What's the Deal with Tony Lazzeri?

Saw a fairly nice Marathon Tony Lazzeri glove on eBay with a "Buy-it-Now" price of $499. That price made me do a double-take!
At the same time, another Lazzeri glove- this one in much better condition- was running with an open-auction format. That auction just ended at $330.
The first glove with the fixed-price didn't sell. Now it has been re-listed with a "BIN" price of $359 (probably still too high when compared to the nicer one that sold for just less than that).
The glove itself looks identical to the Marathon-issued Joe Gordon personal model from the same era. It's a buckle-back glove with a somewhat unusual wrist strap arrangement and a reinforced split-finger design. Lazzeri was a Yankee and eventual Hall-of-Famer, having been inducted by the veteran's committee nearly 50 years after he played his last game.
Strangely, while Lazzeri gloves can be found in the "Catalog Source Book" (both as "found" and "cataloged") and in the "Autograph Glove Finder" (which is basically a cross-reference of the "Catalog" book), his gloves are nowhere to be found in the "Vintage Glove Price Guide" (an omission by oversight?).
Those prices seem to be on the high-end, especially when compared to similar gloves of the same age endorsed by better-known players. Is this just a case of a convergence of factors- age, condition, rarity, Yankee player, HOF'er- coming together to net a high price?
I wonder if Lazzeri's omission from the price guide has led some to believe that this glove is more scarce than it actually is?
Link to Completed eBay auction
Link to "BIN" Glove
At the same time, another Lazzeri glove- this one in much better condition- was running with an open-auction format. That auction just ended at $330.
The first glove with the fixed-price didn't sell. Now it has been re-listed with a "BIN" price of $359 (probably still too high when compared to the nicer one that sold for just less than that).
The glove itself looks identical to the Marathon-issued Joe Gordon personal model from the same era. It's a buckle-back glove with a somewhat unusual wrist strap arrangement and a reinforced split-finger design. Lazzeri was a Yankee and eventual Hall-of-Famer, having been inducted by the veteran's committee nearly 50 years after he played his last game.
Strangely, while Lazzeri gloves can be found in the "Catalog Source Book" (both as "found" and "cataloged") and in the "Autograph Glove Finder" (which is basically a cross-reference of the "Catalog" book), his gloves are nowhere to be found in the "Vintage Glove Price Guide" (an omission by oversight?).
Those prices seem to be on the high-end, especially when compared to similar gloves of the same age endorsed by better-known players. Is this just a case of a convergence of factors- age, condition, rarity, Yankee player, HOF'er- coming together to net a high price?
I wonder if Lazzeri's omission from the price guide has led some to believe that this glove is more scarce than it actually is?
Link to Completed eBay auction
Link to "BIN" Glove