Judge smashes on and off field records.
Home Runs sell baseball cards. This is not breaking news. The chase of home run records on the field has always resulted in card sales off it. Speculators dive into the minor leagues and colleges to find the next Mark McGwire, Barry Bonds or Mike Trout. Very often they wind up with stacks of Kevin Maas, Rob Deer or Pete Incaviglia. Investing in home run hitters is an inexact science. When have you seen enough power to jump on board and start collecting that player? Fast starts to a season happen almost every year. The staying power is what’s hard to come by and predict.
“Throughout May and June, Aaron Judge was as hot as any player has has been in years. His meteoric rise could only be compared to the similar cardboard explosions of Mike Trout, Stephen Strasburg and Bryce Harper,” says Beckett Price Guide Senior Editor Brian Fleischer. “Seemingly overnight, his key autographed cards jumped hundreds of dollars in the Price Guide.”
Different from those other meteoric superstars, we have another way to track their popularity: Topps Now. The online offered, print on-demand product traced Judge’s record setting season from the start. There were 52 different base cards released throughout the regular season. That’s almost one, every third game. And that does not include the autographed releases, of which there were 33 different. And memorabilia releases, in which there were 11. All of these are by far the most of any single player in 2017 Topps Now releases. It doesn’t take a mathematician to tell you collecting Judge got expensive. If you paid list price and only bought the base cards, you spent almost $520. An autograph or two, and that amount doubles quickly.
Esta historia es de la edición December 2017 de Beckett Baseball.
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Esta historia es de la edición December 2017 de Beckett Baseball.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
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