PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — Former Boston Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling might have to sell or give up the famed blood-stained sock
he wore on the team's way to the 2004 World Series championship to
cover millions of dollars in loans he guaranteed to his failed video
game company.
Schilling, whose Providence-based 38 Studios filed for bankruptcy in June, listed the sock as collateral to Bank Rhode Island in a September filing with the Massachusetts secretary of state's office. The sock is on display at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown, N.Y.
Schilling
also listed a baseball hat believed to have been worn by New York
Yankees great Lou Gehrig and his collection of World War II memorabilia,
including some the filing said is being held at the National World War
II Museum.
Schilling told WEEI-AM in Boston on Thursday that possibly having to sell the sock
is part of "having to pay for your mistakes." He said that "I put
myself out there" in personally guaranteeing loans to 38 Studios and is
seeking what he called an amicable solution with the bank.
"I'm obligated to try and make amends and, unfortunately, this is one of the byproducts of that," he told the station.
Hall of Fame spokesman Brad Horn declined to say whether Schilling has asked for the sock, on loan since 2005, to be returned.
The Boston Globe first reported the filing Thursday. It said Schilling
personally guaranteed as much as $9.6 million in loans from Bank Rhode
Island and $2.4 million in loans from Citizens Bank related to 38
Studios.
Schilling, who also pitched for
Baltimore, Houston, Philadelphia and Arizona and who won the World
Series three times, is perhaps best remembered for pitching Game 6 of
the 2004 American League Championship Series with an injured ankle that bloodied his sock. The sock
now listed as collateral was stained during the second game of the
World Series, which the Red Sox won that year for the first time in 86
years.
Richie Russek, owner of the Westhampton, N.Y.-based Grey
Flannel Auctions, who is featured on The Discovery Channel series "All
Star Dealers," estimated the bloody sock could sell
for $50,000 to $100,000, but stressed there is nothing comparable that
has ever been auctioned off. He said the Gehrig cap would likely fetch
at least $150,000.
38 Studios — which was lured to Rhode Island
from Massachusetts with a $75 million state loan guarantee — had a
spectacular collapse. Its financial problems spilled into public view
last spring when it missed a $1.1 million payment to the Economic
Development Corp. Within weeks, 38 Studios had laid off its nearly 300
employees in Providence and 100 more at an affiliate in Maryland ahead
of a bankruptcy filing in June.
The firm owes $150.7 million and
has assets of $21.7 million, according to court filings. 38 Studios
Baltimore made a separate bankruptcy and owes more than $121.4 million,
with assets of more than $335,000.
The state of Rhode Island, by
far the firm's largest creditor, is now likely on the hook for some $100
million related to the loan guarantee deal, including interest. The
company's assets are scheduled to be auctioned off.
Schilling
has conceded he was "absolutely" part of the reason the company failed.
But he repeatedly accused Gov. Lincoln Chafee, who was sharply critical
of the loan guarantee, of having an agenda that hurt 38 Studios. He
called Chafee a "dunce of epic proportions" and a "buffoon."
Chafee, an independent, has said he did everything he could to help the company.
Schilling
also recently put his 20-room home on 26 acres in Medfield, Mass., on
the market for $3.45 million. The house, which has a heated pool with
waterfall, a beach volleyball court, batting and pitching cages and a
putting green, was also listed for sale in 2008. He told WEEI on
Thursday that he and his wife had been looking to downsize for some
time.
Schilling has said he invested as much as $50 million in 38 Studios and has lost all his baseball earnings.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.