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Episode 295 of Sports Cards Live closes out with a blunt, necessary conversation about responsibility in the hobby. We finish unpacking the Wilt Chamberlain PSA downgrade and move past the shock value into the real issues: PSA’s grade guarantee limits, insurance caps, NDAs, and why the buyer likely absorbed the majority of the loss.
We debate why a buyer would request a review on a card that sold as a PSA 10, what PSA is and is not obligated to do under its own terms, and whether exceptions behind closed doors create fairness issues for the broader hobby. The conversation also tackles a key question raised in the chat: should auction houses like Heritage bear responsibility for selling overgraded cards?
From contract law to hobby ethics, we draw a clear line between counterfeit liability and misgrading reality. We explain why auction houses are middlemen, not graders, and why shifting that responsibility would create even bigger conflicts of interest. This segment also touches on reslabbing policies, reholdering versus regrading, contingent liabilities, and why older slabs represent a structural challenge no grading company wants to fully reopen.
The episode winds down with broader end-of-year reflections: grading trust, accountability, collector responsibility, and why “buyer beware” still matters even in a slabbed world. We close by looking ahead to 2026, upcoming shows, the Sport Card Expo in Toronto, and continued development of the Hobby Spectrum and Spectrum Directory.
In this episode:
Why PSA cannot simply erase past sales or comps
Grade guarantee caps and why $800K losses are not getting reimbursed
NDAs, discretionary payouts, and fairness concerns
Reholdering vs regrading and why that distinction matters
Why auction houses are not liable for grading outcomes
Counterfeit cards vs overgraded cards: a critical legal difference
Buyer responsibility at the ultra-high end of the hobby
Why reopening decades of grading would be chaos
End-of-year reflections and what to expect in 2026
Sports Cards Live streams live every Saturday night on YouTube.
If you haven’t yet, visit TheHobbySpectrum.com to join the waitlist, discover your collector identity, and add your social and hobby links to the Spectrum Directory. It’s free to use and built for discoverability.
Thank you for an incredible year. We’ll see you in 2026.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By Cloud104.4
4747 ratings
Episode 295 of Sports Cards Live closes out with a blunt, necessary conversation about responsibility in the hobby. We finish unpacking the Wilt Chamberlain PSA downgrade and move past the shock value into the real issues: PSA’s grade guarantee limits, insurance caps, NDAs, and why the buyer likely absorbed the majority of the loss.
We debate why a buyer would request a review on a card that sold as a PSA 10, what PSA is and is not obligated to do under its own terms, and whether exceptions behind closed doors create fairness issues for the broader hobby. The conversation also tackles a key question raised in the chat: should auction houses like Heritage bear responsibility for selling overgraded cards?
From contract law to hobby ethics, we draw a clear line between counterfeit liability and misgrading reality. We explain why auction houses are middlemen, not graders, and why shifting that responsibility would create even bigger conflicts of interest. This segment also touches on reslabbing policies, reholdering versus regrading, contingent liabilities, and why older slabs represent a structural challenge no grading company wants to fully reopen.
The episode winds down with broader end-of-year reflections: grading trust, accountability, collector responsibility, and why “buyer beware” still matters even in a slabbed world. We close by looking ahead to 2026, upcoming shows, the Sport Card Expo in Toronto, and continued development of the Hobby Spectrum and Spectrum Directory.
In this episode:
Why PSA cannot simply erase past sales or comps
Grade guarantee caps and why $800K losses are not getting reimbursed
NDAs, discretionary payouts, and fairness concerns
Reholdering vs regrading and why that distinction matters
Why auction houses are not liable for grading outcomes
Counterfeit cards vs overgraded cards: a critical legal difference
Buyer responsibility at the ultra-high end of the hobby
Why reopening decades of grading would be chaos
End-of-year reflections and what to expect in 2026
Sports Cards Live streams live every Saturday night on YouTube.
If you haven’t yet, visit TheHobbySpectrum.com to join the waitlist, discover your collector identity, and add your social and hobby links to the Spectrum Directory. It’s free to use and built for discoverability.
Thank you for an incredible year. We’ll see you in 2026.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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