The Breaks

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The Breaks

The Breaks

@WatchTheBreaks

Ivan | Sports Card Collector - ⚾️ Cubs | 🏈 Rams | 🏀 Bulls | 🏒 Kings | Community Lead @sports_district

Omaha, NE Katılım Haziran 2013
11.8K Takip Edilen59.9K Takipçiler
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The Breaks
The Breaks@WatchTheBreaks·
RT if you used both sides of the binder page in the early 90's
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The Breaks
The Breaks@WatchTheBreaks·
Two goats i sold today
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@Medz
@Medz@Medz_Sportcardz·
@WaxandWrigley Do only new people buy from him since it feels like 95% of the hobby despises him?
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Drew
Drew@WaxandWrigley·
Good ol Probstein auctions
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BaseballHistoryNut
BaseballHistoryNut@nut_history·
Under MLB's 2026 ABS challenge system, the pitcher, catcher, or batter can challenge ball/strike calls by tapping their helmet—but this isn't allowed when a position player is pitching. Umpires found their loophole and they’ll have their revenge as we all know position players pitching is a thing we see a lot more often this day an age
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Arizona Diamondbacks
Joe Giacinto, a blind and autistic clarinet phenom, performed tonight's National Anthem.
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The Breaks
The Breaks@WatchTheBreaks·
I'm so happy today to be free and clear of Rocket Mortgage... over/under the new loan gets transferred to them in the next 3 weeks? 😆
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Ben Burrows
Ben Burrows@BenMBurrows·
Topps announces LeBron James has a new signature with a crown doodle. James joins Shohei Ohtani as a key Fanatics signer to update an autograph after years using one style. Worth watching to see if the crown is as coveted as Victor Wembanyama’s alien doodles. 📷: @Topps
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The Breaks
The Breaks@WatchTheBreaks·
These are the trading cards I felt were worth picking up in the past month
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The Breaks
The Breaks@WatchTheBreaks·
Winning
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Mike in Vegas
Mike in Vegas@mk9577·
@Mike__McKenna @WatchTheBreaks me looking at all those influencers and seeing them all with accounts from 2017 & higher 😂😂😂 #2009 punk kids 😜
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Mister Daniel@FiloFoomp

People who have a solid hobby take and understanding too three I would like to put hire as consultants would be @DubMentality who has an amazing grasp of the hobby since the 80s today. He is someone who has contributed in so many way. @PapayonTrading a former breaker now seller who has seen the destruction caused when fanatics changed its distribution practices @paullydoughnuts has an absolute solid grasp of the market and the hobby as we all know it and has some solid advice as well. And of course I would want @CardPurchaser as nobody has a bigger reach an amazing understanding of situation and solutions like that guy. All of these guys are solution driven people who have a good sense of where we were where we are and where we could end up.

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Birdie 18
Birdie 18@Birdie18th·
@WatchTheBreaks I learned this very quickly when I saw JJ McCarthy cards going for more than Wayne Gretzky rookies
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Adam Gray
Adam Gray@the27guy·
Sorry for all the drama from the last couple days. After the great @mcsportscards overnighted this beauty to me, FedEx lost it for a few days, routed it from from New Hampshire, through Hong Kong (???!) to Salt Lake, and then told me that it was lost.
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The Breaks
The Breaks@WatchTheBreaks·
@DadRipsPacks they don't want people buying their product; they want corporations and entities buying their product.
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DadRipsPacks
DadRipsPacks@DadRipsPacks·
@WatchTheBreaks Topps really just keeps finding new ways to tell collectors they don't matter. Gut the rewards, kill the Montgomery Club, and what's left exactly? At some point you gotta wonder if they even want people buying their product anymore.
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The Breaks
The Breaks@WatchTheBreaks·
Surprise Surprise, Topps killing off the last thing that was a cool benefit for collectors, days after axing their valuable tiers in the reward system So glad I only collect "playing days" Kris Bryant Cubs baseball cards and Women's Soccer now
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The Breaks@WatchTheBreaks·
Thesis is perfect: "The sports card market isn't driven by talent. It's driven by attention."
TY WILSON@BreakerCulture

