Bradford City fans will get the chance to follow in the footsteps of Jennifer Lopez with the latest prize to be donated to the Telegraph & Argus Save Our City Appeal Auction.
The auction of sporting, music and television memorabilia is the latest event in the T&A's fundraising campaign to stop the club going out of business.
A host of celebrities including Bradford-born pop stars Gareth Gates and Kimberley Walsh and TV presenter Richard Whiteley have already agreed to donate items for the cause.
Now Bradford boxing star Nadeem Siddique is offering people the chance to travel in a style with a stretch limousine ride to and from a free slap-up meal for eight people at a top Bradford curry house.
Anams Restaurant in Great Horton Road and Unique Limousines in Heaton both sponsor Bradford boxer Nadeem and have agreed to donate their services to support the auction.
Nadeem said: "It is an X5 limo. There are only nine others like it in the world and its previous owner was J-Lo (Jennifer Lopez)
"You cannot buy BMWs like this, she ordered it to be stretched to meet her requirements. It is amazing. It is like a nightclub inside. It has a DVD player and the televisions that go with it, air conditioning and halogen lighting.
"They normally charge £150 for the first hour and £100 per hour after that.
"I thought any Bradford City fan would jump at the chance of this prize because the car was owned by Jennifer Lopez and Anam's has won awards for being one of the best restaurants in the north of England."
Nadeem is also donating the boxing gloves worn by Esham Pickering when he won the European super bantamweight belt in Bradford earlier this year.
The gloves will be signed by boxers who train at Brendan Ingle's gym in Sheffield.
Nadeem has been a Bradford City fan since he was a teenager and has already supported the T&A Save Our City Appeal by playing in the pro-celebrity match at Valley Parade, which helped to raise about £100,000.
He said: "I went to my first Bradford City match in 1991 against Leyton Orient and they won 3-1.
"Can you imagine what it was like to be there on the same pitch as these players at Valley Parade 13 years later? It didn't really sink in straight away. It wasn't until a couple of days after the game that I realised what a privilege it was to have played."
Now he is urging everyone in the City to make the T&A's charity auction as much of a success.
He said: "We need to get everybody in the city involved. And I am calling on the Asian community. There are a lot of big businesses in Bradford who could donate prizes. I hope I can get it started and others will follow."
The auction takes place at the banqueting suite at Valley Parade on Friday, July 2, at 7.30pm. There is a £3 admission fee which will go to the appeal.
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