Fake Patch Cards Like all of these scams, they don’t make financial sense to the seller in the long-run – so I have no idea why people do this, but it happens. People take normal jersey cards, or sometimes bland looking prime jerseys – then add a patch from a fake jersey they buy off eBay. I’ve seen jersey cards #/299 with the NFL patch, I’ve seen people take (an already very valuable) Adrian Peterson Exquisite RC’s and add a ‘better’ Vikings patch. You can’t avoid fake patches, so the best thing to do is know how to spot them.
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Fake Autographs I would guess that at every card show I go to, over 90% of the autographed jerseys, 8×10’s, helmets, and other items are fake. LeBron James, Tim Lincecum, Kobe Bryant, Michael Jordan, Tiger Woods and other big time athletes just don’t sign stacks of 8×10’s and fake Addidas jerseys. Most of the time, these athletes have had a relationship with Upper Deck or other local companies to only sign autographs for them. It’s funny that people actually try to sell this crap at a card show when the main draw is usually an athlete or celebrity signing.
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Pack Searchers I saw a kid get dropped off by his mom at Target right when it opened on a Tuesday to run inside to go ‘feel up’ all the new boxes that had been put out. Talk about being a pathetic looser. However, these loosers exist. While I wouldn’t rule out the guys that bring the scales into the store weigh the blaster boxes too, I would consider these a safer buy because you know the packs haven’t been searched one by one.
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Bad Traders People on forums lure people in to trade with them, and then they never send the cards – or send less valuable ones out. I’ve seen people with good feedback go off the deep end and rip people off. The best thing to do is not trade cards online that you can’t afford to loose.
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Phony Websites A while back a website was gaining traffic by stealing content from other bloggers + streaming in RSS feeds from ESPN, Yahoo and other sources to make his site look like it had content. Then he started selling re-packaged products to people off the site via YouTube. He lured people in by making everything look like a great deal in the beginning – but once he knew he could take your money and run … he did. Sites gone because he never spent any time on it, and he took your money just like he had planned it all along. The same thing can happen with a ‘box break’ or any other kind of website. For a period of time they can seem legitimate and run a clean business. But usually you can tell the ones that just want to setup a quick website & videos to scam you later on.
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Panini, Topps, Upper Deck NONE of these companies see the athletes sign every card, and they certainly didn’t see Derrick Rose take off the jersey after the game and cut it up into cards. Most of the time these things end up in the hands of a third party printer (who has no affiliation to the company) … and most certainly have employees that could steal or make the items less credible. That doesn’t mean it happens a high percentage of the time, but it certainly can. We’ve seen Magic Johnson autograph stickers end up on a baseball prospects cards … there are more examples of this mistake that happen almost every season. You can bet they’ve mixed up jersey pieces and other items as well; as human error happens.
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Listen To Show #96 Below {play}http://norcalsportshop.podbean.com/mf/play/qrqum/ShowNintySix.mp3{/play} |
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