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Anybody Collect Memorabilia?


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3 members have voted

  1. 1. Do you collect sports memorabilia?

    • Yes, I have paid for objects with historical significance.
      1
    • Yes, but only basic souvenirs for my own collection.
      4
    • No, I collect mementos, but nothing I need to purchase.
      2
    • No, I do not collect memorabilia.
      5


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  • Moderator
Posted

I saw that Rory's golf ball that he threw into the stands right after he won the British Open is up for auction, and is likely to sell for thousands of dollars.

http://espn.go.com/golf/story/_/id/11275989/ball-rory-mcilroy-open-championship-win-auction

Quote:
Through noon ET on Monday, 14 bids have been placed on the ball with a high bid of $3,137. The auction closes on Aug. 9, with the other items in the company's summer auction, including many Bobby Jones items. A program from Hoylake, part of Jones' grand slam in 1930, currently has a high bid of $10,573.

That seems kind of excessive, to me. I like to collect souvenirs of my travels and experiences, but I would never even consider buying something like this.

My mementos tend to have personal attachment to them, like golf balls or yardage books from courses I've played or game pucks that I picked up. I do not own, for example, dirt from the mound at the old Yankees Stadium, and I wouldn't want a homerun ball unless I caught it. There is no appeal to me to own an object from an event that I wasn't even at.

Thoughts? Anybody else collect memorabilia?

Bill

“By three methods we may learn wisdom: First, by reflection, which is noblest; Second, by imitation, which is easiest; and third by experience, which is the bitterest.” - Confucius

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Posted

I have a large framed black and white action photo of Ali and Foreman fighting, signed by both boxers! I love it!

Gaz Lee


  • Moderator
Posted

I have a few framed photos signed by musicians, a hockey stick signed by Bobby Orr, Phil Esposito and two other Bruins.

The only other thing I collect are refrigerator magnets of the places I have traveled.  In September, I will add Bangkok!

Scott

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Posted

I don't but wish I would have years ago. When my dad took me to baseball games as a kid sometimes we were close enough to the dugout to get a ball autographed and my dad would tell me I should try to get autographs from certain players.

Unfortunately I didn't value the autographs and anytime we needed a ball for our backyard games I would use an autographed ball without a second thought. If they signed something like my hat or my glove I just continued to use it as normal until it was thrown away when I got a new one.

Some of those would probably have some value today but I'm not sure how much.

Same with baseball cards. We got them in chewing gum, looked at them and read the stats, and then fastened them to our bicycle spokes to make noise. No telling how many valuable cards I destroyed doing that.

As an adult I never even think about getting an autograph when I meet somebody that's "famous".


Posted
Nope. I did ask Graeme to sign my 2010 US Open hat after we played, and one ball for a buddy's son, but that's it.

In David's bag....

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Posted
I used to collect a few things, but found they lost value to me ... Plus had to pack them when I moved ... I also discovered when you get rid of them, you have to find someone that is willing to pay the value you see in them ... As I age I just collect good memories and friends ... Much more valuable than an object to me. And a lot less hassle, and I have more room now.

Ken Proud member of the iSuk Golf Association ... Sponsored by roofing companies across the US, Canada, and the UK

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  • 2 weeks later...
  • Moderator
Posted

Bill

“By three methods we may learn wisdom: First, by reflection, which is noblest; Second, by imitation, which is easiest; and third by experience, which is the bitterest.” - Confucius

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Posted

I had a few signed pictures of athletes and actors when I was younger given to me by my dad and I used them as coasters. I regret it now that Ive gotten older more so because my dad has passed on then the value of said items. I stopped collecting Jordans and started collecting Lebrons (samples, f&f;, PEs) although the last 2 models haven't been much to see Im hoping with the move back to Cleveland things back to "the good ol days". Then I started collecting jerseys and autographed balls because they take up less space but have since stopped that. Picked up a few bobbleheads from games that are still tucked away in boxes which causes the same problem as the shoes lol so thats been put on hold (especially since people put them up on ebay as soon as they get their ticket. After I graduate and buy a house I would like to start collecting again and dedicate a room or two to my collection. Ive met alot of cool people from all walks of life from collecting.


