If you want an idea of how
barmy the market for football memorabilia has become, forget the £24,000 paid
recently for George Best’s shirt from the 1970 FA Cup fifth round. Instead,
look to last year’s burglary of the £1.2m Merseyside home of Wayne Rooney’s
parents.
The robbers ignored the opulence and went straight for a cup final shirt,
several England caps, the 2004 BBC Young Sports
Personality of the Year trophy and a World Cup 2006 shirt. Some people will do
anything to get their hands on football memorabilia – and when items are
connected with specific players and events, they become even more valuable.
Who is top of the table?
Pele’s number ten shirt from the 1970 World Cup final went for £157,750 in 2002. Shirts worn by Eric Cantona and Bobby Moore in their last league matches for Manchester United and Blackburn Rovers respectively each sold for £3,600. Then there’s the ball with which David Beckham missed a crucial penalty against Portugal in Euro 2004 – a masochistic fan paid £18,700 for the offending object.
According to David Convery,
football memorabilia specialist at Christie’s, there will always be a market
for memorabilia, although “how strong is anyone’s guess”. But “if you have an
item relating to a known player then it will not diminish in popularity”, he
tells The Scotsman. But while Best and Pele will always be remembered as
legends, the stars of players such as Paul Gascoigne have waned – and the price
of items linked with them has followed suit. However, exceptional pieces will
always draw interest, such as the England shirt that Gazza cried on in the
team’s semi-final loss to West Germany in the 1990 World Cup. It sold two
years ago for nearly £28,680.
And it’s not just the
shirts. Match programmes “always sell well”, says Dan Davies of Bonhams Auction
House in Chester, “especially pre-war ones and ones
associated with the main clubs”. In the 1930s and 1940s, programmes were
printed on poor-quality paper, and in far smaller quantities than today, so
their rarity makes them desirable. Autographs also fetch good prices. However,
with items now going for record prices, finding a bargain is increasingly
tough. That’s why, just as traditional investors seek out undervalued and
unloved companies to buy, collectors should look for up-and-coming players and
get hold of anything associated with them, such as shirts and medals. Of
course, if discovering the next Bobby Moore were that easy, England would have picked another World Cup
winning team long ago.