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Showing posts from 2017

A Primer on Coin Grades

As an experienced buyer and seller of a variety of coins and antique jewelry, “Kota” Saint Jovite Youngblood works to supply collectibles to a network of dealers. His company, Youngblood Metals Mining, has been in business in Monrovia, California, for seven years. Saint Jovite Youngblood’s previous experience with coins includes a management position with Miracle Mile Coin Center in San Marino. Professionals grade previously circulated coins according to a standard scale that descends from 70 down to 1 and includes a system of descriptive adjectives. These descriptors range from “AU,” or “about uncirculated,” all the way down to “PO-1,” or so “poor” that most if not all of the identifying features have weathered away, making a piece close to unrecognizable. Not surprisingly, most coins on the market today fall somewhere between these extremes. The second-highest grade achievable, “XF” (sometimes abbreviated “EF”) indicates that a coin is “extremely fine.” Such coins display only mi

Kirk Gibson's Iconic Pinch-Hit Home Run

A business graduate of Case Western Reserve University and member of the Professional Numismatic Guild, "Kota" Saint Jovite Youngblood has over a decade of experience purchasing collectible coins and antiques. When he isn't busy seeking product as president of Youngblood Metals Mining, Saint Jovite Youngblood enjoys following his favorite Major League Baseball (MLB) team, the Los Angeles Dodgers. The last time the Dodgers won the World Series was in 1988, when the team beat the Oakland Athletics in five games. Orel Hershiser was named World Series MVP, but Kirk Gibson was responsible for the defining moment of the series, which happened in Game 1 and set the tone for the next four games. Trailing 4-3 to Oakland and down to its last at bat, Los Angeles sent Gibson to the plate, who had previously been declared ineligible for the series due to injury. With a runner on first base, Gibson hit a 3-2 pitch from Oakland closer Dennis Eckersley into the stands, giving the Dod

PCGS Reveals Mobile Redesign of Set Registry

California-based business leader “Kota” Saint Jovite Youngblood oversees the purchase of wholesale inventory for antique and coin collectibles dealers as the president of Youngblood Metals Mining. An active member of his professional community, Kota Saint Jovite Youngblood belongs to the Professional Coin Grading Service (PCGS). Since 1985, the PCGS has been setting the standard for coin grading and authentication. Over the years, the organization has adopted advancing technology and recently designed a mobile version of its PCGS Set Registry.  The PCGS Set Registry was created in 2001 as a way of allowing coin collectors to organize and analyze their collections. Since then, more than 82,000 coin sets have been registered through the PCGS website. However, the PCGS recently recognized the need to expand into the mobile realm, so the organization spent much of 2016 redesigning the Set Registry to function on mobile devices. The new version of the PCGS Set Registry, launched in earl

Clayton Kershaw's Three Cy Young Awards

After serving for a decade as a finance director, "Kota" Saint Jovite Youngblood transitioned into the collectible coin and antique industry. Currently leading Youngblood Metals Mining as president, Saint Jovite Youngblood is an avid Los Angeles Dodgers fan.  A seventh overall pick in the 2006 Major League Baseball (MLB) Amateur Draft, Clayton Kershaw has been a pillar of the Dodgers' starting rotation since his MLB debut in 2008. With a career record of 126-60, he has posted a sub-3.0 earned run average (ERA) in the past eight seasons. During that time, Kershaw has won three Cy Young awards as the best pitcher in the National League.  Kershaw won his first Cy Young in 2011 after posting a 21-5 record to go along with a 2.28 ERA and a league-best 248 strikeouts in 233.1 innings. Two years later he won the award for a second time, backed by a league-leading 1.83 ERA. The following year, in 2014, Kershaw had a career-best season in which he won both the Cy Young and Mos

PCGS Grades Rare Double Eagle Coin

For more than a decade, “Kota” Saint Jovite Youngblood has been working in the collectibles and wholesale antiques industry. He spent three years serving as the general manager of Miracle Mile Coins in California and he currently serves as the president of Youngblood Metals Mining. An active member of the professional community, Saint Jovite Youngblood belongs to PCGS. Professional Coin Grading Services (PCGS) has been the leading coin certification service in the United States for more than three decades. One of the rare gold coins that the organization has graded is the 1861 Philadelphia Mint Paquet Reverse Double Eagles. Earning a grade of MS67, the coin is insured for $8 million and was once owned by Egypt’s King Farouk. The 1861-P Paquet Double Eagle is the rarest of all U.S. Double Eagle coins. It was originally thought that the coin’s appearance was due to a unique pattern. Experts later discovered that the coin was meant for circulation, but, upon the discovery of a defect

PNG and ANA's Numismatic Trade Show to be Held in Denver, Colorado

In his role as president of Youngblood Metals Mining, Kota Saint Jovite Youngblood oversees the wholesale purchase of inventory, acting as a middleman and buyer for various antique and coin dealers. An expert on coins, Saint Jovite Youngblood currently belongs to the Professional Numismatic Guild (PNG).  PNG is partnering with the American Numismatic Association (ANA) to present the PNG/ANA Numismatic Trade Show. Scheduled for July 31st, the trade show will take place at Denver’s Colorado Convention Center. The event directly precedes the ANA World’s Fair of Money, held at the same venue.  The Numismatic Trade Show provides an opportunity for guests to browse and purchase dealer coins and materials before the World’s Fair of Money, but in a less crowded and more relaxed setting. For dealers, the show offers the opportunity to sell their wares, whether or not they plan on selling at the World’s Fair of Money.  The trade show will also include multiple auctions from Stack’s Bowers Gal

Dodgers' Adrian Gonzalez Named One of ESPN's Top 10 First Basemen

As the president of Youngblood Metals Mining, Kota Saint Jovite Youngblood is an expert in pre-1800 silver dollars, as well as vintage toys and Victorian-era jewelry. Located in Monrovia, California, Saint Jovite Youngblood is a self-professed die-hard Los Angeles Dodgers fan.  Los Angeles Dodgers first baseman Adrian Gonzalez recently ranked in a list of the top 10 first basemen in the league. The list, curated by ESPN Senior Writer Buster Olney, placed Gonzalez in the number eight spot, the same position he earned for Olney’s 2015 list.  The 34-year-old Adrian Gonzalez shares the list with other high-ranking first basemen, including Freddie Freeman, Anthony Rizzo, Paul Goldschmidt, Joey Votto, and Jose Abreu. Though the veteran Gonzalez was responsible for 18 home runs during the 2016 season, it was his lowest number of homers since 2012, thanks in part to injury.  The first baseman suffered through the season with continued pain from a pinched nerve which ultimately got so bad

A Brief History of Kendo

  A proven leader, “Kota” Saint Jovite Youngblood has held roles such as general manager and finance director. He currently leads Youngblood Metals Mining as president. Outside of his professional responsibilities, Saint Jovite Youngblood is working toward a black belt in kendo . Most historians connect kendo to kenjutsu, a sword-wielding method used by samurai warriors in Japan’s feudal times. Records of the sword-wielding art go back to the 8th century, but it was not until around the 14th century that kenjutsu schools began appearing in Japan. These schools emphasized the spiritual aspects of sword wielding. Students were taught social and moral aspects related to Zen Buddhism and Bushido, the Japanese way of the warrior. Kenjutsu was considered an indispensable part of samurai training, but its popularity declined after 1867 when sword wielding was banned in Japan. Kenjutsu came back into common use among the country’s police officers in 1877. Shortly after Japane