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jcy123 Offline

Unübertreffbarer Weltmeister in alles Disziplinen

Beiträge: 7.429

05.08.2019 09:45
the more illustrious Wayne. Chaulk now has more than 100 sticks that once hit the ice in the hands of the Great One: Titans, Eas Antworten

FORT MCMURRAY, Alta. -- It started almost two decades ago with a $20 hockey stick once wielded by a forgotten player for a string of mediocre teams. It ends this week when millions of dollars are likely to change hands as what may be the worlds largest game-worn collection of memorabilia from the worlds best player from the sports last great dynasty goes on the auction block. Shawn Chaulk, a quick-to-smile former Newfoundlander whose hoard of everything Wayne Gretzky makes grown men weak in the knees, says its all been nothing more than an attempt to get closer to the game he loves. "When youre a fan, fans are usually at a distance," he recently told The Canadian Press in the basement office of his home in Fort McMurray, Alta. The space is a forest of game-used Gretzky hockey sticks, a dressing room of game-worn Gretzky jerseys and a trainers bag full of assorted pucks, gloves, helmets and skates -- all touched, used and sweated in by the Great One himself. "You love the game. You love the athletes, at a distance. At best, you get to attend an event and see them in person. Again, from a distance. And thats as close as we get. "This was all to help me get closer to the game." Just a few items from the hundreds in an online auction, which begins Friday through Montreals Classic Auctions: -- The puck Gretzky shot to score his 500th goal, as well as the jersey and skates he was wearing at the time. -- Battle-scarred gloves and helmets worn during Stanley Cup victories and regular-season tilts that live still in copper-and-blue hearts. -- Skates replete with scuffs and repairs. -- Gretzkys early-1980s Oilers Nike track suit. -- A No. 99 practice bib. -- A Gretzky-used equipment bag. After the giant auction, Chaulk will still own some impressive items that drip with hockey history. Hes not selling: -- A stick from Gretzkys first pro team, the World Hockey Associations Indianapolis Pacers, on which the equipment manager stamped the name "Gretsky." -- The jersey Gretzky wore during the entire 1981-82 season in which, as an Edmonton Oiler, he compiled more than 200 points and broke Phil Espositos scoring record of 77 goals in one season. -- Replica Stanley Cups once owned by former Oilers owner Peter Pocklington, much-reviled for trading Gretzky to the Los Angeles Kings in August 1988. -- The jersey Gretzky wore the infamous night in April 1986, when, in a division final against arch-rival Calgary Flames, Steve Smith scored on his own net to eliminate the Oilers from the playoffs. Although hes played sports all his life, Chaulk, 45, didnt grow up as the kid with the biggest bag of marbles on the block. He didnt start collecting anything until he was in his 20s -- and then it involved golf. Chaulk had read an article about Arnold Palmer, which included a chat with the golf legends secretary. "She talked about how once a week she opens all his mail from fans, lays out all his autograph requests and he signs them and she sends them off," Chaulk recalled. "I thought, Wow." He wrote to the magazine which forwarded the letter to Palmer, who, in due course, returned a signed autograph. Chaulk thought it was great and, when he thinks something is great, he doesnt hold back. "Id go to the post office and drop 300 letters in the mail," he said. "Some days Id get up to 50 cards back in the mail." He ended up with 50,000 signed hockey cards in his collection, many accompanied by letters. Chaulks correspondents included Montreal Canadiens legends Maurice and Henri Richard and Jean Beliveau. But the cards, now sold or donated, were just a gateway drug. Before long, and as his contracting business prospered, Chaulk was dabbling in harder stuff: signed photographs, prints, jerseys. Then one afternoon he was in an Edmonton pawn shop, looking over some more cards. He spotted an old hockey stick hanging on the wall. The man behind the counter told him it had been used by Wayne Presley, a journeyman NHLer for five teams between 1984 and 97. "I didnt realize you could put your hands on that type of thing," said Chaulk, awe still in his voice more than a decade later. "I didnt know it was available to the fan. And there I am in a pawn shop and theres a game-used stick there. "I asked to see it and held it and went Wow! Will I ever get closer to the game? "I spent my $20. That was my first piece of the game." But not his last. Chaulk moved on from Presley and decided to focus his collection on Gretzky. If game-used sticks were available, he wanted them from the more illustrious Wayne. Chaulk now has more than 100 sticks that once hit the ice in the hands of the Great One: Titans, Eastons, wood and aluminum. They cover his entire career -- from the 1977 world juniors to his last NHL game on April 18, 1999, with