Inside the Vault — "The Canada Kid" · Issue #05 · May 22, 2026
Dugout Vault
Inside the Vault
The sports card newsletter for collectors who want real intel, not hype.
Issue #05
May 22, 2026
newsletter.dugoutvault.app
"The Canada Kid"
Eric Hartman's 2026 breakout, the grading monopoly lawsuit every collector needs to know, and a Roman Anthony RC you can actually afford
🔒 Vault Trivia — Braves Edition
Hank Aaron's 1954 Topps rookie card (#128) is one of the most coveted pieces in the entire hobby — a PSA 8 can command five figures. But Aaron was more than just a cardboard legend. In what year did he break Babe Ruth's all-time home run record of 714?
Scroll to the bottom for the answer.
Allen's Note

Ripped 5 blasters this week — 3 packs of '26 Bowman, 2 Prospect Edition — and the results were...meh.

No autos. Three numbered cards total, and only one came from Bowman. On paper, a losing week. But honestly? I still love both of these products. The '26 Bowman checklist is loaded, the Prospect Edition has some genuinely interesting names, and ripping packs is just fun — not every break needs to end in a big hit to be worth doing. The hobby isn't always the pull. Sometimes it's just the process.

5 blaster rip — 3x 2026 Bowman, 2x Prospect Edition

That said, those five blasters got me thinking about something bigger. Because if I had pulled something worth grading this week, the landscape for doing that has changed dramatically — and not in our favor. There's a lawsuit working its way through federal court right now that goes directly to the question of whether collectors will have real choices the next time they open their grading app.

Let's talk about it.

The Grading Monopoly Lawsuit You Need to Know About

In April 2026, a collector named Michael Rasmussen filed a class-action antitrust lawsuit against Collectors Holdings — the parent company of PSA — in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California. Case number: 8:26-cv-00897. The allegation: that Collectors Holdings used back-to-back acquisitions to build an illegal monopoly over sports card grading, then used that position to raise prices and degrade service quality.

How We Got Here

Collectors Holdings acquired SGC in February 2024 and Beckett Grading Services (BGS) in December 2025. Add PSA — which they already owned — and you have one company controlling an estimated 80% of the card grading market. The lawsuit cites Section 7 of the Clayton Act (acquisitions that substantially lessen competition) and Section 2 of the Sherman Act (monopolization). The complaint details price increases at both SGC and BGS following acquisition, longer service terms, and PSA raising its own prices at the same time. When the three options you had are all owned by the same person, the competitive pressure that kept those prices honest disappears.

Why It Matters to You

The grading market used to be like a neighborhood with three independent mechanics — you could shop on price, turnaround time, and reputation. Now those three shops are under the same ownership. He sets the price, he sets the wait time, and your only real alternative is to skip grading altogether. That's what this lawsuit is challenging. Congressman Pat Ryan has written to the FTC demanding an investigation. The remedy being sought isn't just damages — it's forced divestiture, which would require Collectors Holdings to sell off SGC and/or Beckett to restore real competition.

Company Acquisition Date Impact (per complaint)
PSA Pre-existing ~50% market share baseline
SGC acquired February 2024 Price increases post-acquisition
BGS (Beckett) acquired December 2025 Price increases + longer turnarounds
Combined Now ~80% of grading market under one roof

Sources: Value Added Resource · Cardlines · Bloomberg Law

My Take

I'm not a lawyer, and antitrust cases take years to resolve. But the underlying issue isn't about legal theory — it's about something real that collectors are living through right now. PSA bulk submission costs are up, turnaround times are pushing past seven months, and the alternatives that used to keep PSA honest are now under the same roof. Whether the lawsuit succeeds or not, the question of what a healthy, competitive grading market looks like is one the hobby needs to take seriously. Worth following. Case: 8:26-cv-00897, Central District of California.

In the meantime — Bowman season is here, we've got a Braves prospect worth knowing about, and Roman Anthony's most accessible card is right in front of us. Let's get into it. — Allen
Founder, Dugout Vault

🪓 Chop Talk — Braves Corner

Eric Hartman Might Be the Best Braves Card Nobody Is Buying Yet

Eric Hartman — Atlanta Braves / Rome Emperors
Eric Hartman
OF · Atlanta Braves / High-A Rome Emperors · St. Albert, AB, Canada · Age 19
.326
2026 AVG
12
HR (2026)
1.097
OPS
+7 mph
Exit velo
jump
#100
BA Top 100

A 20th-round pick in 2024 out of Holy Trinity High School in Okotoks, Alberta — $337,500 bonus, zero hype. Then 2026 happened. Hartman is hitting .326 with a 1.097 OPS and 12 HRs in 132 AB for High-A Rome, his exit velo jumped nearly 7 mph to over 91 mph, and Baseball America just slotted him at #100 on their Top 100. That recognition matters — it's the kind of moment that moves prices.

