Fans Can Step Up to the Plate for Red Sox CEO’s Memorabilia at Auction

FILE - Boston Red Sox CEO Larry Lucchino, left, and Chief Operating Officer Sam Kennedy hold the 2013 World Series baseball trophy on the red carpet at the Wang Theatre before a screening of a DVD about the series in Boston, Nov. 23, 2013.
FILE - Boston Red Sox CEO Larry Lucchino, left, and Chief Operating Officer Sam Kennedy hold the 2013 World Series baseball trophy on the red carpet at the Wang Theatre before a screening of a DVD about the series in Boston, Nov. 23, 2013.
AP Photo/Steven Senne, File
1 min read
Share
FILE - Boston Red Sox CEO Larry Lucchino, left, and Chief Operating Officer Sam Kennedy hold the 2013 World Series baseball trophy on the red carpet at the Wang Theatre before a screening of a DVD about the series in Boston, Nov. 23, 2013.
FILE - Boston Red Sox CEO Larry Lucchino, left, and Chief Operating Officer Sam Kennedy hold the 2013 World Series baseball trophy on the red carpet at the Wang Theatre before a screening of a DVD about the series in Boston, Nov. 23, 2013.
AP Photo/Steven Senne, File
Fans Can Step Up to the Plate for Red Sox CEO’s Memorabilia at Auction
Copy

A Boston auction house is going to take bidders out to the ballpark with an online auction of a team executive’s Red Sox memorabilia — including four World Series trophies.

Items belonging to former Red Sox President and CEO Larry Lucchino, who died in April at the age of 78, will be auctioned starting Saturday with proceeds going to The Lucchino Family Foundation, which funds charities throughout New England.

“My brother, Larry, embodied the spirit of generosity,” said Frank Lucchino, a retired judge from Pennsylvania.

Items include Lucchino’s Commissioner’s Trophy and ring from the curse-ending 2004 World Series in which the Red Sox had to first beat the New York Yankees for the opportunity to face the St. Louis Cardinals in the series. Two other championship trophies from Lucchino’s tenure, 2007 and 2013, are being auctioned along with another one from 2018.

Other items include 2004 and 2007 championship banners that flew at Fenway Park, a couple of stadium seats and a turnstile, and an electric guitar signed by Boston rockers Aerosmith when they played at Fenway in 2010.

Lucchino served as Baltimore Orioles president, leading the effort to build Camden Yards, before doing the same thing for the San Diego Padres, building a new ballpark. In Boston, he helped to assemble the new ownership group led by John Henry and Tom Werner that bought the franchise in 2002. The group opted to renovate Fenway Park, rather than replace it.

The online auction is being handled by Bonhams Skinner. Included in the auction were non-Red Sox items owned by Lucchino including a World Series ring won with the Orioles and a Super Bowl ring from Washington.

This story was originally published by the Associated Press.

Val Lawson and Frank Ciccone join forces in bid to lead chamber, while Ryan Pearson mounts challenge in high-stakes scramble for votes ahead of potential Tuesday decision
Activists and local officials demand answers after federal agents allegedly used a taser during an apprehension in Dexter Park and transferred the injured man without allowing him to speak to a lawyer
‘It’s a huge loss. I can’t put into words what a huge loss it is’
On foggy spring nights, volunteers step into the dark to help frogs and salamanders survive their ancient migration—one wet hop at a time—against the threats of cars and climate change
After 60 years of supporting low-income families, Head Start faces an existential threat under a proposed federal budget—prompting Rhode Island’s Sen. Reed and advocates to rally in defense of early childhood education
The public has only one month to comment on Housing 2030 draft released Wednesday
Jennifer Gilooly Cahoon, Owner, HeARTspot Art Center and Gallery, East Providence
The Department of Education announced that its office of Federal Student Aid will resume collections May 5
Unsustainable fishing, not climate change, has been the biggest threat to ocean biodiversity for decades. Scientists warn that dismantling marine protected areas could accelerate the crisis for species, ecosystems, and coastal economies alike