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Description

We kick off Episode 284 with Joe Poirot and dive straight into the psychology of restraint during a red-hot market. Joe explains selling into a war chest, nearly firing on a few big cards, and why he chose patience over retail therapy. Then hobby president John Mangini joins to unpack why grading labels still say 1948 Leaf when the research points to 1949, how that impacts Jackie Robinson’s “true” rookie landscape, and why accuracy on flips matters for new and seasoned collectors alike.

Highlights

Jeremy’s long day at the Southern Alberta Card Show and why he was still wired

Building a war chest: selling steadily to fund one hallmark card

Choosing not to buy on a big auction night and how to manage the letdown

Vintage vs modern targeting: 1952 Topps Jackie, T206 Cobb, 1990s Star Rubies out of 50, Exquisite LeBron, and a Wizards-era Jordan auto

Why “feel it in your gut” beats forcing a justification on a major purchase

Market reality check: fewer slips through the cracks when everything is hot

The hobby friend advantage: having a second set of eyes before a big bid

John Mangini on flip accuracy: 1948 Leaf vs 1949 Leaf and why it should change

Other label fixes discussed: Home Run Derby 1959 vs 1960, W555 roster tells, Scrapps Tobacco, Bond Bread vs Star Subjects

Rookie card logic in the wild: 1952 Topps Mantle as a first Topps, not a rookie

1984 Star vs 1986 Fleer Jordan and how distribution rules get misused

Why research matters: matching photos and dates, Net54 deep dives, and what graders should own in identification

Recorded live Sept 27, 2025
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