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Writer's pictureEric Moreno

One Man’s Museum-Worthy Collection – A Stadium Journey Q&A with Helmet Historian Blaise D’Sylva



Photos courtesy of Blaise D'Sylva


If you’re a sports fan, more than likely you were a collector of something at some point in your fandom career – maybe it was baseball cards or autographs; maybe it was ticket stubs or jerseys. If you’re a fan, you probably have some merchandise of your favorite team and/or players. Some fans grow out of the collecting hobby, while some, like Blaise D’Sylva, grow into it.


D’Sylva has amassed what can only be described as a museum-worthy collection of football helmets that he showcases on his X – formerly known as Twitter – account. At the time of our interview, D’Sylva estimated his collection of mini helmets was probably over 7,000 and spanned every FBS team ever, every NFL team ever, and most CFL and sundry other pro football leagues.


It is astounding.


I caught up with him recently to ask about how this collection got started, how his professional career has brought him in and around sports, his website, and we naturally talk about his favorite helmets.

 

EM: Before we dive in and talk about the helmets, let’s talk about you a little. Looking at your professional background, you have been in and around the sports world for a long time. Can you share a little bit about that?


BD: My career has really been about working in advertising. I started at an advertising agency right out of grad school in Chicago. I was working in the media department where we actually had the money and got to spend it. I worked there for 17 years and then I switched…and worked for All-State Insurance. I did a couple of fun projects that are still around. One is the All-State Sugar Bowl and also when you see All-State in the field goal nets, we started that as well, when I was there. I’m proud to have been part of a team to have put that all together.


I then went to ESPN where I sold advertising. Did that for about six years, and then went back to the client side of the business. I worked at Anheuser-Busch in St. Louis…then I was down at the Dr Pepper/Snapple Group [now Keurig/Dr Pepper] in Plano, Texas. Since then I’ve done some different projects out here in Vegas, where I am today.


EM: Would it be fair to say then that you are a bit of a sports fan?


BD: Yeah, definitely. The fact that I’ve been able to marry a personal passion with something I like to do in business has been fantastic. It doesn’t get much bigger than when you’re running all the sports sponsorships at Anheuser-Busch. I’ve been able to touch sports in a lot of different ways in the work that I’ve done.


EM: Let’s talk about the collection now. Right now, do you know how many helmets you’ve got?


BD: That’s a good question. I would say, rough count is probably somewhere between 7,000 and 7,500. Just to give you perspective, there are about 275-300 new college helmets per year. In the NFL, there are 10-15 new helmets this year. The CFL probably half a dozen. Maybe I do the UFL, there will be a few there. There are probably around 350 new helmets a year that get added.



My biggest worry is that I’m running out of room. I’ve probably got enough space to get through 2025. After that, I’ll have to figure something out for this space. That and the acrylic cases [I have them in]. Riddell used to make those when they first started making the Pocket Pro Sized Helmets years ago and I used to pick them up from them and they were fairly cheap. They stopped making those 10-15 years ago. I pick them up on eBay every once in a while.


EM: How did this get started? Did it start with one and then just snowball?


BD: When I was a kid, this was back in the 1970s, I collected those gumball helmets that you used to get for $.25 in the gumball machines. I do still have a bunch of gumballs [in my collection]. I had those and forgot about them. Then, with the advent of eBay, you started buying things you never thought you’d see again.


For me, it was the combination of two things. It was eBay and second, I went to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2001. It was the weekend before the induction ceremony and there was a bunch of vendors out in the parking lot. One of them was a Riddell booth and they had a set of these Pocket Pro helmets that looked really nice. They had an NFL throwback set, that they would eventually sell, but were for display only at that time. They had a bunch of helmets I’d never seen before.


Riddell started making those in mass production in the early 2000s. I met a guy on eBay and bought some Arena helmets from him. He’d taken the Riddell helmets and strip the paint, repaint them and put the vinyl logos on them. He asked me what I’d want, and I said let’s make everything. That’s when it really took off, because that’s how it allowed me to collect every version of every team.


He and I have been working together since 2003 and I added a second guy in 2016 when the first one said he was going to stop doing it. He ultimately didn’t stop, which is a good thing, because it has taken so much effort just to get caught up. At the end of the 2022 season, I was finally caught up with all the FBS schools. I’m probably less than 40 helmets away from the 2023 season. It’s a never-ending thing.


 

EM: I frequently visit your website, helmethistory.com; it’s very comprehensive. It seems like you update that very regularly. How much work are you putting into sharing your passion for this unique part of the game of football?


BD: I tell you, I look forward to the offseason because of the amount of work that goes into this. I don’t make the helmets, but the amount of work in doing just the research every week is a lot. By the time I research it, I’ll post it on the website, I’ll tweet it out. It’s a good eight to 10 hours of work a week to do it right.


The one thing that I do do, and I’m probably creating more work for myself, is that I’ll record what a team says they’re going to wear, but I’ll always verify what they did wear. You’ll always get one or two teams a week that say they’re going to wear something and not do it.


The thing for me is, I’m not breaking any news or selling any ads on my website. I’m doing it because I need to track it so the guys can make the helmet. I think my website is the most comprehensive for what I do. I track all the teams in FBS and 72 teams in FCS and the NFL and CFL. It’s a lot of work, but it’s fun. There is no end game in sight.

 

EM: Before I let you go, I wouldn’t think of asking you to pick out a helmet as your favorite, but what would you same are some of your favorite ones?


BD: I’m more partial to some, sure. Washington State, for sure, because that’s where I went to school. So, that’s always a favorite for me. I do like teams that I think have cool colors and cool logos. Tulane has always been a favorite of mine with the angry wave. I do like some of the Navy and Army ones that they use when they play each other. Air Force, too. Those are some of my individual favorites. I do like what Oregon does, because they were the original innovators.

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Follow Eric Moreno's Stadium Journey on Twitter at @EricMoreno6477.

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