Ballpark Figures

PODCAST · sports

Ballpark Figures

Ballpark Figures is where sports fandom meets smart investing. Hosted by Michele Steele and Rob Shaw, the show dives deep into the fast-moving world of sports collectibles — from trading cards and memorabilia to the market forces driving prices up (or crashing them down).

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    The Collector Reality: Big Box Scores Don’t Always Create Big Price Spikes

    Welcome back to Ballpark Figures, presented by Stocktwits. Michelle Steele and Rob Shaw open with a collector’s reality check after the “new 83-point game” from Bam Adebayo: insane box score, cool moment… but not every scoring eruption turns into a lasting price spike. Rob explains why these moments matter most to the people who watched it live (or were there) — and why it’s not the same kind of mainstream market-moving event as the Olympics, the Super Bowl, or Kobe’s 81. Then it’s time for Bulls & Bears — with a little Español flavor — led by three Bulls: Junior Caminero, a monster power profile and a big slab-pack hit that sparks a real “bull market” thesis (even in peak baseball season). Bobby Witt Jr., the blue-chip Kansas City superstar with a Bowman Chrome auto move that’s already climbing. Jayson Tatum, whose comeback flips the market fast — and Rob shares a key marketplace lesson after almost accepting a lowball offer. On the Bears side, Rob runs tape-to-tape through three names whose value has cooled: Hunter Greene, elite results but brutal injury risk and the harsh pitcher reality in the hobby. Jasson Domínguez, “The Martian” whose everyday opportunity didn’t translate — and what the pinstripes premium means if he’s sent down or moved. Scoot Henderson, trending toward “sell even at bottom rates” as the trajectory starts to look more role-player than franchise guard. Next up: Rob breaks down two major transactions — one high-conviction bet on a Mets prospect (with real downside if it doesn’t hit), and another deal that turns a scarce Acuña into cash, a Bobby Witt case hit, and J.J. Weatherholt upside. Finally, we head into the personal collection: cards Rob isn’t selling — from Bo Knows (including a Toys “R” Us PSA 10), to a special Dwight Gooden piece with a personal story, a Willie Mays Mets card from 1973, and a wild Michael Jordan baseball short print that’s now a four-figure PSA 10. The episode closes with the marketplace rule of the week: if you spot value, don’t nickel-and-dime — because you might lose the card. Disclaimer: All opinions expressed on this show are solely the opinions of the hosts’ and guests’ and do not reflect the opinions of Stocktwits, Inc. or its affiliates. The hosts are not SEC or FINRA registered advisors or professionals. The content of this show is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Please consult with your financial advisor before making any investment decision. Read the full terms & conditions here: https://stocktwits.com/about/legal/terms/ 0:00 - Welcome + Bam’s “83-point game” collector takeaway 0:34 - Why big stats don’t always mean a lasting price spike 1:25 - Bam vs true mainstream market moments (Olympics/Super Bowl/Kobe 81) 3:20 - Bulls & Bears intro (Español vibes) 3:46 - Bull: Junior Caminero (Arena Club slab-pack hit + power thesis) 5:19 - Bull: Bobby Witt Jr. (Bowman Chrome auto + blue-chip case) 6:57 - Bull: Jayson Tatum (comeback + marketplace negotiation lesson) 9:02 - Bears: Hunter Greene (pitcher risk + injuries) 9:58 - Bears: Jasson Domínguez (“Martian” hype vs results + pinstripes premium) 10:55 - Bears: Scoot Henderson (role-player risk + health concerns) 11:33 - Trader Rob intro 11:58 - Trade 1: Wemby + Ant-Man + Soto auto + cash → Mets prospect bet 14:02 - Trade 2: Acuña blue auto → $800 cash + Witt case hit + Weatherholt /99 15:39 - PC spotlight: “never sell” cards (Bo Knows + stories) 17:45 - PC spotlight: Dwight Gooden (personal story) 18:49 - PC spotlight: Willie Mays as a Met (1973) 19:49 - PC spotlight: Michael Jordan baseball short print PSA 10 21:13 - Rule of the week: don’t lose value by negotiating pennies + wrap

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    Juan Soto Value Play, Cade Cunningham Run-Up, and “Whatnot” Scams (Plus a Diamond Ring?!)

