Speculators had been warming in their bullpens for weeks. There is money to be made with Aaron Judge matching the American League’s single-season record with his 61st home run on Wednesday in Toronto. It promises to be a life-altering event for more than just Judge.
When Judge reached 60 homers last week, secondary ticket marketplaces exploded: Outfield seats to games at Yankee Stadium began selling for hundreds of dollars, with a high of roughly $1,100. Fanatics, a company that signed Judge to an exclusive long-term autograph deal in 2017, is planning to have an assortment of event-related memorabilia rushed online the moment the record-setting 62nd homer lands. The offerings are expected to include dirt from the home plate area at the stadium where he hits the home run — maybe even the granules displaced by Judge’s cleats in the batter’s box.
Game-used bats, balls, bases and more are on deck, too.
Just as Judge bet on himself by declining the Yankees’ seven-year, $213.5 million offer for a contract extension in April, a decision that could lead to his earning more than double that amount via free agency this winter, there have been various ways for memorabilia dealers and fans to bet on themselves in the final, frenzied days of the home run chase. One of them has been to pay top dollar for an outfield seat and a chance to catch an airborne lottery ticket in the form of a five-ounce, red-seamed piece of history.
David Kohler, the president and founder of SCP Auctions, estimated that the ball from Judge’s 61st home run, which landed over the fence and caromed into the Blue Jays’ bullpen untouched by fans, could have fetched $250,000 or more, while No. 62 should easily bring in $1 million or more should a fan get their hands on it, particularly with Nos. 60 and 61 being out of circulation.
The ball from No. 61, amusingly enough, was caught on a bounce by Toronto’s bullpen coach, Matt Buschmann. His wife, the sportscaster Sara Walsh, tweeted shortly after the hit that she could announce her retirement, but later posted that Buschmann had turned the ball over to Zack Britton of the Yankees, who gave it to Judge.
“And I feel his last home run could be worth upwards of a million dollars,” said Kohler, who founded his Southern California-based company more than 40 years ago and over time has auctioned off Barry Bonds’s then-record 756th home run ball ($752,467); Bonds’s 762nd and final home run ($362,000); and Jorge Soler’s three-run homer from Atlanta’s World Series-clinching win last October ($70,745), among many others.
Ken Goldin, the executive chairman and founder of Goldin Auctions, predicted Judge’s 62nd home run ball could sell for $750,000 to $1.25 million, with the 61st homer ball being worth between $250,000 and $350,000. And last week, he announced he would pay $250,000 upfront to the fan who caught Judge’s 62nd home run, strongly discouraging the fan from handing it over to Judge and the Yankees.
It’s not so much a pre-emptive strike, Goldin said, as a simple alert.
“There never is a reason to do a deal, even with the Yankees, on the spot,” Goldin said. “Use common sense. The Yankees are worth $8 billion. Judge is going to sign, likely, a $400 million contract. If the ball means that much to them, they can buy it like anybody else.
“Take my money, put seven figures in your bank account and in the off-season meet Judge. Get an autograph, or photograph, spend an evening with him. Don’t be foolish. The Yankees are not a nonprofit organization. They are not a charity. I’m trying to give people an alternative opportunity. Some of these kids are in college and — guess what — five or 10 years from now when they’re married with kids, they’re going to wish they had money in their bank account.
“Now, if you’re a hedge fund manager and want to be magnanimous, so be it. But for most people, this is a life-changing moment.”
In a twist, should one of Judge’s historic baseballs go to auction through Goldin’s company, the owner of the Mets stands to benefit: Steven A. Cohen is the firm’s second-largest shareholder.
Sports memorabilia as a business, Kohler said, “is on fire.” He added: “The industry has grown and grown over the years. The internet, obviously, has helped with people being able to see what is out there, where to buy things and what’s available.”
Authentication methods have helped fuel it. So, too, did the pandemic, Kohler said, because many sports fans who were isolating at home unearthed their old collections. For some, sorting through their cards and autographs became akin to comfort food during a difficult time. For others, it either rekindled a long-lost love or sparked a desire to sell and find an additional source of income.
This year, SCP Auctions in June sold a Bryant game-worn jersey from his rookie season with the Los Angeles Lakers for $2.73 million, Heritage Auctions in August sold a 1952 Mickey Mantle baseball card for a record $12.5 million, and Sotheby’s in September sold a Michael Jordan game-worn Chicago Bulls jersey for $10.1 million.
“There’s million-dollar sales going on almost every week in all these different categories,” Kohler said. “It’s crazy.”
From his South Florida headquarters, Victor Shaffer, executive vice president of Fanatics, has been on high alert for Judge’s historical moment simply so the company, which sells championship merchandise within seconds of the Super Bowl ending via its N.F.L. partnership, can press a button to begin capitalizing on Judge’s moment. Soon after Judge hits No. 62, the Yankees will inform the company of every item that had been collected: game-used balls, bases and dirt, among other items. Balls and bases will be chopped up so that pieces can be inserted into place-holders in prebuilt shadow boxes with autographed photos.
“We’re going to launch a variety of products at various price points for fans with different wallet sizes,” Shaffer said.
Josh Rawitch, president of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown, N.Y., said the museum expected to obtain artifacts from Judge and Albert Pujols, who last week became only the fourth player to hit 700 career home runs, but he wasn’t yet sure what those items would be. The museum’s modern-day obstacle is that players today recognize the monetary value of items, and sorting through a maze of the players’ wants, agents, marketing people and licensing deals can be complicated.
“Nine times out of 10 a player immediately is pretty honored that his stuff is going to be in Cooperstown,” Rawitch said. “So it’s not necessarily a challenge for us as much as it is just working through the mechanics of things.”
Judge obtained his Babe Ruth-tying 60th home run ball by swapping some signed baseballs and a signed bat with the fan who caught it. He also posed for pictures. Conversely, Pujols has shown little interest in acquiring his historical baseballs. He has told multiple fans to keep their catches while gifting them with autographed balls.
Goldin speculated that the value of the historic — but not record-setting — 700th home run ball would be $150,000 to $300,000. Kohler estimated it could go for $250,000 or more.
The fan who acquired No. 700 on Friday left Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles with the ball — stay tuned on its future — but Pujols a day earlier said that would be fine, too.
“Who cares?” he said. “Do I need the money? Do I need the money? I don’t need the money. If the fans want to have it and sell it in the future, that’s good. Great for them. That’s why they come to the ballpark, so they can get a souvenir.”
Like the stock market, the final values of these baseballs are fluctuating, the experts say. If Judge winds up with, say, 65 home runs, then that’s the American League record and is expected to hold more value than the 62nd. In Pujols’s case, his final homer from this season — 701? 703? — will be exceedingly valuable unless he reverses his retirement decision and plays next season. Then, for example, a home run from next year would eclipse the value of this year’s.
In the interim, speculators continue moving into position. The Yankees finish the season with four games in Texas from Oct. 3 to 5, and John Blake, the Rangers’ executive vice president for communications, said in an email that the 100 Level seats in left field are nearly sold out for all four games. “For sure he is making a difference on where tickets are being purchased for those games versus a normal game,” Blake wrote.
“Aaron Judge is beloved,” said Kohler, who noted a Yankees World Series title this year would also increase the value of a record-setting ball from Judge. “He’s a New York Yankee — obviously, one of the most historic franchises in baseball. And Roger Maris and Babe Ruth, people know them. And Judge has no dark clouds with steroids like you saw with Bonds and Mark McGwire. He checks all the boxes.”
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