Lucas auction brings $433K; Olympics medal doesn’t sell


JERRY LUCAS SPORTS MEMORABILIA SOLD AT AUCTION

Sixteen of the 17 items in the Jerry Lucas collection were sold in an auction by Grey Flannel Auctions. The 1960 Olympic gold medal, with a reserve of $250,000, received no bids.

$4,500: 1970-71 Jerry Lucas San Francisco Warriors Practice Worn Uniform

$5,100: Jerry Lucas Ohio State University Sports Hall of Fame Induction Plaque

$5,400: 1962 Jerry Lucas College All-Star Game-Used Jersey

$6,000: Jerry Lucas NCAA Top 15 All-Time March Madness Player Award

$7,200: Athletes Village Olympic Flag from the 1960 Rome Olympics

$9,600: Jerry Lucas NBA Top 50 Ceremony Worn Leather Jacket and Travel Bag

$12,000: 1991 Jerry Lucas NBA All-Star Game Ring & 2001 All-Star "1965 A.S.G. MVP" Presentation Jacket

$15,600: 1960 Jerry Lucas Ohio State University Worn Shooting Shirt

$22,800: 1969-70 Jerry Lucas San Francisco Warriors Game-Used Home Jersey

$27,000: 1960 Jerry Lucas Ohio State National Championship Ring

$39,000: Late 1960's Jerry Lucas Cincinnati Royals Game-Used Road Jersey

$42,000: Jerry Lucas NBA Top 50 Greatest Players Ring with Presentation Box

$45,000: Jerry Lucas NBA Top 50 Greatest Players Lithograph

$60,000: 1960 Jerry Lucas USA Olympic Game-Used Jersey

$60,000: 1979 Jerry Lucas Hall of Fame Induction Ring

$72,000: 1973 Jerry Lucas New York Knicks World Championship Ring

Reserve of $250,000 not met: 1960 Jerry Lucas USA Basketball Olympic Gold Medal

Source: Grey Flannel Auctions

Jerry Lucas said he wasn’t “totally overjoyed” with the results of his recent sports memorabilia collection auction.

On Saturday night, 16 items that Lucas collected throughout his hall of fame basketball career were sold for about $433,000 by Grey Flannel auctions. The auction ended Saturday night after the Basketball Hall of Fame induction ceremony.

The most expensive and prized item — the 1960 Olympic Gold Medal that Lucas won in Rome as a member of the U.S. Men’s Basketball Team — didn’t receive a bid. The reserve was $250,000.

Lucas said the $433,000 total includes buyers’ fees, so he’s unsure how much he will receive from the auction house.

Lucas said he’s also unsure what he will do with the gold medal.

He has no regrets that he sold the items, but he was disappointed by some of the prices they brought, he said.

Michael Russek, director of operations at Grey Flannel, which was contacted by Lucas to auction off his memorabilia, said he was “a little bit” disappointed that the gold medal didn’t sell. It was the first gold medal from those Olympics ever offered.

Russek said the other pieces garnered “a tremendous price” and “great action.”

Of the 16 sold items, the 1973 NBA Championship ring that Lucas won for the New York Knicks, brought the most — $72,000.

Lucas said he had stored the items for the last five decades that he earned at the Olympics, Ohio State University and his NBA career in his closest.

Lucas, 73, a 1957 Middletown High School graduate who led the Middies to 76 consecutive victories and back-to-back state championships, was the youngest member of the U.S. basketball team that won the gold medal at the 1960 Olympics.

Because he couldn’t divide the items fairly among his family, he said selling them through Grey Flannel Auctions was “the right thing to do at this time.”

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