autographed hockey memorabilia
Transcription
autographed hockey memorabilia
Agreement No. $5.95 FROZEN POND www.frozenpond.com We carry the largest quantity of autographed hockey memorabilia on the planet. All signatures are clean and come with a certificate of authenticity. Your satisfaction is guaranteed. AUTOGRAPHED HOCKEY MEMORABILIA MARC-ANDRE FLEURY Auto. 8X10 Cup Photo ...........$65 Auto. 16X20 Photo..................$86 Auto. Penguins Puck ..............$65 Auto. Mini-Goalie Mask...........$89 Auto. Goalie Stick .................$229 Auto. Penguins Pro Jersey ...$449 ALEX OVECHKIN Auto. 8X10 Photo.................$149 Auto. 16X20 Photo...............$169 Auto. Capitals Puck..............$149 Auto. McFarlane Figurine.....$159 Auto. Stick............................$269 Auto. Capitals Pro Jersey.....$549 PATRICK ROY Auto. 8X10 Photo (Mtl/Col) ..$149 Auto. 16X20 Photo (Mtl/Col) .......$179 Auto. Puck (Mtl/Col) .............$149 Auto. Mini-Mask (Mtl/Col).....$179 Auto. Goalie Stick.................$399 Auto. Canadiens Replica Jersey....$349 JEAN BELIVEAU MIKE GREEN LARRY ROBINSON RAY BOURQUE GORDIE HOWE® Mr. Hockey® DARRYL SITTLER JOHNNY BOWER BOBBY HULL MARTIN ST-LOUIS DON CHERRY MIIKKA KIPRUSOFF JOE THORNTON TONY ESPOSITO ROBERTO LUONGO VLADISLAV TRETIAK RYAN GETZLAF MIKE MODANO BRYAN TROTTIER DOUG GILMOUR RICK NASH Autographed 8X10 Photo...................$39 Autographed Habs Puck ....................$39 Autographed Habs Replica Jersey ..$279 Autographed 8X10 Photo (Bos/Col) .......$89 Autographed 16X20 Photo (Bos/Col) ...$109 Autographed Puck (Bos/Col)..................$89 Autographed Pro Jersey (Bos/Col).......$429 Autographed 8X10 Photo .......................$29 Autographed 16X20 Photo .....................$49 Autographed Leafs Puck ........................$29 Autographed McFarlane Figurine...........$42 Autographed Leafs Pro Jersey.............$399 Autographed 8X10 Photo .......................$49 Autographed 11X14 Photo .....................$59 Autographed Bruins Puck.......................$49 Autographed McFarlane Figurine...........$75 Autographed 8X10 Photo .......................$46 Autographed Hawks Puck ......................$46 Autographed Mini-Goalie Mask ..............$79 Autographed Hawks Replica Jersey ....$279 Autographed 8X10 Photo .......................$39 Autographed 16X20 Photo .....................$59 Autographed Ducks Puck.......................$39 Autographed Ducks Pro Jersey............$399 Autographed 8X10 Photo (Cal/Tor) ........$49 Autographed 16X20 Photo (Tor).............$69 Autographed Puck (Cal/Tor) ...................$49 Autographed McFarlane Figurine...........$69 Autographed Leafs Pro Jersey.............$399 THE POND CHRONICLE #25 The newest edition of our catalog/newsletter will be ready for shipping in October. It contains the most comprehensive selection of signed and unsigned hockey memorabilia available anywhere on the planet. Please call or email for your complimentary copy. COMING SOON Autographed 8X10 Photo .......................$39 Autographed Capitals Puck....................$39 Autographed Capitals Pro Jersey.........$399 Autographed 8X10 Photo .....................$179 Autographed Red Wings Puck .............$179 Autographed McFarlane Figurine.........$189 Autographed Red Wings Pro Jersey ....$799 Autographed 8X10 Photo .......................$59 Autographed 16X20 Photo .....................$79 Autographed Blackhawks Puck..............$59 Autographed McFarlane Figurine...........$75 Autographed Hawks Replica Jersey ....$299 Autographed 8X10 Photo .......................$49 Autographed 16X20 Photo .....................$69 Autographed Flames Puck .....................$49 Autographed Mini-Goalie Mask ..............$89 Autographed Flames Pro Jersey..........$399 Autographed 8X10 Photo .....................$119 Autographed Canucks Puck .................$119 Autographed Mini-Goalie Mask ............$169 Autographed Goalie Stick.....................$269 Autographed Canucks Pro Jersey........$499 Autographed 8X10 Photo .......................$49 Autographed 16X20 Photo .....................$69 Autographed Stars Puck ........................$49 Autographed Stars Pro Jersey .............$399 Autographed 16X20 Photo .....................$59 Autographed 12X36 Panoramic .............$59 Autographed Blue Jackets Puck ............$39 Autographed Blue Jackets Pro Jersey .$399 FROZEN POND 10 Buttermill Ave., Concord, ON L4K 3X4 Order Line: 1-800-461-0965 Inquiries & Catalog Requests : 905-760-8404 Fax 905-760-8410 Official Merchandise Partner of the National Hockey League Autographed 8X10 Photo (Mtl/LA) .........$39 Autographed Puck (Mtl/LA) ....................$39 Autographed Habs Replica Jersey.......$279 Autographed 8X10 Photo .......................$59 Autographed Leafs Puck ........................$59 Autographed McFarlane Figurine...........$79 Autographed Leafs Replica Jersey ......$279 Autographed 8X10 Photo .......................$45 Autographed 16X20 Photo .....................$65 Autographed Lightning Puck ..................$45 Autographed Lightning Pro Jersey .......$399 Autographed 8X10 Photo (Bos/SJ) ........$49 Autographed 16X20 Photo (Bos/SJ) ......$69 Autographed Puck (Bos/SJ) ...................$49 Autographed McFarlane Figurine...........$75 Autographed Pro Jersey (Bos/SJ)........$399 Autographed 8X10 Photo .......................$39 Autographed CCCP Puck.......................$39 Autographed Stick ................................$199 Autographed CCCP Jersey ..................$199 Autographed 8X10 Photo (NYI/Pgh) ......$32 Autographed Puck (NYI/Pgh) .................$32 Autographed Islanders Pro Jersey .......$399 TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS 1967 STANLEY CUP CHAMPIONS Autographed 16X20 Limited-Edition Lithograph (17 signatures) ........$299 TERMS 1. All prices are listed in Canadian funds 2. Minimum postage 8x10s - $7, Pucks $9, Jerseys, Masks, 16x20s, Figurines $10, Sticks, Cups $25 3. All items are genuine. Your satisfaction is guaranteed. Want List the W Premiere Issue Volume 1, Number 1 e all remember our first pack of hockey cards. I was six years old, the season was 1980-81, and the gum was O-Pee-Chee. After a few dozen packs, I was hooked. I had those cards with me when we visited family friends in Kelowna and I found a shoebox of older hockey cards under a bed. They were 1978-79 and 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee cards, the Gretzky rookie included. I still have all my old hockey cards, many of which are wrinkled and have rounded corners. Okay, so I have actually “upgraded” many of my wrinkled cards, but the original Gretzky is still in my collection. It wouldn’t be worth much on the secondary market because of its condition, but I don’t think I will ever let it go. It has been the prize of my collection ever since I first discovered it all those years ago. In launching this first magazine, we hope to encourage a new generation to discover their firsts in the collecting world. Be it a pack of cards, a figure, a signature, or even game-used memorabilia, there is no better connection to Canada’s favourite winter sport. There will be a new issue every two months starting with this special Premiere Issue. Every issue will showcase the newest and coolest from the hockey collectibles marketplace. Additional resources like calendars, price guides and checklists can be found online at www.thewantlist.ca. We encourage hockey fans to stay involved with the hobby and email us their collecting stories at info@thewantlist.ca. We encourage collectors to post their want lists for free online via wanted@thewantlist.ca; we want subscribers to publish their want lists in our magazine. So send us your feedback and let us know what you would like to see in the magazine and what you would like to find online at our website. We’ll be happy to hear from you. As a quick side note to those that subscribed to the retired title Canadian Sports The Magazine: readers that had an outstanding subscription have been mailed one free copy of this issue. The same was done for readers whose subscriptions ended in 2008. For more information, please email us at info@thewantlist.ca. The Want List (info@thewantlist.ca) Publisher: Up North Productions Production Manager: Lisa Scott Subscriptions: One year (6 issues) $23.98 CAN (GST included); NS, NB, NL $26.25 CAN (HST included); Two years (12 issues) $44.98 CAN (GST included); NS, NB, NL $49.25 (HST included). Please email for US rates. Publications Mail Agreement Registration. Return undeliverable Canadian addresses to “Up North Productions” at lisa@hockeymedia.ca Canadian Postmaster send address changes to Up North Productions 1995 Indian Creek Rd, Limoges, ON K0A 2M0 Printed in Canada GST No. 859121667RT0001 Reprint Rights: The Want List Asssumes that letters to any department and all unsolicited material submitted are contributed gratis and are for publication unless otherwise stated. Solicited material will be deemed accepted upon publication. Payment will be made in the month following publication. The Want List reserves the right to edit all material submitted, solicited or unsolicited. Editorial Policy: The Want List is a hobby magazine endeavouring to bring sports collectibles news and views to its readers with the major emphasis on Canadian sports cards and memorabilia. Opinions expressed in signed columns, stories and letters are not necessarily those of The Want List. Photocopying Inquiries: No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the priior written consent of the publisher or, in case of photocopying or other reprographic copying, a licence from Access Copyright (Canadian Reprography Collective), 214 King St. W. Ste 312, Toronto, ON M5H 3S6. Privacy Policy: Occassionally The Want List makes its subscriber list available to other reputable companies with offers of goods and/or services specific to collectors. If you do not wish to be a part of this service, please phone or fax us, or email lisa@hockeymedia.ca. You can also request a copy of our Privacy Policy or see it online at www.hockeymedia.ca. ISSN: 1920-5694 Mailing Address: 1995 Indian Creek Rd. Limoges, ON K0A 2M0 Our next issue mails late October 2009. Material deadline is Oct. 9, 2009. Contact info@thewantlist.ca 4- theWantList.ca The Want List : Table of Contents WANTED - News and notes from the hobby, including Oct. 2 Heritage Auctions GAME JERSEYS - The trail of Pittsburgh Penguins’ game-worn jerseys SET OF YEAR -2008-09 Upper Deck is selected Hockey Card Set of the Year CARD REVIEW - Review of all the 2008-09 hockey sets DRAFT DAYS - Why this year’s draft is good for the hockey-card market THE ROOKIES - A sneak-peak at some of this year’s rookie prospects 09-10 PREVIEW - What to expect from the 2009-10 hockey-card season JOE SAKIC - Must-have collectibles to build your very own tribute collection VINTAGE CARDS - 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee is hockey’s classic card set HOCKEY CARDS - Collectors inspire new In The Game 1972 series HERSH REALITY - Stanley Cup champion Marc-André Fleury DON CHERRY - Don Cherry’s favourite hockey memorabilia 6 12 14 16 24 26 32 34 36 44 48 50 FROM THE COVER The 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee hockey set leads a group of 10 classic sets from 1951 through 1989. Check out the vintage section starting on page 36 The Want List - Premiere Issue - 5 H WANTED New home sought for “priceless” Maple Leaf Gardens puck eritage Auction Galleries is tasked with finding a new home for a “priceless” piece of Canadian heritage. The game-winning goal puck from the first-ever hockey game played at Maple Leaf Gardens has been included in the upcoming auction which closes this Oct. 2, 2009. Heritage Auction Galleries is selling the puck on behalf of Harold March’s family. Harold “Mush” March sco red the winning goal in the Chicago Blackhawks’ victory over the Toronto Maple Leafs on Nov. 12, 1931. That was the first-ever game played at Maple Leaf Gardens, the downtown Toronto building that was constructed in record time during the depression. The building became one of the most cherished sport temples for the city and country. “Harold March’s son thought it would be good to get the Maple Leafs puck into the hands of the public” - Mark Jordan, Heritage Auctions For the record, the puck has been living most of its years in the United States. Mr. Marsh, a Stanley Cup champion in 1934 and 1938, spent 17 seasons as an NHL player in Chicago. He made a home in the area and continued in the sport as a referee. He also enjoyed his time as a club champion golfer. Mr. March passed away on Jan. 9, 2002 at the age of 93. The puck and all his hockey memorabilia passed into the hands of his family. “There was noone else to whom to pass it on, so he thought it would be good to get into the hands of the public,” said Mark Jordan, Consignment Director of Heritage Auction Galleries. Along with the 1931 Maple Leaf Gardens puck, March’s collection also included the Stanley Cup-winning goal from the 1934 NHL final. March scored the winning goal in double overtime on Apr. 10, 1934 (a 1-0 win over the Detroit Red Wings). That 1934 championship was the first in Chicago’s franchise then-young history. Other pieces include March’s 1928 Memorial Cup pocket watch (he won the junior 6- theWantList.ca championship with the Regina Monarchs), a 1929 Blackhawks’ team-signed mini stick (March’s NHL rookie season), a 1930s Blackhawks game-used jersey (missing the team emblem), March’s 1934 team jacket, and March’s 1937 Howie Morenz Memorial Game jersey. The auction also includes several of March’s referee jerseys and the ceremonial puck March dropped for the opening of the 1979-80 season - Wayne Gretzky’s first in the NHL. The 1931 puck, however, will be the most sought-after Canadiana piece in the auction. It is sure to command a pretty penny. The 1934 puck, surely, will be sought-after by Chicago fans. “It has been well documented in the press through the years that (March) has had the pucks,” said Jordan. “They are pieces of hockey history that may well interest the “Maple Leafs or Blackhawks to buy.” Both pucks were recently on display at the National Sports Collectors Convention from Jul. 29 to Aug. 2. They were also scheduled to be displayed in Chicago in the leadup to the early October auction. “You have all these things going for them that make them attractive to collectors and historians,” said Jordan. Bill Campbell, also a Consignment Director at Heritage Auction Galleries, agrees. Campbell is Canadian by birth and knows full well the importance of the 1931 game puck. “This is one of the most important pieces that has come into the marketplace,” said Campbell. “This is a priceless piece - you can’t put a price on it. Of course, come Oct. 3, that goal puck will have a price. “That’s one of the things that auctions do,” said Jordan. “It will put a price on it.” Along with the March collection, the Heritage Auction Galleries Oct. 2 auction will feature plenty of hockey and sports memorabilia. The auction will include game-used hockey sticks (Bryan Trottier and others), game-used jerseys (Börje Salming, Sidney Crosby, Alex Ovechkin, Joe Sakic and others), and plenty of vintage hockey cards. Famous Goal Pucks GAME PUCK DESCRIPTION 1970 Stanley Cup Final Bobby Orr “Flying” Goal 1950-51 Jean Béliveau’s First Goal 1980 Olympic Miracle On Ice USA Goal 1981-82 Wayne Gretzky’s 77th Goal of Season 1979-80 Wayne Gretzky’s 50th Goal of Rookie Season 1955-56 Jean Béliveau’s 100th Goal 1952-53 Elmer Lach Stanley Cup winning puck 1962-63 Jean Béliveau’s 300th Goal YEAR 2002 2005 2002 2005 2005 2005 2006 2005 AUCTION HIGH BID Leland’s $38,000 U.S. Classic $18,000 U.S. MastroNet $13,000 U.S. Classic $11,500 U.S. Classic $6,500 U.S. Classic $5,300 U.S. Classic $5,054 U.S. Classic $4,750 U.S. MARTIN SPORTS CARDS SINCE 1987 • WORLD’S BIGGEST VINTAGE HOCKEY WAX DEALER TUE-FRI 12:30-6:30 & SAT 11:00-4:00 in Guelph, ON • eBay Seller martin-sports 519-836-3061 • martinsports@mdswireless.com G N I L L E S We are now taking KSA Grading Submissions for a limited time only $7 per card!!!! • Hockey Wax Boxes 1977-1989 • Hockey Wax Packs 1970-1989 • Hockey Sets 1970-1989 • Wayne Gretzky Rookie Cards Over 20 in Stock - All Grades! • 1000s of boxes and sets from 1990-2010 all sports • New Boxes including 2009-10 Hockey - Great Prices! We have a complete updated inventory list ready to email, mail or fax to you; please contact us and we will get it right out to you $$$ BUYING • BUYING $$$ • All Wayne Gretzky Rookie Cards • All Pre-1989 Packs, Boxes, Sets & Vending • All Pre-1980 Key Rookie Cards • ALL STORE CLOSINGS, ESTATE SALES & JUNK WAX No matter how big or valuable your collection is, I am ready to purchase it. THINK YOU NEED TO SELL OUR HOCKEY TREASURES SOUTH OF THE BORDER? NO. Feel free to check with everyone you wish, just don’t sell anything until I have a chance at it! Call Jason Martin at 519 836-3061 MARTIN SPORTS CARDS STORE LOCATION: 567 Silvercreek Pkwy. N. Guelph, ON 519-836-3061 MAILING ADDRESS: 304 Stone Rd.West Suite 184 Guelph, ON N1G 4W4 A Classic Bobby Orr game jersey earns $108,410 in June auction game-used Bobby Orr jersey earned the highest bid in the recent Classic Collectibles auction that closed on Jun. 19, 2009. The jersey, with photo-matched provenance, drew 15 bids before it closed at $81,425 U.S. With the 17.5% buyer’s fee and a 1.13 exchange rate, the jersey earned $108,410 Cdn. “This wonderful Wilson-knit jersey is conclusively photo-matched to the jersey Orr was wearing in pictures taken (on the Bruins 1969) award night,” read the auction descrip- tion. “Heavy repair work at the right elbow tells us the jersey had already seen heavy use by that point, most certainly during the 196869 season and into the playoffs that same year during home games. We also believe Orr wore the jersey during the first months of the 1969-70 season or, at the very least, up until the game following the on-ice award presentation in Boston.” Along with the photo proof, the jersey was accompanied by three letters of authenticity and a 1976 letter from Alan Eagleson. An ad- ditional document noted that the jersey had once hung in the Canada Sports Hall of Fame. The next-most expensive jersey from the June auction was a 1934 Toronto Maple Leafs game-worn wool jersey. That jersey closed at $37,982 U.S. Another expensive piece was a 1967-68 Oakland Seals game-used jersey that closed for $10,871 U.S. As for cards, a 1926 Dominion Chocolates set closed at $22,136 U.S. while a 1911-12 Imperial Tobacco hockey near-set (44 of 45 cards) closed at $12,543. Bobby Orr Jerseys GAME JERSEY DESCRIPTION 1967-68 Boston Bruins game-used jersey white 1972 Boston Bruins Stanley