BOSTON (AP) — The most decorated man in NBA history will be giving the public a chance to own some of the prized memorabilia from his Hall of Fame career.
Bill Russell announced Thursday he is offering hundreds of items from his personal collection, including trophies, rings, basketballs, jerseys, letters, photos and other keepsakes. The items span his 13-year career as a player and coach for the Boston Celtics, and also feature mementos chronicling his work during the civil rights movement and beyond.
Highlights of the trove include the first (1957) and last (1969) of the NBA-record 11 championship rings he won in Boston, four of his five NBA Most Valuable Player trophies and his 1956 U.S. men’s basketball Olympic gold medal.
“There are a few pictures I’ll keep for myself, but the rest I will share with the world,” Russell said in a video statement.
The sale will be conducted by Hunt Auctions, which has overseen the auctions of such sports greats as Ted Williams, Joe DiMaggio, Roberto Clemente, Gale Sayers, Johnny Unitas.
The auction is tentatively scheduled for Boston this fall or winter.
Russell said another reason he decided to sell the items was to provide a portion of the proceeds for the Boston-based nonprofit MENTOR, which he co-founded more than three decades ago. The group’s aim is to strengthen mentoring relationships.
An additional donation will be made to Boston Celtics United for Social Justice, which focuses on addressing racial and social inequities in the Boston area.
Hunt Auctions President Dave Hunt said his group is honored to handle Russell’s collection.
“There’s not a lot of folks at Bill Russell’s level. The air gets real thin,” Hunt said. “There’s just certain names of certain players that just transcend the sport, that changed the sport.”
It is unclear how much any one of Russell's items will bring, but similar auctions overseen by Hunt have delivered big numbers. The most notable was in 2019 when a rare, game-worn Babe Ruth Yankees road jersey dating to 1928-30 sold for $5.64 million. The auctioneer said that broke the record for the most expensive piece of sports memorabilia sold.
Hunt notes that among the items Russell is keeping is the Presidential Medal of Freedom given to him in 2011 by Barack Obama.
There's also the letter Jackie Robinson wrote to Russell after he and other Black Celtics players boycotted a game in Lexington, Kentucky, after being denied service at a hotel.
“It’s just an amazing piece and it’s very difficult to put a monetary value on an item like that," Hunt said. "But what better way for this to be shared than directly from the person who participated, and doing good as well as a result of that offering.”
Any rich folks out there?
Honestly, I wish that Wyc would make him an offer for the entire collection, and start a Celtics museum.
I always thought the Celtics should have added a museum section when they built their new training facility.
Given the important historical significance of many Russell items, you’d hope a wealthy beneficiary would donate any winnings to a museum.
According to the Boston Globe, 25 billionaires in Massachusetts are worth more than $104 billion combined. Surely they could scrape a few pennies together.
Bill Russell should have his own wing at the Basketball Hall of Fame. Wish they would expand and make it into more of a museum.
Bill Russell should have been the NBA logo, period.
No sports journalist has the guts to point out that the NBA only picked Jerry West because he was a likeable, WHITE star. It is just a lucky coincidence that West went on to have a 40 year association with the league at every level.
At the time, the NBA league office wanted to show the nation they weren't a black league and bring in a missing audience demographic of conservative whites. When they decided to make West the logo in 1969, he wasn't even NBA champion yet, in fact, West was actually a 6 times loser in the finals (all to Russell's Celtics).
If you were colorblind and just looked at Russell's resume, leadership, athleticism and selflessness, you'd choose Bill Russell ever time...this isn't even taking into account all he did for charities and human rights.