A Nap Lajoie game used bat can sell in the $45,000. price range if accompanied by the proper paperwork or provenance. The absence of acceptable documentation linking the bat to the noted player will bring a much lower price and will have to be identified using player Characteristics. The quality of provenance accompanying the game used bat will dictate the bulk of the value. Provenance is the documentation of the history of ownership of a particular item. It allows the buyer to secure additional insight as to the origin or chain of custody of the item. the provenance must come from a verifiable source. For example, a letter that comes from a source like a player, team executive, family member could have great impact while bats that originate from a particular collection or bats that come with letters from a spectator may not be given much, if any , weight. Player Characteristics For example could be the way a player taped a bat, or applied pine tar. Characteristics so unique to those players that the presence of those characteristics dramatically improves the likelihood that these players used these exact bats. The bat must show some signs of game-use that are attributable to or known for that particular player With or without provenance the bat will have to be evaluated by a repuitable authenticating service. The experts that evaluate the bat will have to rely solely on player Characteristics and the bat will achieve a lower grade bringing the value down. However under rare circumstances a game-used bat that possesses extraordinary player characteristics may achieve a higher grade than a bat that is accompanied by provenance, if the player usage characteristics are superior. The degree of game use could also effect the value of the bat. Game used bats do not receive grades like "Mint" or "Near Mint" based on sheer condition. Game-used bats need to show some sign of wear in order for the expert to render an opinion. It is also part of the appeal of collecting game-used bats. Most collectors of game used bats prefer bats that Show "great use" A Nap Lajoie game used bat accompanied only by word of mouth might only sell in the $1,000. price range if the buyer is aware of what player Characteristics to look for. Even a Nap Lajoie store model bat could sell at or close to that price. To achieve a value of $45,000. the bat will have to have strong evidence that puts the bat in Nap Lajoie's hands during a game. The lesser degree of evidence will put the value of the bat between $1,000. -$45,000. accordingly. For more information on game used bats visit my website. I will leave a link below
Nap Lajoie's birth name is Napoleon Lajoie.
Nap Lajoie is 6' 1".
Nap Lajoie was born on September 5, 1874.
Nap Lajoie was born on September 5, 1874.
Nap Lajoie went by Poli, and Larry.
Nap Lajoie died on February 7, 1959 at the age of 84.
Nap Lajoie died on February 7, 1959 at the age of 84.
Nap Lajoie was born September 5, 1874, in Woonsocket, RI, USA.
Nap Lajoie died February 7, 1959, in Daytona Beach, FL, USA.
Nap Lajoie was born on September 5, 1874 and died on February 7, 1959. Nap Lajoie would have been 84 years old at the time of death or 140 years old today.
1960 and 1961 Fleer had regular issue cards made of Nap Lajoie but they were not reprints of original cards. 2004 Topps reprint of 1915 Cracker Jack Nap Lajoie #66
Nap Lajoie is 6 feet 1 inches tall. He weighs 195 pounds. He bats right and throws right.