
Celebrini/Smith 1-of-1 Premier Rookie Patch Sale
Figoca looks at Goldin’s $271,450 sale of the 2024-25 Upper Deck Premier Dual Rookie Patchtaculars 1/1 Celebrini/Smith card and what it means for collectors.

Sold Card
2024-25 Upper Deck Premier Dual Rookie Patchtaculars Chest Logo #DRPT-CS Macklin Celebrini/Will Smith Patch Rookie Card (#1/1) - PSA Authentic
Sale Price
Platform
Goldin2024-25 Upper Deck Premier Dual Rookie Patchtaculars Chest Logo #DRPT-CS Macklin Celebrini/Will Smith Patch Rookie Card (#1/1) – PSA Authentic
On February 27, 2026, Goldin auctioned one of the first truly headline-making dual rookie hockey cards of the new prospect cycle: a 2024-25 Upper Deck Premier Dual Rookie Patchtaculars Chest Logo #DRPT-CS featuring Macklin Celebrini and Will Smith. The card is a PSA Authentic example of a 1-of-1 dual rookie patch card, showcasing premium chest logo patches from each player’s jersey. It closed at $271,450 (USD).
Because this is an unreleased-future-year card at the time of writing, we don’t yet have full checklist or population data from grading companies to lean on. But we can still break down what this card is, what it represents for collectors, and how to think about its sale in the broader modern hockey market.
Card breakdown
Let’s start with the fundamentals of the card itself:
Year: 2024-25
Brand: Upper Deck Premier
Insert/Subset: Dual Rookie Patchtaculars Chest Logo
Card number: #DRPT-CS
Players: Macklin Celebrini / Will Smith
Type: Dual rookie patch card (rookie-year issue for both players)
Serial numbering: 1/1 (one-of-one, unique copy)
Memorabilia: Dual premium patches, specifically “chest logo” swatches
Grading company: PSA
Grade: PSA Authentic (no numerical grade ) Upper Deck Premier traditionally sits in the high-end tier of hockey releases. It focuses on lower print runs, hard-signed autographs in many subsets, and thick, premium patch content. The “Dual Rookie Patchtaculars” concept—especially with chest logo patches—sits near the top of Premier’s patch hierarchy, because:
Chest logo pieces are visually distinct and usually come from the most eye-catching parts of the jersey.
Dual rookie patches with two major prospects are usually case-level or better chase cards.
A 1/1 parallel dramatically tightens supply compared to numbered versions like /25, /10, or /5.
Even without a numerical PSA grade, the Authentic designation gives some third-party confirmation of the card’s legitimacy, which is especially relevant for high-end modern patch cards.
Why Macklin Celebrini and Will Smith matter
Both players sit in the “ultra-modern” era of hockey cards—today’s prospect-driven, low-print-run environment, where the chase is centered around young stars long before their full NHL resumes are written.
- Macklin Celebrini has been widely discussed in prospect circles as a franchise-level center, with strong production at the amateur level and heavy attention from scouts and media. For many collectors, he is pegged as a potential face-of-the-franchise player.
- Will Smith brings his own first-round pedigree and offensive upside. His scoring ability and highlight-reel potential make him a natural fit for hobby interest if his NHL production translates.
Dual rookie cards that pair two top names often become time capsules for a draft class. Think of earlier eras where duals or combo cards linked key rookies who went on to define a generation—those cards can become focal points for collectors who enjoy “class” or “era” collecting rather than only chasing single-player runs.
Market context and pricing
This specific card is a 1/1, which by definition means there are no direct duplicates to use as straightforward “comps.” In hobby terms, comps (comparable sales) are recent sales of the same or closely related cards used to get a sense of current market range.
For a unique piece like this, collectors usually look at:
Other 1/1s of the same players from:
- The same release (e.g., other Dual Rookie Patchtaculars parallels, if they exist).
- Sister or comparable brands (e.g., The Cup, Black Diamond, or Exquisite-style duals if and when they appear).
High-end, low-serial rookie patch autos (RPAs) of each player individually.
Historical analogues:
- Dual 1/1 rookie patches featuring pairs of top prospects from earlier years.
- Cross-sport comparisons, like dual 1/1 RPAs of top NBA or NFL rookies from premium brands.
Because 2024-25 Premier is a future product at the time of this writing, recent sales data for this specific set, insert, and pair is not yet robust. That means we cannot confidently say if $271,450 is “high,” “low,” or “right in line” for this exact configuration.
What we can say, based on the structure of the high-end modern hockey market, is that:
- Dual 1/1 rookie patch cards that feature the top prospect in a class can command a meaningful premium over non-1/1 versions and over single-player cards of secondary names.
- The upper tier of modern hockey—especially when it involves potential franchise centers—now regularly sees six-figure realized prices for best-in-class pieces.
