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Honus Wagner Baseball Card Could Fetch $1.5 Million

By JIM SALTER 03/26/12 12:11 PM ET AP

Honus Wagner Baseball Card
A 1909 Honus Wagner baseball card, which sold in 2000 for more than US$1 million, is seen on display at a sports memorabilia show at the Atlantic City Convention Center in Atlantic City, N.J., in this file photo from July 2003. The "Holy Grail of baseball cards," the famous 1909 Honus Wagner tobacco card once owned by hockey great Wayne Gretzky, has sold for a record-setting US$2,350,000, the seller of the card Brian Seigel said. The anonymous buyer has only been identified as a Southern Califor

ST. LOUIS — A suburban St. Louis man who has been in the collectibles business for a quarter of a century, says the 102-year-old baseball card he's putting up for auction starting Tuesday is about as good as it gets.

Bill Goodwin expects the 1909 Honus Wagner baseball card – one of the most sought-after sports collectibles in the world – to fetch at least $1 million, and perhaps as much as $1.5 million, in the online auction.

"We deal with nice products, vintage stuff, but this is the ultimate," Goodwin, 64, of Sunset Hills, Mo., said. "I can't see topping this, ever."

The card is owned by a Houston businessman who has declined to be identified. The auction continues through April 19.

The 2-1/2-inch by 1-1/2-inch baseball card was released in cigarette packs sold by the American Tobacco Co. from 1909 to 1911. Wagner is a Hall of Famer and one of the greatest players of his era. Nicknamed "The Flying Dutchman," he spent most of his 21-year career with the Pittsburgh Pirates, winning eight batting titles and hitting a career .327.

But what makes the card special is that it was pulled from circulation after about 200 were issued. For years, the consensus was that Wagner didn't want to encourage smoking, especially to children. Goodwin noted, though, that Wagner was photographed with chewing tobacco in his mouth and did advertisements for tobacco companies.

"I, and some other people, think he just wanted to be paid," Goodwin said.

Historians believe about 60 of the 1909 Wagner cards still exist, but many are in poor condition. Based on a rating system by Sportscard Guarantee Corp., the quality of the card Goodwin is auctioning is better than all but five of the Wagner cards in existence, he said.

In 2011, Arizona Diamondbacks owner Ken Kendrick paid a record $2.8 million for the highest-graded Wagner card in existence.

Goodwin will start the bidding for his card at $300,000 but expects it to bring far more than that.

"I believe it will bring between $1.2 million and $1.5 million," Goodwin said.

Experts agree.

"Every time a Wagner goes up for auction it seems to go higher and higher and higher," said Bob Snyder of Dave and Adam's Card World in Buffalo, N.Y., which claims to be the world's largest baseball card dealer.

Frank Ceresi, a baseball historian whose FC Associates provides appraisals of sports collectibles, said the value of vintage sports memorabilia remains strong.

"Because of the Wagner mystique you can never overestimate the value in the market," Ceresi said. "When you get into the real rare, cool old stuff like a Wagner card, they come up so infrequently that you never know where that price might go."

Goodwin is auctioning other rare 1909 baseball cards that also may bring in big dollars. That includes an Eddie Plank card that was also pulled from circulation, apparently because Plank wanted to be paid for his image. Plank is a Hall of Fame pitcher who won 326 games, mostly with the Philadelphia A's, in a 17-year career that ended in 1917.

Goodwin estimates the Plank card could be worth $300,000 to $500,000.

He is also auctioning a Sherry Magee "error" card. Magee was a good but not great player who hit .291 over 16 careers from 1904 to 1919, mostly with the Philadelphia Phillies. What made the card more valuable is the mistaken spelling of Magee's name as "Magie." That card could bring up to $50,000.

FOLLOW SPORTS

ST. LOUIS — A suburban St. Louis man who has been in the collectibles business for a quarter of a century, says the 102-year-old baseball card he's putting up for auction starting Tuesday is abo...
ST. LOUIS — A suburban St. Louis man who has been in the collectibles business for a quarter of a century, says the 102-year-old baseball card he's putting up for auction starting Tuesday is abo...
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02:50 PM on 04/16/2012
Wow, $1.5 Million!! That's insane!!

www.totalservicerealestate.com
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Ralph Preta
knowledge is the key to life.
03:16 PM on 03/28/2012
its supply and demand. plain and simple. there are only 60 in existence so obviously more than 60 people that can afford it want one. at this price point it is an investment object. the person or people that buy it might not even have any kind of interest in baseball whatsoever. buy it hold it as long as you can sell and reap the profits. look at the dodgers the last owner paid 500 mil held onto them for a few yrs and just sold them for 2 billion. supply and demand. it is what it is.
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Ralph Preta
knowledge is the key to life.
03:04 PM on 03/28/2012
id bid on this (yeah right ;o) ) but im afraid my wife might use it as a coaster.
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blkrvr
03:00 PM on 03/28/2012
wonder how many now famous baseball cards i threw away in the 60's and 70's, when all i wanted was the bubble gum in the wrapper
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rcapitalsim
RYAN
03:03 PM on 03/28/2012
me too blk.
06:11 PM on 03/28/2012
Me three.
08:58 PM on 04/03/2012
I had at many good rookie cards including the koosman/ryan and had a nl/al green locker that held each team set. Just remebering the collections (football and basketball too) I had it would have been worth well over 50K. Mom sold alot of my stuff in a garage sale in early 80's along with GI Joes, tonka toys etc, etc. But its ok because you can't take it with you when you die.
02:56 PM on 03/28/2012
damn wish i had it, i could retire
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Adam Dray
There's a snake in my boot!
02:48 PM on 03/28/2012
...dang ...wish I had one and my great gpa didn't use his as 'clickers' for his bike spokes.....
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twisted8138
Blesseth be me, for I art thou TwIsTeD
02:37 PM on 03/28/2012
Ok, you spend 1.5 million on the card, then what do you do with it???? So much good you could do with that money.
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rcapitalsim
RYAN
03:04 PM on 03/28/2012
you sit on it and bring back up for auction 10 years later and try to double your money.
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Mickey Bitsko
Your sink is shipping
02:34 PM on 03/28/2012
Darn I had a couple of those clothes pinned on my Schwin and running through my spokes to sound like a motor.
02:46 PM on 03/28/2012
ME TOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

