Colts owner Irsay pays $6M for Ali belt at auction

11:54 AM ET

  • Stephen HolderESPN

INDIANAPOLIS — Colts owner Jim Irsay made a major late-night acquisition at a hefty price tag.

Irsay’s latest move wasn’t football-related. Instead, it is the newest addition to his growing historic collection: Muhammad Ali’s WBC championship belt won in the fighter’s 1974 “Rumble in the Jungle” victory over George Foreman in Zaire.

Irsay acquired the item for $6 million at auction after a bidding process that lasted until nearly 4 a.m. Sunday morning. It is considered one of the most treasured examples of boxing memorabilia in existence. The belt sold in 2016 for $358,500 and then sold in 2017 for $120,000. According to Heritage Auctions, the belt is one of just two known Ali WBC belts; the other is held in a private museum collection and unlikely to be sold, according to the company.

“Proud to be the steward!” Irsay tweeted.

BREAKING–Muhammad Ali’s
championship belt from 1974 ‘Rumble in the Jungle’ when he employed his rope-a-dope and defeated George Foreman–just added to @IrsayCollection Just in time for the Aug. 2 show at Chicago’s Navy Pier (and Sept. 9 at Indy). Proud to be the steward!🙏 pic.twitter.com/REJOGV1Cwq

— Jim Irsay (@JimIrsay) July 24, 2022

The belt is just the latest piece of Ali memorabilia to come into Irsay’s possession. He previously purchased the shoes Ali wore in the in 1975’s “Thrilla in Manila,” Ali’s famous victory over Joe Frazier. And earlier this year, Irsay purchased the walkout robe Ali wore in his first fight after changing his name from Cassius Clay — a 1965 rematch with Sonny Liston.

Irsay has compiled a historic collection of hundreds of items. They range from rare rock ‘n’ roll memorabilia such as the famous black Stratocaster guitar of Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour ($4 million) and Beatles drummer Ringo Starr’s drum kit ($2.2 million), to documents written by America’s founding fathers. But the Ali belt represents one of the most expensive items Irsay has ever purchased.

Ali defeated Foreman in the 1974 fight but was given the belt retroactively when belts began being awarded in 1976. Ali defended the WBC title nine times before yielding it in 1978.

Information from ESPN’s Tom VanHaaren was used in this report.

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
Everton to interview Lampard | Rooney being considered thumbnail

Everton to interview Lampard | Rooney being considered

Frank Lampard is expected to be interviewed for the Everton manager's job, with the club also discussing Wayne Rooney as a potential candidate.Everton sacked Rafa Benitez after Saturday's 2-1 defeat at relegation contenders Norwich, with the Spaniard lasting just six-and-a-half months on the blue side of Merseyside. Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible…
Read More
French Open 2024: Men’s bracket, schedule, results & how to watch thumbnail

French Open 2024: Men’s bracket, schedule, results & how to watch

Update: Rafael Nadal fell to Alexander Zverev in straight sets in the tournament’s opening round, with the fourth-seed winning, 6-3, 7-6(5), 6-3. It’s unclear if this will in fact be Nadal’s final tournament at Roland-Garros. And after that, top seed Novak Djokovic looked primed to take home another title, but he had to withdraw before
Read More
Naples, Zielinski is positive at Covid: he was on the pitch with Juve thumbnail

Naples, Zielinski is positive at Covid: he was on the pitch with Juve

NAPOLI - Ancora problemi legati al Covid nel Napoli: Piotr Zielinski è risultato positivo all'ultimo giro di tamponi. E' stato lo stesso club partenopeo a comunicarlo con una nota sui social: "In seguito al giro di tamponi effettuato questo pomeriggio al gruppo squadra è emersa la positività al Covid-19 di Piotr Zielinski.Il calciatore, regolarmente vaccinato,…
Read More
Kyrgios fined for spitting and swearing during US Open second round thumbnail

Kyrgios fined for spitting and swearing during US Open second round

Nick Kyrgios has been fined $7,500 for ‘spitting and audible obscenities’ during his win at the second round of the US Open on Wednesday, tournament organisers confirmed, reported Reuters.The fine is the largest of the tournament so far and follows on from a number of fines in the 27-year-old Australian’s career.Kyrgios was in an angsty
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share