Iām poorāas in broke. As in āI aināt got it.ā
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 ballinā, not only would I treat myself to the new Polaris Slingshotābecause clearly, I deserve, dammitābut Iād also make it rain ticket stubs from Michael Jordanās debut game. Why? Because apparently, theyāre worth some serious bread.
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From ESPN:
The highest-graded ticket stub (bestowed with a grade of EX-MT 6 from Professional Sports Authenticator, or PSA) from Michael Jordanās NBA debut sold for $264,000 at auction, breaking the record for most expensive collectable sports ticket ever sold.
I donāt know what the hell EX-MT 6 even means, but goddamn. According to Google Translate, itās Kardashian for āa lot of damn money.ā
Also of interest is the fact that the sale, which was conducted by Huggins & Scott Auctions, includes a 20 percent buyerās premiumāwhich doesnāt sound nearly as excruciating as Ticketmasterās incessant fees, but hurts just enough to make you keel over and scream in anguish. But even without that premium, apparently the sale still wouldāve 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 Iām 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 Jordanās regular-season, playoff, and NBA All-Star Games.
āI donāt know if anyone can dispute the claim that I may have the largest Michael Jordan ticket stub collection in the world,ā he told the Times.
Maybe not, but do you have his most expensive ticket stub?
Huh? Do you?
For those wondering, Jordanās 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 Iāll catch yāall in about 20 years when I cash out these tickets from Petey Pabloās sold-out āStill Freek-a-Leakingā stadium tour.
Straight From
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