There was extended applause in the salesroom when Sotheby’s and  SportsCards Plus auctioned the contract selling Babe Ruth from  the Red Sox to the Yankees for $996,000. The buyer was Peter  Siegel, owner of Gotta Have It Collectibles, Inc, the historic  collectibles dealer in New York City. Six bidders competed for  the contract in the room and on the phone, but Siegel ultimately  triumphed over an anonymous phone bidder.   The seller, Alan Feinstein, has said that the profits from the  contract will benefit America’s Second Harvest, the nation’s  largest hunger-relief organization.   Of his purchase, Siegel said, “Growing up as a Yankee fan, I am  ecstatic to have purchased the contract selling Babe Ruth from  the Red Sox to the Yankees – it’s a true dream. This is not only  the most important document in sports history but is also  important in American history. The contract is larger than life,  a royal gem.”   Siegel also purchased a rare Lou Gehrig 1934-36 H&B “Small  Signature” game bat, which soared to $156,000. The sale of important sports memorabilia and cards, whichspanned the history of baseball, basketball, football, boxing,tennis and track and field, brought a total of $5,527,200, withnine lots selling above $100,000.   Among the other top highlights of the sale was Babe Ruth’s signed  game bat from 1920, used during his pivotal first season as a New  York Yankee, arguably the most important of his storied career,  which was bought for $216,000 by a private California collector  over the phone. Signed and presented to Chicago Mayor William  “Big Bill” Thompson, the bat was used in a face-off between the  Yankees and the Chicago White Sox in which the Sox beat the  Yankees 6-4.   The first baseball pitched at the 1912 Grand Opening of Fenway  Park, home to the Boston Red Sox and the country’s oldest  ballpark in operation, commanded $132,000 and was purchased by  David Hunt, a baseball memorabilia auctioneer who was bidding in  the room on behalf of a private client. On the ball, Tom  Connolly, one of Major League Baseball’s first umpires, has  inscribed “Fenway Park, First Ball Pitched, April 20, 1912,” as  well as the pitching batteries, umpires and attendants and the  final score: “Boston 7, New York 6.”   Also from the Tom Connolly collection was a Babe Ruth and Lou  Gehrig signed baseball, celebrating one of the most legendary  hitting duos in the history of the game, which sold to an online  bidder for $42,000. Opening day baseballs signed by important  figures such as President Woodrow Wilson from April 20, 1916, and  Vice President Calvin Coolidge from April 13, 1921, sold for  $33,000 and $39,000, respectively. Strong prices were achieved by the significant offering ofbaseball cards, highlighted by the most famous baseball card in theworld, the iconic T206 Honus Wagner PSA 1 PR-FR, which brought$132,000, a record for a PSA 1 card, and one of only two knowngraded PSA NM-MT “8” Babe Ruth rookie cards from 1915, whichfetched $120,000.   Other important baseball memorabilia highlights include Barry  Bonds’ 700th home run baseball from the September 17, 2004, game  in Pac Bell Park, which sold for $102,000; Babe Ruth’s 1938  Brooklyn Dodgers full uniform, which fetched $192,000; and Hall  of Fame catcher Ernie Lombardi’s 1940 Cincinnati Reds World  Series ring, which brought $13,200.   Highlighting the estate of tennis great Arthur Ashe was a pair of  Haggar solid gold presentation trophy tennis balls, weighing 372  ounces, which brought $144,000. Purchased by longtime fan John  Raybin, a New York-based memorabilia dealer who met Ashe a number  of times during his youth, the trophy tennis balls were awarded  to Ashe by The World Championship Tennis Organization in 1975,  the year he became the first and only African American to have  won the men’s singles at Wimbledon when he defeated Jimmy  Connors.   Highlighting the offering from Hall of Fame sports journalist Jim  Murray was the typewriter that he used to write more than 10,000  columns for the Los Angeles Times from the early 1960s through  the late 1990s, which brought $18,000. Murray, who was one of  only four sportswriters to win a Pulitzer Prize, was named  “America’s Best Sportswriter” by the National Association of  Sportscasters and Sportswriters 14 times.   Prices reported include buyer’s premium.   For information, 212-606-7000 or www.sothebys.com.          
 
    



 
						