Cup Final GU jersey 1973-74 Boston Bruins game-used jersey 1970-71 Boston Bruins game-used jersey black 1968-69 Boston Bruins game-used jersey 1968-69/69-70 Boston Bruins game-used jersey 1969-70 Boston Bruins game-used jersey 1975-76 Boston Bruins game-used jersey white YEAR 2006 2007 2004 2006 2006 2009 2007 2006 AUCTION Leland’s Classic Classic Leland’s Classic Classic Leland’s Leland’s HIGH BID $152,897 U.S. $119,182 U.S. $117,000 U.S. $114,874 U.S. $83,544 U.S. $81,000 U.S. $71,327 U.S. $44,289 U.S. Collector shows come to Toronto, Edmonton, Vancouver and Montréal S port fans in Toronto, Edmonton, Vancouver and Montréal will want to check out sports collector shows in September and October. Of note, the Oct. 23-25 weekend marks the 14th edition of the Montréal Collectors’ International. As usual, Montréal’s annual multi-collection show takes place at the Centre Pierre-Charbonneau at Parc Olympique (3000 Viau). The Montréal Collectors’ International will feature a tribute to the Montréal Canadiens’ 100th anniversary. There will be autograph guests throughout the weekend. Bobby Rousseau will sign on Friday, Peter Ma- hovlich and Ralph Backstrom will sign on Saturday, and Phil Goyette, Elmer Lach and Guillaume Latendresse will sign on Sunday. A few more autograph guests are expected to be added to the show lineup. Bossa Shows premier event is the Vancouver Sports Collectors Show from Oct. 17-18 at the Croatian Cultural Centre. Of note, Phil Esposito has already been announced as a featured autograph guest. As for the Bonsor Sports Collector Shows, the September show takes place Sep. 20 at the Bonsor Recreation Centre in Burnaby. The monthly Bonsor schedule continues throughout the year. Walden introduces new Ball Dome A 8- theWantList.ca In Edmonton, the Summit Sports Collectibles Show takes place at the Northlands AgriCom near Rexall Coliseum. The show runs Oct. 2-4 with Ferguson Jenkins signing throughout the weekend, Darryl Sittler signing on Saturday Oct. 3, and Paul Coffey signing on Sunday Oct. 4. This show is being touted as the largest show in Western Canada. The Want List magazine will make its 200910 show debut in Edmonton. At last in Toronto, the Toronto Card Show continues with its monthly shows at Leaside Gardens Arena. The September show takes place Sep. 20 while the October show takes place Oct. 25. new protective holder has been created for baseballs. The BallDome, created by John Weldon and his new company BallDome, officially launched its new product at the 2009 National Sports Collectors Convention in Cleveland. “It was built for the collector,” said Weldon of BallDome. “We created a holder that has the contour of the ball. When you have it on the sweet spot, it rests on the seems of the ball so that it is not touching the plastic and your signature is protected. The holder is made of high-impact plastic and UV-resistant material. Weldon hopes to create similar premium displays for hockey pucks. Orientation camp jerseys on eBay H ockey Canada sold its game-used jerseys that were worn for the Aug. 27 Red vs. White game in Calgary, AB. The game was played at the end of the Canadian Olympic Orientation camp, watched carefully by team general manager Steve Yzerman and his staff. Hockey fans could bid on the jerseys in early September through to the Sunday, Sep. 6 deadline. Game-used sticks from the camp were also available for bid through eBay (until Monday, Sep. 7). The most-expensive game-used jersey was of course the Sidney Crosby jersey. It closed at $3,000 Can. after 38 bids. The second-most expensive jersey was Martin Brodeur at $1,315. Rounding out the top-five were jerseys worn by Jonathan Toews ($900), Michael Richards ($810) and Vincent Lecavalier ($730). Topps returns to hockey market The Topps Company will resume its relationship with the National Hockey League and National Hockey League Players’ Association this 2009-10 season. The New York-based company will debut Topps Puck Attax this November, the first Topps Co. hockey product since 2003-04. The Topps Co. does not have a licence to produce traditional NHL cards; the Upper Deck Co. has had an exclusive NHL-NHLPA license since 2004-05. Beginning this year, however, the Topps Co. does have a licence in the games category. The Topps Puck Attax game is the hockey version of the Match Attax football (soccer) game and Topps Attax baseball game. “We are extremely excited to bring the Topps Puck Attax game to NHL fans,” said Warren Friss, VP, Topps Sports and Entertainment. “Hockey fans are some of the most passionate and devoted fans in the world. We believe this new product will capture the excitement and imagination of kids.” Unlike the Match Attax and Topps Attax cards, the Topps Puck Attax cards are round (like a hockey puck). Card fronts feature individual player “offence” and “defence” ratings. There are 192 game cards in the base set. There are 68 Black Foil game cards, 21 Gold Foil game cards, and six Platinum Foil game cards. Starter packs feature 12 player game cards, two Black Foil game cards, one Gold Foil game card, one Platinum Foil Game card, and one Game Board with rules. Booster packs feature six player game cards plus one random Foil card (Black, Gold or Platinum). The Topps Co. introduced Match Attax in England in 2007 (English Premier League). According to the Topps Co., it is “now the world’s most popular card game.” It has also produced Match Attax cards for the German Bundesliga. In North America, the Topps Co. introduced Topps Attax baseball in April 2009. Hockey Orientation Camp ORIENTATION CAMP JERSEY 2009 White #87 Sidney Crosby 2009 White #19 Jonathan Toews 2009 White #4 Vincent Lecavalier 2009 White #61 Rick Nash 2009 White #94 Ryan Smyth 2009 White #12 Jarome Iginla 2009 White #26 Martin St-Louis 2009 White #12 Eric Staal 2009 White #1 Roberto Luongo 2009 White #10 Corey Perry 2009 White #8 Drew Doughty 2009 White #7 Brent Seabrook 2009 White #10 Patrick Sharp 2009 White #91 Jason Spezza 2009 White #3 Dion Phaneuf 2009 White #1 Steve Mason 2009 White #28 Robyn Regehr 2009 White #25 Chris Pronger 2009 White #30 Cam Ward 2009 White #22 Dan Boyle 2009 White #2 Dan Hamhuis 2009 White #9 Derek Roy 2009 White #3 Stéphane Robidas HIGH BID BIDS $3,000.00 CAN 38 $900.00 CAN 14 $730.00 CAN 34 $676.66 CAN 19 $660.00 CAN 26 $620.00 CAN 28 $610.00 CAN 33 $570.00 CAN 30 $537.00 CAN 16 $510.00 CAN 9 $460.00 CAN 17 $412.77 CAN 13 $405.00 CAN 14 $405.00 CAN 26 $405.00 CAN 20 $401.99 CAN 19 $400.00 CAN 22 $375.01 CAN 13 $375.01 CAN 20 $330.01 CAN 19 $285.00 CAN 19 $260.09 CAN 26 $229.00 CAN 24 ORIENTATION CAMP JERSEY 2009 Red #30 Martin Brodeur 2009 Red #18 Michael Richards 2009 Red #19 Joe Thornton 2009 Red #6 Shea Weber 2009 Red #27 Scott Niedermayer 2009 Red #4 Jay Bouwmeester 2009 Red #15 Dany Heatley 2009 Red #17 Jeff Carter 2009 Red #29 Marc-André Fleury 2009 Red #11 Jordan Staal 2009 Red #19 Shane Doan 2009 Red #52 Mike Green 2009 Red #18 Marc Staal 2009 Red #28 Patrick Marleau 2009 Red #2 Duncan Keith 2009 Red #11 Daniel Cleary 2009 Red #10 Brenden Morrow 2009 Red #10 Andy McDonald 2009 Red #8 Brent Burns 2009 Red #23 François Beauchemin HIGH BID BIDS $1,315.00 CAN 20 $810.00 CAN 25 $620.00 CAN 32 $610.00 CAN 29 $565.00 CAN 27 $550.00 CAN 13 $530.00 CAN 18 $459.92 CAN 24 $455.00 CAN 20 $455.00 CAN 14 $405.09 CAN 26 $405.00 CAN 13 $405.00 CAN 27 $391.12 CAN 28 $357.77 CAN 10 $355.11 CAN 19 $355.00 CAN 24 $349.10 CAN 15 $315.00 CAN 35 $305.00 CAN 9 The Want List - Premiere Issue - 9 I Penguins launch Stanley Cup championship memorabilia line n celebration of the Pittsburgh Penguins’ 2009 Stanley Cup championship, the team and NHL have already released a number of commemorative items via shop.NHL.com. More than 100 items have been posted, from hats and shirts to mugs and pennants. “They have put out all sorts of things,” said George Ryden of Ryden’s Collectibles in Pittsburgh, PA. “The fans went crazy with the first two Stanley Cups (1991 and 1992), but not like it is now.” Most of the items are logo-centric, but rest assured there will be plenty of player-inspired memorabilia in due time. The first three player pieces shown were Forever Collectibles bobble-head figures of Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin and Marc-André Fleury. The bobbles cost $25 U.S. each. Next up was the WinCraft Stanley Cup pennant series, starting with the Sidney Crosby “Youngest Captain to win the Stanley Cup” pennant. There is also an Evgeni Malkin Conn Smythe Trophy pennant and a team celebration pennant. Other early offerings are produced by Antigua, Fathead, Great American, Highland Mint, Inglasco, Old Time Hockey, Reebok, RICO, TNT Media, Topperscot, and Winning Streak. The Upper Deck Company, of course, will also have player products available in its upcoming 2009-10 hockey-card season. If you are not sure what to get, try one of the two bundles. The “Locker Room” bundle ($77 U.S.) features an official locker-room t-shirt (note – organic cotton), a stretch-fit locker room hat, an official Stanley Cup Champions replica puck, and the 2009 Stanley Cup Champions commemorative DVD. Upper Deck The Cup closes out 2008-09 card season Upper Deck Company’s Aug. 6 release of The Cup officially closed out the 2008-09 hockey-card season. At close to $400 per pack in the opening week of its release (four high-end cards per pack), The Cup is UDC’s most expensive brand of the 2008-09 season. That marks quite the contrast from UDC’s least-expensive brands 2008-09 Upper Deck Collector’s Choice and Victory ($1.29 Cdn. for six basic cards). This marks The Cup’s fourth hockey season since the brand made its debut in 2005-06. Each 2008-09 tin pack includes two signed patch cards (one of which is a rookie). Expensive signed patch rookie cards from years past include 2007-08 Carey Price ($2,500), 2006-07 Evgeni Malkin ($2,500), 2005-06 Sidney Crosby ($10,000) and 2005-06 Alex Ovechkin ($4,000). McFarlane Sports Picks: more stars featured in NHL 22 M cFarlane Toys has released its first Sports Picks hockey series of the 2009-10 season. The series features the usual suspects - six active stars and one retired and honoured member from the Hockey Hall of Fame. All seven players have been featured before in the McFarlane Sports Picks series. Each figure measures 6" tall; there are variations of each figure in the set. The honoured Hockey Hall of Fame member is Darryl Sittler from the Toronto Maple Leafs. Active stars are Alex Ovechkin (Washington Capitals), Daniel Alfredsson (Ottawa Senators), Saku Koivu (Montréal Canadiens), Mats Sundin (Vancouver Canucks), goalie Miikka Kiprusoff (Calgary Flames), and goalie Martin Brodeur (New Jersey Devils). NHL Series 23 is up next. It is expected to feature Bobby Orr (Boston Bruins), Chris Drury (New York Rangers), Chris Osgood (Detroit Red Wings), Dany Heatley (Ottawa Senators - maybe?), Luke Schenn (Toronto Maple Leafs), Marc-André Fleury (Pittsburgh Penguins), Sam Gagner (Edmonton Oilers) and Teemu Selänne (Winnipeg Jets / Anaheim Ducks). McDonald’s releases Olympic water bottles at Canadian restaurants McDonald’s is offering five different specially-designed water bottles at its restaurants across Canada. The five bottles feature five sports from the upcoming 2010 Winter Olympics that will take place in Vancouver next February. Three bottles feature McDonald’s athletes (speed skater Cindy Klassen, figure skater Patrick Chan, and snowboarders Brad Martin/Crispin Lipscomb). The other two bottles feature unidentified athletes from hockey and alpine ski. The 500mL bottles cost $3.49 with the purchase of food or drink at McDonald’s Restaurants in Canada. 10 - theWantList.ca Hockey Canada unveils logo for new Olympic hockey jerseys H ockey Canada has unveiled the special logo that will adorn the Canadian jerseys for the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. The special Maple Leaf logo will be featured on Olympic jerseys worn by the men’s, women’s and sledge hockey teams. “This Vancouver 2010 jersey will become part of our nation’s history,” said John Furlong, VANOC’s chief executive officer. “It’s very exciting to see it come to life through partnership and the vision of Nike and a talented Musqueam artist. We hope Canadians will embrace this sweater as the anticipation builds for Canadian team fans across the country and around the world as Canada goes for gold on home ice in just a few short months.” Canada 2010 jerseys, which come in red or white, have a suggested retail price of $135 each. Replica jerseys will be identical to the authentic jerseys, with the exception of the presence of the Hockey Canada mark on the left sleeve. The Olympic jersey logo features several icons and cultural symbols developed by Musqueam artist Debra Sparrow. According to HockeyCanada.ca, the “crest includes smaller Maple Leafs representing the gold medal counts for Canada’s men’s, women’s and sledge hockey teams, the thunderbird and eagle, two powerful First Nations symbols supporting and protecting the central Maple Leaf – and the heralded hockey player and stick.” Upper Deck Co., In The Game debut 2009-10 card year T he 2009-10 hockey-card season opened on Aug. 5 this summer with Victory hockey, one day before the 2008-09 season closed out with The Cup. Victory was the first of two hobby releases by The Upper Deck Company in the month of August. The other was Fleer Ultra hockey released on Aug. 27. The Upper Deck Company has scheduled more than 20 brands for the 2009-10 season. The schedule will be very similar to that of 2008-09, however Upper Deck Legends Masterpieces is not back, nor is Upper Deck Canadiens Centennial edition. The early brands do feature rookie cards. In fact, there are 50 in-pack rookies in both Victory and Fleer Ultra. Fleer Ultra features additional redemption rookies which will be available after the NHL season begins in October. Collectors of course anticipate that these cards will be redeemed for star 2009-10 rookies such as John Tavares, Victor Hedman, Matt Duchene and Cody Hodgson. The first 2009-10 Upper Deck product to feature live rookie cards will be Upper Deck Series One, scheduled for release in November 2009. That series will definitely feature all the key rookies who skate in early October. UDC already has photography on file from the August NHL Rookie Photo Shoot in Mississauga, ON. In The Game, meanwhile, makes its 200910 season debut on Sep. 9 with In The Game 1972. This series features hockey stars from the 1972 hockey season, be it NHL, World Hockey Association or the Canada-Soviet Union Summit Series. This series features a thorough list of signature cards. Wrigley’s Excel Olympic gum Wrigley Canada, an official supplier of the 2010 Winter Olympics, has featured potential Canadian athletes on its gum wraps. With the promise that “portion of proceeds support the Canadian Olympic Team,” fans can choose either hockey goalie Martin Brodeur (Spearmint), speed skater Denny Morrison (Polar Ice), or alpine skiier Kelly VanderBeek-Ford (Winter Fresh). New York Rangers book of greats Co-author Russ Cohen wouldn’t spill the beans as to who was ranked first in the new book, 100 Rangers Greats. The 256-page hardcover book launches Sep. 28 with a $40 CAN retail price (ISBN 978-0-470-73619-7). Cohen’s book is co-written with John Halligan and Adam Raider. The trio has ranked the top 100 New York Rangers of all-time, be it the “superstars, unsung heroes, or colourful heroes.” For the record, Rod Gilbert has been ranked number two. He never won a Stanley Cup, but he did score more than 1,000 points from 1960-1977. Two-time Stanley Cup champion Bill Cook is amongst the top five, but we don’t know at which spot. He would have been our pick for the first overall spot. We look forward to reviewing this book in the next issue of The Want List. Don’t worry, we won’t have any problems spilling the beans on who’s number one. The Want List - Premiere Issue - 11 The trail of the game-used jersey From the player’s backs to the fan’s wardrobe W hen your team gets to the Stanley Cup final, you don’t mind whatever the (un)friendly confines might be: you wear your team’s colours. Such was the case for any Detroit fans lucky enough to find a seat at Pittsburgh’s Mellon Arena for the sixth and final game of the 2008 Stanley Cup final. Detroit fans braved the so-called hostile (but honestly polite) environment and urged their team on to victory. This year, it was Pittsburgh’s turn to wear the black and gold to the seventh and final game of the 2009 Stanley Cup final at Joe Louis Arena in Detroit. This time, it was Pittsburgh’s turn to lift the Stanley Cup. No matter what the crowd, hockey fans like to wear their home team colours. As reigning Stanley Cup champions, the Penguins own what is likely the most popular logo in the National Hockey League. “There is always an interest in the jerseys,” said Joe Tomon of J & J Distributing of Elwood City, PA. “It’s not just in Pittsburgh, it is worldwide. I sell to everywhere: United States, Canada and all over Europe. There is a great fan base for the Penguins.” Tomon sells game-used Penguins jerseys. He purchases the jerseys direct from the team and resells them to fans and jersey collectors from around the world. This past year, the Penguins wore several game jerseys throughout the season. The black (home) and white (away) sets were produced for the overseas match in Sweden, the opening half of the schedule, the second half of the schedule, the first three rounds of the playoffs, and the Stanley Cup final. The players are wore blue “Throwback” jerseys for 10 regular-season games. “They started by selling me the set from Stockholm,” said Tomon. “The next set was worn through early January (at which point) the Penguins called me again.” Tomon then bought the second black-and-white set as well as the blue set “I didn’t think it would (get better), but it did” Joe Tomon on the rising interest of the Pittsburgh Penguins. The Penguins won two Stanley Cup championships in the early 1990s with Mario Lemieux serving as team captain. After a few somber years in the early 2000s, the Penguins have returned to their winning ways with young captain Sidney Crosby in charge. The team also boasts young phenoms such as Evgeni Malkin and Marc-André Fleury. “The interest has been great since Crosby came to the team (in 2005-06),” said Tomon, who explains the interest now is better than it was in the early 1990s. “It has only gotten better with the way the team made the final last year and won the Stanley Cup this year. I didn’t think it would, but it did.” 12 - theWantList.ca at the end of the year. He also picked up the playoff and final jerseys. He pre-sold most of the Stanley Cup final jerseys and had but two remaining by the end of July. Said Tomon, “I had guys buy those way in advance.” Game-issue jerseys may cost $200 U.S. while game-used jerseys may cost $400. A Crosby game-used jersey costs about $10,000. The blue Throwback jerseys are more expensive with the Crosby jersey topping out at $15,000. The Stanley Cup final jerseys, of course, are even more expensive. Of note this past season, players rotated as alternate captain while Sergei Gonchar recovered from injury. The Penguins staff would remove the “A” which sometimes left a marking. Since the Penguins paint the goal posts before each game, collectors will also often notice transferred red paint on the jerseys, especially those of the goaltender Fleury. At last, beside all the game markings, collectors should look for the signature of Dana Heinze on each jersey. Heinze, who previously won the 2004 Stanley Cup as the Tampa Bay Lightning’s assistant equipment manager, now serves as the Penguins’ head equipment manager. On the jerseys we examined, Heinze’s signature appears on the fight strap. 