the New York Rangers. The final step in Chaulks full-blown collectors bug came in 2005, when a major Gretzky collection hit the block. "I saw, in one single auction, the amount of stuff that can surface from a single player. That was the turning point for me. I knew I wanted to collect game-worn equipment and that would be my focus." Chaulk bought a jersey at that sale and hasnt slowed down since. He began buying at other auctions and slowly networked himself into a community of like-minded souls who would get in touch if they ran across something they thought might interest him. Persistence helped. "Once I get something in my mind, theres no stopping me," Chaulk laughed. "Ask anybody that Ive acquired something from who didnt truly want to give it up. I am a hound." Acquisitions came so thick and fast Chaulk jokes that his wife Tanya is on a first-name basis with all the local couriers. The collection has been a big part of his life and Chaulk speaks with great fondness of the friends hes made among fellow collectors. Hes got a great story about filmmaker Kevin Smith calling him up and asking if he could buy a stick, which ended with Chaulk hanging out with the celebrities at the Sundance Film Festival, while Smith used a borrowed stick as a prop onstage. A note of reverence creeps into Chaulks voice when he talks about the day his collection was visited by the man who, literally, created it. Gretzky was appearing at a function in 2011 where Chaulk had his collection on display and the two took some private time to walk through it. "Id tell him where the sticks came from and hed smile and react accordingly. And then, as we moved through the collection, he realized the magnitude of what Id put together and it was just absolutely surreal to walk the collection from end to end and discuss the pieces with him. In terms of collecting, it dont get any better. Thats beyond my wildest dreams as a collector. "Thats way closer to the game than I thought Id ever be." Why sell, then? Insurance is a big reason. Collections such as Chaulks are hard to buy coverage for and the thought of a fire makes him blanch. Also, hes already got most of the main Gretzky items likely to come on the market, so the thrill of the chase is getting rarer. "Theres not a lot of chase left. Its like Ive gotten to the top of the mountain. "I have the memories. Its maybe time to spread it out a little bit." Hes pretty casual about what he thinks the sale might bring in. He claims not to have a figure in his head and doesnt keep a database of what he paid for the items. Still, consider just the sticks. The cheapest one is worth about $2,500 and the most expensive about $20,000. There are plenty leaning against his wall that sell in the neighbourhood of $9,000. Chaulk has more than 100 sticks. The Wayne Gretzky of Wayne Gretzky collectors knows his trove wont stay together. Itll get parcelled out to collectors around the continent and, probably, the world. He just hopes that whoever buys the items lets people see them. He shudders at the thought of someone cutting up the jerseys and selling them piece by piece, which happens. "Thats sick. We just cringe at that." The pieces he plans to keep are special to him. The jersey and skates from the old-timers scrimmage at the very first Heritage Classic outdoor game in Edmonton will stay, because it was at that game that he and Tanya told friends they were about to have their first child. Before I left, Chaulk asked if there was anything Id like to try on. I point, with trembling finger, to the 81-82 jersey. "Sure," he said. The sacred relic was surprisingly heavy in my hands. Despite its satiny copper-and-blue sheen, it felt purposeful and tough, something you could wear into the corners or the front of the net. I held up my arms and the jersey settled over my shoulders. It fit perfectly. I looked at the picture Chaulk was showing me -- Gretz and Espo, sitting together just after the younger broke the older players record. Gretzkys face is still flushed from the game. And hes still wearing the jersey, the same one I now had on. I could see the same loose threads and marks in the picture as I now saw on my sleeve, and the time between then and now, between the birth of a legend and the honouring of it, collapsed. I felt a thrill tingling through my nerves. And I felt very close to the game. Cheap Yeezy Boost 350 . Bjorn, who had a 36-hole total of 8-under 134, made a testing six-foot putt to save par on the 16th and a birdie on the 17th before bogeying the final hole after a misjudged approach shot. American Kevin Streelman was in second place after shooting a 69. Discount Yeezy Shop . The 28-year-old from Calgary matched his career best after missing just one shot in his two rounds of shooting in the mens 10-kilometre sprint competition. Smith finished in 23 minutes 15. http://www.wholesaleyeezy.com/ . A big centre with all the tools to be an elite player, Johansen paced the Blue Jackets with a standout game Saturday night. He had a goal and two assists for a