@Red Wings de Détroit

Existe-t-il un moyen de vérifier de manière fiable les sticks utilisés par le jeu ?


bonjour à tous! J’ai récemment acheté un bâton de jeu utilisé aux enchères DC Sports. Je suppose que la personne qui le leur a vendu n’incluait pas le COA, qui n’était pas dans la description. J’ai entendu de bonnes choses à leur sujet, donc je ne crois pas qu’ils vendraient des contrefaçons, mais juste par curiosité, comment les gens peuvent-ils évaluer si ce genre d’articles est réel ? Est-ce que quelqu’un d’autre a de l’expérience avec des souvenirs sportifs d’occasion ? merci


snowsniper66

11 Comments

  1. petoskey_stone

    If it’s a player that typically doesn’t have their name on it at a store, chances are it’s said players stick.

  2. snasty25

    That is definitely a pro stock CCM stick based on the code printed under his name. It’s almost certainly legit unless it belongs to another professional/college hockey player that is named Edvinsson.

  3. Binner19

    Send it to me and I can verify it for you!

  4. andymfjAZ

    Those letters and numbers underneath his name are very common for “official” game use sticks.

    90 is the flex

    V01 = version 1

    The other numbers in the middle are generally serials for this specific player.

    This is very likely a legit game use stick.

  5. justino

    That last picture tells me it’s prostock and they, not the wings put the name on it. I had a few Marner and Perron sticks I bought from them they were the same. The codes on the front were very similar as well, which I don’t see on sticks you can buy retail.

  6. big_phat_gator

    NHL rules says stick length is limited to 63 inches from heel to the end of the shaft (Apparently this is also the IIHF rules) but Ed, just like Chara and other of similar statue, are allowed to have up to 65 inches. So maybe measure it and see how long it is cos Edvinssons stick is not a very common one.

  7. SexyBenFranklin

    DC Sports is extremely reputable. If they sold it as a game used stick, I wouldn’t think twice about it being fake.

  8. Historical-Bunch4402

    If it’s Ed’s it’s going to be yuuuge. Pretty much don’t make stock sticks for giants; also unlikely that his curve is in stores.

  9. Jsorgeloos8

    Out of curiosity what curve does he use

  10. scubastevie

    Honestly. Check the tape and tape on the blade. You might be able to photo match it any marks or dings stand out.

    Coas from Joe Louis arena are worthless, they lost the entire system.

    Ones from lca still are valid but there are tons of ways people get game used sticks.

    1. We know it’s a Simon stick. And at least pro stock

    2. Doesn’t exhibit game use? Yes ? Move to step 3

    3. Look on Getty images to see if his tape job matches, most players don’t swap it much.

    The parts of the stick you posted are the least concerning of a game used hockey purchaser. The knob, tape job are the two most telling signs of a game used stick by that player.

    Knob will be unique and so will blade and then usually a number or something near the knob.

    You can post pics of knob and blade tape and I’d be able to help some.

    Overall coas are just pieces of paper and mean nothing if you don’t know how to do research and protect yourself

Write A Comment

Pin