The 10 Best Sports Memorabilia Pieces to Collect in 2027
Sports memorabilia crossed into the eight-figure stratosphere this decade, with game-worn jerseys and historic documents now selling alongside fine art. This ranking covers the ten sports memorabilia pieces and categories that matter most to collectors in 2027 — the record-setting trophies, the era-defining relics, and the certified pieces a real collector can actually buy.
Direct Answer
The best overall sports memorabilia piece to collect in 2027 is Babe Ruth's 1932 "Called Shot" jersey, the most valuable sports collectible ever sold, which realized $24.12 million at Heritage Auctions after a six-hour bidding war — a photo-matched, game-worn artifact from the most famous home run in baseball history.
The best value pick is a certified, photo-matched game-used relic or autographed jersey card, where authenticated pieces tied to stars trade from a few hundred to a few thousand dollars — the most accessible way to own a verified piece of the game.
This list serves three buyers: trophy collectors chasing eight-figure game-worn relics, focused collectors after era-defining documents and medals, and everyday fans who want certified, photo-matched pieces at sane prices. Prices reflect Heritage, Sotheby's, Goldin, and SCP Auctions results; photo-matching and provenance drive value above all else.
How We Ranked the Top 10
We weighted six criteria using Heritage Auctions, Sotheby's, Goldin, and SCP Auctions records, plus PSA/DNA and authentication-house standards:
- Historical significance (25%) — the moment, athlete, and event the piece represents.
- Auction track record (20%) — documented record sales, not estimates.
- Provenance and photo-matching (20%) — the strength of the authentication chain.
- Rarity (15%) — how few comparable pieces exist.
- Authentication safety (10%) — forgery risk and certification availability.
- Liquidity (10%) — how readily the piece resells at a fair price.
The ranking rewards iron-clad provenance and historic moments over mere star power.
1. Babe Ruth 1932 "Called Shot" Jersey 🏆 BEST OVERALL
Era/Set: 1932 World Series, Game 3 | Typical price: $24.12 million (record) | Best for: the ultimate sports trophy
The Called Shot jersey is the most valuable sports collectible ever sold, realizing $24,120,000 at Heritage Auctions in 2024 after a bidding war lasting more than six hours. Babe Ruth wore it on October 1, 1932, when he gestured toward the Wrigley Field bleachers before crushing a home run — the most mythologized at-bat in baseball history.
Its value rests on photo-matching to the exact game, a process that authenticates the garment beyond dispute. It eclipsed the prior memorabilia record (Jordan's jersey) by more than double.
Pros:
- The all-time sports memorabilia record at $24.12 million
- Photo-matched to the single most famous home run in baseball
- Worn by the sport's defining legend in a World Series game
- A six-hour bidding war confirming the deepest trophy demand
Cons:
- A singular, museum-grade piece effectively out of reach for all but a handful.
- Game-worn textiles require careful preservation against light and humidity.
Verdict: The Called Shot jersey is the crown of sports collecting — the record-setter every other piece is measured against.
2. Michael Jordan 1998 NBA Finals "Last Dance" Jersey
Era/Set: 1998 NBA Finals, Game 1 | Typical price: ~$10.1 million (record) | Best for: the basketball trophy grail
Jordan's game-worn 1998 NBA Finals jersey sold for $10.1 million at Sotheby's — the most ever paid for a basketball collectible and, at the time, the most for any sports memorabilia, doubling its $5 million estimate after 20 bids. Worn in Game 1 of his final championship run with the Bulls — the "Last Dance" season immortalized by the documentary — it is photo-matched and pedigreed.
Though the Bulls lost that specific game, Jordan scored 33 points, and the jersey's cultural weight is immense.
Pros:
- A $10.1 million sale, a record for basketball memorabilia
- Worn during the documented "Last Dance" championship season
- Photo-matched to a specific NBA Finals game
- Cultural reach amplified by the global "Last Dance" documentary
Cons:
- Eight-figure pricing limits the buyer pool to elite collectors.
- Several Jordan game-worn pieces exist, complicating relative scarcity.
Verdict: The Last Dance jersey is the basketball trophy grail — record-setting, photo-matched, and culturally iconic.