    Welcome back to Ballpark Figures, presented by Stocktwits — where we talk sports cards like a market. Michele Steele is joined by cardboard impresario Rob Shaw, fresh off the Bahamas (and yes, the Atlantis “Michael Jordan suite” stories made an appearance). This episode kicks off with Bulls & Bears: Rob makes the case that Juan Soto is still underrated and calls out a potential bargain in his 2018 Topps Chrome Update PSA 10. From there, we hit the hardwood with a playoff-minded play on Cade Cunningham, why his Prizm Silver PSA 10 has already doubled, and what a deep run could do to the card. We even get a rare hockey moment — how one massive international spotlight can move a market, and why Rob likes Jack Hughes’ Upper Deck rookie after a major price spike. On the Bear side: Jackson Holliday (why Rob is buying the dip anyway), Oneil Cruz (why it might be time to sell into preseason optimism), and Domantas Sabonis (injuries + team situation freezing the card thesis). Then we shift into Trader Rob with two deals: A vintage + modern swap that lands Rob in Jordan Lawlar upside. A Travis Kelce Downtown PSA 10 move that turns into a blue-chip Shohei Ohtani Topps Chrome Update rookie plus cash. Finally, we close with the wildest segment of the episode: Rob’s “adventures on Whatnot,” where a too-good-to-be-true Shohei deal turns into… a diamond ring showing up at his house. Rob breaks down three simple rules to protect yourself when buying cards online: background checks, seller reviews, and using PayPal protection (not friends & family). 0:05 - Welcome back + Bahamas / Atlantis “Michael Jordan suite” 0:44 - What’s on today: Olympics, Whatnot drama, Bulls & Bears 1:14 - Bull: Juan Soto (underrated + rookie card value thesis) 2:28 - Bull: Cade Cunningham (Prizm Silver PSA 10 run-up + playoffs) 3:51 - Hockey moment: Jack Hughes (international spotlight → card spike) 5:08 - Bear: Jackson Holliday (dip buying + youth + surgery context) 6:43 - Bear: Oneil Cruz (tools vs production + sell into optimism) 7:54 - Bear: Domantas Sabonis (injuries + “good player, bad team” risk) 9:08 - Trader Rob: George Brett + Soto PSA 9 → Jordan Lawlar upside 10:59 - Trader Rob: Kelce Downtown → Shohei Ohtani rookie + $75 12:32 - Whatnot story: buying cards… receiving a diamond ring 14:09 - Rob’s 3 scam-proof rules for buying cards online 16:38 - Wrap: diamond rings, weird deliveries, see you next time Disclaimer: All opinions expressed on this show are solely the opinions of the hosts’ and guests’ and do not reflect the opinions of Stocktwits, Inc. or its affiliates. The hosts are not SEC or FINRA registered advisors or professionals. The content of this show is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Please consult with your financial advisor before making any investment decision. Read the full terms & conditions here: https://stocktwits.com/about/legal/terms/

  3. 1

    The Super Bowl Card Market: Legends, Spikes, and What NOT to Buy

    Welcome back to Ballpark Figures — the Sports Trading Cards Edition, presented by Stocktwits. It’s Super Bowl week, which means legends can be made… and card prices can move fast. Michelle Steele and Rob Shaw break down the “cardboard implications” of the biggest game of the year, why this is usually not a buy-low moment, and how one game-defining play can turn an obscure name into an instant hobby spike. Then it’s time for Bulls & Bears. Rob highlights why Cooper Flagg cards are flooding the market (and why the current PSA 10 pricing isn’t sustainable), breaks down the Mets’ splash with Bo Bichette, and explains why Pirates prospect Konnor Griffin is already forcing his way into serious collector portfolios. On the Bears side, the conversation turns to value erosion and risk: Paolo Banchero slides into bargain territory, Carson Williams struggles with contact, and Jayden Daniels takes a brutal sophomore-year hit in the card market. Rob also opens the trade log with a blockbuster Wemby deal — swapping one big card for legend + upside — and then consolidates into a top prospect position. Finally, the episode ends with a full-blown grading rant after PSA returns Rob’s childhood grail: a 2000 Upper Deck “Hardcore” Kobe Bryant auto… as “inconclusive.” The inconsistency, the pricing model, and the hobby’s dependence on PSA all get put on the table. Stick around to the end for the Super Bowl prediction — and what it could mean for the marketplace. Chapters: 0:05 — Welcome back + Super Bowl week “cardboard implications” 0:34 — Why big games aren’t “buy low” moments (Malcolm Butler lesson) 1:22 — Legends vs. career greatness: how iconic plays move markets 3:12 — Markets are red… but Bulls & Bears is green (intro) 3:32 — Bull: Cooper Flagg (grading lag + PSA flood + pricing reality) 6:20 — Mets Bull: Bo Bichette (NY bump + 2020 hobby-chase effect) 8:50 — Bull: Konnor Griffin (Keith Law hype + early market moves) 11:12 — Bear: Paolo Banchero (winning matters + shooting concerns) 13:27 — Bear: Carson Williams (contact risk despite tools) 15:00 — Bear: Jayden Daniels (sophomore slump + card value hit) 17:09 — Trade Log: Wemby Prism Silver → Judge + Caminero + Basallo 21:06 — Trade Log: consolidation into J.J. Weatherholt 23:57 — PSA rant: Kobe auto “inconclusive” + hobby grading economics 30:22 — Super Bowl prediction: Seahawks vs Patriots + market impact ahead Disclaimer: All opinions expressed on this show are solely the opinions of the hosts’ and guests’ and do not reflect the opinions of Stocktwits, Inc. or its affiliates. The hosts are not SEC or FINRA registered advisors or professionals. The content of this show is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Please consult with your financial advisor before making any investment decision. Read the full terms & conditions here: https://stocktwits.com/about/legal/terms/

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Ballpark Figures is where sports fandom meets smart investing. Hosted by Michele Steele and Rob Shaw, the show dives deep into the fast-moving world of sports collectibles — from trading cards and memorabilia to the market forces driving prices up (or crashing them down).

HOSTED BY

stocktwits

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