I had been watching a pair of Marion Barber "game used" cleats on Ebay for some time. I was actually bidding on them when the original seller ended the auction early. A couple of months later, they appeared again listed by another seller. They were listed several times with no sale (priced too high as buy it now and then when listed twice as an auction item, reserve not met). Last week they were relisted with a more reasonable price, $109.99 buy it now -- I did.
You can read the description and look at the photographs. I had asked the seller back in March about these and these were the answers I received (his answers are in red):
My question: "What is on the back of each shoe? Is that tape residue? Thank you very much!"
Seller's answer: "Yes. Tape & old padding"
My response: "Thank you for answering my question. I don't see any tape on the shoes (or on his ankles) in the pictures you have provided. Do you have a date these were worn so I can see if other photographs are available on getty images? Thank you -- I just want to verify these cleats. Are they marked with his number in any way (the pair Steiner has listed show his number on the cleats)."
Seller's answer: "Hi. When I bought them from crod (ebay seller) I asked the same things and when he replied he told me it was during the 2009 season. Yes, the number 24 are inside the cleats. I trusted ebay seller crod when purchasing these cleats and assured me they were worn by Marion Barber. I checked on his feedback and recent merchandise and all the cleats he had from the Cowboys came with just the photo proof. I hope this helps."
When the cleats and "proof" photographs arrived, I could tell they were fake. To give the seller the benefit of the doubt, I spent about an hour looking at every photograph of Marion Barber I could find from the 2009 season --no match -- not even close. My son and I examined both cleats looking for any indication there was a number "24" since the seller mentioned that both cleats were marked on the inside with this number. Both cleats were very clean on the inside -- there was no #24 on either one of them.
I contacted the seller and got the following reply:
"Sorry for the mishap. I was in the same boat when I originally purchased them, but he wouldn't refund me the money and lost the case w/ ebay. I wouldn't do that to TRUE fellow Cowboys fans. Again, sorry for the mishap and glad we can work it out. "
The thing that was disturbing is that the seller knew he had a questionable item and misrepresented both cleats as being labeled "24" in order to make a sale. I did manage to work things out with the seller -- I am waiting for a refund that is "pending". I sincerely hope the payment clears and this is settled.
These are the cleats once I cleaned the blackened areas. This was easy to do and you can see the cleats were used by a number #16. Clearly a misrepresented item:


You can read the description and look at the photographs. I had asked the seller back in March about these and these were the answers I received (his answers are in red):
My question: "What is on the back of each shoe? Is that tape residue? Thank you very much!"
Seller's answer: "Yes. Tape & old padding"
My response: "Thank you for answering my question. I don't see any tape on the shoes (or on his ankles) in the pictures you have provided. Do you have a date these were worn so I can see if other photographs are available on getty images? Thank you -- I just want to verify these cleats. Are they marked with his number in any way (the pair Steiner has listed show his number on the cleats)."
Seller's answer: "Hi. When I bought them from crod (ebay seller) I asked the same things and when he replied he told me it was during the 2009 season. Yes, the number 24 are inside the cleats. I trusted ebay seller crod when purchasing these cleats and assured me they were worn by Marion Barber. I checked on his feedback and recent merchandise and all the cleats he had from the Cowboys came with just the photo proof. I hope this helps."
When the cleats and "proof" photographs arrived, I could tell they were fake. To give the seller the benefit of the doubt, I spent about an hour looking at every photograph of Marion Barber I could find from the 2009 season --no match -- not even close. My son and I examined both cleats looking for any indication there was a number "24" since the seller mentioned that both cleats were marked on the inside with this number. Both cleats were very clean on the inside -- there was no #24 on either one of them.
I contacted the seller and got the following reply:
"Sorry for the mishap. I was in the same boat when I originally purchased them, but he wouldn't refund me the money and lost the case w/ ebay. I wouldn't do that to TRUE fellow Cowboys fans. Again, sorry for the mishap and glad we can work it out. "
The thing that was disturbing is that the seller knew he had a questionable item and misrepresented both cleats as being labeled "24" in order to make a sale. I did manage to work things out with the seller -- I am waiting for a refund that is "pending". I sincerely hope the payment clears and this is settled.
These are the cleats once I cleaned the blackened areas. This was easy to do and you can see the cleats were used by a number #16. Clearly a misrepresented item:
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