The Pirates’ pathetic offer for Paul Skenes card is slap in the face to the 11 year old who pulled it

The most sought-after baseball card of the year has been pulled from a collection just as Charlie Bucket found a golden ticket. An 11-year-old has opened up on Paul Skenes’ legendary 1-of-1 car, which is expected to fetch $1 million or more when it hits auction.
For those who aren’t familiar with the card terminology, this means it’s a Skenes rookie card, with a patch of his shirt, including his signature, of which there is only one. It has been highly sought after by collectors, as it was the Skenes card that pushed it to its highest levels with the 22-year-old expected to become one of the greats.
Before the card is sold Pittsburgh Pirates They try to get their hands on it so that Skenes can own it. Their offer seems tempting at first, but it’s just a joke.
The Buccaneers are not an elite team when it comes to ticket sales. Season tickets at the lower level are worth about $3,500 per season — so we’ll be generous and say tickets behind home plate are worth $7,000.
This means that season tickets alone will cost $420,000. you have to truly I love that the Buccaneers want to watch them play 30 seasons in a row. Not to mention the fact that you can make a million (or more) at the auction, buy a house, and keep buying tickets yourself if you want.
It is impossible to price a softball game offer. It’s more about how much are you going to pay for it? $10,000?
Skenes signed shirts are anything but. He signs a lot of T-shirts, and can be found for around $400 on eBay. Let’s go high from a reputable dealer It is sold framed and framed for $1,999.
Playing with Livvy Dunne is what an 11-year-old craves most for bragging rights. Another thing is basically whatever. Suppose it is worth $5,000?
This makes the total offer for the Pirates: $439,998. Even if we take into account 30 years of inflation in the entire package, the output comes out to $881,930.14, According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics inflation calculator.
Don’t be fooled, boy. Sell a card, buy a house, go to college – and save the rest.