Breaking
TREski Eş, Parkta Eski Eşini ve Kızını Vurdu: Anne Hayatını KaybettiITIncendio in un deposito Brt a Milano: chiuse le finestre e stop alla frutta e verdura localiCN川普預告「今晚將痛擊伊朗」,揚言奪下哈格島BRPai é flagrado chutando a própria filha de três anos no ParanáINTLMoscow Strikes Kill Four in Odesa; Trump Offers Ukraine License for Patriot MissilesBRFundo Amazônia lança edital de R$ 107 milhões para projetos de pesquisa na regiãoBRJoão e Gabriel, presos por morte em rope jump, são soltosBRBuscas por seis detentos foragidos de delegacia no Amazonas entram no quinto diaBRMulher é encontrada morta em propriedade rural em ConceiçãoFROise : deux hommes mis en examen pour meurtre après la découverte d'un corps calcinéTREski Eş, Parkta Eski Eşini ve Kızını Vurdu: Anne Hayatını KaybettiITIncendio in un deposito Brt a Milano: chiuse le finestre e stop alla frutta e verdura localiCN川普預告「今晚將痛擊伊朗」,揚言奪下哈格島BRPai é flagrado chutando a própria filha de três anos no ParanáINTLMoscow Strikes Kill Four in Odesa; Trump Offers Ukraine License for Patriot MissilesBRFundo Amazônia lança edital de R$ 107 milhões para projetos de pesquisa na regiãoBRJoão e Gabriel, presos por morte em rope jump, são soltosBRBuscas por seis detentos foragidos de delegacia no Amazonas entram no quinto diaBRMulher é encontrada morta em propriedade rural em ConceiçãoFROise : deux hommes mis en examen pour meurtre après la découverte d'un corps calciné
Newsgather
BackPelé's 1958 World Cup final shirt up for auction, expected to fetch over $6m
Pelé's 1958 World Cup final shirt up for auction, expected to fetch over $6m
Sports
Guardian Sport6/2/2026Sports2 min readUnited Kingdom

Pelé's 1958 World Cup final shirt up for auction, expected to fetch over $6m

Quick Look

  • Pelé's iconic blue No 10 shirt from the 1958 World Cup final, worn when he was 17 and scored two goals in Brazil's first World Cup win, is up for auction at Sotheby's in New York.
  • It's expected to sell for over $6m, potentially becoming one of the most expensive football artefacts ever.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Pelé's iconic blue No 10 shirt from the 1958 World Cup final, worn when he was 17 and scored two goals in Brazil's first World Cup win, is being put up for auction by Sotheby's in New York. The shirt is expected to fetch over $6m, potentially making it one of the most expensive football artefacts ever sold.

Font size

Pelé’s iconic blue No 10 shirt from the 1958 World Cup final is expected to become one of the most expensive football artefacts ever sold after being put up for auction.

The Brazilian was 17 when he scored two goals in the 5-2 win over Sweden to secure the Seleção’s first World Cup and write his name into football lore.

Now Sotheby’s expects the shirt’s rich history will lead to it fetching more than $6m (£4.5m) when it goes under the hammer in New York next month.

That figure would put it, as a single item, behind only the Argentina jersey worn by Diego Maradona when he scored the Hand of God goal against England at Mexico 1986, which sold for $9.3m in 2022. A collection of six Lionel Messi shirts from the Qatar World Cup went for $7.8m in 2023.

“The shirt itself is in extraordinary condition for something that’s nearly 70 years old,” Brendan Hawkes, Sotheby’s vice president of sport strategy, told the Guardian. “It’s just a really vibrant blue colour with the Brazil yellow on the back.

“One of the things that struck me when I actually first handled it was how small it was. Pelé wasn’t a very large man and he wore this shirt when he was 17. He was a lean young kid at that point, and if you look at the pictures from that match, the shirt is actually quite small on him.”

Pelé finished the tournament with six goals in four matches, and remains the youngest player to appear in a World Cup final. After the game he gave the shirt to his roommate Didi, and it stayed in Didi’s family until 1993, when it was donated to the Museu dos Esportes Edvaldo Alves Santa Rosa in Brazil.

The museum offered the shirt at auction in London in 2004, where it sold for £59,000. Such is the boom in sports memorabilia that it is expected to fetch nearly 100 times that amount by the time bidding closes on 16 July.

“We have seen just a ton of growth in this market over the last five years,” said Hawkes. “Maradona’s Hand of God shirt is still the high watermark for a single football shirt but we’re placing this in the same orbit.”

Pelé revealed in his autobiography that a few of his teammates worried that wearing blue against Sweden would be a “bad omen”. “But Dr Paulo, the head of the delegation, turned it round cleverly,” Pelé wrote. “He said blue would be lucky, as it was the colour of our patron saint, Nossa Senhora de Aparecida, and it had served previous teams well.” And so it proved.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • The shirt will sell for over $6m.

    Very likely · Within days

  • The sale will set a new record for a single football shirt.

    Likely · Within days

Open Questions

  • Will the final sale price exceed the $6m expectation?
  • Who will be the buyer of the shirt?
  • What is the provenance of the shirt beyond Didi's family?
  • How will this sale impact the broader sports memorabilia market?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Guardian Sport.

Related Stories

Four-Way Golden Boot Race at 2026 World Cup is a Generational Battle
Developing·3h ago

Four-Way Golden Boot Race at 2026 World Cup is a Generational Battle

The 2026 World Cup features an unprecedented four-way Golden Boot race between Kylian Mbappe (7 goals), Erling Haaland (7 goals), Lionel Messi (8 goals), and Harry Kane (6 goals). This high scoring rate is historically rare, with Messi joining an elite group of players who have scored 8+ goals in a single tournament. The competition is fierce, with tiebreakers like assists and minutes played becoming crucial.

BBC Sport
More on this topicPelé