Regina Leader-Post

Game-worn '31 Gehrig jersey expected to sell for $1.5 million

- JAMES TARMY

Next week, a jersey worn by Lou Gehrig during his record-setting 1931 season with the New York Yankees becomes sports memorabili­a's latest big swing. It could sell for as much as US$1.5 million at auction.

The uniform is part of a sale offered by Christie's and Hunt Auctions in New York titled Home Plate: A Private Collection of Important Baseball Memorabili­a. The auction comprises 152 lots and carries an estimate of $4 million to $7 million. It includes a Louisville Slugger baseball bat used by Babe Ruth sometime between 1916 and 1918, which is estimated to sell for between $500,000 and $1 million.

The auction comes at a time when sports memorabili­a sales continue to shatter records.

“The last two and a half to three years has just been staggering,” says Dave Hunt, owner of Hunt Auctions. “An item that sold for $1,000 to $2,000 for years all of a sudden is $25,000 or $100,000. A Lou Gehrig jersey that we'd sold at auction maybe in 2007, for $450,000, we sold privately for nearly $3 million.”

At the onset of the pandemic, Hunt anticipate­d a crash.

“The opposite happened,” he says. “It's gotten even stronger.”

Besides the famous sales — Michael Jordan's game-worn 1985 Air Jordans, which sold for $560,000 at

Sotheby's in May, and the Lebron James rookie card that hammered for a stunning $1.8 million at Goldin Auctions in July — prices for more esoteric sports memorabili­a have risen across the board.

In September, Hunt sold a collection of baseball memorabili­a assembled by Hall of Fame broadcaste­r Vin Scully. The sale included a baseball signed by Ronald Reagan ($11,750) and a Dodgers scorebook from 2016 ($82,250). Heritage Auctions is currently hosting a sports memorabili­a sale that includes a 1971-72 Boston Bruins jersey worn by Bobby Orr; as of Thursday, bidding had already reached $97,500, or $117,000 with the premium.

Memorabili­a, it seems, is being pushed by the same tailwinds as the rest of the online luxury and collectibl­es market.

“People are at home,” Hunt says, “and they're not spending money on travel and leisure and tickets to games. So they're spending it elsewhere.”

 ?? AP ?? A jersey worn by former Yankees first baseman Lou Gehrig is up for auction as part of the Home Plate memorabili­a sale in New York.
AP A jersey worn by former Yankees first baseman Lou Gehrig is up for auction as part of the Home Plate memorabili­a sale in New York.

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