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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 ...
The story of golf can’t be told without Old Tom Morris. The four-time British Open champion (1861, 1862, 1864, 1867) was born ...
More golf-memorabilia collectors are pivoting toward other big-ticket items, such as winners' Masters trophies, which depict the National's famous clubhouse.
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.
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 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.
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.
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.