Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
The puck stops here
Winnipeg's Rankin a rabid Rubber Man, but Ontarian the go-to guy for ranking vulcanized valuables
Five years ago, Lyle Rankin purchased a dusty box of hockey pucks at an Ellice Avenue flea market.
Some of the pucks dated back to the 1970s, and featured the crests of defunct World Hockey Association teams like the Calgary Cowboys and Birmingham Bulls.
At the time, Rankin owned a sizable hockey card collection, so the pucks were more of an impulse buy than anything else, he says. Which is why Rankin wasn't too troubled a couple of months later, when he parted ways with some of his pucks, after noticing that others just like them were fetching as much as $100 each on eBay.
Don't it always seem to go that you don't know what you've got till it's gone?
"The money was good but if I had the chance to do it over again, I wouldn't have sold any," says Rankin, who now devotes the majority of his spare time to his collection of souvenir pucks.
The walls of Rankin's basement lair (let's call it his rubber room) are lined with hundreds of different pucks. Most of them are emblazoned with logos of professional hockey teams or portraits of retired superstars. But the married father of two also keeps his eyes open for promotional pucks, distributed by breweries like Labatt or retail chains such as Canadian Tire.
"Pretty much, if it's a puck, I want it," Rankin says, matter-of-factly.
Nowadays, Rankin thinks nothing of going to the ends of the Earth -- or in some cases, Saskatchewan -- for the express purpose of adding another 50 or so discs to his colourful cache.
His latest prized possession is a wooden wall plaque boasting pucks from all 21 teams that played during the 1982-1983 National Hockey League season, a campaign that included dearly departed squads like the Hartford Whalers, Colorado Rockies and Winnipeg Jets 1.0.
Perhaps the oddest -- and rarest -- puck in Rankin's collection is attached to a two-metre-long plank of wood, and is endorsed by one Robert Marvin Hull.
"This is the only one of these I've ever seen, but basically it was something kids could buy in stores in the '70s to measure how fast their slap shot was,' Rankin says, offering to demonstrate the gadget for a visitor.
The contraption works a bit like one of those sledgehammer-strongman thingies you see at the Ex. When you shoot the puck, it runs down a grooved-out path. It then slams up against a device that lets you know how cannonating your drive is, as compared to the Golden Jet's.
Rankin notes that there is one clear-cut advantage to collecting pucks instead of hockey cards.
"If that zombie apocalypse ever comes, I'll be well-armed," he says.
Darren Becker is the author of Becker's Hockey Puck Guide, a 314-page, spiral-bound tome that has become a bible of sorts for puck collectors around the world.
Becker, whose own puck collection numbers in the thousands, never set out to be an author.
About 15 years ago, the Bolton, Ont. resident compiled a checklist of pucks he was hoping to net one day. He carried it with him whenever he was out shopping at sports collectible shows. He realized he might have something marketable on his hands after a fellow collector noticed the "book" and offered Becker $100 for it on the spot. (Becker accepted the money and printed off another copy the next day.)
Becker has since published two editions of his puck guide. Each volume contains more than 20,000 listings. Chapters are divided into pro ranks, minor leagues and college levels.
"Most people consider the NHL Spalding game pucks from the 1920s and '30s to be the holy grails," says Rankin, who once sold a bunch of his doubles to a restaurant in Paris called Le Puck. "They can fetch $500 to $1,000 if they're in good condition."
Becker say pucks from the early days of the WHA -- back when the renegade league experimented with blue pucks -- are also sought after by collectors.
"A blue Ottawa Nationals with the league logo on the back can go for a ton of money," he says, referring to a team that competed for only one season before relocating to Toronto, where it became known as the Toros.
Game-used pucks usually command the highest prices, Becker says. For example, the Gold Medal-winning puck from the 1960 Olympics in Squaw Valley, Calif., once listed on eBay for $60,000.