2009 Conn Smythe Trophy winner #71 Evgeni Malkin The Want List - Premiere Issue - 13 2008-09 Upper Deck Canadian stores select favourite NHL sets from 2008-09 card year N ow celebrating its 19th-consecutive season in the hockey-card market - the longestrunning tenure of any hockey brand - Upper Deck has been named 2008-09 Hockey Card Set of the Year by stores across Canada. The annual favourite finished first ahead of 2008-09 O-Pee-Chee, 2008-09 SP Authentic, 2008-09 Upper Deck Canadiens Centennial, and 2008-09 The Cup. Surveyed in August, the 60 stores gave 2008-09 Upper Deck the thumbs up 14 times in the “best overall” vote and 32 times in the “best-in-category” vote for Premium brands. “Upper Deck does really well every year,” said Steve Edgar of Legends of the Game in Toronto, ON. “This brand really won over the hobby after it switched (the emphasis) from Program of Excellence (junior players) to Young Guns rookie cards.” The Young Guns rookie cards are seeded six per hobby box (one in every fourth pack). In Series One, the rookies are numbered cards 201-250; in Series Two, they are numbered cards 451-500. The first series is always pushed out shortly after the start of the hockey season, thus ensuring the newest rookies from the first month are included in Series One. Additional rookies are featured in Series Two released two months later. “Upper Deck Series One feature the lion’s share of 2008-09 rookies,” said Hans Tan of Game Breakers Sports Cards in Ottawa, ON. “There was not much left over for Series Two.” “Upper Deck does very well every year. This brand really won over the hobby after it switched to Young Guns.” - Steve Edgar, Legends of the Game, Toronto, ON At $3-4 per pack, Upper Deck is still reasonably affordable for the average collector. Those not chasing the short-printed Young Guns will complete the two separate shell sets: Series One cards 1-200 and Series Two cards 251-450. Many collectors, however, go the full nine yards and try to complete the full 500-card base set - the 400 veterans and the 100 Young Guns. They also enjoy putting together the basic insert sets, starting with the eight easiest sets from Series One (Captains Calling, Hat Trick Heroes, Sophomore Sensations, Winter Classic) and Series Two (Favorite Suns, Spectacular Saves, Tales of the Cup, The New Era). Of course, 2008-09 Upper Deck also featured a great assortment of memorabilia and signature cards. “Upper Deck is a big seller every year,” said Bruce Bowering of AJW Sports Cards in Saskatoon, SK. “People always want the Upper Deck cards.” NHL Brand Category Winners Before we asked stores what was their favourite NHL brand of the 2008-09 season, we asked them what was their favourite brand in five different categories. Entry-Level Brand -2008-09 O-Pee-Chee Premium Brand - 2008-09 Upper Deck Super Premium Brand - 2008-09 SP Authentic Special Chase Brand - 2008-09 SP Game-Used Edition Super Chase Brand - 2008-09 The Cup 14 - theWantList.ca UDC The 2008-09 NHL Card Year in Review We surveyed 60 random stores in mid-August per their favourite NHL card sets from the 2008-09 hockey-card season. We asked each store to select the top brand in five different categories: Entry Level, Premium, Super Premium, Special Chase (special chase card per pack, less than $50 per pack), and Super Chase (special chase card per pack, more than $100 per pack). We also asked each set to select the best overall set from the year. Thank you to every store that participated and our apologies to those we did not reach. Special thanks to Hans Tan of Game Breakers Sports Cards of Ottawa, ON who provided further commentary for our 2008-09 hockey-card year-in-review. 2008-09 Be A Player May 2009 Product category: Special Chase (One signature card per pack) $16.00 for eight cards Now in its 16th season (15th as an autograph-per-pack product), Be A Player continues to serve as the hobby’s most direct route to autographs. This year’s brand featured a modest 155 different Signature cards, including Stanley Cup champions Sidney Crosby, Marc-André Fleury, Evgeni Malkin and Jordan Staal. Also included were star veterans Paul Kariya, Nicklas Lidström and Joe Sakic. At $16 a pack, the brand is still reasonably priced, however an extra veteran or two in the Signature Series would have served the brand better. The brand did, however, feature plenty of rookies, both in the base set as well as the Signature Series. Collectors especially liked the rare rookie cards limited to 99 copies each and seeded one per box. We don’t necessarily agree with the reasons, but some collectors still complain that autographs are signed on a sticker rather than directly on the card. 2008-09 Champ’s March 2009 Product category: Super Premium $7.00 per pack “Take a trip back in time, when pond hockey was the game people gathered to watch” - UDC With three votes as the year’s best, Champ’s hockey finished as a runner up to Upper Deck Canadiens Centennial as the Best New Brand of the 2008-09 season. Ted Krieg of The Comic Connection in Hamilton, ON said, “it totally outsold everything else in this market.” The brand had a following in other markets, too, however one store pointed out the “hobby product was horrible, but the retail was great.” Another store said the regular rookies seem to be amongst least popular while the opposite was true of the mini rookie cards. There was, of course, lots of interest created by the fossil insert cards. Overall, the product was well designed with each box opened leading to another box purchased as collectors completed the different level sets throughout the brand. 2008-09 Fleer Ultra September 2008 Product category: Premium $3.50 for eight cards Now in its fourth year back since its 2005-06 revival, Fleer Ultra was the only Premium brand ($3 or more per pack) that did not receive any best-in-category votes. One store said “why bother” while another said “same old, same old” of the brand’s ninth hockey release. Still, the brand has somewhat of a following, in part thanks to its original five-year run between 1992-93 and 1996-97 (produced by Fleer). While it was the first Premium brand on the market in 2008-09, it suffered because of an apparent lack of impact live rookies in the product. Okay, so Steve Mason (card 208) went on to win the Calder Trophy as the league’s top rookie, but “impact” names such as Steven Stamkos, Luke Schenn and Fabian Brunnstrom were only available via one-per-box redemption cards. The 2008-09 release also included E-X as a brand within the product. 2008-09 McDonald’s October 2008 Product category: Entry Level $1.30 for three cards Now in its 17th season, McDonald’s hockey is a staple for hockey-card collectors from coast to coast. Missing only the lockout 2004-05 season, McDonald’s hockey cards have been available in McDonald’s restaurants on an annual basis since 1991-92. Said Game Breakers, “it is consistently the most collected brand in the hobby.” Some collectors may have complained that the Clear Patch to Greatness insert cards are too tough to collect, but too are the rare prize cards of jerseys, patches and signatures. This year’s product finally included a parallel series (only the second time ever), but by its rare nature (100 copies of each) it was one that “most collectors wouldn’t dream of putting together” (perhaps a more plentiful parallel tier is needed). Still, McDonald’s remains a “big trader” in stores and will be another big hit in 2009-10 no matter what the format. 16 - theWantList.ca 2008-09 O-Pee-Chee September 2008 Product category: Entry Level $2.00 for five cards As it is every year, O-Pee-Chee was “pretty much a hit” from the moment it hit stores in September. Now in the third year of its comeback (produced by the Upper Deck Company since 2006-07), this was the first time the brand was released before the start of the NHL season. What may have seemed like a bold move was in fact a brilliant move. After all, if any brand was good enough to sell strong without the inclusion of the newest rookies, it was O-Pee-Chee. Of course, the one-per-pack 1979-80 retro cards (with their own unique photos) were “wildly popular”. Collectors also liked the topical basic inserts which had “purpose”. The brand received 37 best-in-category votes (the most by any brand in five different categories) and 11 best-overall votes (second most behind Upper Deck’s 14). 2008-09 O-Pee-Chee (Update) March 2009 Product category: Entry Level $2.00 for five cards (hobby $3.50 for five cards) O-Pee-Chee Update added 200 extra base cards to the original release, including all the newest rookies that were not available when UDC produced the first 600 cards in the summer. The release was again popular, however collectors did not like the more expensive hobby packs. Some stores were careful to differentiate the two releases when voting for O-Pee-Chee as best-in-category Entry Level product. The second release not only included the 1979-80 retro cards (as well as their rainbow parallels), but also new metal parallels for the first 600 cards. The second release also included additional signature and triple jersey cards, but no new basic insert cards. Well, actually, there were four special Wayne Gretzky retro insert cards using the 1979-80 design. The four cards featured Gretzky in different uniforms: either Edmonton, Los Angeles, New York, or Canada. 2008-09 O-Pee-Chee Premier March 2009 Product category: Super Chase $200.00 for five cards O-Pee-Chee Premier was back for a second year as a Super Chase brand, again with an incredible price and some incredible hits. Of the four Super Chase brands, however, O-Pee-Chee Premier received the fewest bestin-category votes. Then again, it also had a so-called middle-of-the-road price within the Super Chase brand (yes, two other brands were more expensive than this $200-per-pack release). This brand has terrific lineage, in particular thanks to the original 1990-91 O-Pee-Chee Premier that caught the hobby by surprise. Collectors liked the 2008-09 rookie cards which featured the memorabilia-signature combination and were limited to 299 copies each. They also liked the designs and many of the memorabilia cards. They didn’t, however, like the price and wished they could have afforded the brand at two thirds of the cost. 2008-09 Power Play November 2008 Product category: Entry Level $50.00 for 300 cards; $30 for 100 update cards This was one of three all-in-one releases produced by the Upper Deck Company this year. Actually, this was in fact a one-in-two release as there was both the initial release (the first 300 cards released as a complete set in November) and the update release (the last 100 cards released as a second complete set in February). First produced in 2005-06 and then again in 2006-07 (both times available in packs), this brand took a one-year hiatus in 2007-08 before coming back in 2008-09 for its third release. Despite a November release, this brand did not include any new rookies, however eventual rookie-of-the-year winner Steve Mason (card 83) was featured in the first 300 cards. The 100-card update, meanwhile, featured almost exclusively all rookie cards, including the 2008 first-overall draft pick Steven Stamkos. 2008-09 SP Authentic Best in Category March 2009 Product category: Super Premium $6.00 for five cards “When hockey card fans are searching for quality autographs, they look no further than SP Authentic” - UDC Now in its 12th season as SP Authentic (16th if you include the early “SP” brand issued between 1993-94 and 1996-97), this brand is well “established as a must for rookie-card collectors.” This brand features the standard premium rookie card of choice. As usual, there are signed and unsigned Future Watch rookie cards, all limited to 999 copies. While this year’s crop may not have been as deep as in recent years (or initially as successful), it still produced a pair of $100-or-better cards in Steven Stamkos and Steve Mason. As always, collectors also liked the base design and enjoyed chasing the rookies (which were signed on the actual cards). SP Authentic received 34 best-in-category votes (second most by any brand in five categories) as well as eight best-overall votes. The Want List - Premiere Issue - 17 2008-09 SP Game-Used Edition January 2009 Product category: Special Chase (One memorabilia card per pack) $40.00 for four cards “Packing a punch at every turn, SP Game Used builds on its success with terrific new additions” - UDC Now in its eighth season, SP Game-Used Edition doesn’t pack quite the punch it did nine years ago when it made its 2000-01 debut. Nevertheless, it made a decent “comeback” as the standard jersey set of the hobby. The appeal of nice hits in every pack seem to keep it as collector’s favourite. The new big hit was the Fight Strap memorabilia cards. SP Game-Used Edtion won 24 best-in-category votes, one more than runner-up Upper Deck Trilogy. It even managed one best-overall vote. Thanks to the invention of the Super Chase category (four brands with pack prices well over $100), however, all three Special Chase sets (brands with pack prices below $50) pale in comparison to the Big Four. 2008-09 SPx December 2008 Product category: Super Premium $8.00 for four cards “The home of the rookie autograph jersey card has become home to some of the hottest RCs” - UDC Now in its 12th season (excluding the 1998-99 brand split between SPx Finite and SPx Prospects), SPx is still sought after as one of the key Super Premium brands of the season. Despite its long-standing popularity, it received only one best-in-category vote this season, which on the bright side coincided with its one best-overall vote. SPx featured brisk sales when it was first issued, in part because more expensive Special Chase and Super Chase brands had yet to be released. As expected, the demand for the rookie jersey cards - a staple since 200001 - was good. The demand for the rookie signed jersey cards - a staple since 2002-03 - was even better. The Steven Stamkos, Steve Mason and Luke Schenn rookie signed jersey cards all surpassed the $100 mark. 2008-09 The Cup Best in Category August 2009 Product category: Super Chase $375 per pack “The Cup lives up to its name by providing some of the most amazing and innovative cards” - UDC Now in its fourth season, this brand continues to dominate the Super Chase category. It won 32 best-incategory votes, just as many as the 2008-09 NHL Set of the Year Upper Deck won in the Premium category (keep in mind, seven stores abstained from voting in the Super Chase category). The Cup also won four best-overall votes, pretty impressive for a brand that hit stores but a week before our year-end survey. In that one week, the brand created a real “feeding frenzy” as the pack price pushed well over the $400-per-tin pack price. It of course provided everything that collectors dreamed for such a big-ticket brand, prompting stores to express it as the “brand that everyone wants.” The new Draft Board cards were especially popular. 2008-09 Ultimate Collection April 2009 Product category: Super Chase $110.00 for per pack “Ultimate Collection has been successful year after year” - UDC Were it not for the year-end release of 2008-09 The Cup, Ultimate Collection could have easily won out as the best brand in the Super Chase category. Originally the most expensive brand in the hockey-card market (when it debuted in 2004-05), it is now the fourth-most expensive brand in hockey. Still, it managed to win seven bestin-category votes, one less than newcomer Upper Deck Black which was some $250 more per pack. Collectors appreciated the overall look of the brand, including the rookie cards (signed or unsigned) and memorabilia cards. The brand was successful by staying true to its popular formula: the promise of one rookie card, one signature card and one memorabilia card in every pack. 2008-09 Upper Deck (Series One) Best in Category October 2008 Product category: Premium $3.75 for eight cards Almost always the “most anticipated set” of the new hockey-card season, this year’s edition not only won Best in Category (Premium), but also won 2008-09 Set of the Year honours. It won 32 best-in-category votes (actually third most amongst all brands in five different categories) and 14 best-overall votes (the most by any brand). As if often the case, Upper Deck Series One was more widely celebrated than Upper Deck Series Two because of the selection of Young Guns rookies. Collectors enjoy what is now the proven format of six rookie cards per hobby box. We only wish those Series One Young Guns would be numbered cards 401-450 instead of 201-250. That way, collectors who only want the “veteran” shell sets could complete a numerical 1-200 (Series One) and 201-400 (our hypothetical Series Two). 18 - theWantList.ca 2008-09 Upper Deck (Series Two) January 2009 Product category: Premium $3.75 for eight cards “Although UD1 brings you the first rookies, Upper Deck Series 2 has taken rookies to a new level” - UDC There was not much left over in terms of rookies by the time Upper Deck Series Two came out in January. Then again, should Simeon Varlamov, Cory Schneider and Nikita Filatov spark the 2009-10 Calder Trophy race, collectors could jump backwards to bust this product. To date, collectors have busted less boxes of Upper Deck Series Two compared to Upper Deck Series One. Ironically, that means the shell sets (cards 251-450) “are quite marketable because there are less on the open market.” As for the popular Upper Deck Series One rookie crop, it is featured in Upper Deck Series Two via the rare acetate Clear Cut Rookies insert (each card limited to 100 copies) and the 2008-09 Victory brand update cards 2008-09 Upper Deck Artifacts October 2008 Product category: Super Premium $13.50 for four cards After just four years in the hockey-card market, some collectors will suggest that this brand has run its course. Following what is now a familiar breakdown, the set features a 100-card shell set and a 160-card Legends, Stars and Rookie short-print subset (with each card serial numbered to 999 copies). Because it is released in October, there are no live “new” rookies (they are, however, available later via redemption). The jersey and autograph cards are numbered to low amounts, however the availability of parallel versions suggest the so-called special cards are not as rare as noted. Despite those remarks, Upper Deck Artifacts still won an impressive 12 best-incategory votes from stores across Canada. It even won five best-overall votes, only three fewer than category winner SP Authentic (which won 34 best-in-category votes and eight best-overall votes). 