After Garcia's death, a dispute arose between Irwin and the Grateful Dead regarding ownership of Garcia's four Doug Irwin guitars. In his will, Garcia gave possession of these instruments to Irwin. The Grateful Dead challenged whether Garcia had the right to convey title and insisted that the band owned the instruments. The parties reached a settlement in 2001 where Irwin was awarded two of the guitars, Tiger and Wolf, and the Grateful Dead took possession of the other two, Rosebud and Headless (the latter of which Garcia had never played onstage). Irwin sold Tiger and Wolf at auction on May 8, 2002. Tiger was purchased by
Indianapolis Colts owner
Jim Irsay for $957,500, including commission. Irsay loaned Tiger to be played during
Dead & Company concerts and regularly exhibited it as part of
The Jim Irsay Collection. Tiger was also exhibited as part of
The Metropolitan Museum of Art's
Play it Loud exhibit in 2019. In March 2026,
Christie's sold the guitar in the first of four auctions of
the Jim Irsay Collection. Bobby Tseitlin of Family Guitars won the auction at $9,500,000 - $11,560,000 including auction fees. Mr. Tseitlin vowed that Tiger will “continue to be played, heard, and experienced the way [it was] meant to be.” True to his word, Tiger was back onstage the next day in the hands of
Derek Trucks of the
Tedeschi Trucks Band, a few blocks from Christie's Auction house. In a tribute to Mr. Garcia, Trucks played the Garcia-favorite song
Sugaree amongst others that evening. Tiger represents the second-highest ever paid for a guitar, exceeded only by the sale of
the Black Strat at the same auction. ==See also==