The Stephen Strasburg baseball card that costs as much as a car

Hey, anyone have $10,500 just lying around?

You do? Well, then you could be the top bidder on this crazy-nuts eBay auction for the only Stephen Strasburg(notes) "Superfractor" card in the 2010 Bowman Chrome set.

But if you actually have designs on owning the card, you better go back to diving for dimes in your couch cushions. That's because $10,499 was the auction price as of this post time and there are still almost five days left in the auction. The price will only go up and could approach or pass a new Kia Sportage territory.

A poster on Freedom Cardboard says he's the lucky collector and Blowout Cards is running a contest to guess the final price of the ultra-scarce card of the Washington Nationals pitcher who hasn't even been called up to the big leagues, let alone experienced any success there.

But the insane price is both a product of Strasburg's potential as the top pick in last June's amateur draft and the limited edition 1/1 that's stamped on back.

Though the amount is hard for most of us non-collectors to fathom, Cardboard Connection is calling this "one of the greatest auctions for a modern baseball card in history." The Bowman "superfractors" are among the most sought-after cards in the hobby and the 2006 Evan Longoria(notes) Superfractor is legendary because it's rumored it hasn't been pulled yet.

To each his own, I suppose, though you won't see me bidding my salary any time soon.

Then again, I'm glad I stumbled across this story. Had I not, there's a chance I might have pulled a Steve Phillips and traded Strasburg's rookie for the Roy Oswalt(notes) in the set.
 
I might. I have 18K and 22K gold plated baseball cards of the greats in baseball. As well as golden stamps of famous baseball players. Countless sports memorabilia and yeah. A whole lot of gold, sports collectibles, and coins, gold, and silver, and everything else under the sun.

I could probably buy a nice house, two cars, and a nice size lot if I sold all of it at half the offering price. And some left over.
 
I might. I have 18K and 22K gold plated baseball cards of the greats in baseball. As well as golden stamps of famous baseball players. Countless sports memorabilia and yeah. A whole lot of gold, sports collectibles, and coins, gold, and silver, and everything else under the sun.

I could probably buy a nice house, two cars, and a nice size lot if I sold all of it at half the offering price. And some left over.

I pity you.
 

Mayhem

Banned
I might. I have 18K and 22K gold plated baseball cards of the greats in baseball. As well as golden stamps of famous baseball players. Countless sports memorabilia and yeah. A whole lot of gold, sports collectibles, and coins, gold, and silver, and everything else under the sun.

I could probably buy a nice house, two cars, and a nice size lot if I sold all of it at half the offering price. And some left over.

I pity you.

I don't either. We're well past the point where this kind of stuff is going anywhere but up in value. Whatever you have now will be worth more in 5, 10, 15 years, no matter what happens with the economy, who starts a war with who, or whatever. It is a physical pain to this day that I didn't hang on to my brothers and my comic books. We had stuff that is worth a literal fortune today. And we kept them in great shape for the longest time. Ok, I'm off to cry now. :mad::(
 
Has he even thrown a pitch in the big leagues yet? I hope he busts and the price of this card plummets like my boner when I see Ron Jeremy's chins.
 
people who are still paying big bucks for cards need to get their head examined. Or they need to allow themselves to be slammed back to reality as BlueBalls' tiny cock slaps them in the face (the scrotal after-shock is epic, as his furry nut-sack is roughly eighteen times longer than his actual pecker).
 

meesterperfect

Hiliary 2020
i was a serious buyer and seller of vintage high grade, professionally graded cards, mostly early 50'- late 70's with some exceptions.
you should have seen my collection, it was sweet.
the card you mention is worthless.
just because some company decides to make a limited number of a new card doesn't give it value.
it will soon be forgotten forever along with the thousands of others like it.
example, i just took a dump, theres only one like it in the world, whats it worth?
all that b.s. started in the late 80's.

vintage, high grade, graded cards are the only true investment in the hobby, the rest, don't waste your money.
 
I stopped caring about sports cards when everybody involved in them including both the producers and the fans started caring more about putting gimmicks into them and getting them for their future perceived appreciation of value than just buying them because they were fun. That was a long time ago, and the sports collectable industry is just as bad as ever.

For a similar reasons I soured on comic books too.
 

alexpnz

Lord Dipstick
Makes his MLB debut in 1 Hr.
This dudes stuff looks NASTY!:bowdown:
 

LukeEl

I am a failure to the Korean side of my family
All I wanted to buy was the Carl Yazstremski card with the mutton chop side burns!
 
Makes his MLB debut in 1 Hr.
This dudes stuff looks NASTY!:bowdown:

So did Ben McDonald. And David Clyde. And Todd Vann Poppel. And Brien Taylor. and Matt Harrington.

This guy will have to win a World Series and a few Cy Youngs to live up to the hype. Doomed for disappointment. .
 

alexpnz

Lord Dipstick
Filthy :bowdown:
 
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