bought this on ebay trying to see if real or fake ty

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I'm not familiar with his signature, but would advise you to search this site for "sportsnmore9999."

I am puzzled by the title of your thread?

Click your mouse on the above image to get a closer view.

This should tell you all you need to know about that seller.

https://live.autographmagazine.com/forum/topics/ebay-seller-sportsn...

500+ feedbacks per month. Consistently. 5000+ feedbacks in one year alone. Not even one item, that I could see, sold in the past month, had any provenance other than, "I got this myself". And that 500 feedbacks can very well be 5000, if one Ebayer purchases more than one item at the same time, if they leave feedback for 12 items, that counts as only one tic on the feedback counter overall number. Also, buyers often forego leaving feedback.

Unless he or one of his employees is the Flash, or he has an unlimited army of autograph hounds chasing down signors, and he's willing to lose money in expenses for every auto he sells, it is what it is, Chris is 100% correct.

In my opinion, it's a case of "aim small, miss small". The counterfeiter who was satisfied to produce dollar bills, instead of larger denominations. Less risk, less exposure. Except that this fellow will fall eventually. Too many pieces. Just a matter of time.

+1

If it came from that seller,I wouldn't touch it with a ten foot pole.

As a general comment, I am constantly amazed at the number of folks who will buy items on eBay with no returns, a NOT proof photo that proves nothing, and the "I got it myself" bit...such a triad of red flags.

This is why sellers of forgeries are so successful on Ebay.

Ebay is so heavily-populated with delusional collectors and impulse buyers.

Technically speaking, even if the seller states, "As is". "No returns". "If you don't like it, go fish", etc., etc., a buyer can still initiate the "item received not as described" dispute and paypal will freeze the funds for the purchase pending resolution, which is always "settled" in deference to the buyer. the seller having little say or choice in the matter. Ebay and Paypal's policy is "the buyer is always right". I don't even know why a seller would risk alienating potential bidders by stating, "no returns", as that simply is not the case on ebay.

It's interesting to compare some of the JSA authenticated signed LPs from eBay seller krukcards to those offered by sportsnmore9999.

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