This is the first such Mays glove box I can recall ever having seen. After looking at, literally, thousands of eBay auctions over the years that would seem to place this squarely in the "rare" catagory! For that matter, I have only seen a couple of Mays G25 models and they don't come up for sale very often.
As a side note, this glove is nearly identical to the MacGregor G111 Bob Doerr glove I posted under the "Today I Found..." section this past summer. The only differences (besides the endorsement) are the color of the MacGregor patch and the addition of a slight palm and pinky lace on the Mays. All other aspects- the shell, stitching, web, etc.- are exactly the same.
From a "book value" standpoint, that opening bid price might not be too outlandish- though too rich for my blood!
The G25 Mays was a mid-priced glove, so the book price is somewhat less than a top-of-the-line Mays personal model. The glove itself is listed as being "rare". The Vintage Glove Price Guide puts a near-mint Mays "USA- 50's style" glove alone, including the G25 model, at $200. A case could be made to call this glove "mint", which at least doubles the price to $400.
The guidelines for a "picture box" with the matching glove tells us that, for post-war Hall of Famers depicted in uniform the glove price is multiplied by a factor of six. So a perfect mint G25 Mays with the box would top out at a full-book value of about $2400!
Given the condition of the glove (I'm kind of picky and might rate this just a tiny notch below "mint"- but not much below- due to some fading of the stampings and wrinkling of the leather) and the box, that opening bid is just about consistent with the full-book retail value.
But who pays full-book value for their collectibles?
