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#1
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Every time Mastro started to elaborate or say something interesting, he was abruptly cut off and/or redirected. A good interviewer lets the interviewee do 80% of the talking. This was the exact opposite. Difficult to sit through it and I would have loved to hear more from Bill about how he grew Mastro Auctions into the "empire" it once was.
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Be sure to subscribe to my YouTube Channel, The Stuff Of Greatness. New videos are uploaded every week... https://www.youtube.com/@tsogreatness/videos |
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#2
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I watched from beginning to end and really enjoyed the back and forth dialogue. It was less an interview and more a lively conversation between two old hobby friends-felt like I was a fly on the wall for a really epic conversation between two industry titans, unique in their own way and experiences.
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#3
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#4
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On the lookout for Billy Sullivan Jr. and Sr. memorabilia Last edited by pbspelly; 10-18-2024 at 07:38 AM. |
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http://www.flickr.com/photos/calvindog/sets |
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#6
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__________________ • Collecting Indianapolis-related pre-war and rare regionals, Jim Thorpe, and other vintage thru '80s • Successful deals with Kingcobb, Harford20, darwinbulldog, iwantitiwinit, helfrich91, kaddyshack, Marckus99, D. Bergin, Commodus the Great, Moonlight Graham, orioles70, adoo1, Nilo, JollyElm, DJCollector1, angolajones, timn1, jh691626, NiceDocter, h2oya311, orioles93, thecapeleague, gkrodg00, no10pin, Scon0072, cmoore330, Luke, wawazat |
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#7
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So painful to watch... Bill was in a mood to just tell stories about stuff we all wanted to know about and I found myself screaming at the screen to "shut up!!" over and over again.. I will give him credit for getting the interview though.
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Always looking for PSA Graded 1952 Topps: 1-80 PSA 7 81-310 PSA 8 311-407 PSA 6 |
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#8
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That's exactly what I was screaming multiple times listening to it in my car yesterday.
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Postwar stars & HOF'ers. Cubs of all eras. Currently working on 1956, '63 and '72 Topps complete sets. |
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#9
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Wasn't part of Bill's sentencing is that he is forever prohibited from engaging in the sport's card industry either as a dealer and auctioneer?
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#10
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I came away mostly wanting to hear more about the early days of hobby types / sets becoming "discovered" or "popularized", what that was like to uncover these rare regional sets and some of the early collectors who gave them their attention and deemed them valuable. so much hobby knowledge today is just accepted without learning much of the origins and how things came to be favored or desirable.
I also want to see the collection of John Ramirez (sp?), who Mastro said has everything and has been collecting forever.
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-------------------------------------------------------------- Signed Jackie Robinson Run: 4/8 (needs: 48L, 49B, 52T, 56T). Signed 1948 / 1949 Leaf Baseball Set: 56/98. (needs: 8,13,19,22,30,33,36,43,45,55,57,62,65,66,68,70,78, 79,81,93,95,104,108,113,121,123,129,131,137,142,14 3,144,146,153,159,160,161,163,165,168) https://www.flickr.com/photos/198641438@N03/albums/ --not always up to date |
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#11
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"The T206-series Wagner card is considered one of the world’s most expensive trading cards. Mastro admitted in the plea agreement that he cut the card’s side borders, and then concealed this information when he sold the card in 1987. Mastro again failed to disclose his alteration even after participating in subsequent auctions of the card in 1991 and 2000. The sale in 2000 produced a purchase price of more than $1 million, according to the plea agreement. Mastro also failed to disclose that he cut the Wagner card again in 1992, even though he was aware that the card had been submitted to become the first baseball card assigned a grade based on the condition of the card." cut from here the below link seems to answer your question: https://www.justice.gov/usao-ndil/pr...l-bidding-scam
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-------------------------------------------------------------- Signed Jackie Robinson Run: 4/8 (needs: 48L, 49B, 52T, 56T). Signed 1948 / 1949 Leaf Baseball Set: 56/98. (needs: 8,13,19,22,30,33,36,43,45,55,57,62,65,66,68,70,78, 79,81,93,95,104,108,113,121,123,129,131,137,142,14 3,144,146,153,159,160,161,163,165,168) https://www.flickr.com/photos/198641438@N03/albums/ --not always up to date |
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#12
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Here is an excerpt from the actual indictment. As evidenced by a thread last year, there is a lot of misunderstanding of this proceeding and the role of the Wagner. Bottom line, people who claim it had NOTHING to do with the case are flat out wrong, but at the same time, it certainly was not the focus of it. The focus was clearly shill bidding.
11. It was further part of the scheme that in marketing materials distributed on behalf of Mastro Auctions, which were intended to portray Mastro Auctions to potential bidders and consignors as a premier seller of valuable items for which a strong market existed, defendant MASTRO represented that Mastro Auctions had sold the most expensive baseball card in the world, a Honus Wagner T-206 card. In making this representation, however, defendant MASTRO knowingly omitted the material fact that defendant MASTRO had altered the baseball card by cutting the sides of the card in a manner that, if disclosed, would have significantly reduced the value of the card.
