With $500, Which Hockey Cards Would You Buy?

In May 1995, Trading Cards Magazine ran a piece by Jim Stevens asking which hockey cards were worth buying with $500. I thought it’d be fun to see how John Moore’s picks have held up!

You can see that Moore recommended: One Ken Dryden 1971-72 OPC RC #45, $300; one Patrick Roy 1986-87 OPC RC #53, $140; two Dale Hawerchuk 1982-83 OPC RCs #380, $36; and four Paul Kariya 1992-93 UD RCs #586, $24. Total expense: $500.

Let’s assume he was talking about cards that would grade PSA 8s, which is a bit optimistic, but I need to compare against something.

It looks like Ken Dryden’s PSA 8 RC’s are ~$1475, Roy PSA 8 rookies are ~$330, Hawerchuk’s RC is ~$40 (times two is $80), and Paul Kariya’s UD RC is essentially worthless in a PSA 8 slab. So combined, that’s $1,885 from the original $500. But just a moment, the U.S Bureau of Labor Statistics CPI Inflation Calculator says that $500 in May 1995 has the same purchasing power as $1,043.60 in January 2025.

Not bad by Moore overall. But everyone probably should have stuck to Gretzky’s rookie cards, eh? 

Happy Collecting!

The 1979-80 OPC Hockey Set Isn’t Great Only Because of The Gretzky Rookie Card

The 1979 OPC Hockey set is a landmark release in the hobby, largely due to the iconic Wayne Gretzky rookie card. But the set is incredible for a few other reasons. In this piece, I’ll highlight some of them while saving a detailed analysis of Gretzky’s #18 rookie for another time.

1979 OPC #18 Wayne Gretzky

First, the 1979 OPC design is sharp! They moved from a white border design to the now-iconic blue-bordered design.

However, while they look incredible, those blue borders are condition-sensitive and prone to chipping. The cards are also tough to find centered. The rough cut edges are typical for O-Pee-Chee cards, and while they don’t detract from the grading of cards, they can turn off certain collectors.

The bilingual backs have 1978-79 statistics, a biography, and a cartoon sharing a fun fact about the player.

1979 OPC #170 Gainey – Reverse

Next, the set debuted four new NHL clubs in Edmonton, Winnipeg, Quebec, and Hartford. These team cards and checklist emblems (logo cards) are some of the most expensive cards in the set.

1979 OPC #261 Nordiques Team

The set is also famous for having the last cards of Gordie Howe, Bobby Hull, Stan Mikita, and Ken Dryden. Howe was still playing pro hockey at 51, so this set demonstrates the torch passing from Howe to the 19-year-old Gretzky.

1979 OPC #175 Gordie Howe
1979 OPC #185 Bobby Hull
1979 OPC #155 Stan Mikita
1979 OPC #150 Ken Dryden

As is standard with older hockey releases, the checklists are particularly expensive. This set includes three: #131, #237, and #346.

1979 OPC #237 Checklist #133-264

Unfortunately, wax packs are selling for a little more than the 20 cents they sold for when released in 1979. Graded wax packs are multi-thousand-dollar collectibles; REA sold a PSA 9 in the spring of 2024 for just over $3k. 

1979 OPC Hockey Wax Pack

Wax boxes, which hold 48 packs, are proportionally expensive; each pack has 14 cards, which means you will get 672 total cards in a box. With a 396-card checklist, you have a good chance of pulling multiple Gretzky (or any other) cards. But remember, the cards are condition-sensitive; most won’t even be PSA 7 quality out of the pack.

1979 OPC Hockey Wax Box

Uncut sheets come to market from time to time as well. Robert Edward Auctions sold this complete set of 1979 O-Pee-Chee hockey cards on three uncut sheets (which obviously included the Gretzky rookie) for just over $20k in their spring 2019 auction. Sheets without the Gretzky rookie are significantly cheaper.

1979 OPC Hockey Complete Set on 3 Uncut Sheets

While the Gretzky card still dominates the public’s perception of the 1979 OPC Hockey set, as it should, the set has many other great features. Happy collecting!