2008-09 Upper Deck Biography of a Season 2008-09 Product category: Promotions Hobby Store Promotion Upper Deck Biography of a Season was a great concept, providing extra reward for collectors that visited their favourite hobby stores throughout the hockey-card season. Cards detailed significant events from the 2008-09 regular season, be it All-Star Game MVP Alex Kovalev (he “delighted the home crowd” on Jan. 25, 2009), Art Ross Trophy champion Evgeni Malkin (he scored his 113th point to capture “his first Art Ross Trophy” on Apr. 11), or new Canucks’ signee Mats Sundin (he made “his Canucks debut” on Jan. 7). There were 30 different cards produced throughout the season, with the last group arriving in hobby stores in August. The set was designed to be distributed one card at time each week (free), thus encouraging collectors to visit their favourite hobby shop regularly. 2008-09 Upper Deck Black August 2008 Product category: Super Chase $375 for five cards Released early in the season, Upper Deck Black was the first of four Super Chase products produced in 200809. Collectors liked this new brand, especially the quad-jersey design featured on the 42 base cards (all of which are rare and limited to just 99 copies). Fifty-eight rookie subset cards (16 signed, 42 unsigned) are in fact more plentiful than the veteran base cards (399 copies of each Rookie Lettermen) while 22 redemption rookie cards are just as rare as the veteran base cards (99 signed copies of each).Despite the high pack price, the rookies don’t sell comparatively well, perhaps because this is a new hockey brand, perhaps because “they have not yet caught on.” Still, the product sells well and the brand received eight best-in-category votes, second only to year-end super hit The Cup (which won 32 best-in-category votes). 2008-09 Upper Deck Black Diamond December 2008 Product category: Premium $5.00 for five cards “Black Diamond is known for including high valued rookie cards year in and year out” - UDC Now in its 10th season since making its successful 1996-97 debut, Upper Deck Black Diamond offers an alltoo predictable breakdown of single-, double-, triple- and quadruple-diamond base cards. The 2008-09 release features the same standard of six triple (three rookie, three veteran) and two quadruple (one rookie, one veteran) cards in every box. The parallel cards remain too scarce for collectors looking for an extra challenge (Gold cards are limited to 10 copies while Onyx cards are limited to one copy). By year’s end, 2008-09 boxes had fallen in price. Still, Upper Deck Black Diamond managed to win seven best-in-category votes in the Premium category, third most behind Upper Deck and Upper Deck Centennial. It also won two best-overall votes. The Want List - Premiere Issue - 19 2008-09 Upper Deck Canadiens Centennial Product category: Premium February 2009 $5.00 for eight cards “Few teams have ever dominated a sport the way the Canadiens have” - UDC Upper Deck Canadiens Centennial won Best New Brand for the 2008-09 card season, beating out more expensive newcomers Champ’s and Upper Deck Black. As expected, this set was hugely popular in the province of Québec. Perhaps unexpected was the set’s strong popularity in Maple Leaf-friendly places surrounding Toronto. As Richard Stokes of The Comic Connection in Oakville, ON put it, “there simply wasn’t enough of this product to go around.” Boxes have almost tripled in price because so many collectors are chasing down the base set (including short prints) and signature cards. Quite deservingly, Upper Deck Centennial won 15 best-incategory votes (up against the seasoned Upper Deck brand) and seven best-overall votes. 2008-09 Upper Deck Collector’s Choice February 2009 Product category: Entry Level $1.25 for six cards “The Choice is back – Collector’s Choice, that is” - UDC This was a comeback that few collectors could have predicted, especially after an 11-year hiatus. Up against more experienced entry-level brands, Upper Deck Collector’s Choice narrowly escaped a shutout by picking up one best-in-category vote. It was indeed designed as a fun product, especially with the inclusion of the 30 StickUms stickers. It also featured a very cool design, perhaps superior to the more cluttered O-Pee-Chee look. The base set was also semi-challenging for young collectors, with rookie cards seeded in every second pack and highnumber subset cards seeded in every fifth pack. Collation, however, seemed to be a problem for this brand, with some areas better than others for number sequences within the base set. 2008-09 Upper Deck National Hockey Card Day January 2009 Product category: Promotions Free hockey cards There wasn’t a better priced product on the market this year: Upper Deck National Hockey Card Day cards were free to kids that walked into card stores on Jan. 23, 2009. That’s right, free. There were in fact three different packs to collect with five cards in each pack. The 15-card set featured rookies, current stars and legends, not to mention Canadian television star Don Cherry. The brand helped celebrate hockey cards and drove collectors to their local stores at the heart of the 2008-09 hockey-card season. It marked a great excuse for collectors to brave the cold and get out of the house. Along with Cherry, young collectors got to “know” legends like Wayne Gretzky, Gordie Howe, Mario Lemieux and Bobby Orr (it was only too bad that Maurice Richard was missing). The set also included active stars like Sidney Crosby and Jarome Iginla as well as top draft pick Steven Stamkos. 2008-09 Upper Deck Ice February 2009 Product category: Premium $6.00 for five cards “Virtually nothing symbolizes the game of hockey like a fresh sheet of ice” - UDC Upper Deck Ice remains semi popular despite its on again, off again standing in the hockey-card market. Only in its seventh season of production since 1996-97, Upper Deck Ice has never survived more than back-to-back years - this being the second year end of yet another revival. The acetate Ice Premieres rookie cards definitely drive pack sales, with the rare rookies “still fetching consistently solid values.”Collectors also appreciate the attractive design featured on the base cards. Despite its good qualities, however, box prices have dipped below their original asking price. Furthermore, the brand received just six best-in-category votes, one less than Upper Deck Black Diamond and far less than Upper Deck Centennial (15) and Upper Deck (32). 2008-09 Upper Deck Legends Masterpieces August 2008 Product category: Super Premium $7.50 for four cards This new brand was perhaps forgotten in the clutter of 2008-09 sets, especially when you consider some 25 releases were issued after Upper Deck Legends Masterpieces made its debut in August 2008. The set was, however, very well received, especially in light of the player content and the way in which hockey’s great history was presented through art. While there was some problems with quality control (because of the canvas finish on the card fronts), collectors were “genuinely happy with the slate of stars in the jersey and signature sets.” The rare serial-numbered parallel variations of these special inserts were also very popular. Some 12 months after its initial release, Upper Deck Legends Masterpieces garnered just four best-in-category votes. It did, however, also win one best-overall vote, suggesting that not everyone forgot this diamond in the rough. 20 - theWantList.ca 2008-09 Upper Deck MVP December 2008 Product category: Entry Level $2.50 for eight cards Upper Deck MVP features a “familiar product breakdown” that remains popular with those collectors searching for an inexpensive route to the NHL’s newest rookies. Now in its ninth season over an 11-year run (it made its debut back in 1998-99), Upper Deck MVP remains number-two in the Entry Level category behind collecting legend O-Pee-Chee (six hockey years from 1933-34 to 1940-41 plus another 41 hockey years since 1961-62). Upper Deck MVP won an impressive 14 best-in-category votes, second most behind O-Pee-Chee’s outstanding 37 (which was the most of any brand in five categories). Despite Upper Deck MVP’s perceived “bang for the buck”, the brand was also perceived as over produced resulting in a slight drop in box prices by the end of the year. 2008-09 Upper Deck Ovation November 2008 Product category: Entry Level $40 per 50-card set Upper Deck Ovation again flew very much under the hobby radar in 2008-09. Produced for retail stores, the set was packaged in four different factory-sealed sets. Each tin box featured 50 different cards; all four tin boxes completed a 200-card base set. The brand has followed the same formula for three straight years since making its comeback in 2006-07 (it was a pack-distributed product in 1999-2000). This year’s brand not only included all the big stars, but all the big rookies too, including Calder Trophy winner Steve Mason and first-overall draft pick Steven Stamkos. The final 50-card tin had perhaps the best selection, including most “new” rookies as well as company spokesperson Sidney Crosby. As the brand did last year, each tin included an oversize card, most often unsigned, but sometimes (for those that are lucky) signed by the player. 2008-09 Upper Deck Rookie Class January 2009 Product category: Entry Level $20.00 for 51 cards Like Power Play and Upper Deck Ovation, Upper Deck Rookie Class was a brand sold exclusively in set form. Each set included the full 50-card base set plus one oversize card. Once in every 20 boxes, the set included a limited edition signature card. As $20 per box, Upper Deck Rookie Class “serves its purpose... offering collectors the cheapest way to get all the year’s (newest) rookies in one shot.” With a January release, “second-half” rookies like Simeon Varlamov and Cory Schneider are missing. Then again, since most of the “big name” rookies came out in the first half of the year, Upper Deck Rookie Class does capture the likes of Steve Mason, Steven Stamkos and Luke Schenn. Fourteen of the 50 rookies are available in the oversize insert set while 41 of the 50 rookies are available in the Signature insert. 2008-09 Upper Deck Trilogy December 2008 Product category: Special Chase (Rookie, Jersey or Signature per pack) $25.00 for five cards “Trilogy proves that Hat Tricks aren’t the only good threes in the hockey world” - UDC Now in its fifth season since making its debut in 2003-04, Upper Deck Trilogy remains somewhat popular in an otherwise acknowledged weak category. Some stores will suggest that packs are overpriced, noting that the aftermarket prices on singles do not justify the $25 pack price. Then again, others will note that it was a decent hit when it made its debut in December. Each pack includes either a numbered rookie card, a jersey card or a signature card. Rookie cards are limited to 999 or 499 copies, so they are plentiful enough when compared to rookie cards in some other brands. Still, collectors like the “lottery” aspect and like the Ice Scripts signature cards. This brand won 23 best-in-category votes, one less than category winner SP Game-Used Edition. 2008-09 Victory (inc. Update) July 2008 Product category: Entry Level $1.25 for six cards Victory once again features the lowest pack price in the hockey-card market. At just over a loonie a pack, young collectors should have no problem putting together the 200-card shell set. If they are looking for a challenge, they can complete the 50-card rookie subset as well as the two basic insert sets. They can also chase two levels of parallel cards. The update set is in fact distributed in Upper Deck Series Two, thus featuring 50 veterans in their new uniforms and 50 rookies from the first part of the season. At year’s end, Victory collected six best-in-category votes, third most in the Entry Level category behind O-Pee-Chee and Upper Deck MVP. Nevertheless, hobby stores confirm that Victory “is the epitomy of the Entry Level class.” The 2009-10 Victory brand was released on Aug. 5, one day before The Cup marked the end of the 2008-09 hockey-card season. The Want List - Premiere Issue - 21 ITG In The Game’s Card Year in Review In The Game was not licensed by the National Hockey League or National Hockey League Players’ Association in 2008-09, but that did not stop the company from producing popular products throughout the year. The 2008-09 hockey-card lineup featured three returning brands, although one was split into the two Superlative releases (Canadiens and Maple Leafs). Between the Pipes and Heroes & Prospects featured licensing rights from the American Hockey League and Canadian Hockey League, so up-and-coming talents like John Tavares and Simeon Varlamov were included in brands. The Superlative designs did not feature the club logos, but rather highlighted the player’s signature or memorabilia piece. 2008-09 Between The Pipes March 2009 Product category: Premium $5.00 for five cards Now in its fifth season, In The Game’s Between the Pipes made a big impression with collectors this year after cutting production without cutting the goods. As a result, many (but not all) boxes produced extra hits. Said Scott Veenstra of Action Packed Comics in Kingston, ON, “In The Game cut the Between the Pipes print run in half. There was not a single complaint from our customers. Almost 80% of them doubled their money on their box.” So popular was this brand that some stores tried to vote for it in the NHL Premium category. Like In The Game Heroes & Prospects, this brand featured retired legends and NHL prospects. Up-and-coming AHL goalies like Simeon Varlamov and Cory Schneider (who both made their NHL rookie-card debut) are included in this year’s set. Collectors also really liked the Super Gloves and Super-Sized Pads. 2008-09 In The Game Heroes & Prospects (inc. Update) December 2008 Product category: Premium $4.50 for five cards In The Game Heroes & Prospects delivers what no NHL product can deliver - the hottest prospects outside the NHL. This year’s product was no different, featuring superstar-in-waiting John Tavares. Tavares, who has been featured exclusively with In The Game since 2005-06, should make his NHL debut in 2009-10. The set also included junior prospects Victor Hedman, Evander Kane and Cody Hodgson. The set also included 2008-09 NHL graduates Steven Stamkos, Alex Pietrangelo and Luke Schenn. On the flip side, the “Heroes” portion (specifically retired legends) continues to became a smaller and smaller component of what could be renamed “In The Game Prospects”. Peter Forsberg was the one retired “hero” of note while active NHL stars Alex Ovechkin, Ryan Getzlaf and Pavel Datsyuk were also included. 2008-09 In The Game Superlative Bleu, Blanc, Rouge January 2009 Product category: Super Chase $500 for seven cards Released shortly before the 2009 NHL All-Star Game in Montréal, In The Game Superlative Bleu, Blanc et Rouge had a brief head start on UDC’s all-Montréal set, Upper Deck Canadiens Centennial. In the collecting world, however, the two products were miles apart. Sold at an impressive $400-500 per pack, In The Game Superlative Bleu, Blanc et Rouge was created for the high-end collector. The entire series focuses on the Montréal Canadiens who in 2009 celebrate its 100th anniversary. Every card is limited to 40 copies or less, most of which are either signed or feature a cut-and-affixed swatch from game-used memorabilia. There are numerous one-ofa-kind inserts, including cut-signature cards of deceased and honoured members from the Hockey Hall of Fame. The set features players from all eras of the storied franchise’s past. 2008-09 In The Game Superlative Franchise May 2009 Product category: Super Chase $500 for seven cards Like Bleu, Blanc et Rouge, In The Game Superlative Franchise is entirely focused on one team. This time, In The Game portrayed the Canadiens’ biggest rival, the Toronto Maple Leafs. Released in time for the Toronto Sportcard & Memorabilia Expo, In The Game Superlative Franchise features the most popular Toronto players from eight decades at Maple Leaf Gardens and the Air Canada Centre. The Toronto set had a higher print run than the Montréal set, even though Montréal fans will point out there is “not as much star power” in the Toronto lineup. For those dedicated “Leaf Nation” members, however, this series features just the right mix of former players. Toronto has, after all, won 13 Stanley Cup championships, third most in NHL history. The most recent championship was, of course, 1967. 22 - theWantList.ca NHL McFarlane Sports Picks There were three standard Sports Picks hockey series released during the 2008-09 NHL season: NHL 19 (August 2008), NHL 20 (February 2009) and NHL 21 (March 2009). These series featured both active and retired players. There was also one series of retired stars: Legends 7 (November 2008). Outside these four series, there was a six-figure series distributed exclusively through Grosnor Distribution in Toronto. That series featured one player from each of the six Canadian teams. There were also three two-pack figures sold at Wal-mart Canada stores. Other special releases were the Trevor Linden (Canucks) and Saku Koivu (All-Star) figures. Subscribe and save 40%* off the cover price! Get all the hockey stuff you want: Don’t miss a single issue! Call 646.845.9396 or email info@theWantList.ca * Savings based on a two-year subscription for just $44.98 CAN (tax incl.) The Want List - Premiere Issue - 23 draft days draft days 24 - theWantList.ca draft days T he National Hockey League’s Entry Draft provides new hope for its teams and fans every year. If you follow the New York Islanders, though, the answer may be more along the lines of, ‘maybe we’ll get that special something next year.’ With apologies to Joshua Bailey (ninth overall in 2008) and Kyle Okposo (seventh overall in 2006) who have yet to make their NHL impact, Islanders’ fans have been waiting for what seems like a lifetime to rejoin the glory days of their Stanley Cup past. The team hasn’t finished amongst the top-10 teams in back-to-back years since 1987-88 (Okposo’s birthyear) and hasn’t reached the second round of the playoffs in back-to-back years since 1985. After an invincible run of four-straight Stanley Cup championships from 1980 to 1983 (plus a fifth Prince of Wales Trophy in 1984), the Islanders have run away from the elite company of the league. Aside from a brief sojourn to the 1993 Wales Conference final after they toppled the two-time defending champion Penguins, the Islanders have failed to impress in the NHL’s second season. So along comes John Tavares, the sport’s heralded can’t-miss kid going back four seasons. At last, the Islanders have not only won the lottery, but it looks like they have made the right selection, too. We’re not saying the Islanders are ready to rejoin the glory years or win another Stanley Cup - not yet - but at last it looks like the team is heading in the right direction with the selection of the can’t-miss Tavares. At last the New York faithful have the right to say, ‘we finally snagged that something special.’ “He’s a tremendous talent and a high character kid,” said Islanders’ general manager Garth Snow on Islanders.com. “We identified him when we won the lottery. As we navigated through the process, it just re-affirmed that John was the right selection for us. We picked the player that we felt would fit in best with the other pieces of our puzzle.” Now 19 years old on the eve of the 2009-10 season, Tavares is primed to make an impact in his National Hockey League rookie season with the Islanders. He has loads of talent from the offensive blueline towards the goal and will be given plenty of ice time on a team that is starved for offence. More importantly, the Islanders’ franchise knows it needs to sell tickets and genuine ‘hope’ to its fans. More than just a piece to the puzzle, Tavares has that potential to become a legitimate franchise player, a player around which you can build a winning team. “I am excited and I can’t wait to get things going,” said Tavares. “It’s going to be a lot of fun and I can’t wait for this journey to start.” “John Tavares is going to make the card market come around again. It will be a one-two punch with Victor Hedman in Tampa Bay.” - Sonny Kunar, Terrace, BC As soon as Tavares was drafted, New York fans were searching for their new Tavares memorabilia. The NHL sold draft caps for all 30 NHL teams (no player names attached) while the Islanders began selling Tavares tshirts via its online website (Tavares / 91). Tavares is not an NHL player until he makes his debut this October, so he is not yet eligible to be featured on licensed memorabilia issued by the National Hockey League and National Hockey League Players’ Association. Licensees, of course, will be vigilant to get their artwork ready in September so that they can submit their designs to the NHLPA the day Tavares makes his debut. As soon as he is dressed and the whistle blows for the opening face off, the NHLPA may grant approval and the production may begin. Tavares’ first hockey cards are expected to be released in early November, just before the bi-annual Sportcard & Memorabilia Expo in Toronto, ON. The Upper Deck Company cannot tip its hat early, but you can expect Tavares to be included in 2009-10 Upper Deck Series One as long as Tavares stays healthy through training camp and makes his debut with the start of the season. The NHLPA rules ensure that NHL players are the focus within NHL picture-card sets. Rookie cards are of great importance to the marketing of these card sets, so lining up rookie-card hype with rookie-season hype was instrumental in the NHLPA’s decision to remove non-NHLPA juniors from its sets 10 years ago. The move paid dividends for the market, especially with the graduation of such first-overall picks as Ilya Kovalchuk (200102), Rick Nash (2002-03), Marc-André Fleury (2003-04), Alex Ovechkin (2005-06 because of the lockout), Sidney Crosby (2005-06) and Patrick Kane (2007-08). One big rookie is sometimes enough to carry an entire rookie-card crop. Crosby and Ovechkin did a marvelous job as a 2005-06 duo, although they could have honestly held their own in separate years. From the 2009 draft, Tavares is expected to have the help of Victor Hedman (Tampa Bay Lightning) and Matt Duchene (Colorado Avalanche) “John Tavares is going to make the card market come around again,” says Sonny Kunar of Sonny’s Collectables in Terrace, BC. “It will be a one-two punch with Victor Hedman in Tampa Bay.” Unlike the National Basketball Association and National Football League drafts, not all NHL draftees make the immediate jump to the NHL. From 1998 to 2008 (excluding the 2004 draft), an average of five first-round draft picks played in the NHL in the same season they were drafted. So from the 2009 draft, you may see top-five picks Tavares, Hedman, Matt Duchene (Colorado Avalanche), Evander Kane (Atlanta Thrashers) and Brayden Schenn (Los Angeles Kings). More rookies will come out of the draft two or three years past, which means we could be in store for Cody Hodgson (Vancouver Canucks), James Van Riemsdyk (Philadelphia Flyers) and Thomas Hickey (Kings) this year. Of note, the 2008 NHL Draft was a peculiar case in that it graduated 11 players to the NHL in 2008-09. All six top picks - Steven Stamkos (Lightning), Drew Doughty (Kings), Zach Bogosian (Thrashers), Alex Pietrangelo (St. Louis Blues), Luke Schenn (Toronto Maple Leafs) and Nikita Filatov (Columbus Blue Jackets) - had rookie cards issued during the 2008-09 season. By contrast, the 2007 NHL Draft graduated four players (Patrick Kane, Kyle Turris, Sam Gagner and David Perron) while the 2006 NHL Draft graduated just two players (Jordan Staal and Phil Kessel). Fortunately, both of those rookie-card crops had rookie cards come in from previous drafts - Evgeni Malkin in 2006-07 (drafted second overall in 2004) and Jonathan Toews in 2007-08 (drafted third overall in 2006). “Lots of people assume Tavares, Hedman and Duchene will be in Upper Deck Series One,” says Glen Humenik of Legends of the Game in Toronto. “There should be a solid group in 2009-10. There is plenty of anticipation from our regular customers.” So as goes Tavares, so too could the 200910 hockey-card season. There is plenty of hope on young Tavares’ shoulders - you need not ask collectors, but just Islanders’ faithful in New York. Fortunately for everyone watching, Tavares isn’t just another first-overall pick. This kid seems to be something special. The Want List - Premiere Issue - 25 the Vancouver Canucks’ Cody Hodgson wore this collector jersey after signing it at A.J. Sports World in Vaughan, ON 26 - theWantList.ca Rookies J ohn Tavares, Victor Hedman, Cody Hodgson, Jonas Gustavsson, Matt Duchene and James van Riesmsdyk. Those are the six rookie-card prospects that Upper Deck Company’s hockey brand manager Josh Zusman identified as Calder Trophy candidates for the 2009-10 National Hockey League season. All six are expected to make their NHL debut this October. Once they do, they will be eligible for inclusion in 2009-10 hockey card sets, most notably starting with the release of Upper Deck Series One in November. All six were also in gear for UDC’s firstever NHL Rookie Debut photo shoot on Aug. 26 in Mississauga, ON. With the blessing of both the NHL and the National Hockey League Players’ Association, fourteen rookie prospects dressed in their NHL gear so that UDC could photograph them before the start of the 2009-10 NHL season. Should these prospects make their debut in the first week of October, UDC will have plenty of artwork from which to choose. The NHL’s exclusive trading-card company also collected autographs and event-worn jerseys that can be affixed to the future trading cards. Of Zusman’s six picks, the 2009 NHL Draft trio is Tavares, Hedman and Duchene. The three teenagers, all born during the 1990-91 season when UDC entered the hockey-card market, were drafted one-two-three in the 2009 NHL Entry Draft. Tavares is a forward with the New York Islanders, Hedman is a defenceman with the Tampa Bay Lightning, and Duchene is a forward with the Colorado Avalanche. “I think Cody Hodgson could just be a darling of this rookie class” - Josh Zusman, Upper Deck Co. “They have incredible skill and an incredible sense of the game,” said Zusman. “They have a wealth of talent and they know how to take their game to the next level. Ultimately, I hope that in the NHL they can translate that (talent) into making the players around them that much better. That is the true mark of a superstar.” Two of the “older” players were drafted high in the past two NHL Entry Drafts. Centre Hodgson was drafted 10th overall in the 2008 NHL Entry Draft by the Vancouver Canucks. Winger van Riemsdyk was drafted second overall in the 2007 NHL Entry Draft by the Philadelphia Flyers. “Hodgson and van Riemsdyk both had incredible World Junior Championships,” said Zusman. “Their international experience will go a long way. When you have that kind of experience playing against the best in the world at your own age, it makes a huge difference. So when you get to the NHL, you won’t be necessarily shocked by players that may be bigger (and) that may be faster.” The sixth player is goaltender Jonas Gustavsson. Gustavsson was never drafted, but rather signed as a free agent with the Toronto Maple Leafs this past off-season. He says he wants to challenge likely goaltending partner Vesa Toskala for as many games as possible between the Toronto pipes. Out of the gate, Tavares will unquestionably be the player to watch and the rookie card to chase. “Given the pre-season hype, given the name and the amount of coverage he has received in previous years, he is an easy pick,” said Zusman. Tavares has been scrutinized at the majorjunior level these past four seasons. Drafted first overall in the 2005 OHL Priority Draft, he maintained his number-one prospect status for four years so that he could be drafted first overall in the 2009 NHL Entry Draft. Tavares is of course an early favourite to win the Calder Trophy as rookie of the year. As for a “second pick”, Canucks’ forward Cody Hodgson quickly comes to mind. Last winter, Hodgson played alongside Tavares on Canada’s gold-medal winning team at the World Junior Championships in Ottawa. “I wouldn’t call this guy at all a surprise, but I just think that to the level this guy may get, it may be very close to John Tavares in the end,” said Zusman. “I just think his natural talent, him playing in a great hockey city like Vancouver: he could just be a darling of this rookie class and really garner huge values both early and down the road.” It should be a great rookie year. Let’s just hope they all play early so we can start chasing their RCs sooner rather than later. The Want List - Premiere Issue - 27 1990-91 BIRTH YEAR Okay, so we haven’t seen the designs that the Upper Deck Company will unveil for the first Tavares, Hedman and Duchene cards. In the meantime, you can enjoy the classic 1990-91 Upper Deck design - the season in which the trio was born! 28 - theWantList.ca 2009-10 Mikael Backlund Colin Wilson The Upper Deck Company invited 14 rookie-card prospects to its first-ever NHL Rookie Debut photo shoot. Here is a quick look at the 14 invited players. A first-round pick from the 2007 NHL Entry Draft, Backlund moved to Canada in 2009 after the World Junior Championships in Ottawa. He made his NHL debut in January. The seventh-overall pick from the 2008 NHL Entry Draft, Wilson was also the #4 prospect listed in The Hockey News’ Future Watch ‘09 issue. Selected first overall in the 2009 NHL Entry Draft, Tavares has been the NHL’s most anticipated rookie since he made his OHL debut four years ago. Undrafted, Bozak was a prize signing for the Maple Leafs this past April. The two-way centre will turn pro this season after a twoyear career at the University of Denver. A first-round pick from the 2006 NHL Entry Draft, defenceman Sanguinetti has spent a year of seasoning in the American League with the Hartford Wolf Pack. Selected second overall in the 2009 NHL Entry Draft, Hedman hopes to blossom into the next great defenceman, following the trail of Börje Salming and Nicklas Lidström. Undrafted, goalie Gustavsson signed with the Maple Leafs this past July after winning an Elitserien championship and an IIHF World Championships bronze medal. The second-overall pick from the 2007 NHL Entry Draft, van Riemsdyk will turn pro after a two-year stint at the University of New Hampshire. Selected third overall in the 2009 NHL Entry Draft, Duchene hopes to fill the lineup position vacated by outgoing scoring legend Joe Sakic. A second-round pick from the 2007 NHL Entry Draft, defenceman Subban won a gold medal with Canada at the 2009 IIHF World Junior Championships in Ottawa. A second-round pick from the 2007 NHL Entry Draft (by the Ducks), Tangradi hopes to turn pro with Pittsburgh after a three-year major-junior career with Belleville. At 6'5" and 215 pounds (for now), Cowen is a big defenceman that Ottawa would just love to have on its blueline this season. He was the 9th pick in the 2009 NHL Draft. Ranked #2 in The Hockey News’ Future Watch ‘09 issue (behind Nikita Filatov), Hodgson is a can’t-miss prospect that will make his debut in Vancouver this year. The 9th overall pick from the 2007 NHL Entry Draft, Couture was a late cut by the Sharks last autumn and a late cut by Canada’s junior team last winter. John Tavares Victor Hedman Matt Duchene Jared Cowen Tyler Bozak Bobby Sanguinetti Jonas Gustavsson James van Riemsdyk P.K. Subban Cody Hodgson Eric Tangradi Logan Couture 2009 Upper Deck Rookie Debut photo shoot Be sure to check out our next issue for a recap of the 2009 Upper Deck Rookie Debut photo shoot. We’ll also highlight the rookies that made their debut in early October. The Want List - Premiere Issue - 29 Early RCs from 2009-10 hockey B Fifty-five RCs have been featured in Victory and Fleer Ultra hockey efore John Tavares, Victor Hedman and Matt Duchene move to the head of the 2009-10 rookie-card class, there is a group of rookies that make their debut in the first few sets of the 2009-10 season. After just two sets (Victory and Fleer Ultra), there are already 55 new rookie-card players on the market. These players all made their debut in 2008-09, but were “saved” for the 2009-10 hockey-card season. As the NHL-NHLPA’s exclusive trading-card company, UDC imposes its own rookie cut-off date each season. There is little sense in overwhelming late-season products with extra rookies, especially if those releases are Super Chase products and those rookies were not available in Premium or Super Premium products like Upper Deck and SP Authentic. Collectors generally understand that early-season RCs aren’t supposed to be as glamorous as the new-year RCs that debut in November and December (ie - those that make their NHL debut in October). Then again, there is usually one or two kids that show promise. Two years ago, there was David Krejci and Jaroslav Halak. Last year, the class was better with Derrick Brassard, Claude Giroux, Kyle Ok- poso and Kyle Turris, not to mention surprise Calder Trophy winner Steve Mason. This year, there are more questions than answers. There are five former first-overall draft picks, although only one of them ranked amongst the Top 50 prospects in The Hockey News’ Future Watch ‘09 magazine published last spring. That was Flames’ centre Mikael Backlund, who is at least decent enough to have earned an invitation to the 2009 Upper Deck Rookie Debut photo shoot. The one other Top-50 prospect is Artem Anisimov, who scored 37 goals last year for the American League’s Hartford Wolf Pack. Undrafted forward Ville Leino recently resigned with the mighty Detroit Red Wings after scoring five goals in his first 13 NHL games. He won the 2007-08 Lasse Oksanen Trophy as the best player in the Finnish League. Goaltender Michal Neuvirth was the 2008-09 American League playoff MVP after leading the Hershey Bears to a Calder Cup championship. As for the rest of the group, it is interesting to note that Christian Hanson is the son of former Calder Cup champion Dave Hanson. Dave, of course, is better known for his part in the 1970s cult movie classic Slapshot. RC PROSPECTS Artem Anisimov NYRA Centre, Drafted 2006-2-24 Mikael Backlund CALG Centre, Drafted 2007-1-24 Taylor Chorney EDMO Defence, Drafted 2005-2-36 Kris Chucko CALG Forward, Drafted 2004-1-24 Jhonas Enroth BUFF Goalie, Drafted 2006-2-26 Riku Helenius TAMP Goalie, Drafted 2006-1-15 Ville Leino DETR Forward, Undrafted Michal Neuvirth WASH Goalie, Drafted 2006-2-34 Matt Pelech CALG Centre Mikael Backlund is a top rookie prospect for the 2009-10 Calgary Flames. He made his NHL debut last season. 30 - theWantList.ca Defence, Drafted 2005-1-26 Ivan Vishnevsky DALL Defence, Drafted 2006-1-27 Cherry picks his Calder favourite Matt Duchene will be one to watch during 2009-10 campaign D on Cherry knows who he likes for the 2009-10 Calder Trophy. At the 2009 Upper Deck Rookie Debut photo shoot, he pointed to Colorado Avalanche forward Matt Duchene. The young forward is expected to make his NHL debut this October after being drafted third overall in the summer’s NHL Entry Draft. As it so happens, Cherry isn’t just a big fan of Duchene, but Duchene (and his family) is a big fan of Cherry. As Cherry told it, Duchene’s grandfather can owe his life to Coach’s Corner, the Hockey Night in Canada intermission show on which Cherry stars. “His grandfather and grandmother own a dairy farm,” said Cherry. “There was an awful icestorm while they were watching Hockey Night in Canada, but the cows were ready to be milked. The grandmother said ‘you better get out there to milk those cows.’ He put on his jacket, but then he said, ‘no, I am not going out until Coach’s Corner is over.’ “So he stood there are watched Coach’s Corner. While he was watching Coach’s Corner, the barn collapsed and killed the cows.” Duchene may thank Cherry for the “intervention”, but he doesn’t need to rely on the television personality to promote him to the fans. Duchene created plenty of fans on his own during his terrific 200809 junior season with the Ontario League’s Brampton Battalion. He has picked up countless more since being drafted by the two-time Stanley Cup champion Colorado Avalanche. He joins a popular team in search of a new superstar after the retirement of franchise legend Joe Sakic. “Growing up, I had some different posters and I always cut some stuff out of The Hockey News,” said Duchene. “I was just a normal kid that collected as much as I could.” Duchene was an Avalanche fan and had plenty of Colorado memorabilia on his walls. He even had an Avalanche jersey, albeit it wasn’t the first in his wardrobe. “My uncle Newell Brown was a coach with the Adirondack Red Wings in the American League, so I actually had a Red Wings jersey when I was younger,” said Duchene. “My second jersey was an Avs jersey.” Duchene is now too big for those youth-size jerseys, but he did pick up a new Avalanche jersey on draft day this past June. That new Avalanche NHL Draft jersey is the favourite in his collection, although it will be surpassed by his first NHL game-worn jersey. Duchene will be one of a handful of early-season favourites for the Calder Trophy, the annual award presented to the NHL’s top rookie. Other favourites include John Tavares and Victor Hedman from the 2009 NHL Draft (both selected ahead of Duchene) as well as Cody Hodgson and Nikita Filatov from previous draft years. The Want List - Premiere Issue - 31 What to expect from 2009-10 UDC W More than 20 NHL brands expected to be released this season ith more than 20 NHL brands slated for release in 2009-10, there should be a little bit of everything for everyone when it comes to card collecting. This will be Upper Deck Company’s fifth and final year of its existing NHL-NHLPA exclusive trading card license, so it is hoping to make a big impression. Rookies like John Tavares, Victor Hedman and Matt Duchene (see preceding stories) could go a long way in making that happen. UDC does not anticipate any new brands this year (or at least, it is not tipping its hat just yet). Each brand’s 2009-10 make-up should be pretty similar to its 2008-09 make-up, so brush up with the 2008-09 Card Year in Review (UDC brands on pages 16-21). At least two brands are not expected to be back: Upper Deck Legends Masterpieces and Upper Deck Canadiens Centennial. At least one new insert has been previewed for 2009-10: Shadow Box inserts (see football card at right) will be added to 2009-10 SPx. Card season offers something for everyone, from beginner to veteran N ow that you have reviewed the 2008-09 Card Year in Review, you are probably wondering why some packs cost less than a “toonie” and others cost more than $500. If you are indeed new to the hobby, you may want to take advantage of the next few paragraphs before you get started in 2009-10. “Sample a pack from a couple of different brands,” said Hans Tan of Game Breakers Sports Cards in Ottawa, ON. “See if one jumps out that you like.” Okay, so maybe if you are sampling packs, be sure to try either the entry-level or premium packs first. Those are packs $5-6 or less. It’s best that you start slow. “‘How do you want to collect’ - that’s the first question we ask customers,” said Wayne Wagner of Wayne’s Sports Cards in Edmonton, AB. “Do you want to collect players, sets, rookies, memorabilia, autographs? You need to determine which spectrum or you can you select all of the above.” When it comes to collecting, “there is no right or wrong answer.” Once you decide what you want to collect, start asking questions. Start by speaking with the manager or employee at your local sports hobby store. Finding a good sports hobby store is one of the first things you should do. You may sample your first few packs at a retail or corner store, but be sure to find a sports hobby store so that you get a good idea of what is 32 - theWantList.ca “Sample packs from a couple of different brands. See if one jumps out that you like” - Game Breakers Sports Cards available to collect. If there isn’t a store in your area, try to find a local show or even plan a road trip to visit an out-of-town shop. There may not be a sports hobby shop in your area, but that shouldn’t stop you from learning as much as you can about the hobby. Once you do get a taste for the hobby, determine what your objectives will be for your first hockey-card season. That might mean determining a budget or a rough estimate of how much you would like to spend. If you want to build just one set through no more than a couple of boxes, try Victory or Upper Deck MVP. The 2009-10 Victory set is the first set of the new season. There are 200 cards in the shell set, or 250 if you want to chase the rookies. have you... If you want a greater challenge, try the 2009-10 O-Pee-Chee brand. There are 600 cards in the base set, so it is going to take more work. Also be sure to keep an eye out for the expected Update set, which might feature an extra 200 cards to the series. Once you do start buying cards, you will need to decide how you are going to store them. You can purchase either plastic binder pages (along with a binder) or cardboard boxes for storage. Your card dealer should be able to give you a hand. Finally, if you are buying packs, it is a good idea to meet other collectors with whom you can trade. After all, there is no such thing as perfect collation. Of course, meeting other collectors will make your collecting habits that much more enjoyable. Found a good hobby store that you can visit regularly? Determined your objectives for the hockey-card season? Bought binder pages or boxes to store your cards? Met other collectors with whom you can trade? Visited the collector’s calendar at theWantList.ca Scoring King vs. scoring Queen Pittsburgh’s Evgeni Malkin, Brampton’s Jayna Hefford win titles Art Ross Trophy 113 points in 82 games AWARD SCORING 1.38 points per game POINTS/GP Angela James Bowl Mock card: this card does not exist Malkin Hefford 69 points in 28 games 2.46 points per game 110 points by Alex Ovechkin RUNNER-UP 59 points by Caroline Ouellette Malkin 1st in NHL Assists (78) GOAL/ASSIST Hefford 1st in CWHL Goals (44) 2009 Stanley Cup 23 years old Magnitogorsk RUSSIA 2005-06 NHL 2006 Fourth Place Pittsburgh Penguins PLAYOFF AGE HOME NATION ROOKIE OLYMPICS 2009-10 Top-20 Art Ross Trophy Scoring Leaders 2009 Third Place 32 years old Kingston CANADA 1996-97 COWHL 2006 Gold Medal Canada Olympic Evgeni Malkin has spent all three years of his NHL career on the NHL’s top-20 scoring list. This past season, eight players made their debut on the year-end top-20 list: the Devils’ Zach Parisé (fifth overall), the Capitals’ Nicklas Bäckström (10th overall), the Flyers’ Jeff Carter (12th overall), the Flames’ Michael Cammalleri (13th overall), the Canucks’ Henrik Sedin (15th overall), the Flyers’ Michael Richards (16th overall), the Capitals’ Alexander Semin (18th overall), and the Blue Jackets’ Rick Nash (19th overall). The Want List - Premiere Issue - 33 19 must-have Joe Sakic items How to build your very own tribute collection Game-Worn Jersey Okay, so it won’t be cheap, but it is the ultimate addition to any Joe Sakic collection. If you are fortunate to find one, buy a Nordiques gamer from Sakic’s early days. Canada Jersey It doesn’t need to be game-used, it just needs to feature the Canadian maple leaf. Try to match the look of the 2002 Winter Olympics when Canada won gold. Signed Photo Pick a great photo and see if you can get it signed in person. If you have the option, have it personalized. Sports Picks Figure Take your pick of any McFarlane Sports Picks figure of Sakic, be it with Québec, Colorado or Canada. Classic Portraits Bust Joe Sakic finished amongst the top-20 NHL scorers 14 times during his career - that’s more often than Jaromir Jagr (13), Ron Francis (12), Mario Lemieux (11) and Steve Yzerman (11) Rookie Card Stanley Cup Photo These busts were issued in Upper Deck Classic Portraits in 2002-03 and 2003-04. Don’t get just one, pick up both the Topps and O-Pee-Chee rookie cards from 1989-90. Any photo, trading card or publication featuring Sakic with the Stanely Cup. It won’t feature Sakic, but should feature the Avalanche logo to represent 1996 or 2001. Take your pick of any of Sakic’s Québec or Colorado team-issued oversize cards. Any photo, trading card or publication featuring Sakic with the Conn Smythe Trophy. The NHL’s 1996 Stanley Cup Avalanche DVD is entitled “Landslide”. Sakic’s first authentic signature card was seeded in 1997-98 Pinnacle Be A Player. Any photo or trading card featuring Sakic with the Hart Trophy or Pearson Award. This guide features Sakic and the Avalanche after their first Stanley Cup championship. Try to find a multi-colour jersey card, or better yet a patch card. Any game-used puck from a game in which Sakic played. Better yet, make it a goal puck. After you select your poster, be sure to hang it proudly on your wall. There are more than 100 so-called one-of-akind Sakic cards from which to choose. You will want this in your collection. After all, Sakic used it to score hundreds of goals. Mini Stanley Cup Stanley Cup DVD 1996-97 Media Guide Full-Size Poster 34 - theWantList.ca Team-Issued Card Signature Card Memorabilia Card One-of-a-Kind Card Smythe Trophy Photo Sakic Trophy Photo Game-Used Puck Game-Used Stick Joe Sakic Memorabilia JOE SAKIC AUCTION RESULTS 1988-89 Québec Nordiques GU Jersey #88 1994 Québec Nordiques GU Jersey 1991-92 Québec Nordiques GU Jersey 1989-90 Québec Nordiques GU Jersey 2004 Canada World Cup GU Jersey 2005-06 Colorado Avalanche GU Jersey (Goal 544) 2004 NHL All-Star GU Jersey 2000-01 Colorado Avalanche GU Jersey 2003-04 Colorado Avalanche GU Playoff Jersey 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee graded PSA-6 2001-02 Colorado Avalanche GU Cancer Jersey 2006 Canada Olympic GU Jersey 1997-98 Colorado Avalanche GU Jersey 2002-03 Colorado Avalanche GU Alternate Jersey 2004 NHL Skills Competition Jersey 2002-03 Colorado Avalanche GU Alternate Jersey 2004 NHL All-Star GU Jersey 2000 NHL All-Star Practice Jersey 2002 Canada Olympic Training Jersey YEAR 2004 2005 2004 2005 2004 2006 2004 2002 2007 2002 2002 2007 2003 2008 2004 2008 2008 2002 2002 AUCTION Classic Classic Classic Classic eBay eBay eBay Classic Classic Leland’s Classic Classic Leland’s Classic eBay Classic Leland’s Leland’s Leland’s HIGH BID $7,500 U.S. $5,973 U.S. $5,696 U.S. $4,436 U.S. $4,200 U.S. $3,975 U.S. $3,800 U.S. $2,662 U.S. $2,395 U.S. $2,358 U.S. $2,320 U.S. $2,196 U.S. $2,087 U.S. $1,610 U.S. $1,501 U.S. $1,330 U.S. $1,264 U.S. $1,121 U.S. $886 U.S. This Joe Sakic rookie game-used jersey (left) sold for more than $10,000 Cdn. in a May 2004 Classic Collectibles auction. The jersey can be photo matched to his 1989-90 O-Pee-Chee rookie card (below). The Want List - Premiere Issue - 35 Hockey’s Classic Set: 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee G OUR Top-10 Classic sets 1951-52 Parkies 1954-55 Topps 1955-56 Parkies 1960-61 Topps 1964-65 O-Pee-Chee 1966-67 O-Pee-Chee 1971-72 O-Pee-Chee 1974-75 O-Pee-Chee 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee 1984-85 O-Pee-Chee ary Koreen nearly bit his tongue after he said it, worried he might get a phone call from the Great One himself. “That year, people didn’t realize that he would develop into the player that he did,” said Mr. Koreen, referring to Wayne Gretzky and the Gretzky rookie card from the 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee set. “Well, we knew, but...” Yes, the hockey world knew he would be good, but maybe not 60-plus NHL records good. Mr. Koreen should rest easy knowing the Great One won’t come calling to ask if Canada’s greatest card company ever thought less of the 18-year old superstar in the making. After all, O-Pee-Chee’s testimonial of the Great One can be found on the back of that 1979-80 hockey card. It reads, “Wayne is considered the best prospect to turn professional since Guy Lafleur.” Nearly 30 years after his NHL debut, Gretzky is considered by many to have enjoyed hockey’s greatest career. As for Mr. Koreen’s 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee hockey set, it is considered the most significant hockey set of the post-War era. “You talk of the changing of the guard,” said Jason Martin of Martin Sports Cards in Guelph, ON. “You have Gordie Howe looking like a grandfather and Bobby Hull with a toupé well into his 40s. That set captures those two legends in their final year. Then there is the Gretzky card picturing him as a 17-year old rookie.” The 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee set is distinct. After a five-year run of the plain white border, the O-Pee-Chee Company switched to the now-famous baby blue border for its hockey set. Over time, the blue border has proved to be one of the greatest challenges for card collectors searching for that perfect Gretzky or compiling that perfect set. The taste of O-Pee-Chee gum 36 - theWantList.ca “Any little touch to the card and it will show more on the blue compared to the white,” said Martin. Martin recently learned a little history to the colour selection from a former employee of Lawson & Jones, the company that printed O-Pee-Chee’s hockey cards at the time. As it turns out, Lawson & Jones had a surplus of that very blue and suggested it be used for the hockey design. The blue had previously been used by Carling O’Keefe on its Old Vienna beer packaging. There were other significant changes to that 1979-80 set. For young collectors in Canada, the pack price jumped from 15 cents to 20 cents. To provide merit to the cost, O-PeeChee added four more cards to every pack (14 cards plus a stick of bubble gum). Today, a single unopened pack may cost you more than $200. “Everyone opened it, so it is very hard to find it in unopened wax today,” said Demian Werner of Global Authority. “The packs were Harvey Goldfarb of A.J. Sports World remembers the 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee set well. After all, he was a young father when he was first introduced to collecting. “My responsibility was to sit down at supper time and make sure the kids ate supper. I used to bribe them with a piece of gum and the gum came from 1979-80 cards. So I took all the cards and I built three sets, one for each one of the kids. I then took all the other cards and I put all the cards in a big kleenex box down in the basement. I had thousands of them.” meant to be opened and people of course have an itch to open them.” Packs can still be found in their unopened form, however collectors should be careful to ensure the pack has not been tampered. Packs can also be found professionally graded or guarded by companies like Global, PSA or BGS. “If they realize there is nothing in there, the first thing they want to do is put it back,” said Werner. “They want to sell it to someone else.” The “something” is the Wayne Gretzky rookie card, number 18 in the 396-card set. It’s not an exact science, but there should be one Gretzky rookie card in every 28 packs or so. The 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee set is often viewed as a one-horse set. At times, the Gretzky rookie card makes up 90% of the entire set value. The second-most expensive card is the Howe finale at $20-$25. When Gretzky was filling his showcase in the 1980s and 1990s, many hockey fans only wanted the Gretzky rookie card. Today, fans are going back and completing the set. “It is interesting,” said Martin. “In the last six to 10 years, guys that had previously bought the Gretzky are coming back to get the rest of the set.” This past year, the Upper Deck Company even inserted original 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee cards in its 2008-09 O-Pee-Chee hockey set. The Upper Deck Company, who has pro- Today, most Gretzky rookie cards cost $800-$1,200. A so-called mint card that has been professionally graded should cost in excess of $5,000. The most-expensive copy sold to date was a Gem Mint card graded BGS-10. It sold for $75,594 Cdn. in August 2005. “When cards got hot in the 1990s, the first ‘old’ set to which collectors returned was the 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee set,” said John McQuaig of Overtime Sports in Thunder Bay, ON. “Sure, they bought other sets from the (early) Parkies to the (1980-81) Raymond Bourque rookie year , but it was the Gretzky year that became the iconic set.” So iconic, in fact, that many fake copies have been produced in the last 30 years, a problem that has been somewhat curbed thanks to the emergence of authentication companies in the last 15 years. One tell-tale sign of what is likely an authentic copy is the “tint mark on Gretzky’s left shoulder,” said Mr. Koreen. duced O-Pee-Chee cards since 2006-07, also featured active and retired players on a new retro-look insert with the 1979-80 design. Those new cards featured the same blue border on the front and the skate design on the back. Only the cartoons are missing. Beyond the Gretzky card, the original 1979-80 set featured superstars of hockey like Lafleur, Bryan Trottier, Mike Bossy, Marcel Dionne, Bobby Clarke and Phil Esposito. Along with Howe and Hull, Ken Dryden and Stan Mikita also make their final O-Pee-Chee appearance. Only Bobby Orr is missing. As for rookies, Gretzky is the only one that earned a place in the Hockey Hall of Fame. By contrast, the 1980-81 set featured five Hall of Fame rookies while the 1981-82 set featured six Hall of Fame rookies. Back in 1979-80, however, the other “hot” rookies were Charlie Simmer, Bobby Smith and Ryan Walter. Smith, although three years older, outscored Gretzky when both played “Guys that had previously bought the Gretzky are coming back to get the rest of the set.” - Jason Martin, Guelph, ON junior hockey in the Ontario League in 197778. As for other “new” players, there was the entire cast of Edmonton Oilers, Hartford Whalers, Québec Nordiques and Winnipeg Jets. The four former World Hockey Association teams made their NHL debut in 197980. The logo/checklist cards of the Oilers, Whalers and Jets are still very popular with collectors. The Nordiques checklist card features the team photo, as did the checklists for the 17 established NHL teams. It happened to be the “end of an era” for hockey team photo cards in 1979-80. In 1980-81, the 21 team checklists featured the team goal-scoring leaders. As for the cartoons, it was the last year of player-specific cartoons for O-Pee-Chee hockey. In 1980-81, the card-back cartoons featured generic topics, which actually meant cameo appearances for retired legends like Bill Cook, Gordie Howe, Terry Sawchuk and Bobby Orr. The 1979-80 set also featured the last year of the Atlanta Flames (before the franchise moved to Calgary) and the first year of the often-mocked (albeit my favourite) Vancouver Canucks “V” jerseys. Today, the 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee set may cost you $1,000-$1,200, although beyond the Gretzky cards cost 75¢ (commons) to $25 (the Howe). The true mark of the 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee set, however, is the Gretzky rookie. By capturing Gretzky during his first NHL campaign, O-Pee-Chee provided a portrait