His 2026 Bowman Chrome Prospect Auto is his first Bowman card. The secondary market is reflecting early interest: the Blue /150 is trading around $642 and the Gold Shimmer /50 around $560 — but because Hartman is still flying under the radar outside the Braves fanbase, the base auto remains an accessible entry. Source: SportsCardsPro / eBay auction data, May 2026

The Braves Fan Take: You're not paying Konnor Griffin prices here. You're betting on a Canadian kid who might quietly become one of the best power bats in the system — and he's ours. BA called him out by name as one of the 2026 Bowman prospects to know. The window at these prices is open, but probably not for long. Chop.
Market Pulse
2026 Bowman Secondary Market — Quick Read

We covered the full Bowman market breakdown in Issue #04 — including the Chase DeLauter 40% single-week spike and the 30-day price curve that applies to almost every first Bowman auto. The short version: hobby boxes retailing at $239.99 are trading around $310 on the secondary market, and patience still wins — most Chrome autos soften 15–20% within 30 days as breaker supply hits eBay. The exception is a prospect who keeps producing. Which brings us to Hartman (see Chop Talk).

The Patient Play: Bowman Mega Box drops May 30, Sapphire follows June 4 — two more supply waves that typically bring better secondary pricing than the initial hobby release. If you missed the first wave, those are your next best entry points.
The Card Worth Knowing
Roman Anthony
OF · Boston Red Sox · Debuted June 2025
2026 Topps Series 1
Rookie Card #189
Budget Entry Point
RC
Official Topps
Rookie Card
#189
Card # in
2026 Topps S1
2–3×
Box cost flip
(early sales)
1,450+
eBay sales
debut day
$93K
Record sale
(Red /5 PSA 10)

Roman Anthony is one of the best young hitters in the game. His 2023 Bowman Chrome Prospect Autos have set records — a Red Refractor /5 PSA 10 cleared $93,000 in February 2026, and the base auto PSA 10 is trading $800–$900. But today's focus is the accessible entry: his 2026 Topps Series 1 RC #189 — his first official Topps rookie card designation. When Anthony debuted in June 2025, eBay logged 1,450+ sales in a single day. Early secondary market data shows these S1 RCs flipping at 2–3× box cost, with True Photo Variations and All Kings inserts carrying steeper premiums. For a collector who wants exposure to Anthony's upside without committing $800+, the S1 RC is how you get in the conversation. Sources: Athlon Sports · eBay sold listings, May 2026

What to Watch: His 2026 Bowman Chrome Rookie Autos are already in hand from the May 7–8 release — the natural next step up from the S1 RC. And when Topps Series 2 drops June 10, another wave of RC supply arrives that could either sustain demand or soften base prices. Buy the S1 base now, or wait for Series 2 and reassess.
What's Dropping
MAY
21
Panini Donruss Baseball 2026
Classic retro design, affordable parallels, and Rated Rookies as the chase tier. Good budget alternative to Topps for player collectors. Out Now
MAY
25
2026 Topps Tier One Baseball
Guaranteed on-card autos, high-end parallels, premium rip experience. Best for collectors who want quality over quantity. Premium
MAY
30
2026 Bowman Baseball Mega Box Edition
Your next shot at Bowman Chrome prospect autos — including Hartman — without paying hobby box secondary premiums. Braves Alert
JUN
4
2026 Bowman Sapphire Edition
Crisper Chrome printing than the standard release — the preferred format if you're planning to grade a Hartman or any 2026 Bowman prospect auto. Grade Targets
JUN
10
2026 Topps Series 2 Baseball
More Roman Anthony RCs, new short prints, and photo variations. Another wave of supply that may soften S1 RC prices slightly — worth watching before you buy the base. Roman Anthony RC
JUN
17
2026 Topps Tribute Baseball
High-end veteran and legend autos with vintage design. Not a prospect product — but usually delivers at least one jaw-dropping legacy pull. Legend Content

Sources: Beckett Release Calendar · Waxstat 2026 Calendar · topps.com · Dates subject to change.

🔓 Vault Trivia — Answer
1974

On April 8, 1974, Hank Aaron hit his 715th career home run off Al Downing of the Los Angeles Dodgers at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium — breaking Babe Ruth's record of 714 that had stood for 39 years. Aaron finished his career with 755 home runs. His 1954 Topps rookie card (#128) is one of the most coveted pieces in the hobby: a PSA 8 has sold for $10,000+, and a PSA 9 — of which very few exist — has commanded six figures at auction. Few cards connect the history of a franchise to the history of the hobby quite like it.

Keep Reading