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Hall of Fame Sports Memorabilia

Framed Autographed/Signed George Brett 35x39 Kansas City Blue Baseball Jersey JSA COA

Framed Autographed/Signed George Brett 35x39 Kansas City Blue Baseball Jersey JSA COA

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Framed Autographed/Signed George Brett 35x39 Kansas City Royals Blue Baseball Jersey JSA COA — The Framed and Authenticated Hand-Signed Kansas City Royals Blue Jersey of the Glen Dale, West Virginia Native Who Spent Twenty-One Seasons as a Royal, Hit .390 in 1980 to Become the Most Discussed Batting-Average Story Since Ted Williams, Won the 1980 American League MVP Award, Delivered the 1985 World Series Championship to Kansas City, and Was Inducted Into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1999 on the First Ballot

✨ The framed autographed 35x39 Kansas City Royals blue jersey, authenticated by James Spence Authentication with COA, carries the signature of George Brett — one of the most accomplished hitters in the history of professional baseball and the player whose entire major league career, from 1973 through 1993, unfolded in the same Kansas City uniform he wore on the day he retired. The Kansas City blue is the specific color of the Royals alternate uniform that defines the visual identity of the franchise's most celebrated era, and the 35x39 framed format creates a display piece built for permanent prominence in a collection or a room. JSA authentication is among the most respected third-party authentication standards in the signed memorabilia market, providing the certification documentation that establishes this jersey's signature as genuine.

⚾ George Howard Brett was born May 15, 1953, in Glen Dale, West Virginia — a small community in Marshall County in the northern West Virginia panhandle — and grew up in El Segundo, California, the Los Angeles area city near the airport where he developed the baseball fundamentals and the competitive intensity that would carry him to the highest level of the game. The Kansas City Royals selected Brett in the second round of the 1971 MLB Draft, and his progression through the organization to the major leagues in 1973 began a relationship between player and franchise that would span two decades, three Topps flagship cards, and every significant moment in Royals baseball history during the period.

⚾ The 1980 season is the chapter of George Brett's career that every conversation about him eventually reaches: the year he batted .390, the highest batting average any major league hitter had produced since Ted Williams hit .406 in 1941. The pursuit of .400 through the summer of 1980 was one of the most sustained sports narratives in American baseball — a daily tracking of Brett's average against the question of whether a player could again accomplish what Williams had and what no one had since. Brett did not reach .400, but .390 in the era of modern pitching and relief specialization was remarkable enough that the 1980 American League MVP Award followed naturally. The Royals that year won the American League pennant and reached the World Series, where they lost to the Philadelphia Phillies in six games. The championship would wait five more years.

⚾ The 1985 Kansas City Royals won the World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals in seven games — a series whose seventh game, an 11-0 Royals victory, remains one of the most decisive World Series conclusions in the modern era and delivered to Kansas City the championship that the franchise had been building toward since it first competed for the title in 1976 and 1977. Brett was at the center of that championship run as he had been at the center of everything in Kansas City baseball since the mid-1970s: a third baseman whose glove was as reliable as his bat, whose presence in the lineup gave the Royals an offensive anchor that opposing pitchers planned entire game strategies around, and whose competitive disposition communicated itself to teammates and opponents alike in a way that made him one of the most respected presences in the American League for two decades.

⚾ The Baseball Hall of Fame inducted Brett in 1999, his first year of eligibility, with a vote percentage that confirmed what the numbers had been saying for twenty-one seasons. His plaque in Cooperstown carries the Kansas City Royals cap, and the Kansas City blue jersey — the specific garment this framed display presents — is the artifact that connects the collector to the entire arc of a career that began in 1973 and ended twenty seasons later in the same uniform city, with one of the most complete offensive records in third-base history. Condition: NOS.

⚾ George Brett. Glen Dale, West Virginia. El Segundo, California. Kansas City Royals (1973-1993). 1980 AL MVP. .390 Batting Average, 1980. 1985 World Series Champion. 13-Time All-Star. Baseball Hall of Fame 1999. Framed 35x39 Kansas City Royals Blue Jersey. JSA COA. Hall of Fame Sports Memorabilia. Condition: NOS.

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