Ken Brett Autograph

Ken Brett

Kenneth Alven Brett (September 18, 1948 – November 18, 2003) was an American professional baseball pitcher who played in Major League Baseball for the Boston Red Sox, Milwaukee Brewers, Philadelphia Phillies, Pittsburgh Pirates, New York Yankees, Chicago White Sox, California Angels, Minnesota Twins, Los Angeles Dodgers, and Kansas City Royals from 1967 to 1981. He was the second of four Brett brothers who played professional baseball, the most notable being the youngest, George Brett. Ken played for ten teams in his 14-year MLB career. More about Ken Brett

Affiliate disclosure: When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.

Current items with a signature of Ken Brett

These are the most current items with a signature of Ken Brett that were listed on eBay and on other online stores - click here for more items.

Picture Item Title Price Store
thumbnail1972 TOPPS KEN BRETT SIGNED BASEBALL CARD BREWERS AUTOGRAPH #517 D.2003$14.99logo
thumbnailKen Brett 1973 Topps Autographed Cardinals Baseball Card #444 Vintage Auto EX$29.00logo
thumbnailKEN BRETT 1976 TOPPS AUTOGRAPHED SIGNED AUTO BASEBALL CARD$19.95logo
thumbnailKen Brett 1978 Topps #682 Autographed Angels 81607$19.95logo
thumbnailKen Brett MLB Baseball Autographed Signed Index Card$39.99logo
thumbnailKen Brett Signed Baseball and Card Ken Brett Traded to Yankees 1975$399.00logo
thumbnailYoungest World Series Pitcher Ken Brett Hand Signed 3X5 Card Sig Auctions COA$29.99logo
Born in Brooklyn, Brett grew up in El Segundo, a suburb of Los Angeles just south of Los Angeles International Airport.

Just out of El Segundo High School at age 17, Brett was the fourth overall pick in the 1966 Major League Baseball Draft, selected by the Boston Red Sox as a pitcher; the nineteen other MLB teams coveted him as a center fielder. Read even more about Ken Brett at Wikipedia

Traded items with a signature of Ken Brett

In total, we tracked 320 items since 01/01/2008. The chart below shows the trade volume over time.

The most expensive item with a signature of Ken Brett (Ken Brett Signed Autographed MLB Baseball. JSA COA. RARE) was sold in April 2022 for $249.00 while the cheapest item (1978 Topps #682 Ken Brett Angels Signed Autograph Dec'd) found a new owner for $0.01 in October 2008. The month with the most items sold (7) was April 2020 with an average selling price of $10.99 for an autographed item of Ken Brett. Sold items reached their highest average selling price in February 2019 with $91.00 and the month that saw the lowest prices with $0.99 was November 2012. In average, an autographed item from Ken Brett is worth $8.10.

Most recently, these items with a signature of Ken Brett were sold on eBay - click here for more items.

Picture Item Title Price Store
thumbnail1971 Arco Oil Ken Brett 8 x 10 Signed Photo - Boston Red Sox$12.00logo
thumbnail1975 Topps Ken Brett SIGNED AUTOGRAPHED # 250 Pirates$6.99logo
thumbnail2011 Leaf Ink Cuts Beantown Heroes Ken Brett 1 of 1 Cut Signature Auto Red Sox $29.99logo
thumbnailAutographed Ken Brett 1974 Topps Baseball Card Pirates Royals$8.00logo
thumbnailKansas City Royals star Ken Brett signed autographed 1982 Topps card- Died 2003!$9.99logo
thumbnailKen Brett Autograph On a 1981 Topps - Kansas City Royals (Read Description)$12.95logo
thumbnailKen Brett Beckett BAS Signed 1976 Topps Traded Autograph$39.00logo
thumbnailKen Brett Pittsburgh Pirates 1974 Topps Team Checklist autographed card$14.99logo
thumbnailKen Brett Signed 1976 Topps Card Dec ‘03 Pirates Auto$7.63logo
thumbnailKen Brett Sketch Card Limited 4/50 Edward Vela Signed (Anaheim Angels)$0.99logo

Ken Brett signed Baseball Trading Cards by Manufacturer

Latest News about Ken Brett

MLB rumors: Yankees willing to offer Manny Machado $220 million?; Brewers sign B (02/10/19): Baseball season is lurking. The Super Bowl is in the rearview mirror and we’re starting to see teams post social media photos of moving trucks heading to either Florida or Arizona with pitchers and catchers reporting in a few days, and yet we’re still waiting more than a dozen needle-moving free age