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 Tuesday, July 29, 2008
Roger Hooper finally being held accountable
Posted by Steve
 What comes around goes around, right? It was very satisfying to read that Roger Hooper had been arrested for selling bogus items. The Cumberland County district attorney has charged Hooper with deceptive business practices, according to the Patriot News. I first learned about Hooper in 2002 when Bob Lemke wrote about a ton of counterfeit 1963 Bazooka cards that were flooding the market from an eBay user known as "bassmaster." Yes, you guessed it, Hooper. There were also counterfeit 1921 W551 strip cards, 1931 W517 strip cards, 1947 Homogenized Bond Bread and 1952 Wheaties to name a few more. And to top it all off, there was even a fake grading company, FGA that encapsulated the counterfeits and further deceived the public. Guess who was the founder and owner of FGA? Yes, Hooper. Back then, Hooper blamed it on a business partner named Randy Howard, who was in control of his eBay username, although it was registered to Hooper. Hooper claimed he purchased the cards from a dealer at a show. Nobody saw the dealer, was able to identify him and, of course, he paid cash so there were no records of a transaction. It was almost like he printed them himself, put them in his own graded slab and sold them.  After lying relatively low for a few years, Hooper was back in the middle of another huge counterfeit scheme, which was very similar three years ago. Several different eBay sellers seemed to have endless quantities of rare SLU cards, Star Co. cards, Sportscasters and rare minor league cards, like Rickey Henderson, Cal Ripken and Roger Clemens. And they were selling them in GEM and GEM Elite holders. The eBay usernames were "inserts4collectors", "sportscardzz", "shaqfu1", "cavsking" and "jtgcards". The link was a yahoo.com seller named Randy Howard that had a very nice mix of the fakes from 2002 and the fakes from 2005. Hooper and Howard were at it again.  In both cases, the primary image for the card was used, then the fonts, borders, etc. were rebuilt to make the card look pretty convincing unless you had a real one to compare it to. I spoke with Det. Sgt. Earl Brock, who's leading the investigation, a couple days ago and he told me many other things they found in Hooper's warehouse, from tons of resealed packs (with more glue sticks than the average person would use in 10 lifetimes), to fake autographs, to labels from various grading companies, including FGA, Capitol, GEM and Gem Elite, along with other stuff I can't talk about quite yet. They have frozen all of Hooper's assets and have access to all of his accounts so if they can just locate payments to a printing press, they'll have the smoking gun. Until then, it's very tough to prove he knowlingly committed fraud. If you've ever dealt with Hooper and been ripped off...I should say, if you are aware you were ripped off, because almost everyone that has dealt with him has been ripped off, please call Det. Bock and try to document your losses. His number is 717-240-77764. Don't let the guy behind virtually every counterfeit sports card in the past six years walk. One more point I want to make is there's a reason why I pictured the Star Co. cards in this blog. It's because three years after we wrote about it, bigboydsportscards3 is STILL selling these on eBay (the Jordan on the top is the fake and here's a link to his auction for the exact same fake card...you compare). After I've talked to him and told him they were fake and after the ring leader has been arrested. If you've purchased any Star Co. cards from Terry Boyd, please call me (800-726-9966 ext. 13383) because it's time we start building a case against him.
7/29/2008 5:15:27 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Thursday, July 24, 2008
National offers Bartman $25K to show up and sign
Posted by Steve
The National is only a week away in Chicago and the infamous Steve Bartman is making news again for the wrong reasons. This time, it's not his fault. Show organizers and SportsBuy.com announced there will be briefcase with $25,000 in it offered to Bartman on July 31. All he has to do is show up at 1:00 CST on Thursday in the TriStar Autograph Pavilion and sign a photo. The photo, of course, is the infamous image from Game 6 of the 2003 National League Championship Series vs. the Marlins, where he reached over the wall and interfered with a foul ball that would (probably) have been caught by Moises Alou. The extra out cost the Cubs as Florida rallied and went on to win the series in seven games and win the World Series. He'll be offered personal security at The National and to a destination of his choice, according to Mike Berkus, co-executive director of the show. The photo, once signed, will be auctioned on SportsBuy.com to the general public, with net proceeds being donated to a Chicago-based charity. Will he show? Nobody really knows, but I'll be there to find out. Would you show up in a city where you were hated and essentially ran out of town, to sign a single autograph on a photo capturing the worst day of your life, to get $25,000? We'll see what Mr. Bartman decides in a week.
