Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - July 20, 2015, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE B3
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I T'S going to be a busy
year for sports card shops
across the country and
two words sum up why:
Connor McDavid.
A hockey phenom such as McDavid
always spawns a new generation of
sports card collectors, said Mike
Bergmann, owner of Lower Level
Sports Cards and
Collectibles.
Who won't be
tempted to lay
down a few bucks
for a shot at a
McDavid rookie
card? It would be
like winning the
lottery. His rookie
card in an Edmonton
Oilers jersey
comes out in
November, although there are already
cards of him in Erie Otters ( OHL) and
Team Canada junior team jerseys.
" I'm expecting to see a lot of new
faces in here," Bergmann said.
Bergmann sees a lot of faces as it is,
at his shop at 189 Henderson Hwy. It's
a brick- and- mortar store in downtown
Elmwood where you can still drop in
to talk sports as much as to buy sports
cards and collectibles.
At any given time, the shop talk is
last night's game, the game coming up,
the next star, the fading star, trades,
free agents, injuries, what the home
team needs, and " did you see the hit
last night?" multiplied across four or
five sports.
You can't not jump in and agree,
fake agree, disagree, allow, interject,
interrupt, wonder when he'll stop, or
ask yourself, " Who does this guy think
he is? Don Cherry?"
" That's the neat thing about sports
is you can have sharp disagreements,"
said Bergmann, 40. " You can have a
strong opinion and that's OK."
Bergmann is more like an understanding
bartender than a regular
shopkeeper, and you can almost
picture him compulsively wiping the
counter while he follows the conversation.
He started collecting cards when he
was seven and still has the first card
he opened on display in his glass showcase:
an NHL penalty minute leader
card with a photo of Jimmy Mann, of
the Winnipeg Jets first edition. Mann
had 287 penalty minutes that year.
Bergmann displayed street smarts
early, renting his first table at a card
show at 14. He took a break from collecting
when he married and started
a family, then got back into it and
opened his shop three years ago.
It's a tough racket. He's seen three
other card stores open since he started,
and two of them are already closed.
In the early 1990s, there were more
than 100 card shops in Winnipeg,
Bergmann said. One strip mall in
North Kildonan, off Henderson Highway,
had two card shops alone - one
owned by former Winnipeg Jets forward
Pat Elynuik and Tony DaCosta,
former Jets equipment manager and
now equipment manager for the Minnesota
Wild.
Now, there are eight card shops
in Winnipeg, by Bergmann's count.
People started dropping out from
collecting in 1993- 94. " I think a lot of
people still want to collect, but they
had a bad experience collecting," he
said.
Part of the problem, says Bergmann,
is the industry became overrepresented
by speculators who buy
and sell cards like small- cap market
stocks. Buying cards as a moneymaking
scheme, albeit a poor one, has
driven the price way up and squeezed
children out.
Bergmann even misses the bubble
gum that used to come in a pack of
cards, so flat it looked like it had been
driven over by a steam roller, and as
hard as peanut brittle from sitting in
the pack for years. " That's how I was
introduced to cards. They were in the
candy section."
It's almost a blur to walk in to a card
shop today and see all the different
sets of cards. There are 18 different
sets of hockey cards alone. They are
all owned by one company, Upper
Deck.
The top series, Artifacts, sell for $ 12
a pack, with only four cards per pack,
or $ 100 for a box of 10 packs. Those
are specialty series that include player
autographs and pieces of the player's
jerseys.
At the other end of the scale are four
series that sell for less than $ 4 a pack,
typically with eight cards per pack,
including two, O- Pee- Chee and MVP
cards, that sell for $ 2 a pack.
Bergmann, with five young children
of his own, tries hard to promote
sports cards to kids, and to the kid in
grown- ups, to collect for the love of it.
He runs promotions such as a recent
party to watch the 2015 NHL Draft.
Also in June, he offered cards at the
discount price of $ 1 per pack for the
first 10 packs. He has a room dedicated
to rows and rows of individual
cards that people can flip through and
buy for 25 cents to 50 cents apiece.
" My goal is to get back to where card
collecting is fun for everyone, like in
the ' 90s when everyone had cards."
Many people try to fill a set or collect
for their favourite team. But there
are unusual niches. One customer
only collects former players from the
Regina Pats and Brandon Wheat Kings
who went on to the NHL.
Another collector was born in 1966
and collects cards not just from that
year but cards No. 66 in other years,
too - just that one card, not any
others.
( It's not just sports cards. I bought
a set of Vietnam War cards from him
only because I couldn't believe such a
thing existed.)
You don't usually get people's names,
but in recent visits I met a Chinese student
interested in obtaining the card
of Andong Song, the first Chinese- born
player drafted by the NHL ( 172nd
overall by the New York Islanders in
2015).
Another customer explained to
the room his job is to be the guy at
Winnipeg Blue Bombers games who
runs onto the field and twirls the red
chamois cloth to indicate a commercial
timeout.
Someone joked he should have a
montage of his greatest moments up on
Youtube. Yes, run in slow motion, with
Carly Simon's Nobody Does It Better
playing in the background.
bill. redekop@ freepress. mb. ca
Sports talk
etched in
cardboard, ink
Elmwood card shop keeps
hobby alive for collectors, kids
Neighbourhood Joints
They're in every corner of the city: the
weird little store that stocks exactly
what you're looking for, or that mashup
of a place that carries a little bit of
everything. It could be that little diner
with the crusty owner that makes the
best burgers in town. Or maybe it's that
odd little store, caf� or restaurant that's
been around forever and caters to a
mysterious clientele.
A Neighbourhood Joint can be just about
anything, but more often than not, it's
what makes your neighbourhood unique.
But the reality of keeping these
Neighbourhood Joints in business
is a struggle.
In this summer series, Free Press
reporters shine a light on some of these
under- the- radar spots.
BILL
REDEKOP
MIKAELA MACKENZIE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Mike Bergmann, owner of Lower Level Sports Cards and Collectibles, in his shop at 189 Henderson Hwy.
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