Over the years I’ve seen countless otherwise gem mint Japanese Pokemon cards receive PSA 8 or 9 grades due to being off-centered.
If PSA had a clear justification for when they dock a grade, it would be understandable. But their decision making when docking a mint card for centering is nearly arbitrary.
Here are the centering standards for PSA and BGS, taken from their website.
PSA Overall Grade with required centering parameter:
10: 55/45 to 60/40
9: 60/40 to 65/35
8: 65/35 to 70/30
www.psacard.com/resources/gradingstandards/#cards
Beckett Centering Subgrades:
10: 50/50 both ways
9.5: 50/50 one way, 55/45 the other
9: 55/45 both ways
8: 60/40 both ways
7: 65/35 both ways
www.beckett.com/grading/scale
In MTG, it is normalized in the hobby to have high end BGS cards reviewed for centering based on blown up high res scans measuring ratio based on pixels. For the other 3 subgrades, I think constantly sending cards for review/bump-ups can quickly cross a line into trying to over-grade your cards. But centering is completely justified, given that they have specific parameters listed, so if your card falls within those parameters, you should expect to receive that centering grade.
With Pokemon, I haven’t seen people do this much, and when they have it’s failed. PSA seemingly eyeball most Japanese cards, and since the borders are slimmer than English variants, differences in centering can be more immediately obvious.
That being said – PSA has their centering standards listed. Why are they not held accountable for misgrades based on centering?
Here’s a few examples I’ve seen, where the difference in grade, solely due to centering, is now a five-figure difference. I have blown up high res scans and measured the centering myself in Photoshop.
– A flawless card can have 57/43 centering and be visually unappealing, leading PSA to knock it down to a 9. Tecnically, they state “approximately 55/45 to 60/40” for a 10, to give them wiggle room. But if 60/40 centering is listed as 9 worthy, that should mean anything better than 60/40 deserves a 10.
– A flawless card can have 55.5/45.5 centering and be given a 9.
– A flawless card can have BETTER than 55/45 centering (eg 54/46) and be given a 9.
– A flawless card can have 59.5/41.5 centering and be given an 8 based on eyeball grade, despite being within 10 parameters.
– A flawless card can have 62/38 centering and be given an 8 based on eyeball grade, despite being within 9 parameters.
It’s gotten to the point where when an ungraded trophy card is listed on Yahoo Japan, people eyeball and will point out it won’t get a PSA 10 grade due to centering. And from experience, they are right! But if you blow up said card, it’s almost always within their PSA 10 standards and sometimes even better.
Regardless of one’s personal opinion on if a card with visually unappealing centering should reveive a 10 grade, the reality is PSA publicly writes that 55/45 - 60/40 is worthy of a 10 grade, yet throws this out the window with Pokemon.
In the past, it hasn’t been worth spending so much money on graded card reviews. But as cards rise in value, and the difference between 8 - 9 - 10 grows higher, it’s going to be increasingly frustrating to get a 9 grade due to 56/44 centering.
I’d like to hear people’s experiences of reviewing graded cards for centering docks, and if any progress can be made on this issue. Heck, if PSA wants to have different standards for Pokemon, and demand 50/50 - 55/45 is required for a 10, then they can do that – but if it’s something they already have as an internal standard, it’s not fair for the Pokemon community to be left in the dark, while the Sports card collectors can properly estimate what grade a card can receive based on centering.