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1999-00 SPx MJ Winning Materials Auto Sells for $47K
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1999-00 SPx MJ Winning Materials Auto Sells for $47K

Goldin sold a 1999-00 SPx Winning Materials Autographs Michael Jordan /23 BGS Authentic, Auto 10 for $47,443. Here’s what that means for MJ collectors.

Mar 15, 20269 min read
1999-00 Upper Deck SPx Winning Materials Autographs #WM1-A Michael Jordan Signed Jersey & Shoe Dual Game-Used Relic Card (/23) - BGS Authentic, Beckett 10

Sold Card

1999-00 Upper Deck SPx Winning Materials Autographs #WM1-A Michael Jordan Signed Jersey & Shoe Dual Game-Used Relic Card (/23) - BGS Authentic, Beckett 10

Sale Price

$47,443.00

Platform

Goldin

1999-00 SPx Michael Jordan Winning Materials Autograph Sells for $47,443

On March 15, 2026, Goldin closed a notable Michael Jordan sale that caught the attention of high-end basketball collectors: a 1999-00 Upper Deck SPx Winning Materials Autographs #WM1-A Michael Jordan card, featuring a signed jersey and shoe dual game-used relic, serial numbered to just 23 copies. This particular example was authenticated by Beckett (BGS Authentic) with a Beckett 10 autograph grade and realized $47,443.

For a late-1990s Jordan insert, this result sits squarely in the high-end lane of the MJ market and highlights how collectors continue to prioritize early, on-card autograph game-used issues.

Card basics: what exactly sold?

Let’s break down the key details of the card:

  • Player: Michael Jordan
  • Team: Chicago Bulls (depicted in uniform; set is from the 1999-00 season)
  • Year: 1999-00
  • Set: Upper Deck SPx Winning Materials Autographs
  • Card number: #WM1-A
  • Serial numbering: Limited to 23 copies (/23)
  • Features:
    • On-card autograph (Jordan signed directly on the card surface)
    • Dual game-used relic: one swatch of game-used jersey and one piece of game-used shoe
    • Part of one of the hobby’s earliest premium memorabilia + autograph combinations for Jordan
  • Grading:
    • Card: BGS Authentic (card is authenticated as genuine, but not assigned a numerical condition grade)
    • Autograph: Beckett 10 (a “Gem Mint” grade for the signature quality)

This is not a rookie card—it comes more than a decade after Jordan’s 1986-87 Fleer rookie—but it is widely viewed as a key 1990s Jordan insert/auto and a cornerstone for collectors who focus on game-used, on-card autograph issues.

Why 1999-00 SPx Winning Materials matters

The late 1990s marked a transition era in basketball cards. Manufacturers began moving from simple base cards and parallels into more complex combinations: autographs, game-used jerseys, patches, and even shoes, all in one premium package.

1999-00 SPx Winning Materials Autographs sits squarely in this shift:

  • Early dual relic + autograph combo: Having both a game-used jersey and game-used shoe on the same Jordan card, with an on-card signature, was cutting-edge at the time.
  • Low serial numbering to 23: Matching Jordan’s jersey number, the /23 print run creates built-in thematic scarcity. For high-end MJ collectors, anything numbered to 23 often carries extra weight.
  • Brand and era: SPx was one of Upper Deck’s higher-end brands in the late 1990s. These years are often seen as a bridge between the mass-production “junk wax” era and the truly ultra-premium modern era.

Because of these factors, 1999-00 SPx Winning Materials Autographs has carved out a place alongside other important 1990s Jordan autograph and memorabilia issues from products like Upper Deck Ultimate Collection, SP Authentic, and early UD game-used sets.

Market context and recent sales

When collectors talk about “comps,” they mean comparable recent sales of the same card or very similar versions, used to understand current market levels. For a card this scarce (only 23 copies), true comps are limited. Many examples are locked away in long-term collections.

Looking across major marketplaces and auction houses (including Goldin, PWCC, Heritage, and eBay’s verified high-end sales), we see a few patterns for this card and its close cousins:

  • Exact card, different grades:
    • High-grade examples of the 1999-00 SPx Winning Materials Autographs MJ (for example BGS 8.5–9 or PSA 8–9 with strong autograph grades) have typically sold in the tens of thousands of dollars over the last few years, with standout copies in premium holders sometimes stretching higher.
    • Authenticated-only copies (like BGS Authentic) with a strong autograph grade tend to trail top numerical grades, but can compete in value when eye appeal is strong and the auto is a 10.
  • Related Jordan auto/memorabilia cards from the era:
    • Similar late-1990s/early-2000s MJ on-card autograph + jersey or patch cards from Upper Deck, SPx, and SP Authentic often cluster in the $20,000–$60,000+ range depending on rarity, numbering, and condition.

Within that context, the $47,443 result at Goldin for a BGS Authentic / Auto 10 example is toward the upper middle of the range you’d expect for this card: not an outlier record for a Jordan grail, but a strong, healthy price for a scarce, important insert.