3. Diego Maradona "Hand of God" Shirt
Era/Set: 1986 World Cup quarterfinal | Typical price: ~$9.3 million | Best for: the global football grail
Maradona's "Hand of God" shirt sold for £7.1 million ($9.3 million) at Sotheby's, briefly the most valuable sports memorabilia ever. He wore it on June 22, 1986, scoring both the infamous handball goal and the "Goal of the Century" against England in the World Cup quarterfinal.
Its provenance is exceptional: England midfielder Steve Hodge swapped shirts with Maradona after the match and kept it for decades, giving an unbroken chain of custody that anchors the authentication.
Pros:
- A $9.3 million sale, a sports memorabilia record at the time
- Tied to two of the most famous goals in World Cup history
- Unbroken provenance via Steve Hodge's documented shirt swap
- Global football's single most coveted match-worn artifact
Cons:
- Some debate persists over which half the shirt was worn in.
- Football match-worn textiles are fragile and require expert care.
Verdict: The Hand of God shirt is the football trophy grail — historic, impeccably provenanced, and globally coveted.
4. James Naismith's Original Rules of Basketball
Era/Set: 1891 founding document | Typical price: ~$4.3 million | Best for: the founding-document grail
Naismith's original 13 rules of basketball sold for $4.3 million at Sotheby's — the founding document of an entire sport. Naismith typed the two-page rules on December 21, 1891 so YMCA students in Springfield could play indoors through winter, then tacked them to a gym bulletin board.
Billionaire David Booth bought them and donated them to the University of Kansas. As the literal birth certificate of basketball, it occupies a category beyond jerseys or equipment — a one-of-one historical artifact.
Pros:
- A $4.3 million sale for the sport's founding document
- A genuine one-of-one artifact, the birth certificate of basketball
- Impeccable institutional provenance and public display
- Cross-collector appeal spanning sports and historical documents
Cons:
- Truly unique — it will essentially never trade again.
- Paper documents demand archival-grade conservation.
Verdict: Naismith's rules are the founding-document grail — a singular artifact at the origin of a global sport.
5. Babe Ruth Game-Used Bat
Era/Set: 1920s, New York Yankees | Typical price: ~$400,000 to $1.85 million | Best for: the game-used equipment grail
A circa-1920–21 Babe Ruth game-used bat sold for a record $1.85 million through Hunt Auctions, the most ever for a baseball bat, as the only known example with photographic corroboration matching a 1921 photo of Ruth swinging it. An earlier Ruth bat brought $1.68 million via Heritage.
Game-used bats reward photo-matching and "use marks" — ball impressions, cleat scuffs, and stamping — and Ruth's are the gold standard. Lower-tier authenticated star bats trade in the five and six figures, making the category broadly collectible.
Pros:
- A record $1.85 million sale for a photo-matched Ruth bat
- Photographic corroboration sets the authentication gold standard
- Game-used wear and stampings give each bat a unique fingerprint
- A deep category with accessible tiers below the Ruth peak
Cons:
- Bat authentication is technical; PSA/DNA grading is essential.
- Restored or "gamer" claims without photo-matching carry real risk.
Verdict: A photo-matched game-used bat is the equipment grail — Ruth's $1.85 million example leads a deep, collectible category.
6. Record Home Run Baseballs
Era/Set: milestone home run balls | Typical price: ~$1.5 million (record-setters) and far less for lesser milestones | Best for: moment-driven baseball relics
Milestone home run balls are among the most liquid trophy relics. Aaron Judge's 62nd home run ball sold for $1.5 million at Goldin in 2022 — the American League single-season record — after the catcher turned down a $3 million private offer. Mark McGwire's 70th home run ball famously sold for $3 million in 1999 before settling to a $250,000–$400,000 valuation, a cautionary tale about how single-moment balls can deflate.
Provenance — ticket stubs, video of the catch, and authentication — is everything.
Pros:
- A $1.5 million sale for Judge's record-setting 62nd home run ball
- Direct, tangible link to a specific record-breaking moment
- Strong liquidity for genuine, well-documented milestone balls
- A category with both blue-chip and affordable milestone tiers
Cons:
- Values can fall sharply as records are later broken (see McGwire).
