In a suburb of Melbourne, there’s an extra bedroom that most guests don’t notice at first. The shelves go from the floor to the ceiling. The binders are organized by color. And every single card inside—hundreds or even thousands of them—is from a sport that most Australians only know a little about. Football in America. Not AFL. Not football. Field goal.
People in the hobby agree that this person’s collection of American football cards is the biggest privately owned collection on this side of the Pacific. They have spent the better part of fifteen years building it up and prefers to stay out of the spotlight. There shouldn’t be such a difference in a country where AFL cards regularly sell for tens of thousands of dollars. Tony Lockett, Jason Dunstall, Doug Wade, and Gary Ablett Sr. all signed a 2021 Select Supremacy quad signature card that was once sold for $50,000. That’s the market that most collectors in Australia know about. This person made a completely different choice.
That choice is hard not to find quietly interesting. People in Australia really like American football, but not a lot of other people. A good number of people watch NFL games here, especially since streaming made it possible, but it was never as important to the culture as it is in some parts of the US. Putting this much money, time, and emotion into building an archive of NFL cards in Melbourne seems like a very deliberate act of going against the grain. It’s not clear if that’s stubbornness or lack of vision.
It has cards from many decades of American football history. There are modern parallel inserts and autographed rookie cards next to old items from the 1960s and 1970s. Condition is very important to this collector, as it is for all serious collectors. No matter who is on the front, cards that are near-mint or mint have value that worn copies just can’t match. The archive was put together in a methodical way, not just by collecting things for the sake of collecting them, but also by selecting the best ones to keep.

An interesting thing about this project is that the global trading card market seems to have helped it rather than hurt it. The card boom during the pandemic drove prices through the roof for almost every sport and era. This created a strange window of time when knowledgeable and patient serious collectors could buy things that would not have been possible during the peak of the frenzy. That time period could have been used by this collector to fill in big gaps. The archive shows a level of detail that comes about over years, not months.
There’s also something to note about the community aspect. There aren’t many Australians who collect NFL cards, but they’re all linked through online forums, social media groups, and sometimes in-person events. Some people in those groups know about this Melbourne archive. Collectors in the US who have bought or sold from this person say they are amazed at how much they know about the sport even though they live so far away from it’s home country.
It’s still unknown if the collection will ever grow into something more public, like an exhibition, a well-documented archive, or a hobbyist’s go-to resource. It’s living in that spare bedroom in Melbourne for now, where it’s neat and quiet. In a way, that seems to be the whole point for the person who owns it. Not every collection needs people to read it. Some are built just because the person who built them can’t picture not building them.
