We are an eBay affiliate and may be compensated for clicks on links that result in purchases.

Ebay Seller Bthoven14 Roger Maris Autographed Baseball Ugly Forgery

Check out his ugly Roger Maris forgery on a baseball found on Ebay.

The below putrid-looking Roger Maris forgery on a baseball is listed by Ebay seller Bthoven14.

Ebay seller Bthoven14 writes "Will guarantee the signature to be authentic and pass any respected third-party authentication service."

Seriously?

Both PSA and JSA will deem the below "Roger Maris" autograph "Not Authentic" in a millisecond.

This is one ugly Roger Maris forgery on a baseball listed by Ebay seller Bthoven14.

http://www.ebay.com/itm/FINE-ROGER-MARIS-NEW-YORK-YANKEES-SINGLE-SI...

Tags: Ny, Yankees, baseball, bthoven14, ebay, forgery, maris, roger, seller, signed

Views: 1283

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Never said you did. I said you were selling a fake which you were. Did I say you made it? I didnt. I did however point out the bidding activity which is highly irregular. I would even go as far as to ask could this be the person you were selling these for? Not saying you're in on it but that activity is highly suspicious. As a person with as much feedback as yourself you know this. 

Whats the (2) ebay id? 

hello rock,

yes, i understand the suspicion of the bidding but what it appears to be is someone who has signed up recently, found my site, and started bidding and until they do something wrong i have to allow them to bid. no, it is definitely not anyone bidding who owns these items. would never allow that. take care

oh sorry...forgot....the (2) in some of my titles is just a way of me identifying an item that is similar to another... for example, i listed two auburn rubber red football players and the second one i listed i placed a (2) in the title to differentiate between the two. take care 

I meant the bidder with (2) feedback whats their id? 

 would i be allowed to say? wouldn't i get into trouble? they are meant to be anonymous aren't they?

Bob there isn't one letter in this maris signature that is consistent with authentic examples. The letters in the first name are much too large relative to the size of the letters in his last name. The capital R and M, which are considered primary check points of authentication in a Maris signature, are poorly formed. As everyone on here has stated this is an easy to spot forgery. Not even close.

wonderful, thank you....finally someone has at least given me an explanation and i thank you for it. take care, bob 

i totally understand William and believe me i would not allow it nor do it. take care

RSS

© 2024   Created by Steve Cyrkin, Admin.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy Policy  |  Terms of Service