1 January 1907 is the origin date of Real Betis Balompié, the Seville club that today competes in La Liga, and fans can find authenticated signed football shirts and memorabilia on Walkouts. The club’s green-and-white identity has a long local life, and collectors prize both retail fanshop runs and player-issue variants for provenance, condition and signature placement.
Real Betis have played major fixtures at the Estadio de La Cartuja while alternating traditional home ties across the city, and the trophy cabinet includes a headline domestic honour of a one La Liga title won in 1935 plus three Copa del Rey wins. The club is ranked 38 by the IFFHS, a metric collectors sometimes consult when prioritising signings and retrospectives.
Collector interest focuses on historical moments as much as individual names. Anniversary releases such as Centenary 2007 with its special crest are catalogued by season, while supplier eras from Kappa, Hummel and Adidas signal visible changes that help date shirts. The Seville Derby against Sevilla FC also adds provenance to match-worn and fan-issued shirts, and Copa del Rey finals in 2005 and 2022 generate strong market attention.
Specific seasons act as magnets for collectors: the 1934-35 campaign that delivered the first La Liga crown, the 2004-05 Copa del Rey run that produced parade shirts and away designs, and the 2021-22 cup triumph decided on penalties are all cited in catalogues and sales notes. Shirts from those years are chased for connection to decisive matches, squad lists, and period sponsors.
Away designs are notable in Betis collecting. Historic entries include the 2004-05 black away that accompanied key cup ties and later black and gold variants from European runs in 2022-23. Those away colourways are sought after when they can be tied directly to a final or decisive away result, and photographic evidence in archives helps verify match use.
Centenary pieces such as Centenary 2007 and vintage winners like 1934-35 carry special appeal for display and study, often fetching attention for original crests, limited fanshop early runs, and player-issue differences. Retail shirts from club stores, region-specific releases and early production runs are explicitly collected alongside match-worn items, and provenance notes, squad prints and era-specific supply marks are used to confirm authenticity.
Signed retail demand remains strong for fanshop shirts and limited editions, while iconic away pieces such as the 2004-05 black Copa del Rey away are highlighted in framed displays; many listings will include a COA or equivalent verification to support signature claims. Collectors often reference seasons like 2004-05 and 2021-22 when grouping lots, and provenance tied to the Seville Derby, Estadio de La Cartuja and Copa del Rey fixtures adds discernible value to a verified signature package.