DARN IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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02:29 PM on 03/28/2012
We have all seen this card how many times??? wow i know its rare...but nobody even collects sports cards any longer...so how can this be worth so much more now...I have a ton of super valuable ones i should have sold over 20 years ago they would have sold for way more back then ...than today!!
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Mickey Bitsko
Your sink is shipping
02:35 PM on 03/28/2012
Maybe a change in your circle of friends?
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madmikiemike
02:25 PM on 03/28/2012
i had one of them, once. i thot it was gabage. so i put it inside an old movie poster advertising a 1931 film called Dracula, starring Bela Lugosi, then wadded them up and threw them away.
02:16 PM on 03/28/2012
You pool your friends together. You buy this card for even more money then first bought it for. You create a false market. Now all your other stuff is worth more. You give the card to someone else in your pool. Now you have more cash to pkay with and the other person has an asset he can use to buy houses cars boats land. You do this a couple times using the asset value of the card and other stuff to keep getting bank loans on the asset value. In the end you sell the card to the one guy in the group you can lose everything in a bankruptcy. Now the pool has millions in the bank. The card is still worth millions cause someone said so. The guy who went bankrupt is taken care of by his pool. The pool rebuys the card. The perpetual motion money machine keeps going.
Owaza
Mercy to the guilty is cruelty to the innocent
02:26 PM on 03/28/2012
What????
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RadicalAmerica
Common sense for the common man
02:29 PM on 03/28/2012
Call the psycho squad.
07:26 PM on 03/28/2012
Ok here's a real life example. Had family that worked for hawker beach. There an aircraft builder for small commercial jets. Goldman Sachs bought them in 2007. They literally did nothing to make the company stronger or better in any way. Things I can't even say on here. They milked every asset out if the company. They built 70 personal spec planes so they could fly around the world when ever they wanted. Wrote it off as business expense. Now every other company in Kansas that builds the same type of planes would never have more then 20 spec planes. Well after 5 years of sucking everything out Goldman Sachs is putting them into bankruptcy. Yeah im crazy.
01:58 PM on 03/28/2012
I believe at one time Wayne Gretzky was a part owner in a Honus Wagner card.
Owaza
Mercy to the guilty is cruelty to the innocent
02:26 PM on 03/28/2012
You're correct, he was . . . as the article points out.
01:32 PM on 03/28/2012
the heathen should start cracking in the bible, baseball cards is idol worship.
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RadicalAmerica
Common sense for the common man
02:08 PM on 03/28/2012
The Church of Baseball is the only thing I worship.
03:15 PM on 03/28/2012
I belong to the Church of Monday Night Football.
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azmikede
Abandon Hope all ye that enter here.
03:00 PM on 03/28/2012
I'm not too sure.......right after the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus complained about the Designated Hitter Rule !
01:27 PM on 03/28/2012
Everyone should see here along with the sale of the dodgers. This is how the 1% perpetually keeps themselves in the 1%. Even though reality is they are not worth it. The sale of this card which has been used as an asset for its owner to buy luxury goods. To create businesses that will fail in a couple years after he milks all the profits from company. This is the system that the 1% have put in place so that nobody else can achieve their status. They sell their assets that truley have zero value to each other to keep the price of all their crap worth millions. You will go buy a car that's 50000 dollars save it for 50 years. Your car will be worth nothing. But their car that can barley be driven on the road. If it broke down couldn't be fixed by anyone for months. Would cost another fortune to fix. But it's worth millions.
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RadicalAmerica
Common sense for the common man
02:15 PM on 03/28/2012
Oh boo fkg hoo.
03:55 PM on 03/28/2012
Hurt your feelings or figure out your ponzi scheme. Boo hoo. Really . Thanks for the intellectual reply. The fall guy didn't start in boxing. It started in business hundreds of years ago. They still use it today. But now their untouchable. So the ball keeps rolling till the new generation and new societies take over and put value on what's real. Not what's make believe. The days are numbered for this kind of value in useless trinkets. All it will take is one major catastrophe. Will we see who the thinker is here. And who the fool is.
Owaza
Mercy to the guilty is cruelty to the innocent
02:27 PM on 03/28/2012
You, sir or madam, are clearly a genius. Please, seek help.
12:09 PM on 03/28/2012
Just another indication that some people have way too much money.
01:27 PM on 03/28/2012
Yeah, how dare they
Owaza
Mercy to the guilty is cruelty to the innocent
02:28 PM on 03/28/2012
Most people in the world would say the same of you. But, that's none of their business, is it?