OLD MAN: What in the
hell are you two doing? You're supposed to be
on the floor working. I'm working. I gotta call Jeremy. RICK: What are you
calling him about? COREY: This guy's got
two Rocky Marciano custom-made punching bags. OK OLD MAN: Yeah. Well, I want to test them out. But I still got it, right, Rick? RICK: Really, dad? CHUMLEE: I think you
still got it, boss. RICK: [LAUGHS] What-- what is that? OLD MAN: That'll take and
put you on the ground, son. This one, I call "the hospital." This one, I call "the morgue." Understand me? [CHA-CHING] JEREMY BROWN: This is amazing. I mean, Rocky Marciano is
just an absolute legend in the world of boxing. He's one of the greatest
heavyweights of all time, and just pummeled his
opponents in the ring with just unparalleled power,
despite the fact everyone called him undersized. He had this unbelievable
ability to knock whoever he wanted to flat on
their ass with a single punch. SCOTTY: I've watched
footage of this guy fight. He is scary. This guy's knocking
out big guys. 49-0 with 43 knockouts,
it's hard to argue. SCOTTY: I know. JEREMY BROWN: Rocky
Marciano embodied what a great heavyweight
champion should be. He didn't have the
greatest reach or height, but he made up for it in just
brute power and charisma. And he's the only champion to
go through his entire career undefeated. COREY: You know, he's asking
for a lot of money. $375,000. OK. You know, I have no
idea what to pay for these or what they're worth. JEREMY BROWN: What I can tell
you, the most valuable piece of boxing memorabilia
ever sold, Muhammad Ali's trunks from the Fight of the
Century against Joe Frazier, $175,000. You mentioned that there's
paperwork or affidavits? SCOTTY: Yes. Now, these run from
my father-in-law all the way through guys
that were there with him when he gave them the bags. JEREMY BROWN: OK. I had occasion to travel to
Grosenger's Training Camp in New York. This was the camp used
by Rocky Marciano. While at Grosenger's, I was
present when Mr. Marciano gave his personally-designed
and custom-made heavy bag to Peter [INAUDIBLE]. SCOTTY: That was
my wife's uncle. JEREMY BROWN: OK. These were
custom-made for Rocky? SCOTTY: Yes. OK. Well, that's the tricky part,
because they're one-of-a-kinds. As far as the value on
these, they're worth as much as somebody's willing to pay. Marciano is a huge name. He has a huge following. It's hard to assess a value,
because they are one-of-a-kind. With one-of-a-kind
items, you never know. There could be some guy
waiting out there for something just like this
with deep pockets, who can pay a million bucks. Unlike autographs where you
have established third-party authentication
services out there, there's really not a company
who's an authority that can authenticate these because of
the fact they're one-of-a-kind, there's no serial
numbers, markings anywhere specific on it. There's really not a
smoking gun, so to speak, that without a doubt links
these bags as the bags mentioned in the affidavits. You know what, though? The thing is I would have
to say is that definitely it links him to there. I've seen photographs
all over the internet. I've seen this bag with
Rocco on it in Grosenger's. I've seen that back
with Rocco punching it. JEREMY BROWN: OK. SCOTTY: So it's there. JEREMY BROWN: What
I'm saying is there's nothing in the paperwork
stating that this is bag XYZ and this bag is XYZ,
so to speak, that we know definitively this is
the bag that Marciano gave to those folks
in the paperwork. SCOTTY: So as much
as your guy, you know, doesn't think he can
put the pieces together, they definitely fit. So-- COREY: Do they $375,000 fit? That-- that's the problem. I believe that they're real. I think that they could
be, and I think that could be worth a lot of money. Sure. COREY: But it's
kind of like the-- you know, the baseball hat that
Babe Ruth took off his head and threw to a kid in the crowd. Right. COREY: It's very, very hard
for that kid, 50 years down the line, to say,
this is the hat Babe Ruth threw to me
when I was in the stands at Yankee Stadium. SCOTTY: Oh. But-- but these
affidavits are true. COREY: But. I mean, you have affidavits
from nobody I've ever heard of. SCOTTY: I have photographs
with Rocky and the bag-- COREY: You have photographs
with Rocky and a bag. SCOTTY: --and my uncle,
and my brother-in-law, and our friends. COREY: You know, you
may have a point. And you know what? You might be 100% right
and everything else. It's just not a chance I
can take, not with my money. OK. You're missing out here. COREY: I mean, is there a
guy out there that would pay a million bucks for it? I'm sure there is.
SCOTTY: Sure. Sure. But is that guy gonna
come stumbling into my shop, and see it hanging on
the wall, and buy it? SCOTTY: I know.
I know. I--
COREY: No. I would really very much try to
sell them in an auction house and get somebody else to put
their-- put their name with it. Really? COREY: They could definitely
be worth some money. And you know what? The sky could be
the limit on them. All right?
SCOTTY: All right, man. Appreciate it.
SCOTTY: Thank you. Thank you.
SCOTTY: All right, dude. I think that the
paperwork does really prove the validity of the bags. Along with the photographs,
I know it's Rocky's bag. We all know it's Rocky's bag.