Collectors on the hunt for rare Connor Bedard rookie card - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 10:03 AM | Calgary | -16.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Collectors on the hunt for rare Connor Bedard rookie card

Metro Vancouver hobby shops say hockey cards are flying off the shelves as collectors search for a one-of-a-kind Connor Bedard rookie card. A U.S. collectibles company posted a bounty of $1 million US for the specialty card.

One-of-a-kind variant now has a $1 million bounty from a U.S. collectible company

A young boy with his father and a store owner looking at a bunch of hockey cards stacked on a table.
Fiver-year-old Barry Geluch with his father Joe, left, and Langley-based hobby shop owner Ken Richardson. The father-son duo grabbed a rare Connor Bedard printing plate, once used to manufacture the cards found in the Upper Deck collection series. (CBC News)

Hockey trading card collectors are scrambling to hobby shops across Metro Vancouver, hoping to get their hands on a one-of-a-kind Connor Bedardcard which could fetch the finder $1 million US.

Upper Deck, theexclusive,NHL-licensed manufacturer of trading cards, released its much-anticipated 2023-24 collection last week.

The collection is one of the most covetedsets in hockey every year, according to one local card game store owner,due to the popularity of the Young Guns cards thatfeaturethe best and brightest young rookiesin the game.

"There's a heck of a lot of excitement around it for sure," Ken Richardson, owner ofPastime Sports and Games in Langley, B.C., told CBC News.

But this year, he said, there's been more anticipation than ever because the collection features North Vancouver hockey phenomenonBedard.

The young athletemade his name in the Western Hockey League where heplayedfor the Regina Pats. After breakingdecades-old records, he wasdrafted into the NHL by the Chicago Blackhawks at age 18.

Now there's a uniquecard for the unique player: a shimmering golden card hiddenin a hobby box on a store shelf somewhere that's attracted a million-dollar bounty.

Hobby boxes contain 12 packs of 12 cards 144 cards in total and these particular boxes include sixYoung Guns cards, which may belong to anyof the 50 rookie players. Contained in one of the boxes is the "Outburst Gold Connor Bedard"card of which only one copyexists.

"That's Willy Wonka's golden ticket right there," Richardson said.

Men's hockey player, selected first overall in the NHL draft, wears a Chicago ball cap and jersey while addressing reporters.
Connor Bedard made his name as a hockey phenom in the WHL with the Regina Pats, where he broke decades-old records, and was then drafted by the NHL's Chicago Blackhawks at age 18. (Jason Kempin/Getty Images)

An American collectibles company, Dave and Adam's Card World,posted a "bounty" of $1 million on social mediafor the Bedardgold card last week.

"We haven't really seen ... agenerational talent like Bedard [in a long time]," said the company's CEO Adam Martin.

"I feel like hockey collectors worldwide have been waiting for someone like Bedard to come along to say, 'this is the card that I want to own.' We've seen anexplosion of interest in all of his cards."

Martin said the company will offer the money if the card is in good condition, without anydamage.

Joe Geluch and his five-year-old son Barry, from North Vancouver, B.C., areon the hunt for their golden ticket.

"It's fun opening [the boxes] with my dad," Barrysaid.

For Geluch, huntingfor that one Bedardcard has meantspending more time with his son.

"It has sparked an interest for us to do such things together," he said.

The father-son duo haven't found the outburst card buthave, nonetheless, bagged another rare item a Connor Bedard printing plate,once used to manufacture the cards found in the Upper Deck collection series.

'The prices people are paying ... it's crazy'

Rookie cards are major investments that can fetch anywhere from a few thousand to hundreds ofthousands of dollars, according to Billy Celio, senior product manager of Upper Deck.

"Hockey is actually still quite calm when it comes to this sort of stuff,"he said. "Theprices people are paying for football and basketball and baseball cards ... it's crazy."

Just this February, a Saskatchewan family sold a case full of unopened 1979 hockey card boxes for over $5 million.The boxes contained an unknown number of Wayne Gretzky rookie cards.

With files from Janella Hamilton and Cory Correia