Posted

I had a few signed pictures of athletes and actors when I was younger given to me by my dad and I used them as coasters. I regret it now that Ive gotten older more so because my dad has passed on then the value of said items. I stopped collecting Jordans and started collecting Lebrons (samples, f&f;, PEs) although the last 2 models haven't been much to see Im hoping with the move back to Cleveland things back to "the good ol days". Then I started collecting jerseys and autographed balls because they take up less space but have since stopped that. Picked up a few bobbleheads from games that are still tucked away in boxes which causes the same problem as the shoes lol so thats been put on hold (especially since people put them up on ebay as soon as they get their ticket. After I graduate and buy a house I would like to start collecting again and dedicate a room or two to my collection. Ive met alot of cool people from all walks of life from collecting.

I forgot I have a box of basketball and baseball cards. Took a few to a shop and of course they want to give you pennies. Anyone interested?


  • 7 years later...
Posted
On 8/14/2014 at 1:30 AM, Mayday said:

 

I forgot I have a box of basketball and baseball cards. Took a few to a shop and of course they want to give you pennies. Anyone interested?

I may be interested. What year and type of cards are they?


  • Administrator
Posted
5 hours ago, Gregory Crowley said:

I may be interested. What year and type of cards are they?

You replied to a post that's from 2014, @Gregory Crowley.

Erik J. Barzeski —  I knock a ball. It goes in a gopher hole. 🏌🏼‍♂️
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  • 1 year later...
Posted

Mainly baseball cards, have a few full sets from 70's and random cards all the way back to 58'. I know I do have some of value like some of Aaron, Brock, Mantle, Clemente but not the very valuable years unfortunately. I do have Ricky Hendersons rookie card which I believe has some real value.

Rich C.

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Posted

I used to buy a logo ball from courses I played, but not so much anymore. The only item of "value" to me is a scorecard from the 2000 MCI at Harbor Town. I was a caddie during the Pro-AM, and practice rounds so I had every player I knew sign it. It was kind of the whos who back then. Zoeller, Norman, Tway, Mayfair, Funk, Price, Love, Faldo, etc. Full front and back.  The other item I have somewhere is a cocktail napkin signed by Johnny Lydon (Rotten) from like 85 or so at a bar in Atlanta after a PIL show.  Padraig hit a guy in the head with his ball at the Senior Tour Championship and gave him a signed glove and 300 bucks for dinner. Padraig said " I thought, what does a grown man need with a signed glove so I figured I'd buy him and his wife dinner" I got a chuckle out of that.

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  • 1 year later...
Posted

Baseball cards, I  have Ricky Hendersons rookie card that should be going for more now that he passed away December 23rd.

Rich C.

Driver Titleist 915 D3  9.5*
3 Wood TM RBZ stage 2 tour  14.5*
2 Hybrid Cobra baffler 17*
4Hybrid Adams 23*
Irons Adams CB2's 5-GW
Wedges 54* and 58* Titleist vokey
Putter Scotty Cameron square back 2014
Ball Srixon Zstar optic yellow
bushnell V2 slope edition


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Nicklaus era (roughly mid-1960s to early-1980s) International presence in PGA TOUR fields ~2–5% of players in a typical PGA TOUR field Often 5–8 non-U.S. players in a 140-player event Many weeks: fewer than five Who those internationals were Gary Player occasional Europeans (Seve later, Woosnam briefly) a handful of Australians or South Africans Crucially: They were elite imports, not a broad middle class. What that means for field strength The top of the field was excellent The middle and bottom were shallow After ~10–12 legitimate contenders, win equity dropped sharply This is why Nicklaus: contended constantly piled up runner-ups remained relevant for decades The field simply didn’t replenish elite threats fast enough. 3. Transition era (late-1980s to early-1990s) This is the inflection point. 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