Several factors likely helped support this level:

  1. Population scarcity: With only 23 copies, the overall “pop” (short for population—how many exist in grading company populations) is naturally tiny. Even if every copy were graded, seeing one at auction is unusual.
  2. Autograph grade 10: Jordan’s on-card autos from this era are generally clean, but a 10 grade from Beckett still adds a premium, as it assures buyers the signature is bold and well-centered.
  3. Stable MJ demand: Michael Jordan’s market has matured. Fluctuations happen, but compared to active players, Jordan’s value trends are more tied to long-term collector demand than short-term performance swings.

Because examples trade infrequently, each public sale like this helps reset expectations for what the card can bring in a competitive auction format.

Why collectors chase this card

For serious Jordan and 1990s basketball collectors, this SPx Winning Materials Autographs card checks several boxes:

  • Iconic player, prime-era imagery: Jordan in Bulls gear from the tail end of the dynasty era still resonates strongly with collectors.
  • Game-used relics with variety: The jersey + shoe combination appeals to collectors who want more than a simple jersey swatch. Shoe pieces, in particular, are less common and can feel more personal.
  • On-card autograph: Many modern cards use sticker autographs. In contrast, Jordan signed this card directly. On-card autos are generally preferred because they feel more integrated and aesthetically pleasing.
  • Turn-of-the-century innovation: This set represents a time when companies were just figuring out what “high-end” meant. For hobbyists, that historical context is part of the draw.

For returning collectors who remember opening packs in the late 1990s, cards like this are the “white whales” they saw in price guides or hobby magazines but almost never in person.

How the BGS Authentic / Auto 10 label impacts value

The grading line on this card is distinctive: BGS Authentic, Beckett 10 autograph.

Here’s what that usually implies:

  • Authentic card, no numerical grade: Beckett has confirmed the card is genuine, but has not assigned a 1–10 grade for the card’s condition. Sometimes this is because the card has issues (wear, surface defects, possible alterations), and sometimes it’s simply because the submitter requested authentication-only.
  • Autograph 10: Beckett has graded the signature itself as Gem Mint. This tells buyers the ink is strong, consistent, and well-placed.

In practice:

  • A high numerical grade (e.g., BGS 9) plus a 10 auto usually sells for a premium.
  • Authentic-only with a 10 auto generally sells for somewhat less than the top numerical grades, but often more than raw, ungraded copies because of the certainty around authenticity and auto quality.

At $47,443, this result indicates that bidders were comfortable valuing the card primarily on:

  • Its scarcity and importance within the Jordan catalog
  • The strength of the autograph
  • The eye appeal of the relic pieces and overall presentation

rather than demanding a top-shelf numeric grade on the slab label.

Where this sale fits in the broader MJ market

Jordan’s market has several tiers:

  • All-time grails: 1986-87 Fleer rookies in top grades, ultra-rare 1990s inserts and PMGs, and the most iconic auto/patch cards often six figures and beyond.
  • Premium 1990s autographs and memorabilia: Cards like this SPx Winning Materials Autographs /23, high-end Upper Deck autographs, and key game-used issues often in the mid five-figure range.
  • More accessible autos and relics: Later-era MJ autos, higher-serial-number jerseys, and non-rare inserts.

This SPx MJ sits squarely in that premium 1990s autograph/memorabilia band. A mid–five-figure result confirms that collectors still place significant value on the early game-used + auto combinations, particularly when they’re tightly numbered and feature strong presentation.

Takeaways for collectors

If you’re a newer or returning collector, here are a few practical lessons from this sale:

  1. Scarcity and story matter together. The /23 numbering is important, but it’s the combination of low print run, on-card auto, and dual game-used relics from a key brand and era that pushes this card into premium territory.
  2. Autograph grades can be a major lever. On high-end cards, a 10 auto grade can meaningfully influence bidding, sometimes as much as small differences in the card’s condition grade.
  3. Comps are guideposts, not guarantees. With only 23 copies in existence, each auction can land slightly differently depending on timing, bidder interest, and how many similar cards are available.
  4. Iconic players age differently in the market. Jordan’s value profile is different from active stars. Performance cycles, injuries, and short-term hype affect him less than they do current players.

For those building a focused Jordan PC (personal collection), this card is the kind of piece that often becomes a long-term anchor. For small sellers and investors, it’s a useful reference point for how the market currently prices late-1990s Jordan game-used autograph issues at the highest levels.

Final thoughts

The March 15, 2026 Goldin sale of the 1999-00 Upper Deck SPx Winning Materials Autographs #WM1-A Michael Jordan BGS Authentic / Auto 10 at $47,443 reinforces how durable demand remains for premium 1990s MJ autograph and memorabilia cards.

While not a record-setting headline compared to the very top of the Jordan market, it’s a clear signal that:

  • Early game-used + auto combinations
  • Low serial numbering tied to MJ’s jersey number
  • Strong autograph grades

continue to command attention and serious bids.

For collectors tracking the evolution of high-end Jordan memorabilia cards, this sale is another solid data point in a long-running story of how the hobby values one of its most important players.