career-high three points as Columbus beat the New York Islanders 5-2 to snap a five-game losing streak. Wholesale Yeezy Replica .Y. -- Sabres defenceman Tyler Myers had no intention of changing his hard-hitting style before taking part in a disciplinary hearing for his illegal check to New Jersey forward Dainius Zubrus head. Wholesale Yeezy Boost . Aduriz headed home Markel Susaetas cross in the sixth minute to open the scoring at San Mames Stadium. He bettered that with a long-range blast that went in off the goal frame in the 18th, and converted a penalty in the 72nd after Diego Mainz was sent off for fouling Aduriz with only the goalkeeper to beat. GREEN BAY, Wis. -- A full week of practice could help newly acquired running back Knile Davis get up to speed in the Green Bay Packers injury-depleted backfield.And a swelling-reducing glove may help rookie Don Jackson contribute, too.Davis had a long weekend to study the Packers offensive playbook after arriving in an Oct. 18 trade from Kansas City -- less than 72 hours before the Packers victory over the Chicago Bears last Thursday night. Coach Mike McCarthy was reluctant to play Davis with so little time to learn the schemes, so Davis didnt see action on offense until late in the fourth quarter, carrying twice for 1 yard.Theres definitely some similarities (to Kansas Citys playbook). Ive just got to get the terminology and verbiage together, Davis said. Im definitely excited.McCarthy said Davis spent the weekend working with running backs coach Ben Sirmans to get a better feel for the offense entering Sundays game at Atlanta.Hes part of the game plan, McCarthy said of Davis. I like what he brings to the table. Hes a natural football player, someone thats played a lot of football, was successful obviously in college, and hes been in the league. I think this is just more of a language and communication gap that you have to fill. Hes very bright. Hes making progress.Jackson, meanwhile, took part in Wednesdays practice after X-rays did not show a fracture in his left hand, which he injured against Chicago. In an effort to reduce swelling, Jackson wore a special therapeutic glove throughout practice and was able to carry the ball with both hands -- something he couldnt do after the injury occurred.Its already looking better, Jackson said. The trainers, theyre pretty optimistic about it. Weve still got (four) days, so weve still got some time. And its already taken, I think, a dramatic leap from Sunday till now. I couldnt even like have anybody touch it, and now its to the point where I can move it a little bit, I have a little bit of grip.Still, McCarthy said Jackson must take part in Thursdays contact-filled, in-pads practice to gauge how realistic it is for him to play against the Falcons.Its important for him to go through team work, especially (Thursday). He needs to go through the half-line drill and the full physical team, McCarthy said.ddddddddddddThat will obviously give us direction on how we proceed Sunday.If the Packers have both Davis and Jackson at their disposal against the Falcons, they wont have to rely as heavily on Aaron Rodgers. He threw 56 passes -- five fewer than his single-game career high -- and finished with a career-best 39 completions against the Bears.It would also allow McCarthy to pick and choose how he uses receiver-turned-halfback Ty Montgomery, who carried nine times for 60 yards and caught 10 passes for another 66 yards against the Bears.The Packers are in such dire straits at running back because they lost starter Eddie Lacy for at least eight weeks (ankle/foot). Green Bay has been without No. 2 running back James Starks because of a knee injury that required arthroscopic surgery on Oct. 16. Its unclear how soon hell return.(Montgomery) and Don spent some extra time with me the night before (the Bears game) talking about different things, and Im sure that will happen this week. Maybe well get Knile in on it as well this time to make sure hes ready to go, Rodgers said. Weve got to go with the guys weve got and make sure theyre ready to play.Game notes Despite their mini-bye after their Thursday night victory, the Packers had a whopping nine players on their injury report. In addition to the players not expected to play against Atlanta -- Starks, tight end Jared Cook (ankle) and cornerbacks Damarious Randall (groin) and Quinten Rollins (groin) -- three other players were slight surprises: linebacker Clay Matthews (hamstring), wide receiver Randall Cobb (hamstring) and Montgomery (illness). . Matthews did not practice Wednesday and apparently injured his hamstring against the Bears. Montgomery spoke with reporters after practice and is expected to play, while Cobb was a limited participant. . The Packers added rookie center Jacob Flores to the practice squad. He spent the offseason and training camp with the Packers after signing with the team, but was cut at the end of camp.---AP NFL website: www.pro32.ap.org and www.twitter.com/AP-NFL ' ' '

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