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Toni Kroos’ La Liga Socks Preserved: Inside the World’s Most Valuable Football Memorabilia Collection

2026-07-13 · Toni Kroos · Player Focus

**Toni Kroos’ match-worn La Liga socks-still bearing grass stains from his final Real Madrid appearance-sit locked in a Mexican basement alongside Diego Maradona’s half-smoked cigar and a FIFA bribery letter, all part of Gabriel Bustamante’s 20,000-piece football memorabilia empire.**

The collection, unearthed by *The Athletic* in Monterrey, Mexico, includes **Kroos’ iconic Real Madrid sliders**-a relic that traces back to his 2019-20 season. Bustamante, 59, cross-referenced the socks’ stains against game footage to authenticate them, joining shirts from Andrés Iniesta’s Barcelona prime and Rolex watches Maradona gifted to Dorados de Sinaloa players.

Bustamante’s obsession with preserving football’s physical history extends beyond trophies. The Kroos socks, stored alongside Maradona’s cigar (salvaged after a 2019 playoff loss) and a 1986 FIFA letter authorizing a $25,000 bribe to Trinidad & Tobago’s Jack Warner, reflect a **no-expense-spared approach to authenticity**.

The collector’s basement-accessed through a nuclear-bunker-style entrance-holds **7×15 shelves of match-worn jerseys**, including Pele’s, Luka Modrić’s, and Lamine Yamal’s. But Kroos’ items stand out: the sliders and socks aren’t just memorabilia; they’re **tangible proof of a midfield maestro’s final chapter at Madrid**.

Maradona’s discarded cigar, picked up by Bustamante after a 2019 Dorados de Sinaloa playoff defeat, became the collector’s most infamous acquisition. When Maradona spotted him retrieving it, he quipped, *“This guy needs more therapy than me”*-then handed over his sunglasses. The exchange underscores Bustamante’s **relentless pursuit of football’s raw, unfiltered moments**.

Unlike public museums, this archive thrives on **unseen stories**. The FIFA letter, for instance, reveals corruption at the 1986 World Cup’s core-yet it’s displayed alongside a referee’s 1990 World Cup red card, blending scandal with sport. Kroos’ socks, meanwhile, offer a quieter tribute: **the wear and tear of a player who defined an era**.

Bustamante’s mission isn’t just hoarding relics; it’s **teaching history through objects**. He cites Alfredo Di Stéfano and Ferenc Puskás as his early inspirations, arguing that **physical artifacts bridge the gap between black-and-white footage and modern fandom**.

The Kroos sliders, pulled from a drawer during *The Athletic*’s visit, carry the weight of a player who retired in 2023. Their presence in the collection isn’t about Kroos’ trophies-it’s about **the sweat, the grass, the unglamorous reality of 90 minutes**. For Bustamante, that’s the real legacy.

Located in a secured, abandoned car park beneath Monterrey, the collection requires a **security checkpoint pass**. The exterior gives nothing away-until you step inside, where rows of Nike, Adidas, and Puma boots line the walls, each with a story. Kroos’ socks, tucked among Maradona’s cigar and Pele’s jerseys, prove that **some legends are preserved in the details**-not just the headlines.

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