I opened a lot of these packs in 1952. I was 5-years old or approaching 5 in Aug of 1952. I remember it like it was yesterday. Sitting on the steps outside the local neighborhood store ripping the wax wrappers and throwing them away and then jamming the cards into my pocket. You had to have been there for such a memory.
That is awesome. My dad was born in '44 and to this day, still calls cards 'Flips'. Said it was a game the kids played, flipping the cards on the ground or something!?! He grew up in St. Louis, MO, so not sure if kids did that all over, on top of putting them in wheel spokes, haha!
@@clinitekservice2122 My dad was born in 1922. I never asked him if he collected baseball cards. He did tell me, though, he sold peanuts at Detroit Stadium in the mid 1930s.
Guy shares a pack of 1952 Topps opening with the world and gets nothing but critics busting his chops. 1. THIS IS AN AMAZING VIDEO. He is doing something all collectors dream of. I for one appreciate him sharing. 2. This is obviously not a resealed pack. He got 3 good name stars of the era. No way you will find this quality in a reseal. 3. You people kill me complaining about him not talking. probably the same people who bitch on videos about people talking to much
Obviously not a reseal because of that quality? The "stars" he got are worth barely more than commons. There are a bunch of HOFers in the first series of '52 Topps. Plus, it's GAI, which means it was basically ungraded. Murphy left there soon after they started grading packs; there's even a video of someone opening up an old GAI graded pack and getting cards from a different year in it. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-_y9PtfSRC0U.html There is no way of really knowing if it was searched. It's great that he opened it obviously, but I can't imagine wagering thousands of dollars on just the hope that it somehow wasn't. Doubt the odds were anywhere near in his favor
Thank you for sharing this experience. That's a once in a lifetime opportunity and you shared it with the world. I'd like to do a pack one day but I'm not quite in the $15K arena for box/pack breaks. :)
This was a Series 1 low number pack. The best card he could have pulled would have been a Phil Rizzuto. The high number series (Mickey Mantle/Jackie Robinson/Roy Campanella/Eddie Matthews) has a Blue and White wrapper, not Green and Orange
Wow, a 1952 1st series wax pack. Only a handful of collectors nowadays will ever have that opportunity. Some nice looking pack fresh 52's. Thanks for sharing
back in 1989 i went to a card show near seattle. Mr. Mint was there and someone had brought in a near full 1952 topps unopened box 1st series. Mr. Mint paid $400 a pack. i don't know how many packs were in a box in those days but i do know Mr. Mint bought more than 15 of those packs. wondering how much those packs sell for now?
Rosen and Sauer were both MVP's of their leagues, Ferris Fain was a good hitter, Pollet and Staley were useful pitchers. The five cards probably bring 300-400 if left ungraded.
This is amazing. Al Rosen had some great seasons. An MVP winner. Thank you for sharing this with the world. I wonder how man of these even still exist?
Man those first four were dang nice, I just wish you could have hit a star! I have two of those cards anyhow that was three years ago that pack now my goodness I can only imagine what that same type would sell for right now in 2021
That Ferris Fain is a beautiful card. My grandfather has an autographed 1953 topps card signed by him. He, (Fain) had an interesting life. Great video. Thanks for sharing
Just read his bio, and yes he sure did have an interesting life, ha! Too bad for him he wasn't born much later, could have really prospered growing good weed where he lived in CA.
I played softball back in the 70’s with a guy who had collected cards with his dad all of his life. His dad passed away in the late 60’s, and he and his mom kept the cards because it was a memory of them being together. My mom sold all of my cards at a garage sale, including a complete set of ‘65 Topps obtained by buying packs (traded 12 comic books to get Warren Spahn to complete the set). My friend decided to look back at the cards when collecting surged in popularity. He found 7 Mantle rookies… it was his dads favorite player so he didn’t sell at that time, against all the advice from team members! We said keep one, sell the rest. Haven’t seen him in 40 years!
Other than opening a cigarette pack for hope of a t-206 card, this is the next best thing. I give him credit for having 50k worth of balls to open this.
@@dennispaulsen2408 got to cost at least 5k per card. so at least $25k for the pack. thats just minimum. would probably be between 25 and 50k for the pack. whats amazing is i was at the card show when Mr. Mint bought a near box full of these, like 20 packs for $400 a piece. this was back in 1988 or 89.
Wow i just looked up that Al Rosen card because its the best card of the 5, to me it looks like an 8 and on PSA one went for 5 thousand bucks, id say he definitely got his moneys worth lol
awesome I hope you got all those graded including the wax stained one on back because even low grade 52 topps commons are worth a ton compared to any other year,,,,even a psa 2 is worth the grading fee on most all players for what they sell for and these your getting possibly a few 9s and maybe 10 so yeah you can make your money back
Yes I get why people are critical of him opening that pack, but you should still appreciate the fact that these cards are really old and you can't find too many of them
On one hand, I'm cringing watching him open a pack like this because unopened packs aren't common. On the other side, I now have a better understanding of how they were issued and where the gum was placed. Mixed feelings for sure.
Do you think whoever sold him that pack by chance mentioned IT WOULD BE IMPOSSIBLE to pull the mantle from this pack lol...that was a pack from series 1.....the mantle is in series 2
hey this is a cool youtube channel. I am a 10 year old and my dad gave me all of his cards when he was a kid in the early 90s. I started my own youtube channel opening up cards, your youtube has given me some good tips. thanks.
I think it was a repack. What the hell was that inner lining thing? Supposed 2 get at least one hall of Famer. Gum wasn't sticking to that cards. He got ripped off.
After checking the value of an unopened 52’ wax pack (approx. $50,000 to $60,000), I almost threw up. This poor man (although can obviously afford it) reduced its value to a few hundred dollars. Even the S & P 500 hasn’t lost that much value lately.
65 year old gum (at the time)! Wonder what it would've tasted like....... Even common cards from that year are minor gems, never saw a pack that ancient get opened!