A 115-year-old piece of cardboard the size of a matchbook, printed on machines that don’t exist anymore, selling for more than most Americans will earn in their whole lives is a little strange. But that’s exactly what’s happening in the top level of the sports collectibles market right now. The numbers don’t surprise anyone who has been paying attention.
A Memory Lane catalog from January 2026 began with two lots that most likely tell you everything you need to know about the state of the market. In Lots 1 and 2, there are PSA 8 examples of the T206 Ty Cobb in both “bat off shoulder” and “bat on shoulder” styles. First bid on each? Five hundred thousand dollars. Not the likely price of sale. The first bid. The T206 set, which collectors call “The Monster,” has long had a mythical status in the hobby, and high-grade cards from it are now considered to be very valuable.
It’s not just the prices that are interesting. This is the catalog itself. It has more than 290 pages and more than 1,450 lots that cover American sports history from the Dead Ball Era to the Jordan years. There are items from before the war, like a 1952 Topps Mantles set, a 1957–58 Topps basketball set with almost every card graded PSA 8 or better, and signed items from Ruth and Gehrig. The range is meant to be there. An auction house like Memory Lane knows that the serious money and the nostalgic money often hang out together. It’s an art to make a catalog that speaks to both groups.

In the hobby, there’s a belief that pre-war items have been undervalued for most of the last twenty years because they are so hard to find. Post-war stars, like Mantle, Mays, and Robinson rookies, got more attention because most people knew who they were. Before World War II, collecting required a lot of work. You had to learn the sets, the printers, the tobacco brands, and the regional differences. You don’t just happen to find a Drum Tobacco back T206 Sam Crawford card. It takes years to figure out what it is and why it’s important.
Now, that skill is being rewarded right now. This catalog has 1915 Cracker Jack cards of Cobb, Shoeless Joe Jackson, and Walter Johnson. These cards aren’t rare like diamonds are. They’re very rare, like original newspaper front pages from the same time period: they’re fragile and easy to lose, and there aren’t many of them left that no one has fully mapped out. A high-quality Jackson copy carries the extra weight of his complicated legacy, which doesn’t seem to cut into collector demand but rather boost it.
It’s still not clear if the current prices reflect real long-term value or just a market that’s been inflated by ten years of low interest rates and new money pouring into real estate. It is possible for two things to be true at the same time. Watching a 1920 National Caramel Babe Ruth card go up for auction next to a full ticket to the Yankees’ first-ever World Series win in 1923 is less about making money and more about being close to history that can’t be made again.
People who really enjoy the hobby have always been there. The auction houses that serve them have become more advanced to handle the needs of large institutions. However, the fact that this is still mainly about people who love old baseball cards remains unchanged. Memory Lane’s January catalog does a better job of finding that balance than most. In the end, only the person who bids can say if that’s enough to justify putting down $50,000 for a T206.
