So I put a game presentation ball on eBay that I had. When I got this ball, it looked like this:

Knowing someone in the Pat's organization, I find out where it was painted. I contacted them and they said they would fix it for free. After they got it they contacted me and told me the ball didn't hold air they would replace it with another game ball they had. I sid, "absolutely not, I want the same ball back" The thing I noticed was they used up to date logos for the Fins and Pats. I put it on eBay and a potential bidder pointed out that the ball laces did not match.

Naturally I removed it from eBay immediately because I have to agree. It got me thinking, though, these places that do the painting probably know nothing about memorabilia authenticity. I wonder if they are careful to make sure the ball they paint is the actual ball handed to the player.
Thoughts??

Knowing someone in the Pat's organization, I find out where it was painted. I contacted them and they said they would fix it for free. After they got it they contacted me and told me the ball didn't hold air they would replace it with another game ball they had. I sid, "absolutely not, I want the same ball back" The thing I noticed was they used up to date logos for the Fins and Pats. I put it on eBay and a potential bidder pointed out that the ball laces did not match.

Naturally I removed it from eBay immediately because I have to agree. It got me thinking, though, these places that do the painting probably know nothing about memorabilia authenticity. I wonder if they are careful to make sure the ball they paint is the actual ball handed to the player.
Thoughts??
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