Current:Home > reviewsOne of the last tickets to 1934 Masters Tournament to be auctioned, asking six figures -LegacyBuild Academy
One of the last tickets to 1934 Masters Tournament to be auctioned, asking six figures
View
Date:2025-04-13 08:55:36
AUGUSTA, Georgia − It’s a sports ticket unlike any other.
One of the last 1934 Masters Tournament badges known to exist is headed to the auction block.
The ticket from the tournament's inaugural year – autographed by Horton Smith, the tournament’s first champion – is scheduled to go up for bid Dec. 6 through auction house Christie’s New York and sports memorabilia auctioneers Hunt Bros., Christie’s confirmed Wednesday.
Called “badges” by the Augusta National Golf Club, tickets from the earliest Masters Tournaments are especially rare. The event was called the Augusta National Invitational Tournament until 1939.
“There's a real Augusta story there because it's been in an Augusta family since March of 1934,” Edward Lewine, vice-president of communications for Christie’s, told The Augusta Chronicle. “It hasn’t been on the market. It hasn’t been anywhere.”
The badge’s current owners are an unidentified Augusta couple “known as community and civic leaders,” whose family attended the Masters for more than 50 years, Christie’s said. The woman possessing the ticket at the time successfully asked Smith for his autograph, which he signed in pencil while standing under the iconic Big Oak Tree on the 18th green side of the Augusta National clubhouse.
According to Christie’s, the ticket is one of fewer than a dozen believed to have survived for almost 90 years.
When another 1934 Masters ticket fetched a record $600,000 at auction in 2022, Ryan Carey of Golden Age Auctions told the sports-betting media company Action Network that only three such tickets existed, and one of them is owned by the Augusta National. That ticket also bore the autographs of Smith and 16 other tournament participants and spectators, such as golf legend Bobby Jones and sportswriter Grantland Rice.
Christie’s estimated the badge’s initial value between $200,000 and $400,000, according to the auction house’s website. The ticket's original purchase price was $2.20, or an estimated $45 today.
Because no one predicted the Masters Tournament’s current global popularity in 1934, few people had the foresight to collect and keep mementoes from the event, Lewine said. The owners likely kept the badge for so long, at least at first, because of Smith’s autograph, he added. The ticket's very light wear and vivid color suggests it hasn’t seen the light of day since badge No. 3036 was used March 25, 1934.
“According to my colleagues whom I work with, the experts, it’s by far the best-preserved. The more objects are out and about in the world, the more chances there are to get damaged or out in the sun. The sun is the worst thing,” Lewine said. “If you look at that thing, it’s bright blue. It’s as blue as the day it was signed. That means it’s been in somebody’s closet somewhere.”
The badge's auction is planned to be part of a larger sports memorabilia auction featuring the mammoth autographed-baseball collection belonging to Geddy Lee, lead vocalist for the rock group Rush.
veryGood! (39893)
Related
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Accused of kidnapping hoax, how Denise Huskins, Aaron Quinn survived ‘American Nightmare’
- What are sacred forests?
- Trump-backed Ohio US Senate candidate and businessman Moreno faced discrimination suits, AP finds
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Samsung vies to make AI more mainstream by baking in more of the technology in its new Galaxy phones
- Pauly Shore transforms into Richard Simmons for short film: Watch
- Miranda Lambert loves her husband Brendan McLoughlin's brutal honesty: 'He gives me harsh reality'
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- 'We're home': 140 years after forced exile, the Tonkawa reclaim a sacred part of Texas
Ranking
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- What temperatures are too cold for dogs, cats and more animals? Experts explain when to bring them inside
- Mid-East conflict escalation, two indicators
- South Dakota House passes bill that would make the animal sedative xylazine a controlled substance
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- UK leader Rishi Sunak tries to quell Conservative revolt over his Rwanda plan for migrants
- In ‘Origin,’ Ava DuVernay and Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor seek the roots of racism
- Official in Poland’s former conservative government charged in cash-for-visas investigation
Recommendation
Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
Bush is hitting the road for greatest hits tour. Fans will get to see 1994 rock band for $19.94
Zambia reels from a cholera outbreak with more than 400 dead and 10,000 cases. All schools are shut
Spiritual adviser at first nitrogen gas execution asks Alabama for safeguards to protect witnesses
Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
Who is Jaish al-Adl, the Sunni group that Iran targeted in an airstrike on Pakistani soil?
DirecTV, Tegna reach agreement to carry local NBC, CBS, ABC, Fox stations after dispute
Oldest black hole in the universe discovered using the James Webb Space Telescope