Description: A gorgeous card that looks great on a lighted display self featuring Patrick Roy. Patrick Roy, one of the greatest goaltenders in NHL history, is celebrated for his remarkable career with the Montreal Canadiens and Colorado Avalanche. He set numerous records, including winning the Vezina Trophy three times, the Conn Smythe Trophy three times, and achieving the most career playoff victories by a goaltender with 151 wins. His unique combination of skill, mental toughness, and the iconic "butterfly" style revolutionized goaltending. Roy's leadership and competitive spirit made him a cornerstone of his teams, leading them to four Stanley Cup championships. His legacy extends beyond his records, as he continues to influence the game as a coach and mentor.The Hockey History Archive (HHA) has deemed this card historically significant. Authenticated, graded, and placed in an attractive and protective acrylic display case. The HHA features many different themed historically curated collections, including the popular "Enforcers" series, all authenticated and graded by HHA experts. Browse this seller's items to see other HHA Legends of the Game collections and to purchase all or just your favorites players in the Enforcers series. Combined shipping is available if you buy more than one item, so check out my other cards, all graded cards. Typically we can mail 3 cards for the price of one. Usually what we do is if you buy 3 cards and each card costs $8.45 to mail, we will round it off and refund you $8 on cards 2 and 3, for a total refund of $16. So initially Ebay will charge you $25 or so for shipping (varies depending on where you are), but we will refund you $16. The photo is a photo of the actual card so please take a good look at the card and pay attention to grading. Please note that while grades 7.5 through 10 are easy enough to understand, we do not number cards less than 7.5, we simply grade those G/VG etc and let you decide. G/VG does not mean the cards are not collectible at all it just means it did not make the 7.5 threshold which is where most of the money circulates in terms of investment cards, but the card is still collectible. In collecting, as supposed to simple investing, imperfections are actually frequently endearing and give the cards character and speak to their age and authenticity. Detailed Facts On the HHA grading and authentication company, and their grading standards:The Hockey History Archive (HHA) is a new trading card authenticating, grading, reclamation, historical collection, packaging and presentation service. We reclaim and regrade cards that investor-focused groups like PSA have, in our opinion, mishandled and irresponsibly graded, resulting in the establishment of a widespread grading environment that is both anti-historical and harmful to the cards themselves as historical artifacts. They have set up a grading system and environment that is frequently arbitrary and which fails to recognize the true collectible nature and historical value of cards, particularly with cards made prior to the late 1990s when laser centering etc began to be used. Our grades are done without reference to PSA or other such companies because we feel their standards do not adequately take into account standards of the day and age related considerations that *must* be taken into consideration when grading. We judge cards based on their historical value and the general condition relative to the production standards of the time with allowances for time-caused decay in controlled conditions. When you do this with cards created prior to the late 1990s slight centering issues and minor paint/ink issues should not influence a cards grade in terms of collectability. In fact, cards perfectly centered in that era should be regarded as flukes not standards. Significant marks or decay should, but HHA treats cards from the 2000s quite different than older cards, and we believe failure to do so is historically irresponsible. HHA takes into consideration the age of a card, the type of paper used, and the printing standards of the time. Companies such as PSA judge all cards the same, which is anti-historical. An off-center card in 1989 with minor ink flaking on the edges was endemic to a typical artifact from that time. Cards came out of packs brand new with these "issues." HHA is interested in collectors and historians period, *not* investors or person's with OCD conditions caused by hyper-analyzing artifacts using unrealistic standards. Our founder is not only a lifelong collector, but is also a lettered historian whose primary interest is in the historical value of a card in terms of "is it an artifact in excellent condition and representative of the time and place the card was made?" "If there is perceptible minor imperfections are they commensurate with natural decay in controlled conditions?" If both questions are answered "yes" then you have a perfectly collectible card and artifact in excellent, ergo, "10" condition. Deductions on older cards occur when serious imperfections in production are observed that indicate a factory flaw, such as plates being abnormally off-center and or when ink fading or specking occur that were caused by quality control standards not being met. Under this system cards do not have to be perfectly centered or devoid of any imperfections, they simply have to be commensurate with production standards of the time. HHA does not recognize PSA's standards at all; we grant them zero authority on the subject because they are not historians and to be frank it is not clear what they are or where their claimed authority comes from. They do not have "perfect" specimens by which they can compare cards they grade, so they do not know that the "imperfection" they identify is not endemic to