- Authentication and chain-of-custody are absolutely critical.
Verdict: Record home run balls are the moment-driven relics — electrifying upside on true milestones, but provenance is non-negotiable.
7. Jesse Owens 1936 Olympic Gold Medal
Era/Set: 1936 Berlin Olympics | Typical price: ~$1.46 million | Best for: the Olympic-history grail
Jesse Owens' 1936 Olympic gold medal sold for $1.46 million through SCP Auctions — the highest price ever for a piece of Olympic memorabilia. Owens won four golds in Berlin, defying Nazi propaganda on the world's biggest stage, and this medal carries that history. Olympic medals as a category range widely: most athlete medals trade in the tens of thousands, but those tied to defining moments command far more.
Authentication and the athlete's documented chain of ownership drive the premium.
Pros:
- A $1.46 million sale, the Olympic memorabilia record
- Tied to one of the most significant moments in sports history
- Cross-collector appeal across sports and 20th-century history
- A broad category with accessible athlete-medal tiers
Cons:
- Olympic medals are sometimes restruck or replaced, complicating provenance.
- Only history-defining examples reach seven figures.
Verdict: Owens' gold medal is the Olympic-history grail — a record-setter anchoring a deep, story-driven category.
8. 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings Pioneer-Era Memorabilia
Era/Set: 1869, first professional team | Typical price: ~$10,000 to $250,000+ | Best for: the origin of professional sports
The 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings were baseball's first openly all-professional team, and relics from that pioneer era — CDV team photographs, trophy balls, and signed material — are foundational to the hobby. Authenticated pieces range from five figures for photographs to six figures for premier trophy balls and team relics.
As artifacts from the literal birth of professional sports, they carry deep historical weight and genuine scarcity, since so little survives from the 1860s. Condition and provenance are paramount given the age.
Pros:
- Relics from professional sports' founding team
- Genuine 1860s scarcity, with very little surviving material
- Strong historical weight that anchors a vintage collection
- A range of accessible photo and document tiers
Cons:
- Extreme age makes condition and authentication challenging.
- The thin market means valuations can vary widely.
Verdict: 1869 Red Stockings memorabilia is the origin-of-pro-sports grail — scarce, historic, and foundational to any vintage collection.
9. Olympic and Championship Medals (Broad Category)
Era/Set: various Games and championships | Typical price: ~$10,000 to $100,000+ | Best for: story-driven collecting beyond the marquee names
Beyond the Owens medal, Olympic and championship medals form one of the most collectible categories in sports memorabilia. Athlete-issued Olympic golds frequently trade in the tens of thousands, while medals tied to landmark performances or famous athletes climb into the six figures.
Championship rings, winner's medals, and presentation pieces add further depth. The appeal is the direct, wearable link to a documented achievement — and the category offers far more accessible entry points than the eight-figure jerseys above.
Pros:
- A deep category with attainable five-figure entry points
- Direct, tangible links to documented athletic achievements
- Strong cross-collector and international demand
- Championship rings and presentation pieces broaden the field
Cons:
- Restrikes and replacement medals require careful authentication.
- Values hinge heavily on the athlete's and moment's fame.
Verdict: Olympic and championship medals are the accessible story-driven grail — historic links to achievement at attainable prices.
10. Certified Photo-Matched Relics & Autographed Jersey Cards 💎 BEST VALUE
Era/Set: modern certified relics and cards | Typical price: ~$200 to a few thousand dollars | Best for: owning verified memorabilia affordably
The best value in sports memorabilia is the certified relic and autographed jersey-card tier. Game-used swatch cards, autographed memorabilia certified by PSA/DNA, JSA, or Beckett, and photo-matched modern relics put a verified piece of the game within reach for $200 to a few thousand dollars.
The key is third-party certification and, ideally, photo-matching — the same authentication discipline that underpins the eight-figure pieces, applied affordably. For most collectors, this is the smart, liquid way to build a genuine, certified collection.
