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The 2010 Mens Olympic Hockey Teams:
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Star Player Index

A-G
Daniel Alfredsson
Jason Allison
Tony Amonte
Dave Andreychuk
Jason Arnott
Ed Belfour
Patrice Bergeron
Todd Bertuzzi
Rob Blake
Peter Bondra
Ray Bourque
Daniel Briere
Rod Brind'Amour
Martin Brodeur
Pavel Bure
Sean Burke
Jeff Carter
Jonathan Cheechoo
Chris Chelios
Wendel Clark
Dan Cloutier
Paul Coffey
Mike Comrie
Sidney Crosby
Vincent Damphousse
Pavel Datsyuk
Eric Daze
Adam Deadmarsh
Pavol Demitra
Eric Desjardins
Rick DiPietro
Shane Doan
Drew Doughty
Chris Drury
Patrick Elias
Sergei Fedorov
Marc-Andre Fleury
Theoren Fleury
Peter Forsberg
Ron Francis
Jeff Friesen
Alexander Frolov
Grant Fuhr
Marian Gaborik
Simon Gagne
Mike Gartner
Ryan Getzlaf
J.S. Giguere
Doug Gilmour
Brian Gionta
Scott Gomez
Wayne Gretzky 80-97
Wayne Gretzky 98-08
Bill Guerin

H-N
Dominik Hasek
Derian Hatcher
Martin Havlat
Dale Hawerchuk
Dany Heatley
Milan Hejduk
Ales Hemsky
Nathan Horton
Marian Hossa
Gordie Howe
Brett Hull
Jarome Iginla
Jaromir Jagr
Olli Jokinen
Curtis Joseph
Ed Jovanovski
Patrick Kane
Paul Kariya
Duncan Keith
Ryan Kesler
Nikolai Khabibulin
Miikka Kiprusoff
Saku Koivu
Olaf Kolzig
Ilya Kovalchuk
Alexei Kovalev
Jari Kurri
Guy LaFleur
Pat LaFontaine
Jamie Langenbrunner
Vincent LeCavalier
John LeClair
Brian Leetch
David Legwand
Jere Lehtinen
Mario Lemieux
Niklas Lidstrom
Trevor Linden
Eric Lindros
Henrik Lundqvist
Roberto Luongo
Al MacInnis
Evgeni Malkin
Patrick Marleau
Mark Messier
Ryan Miller
Mike Modano
Alex Mogilny
Andy Moog
Brendan Morrison
Evgeni Nabokov
Rick Nash
Marcus Naslund
Cam Neely
Scott Niedermayer
Joe Nieuwendyk
Janne Niinimaa
Owen Nolan

O-Z
Adam Oates
Mattias Ohlund
Bobby Orr
Chris Osgood

Alexander Ovechkin
Sandis Ozolinsh

Zigmund Palffy
Zach Parise
Mike Peca
Dion Phaneuf
Felix Potvin
Carey Price
Keith Primeau
Chris Pronger
Mark Recchi
Brad Richards
Mike Richards
Mike Richter
Luc Robitaille
Jeremy Roenick
Patrick Roy
Joe Sakic
Tommy Salo
Sergei Samsonov
Geoff Sanderson
Miroslav Satan
Brent Seabrook
Daniel Sedin
Henrik Sedin
Teemu Selanne
Alexander Semin
Brendan Shanahan
Ryan Smyth
Jason Spezza
Eric Staal
Jordan Staal
Steven Stamkos
Patrick Stefan
Scott Stevens
Martin St.Louis
Brad Stuart
Mats Sundin
Alex Tanguay
Jose Theodore
Jocelyn Thibault
Joe Thornton
Keith Tkachuk
Jonathan Toews
Marty Turco
Roman Turek
Pierre Turgeon
Oleg Tverdovsky
John VanBiesbrouck
Tomas Vokoun
Cam Ward
Doug Weight
Alexei Yashin
Steve Yzerman

Henrik Zetterberg

Everyone Else:

Active Players: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U,V,W,X - Y - Z
(All active players not already listed above)

Retired Players: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U,V,W,X - Y - Z
(All retired players not already listed above)

Rookie Cards: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U,V,W,X - Y - Z

(The rookie cards of all players)

Rookie Cards of Retired Players - Team Cards & Checklists - Womens Cards - Packs - Sets

McDonalds Cards: 91/92 - 92/93 - 93/94 - 94/95 - 95/96 - 96/97 - 97/98 - 98/99 - 99/00
     00/01 - 01/02 - 02/03 - 03/04 - 05/06 - 06/07 - 07/08 - 08/09 - 09-10

O-Pee-Chee: 09/10

Upper Deck Cards: 09/1008/0907/08 - 05/06 & 06/07 Young Guns

Team Index

Shortcuts to players and former players on these NHL teams

Baseball Cards: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U,V,W,X - Y - Z

History of the Hockey Card

       Made in Canada Hockey Cards have been in existence long before baseball cards and football cards were produced here.   The very first hockey cards came out over 125 years ago.  In 1879 and 1880 various card sized drawings depicting "Ice hockey" or "Eishockey" appeared.  One American card called the game "Ice Polo" and depicted a game between Cottage City and Providence.

