Results 21 to 30 of 35
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08-21-2012, 03:59 PM #21
looks like I opened a big can of worms with this thread lol
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08-22-2012, 08:38 AM #22
Yeah I get that point but some collectors still consider a players first card from high school, college, minor leauge, europe, etc as a players rookie card and will buy and sell them accordingly.Drug and smoke free trading.
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08-22-2012, 01:24 PM #23
Yeah I get that as well.
Reminds me of people purchasing the 94-95 Pinnacle Turgeon Base because Patrick Kane was a baby sitting on his dad's lap and he happen to be in the background and calling that is "rookie" card.
HahaLast edited by Yipper; 08-22-2012 at 02:56 PM.
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08-22-2012, 02:16 PM #24
In other sports, absolutely. In hockey, much less so. I do see a player's "first licensed card" going for a few bucks from time to time but that really only applies to the stars and future stars. It's a different kettle of fish with hockey, and the Players Association themselves are pretty involved in the process of defining what is what. Things got really out of hand in the late 1990's where you would get cards made of guys who were only 16-18 and never played a single NHL game. But they played for Team Canada in the World Juniors so they got a rookie card done. It became a real race between competitors to see who could produce the first cards and it ultimately hurt values for some of the guys when they made their actual NHL debuts.
Habs fan and collector! Current PC's: Nick Suzuki, Cole Caufield, and Lane Hutson...., and of course...
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08-22-2012, 06:55 PM #25

Interesting - in all my years of collecting the Sedins, I've never really come across anyone who considers their rookie cards to be anything other than those from 1997-98 Black Diamond - which were produced well before they were drafted, let alone played an NHL game. Both SCF Inventory and Beckett list only this set as being their RC. Curious if you're suggesting that Beckett / SCF Inventory are wrong here, or is there a certain timeframe (i.e. from a certain year onwards) that this rule applies, and for cards from perhaps older years that have widely been accepted as RC's for many years, does the designation stick?
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08-22-2012, 07:46 PM #26
you can't say one is right or wrong as there is not one definition of what a rookie is. Here on SCF we try to go with the biggest concensus of what a rookie is for most but there is no right or wrong. Also there always been exception for all kind of reason. Since SCF did not exist in the '90, we went with how other have set RC for past year and it's not like we investigated each one. Now if somone come and bring valid point on certain player from the past we will consider and look at the issue and maybe make a change. But SCF database does not hold the truth! we just try our best to create a database that reflect the reality and we constantly make change when member bring issue and we can agree with them.
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08-22-2012, 07:50 PM #27
That's exactly the case.
The best way to describe a hockey rookie card has little to do when when they've played their first game..... but in fact, is when they had their first card in an NHL licensed set. In the 1990s these were two different things. The Sedins you mentioned are case in point. Those are their real rookie cards.... based on a widley excepted standard. Upper Deck or Pacific writing 'Rookie' on a card two years later doesn't make those new cards rookies.
That changes in the early 00s though, when a player's first game was required before a manufacturer could put them into an NHL licensed set. I think that's what Yip Collector is getting at.... for the last 10+ years, players did have to play a first game before they could get a RC.
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08-22-2012, 08:57 PM #28
Once a card is released and labelled a rookie card, that designation doesn't change. "The hobby" (in a nebulous, collective form) can't up and decide in 2012 that a 1997-98 card which has been considered an RC for 15 years...suddenly isn't. What was shall continue to be. But the rules did change in the 2000's at some point to restrict the card companies from falling all over one another to scramble and get the "exclusive" RC of a player. They got smart and realized that having a wider pool of RC's was better for the hobby, which is why a guy that has played in 2 games can have 22 RC's nowadays instead of his Quebec Pee-Wee Tournament card being considered the RC. They could conceivably change the rules in the future, but those changes wouldn't affect cards already in existence.
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08-23-2012, 02:08 PM #29
I don't think SCF should put itself in the position of defining rookie cards. The licensing agreements and industry standards remain pretty clear in their determination and acceptance of true rookies. While I agree that there was a time when designations such as "RR" or "XRC" and the word "rookie" appearing on many cards (especially in 90's) led to a great deal of confusion and debate, but that is no longer the case. This article sums it up pretty well:
http://www.hockeyheadquarters.com/ar...okie-cards.php
Regarding SCF's designation of UD Ice as an insert set that determination was reached based open opinion rather than standard industry practice, therefore, adding to the confusion. Ice packs can be sold separately despite the fact they are included in another product and Ice remains a stand alone set with an NHLPA license. Therefore, they meet the criteria of true rookies.
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08-23-2012, 02:30 PM #30
Correct me where I'm wrong, but the license that both Upper Deck and Panini hold entities them to produce 11 sets each year.
That is a fact.
After that, you're right. It's a lot of conjecture, opinion, whatever.
To me - If the manufacturers are limited to 11 sets, that tells me that there are AT MOST going to be 22 Rookie Cards of each player in a season. Each manufacturer gets to make 11 of them.
If Panini wants to insert National Treasures into another product, or Upper Deck wants to drop Ice inside another product, I don't understand how anyone considers those to be anything but an insert. A really nice looking inserts that's limited.... will be worth a lot in terms of cash or trade value.... but its still an insert in my mind.
I can accept a Victory style update, being inserted into another set, and calling those RCs.... but Upper Deck did not release Ice this year. They released Black Diamond & SPx, and inserted 'bonus' packs inside them.
That this happened with Ice though, makes for a very unique situation. Ice was the one brand of UD cards that was truley unique IMO, and a shame that they did away with it. I would have folded SPx or SPGU before dropping this one.
Anyway - you've got a long list of people who have been collecting Ice RCs for a lot of years.... and since Upper Deck has still made them available: Those collectors (and many who never had more than a casual interest in Ice too) refuse to think of them as anything other than a RC.
I have no problem with that. If you think it's a RC, good for you. Collect what you like, as that is (IMO) the most important thing.
However, I don't have to agree with you. While I understand the logic behind the "Ice are still RCs" argument, there is also sound logic on the other side. This is going to be something that people will disagree about for a long time.
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