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Four phrases I nave coined that sum up today's hobby: No consequences. Stuff trumps all. The flip is the commoodity. Animal Farm grading. Last edited by Peter_Spaeth; 10-18-2024 at 05:00 PM. |
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#13
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#14
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https://www.net54baseball.com/showth...ght=memorandum Dayenu.
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Four phrases I nave coined that sum up today's hobby: No consequences. Stuff trumps all. The flip is the commoodity. Animal Farm grading. Last edited by Peter_Spaeth; 10-19-2024 at 12:29 AM. |
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#15
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( h @ $ e A n + l e y |
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#16
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Is this really the case with this specific card? What would the value of the card be if it had not been trimmed? |
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#17
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It would be worth much less now if Mastro had not touched it, it would just be a nice sheet cut (AUTHENTIC) but still rare Wagner. But keep in mind it's the notoriety of the card driving its extreme value (IMO), not that anyone thinks it's a real pack-issued 8.
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Four phrases I nave coined that sum up today's hobby: No consequences. Stuff trumps all. The flip is the commoodity. Animal Farm grading. Last edited by Peter_Spaeth; 10-25-2024 at 11:22 PM. |
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#18
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#19
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Ray may have been lying for some reason, but he is the only actual primary source I have ever seen able to recount the origin. His testimony appears to be the only actual evidence. I have been told there is some evidence of the Long Island origin but nobody is able to produce it when questioned about what it is. So strange.
Mastro was obviously guilty of very serious criminal fraud. Imperfect is putting it far too lightly. But criminal fraud is not seen as a big deal in this hobby for some reason ($$$), so I guess that is not a big problem. What's wrong with having auctions and auction houses run by convicted fraudsters? Nothing! The 'trimming' is kind of irrelevant, since it was cut by hand from a "sheet" (deductively, almost certainly not an actual sheet, perhaps a panel or strip). Its only added value is that the card was effectively cut illegitimately twice and PSA still pretends it's an 8, adding to the comic absurdity of their money-printing claim to this day. If a corporation says up is down, this hobby will decide that up is close enough to down that it is fine as long as money can be made. A card that is altered in reality is... altered, independent of any single person's knowledge of said alteration. Not being caught doing something does not mean that thing did not in actual objective reality ever happen or it somehow does not count. The real tragedy of the saga is that possibly the only piece of uncut material from the set production runs to survive to modernity was destroyed without any documentation of the layout, size, what was on it, etc. There are only a handful of uncut T strips/sheets/panels that anyone can show (mostly Obak), and none for T206. Some other T sheets we know survived to modernity have been destroyed, like the T25 sheet and the T204 sheet. |
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#20
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Where did Ray discuss the origin? I know I have read this but cannot now recall except to vaguely remember it was something about Florida.
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Four phrases I nave coined that sum up today's hobby: No consequences. Stuff trumps all. The flip is the commoodity. Animal Farm grading. |
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#21
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As I recall the details (I'm not home, I can't go through my archive right now), the Florida origin was stated by Ray to be from a flea market. The sheet was bought at the flea market for an unstated pittance, and then brought up north where the cutting and selling (1985) happened via Ray. Ray, of course, is probably the only person who would really have any real information on the origin. I would never assume people are honest, but there's no other evidence and nothing that contradicts. The claims from Long Island have been made by multiple people. None have ever been able to provide a shred of evidence or real information beyond just insisting they are right because they are. NY is closer to the production facility (we do not actually know, despite many claims to the contrary, for a certain fact which facility actually printed T206 - probably it was multiple, and not all of them may have been direct on paper facilities of the ALC), but in the course of 70 something years items move around. Plenty of New Yorkers have retired to Florida and brought their possessions with them. I have found 1910 T card sheets (actually a series of panels in two sheets for two different sets) and traced them to a NY origin, but things can be found in other places too and be legitimate. I don't see any problem with a sheet popping up in Florida. |
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#22
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In this 2001 piece by O'Keeffe, Ray refused to say where he got it. Also note Mastro's adamant denial.
https://www.t206museum.com/page/periodical_19.html
__________________
Four phrases I nave coined that sum up today's hobby: No consequences. Stuff trumps all. The flip is the commoodity. Animal Farm grading. |
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#23
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#24
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If this wasn't apparently found in Wagners estate, I'd have a lot of doubts about it. To my eyes this piece is way more interesting and cool than the PSA 8 Wagner. |
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#25
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I would agree Greg. This panel is very odd. Have you ever seen any T205 uncut sheets or panels?
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#26
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Working on the following sets: 1952 Star-Cal, 1954B, 1955B, 1969T Super, 1971T and 1972T |
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#27
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A halfway decent interviewer would automatically have gone there. Mastro was jovial and in a talkative mood. The interviewer should have asked more about the original uncut sheet with a single question… and then shut up and let Mastro expound on it. But because he was mercilessly interrupted, cut-off and redirected (for the interviewer to talk about himself) I guess this critical part of the story has to remain a mystery.
__________________
Be sure to subscribe to my YouTube Channel, The Stuff Of Greatness. New videos are uploaded every week... https://www.youtube.com/@tsogreatness/videos |
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#28
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Enough about you. Now, let's talk about ME.
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Four phrases I nave coined that sum up today's hobby: No consequences. Stuff trumps all. The flip is the commoodity. Animal Farm grading. |
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