- Goldin has become a central venue for these types of ultra-modern headline auctions, which typically draw a concentrated group of high-end bidders and consignors.
The $271,450 hammer for this PSA Authentic example firmly places it within that high-end ultra-modern lane, where scarcity (true 1/1), perceived upside, and brand recognition intersect.
Why this card matters to collectors
Even early in these players’ careers, this card checks several boxes that advanced and aspiring high-end collectors tend to care about:
True rookie-year issue
This is a rookie-year patch card for both Celebrini and Smith. Rookie-year cards are typically the cornerstone of any player’s hobby profile.Dual flagship-level prospects
Instead of pairing a star with a role player, this card links two legitimate top-end names from the same prospect wave. If both careers develop well, the card’s hobby narrative strengthens; if only one does, it still has a strong anchor.Premium memorabilia: chest logo patches
Not all patches are equal. Collectors often prioritize:- Multicolor patches over single-color.
- Emblem and logo pieces (crest, shoulder logo, numbers, nameplate) over jersey base fabric. Chest logo patches usually sit at the top of that hierarchy.
1/1 scarcity
In modern products, there can be many parallels and print runs. A true 1/1 cuts through that complexity. For set-builders, player collectors, and investors alike, it becomes the de facto “best possible” version of that specific design.High-end brand positioning
Upper Deck Premier is not the only high-end option in hockey, but it’s recognized as a premium lane with a track record of desirable rookie patches, especially when complemented by The Cup and other super-premium lines.
PSA Authentic vs numerical grades
One detail that will catch many eyes is the PSA Authentic label instead of a numerical grade (like PSA 8, 9, or 10).
For thick, patch-based ultra-modern cards, there are a few reasons collectors may choose Authentic:
- Condition sensitivity: Thick patch cards are prone to soft corners, edge chipping, and surface dimples straight out of the pack.
- Aesthetic preference: Some collectors prioritize the visual presentation in a PSA holder without wanting a low grade that might appear on the label.
- Authentication first: At high price points, some bidders value the peace of mind that the card and patch components are authentic above the exact technical grade.
In practice, for certain unique, high-end patches—especially 1/1s—the market often values eye appeal, patch quality, and player selection more than the specific numerical grade, assuming the card isn’t significantly damaged.
How small collectors and sellers can use this data
Most collectors won’t be chasing a six-figure dual 1/1, but sales like this can still be useful reference points if you’re focused on more accessible cards of Celebrini, Smith, or other modern rookies.
Here are a few practical takeaways:
Understand the hierarchy of a player’s rookie cards
- Flagship base rookie cards (e.g., Young Guns) are typically the entry point.
- Parallel and low-numbered versions increase scarcity and price.
- High-end patch autos and 1/1s sit at the top of the pyramid.
When a top-of-the-pyramid piece sells strongly, it can signal sustained interest in that player’s broader card ecosystem.
Use comps in layers
With unique items, you can’t rely on an exact match. Instead, look at:- Recent sales of the same player’s rookie autos and patch autos in more common print runs.
- Cross-check prices across multiple marketplaces—auction houses, major marketplaces, and fixed-price platforms—to avoid anchoring to a single outlier.
Differentiate patch quality
For patch cards you’re buying or selling, photograph and describe the patch clearly. Mention multicolor, logo presence, and any unique elements. As this Dual Rookie Patchtaculars card shows, patch placement and design can be a major value driver.Follow the news cycle, but don’t chase every spike
Prospect-heavy cards often move with headlines—big debuts, early-season streaks, and awards buzz. That attention can influence short-term prices, but long-term values usually settle around actual NHL performance and sustained hobby interest.
Where this sale fits in the ultra-modern landscape
In the broader context of ultra-modern hockey:
- Six-figure prices for the top 1/1 rookie patches of elite prospects have become more common across major auction houses.
- Dual cards like this add an extra layer of interest: you’re essentially making a long-term bet on two careers tied to one physical piece.
- Goldin’s February 27, 2026 result at $271,450 underscores how much of the modern market’s attention has shifted toward unique, story-rich, high-end pieces versus mass-printed base content.
For figoca users tracking the market, this sale is a useful datapoint in a few ways:
- It helps frame the top-of-market ceiling for Celebrini and Smith at the very high end.
- It illustrates how card construction (chest logo dual patch, 1/1, rookie-year) can matter as much as brand name.
- It reminds us that for the rarest cards, price discovery is less about strict comps and more about what a small group of serious bidders is willing to spend at a given moment.
As more 2024-25 Premier cards surface, and as PSA, BGS, and other grading companies update their population reports, we’ll get a clearer picture of how this Dual Rookie Patchtaculars 1/1 fits alongside other key early Celebrini and Smith issues. For now, it stands as one of the earliest marquee proof points of how the hobby is valuing this new prospect class at the absolute high end.