News

A golf ball used in his final round from the 1997 Masters sold for $64,124, while the ball used to sink Woods’ tournament winning putt in 2005 fetched $30,326.
He said he’s heard way more from buyers interested in The Masters’ gnomes than either of those two pieces of golf memorabilia. “The gnomes have staying power because they’re making a ...
More golf-memorabilia collectors are pivoting toward other big-ticket items, such as winners' Masters trophies, which depict the National's famous clubhouse.
The story of golf can’t be told without Old Tom Morris. The four-time British Open champion (1861, 1862, 1864, 1867) was born ...
Local Augusta area thrift stores and consignment shops offer shoppers an affordable to get golf-related items like Masters badges, hats, shirts, flags and art.
The items, which were stolen between 2009 and 2022, included such historic memorabilia as tickets to Masters tournaments in the 1930s, as well as T-shirts, mugs and chairs, according to prosecutors.
A former warehouse worker for the Augusta National Golf Club was sentenced to one year in federal prison for transporting millions of dollars’ worth of stolen Masters tournament memorabilia.
For instance, Tiger Woods’ Slam irons sold for an unprecedented $5,156,162 in 2022, setting a new record for golf memorabilia. Prior to that, Horton Smith’s Green Jacket from the Masters sold ...
A former Georgia warehouse worker for the Augusta National Golf Club was sentenced to one year in prison Wednesday for transporting millions of dollars’ worth of stolen Masters tournament ...
A former warehouse worker for the Augusta National Golf Club was sentenced to one year in federal prison for transporting millions of dollars’ worth of stolen Masters tournament memorabilia.
FILE -Richard Globensky, of Georgia, walks out of the Dirksen Federal Courthouse after pleading guilty to transporting stolen golf merchandise and memorabilia from the Augusta National Golf Club ...
A former warehouse worker for the Augusta National Golf Club was sentenced to one year in federal prison for transporting millions of dollars’ worth of stolen Masters tournament memorabilia.