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6 Ways to Protect
Yourself Against Buying A Counterfeit Sports Jersey by Bill
Wilcox
With the popularity of sports jerseys growing dramatically over
the past decade, so have the number of fake or counterfeit jerseys
being offered as authentic. Unfortunately, counterfeit jerseys are big business.
It is estimated that tens of millions of dollars
are lost each year to counterfeiters. Legitimate sales are lost,
producer's royalties are unpaid, and the sports fans get inferior
quality merchandise - everybody loses!
Many scam artists set up shop and peddle their fake
merchandise at sporting events and temporary locations.
The sales pitch usually starts with a bargain price.
This is usually the hook that is used to lure the prospective
buyer into a high-pressure sales pitch.
The vendor may tell you that the reason for the bargain
price is that they received a great deal on overstocked
merchandise, or they were lucky enough to buy out the
stock of a going-out-of-business retailer. And of course,
this all comes with a "guarantee" that the sports jersey is the real thing. Don't buy it! Most
likely these sports jerseys are knock-offs (unauthorized
copies) shipped in from overseas. These fakes usually
come with poor quality materials and inferior manufacturing
processes. Bad stitching, faded colors, off-sizes, and
all-around cheap appearance are common characteristics
of the counterfeit jersey.
These same unscrupulous vendors have gone high tech
by selling their fake merchandise on the internet. If
you want to try your hand at buying that favorite sports
jersey at one of the online auctions - think again!
It is estimated that up to 95% of the Mitchell & Ness throwback jerseys sold on eBay are counterfeits.
Law enforcement agencies are starting to police these
fake sports jerseys and the vendors that sell them.
The counterfeit jerseys are being confiscated and the
vendors arrested. Selling or manufacturing counterfeit
jerseys is a very serious crime. Penalties for a first
offense are a fine of up to $2 million and 10 years
in prison. A second offense virtually doubles these
penalties.
Despite these efforts, there is still a huge black market
for the counterfeit jerseys. The policing agencies are
just not staffed up to stop the large inflow of these fake jerseys coming in from overseas. So, your best
advice is - Buyer Beware!
Follow these 6 tips and you can be assured that your
next purchase will be the "real deal" - an authorized, high-quality official sports jersey:
- Be suspicious of prices too good to be true
- they usually are.
- Don't buy your jersey from a street vendor -
authorized dealers rarely market authentic sport jerseys in stadium parking lots or on street corners.
- Look at the jersey carefully. Fakes usually
have poor stitching and faded (or wrong) team colors.
- Believe it or not, check the spelling of the name
of the team or player. Fakes often have misspellings.
Think about it - a name like R-o-e-t-h-l-i-s-b-e-r-g-e-r
just isn't that easy to get right.
- Look for the official sport logo - NHL, NFL,
MLB, NBA, etc. Most official jerseys display the league
logo in the form of a hologram.
- Official jerseys display the name of the licensed
manufacturer and a trademark -- this is a must.
Remember - if the "deal" sounds too good,
it probably is! Smart sports fans, like you, make their
sports jersey purchases from reputable, licensed merchants
and take pride in knowing that they are wearing the
REAL DEAL!
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