There appears to be a happy ending in the saga surrounding the gloves that Vikings tight end Kyle Rudolph wore when he made the game-winning catch in the team's wild-card win Sunday over the New Orleans Saints and thought he was donating to charity.
As of Thursday, they had brought in nearly $14,000 for the M Health Fairview University of Minnesota Masonic Children's Hospital, one of Rudolph's favorite charities.
That's mostly because of Jason King, a die-hard Vikings fan from New Jersey. He bought the gloves on eBay and later learned that Rudolph had been duped into handing the white gloves over to someone who was in the team's locker room, claiming they were for a charitable event. The person instead put them up for sale online.
"I felt I had to reach out to Rudy and make it right," King said Thursday.
King took precautions not to be tricked before he bought the gloves for $375 on eBay. He carefully examined photos of the gloves on the auction site and compared them with those posted on Getty Images to be sure they were authentic.
"There are so many scam artists that try to sell stuff that is not game-used," King said. "I saw the string on the middle finger of the glove to verify they were real, and I jumped online and bought them."
Shortly after King's purchase about 2 p.m. Wednesday, social media was abuzz with the news about how Rudolph's gloves made it to the online auction site instead of charity.
King said a friend from a Vikings memorabilia Facebook group spoke with Rudolph and learned how the gloves might have ended up in the wrong hands. The locker room was teeming with reporters after the Vikings' thrilling 26-20 overtime win, and someone in the room apparently asked Rudolph for his gloves.