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For the Low, Low Price of $264K, Somebody Snatched Up a Ticket Stub From Michael Jordan’s NBA Debut

The sale broke the record for the most expensive collectible sports ticket ever sold.

Iโ€™m poorโ€”as in broke. As in โ€œI ainโ€™t got it.โ€

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So my splurging is limited to a quarter tank of gas, a half-dozen chicken wings, and whatever socks are left in the clearance aisle at Target. But if I was ballinโ€™, not only would I treat myself to the new Polaris Slingshotโ€”because clearly, I deserve, dammitโ€”but Iโ€™d also make it rain ticket stubs from Michael Jordanโ€™s debut game. Why? Because apparently, theyโ€™re worth some serious bread.

From ESPN:

The highest-graded ticket stub (bestowed with a grade of EX-MT 6 from Professional Sports Authenticator, or PSA) from Michael Jordanโ€™s NBA debut sold for $264,000 at auction, breaking the record for most expensive collectable sports ticket ever sold.

I donโ€™t know what the hell EX-MT 6 even means, but goddamn. According to Google Translate, itโ€™s Kardashian for โ€œa lot of damn money.โ€

https://twitter.com/FOS/status/1471847902645567489?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

Also of interest is the fact that the sale, which was conducted by Huggins & Scott Auctions, includes a 20 percent buyerโ€™s premiumโ€”which doesnโ€™t sound nearly as excruciating as Ticketmasterโ€™s incessant fees, but hurts just enough to make you keel over and scream in anguish. But even without that premium, apparently the sale still wouldโ€™ve crushed the previous record, which was set in October when a ticket stub from Game 3 of the 1903 World Series was sold for a meager $175,000.

The winner of the auction has yet to reveal themselves, but Iโ€™m sure super-collector Andrew Goldberg has something to say about it. In a July profile with the New York Times, the 47-year-old nonprofit consultant revealed that his collection includes 1,264 ticket stubs from Jordanโ€™s regular-season, playoff, and NBA All-Star Games.

โ€œI donโ€™t know if anyone can dispute the claim that I may have the largest Michael Jordan ticket stub collection in the world,โ€ he told the Times.

Maybe not, but do you have his most expensive ticket stub?

Huh? Do you?

For those wondering, Jordanโ€™s NBA debut occurred on Oct. 26, 1984, at Chicago Stadium, which was demolished in 1995. In that game, he dropped 16 points and gave fans a small glimpse of what was to come.

Considering ticket stubs are worth so much, I should probably start saving them instead of throwing them away like a dumb ass. So Iโ€™ll catch yโ€™all in about 20 years when I cash out these tickets from Petey Pabloโ€™s sold-out โ€œStill Freek-a-Leakingโ€ stadium tour.

Straight From The Root

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