The man who took the famous picture of Muhammad Ali standing over Sonny Liston is selling his collection.Sports photographer Neil Leifer, who shot the pictures for more than 200 Sports Illustrated covers, is selling prints of his best photographs. The most treasured photos are signed and come with Leifers credentials that got him into the events.The auction of photos Leifer owns taken by other photographers will be sold Friday in New York City by Guernseys. Pictures that Leifer took and owns will be sold Saturday.The piece expected to go for the most money is the shot taken at Ali-Liston II in Lewiston, Maine, in May 1965.The 11-by-14 inch photo was made through the expensive dye transfer process and is signed by both Ali and Leifer. Ali wrote under the photo: To Neil Leifer, Thank you for such a great picture. The picture is mounted and comes with Leifers credentials for the dressing room, the weigh-in and the fight and the original envelope they came in.The bidding for the piece started online at $160,000. There have not been any bidders thus far, but Guernseys president Arlan Ettinger said he believes the piece could sell for at least $500,000.Leifer, 22 at the time, was situated perfectly for the shot, as SI senior photographer Herb Scharfman took the other side of the ring. Scharfman wound up in between Alis legs in the photo.Another famous photo included in the auction is the shot Leifer took from the Astrodome roof when Ali fought Cleveland Williams. That item, which is signed by Leifer and includes his credentials, has hit the opening bid of $80,000.NFL photos up for bid include?Leifers picture of the opening handshake at Super Bowl I and?a photo from the 1958 NFL championship game, dubbed The Greatest Game Ever Played, which Leifer shot on the day he turned 16.Ettinger said some photos have a reserve price that will not be publicly disclosed but exist because Leifer would rather keep them if the price is not right.The record price paid for sports photographs was $1.79 million in August by a collector who bought photographer Charles Conlons work. Conlon took pictures of baseball players from 1904 to 1942. The auction included the negatives.The Leifer auctions are only for the photos being sold and do not include the rights to the photos themselves, many of which are owned by Sports Illustrated.Mike Hull Jersey . Isner, ranked No. 14, won his eighth career singles title and took the title in New Zealand for the second time after his victory in 2010. The match was similar to Isners quarterfinal victory over fifth-seeded Philipp Kohlschreiber which went to three sets, all tiebreaks and contained no breaks of serve. Kenyan Drake Jersey . - Oakland Raiders running back Rashad Jennings was speaking to a group of local high school students earlier this week when the conversation turned to the importance of being prepared when opportunities in life arise. http://www.wholesaledolphinsjerseys.com/?tag=youth-adolphus-washington-jersey . The 18th player to shoot 60 on the tour, Jamieson settled for par on the final hole when his 15-foot birdie chip grazed the edge of the hole and stayed out. After opening with rounds of 66 and 73 to make the cut by a stroke, he had 11 birdies in the bogey-free round. Cordrea Tankersley Jersey . Note: The Calgary Flames announced Tuesday that Sean Monahan would not be made available to Canadas World Junior team. Cheap Dolphins Jerseys Online . The Dane followed up his first European Tour title last weekend with eight birdies and just a single dropped shot on Thursday for a one-stroke advantage over South Africas Allan Versfeld and Portugals Ricardo Santos.As West Ham bid farewell to Boleyn Ground, Sky Sports looks back at the iconic stadiums 112-year history with the help of five Hammers icons in a new documentary to be shown at 6pm on Tuesday on Sky Sports 1 HD.With 2,391 appearances, 246 goals, seven Hammer of the Year awards and 10 major honours or promotions between them, West Ham legends Billy Bonds, Alan Devonshire, Phil Parkes, Tony Gale and Tony Cottee have more memories than most of the Boleyn Ground.They gathered together in the Greenwood and Lyall lounge at the famous old ground to reminisce on their combined 69 years as West Ham players. The quintet touch on their experiences as fans before and after they donned the famous claret and blue shirt - or stepped into the dug-out, in the case of Bonds.ddddddddddddAmong tales of Bobby Moore and Trevor Brooking playing with beer barrels for goal posts, block tackles, naps for warm-ups, European comebacks and the legendary chicken run, they also look forward to the Hammers future at their new home in Stratford at the Olympic Stadium.Watch The Boleyn Boys on Tuesday, 6pm, Sky Sports 1 HD, followed by live coverage of West Ham v Manchester United.Also See:Sky Live: West Ham v Man UtdFarewell to the Boleyn blogWest Ham darll to the Boleyn blogWest Ham darings[/url] Wholesale Baseball Jerseys ' ' '