      As the 19th Century drew to a close many more photos and cards appeared depicting various hockey clubs and colleges in Quebec and New England.   The first sets that actually featured named players were made available in cigarette packs from 1910 - 1913.   These three "C" sets (C-55, C-56 and C-57), measured 1 1/2" x 2 1/2".  They featured colour portraits of the leading hockey players of the day.  The top teams in that day were from Quebec, Ottawa, Montreal and Renfrew - which was a club team from Vancouver.  Some of the names of the players in these sets have a familiar ring with anyone who follows the NHL today.  Names like Georges Vezina, Fred Cyclone Taylor, and Art Ross are some examples.   These ended with the outbreak of World War One, and during the war years the only hockey memorabilia to be seen would be from American colleges.

      Following the Great War, the West Coast featured the first revival of hockey cards with Victoria and Vancouver producing sets.  Other Western Canadian sets and American sets followed into the 20's.   The first National Hockey League set called William-Patterson appeared in 1923 featuring players from Ottawa, Montreal, Toronto, Hamilton and Boston.  Here is where the first cards of Howie Morenz, Aurele Joliat, and King Clancy debuted. 

      More food and candy manufacturers came on board as the 20's progressed with the object that if you collected the whole set, you would send the set in where they would stamp it and return it along with a gift.  From these, the O-Pee-Chee Chewing Gum company prevailed due to better looking cards.  O-Pee-Chee continued to produce cards up until 1940 when due to the 2nd World War, production ceased.   Before they stopped, names like Eddie Shore, Charlie Conacher, Ace Bailey, Turk Broda, Toe Blake, Elmer Lach and Syl Apps appeared on cards.

      Hockey cards like this did not reappear until 1951 when Parkhurst Products was the lone issuer for the next three years.  Topps and O-Pee-Chee rejoined the hockey card promotions, and again due to having more interesting and colourful cards which became more popular, Parkhurst backed out of hockey card production in 1964.  By 1968 Topps and O-Pee-Chee were the dominant supplier of hockey cards in North America.  Topps supplied the U.S. market while O-Pee-Chee supplied cards across Canada.  O-Pee-Chee continued as a major supplier of hockey cards until 1995 when they announced they were discontinuing production and distribution and handed over the responsibility to Topps. 

      Many issues faced Topps such as competition from other brands, and an overall destruction of the hobby market due to overproduction in the early 1990's by all brands.   Some of the other brands that appeared in 1990 were primarily Upper Deck, Pro Set and Score.   Poor quality, superior competition, and a host of card errors caused Pro Set to back out by 1993.  Of the new brands, Upper Deck achieved the most success with their white stock paper and interesting photography.  Other brands came and went through the 1990's, but Upper Deck was the one brand that remained constant.

      Another change that occurred during the 1990's was the more common use of insert and parallel sets, as well as one brand now being licenced by the NHL and NHLPA to produce more than just one set per season.   These series of events could be called the dark days of hockey card collecting.  Over production in the early 90's, more sets on the market in the mid-90's, and harder to find inserts and parallel cards in the late 90's shook out a lot of good collectors who got fed up trying to keep up with collecting every card of their favourite player or team.  Thus card companies have had to respond with more and more "limited issue" releases and higher end products to make up for the shortfall in what was once a brisk market.

      Since the lockout of 2005, Upper Deck is currently the only licenced producer of NHL hockey cards.  Topps does not produce hockey cards anymore, and Pacific has gone out of business.  In The Game has signed individual contracts with retired players to use their names and likenesses on hockey cards, and they also have contracts to produce cards of players in the CHL junior leagues, the AHL and Hockey Canada.  In The Game cards are not licened by the NHL or NHLPA.

      Many collectors have now narrowed their collecting to just a few players, or perhaps just one set per year.  With these adjustments over time, we now see as the new millennium progresses, more and more former card collectors coming back.  Some only collect food issues such as releases from McDonalds or Kraft, others only collecting "Hall of Fame" players, or only collecting cards from before 1990.  With all the changes in the hobby over the years, and especially in the last 15 years there are really "no rules" about card collecting.  One can decide for themselves what they would like to collect.   Some only collect autographed cards or what is called "game used" cards, where a piece of the players jersey or equipment is embedded in the hockey card.  One European collector I know just likes to collect one card of every player who has ever played a game in the NHL and it does not matter which brand of card the player is on.   Other collectors that shop here are determined to get every card ever produced of a certain player such as Wayne Gretzky, Patrick Roy, Steve Yzerman, Mario Lemieux, Raymond Bourque, Ron Francis or another favourite player.

      So if you are new to hockey cards, or are just returning for the first time in years, enjoy browsing through the site, and remember there are no rules regarding what you collect.  You may just want to place a small order at first to see how things go, and then place more orders as time goes on.  We have been online since 1996 and have no plans of going anywhere, so you can shop with confidence here if you like, and we look forward to hearing from you.
                                                                                                Thomas Clemmer
                                                                                                Canadian Hockey Cards

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