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Everyone thought he was crazy đź‘€

In 2017, 12-year-old Andrew Park from California walked into a card show and spent $40,000 on a Giannis Antetokounmpo rookie card, a 1-of-1 National Treasures Logoman. He was an avid collector who had been flipping Pokémon and sports cards throughout his childhood, slowly building an eye for the next big opportunity.

At the time, most people doubted Giannis’ future. Some thought Andrew had overpaid, but he trusted his instincts and saw what others didn’t. Three years later, it paid off when he sold the card for $1.81 million, becoming the most expensive basketball card ever sold at that time.

A young collector’s bold move, patience, and belief in his own judgment turned a single card into collecting history. #1of1Day

(via @cardladder)
Everyone thought he was crazy đź‘€

In 2017, 12-year-old Andrew Park from California walked into a card show and spent $40,000 on a Giannis Antetokounmpo rookie card, a 1-of-1 National Treasures Logoman. He was an avid collector who had been flipping Pokémon and sports cards throughout his childhood, slowly building an eye for the next big opportunity.

At the time, most people doubted Giannis’ future. Some thought Andrew had overpaid, but he trusted his instincts and saw what others didn’t. Three years later, it paid off when he sold the card for $1.81 million, becoming the most expensive basketball card ever sold at that time.

A young collector’s bold move, patience, and belief in his own judgment turned a single card into collecting history. #1of1Day

(via @cardladder)
Everyone thought he was crazy đź‘€

In 2017, 12-year-old Andrew Park from California walked into a card show and spent $40,000 on a Giannis Antetokounmpo rookie card, a 1-of-1 National Treasures Logoman. He was an avid collector who had been flipping Pokémon and sports cards throughout his childhood, slowly building an eye for the next big opportunity.

At the time, most people doubted Giannis’ future. Some thought Andrew had overpaid, but he trusted his instincts and saw what others didn’t. Three years later, it paid off when he sold the card for $1.81 million, becoming the most expensive basketball card ever sold at that time.

A young collector’s bold move, patience, and belief in his own judgment turned a single card into collecting history. #1of1Day

(via @cardladder)
Everyone thought he was crazy đź‘€

In 2017, 12-year-old Andrew Park from California walked into a card show and spent $40,000 on a Giannis Antetokounmpo rookie card, a 1-of-1 National Treasures Logoman. He was an avid collector who had been flipping Pokémon and sports cards throughout his childhood, slowly building an eye for the next big opportunity.

At the time, most people doubted Giannis’ future. Some thought Andrew had overpaid, but he trusted his instincts and saw what others didn’t. Three years later, it paid off when he sold the card for $1.81 million, becoming the most expensive basketball card ever sold at that time.

A young collector’s bold move, patience, and belief in his own judgment turned a single card into collecting history. #1of1Day

(via @cardladder)
330K
13.2K
53

Everyone thought he was crazy 👀 In 2017, 12-year-old Andrew Park from California walked into a card show and spent $40,000 on a Giannis Antetokounmpo rookie card, a 1-of-1 National Treasures Logoman. He was an avid collector who had been flipping Pokémon and sports cards throughout his childhood, slowly building an eye for the next big opportunity. At the time, most people doubted Giannis’ future. Some thought Andrew had overpaid, but he trusted his instincts and saw what others didn’t. Three years later, it paid off when he sold the card for $1.81 million, becoming the most expensive basketball card ever sold at that time. A young collector’s bold move, patience, and belief in his own judgment turned a single card into collecting history. #1of1Day (via @cardladder)

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