to what was the greatest entrance in league history. That card captures the Great One just before we truly knew how great he was. The Want List - Premiere Issue - 37 Your twelve-pack of 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee #19 Ron Sedlbauer The “V” jersey made its OPC debut in 1979-80. As for “Seds”, he was coming off a club-record 40-goal season. #108 Marc Tardif Tardif, the first captain of the NHL Nordiques in 1979-80, was the WHA’s all-time leading goal scorer with 316 goals. #281 Greg Millen (RC) The Penguins’ blue jerseys, featured here on the maskless Millen, made its final showing in the 1979-80 OPC set. 38 - theWantList.ca #46 Marty Howe The Howe boys (Marty and Mark) made their NHL card debuts in 1979-80 while father Gordie made his final showing. #191 Charlie Simmer (RC) Simmer scored 50 goals in 51 games in 1979-80, highlighted by an NHL record 13-game goal-scoring streak. #330 Rick Hampton Hampton played for the Kings in 1978-79, but OPC reverted to using an older photo from the defunct Cleveland Barons days. #71 Dave Dryden The older Dryden was the first goalie to wear the mask-cage hybrid mask, as featured on this his final NHL card. #200 Guy Lafleur A six-time 50-goal scorer (1974-75 to 1979-80), Lafleur helped the Canadiens win four Stanley Cups from 1976-79. #373 Ron Ellis Ellis was the last-remaining member of the 1967 Stanley Cup champions still in Toronto in 1979-80. #100 Bryan Trottier Trottier was the reigning NHL scoring champion from the 1978-79 season. He won the Conn Smythe Trophy in 1980. #206 Bobby Smith (RC) Smith won the Calder Trophy as the NHL’s top rookie in 1978-79. He was the first-overall draft pick in 1978. #396 Lars-Erik Sjöberg One of seven three-time AVCO Trophy champions in Winnipeg, Sjöberg was the first captain of the NHL Jets. How the rest of the pack stacks up 1951-52 1954-55 1955-56 topps parkies parkies “You had all the greats of the game and their rookie cards in this set,” said Harvey Goldfarb of A.J. Sports World. Led by the likes of uber-legends Maurice Richard and Gordie Howe, the 1951-52 Parkies set features a remarkable Hall of Fame lineup. It also features legends Terry Sawchuk, Doug Harvey, Bernie Geoffrion, Ted Kennedy and Ted Lindsay. “This set has become one of the most popular issues of vintage hockey cards,” said David Martell of Global Vintage Sports Cards & Memorabilia. “These cards will never go out of style.” The 1951-52 Parkies series was the first true post-War hockey set. Despite its small size (half the standard size), the 1951-52 Parkies still hold their charm in the hobby. “I really enjoyed the first three Topps sets which were art nouveau,” said Harvey Goldfarb of A.J. Sports World. “They are still amongst the nicest products ever made.” Slightly larger than what would become the standard size, the first Topps hockey series was sold in one-card penny packs and six-card nickel packs. The set features players from the four American teams: Boston, Chicago, Detroit and New York. “The 1954-55 Topps set is the most beautiful set ever released,” said Len Pottie of Platinum Promotions. vintage hockey price guide... YEAR 1951-52 1952-53 1953-54 1954-55 1954-55 1955-56 1957-58 1957-58 1958-59 1958-59 1959-60 1959-60 1960-61 1960-61 1961-62 1961-62 1962-63 1962-63 BRAND PARKIES PARKIES PARKIES PARKIES TOPPS PARKIES PARKIES TOPPS PARKIES TOPPS PARKIES TOPPS PARKIES TOPPS O-PEE-CHEE PARKIES O-PEE-CHEE PARKIES PACK $7,000. / 5 $4,500. / ? $4,500. / 4 $4,000. / 4 $8,000. / 6 $4,500. / 4 $4,000. / 4 $4,000. / 4 $2,500. / 4 $2,500. / 4 $2,500. / 4 $2,500. / 4 $2,000. / 4 $2,000. / 4 $2,000. / 4 $2,000. / 4 SET $15,000. / 105 $8,000. / 105 $5,000. / 100 $5,000. / 100 $5,000. / 60 $5,400. / 79 $3,600. / 50 $2,800. / 66 $2,000. / 50 $5,000. / 66 $1,600. / 50 $2,200. / 66 $2,000. / 61 $2,000. / 66 $1,600. / 66 $1,600. / 51 $1,500. / 66 $2,000. / 55 “It is one of the more popular sets of all time, especially with Canadian collectors” said Len Pottie of Platinum Promotions. The 1955-56 set was the first Parkies set to feature just two teams: Montréal and Toronto. It features active and retired legends from both teams, as well as arena cards of the great Montréal Forum and Maple Leaf Gardens. “It was such a neat looking set, such a sign of the times,” said Harvey Goldfarb of A.J. Sports World. “It may not be the most important Parkies set, but it is a very difficult set to find in great condition.” ROOKIES (RAW) HHOF (RAW) HOWE $3000, ROCKET $2000, SAWCHUK $1500, HARVEY $650, GEOFFRION $650 HORTON $750, MOORE $250, ARMSTRONG $250 ROCKET $1500, HOWE $1200 BÉLIVEAU $700, BATHGATE $175, HOWELL $175 HOWE $750, ROCKET $650 BOWER $450, PLANTE ACTION $125 HOWE $600, ROCKET $500 HOWE $1800, SAWCHUK $750 PLANTE $1000, DUFF $100 ROCKET $500, BÉLIVEAU $350 H.RICHARD $600, MAHOVLICH $600 ROCKET $500, PLANTE $400 HALL $400, BUCYK $250, ULLMAN $250 HOWE $500, SAWCHUK $250 ROCKET $400, PLANTE $300 HULL $3000 HOWE $600, SAWCHUK $200 IMLACH $50 ROCKET $325, PLANTE $225 HULL $600, HOWE $400 HOWE $350, ROCKET $300 MIKITA $400 HULL $500, VÉZINA $75 GILBERT $150, RATELLE $150, PILOUS $30 HULL $350, MIKITA $225 KEON $300 HOWE $250, BÉLIVEAU $100 HULL $350, MIKITA $125 HOWE $250, KEON $125 The Want List - Premiere Issue - 39 1960-61 1964-65 o-pee-chee topps “This set is one of the nicest and bestliked sets,” said Len Pottie of Platinum Promotions. Indeed, the 1960-61 Topps set is an affordable set that features many of the game’s big stars, including Hockey Hall of Fame legends from the pre-War era. Those legends are featured in a special “All-Time Greats” subset. “It is a very popular set with collectors today,” said Harvey Goldfarb of A.J. Sports World. “There are lots of big-time players that played in the 1960s and even into the 1970s.” YEAR 1963-64 1963-64 1964-65 1964-65 1965-66 1965-66 1966-67 1966-67 1967-68 1967-68 1968-69 1968-69 1969-70 1969-70 1970-71 1970-71 1971-72 1971-72 1972-73 1972-73 1972-73 1973-74 1973-74 1974-75 40 - BRAND O-PEE-CHEE PARKIES O-PEE-CHEE 1 O-PEE-CHEE 2 O-PEE-CHEE 1 O-PEE-CHEE 2 O-PEE-CHEE 1 O-PEE-CHEE 2 O-PEE-CHEE 1 O-PEE-CHEE 2 O-PEE-CHEE 1 O-PEE-CHEE 2 O-PEE-CHEE 1 O-PEE-CHEE 2 O-PEE-CHEE 1 O-PEE-CHEE 2 O-PEE-CHEE 1 O-PEE-CHEE 2 O-PEE-CHEE 1 O-PEE-CHEE 2 O-PEE-CHEE 3 O-PEE-CHEE 1 O-PEE-CHEE 2 O-PEE-CHEE theWantList.ca PACK $1,700. / 4 $2,000. / 4 $2,200. / ? $3,200. / ? $1,700. / ? $1,500. / ? $8,000. / 5 $1,700. / 5 $1,500. / ? $1,500. / ? $1,200. / 8 $1,000. / 9 $700. / 8 $800. / 9 $650. / 8 $700. / 9 $500. / 8 $350. / 9 $300. / 8 $350. / 8 $600. / 8 $250. / 8 $200. / 9 $100. / 8 1966-67 o-pee-chee Just one year after the demise of Parkies, O-Pee-Chee decided to change its shape, making its cards more than an inch longer than cards from the preceding years. Today, these cards are simply known as “Tall Boys.” Thanks to the departure of Parkies, this O-Pee-Chee set also happens to be the first set in 10 years to feature players from all six NHL teams. SET $1,200. / 66 $2,800. / 99 $1,500. / 55 $4,800. / 55 $1,200. / 66 $1,800. / 66 $3,500. / 66 $1,200. / 66 $1,000. / 66 $2,000. / 66 $1,600. / 132 $1,000. / 85 $1,200. / 132 $1,000. / 99 $800. / 132 $800. / 132 $800. / 132 $800. / 132 $400. / 110 $375. / 98 $800. / 132 $300. / 132 $300. / 132 $500. / 396 Perhaps as much if not more of a one-man set than the Gretzky 1979-80 year, the 1966-67 O-Pee-Chee set is dominated by the great Bobby Orr. “Other than the Orr, collectors are not overly enthusiastic for this set,” said Len Pottie of Platinum Promotions. “The cards are so hard to get in good shape because of the brown borders.” Thanks to Orr, this series ranks as one of the classic hockey sets of all time. Those brown borders are part of a classic woodgrain television design. The season coincided with Hockey Night in Canada’s first colour broadcasts on CBC. It was also the last year of the six-team era, although O-Pee-Chee’s 12-team content did not debut until 1968-69. ROOKIES (RAW) HHOF (RAW) HULL $250, PLANTE $125 LAPERRIÈRE $50 HOWE $500, SAWCHUK $125 HULL $400, BÉLIVEAU $125 HOWE $500, HULL AS $250 CHEEVERS $200, GIACOMIN $175 HULL $225, BÉLIVEAU $75 ESPO $350, COURNOYER DP $125 HOWE 600 $450, HOWE DP $160 ORR $3000, SINDEN $50, E.FRANCIS $25 ESPO $125, SAWCHUK $65 HOWE $225, HULL $150 LEMAIRE $60, SATHER $35 HOWE $175, ESPO $75 VACHON $100 ORR $750, ORR MISC. $350 PARENT $250 ORR $400, HOWE $125 ORR MISC. $200, HOWE $65 S.SAVARD $40 ORR $250, HOWE $100 TONY-O $150 HOWE $175, ORR MISC. $80 PERREAULT $125, PARK $50 ORR $175, HOWE $100 CLARKE $125, SITTLER $125, LAPOINTE $25 ORR MISC. $65, SAWCHUK $65 DRYDEN $300 ORR $120, CLARKE $60 LAFLEUR $250, DIONNE $200 HOWE $125, BÉLIVEAU $75 LAFLEUR $60, ORR $50 ORR $85, DRYDEN $65 ORR AS $50, HULL $65 BARBER $25 ORR $60, LAFLEUR $35 ROBINSON $75, B.SMITH $60 GOALIE LDRS $15, HORTON $8 BOWMAN $65, POTVIN $50, GAINEY $35, McDONALD $30, SALMING $30, SHUTT $25 Want more vintage pricing? Visit the online price guide section at TheWantList.ca. 1971-72 1974-75 o-pee-chee “It is one of the most recognizable designs,” said Kelvin Roemer of Kard Sharks in Regina, SK. “People see that design and know exactly what it is.” Indeed, the 1971-72 O-Pee-Chee hockey set features one of the most popular designs, but it also “has a great lineup of players,” said Moe Amerey of West's Sports Cards in Edmonton, AB. The Ken Dryden RC highlights Series One while Marcel Dionne and Guy Lafleur RCs highlight Series Two. YEAR 1974-75 1975-76 1975-76 1976-77 1976-77 1977-78 1977-78 1978-79 1979-80 1980-81 1980-81 1981-82 1982-83 1982-83 1983-84 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 1986-87 1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 BRAND PACK O-PEE-CHEE WHA $50. / 8 O-PEE-CHEE $50. / 8 O-PEE-CHEE WHA $75. / 8 O-PEE-CHEE $35. / 8 O-PEE-CHEE WHA $30. / 8 O-PEE-CHEE $18. / 12 O-PEE-CHEE WHA $20. / 12 O-PEE-CHEE $20. / 10 O-PEE-CHEE $200. / 14 O-PEE-CHEE $55. / 12 O-PEE-CHEE SUPER O-PEE-CHEE $30. / 14 NEILSON’S . O-PEE-CHEE $10. / 10 O-PEE-CHEE $8. / 10 VACHON . O-PEE-CHEE $25. / 15 O-PEE-CHEE $45. / 15 KRAFT SPORTS O-PEE-CHEE $30. / 7 O-PEE-CHEE $10. / 7 O-PEE-CHEE $10. / 7 O-PEE-CHEE $1.50. o-pee-chee The 1974-75 O-Pee-Chee set does not illicit the same emotion as the 1971-72 or 1979-80 sets, but it does play a significant role in the evolution of hockey cards. It was the first single-series produced by O-PeeChee in a decade; it was also the biggest set created to date (396 cards). Its reputation suggests “it doesn’t do much after the (Don) Cherry and (Scotty) Bowman RCs.” In truth, it boasts HOF RCs of Denis Potvin, Lanny McDonald, Bob Gainey, Börje Salming and Steve Shutt. SET $250. / 66 $400. / 396 $500. / 132 $250. / 396 $200. / 132 $150. / 396 $75. / 66 $200. / 396 $1,200. / 396 $400. / 396 $40. / 24 $350. / 396 $175. / 50 $100. / 396 $125. / 396 $120. / 141 $250. / 396 $400. / 264 $85. / 81 $350. / 264 $100. / 264 $100. / 264 $25. / 330 1984-85 o-pee-chee There are some who would suggest the 1985-86 or 1986-87 were better sets for their lower print runs and impact RCs (Mario Lemieux or Patrick Roy), but the 1984-85 features a superior design and an impact rookie of its own (Steve Yzerman). “It is loaded with rookies,” said Kelvin Roemer of Kard Sharks in Regina, SK. Along with HOF RCs Yzerman, Cam Neely and Pat LaFontaine, this set includes RCs of Chris Chelios and Doug Gilmour. It is also the last big 396-card set of the 1980s. ROOKIES (RAW) HEDBERG $15, U.NILSSON $15 GILLIES $12 MARK HOWE $50 TROTTIER $75 BOSSY $100, FEDERKO $10 GRETZKY $1000 BOURQUE $100, MESSIER $100, GARTNER $50 COFFEY $75, KURRI $40, SAVARD $30 FUHR $40, FRANCIS $25, HAWERCHUK $25 STEVENS $10 YZERMAN $125, NEELY $40, LaFONTAINE $20 LEMIEUX $250, MacINNIS $30 ROY $50 ROY $175 ROBITAILLE $30 HULL $50, SHANAHAN $35 SAKIC $10, LEETCH $4 HHOF (RAW) HOWE FAMILY $100, HULL $50 ORR $40, LAFLEUR $20 HULL $60, HOWE $60, PLANTE $50 ORR $50, LAFLEUR $25 HOWE $45, HULL $35 ORR $30, LAFLEUR $15 HOWE $40, HULL $25 ORR CAN $45, LAFLEUR $15 HOWE $25, HULL $20, BOSSY $20 GRETZKY $125, GRETZKY AS $45 GRETZKY $15, BOSSY $6 GRETZKY $60, GRETZKY SL $30 GRETZKY $5, WG w/ HOWE $20 GRETZKY $30, GRETZKY SA $20 GRETZKY $30, GRETZ./MESS $30 GRETZKY $30, LAFLEUR $12 GRETZKY $20, GRETZKY AS $5 YZERMAN $40, GRETZKY $35 GRETZKY $30, MESSIER $10 LEMIEUX $50, GRETZKY $25 ROY $40, LEMIEUX $30, GRETZKY $25 GRETZKY $15, LEMIEUX $15 GRETZKY $2, LEMIEUX 1.50 The Want List - Premiere Issue - 41 The Graded One: the Gretzky RC T Wayne Gretzky RCs GRETZKY ROOKIE CARD DESCRIPTION 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee graded PSA-10 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee graded BGS-9.5 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee graded Gem Mint 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee graded Gem Mint 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee graded Mint 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee graded Mint 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee graded Mint 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee graded Near-Mint/Mint PSA-7 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee graded Near-Mint/Mint PSA-8 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee graded Near-Mint/Mint PSA-7 42 - theWantList.ca YEAR 2005 2002 2009 2009 2004 2004 2002 2007 2005 2007 AUCTION MastroNet eBay Classic Classic MastroNet MastroNet MastroNet Classic Classic Classic he Wayne Gretzky rookie card is the key piece from the 1979-80 O-Pee-Chee hockey card set. In fact, it is the key rookie card from the post-1967 expansion era. Today, a “raw” Gretzky rookie card (that is - ungraded) may cost you $1,000$1,200. If it has soft, rounded corners, it may cost you only $100-500. Once “slabbed” (that is - graded), a high-grade copy will cost you significantly more. So-called Mint copies often cost $1,000-$5,000 each; Gem Mint copies fetch greater values. Seven years ago, a copy graded BGS-9.5 HIGH BID sold for $27,500 Cdn. ($17,601 in an eBay $62,374 U.S. auction). Three years later, another copy $17,601 U.S. graded PSA-10 sold for an unbelievable $12,800 U.S. $75,594 Cdn. ($62,374 U.S. in a MastroNet Auction). $8,166 U.S. Cards that may look “mint” in your hands $6,000 U.S. may not be graded as such when critiqued by $5,500 U.S. a seasoned third-party expert. Even copies $3,600 U.S. that come fresh out of a pack may have a $713 U.S. blemish or two, be it the centering from a rough O-Pee-Chee cut, a nick from the old $700 U.S. printing machines, or even a gum or wax stain $686 U.S. on the front or back. the Cartoons #15Walt Tkaczuk #197 Mike Palmateer #290 Wayne Bianchin #202 Morris Lukowich #306 J. Bob Kelly #22 Ron Zanussi #92 Dan Labraaten #217 Bob Nystrom #341 Brian Glennie #30 Ulf Nilsson #105 Don Edwards #235 Rogatien Vachon #344 Curt Bennett #33 Garry Unger #111 Behn Wilson #264 Russ Anderson #360 Darcy Rota #37 Rick Dudley #134 Dave Schultz #267 Robbie Ftorek #365 Gerry Hart #48 Paul Woods #142 Wayne Babych #270 Bob Manno #368 Willy Lindström #63 Dale McCourt #159 Dave Maloney #275 Pierre Plante #390 Ed Kea The Want List - Premiere Issue - 43 1972 In The Game produces set for the collectors I n The Game wasn’t looking to create another run-of-the-mill card set. No, as company president Dr. Brian Price put it, “I make my cards for collectors, so I wanted to go to them and ask them which year was the most significant in hockey history.” It was quite the concept, one which in the last nine months has taken on a life of its own. It started back in January when In The Game commenced its first collector survey. “I wanted to pick a theme and I wanted to do another retro set,” said Dr. Price. “We gave collectors five choices (plus an open selection) and ran the votes through our website, through Hobby Insider, through Sportsology and through Beckett. The reply was unbelievable.” Some 3,000 unique votes were cast with two choices running neck and neck through to the March deadline. The eventual winner 1972 - led the race from day one, although 1980 was a close second throughout the process. “They ran neck and neck,” said Price. “1972 was always just a little ahead of 1980. I never imagined the passion that was brought out by this survey and the hundreds of emails I received from collectors who voted but also felt that they had to let me know why they voted for a certain year.” 1972, of course, drew heavy interest from collectors north of the border. The 1972 Summit Series in which Canada won was surely at the top of their minds. 