From Deseret News archives:
A new ball game for Overstock.com
Auction site is taking bids on Bonds baseball
Overstock's auction of the ball took off Monday quicker than a Bonds fly into McCovey Cove. The bidding started with $1 at noon. After about eight hours, 17,000 site visits and more than 100 bids, the total rose to more than $115,000.
Lifelong Giants fan Steven Williams, 26, of Pacifica, Calif., tabbed Overstock.com for the auction after coming up with the ball following an 80-second fracas in the left-center bleachers of SBC Park Sept. 17 and fighting off a couple of legal challenges from other fans claiming ownership.
The auction is scheduled to run until noon Oct. 27 at Overstock Auctions, a venture of online closeout retailer Overstock.com Inc. that started three weeks ago.
"One thing that we are going to clearly benefit from is a lot of good PR on this deal, and we're going to bring a lot of people to the site that might not have seen a young, fledgling auction site," said Jonathan E. Johnson III, Overstock.com's vice president of corporate affairs.
"It's just valuable," he said of the publicity. "There's no way to put a dollar amount on it. The primary interest was just to let people know Overstock has an auction site, and a unique, one-of-a-kind, high-interest piece like this baseball, we thought, would be a great way to do it."
Williams played the field of auction companies before settling on a contract with Overstock, the terms of which are confidential.
Although there's been a fair amount of sniping from a pair of fans who came up empty trying to grab the ball in the stands, Overstock's policies will eliminate online auction "sniping." That's when bidders use software or services to make a last-second bid to secure an item, leaving little, if any, time for other bidders to ante up.
Overstock's "soft-close" process calls for auctions to automatically extend 10 minutes if a bid is made within the last 10 minutes of the auction's close.
"It could, theoretically, go on ad infinitum," Johnson said. "There's nothing wrong with it (sniping), but, frankly, it doesn't really maximize value for the seller, and it makes it difficult for buyers unless they have that software."










