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Charlie Sheen selling Babe Ruth's '27 WS Ring and Ruth's sale document from Red Sox to Yankees.

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Austin

Well-known member
Aug 7, 2008
5,706
41
Dallas, Texas
ESPN - Charlie Sheen has revealed himself as the owner of two of the most coveted pieces of Babe Ruth memorabilia, which will be sold Friday.

Sheen told ESPN on Monday that he consigned Babe Ruth's 1927 World Series ring and an original copy of the sale document that sent The Bambino from the Boston Red Sox to the New York Yankees to auction house Lelands.com.

Bidding on the ring has topped $600,000, which will make it the highest-priced sports championship ring ever sold. The high bid on the sale document, which was the copy owned by Yankees owner Jacob Ruppert, has surpassed $400,000. The copy owned by Red Sox owner Harry Frazee sold in 2005 for $996,000.

"I've enjoyed these incredible items for more than two decades and the time has come," said Sheen, who famously played pitcher Rick Vaughn in the "Major League" movies. "Whatever price it brings is gravy."

The items were purchased in the early '90s, and Sheen said he displayed them in a bar area in his house that he named after the slugger.

Sheen said he doesn't remember what he paid for the Ruth items -- they were sold to him by Josh Evans of Lelands, who is now selling them for Sheen -- but he said he will certainly come away with a profit.

Sheen kept most of his memorabilia -- including the two Ruth items -- in pristine condition, framing them in meticulous fashion in what he says was better than what he saw at the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Sheen said he enjoyed when people noticed the Ruth items in his house. He liked to tell them the story of how the Red Sox, after the 1919 season, sold Ruth to the Yankees for $100,000 and a $300,000 loan.

Sheen said his one wish is that they get into the hands of a collector who enjoys them as much as he did and can share them with the world.

As for the ring, Evans calls it "insanely over the top."

"It's the greatest thing you can own from the greatest player in the greatest year," he said.

Sheen perhaps most famously was the initial buyer of the ball that went through Bill Buckner's legs in Game 6 of the 1986 World Series. He bought the ball in 1992 for $93,000 and sold it eight years later for $63,000. The ball sold again in 2012 for $418,250.

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RStadlerASU22

Active member
Jan 2, 2013
8,881
11
The contract is one of the most important sports pieces ever IMO.

Ryan
Will Clark / Mike Brown Collector
 

rsmath

Active member
Nov 8, 2008
6,086
1
Not sure Sheen will be "winning!" with the sale of the Ruth gear like he is convinced he will be. After all, he took a loss on the Buckner ball while the buyer of the Sheen Buckner ball made a great profit on its next sale.

Can't believe the contract didn't stay in the Yankees files through the ownership changes or at least make it to the museum. I wonder if the Yankees will be bidding to get it back so they can put it in the museum.
 

rsmath

Active member
Nov 8, 2008
6,086
1
winning! world series ring went for about $2.1 million and document went for about $2.3 million

that ring is pretty boring and plain compared to today's world series bling!
 

Pinbreaker

Well-known member
Aug 7, 2008
10,134
292
Laguna Niguel, CA
So I was looking at some of the other items that sold on auction.. sure there were old Bats, Jerseys, but the one that really stood out to me..

http://lelands.com/bids/bidplace?itemid=83627

Recently discovered and unlike anything we have ever offered or previously seen before, this collection of first day covers are an even ten in number. Most impressive when looked at as a whole, these ten immortals represent the greatest in the history of the game at the time. Condition is simply amazing and extremely high grade. The Babe Ruth is perhaps best of all. Signature is pretty much perfect and brilliantly balanced in terms of composition. Plus, the largest Ty Cobb we have ever seen and a rarity on a 1939 FDC as he was late to the events, greatest pitcher of all-time Walter Johnson, a MINT Honus Wagner that is an 11 out of a possible 10, Eddie Collins, Tris Speaker, NM-MT Connie Mack, and the Czars of Baseball: American League President Ford Frick, National League President Will Harridge and Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis. ALL including these "Czars" were there at the 100th Anniversary Centennial of Baseball and the Opening of the National Baseball Hall of Fame. Actual envelopes are overall EX+ and the ink signatures are in incredible condition. It is also very important to note that these all come from one collector (address on envelopes) who compiled the signatures in the 1940s. In addition, the lot includes a letter from Earl Hilligan of the ALPBBC giving the addresses of some of these baseball immortals to the collector (Mr. Bird). The most important thing about this collection is that it is essentially a set. A collection of Hall of Fame cachets as complete as this, as high grade as this, and with the quality of names and signatures as this, simply does not exist. But here they are, fresh to the market, and in all their glory.

View attachment 71022
 

1998 SPx

Member
Jun 11, 2014
168
2
winning! world series ring went for about $2.1 million and document went for about $2.3 million

that ring is pretty boring and plain compared to today's world series bling!


Wonder what Sheen's cut will be after fees and taxes? Though he claims he doesn't know what he paid originally, I'm guessing he knows or has documentation stating his cost basis. The tax man cometh.
 

RStadlerASU22

Active member
Jan 2, 2013
8,881
11
My guess, based on nothing , is he will double up after taxes.

Ryan
Will Clark / Mike Brown Collector
 

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