For more information on puck collecting, visit Becker's website, www.officialgamepuck.com
(Make sure to check out the virtual puck museum, especially the section devoted to wedding pucks; that is, newlyweds who commemorate their big day by printing the date of their nuptials -- and a quip like "He shoots, he scores" -- on a puck.)
david.sanderson@freepress.mb.ca
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition January 12, 2013 E3
More Life & Style
- Back to Top
- Return to Life & Style
Poll
Most Popular Life & Style
- Indiegogo defends campaign for Toronto Mayor Rob Ford's alleged crack video
- Baked Alaska: Unusual heat wave hits north, with temps topping 80 degrees (26C) in Anchorage
- U.S. court upholds Canadian company's patent for couples vibrator
- Two Alberta family doctors suspended over inappropriate patient relationships
- Just for kicks: shoe swap hits town
- Recipes for potato salad, chicken drumettes and luscious lemon buttermilk cake
- Pets of the week
- The old wooden church
- JULY FOURTH: Recipe for 3-pepper barbecue potato salad
- Vitamin C and lysine proven to keep arteries healthy
- Even elite athletes sometimes feel depressed after completing a marathon
- Apple's big week
- Just for kicks: shoe swap hits town
- Make it look natural; companies work to make packaged foods appear homespun
- Study shows commonly prescribed statin drugs and some antibiotics can interact
- Small-town Ohio police chief gives quick repercussion for criminals through Facebook floggings
- Doctors say public purse and public health at risk because of government cuts
- Ontario workers who fear chemical made them sick told to file claim
- More than 400 people ordered to leave homes in Fort McMurray due to flooding
- The old wooden church
- Deadly liver cancer on the rise, but half of cases preventable: Cancer Society
- Climate change keeping early birds from getting worms: study
- Overabundance of carp threatening ecosystem at Saskatchewan's Wascana Lake
- Doc's memoir portrays ERs as frantic, funny, frightening ... but never dull
- Carb-loading and sports drinks: debunking marathon myths
- Two dead, one injured after helicopter crashes north of Fort McMurray, Alberta
- You can't break bad eating patterns, but you can modify them to your advantage
- Magazine's creator says style has no size
- Dr. Henry Morgentaler, the controversial abortion rights crusader, dead at 90
- Even elite athletes sometimes feel depressed after completing a marathon
- Website helps Parkinson's patients avoid protein-medication interaction
- Conflict resolution, aboriginal-style
- It’s all in your mind
- Groin soreness sign of testicular cancer
- Recipes for potato salad, chicken drumettes and luscious lemon buttermilk cake
- Baked Alaska: Unusual heat wave hits north, with temps topping 80 degrees (26C) in Anchorage
- Study: Vaccine against sexually transmitted HPV cut infections in teen girls by half
- Canadian high school seniors in worse health than first-years. study shows
- Study shows commonly prescribed statin drugs and some antibiotics can interact
- Even elite athletes sometimes feel depressed after completing a marathon
- Website helps Parkinson's patients avoid protein-medication interaction
- The old wooden church
- Groin soreness sign of testicular cancer
- Adrenal fatigue can have significant impact
- Turks and chaos
- Poor preschooler eating habits can raise cholesterol, set stage for heart disease
- Make it look natural; companies work to make packaged foods appear homespun
- Just for kicks: shoe swap hits town
- Doc's memoir portrays ERs as frantic, funny, frightening ... but never dull
- Cramping their style
- Specialist moving to Toronto after 23 years at cutting-edge sleep lab
- Markdown maven tells world of Winnipeg deals
- Carb-loading and sports drinks: debunking marathon myths
- Iron overload often missed diagnosis for heart problems
- You can't break bad eating patterns, but you can modify them to your advantage
- Yaz and Yasmin pills linked to 23 deaths, say Health Canada documents
- His nose knows: City perfume maker can concoct your personal aroma
- Genealogical searches connect present to past
Ads by Google












You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is be a Winnipeg Free Press print or e-edition subscriber to join the conversation and give your feedback.
You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is be a Winnipeg Free Press print or e-edition subscriber to join the conversation and give your feedback.
Have Your Say
New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.
Have Your Say
Comments are open to Winnipeg Free Press print or e-edition subscribers only. why?
Login SubscribeHave Your Say
Comments are open to Winnipeg Free Press Subscribers only. why?
SubscribeThe Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010.