Every once in a while, something from the early ’90s reads less like hobby history and more like a live read.
This piece by Shawn Reilly, published in the May 1992 issue of Baseball Cards Magazine, captures a moment when auctions were starting to fundamentally reshape the memorabilia market. Dealers and shows were no longer the center of gravity; auction houses were becoming the place where the best material surfaced, where prices were discovered, and where serious money competed.
Sound familiar?
What makes this article especially interesting today is how clearly it outlines the shift: rising prices driven by a small pool of aggressive bidders, outside money entering the space, and a growing belief that memorabilia could function as an investment class. Replace Sotheby’s headlines and early auction houses with today’s venture-backed platforms, fractional groups, and deep-pocketed buyers, and the framework is nearly identical.
Some things change. Some cycles just repeat with more capital.


Happy collecting!
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