Pros:
- Verified, certified memorabilia for a few hundred dollars
- Third-party authentication (PSA/DNA, JSA, Beckett) reduces forgery risk
- Deep, liquid market across virtually every sport and star
- An ideal entry point that uses the same authentication rigor as grails
Cons:
- Mass-produced relic cards have limited rarity-driven upside.
- Uncertified "game-used" claims carry real forgery risk.
Verdict: Certified relics and autographed jersey cards are the best value — verified pieces of the game at prices any collector can afford.
Which One Is Right for You?
What to Look For
- Insist on photo-matching for game-worn pieces. The difference between a $24 million jersey and an unverifiable one is documented photo-matching to a specific game; demand it on any high-value garment or bat.
- Verify third-party authentication. PSA/DNA, JSA, and Beckett certification with a traceable cert number protects against the rampant forgery of autographs and "game-used" claims.
- Trace the chain of custody. Provenance — like Steve Hodge's documented shirt swap with Maradona — is what underpins both value and authenticity.
- Understand moment-deflation risk. Record balls and milestone pieces can lose value when the record is later broken; McGwire's 70th fell from $3 million to roughly $300,000.
- Preserve condition. Textiles, paper, and game-used wood degrade with light, humidity, and handling; archival storage protects the investment.
What matters less than the hype: a famous name without provenance. A modest, certified, photo-matched piece is a far better hold than an expensive item with a shaky authentication story.
FAQ
What is the most valuable piece of sports memorabilia ever sold? Babe Ruth's 1932 "Called Shot" jersey, which sold for $24.12 million at Heritage Auctions in 2024 — the highest price ever paid for any sports collectible.
What is the best sports memorabilia for a new collector to buy? Certified, photo-matched relics or autographed jersey cards authenticated by PSA/DNA, JSA, or Beckett. They put a verified piece of the game within reach for a few hundred to a few thousand dollars.
Why is photo-matching so important in memorabilia? Photo-matching verifies that a specific jersey or bat was worn or used in an exact game by matching unique wear, stains, and stitching to photographs. It is what separates a multimillion-dollar artifact from an unverifiable one.
Do home run balls hold their value? Not always. Record balls can sell for millions — Aaron Judge's 62nd brought $1.5 million — but values can fall sharply once the record is broken, as McGwire's 70th home run ball did, dropping from $3 million to roughly $300,000.
How do I avoid fake autographs and game-used memorabilia? Buy only items certified by PSA/DNA, JSA, or Beckett with a verifiable cert number, demand photo-matching on high-value game-used pieces, and trace the chain of custody. Be wary of uncertified "game-used" claims.
Are Olympic medals a good collectible? Yes. Jesse Owens' 1936 gold set the Olympic record at $1.46 million, and the broader category offers accessible five-figure entry points with direct links to documented achievements — though authentication is essential given restrikes and replacements.
Bottom Line
For the best overall sports memorabilia in 2027, Babe Ruth's "Called Shot" jersey reigns at $24.12 million — the most valuable sports collectible ever and the trophy that defines the hobby. For the best value, certified photo-matched relics and autographed jersey cards deliver verified pieces of the game from a few hundred dollars.
Between them sit the eight-figure jerseys (Jordan, Maradona), the founding documents and medals (Naismith, Owens), and the moment-driven relics (Ruth bats, record balls). Demand photo-matching, verify certification, and let a grail or a certified relic anchor the collection.
Sources
- Heritage Auctions — Babe Ruth "Called Shot" Jersey Sells for $24.12 Million
- CNBC — Michael Jordan "Last Dance" Jersey Sells for $10.1 Million
- CNN — Maradona's "Hand of God" Shirt Sells for $9.3 Million
- Seattle Times — James Naismith Rules Document Sells for $4.3 Million
- ESPN — Babe Ruth Bat Sells for Record $1.85 Million
- ESPN — Aaron Judge's 62nd Home Run Ball Sells for $1.5 Million
- ESPN — Jesse Owens' 1936 Olympic Gold Medal Sells for $1.47 Million
*Sports memorabilia review — sports memorabilia reviews, ratings, best sports memorabilia to collect 2027, game-worn jersey values, record auction prices, and a review of the top picks for collectors.*









