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Sports memorabilia

Collectables associated with sports


Collectables associated with sports

Sports memorabilia are collectables associated with sports, including equipment, trophies, sports cards, autographs, and photographs. A multi-billion-dollar industry has grown around the trading of sports memorabilia.

Monetary value

Items that have been in direct contact with a famous athlete can have significant monetary value. Game-used items, such as a ball Mark McGwire hit for his 70th home run of the 1998 season, sold for $3 million. The most expensive piece of sports memorabilia ever sold was a New York Yankees baseball jersey worn by Babe Ruth during his 'called shot' game in the 1932 World Series. It sold for $24.12 million in 2024. In 2016, the ten most valuable sports cards and memorabilia sold for a record-setting combined $12,186,294. The highest price fetched for an association football shirt is $224,000. The shirt belonged to Pelé, who wore it during the 1970 World Cup final in which Brazil went on to win. Collectors of sports memorabilia may seek to authenticate items to prove their veracity. Autographed items are nearly always more valuable than non-autographed items. Sports memorabilia items are considered good investments by collectors, as the industry and prices of items grow rapidly.

References

References

  1. David Seideman. (September 19, 2018). "Tech Entrepreneur Determines First Estimate Of U.S. Sports Memorabilia Market: $5.4 Billion".
  2. Binkley, Christina. (2023-07-30). "How Sports Memorabilia Exploded Into a Booming Billion-Dollar Business".
  3. "McFarlane Paid $3 Million for McGwire's 70th Home Run Ball - The Tech".
  4. (2024-08-25). "Ruth 'called shot' jersey sells for record $24.12M".
  5. (December 29, 2016). "In 2016 The Top 10 Most Valuable Sports Cards And Memorabilia Commanded A Record $12 Million+". [[Forbes]].
  6. (2002-03-27). "Pele's shirt goes for record".
  7. Coffey, Brendan. (2023-12-20). "What Is a Collectible? Sports Memorabilia Interest Surges".
  8. (2024-08-21). "Buyer's Guide to Sports Memorabilia".
  9. (2024-08-02). "Pin-demonium hits Paris: Inside the pin-trading market at the Olympics".
  10. Chou, Kathryn. "Pin trading is a huge deal at the Olympics — here's what you should know about the 122-year-old tradition".
  11. Vanhemert, Kyle. "Inside the crazy world of Olympic pin-trading, where everyone wants the Pikachu pin.".
  12. "Snoop Dogg's Olympic pin is what everybody in Paris wants".
  13. Bumbaca, Chris. "Snoop Dog's pin is Paris Olympics' hottest item. Even he doesn't know where to find one.".
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This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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