1980, meanwhile, drew heavy interest from collectors south of the border. The 1980 Olympic hockey tournament in which USA won was of course at the top of their minds. For the record, 1967 finished third in the voting behind 1972 and 1980. While 1972 had the Summit Series and 1980 had the Miracle on Ice, 1967 had the incredible six-team expansion to the National Hockey League. So after the theme was selected, In The Game had to decide what to include in the set. Once again, the company went back to the collectors to decide which attributes should be included. “I went to collectors and gave them all other options,” said Price. “For instance, did they want to go purely retro or incorporate some new things, too? They voted for memorabilia cards because they wanted to have value in the boxes. Should there be no current players included? They said yes there could be, but not as part of the base set. “We followed the total script that the collectors wrote for us.” For the content, In The Game looked at three aspects from the 1972 season - the National Hockey League, the World Hockey Association, and the Canada-Soviet Union Summit Series. “We had to sign every player,” said Price. “Some of the guys are our standard guys, like the Canadian guys. Some of the WHA players were a challenge, but some of the NHL players were a challenge (too).” Price even included players from the Soviet Union team that nearly beat Canada in 1972. Enrolling the help of goaltender Vladislav Tretiak (whom In The Game has featured in the past), In The Game was able to add seven other Soviet players for the 1972 series. “I couldn’t sit back and just do Canadian autographs,” said Price. “So we went on the “We followed the total script that the collectors wrote for us.” - Dr. Brian Price 44 - theWantList.ca also It happened in 1972 challenge to find as many of the Soviet players as we could.” There are five basic insert sets Greatest Moments, Masked Men, Coaches, Forever Linked and Rookies. There are even rare blank-back parallel cards, mimicking the printing problem that was sometimes encountered with the old sets. Of course, In The Game didn’t stop with the retro players and the retro look. It also created a box and wrap reminiscent of the old hockey cards from the early 1970s. Cards come in a wax substrate wrapper (eight cards and one decoy or memorabilia per pack). Packs are housed in a cardboard box (18 packs per box). There’s no gum, but In The Game did experiment with adding a gum smell to the wrapper. It didn’t work, so In The Game passed on the idea. 9-9-09 “We did experiment with a scent – a bubble gum scent – but it didn’t work,” said Price. While In The Game did as much as possible to reinvent the year in collecting, it also made sure it stayed in tune with the modern hobby. In The Game 1972 will include jersey and autograph cards, two special inserts that weren’t around 37 years ago. There are even scarce cut signature cards featuring hockey, sport, political and entertainment personalities. “We kept production extremely low because that is what the marketplace is telling us,” said Price. “They would rather we sell out and they get value.” In The Game 1972 will be a memorable series for collectors, especially those that took part in the survey. “This is the kind of the thing we can do,” said Price. “So we are doing it.” The United States won a silver medal at the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo, Japan. Despite being relegated to the B Pool of the previous IIHF World Championship, USA qualified for Group A at the Olympic tournament. In Group A, USA posted three wins in five games to finish second behind gold medalist Soviet Union and ahead of bronze medalist Czechoslovakia. USA’s surprising 5-1 victory over Czechoslovakia on Feb. 7 was the difference in the standings. Of note, two USA players joined the World Hockey Association’s New England Whalers in the fall, helping their new professional team win the 1973 AVCO World Trophy (Kevin Ahearn and Tim Sheehy). USA’s 1972 team also featured a young teenaged Mark Howe, also a future WHA champion. The Nova Scotia Voyageurs became the first Canadian team to win the Calder Cup, the American Hockey League’s playoff trophy. After finishing second in the regular-season standings behind the Boston Bees, the Voyageurs swept the Bees in the Eastern Division final. In the AHL final, the Voyageurs won four out of six games against the Baltimore Clippers, capturing the title on May 15, 1972. Nova Scotia goaltender Michel Plasse was the star of the playoffs, posting a 1.25 goals-against average in the second season. Three Nova Scotia players - Chuck Lefley, Larry Robinson and Murray Wilson - went on to win a Stanley Cup the following season with the 1973 Montréal Canadiens. The Cornwall Royals won the 1972 Memorial Cup championship. After finishing second in the roundrobin competition, the Royals won 2-1 over the Peterborough Petes in the May 14 final. Goaltender Richard Brodeur won the Stafford Smythe Trophy as the tournament’s Most Valuable Player. Brodeur was one of a handful of future NHL players on Cornwall’s roster. He also played in the WHA where he won the AVCO World Trophy with the Québec Nordiques. Other future NHLers were Blair MacDonald, Bob Murray, Al Sims and John Wensink. The team also featured Robert Geoffrion (Boom Boom’s son) and Ron Smith (future NHL coach). The Want List - Premiere Issue - 45 The Want List ISSUE V1 - n2 V1 - n3 V1 - n4 V1 - n5 V1 - n6 ISSUE DATE DEADLINE MAILING Nov/Dec 2009 Oct. 9 October 2009 Toronto Expo, Holiday Season, New NHL Season Jan/Feb 2010 Nov. 27 December 2009 Winter Olympics, NHL Rookies, NHL All-Stars Mar/Apr 2010 Jan. 25 February 2010 Autographs, Junior Prospects, Vintage Heroes May/Jun 2010 Mar. 29 April 2010 Toronto Expo, Stanley Cup Playoffs, Olympic Gold Jul/Aug 2010 May 28 June 2010 Stanley Cup Champs, Game Gear, NHL Entry Draft Advertisers Wanted The Marketplace MARKETPLACE ADVERTISING // Premium business position 2.5" x 3.5" One year (6 issues) $528 // Standard business position 1.75" x 2.25" One year (6 issues) $396 EXTRAS : TheWantList.ca position and one-year subscription CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Get three free “Want List” classified advertisements (3 x 25 words) with every one-year subscription to The Want List. Contact us at info@thewantlist.ca Be a part of Canada’s new hockey collecting magazine, The Want List. There will be a new issue of The Want List every two months, with our second issue (November/December 2009) featuring John Tavares, Victor Hedman, Matt Duchene and the impressive 2009-10 National Hockey League rookie class. Every issue will be printed in full colour and highlight the best of the hockey card and memorabilia hobby. Additional resources like calendars, price guides and checklists can be found online at www.thewantlist.ca. 46 - theWantList.ca Subscription Information Subscribers Wanted! One year for $23.98 (6 issues) Two years $44.98 (12 issues) Name : ________________________________________________________ (please print) email : _________________________________________ Phone : ___________________ Full Address : _____________________________________________________________ Cheque MasterCard : ____________________________ Expiry : ____________ SEND PAYMENT TO: Up North Productions, 1995 Indian Creek Road, Limoges ON K0A 2M0 email info@thewantlist.ca Call us now at 646.845.9396 or visit theWantList.ca JOBS STORES MARKETING and sales leader. Up North Productions is seeking a marketing and sales leader for The Want List hockey memorabilia magazine and its website thewantlist.ca. For more information, please email lisa@hockeyMedia.ca. COIN DE LA CARTE SPORTIVE, 246 Bld. Maisonneuve in Gatineau, QC J8X 3N8, 819.770.4103. Email Rami at bighurt@videotron.ca. FROZEN POND, 10 Buttermill Avenue, Concord, ON L4K 3X4, 905.760.8404. Email Hersh at hersh@frozenpond.com. Visit www.frozenpond.com. GAME BREAKERS SPORTS CARDS, 780 Baseline Road, Ottawa, ON K2C 3V8, 613.228.9554. Email Hans at gamebreakers@bellnet.ca. KARD SHARKS, 1369 Scarth Street, Regina, SK S4R 2E7, 306.721.2888. Email Kelvin at kardsharks@sasktel.net. Visit www.kardsharks.ca. MARTIN SPORTS CARDS, 567 Silvercreek Parkway North, Guelph, ON N1H 6J2, 519.822-3062. Email Jason at martinsports@mdswireless.com. HOCKEY CARDS 2007-08 CWHL Ottawa Capital Canucks team set. Nine-card set featuring members of the Canadian Women’s Hockey League’s Ottawa Capital Canucks (now known as the Ottawa Senators). Set is $8 plus $2 postage. Includes goalie Robyn Rittmaster and former Mercyhurst captain C.J. Ireland. For details, email rds@hockeyMedia.ca. Feedback Wanted MAVERICK SPORTS & COLLECTABLES, 250 Water Street, St. John’s, NL A1C 1B7, 709.738.2888. Email Andrew at maverick@nfld.net. Visit www.maverickcollectibles.net. SHOWS EDMONTON SUMMIT SHOW, October 2-4 at the Northlands AgriCom near Rexall Coliseum. MONTREAL COLLECTORS SHOW, October 23-25 in Montréal, QC at the Centre Pierre-Charbonneau at Parc Olympique (3000 Viau). MORE WRESTLING VIDEOS, A great selection of old wrestling videos at: www.A1WrestlingVideos.com. rare Tell us what you think. Email us at info@thewantlist.ca to let us know what you would like to read in The Want List, the hobby’s new hockey card & memorabilia magazine. You can also reach us by mail at 1995 Indian Creek Road, Limoges, ON K0A 2M0. Be sure to include your phone number so that we can reach you (which in some cases will be quicker than mail or email). Also be sure to keep an eye out for us at upcoming sports collector shows in Edmonton (Oct. 3-4) and Toronto (Nov. 16-17). The Want List - Premiere Issue - 47 The Hersh Reality Marc-André Fleury • by Hersh Borenstein Flower Power I met Marc-André Fleury three weeks into his NHL career and he has been my favourite player ever since. What started as a professional relationship has developed into a friendship and culminated with tears streaming down my face when Fleury lifted the Stanley Cup following Game 7 of this year’s Finals. It was like watching your child succeed and was a feeling I have never experienced before. But I digress. Initially, being a Fleury fan was not an enjoyable ride. I had to endure the disrespect shown him by the financially-troubled Penguins during his first couple of years in the league. A performance-laden contract kept him bouncing up and down from the minors so the Pens would not have to make good on enriching bonus clauses. There was his “own goal” in the 2004 IIHF World Junior Cham- pionships and a couple of years in which he played with an inflated goals-against average (GAA). Multiple pundits were wondering if the Penguins had wasted the #1 pick of the 2003 NHL Entry Draft and if Fleury would ever aspire to the superstar goaltender projections placed on him at such a young age. Then things changed. Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin arrived and the Penguins got good. There was a 40-win season in 2006-07, followed by a 2.33 GAA and a trip to the Stanley Cup Final in 2007-08. But Fleury still had his detractors, few of whom realized that he still started the 2008-09 NHL season as the second-youngest goaltender in the league (behind Carey Price). Another visit to the Stanley Cup Final was just around the corner. This time, the kid was ready. Last year he made his Stanley Cup The young Marc-André Fleury (24) is not much older than many of his Pittsburgh fans 48 - theWantList.ca Final debut by tripping on a carpet that had been ridiculously-placed right where the players jump onto the ice. At the game’s conclusion, he asked if I “liked (his) entrance?” Prior to our next meeting, he promised that he would “start this game better”. That’s the thing with “The Flower”. He is unbelievably good natured and always has a smile on his face. He never lets anything bother him; his positive attitude and goofy grin are infectious. The kid just oozes charisma which has made him one of the most popular players in the game today. There are critics who say his never-ending positivity is a deterrent to becoming a great goalie. They say that he needs to be more intense and get angry when the situation dictates. Those critics do not know Marc-André Fleury. For two years, I watched him handle the pressure of the Stanley Cup Final. He comes off the ice and is bombarded with media requests in both English and French. He accommodates all of them, even before he has a chance to take off his pads. He has to change with members of the press all around him. He is often taken to the main stage to give a press conference to the masses. He was once asked how much his equipment weighs and replied that, “when sweat-soaked, it’s usually about 35 pounds.” Co-incidentally, that’s the same weight as the Stanley Cup. After practice, he early and wait in droves to cheer for players as they leave their cars, even though they have zero access to them coming or going (no one is getting any autographs here). I had been 0-5 watching Fleury in person in the playoffs, so when the Pens came out victorious in Game 3, I was greeted with “Your first win, huh? I guess you’re not a jinx.” Thanks goodness I got that monkey off my back and I could no longer be blamed for all their losses. In the post-game press conference, Fleury had the press laughing by looking at an imaginary watch and shaking Gordie Howe wished him luck for the rest of the series. I gave him the message and he replied, “really?” is often the last to leave the building as he stays behind to watch video of the opposition. Prior to Game One of the 2009 Stanley Cup Final, I was encouraged by the fact that I had been given a room on the 29th floor of my Detroit hotel. Was this purely a co-incidence? Detroit fans were hard on the kid and kept up their chants of “Fleuuuuuuuuryyyyyyyy” throughout the first two games. Little did they know there was no chance this would phase him. Unfortunately, these two games did nothing but remind us of the 2008 Final, where the Wings were dominant and the Penguins clearly overmatched. Fleury let in a couple of soft goals and his critics dominated the radio waves. Detroit once again jumped out to a quick 2-0 lead in games, but at least this time around the Penguins kept them close and were able to score a couple of goals. Gordie Howe asked me to pass on word to Fleury that he thought he played great and wished him luck for the rest of the series. I gave the kid the message and he replied, “really?” The games moved to Pittsburgh and Fleury was a lot more relaxed. He drives his Lamborghini (he has a seven-year, $35-million contract) to practice and does not have to wear a suit everywhere, as team rules dictate while on the road. He normally naps from 24 on a game day, but was thinking of pushing it back an hour since Stanley Cup games don’t start until 8:00 p.m. Regardless, he never naps for more than two hours and is often woken up by his dog Lily. When you walk around downtown Pittsburgh, you find a city that really loves their team, although they easily play second-fiddle to the NFL’s Steelers. I was able to buy a “Fast and the Fleurius” t-shirt, as well as a bar of Fleury chocolate. Fans get to the games his head when Crosby arrived late. He then patted teammate and good friend Maxime Talbot on the shoulder when Talbot gave him credit for the win. Fleury ended the session by stating that, “tonight was fun.” Indeed it was, but it was about to get better. The Pens were again victorious in Game Four, tying up the series at two games apiece. Detroit went ahead by winning Game Five, but Pittsburgh won the next game to force a seventh and deciding game. Fleury’s naysayers were out in full force. There were those that continued to say that The Flower wilts in the spotlight and he could not win the big game on the big stage. Game Seven was going to be a careerdefining game: a tough loss may shatter his confidence to the point where he may never recover. Fleury, however, was up for the occasion. He used a pokecheck to stop a breakaway early in the game, something I had never seen him do before. Detroit came on strong at the end and even hit the crossbar with less than six minutes left. A roof camera caught Fleury thanking his crossbar during the next commercial break. Is it any wonder why people love this guy? A last-second scoring chance by Nicklas Lidström was stopped with a sprawling save and the Pens were Stanley Cup champions. Fleury threw his stick in the air to celebrate, but has no idea what happened to it after that. He is still extremely shy and placed himself at the far end of the team photo because he did not want to uproot anyone that had already positioned themselves front and centre. Even the team trainers had a better spot than him. Eventually the Cup was passed to Fleury; he quickly passed it on to Talbot. I asked him if that kind of stuff was pre-arranged. It wasn’t, but he always knew that he would be giving it to or getting it from Talbot. He and the other players were allowed to keep their jerseys from the final. His mother had beer poured on her three times, but did not care. She was sprayed with more alcohol after the game. Most importantly, Fleury proved to everybody that he is one of the premier goaltenders in the league. At the tender age of 24, he may have several more of these days in the future. I hope to be able to experience those victories, too. Hersh Borenstein is the President of Frozen Pond, a Toronto-area sports marketing and memorabilia company. The Want List - Premiere Issue - 49 A piece of hockey history I Don Cherry McFarlane Sports Picks would have liked to have had a lot of Bobby Orr’s stuff,” said Don Cherry, the former Boston Bruins head coach and current television personality on CBC’s Hockey Night in Canada. “He had unique equipment, the gloves, the shin pads, the skates. I asked but he said, ‘no, the cat got on it and peed on it, so I threw it out...I almost cried. I said you could have got it cleaned!” Bobby Orr’s game-used equipment may indeed have gotten away, but Cherry was more careful with his own equipment. Hanging in his basement is the pride and joy of his own playing career, a Rochester Americans’ gameworn sweater. “What is near and dear to me is a Rochester Americans sweater that I played in as a captain,” said Cherry. “So if I have anything that I cherish, it is the Rochester Americans sweater when I was captain.” Cherry was one of seven Rochester players that won three Calder Cup championships in four American League seasons (1965, 1966 and 1968). “They were heavy. I remember we would go into Hershey which was a real hot place, you would have those wool socks and that big heavy Rochester sweater.” Cherry played much of his professional career in the American League, although he did play one NHL game for the Bruins (a playoff loss to the Canadiens in the 1955 semi final). Before Rochester, Cherry won his first Calder Cup with the Springfield Indians in 1960. As a junior, he won a Memorial Cup championship in 1953 with the Barrie Flyers. “I remember we’d go in there with Springfield and (team owner) Eddie Shore would have us wearing the cheapest, heaviest stuff. You would lose eight to 10 pounds. They were so heavy, but we never knew any difference.” Of course, Cherry admits that back in the day, “we’d put (the pounds) back on pretty quick right afterwards.” Cherry also had “all sorts of tricks” when it came to his sweaters. “I always liked to have a tight sweater, because when I got into a fight, it would be tough (for the opponent) to grab a tight sweater. “I would also cut the back of the neck so if someone pulled the sweater, it would rip a little bit so it wouldn’t hurt my neck.” As for those fights, there was always the chance that a little bit of blood might fall on the sweater. “We would get blood on them, but the fans liked to see that stuff on our sweaters. We would leave it on for awhile, especially on the white sweaters.” In time, manufacturers changed the material used to make those hockey jerseys and socks. “I remember the very first sweaters that came out with the little mesh, it was Champion Knitwear in Rochester. We were also the very first ones to have socks that weren’t wool. I don’t even know what it was, but it was almost a stretchy cloth, it was very cool. I don’t think they have it now, but the players loved it because it would also hold the shin pads in place. “I designed a lot of things like that. I did the sweaters the way I wanted them from when I played - nice and cool. I guess I was way ahead of my time.” As for today’s “modern” jerseys, Cherry is not a big fan. “I have to tell you that I am not a big fan of the new jerseys. I don’t think they look very good; they look like practice sweaters to me. When I think of the (old) Montréal Canadiens, the Boston Bruins, the Detroit Red Wings - those were lovely sweaters.” “Bobby Orr said, ‘the cat got on it and peed on it, so I threw it out,’... I almost cried. I said you could have got it cleaned!” - Don Cherry on the memorabilia that got away 50 - theWantList.ca