The brutal truth about Sports Card "investing" ...I've bought hundreds of sports card collections over the years. Boxes, binders, storage units, estate sales — you name it, I've dug through it. And after doing this long enough, you start to notice something that most collectors never want to admit. 90% of every collection I open is full of guys who were genuinely great players. Not scrubs. Not junk wax commons nobody wanted even when they were printed. I'm talking real careers. Pro Bowlers. All-Stars. Hall of Famers in some cases. Players that people were legitimately excited about at some point in time. And VERY FEW PEOPLE cares about their cards anymore. Not a little. Not "the market is soft right now." I mean the cards are functionally worthless in terms of long-term appreciation, and they've been that way for a long time. Vinny Testaverde. Shareef Abdur-Rahim. Jaromir Jagr, Guys with legitimate careers, legitimate fan bases at their peak — sitting in boxes that end up in my hands for a fraction of what someone paid for them 20 years ago. For a long time I thought this was just bad luck or bad timing. Then I started to see the pattern. The sports card market isn't driven by talent. It's driven by attention. And here's the thing about attention — it's finite. There is only so much of it to go around, and it doesn't grow proportionally with the number of great players in any given era. The money in this hobby concentrates. It always has! And it concentrates around a very small number of players per decade — and sometimes not the best players, but the ones who transcend the sport entirely and become something bigger than a career stat line. Every decade gets maybe one, two, three of those players. That's it. 👈 The 90s had Griffey, Jordan, and Barry Sanders. Thousands of players were active. Hundreds had great careers. But when you say "90s cards" to anyone in this hobby, those are the three names that come up every single time. The market didn't forget the other guys — it just never gave them the same weight to begin with, and 30 years later that gap has only widened. The 2000s were Brady, Kobe, and Jeter. The 2010s were LeBron, Trout, Curry, McDavid with a significant drop-off after that. The names get fewer and further between the longer you look. That's not a coincidence. That's the structure of how this market actually works. And if you go back even further — into true vintage — the filter gets even tighter. There have been thousands of Hall of Famers across baseball, basketball, football, and hockey over the last century. But the vintage market really only sustains four or five names at the highest level over the long haul. Mantle. Ruth. Mays. Gretzky. Wilt. Gale Sayers on a good day. The rest of those collections, the ones filled with legitimate legends from their eras, eventually end up in boxes that people sell off because the market just doesn't care the way it once did. Vintage just shows you the ending of the movie that modern collectors are still living inside of right now. Here's the part that I think most people in this hobby don't fully sit with: There is a limited pool of money chasing cards. It's bigger than it's ever been, but it's still a pool. It's not infinite. And that pool has to be shared across every player, every set, every era, every sport. When money moves toward a handful of true icons — and it always does over time — it has to move away from somewhere else. The players who seemed like safe bets because they were great athletes end up being the ones holding the bag because the hobby only had room for so many at the top and they weren't quite in that tier. This is the conversation I wish someone had with me earlier. Not "buy stars." Buy the players that the entire world will still know by name in 20 years. That's a much shorter list than most people want to believe. For this decade, my honest read is Ohtani, Wemby, Mahomes (?), and maybe one or two others we haven't fully identified yet. Ohtani might be the safest long-term card investment I've seen in my entire time in this hobby. Two-way dominance at the highest level, global appeal that crosses every demographic, a story that doesn't have a clean comparison to anything that came before it. That's the profile of a player the market rewards forever. Wembanyama has the same energy — if he becomes what the basketball world believes he can be, his early cards are going to look ridiculous in 15 years. Everyone else? Buy them for what they are — short to medium-term plays. Ride the wave, sell into the hype, and move on. There's nothing wrong with that strategy. But don't confuse it with building something that compounds over decades. Every collection I open reminds me of this. The cards don't lie. Someone believed in those players once. Paid real money for them. Held them through the good years thinking it would pay off. And here they are, passed down or liquidated or dropped off at a show for whatever someone will give for them. Find the icons. The real ones. The ones the entire world will still be talking about long after you're gone. There aren't many of them. That's exactly the point....

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