7/24/2008 11:01:58 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Hunt tops $5.3 million; Jennings to Europe
Posted by Steve
Sorry for the lack of recent posts, but this summer has been hectic with deadlines, household projects and swim lessons for my four-year old son (I won't even get into the fact that my 20-month old has slept through about six nights in the past six months). I'll try to post more in the coming weeks and should have a ton of content after I get back from The National. Anyway, the much anticipated Hunt DHL All-Star Fanfest auction topped the $5.3 million mark for its two-day event. The Gehrig jacket that was used the day he pulled himself from the lineup sold for $373,000, which made it the single highest item in the auction. Following the sage of high-school phenom Brandon Jennings, the No. 1 high school player in the land last year is headed for Europe to play next year. I'm getting irritated at all the message boards calling him dumb or stupid though. First, as my son repeats every time I use the word stupid, "we don't use the word stupid, daddy." Enough said. To set the record straight, he failed his first SAT attempt, passed his second attempt but the NCAA red-flagged him because of the jump in scores and forced him to take it a third time. I've never heard how he did on his third attempt because he signed on with a team in Italy before the scores were released. According to several articles, he also maintained a 3.5 GPA in high school. Let's not feel sorry for Jennings or label him a dummy though. He'll do well playing ball in Italy next year, make some solid cash and then be a top 10 pick in the 2009 NBA Draft.
7/22/2008 11:28:25 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Hunt's Fanfest Auction tops $3 million in first session
Posted by Steve
 If Josh Hamilton's performance in the Home Run Derby didn't provide
enough excitement for us yesterday, Hunt's first session of its DHL
All-Star Fanfest auction did. The auction described by David Hunt as
"certainly the best auction we've done in our 20-plus years and it may
be one of the best memorabilia sales ever offered" didn't disappoint.
Topping the list of the 463 items auctioned yesterday was a Babe Ruth
New York Yankees professional model hat c.1920-30s, which finished at
$327,750. Next was a 1978 Thurman Munson presentational New York
Yankees World Series trophy, which sold for $207,000.
After that, a Babe Ruth professional model baseball bat inscribed and
presented to Broadway starlet Tessa Kosta circa 1924 sold for $195,500,
while a 1977 Thurman Munson New York Yankees World Series ring hit
$143,750, while Munson's 1976 American League Most Valuable Player
award sold for $126,500. In all, the first day yielded a total of
$3,012,745. Today, the auction has continued with lots 464-979 so I'll
update you on that tomorrow. To view the completed auction results, click here.
7/15/2008 5:09:06 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Friday, July 11, 2008
No exclusives in 2008-09 NBA products
Posted by Steve
Need a reason to look forward to the 2008-09 basketball card market? How about this: no exclusives. For the first time since 2003, we won't have to open one company's products and know we can't get a signed rookie card of several players. Upper Deck had LeBron in 2003. Since then, guys like Dwight Howard, Kevin Durant, Greg Oden, Chris Paul, Brandon Roy, Adam Morrison, Andrew Bogut, Emeka Okafor, etc. have been exclusive to either Upper Deck or Topps. This year, we can expect everyone in every product for the mostpart. I wondered what it meant when Upper Deck sent out a press release the day after the draft saying they had signed the top 10 picks in the draft. Topps had already emailed me about the Draft Day Autographs available on its site (which I've written about a couple entries ago) so I knew they already had autographs in place for those players. Then Topps send out a release that it signed the top 15 players in the draft. It all makes sense now. We can finally look forward to all the products being loaded with rookie content and nothing held back. That can only be good for collectors. *************** Have you read the stuff about Arizona-recruit Brandon Jennings heading overseas? He had struggled with becoming eligible with his SAT scores, but has already decided to play next year overseas and then make himself eligible for the draft. A couple years ago, he would have been in the draft, but the NBA changed the rule so high schoolers have to go to college for a year, but Jennings is bolting overseas. I hope this doesn't start a trend. If you aren't familiar with Jennings, he's a lightning-quick point guard who has all the makings of an NBA star. It'll be interesting to see how this turns out.
7/11/2008 1:32:46 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, July 02, 2008
Fake Cobb autograph sells for $102 on eBay
Posted by Steve
 When can someone that doesn't authentic autographs whatsoever clearly determine that an autograph is fake? Here's an example with no guesswork involved. I saw a Ty Cobb autograph being sold on eBay recently. It's his signature on a baseball envelope and being sold as genuine. The problem? It has a Lou Gehrig commemorative stamp on it. Cobb died in 1961. The Gehrig stamps came out in 1989. You gotta wonder why is only sold for $102.50. Or maybe we have to wonder who would pay $102.50 for it. ******** The first night of Mastro's Classic Collector Auction finished last night, with other half ending tonight. I now own game-used bats from Carl Yastrzemski and Rod Carew. I'm also still in disbelief that the Barack Obama single-signed PSA 9.5 baseball sold for $2,100.
7/2/2008 5:00:39 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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