the design, and without a perfect positive from manufacurers all opinions are arbitrary, hence HHA's "general standards of the time" make infinitely more sense. Until manufacturers and graders work together providing manufacturer "perfect" specimens, the practise of card grading will remain arbitrary. PSA does not judge cards for what they are or were at the time of release, they judge them by what they think they should be today. They expect 50 year old cards to be flawless, which is anti-historical. HHA seeks to put sanity back into grading, particularly for older cards created before the laser era. So the next question is: what are HHA's grading standards? Note on trimming perforated cards: HHA uses historical preservation standards which means frayed/perforated edges on cards are discouraged because it can speed decay. To make these cards last as long as possible perforatted edges should be trimmed *professionally*. This is a significant disagreement we have with PSA and others who have a strange policy of insisting perforrated edges be left perforated. From a historical preservation perspective this is insanity because such edges are literally torn to remove the card from, for instance, the back of a macaroni box. Our policy is that cards with such edges should be trimmed using professional trimming equipment. This will decrease the likelihood of damage and decay caused by over-exposure to oxygen etc. Obviously you do not want a perfrorated card that is so trimmed that you lose the intended design. Trims too large will damage the card's intended appearance. PSA's position has been that perforrated cards were designed to have jagged edges with torn paper exposed, therefore should never be trimmed. This idea is ridiculous. The card was designed like any other card, to be cut. ALL CARDS are designed to be cut/trimmed, they are printed on sheets and cut with varying degrees of precision, whether in the factory or out of the factory, in the case of perforatted cards the intention was that the cosumer would trim these cards *either* by tearing *or* by cutting. HHA does not subscribe to irrational standards that cater to card decay. If a card is over-trimmed, or trimmed incorrectly, then yes it should be downgraded, but NOT as PSA suggests "scrapped" and not graded at all. That is absurdity on stilts and people have simply granted this irrational power to PSA whose authority comes from themselves, period. Loose frayed edges on such cards should be trimmed, it is the responisble thing to do from a historical perspective. What grades indicate:10. A card graded as a 10 is deemed a highly collectible card in excellent or even perfect condition. HHA does not put the emphasis on centering that PSA does for cards created before the late 1990s (when laser centering began) and will only downgrade a card if the centering is dramatically off. Slight skews this way or that way are 100% consistent with print standards of the day for older cards. In fact, a slightly off-center card might actually be more representative of a perfect artifact of the time, whereas perfectly centered cards must be regarded as flukes. For cards created with laser centering and modern methods our grading expectations increase. Cards created during the laser era are expected to be within certain thresholds. Unlike cards created prior to laser centering, off center cards are NOT the standard of the time, hence off center cards will be downgraded. The usual corner condition, surface condition, edge condition are all examined with deductions being made where appropriate. Image quality is relative to the standard of the time as well. But all this is done with collectors and museum standards in mind, *not* with OCD hyper-analysis in mind. The primary question to be answered is: does this card appear as if a card just taken out of a pack minus minor allowances for age? If the answer is yes and there are not major flaws the card is a "10." 9.5 A virtually perfect card with some slight visually observable imperfections not consistent with standards of the time the card was made. All imperfections must be visible with the naked eye, particularly with older cards. Imperfections only visible with magnification are of little interest as collectors view cards with their eyes, and what matters is how a card appears to the naked eye. 9. A card with some significant but not major imperfection. This might be centering, significant edge wear, minor corner bends etc, or slight surface problems such as minor specs or print lines etc. 8. A card in very good condition but with some more significant imperfections or damage. 7.5. This is the lowest number grade HHA gives and it indicates a card that it is just barely above the point of no longer being considered in excellent condition. VG/G These are the lowest grades HHA gives, and it can manifest as either VG or G or VG/G. These grades indicate that the card is in good or very good collectible condition but cannot be considered in excellent condition. Cards not regarded as good or excellent will not be graded, and will just be marked "NGI" as in "no grade issued."
Price: 33 CAD
Location: Summerland, British Columbia
End Time: 2024-12-12T04:08:44.000Z
Shipping Cost: 6.98 CAD
Product Images
Item Specifics
Returns Accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Card Size: Standard
League: National Hockey League (NHL)
Autographed: No
Set: 1995-96 Topps
Player/Athlete: Patrick Roy
Year Manufactured: 1995
Material: Metal
Type: Sports Trading Card
Sport: Ice Hockey
Parallel/Variety: Marquee Men Power Boosters Parallel
Card Name: Patrick Roy
Manufacturer: Topps
Team: Montreal Canadiens
Features: Insert, Parallel/Variety, Short-Print
Card Number: 377
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Season: 1995-96