{"product_id":"autographed-signed-reggie-leach-bobby-clarke-bill-barber-philadelphia-orange-hockey-jersey-psa-dna-coa","title":"Autographed\/Signed Reggie Leach, Bobby Clarke \u0026 Bill Barber Philadelphia Orange Hockey Jersey PSA\/DNA COA","description":"\u003cp\u003e🏒 \u003cstrong\u003eAutographed\/Signed Reggie Leach, Bobby Clarke \u0026amp; Bill Barber Philadelphia Orange Hockey Jersey PSA\/DNA COA — The PSA\/DNA Authentication Certified Triple-Signed Philadelphia Flyers Orange Hockey Jersey Bearing the Personal Autographs of Reggie Leach, Bobby Clarke, and Bill Barber, Three Broad Street Bullies Legends Whose Back-to-Back Stanley Cup Championships in 1974 and 1975 Built One of the Most Celebrated Dynasties in Professional Hockey History\u003c\/strong\u003e\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e🏒 The Autographed\/Signed Reggie Leach, Bobby Clarke \u0026amp; Bill Barber Philadelphia Orange Hockey Jersey PSA\/DNA COA is the PSA\/DNA Authentication certified triple-signed Philadelphia Flyers orange hockey jersey carrying the personal autographs of three of the franchise's most celebrated players — Reggie Leach, Bobby Clarke, and Bill Barber — all veterans of the Broad Street Bullies era that produced back-to-back Stanley Cup championships in 1974 and 1975 and established the Philadelphia Flyers as one of the defining franchises of the 1970s National Hockey League. PSA\/DNA Authentication verifies each signature as genuine, certifying this jersey as an authenticated piece of hockey history that connects its owner directly to one of the most physically intense, most talented, and most talked-about championship rosters the sport has produced.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e🏒 To understand the Broad Street Bullies is to understand one of the most distinctive championship identities in the history of North American professional sports. The Philadelphia Flyers of the early-to-mid 1970s were a team built on a foundation of elite talent combined with a physical presence that made them one of the most challenging opponents any NHL team faced in those years. Head coach Fred Shero assembled a roster whose physicality was real, deliberate, and central to the team's tactical philosophy — but these Flyers were also extraordinarily talented. Clarke, Leach, and Barber were not complementary pieces or physical role players. They were among the best hockey players of their era, men whose individual credentials earned them places in the Hockey Hall of Fame regardless of which uniform they wore. The fact that they wore Flyers orange together — and won back-to-back championships together — places them among the most celebrated forward groups of the 1970s NHL.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e🏒 Bobby Clarke is the heart of this jersey and the heart of the Broad Street Bullies story. Born August 13, 1949, in Flin Flon, Manitoba — a mining and hockey town on the Manitoba-Saskatchewan border where the sport was not a recreational activity but the defining center of community life — Clarke grew up with the competitive fire and physical commitment that would define his NHL career from his first season with the Flyers to his last. Philadelphia selected Clarke 17th overall in the 1969 NHL Amateur Draft. He wore #16 for the Flyers, a number the franchise has since retired in his honor. Clarke won the Hart Memorial Trophy as the NHL's most valuable player three times — in 1973, 1975, and 1976. He won the Frank J. Selke Trophy as the best defensive forward in 1983. He captained the Flyers through their championship years with a leadership style that was relentless, combative, and entirely unwilling to accept anything less than maximum commitment from every teammate. He is the reason the Broad Street Bullies were what they were.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e🏒 Reggie Leach — known throughout the hockey world as The Riverton Rifle, for the small Manitoba community where he was raised — was one of the most naturally gifted goal scorers the NHL has ever produced. Born April 23, 1950, in Riverton, Manitoba, Leach and Bobby Clarke were childhood friends who played together through the junior hockey system long before either reached the NHL. The Philadelphia Flyers acquired Leach in 1974, and his partnership with Clarke on the top forward unit produced some of the most dangerous offensive hockey of the decade. In the 1975-76 season, Leach scored 61 regular-season goals — a total remarkable in any era of the game. In the 1976 playoffs, he scored 19 goals in 16 games, earning the Conn Smythe Trophy as the Most Valuable Player of the Stanley Cup Playoffs despite competing on the team that did not win the Cup — one of only a handful of players in NHL history to win the Conn Smythe on the losing side. The pure scoring instinct that earned him his nickname — the gift for finding the net with a release so quick and so accurate that opposing goaltenders rarely had time to set — made Leach one of the most feared right wings in 1970s hockey.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e🏒 Bill Barber brought a different dimension to the Flyers' forward group but an equally important one. Born July 11, 1952, in Callander, Ontario, Barber wore #7 for Philadelphia throughout his career and was a two-time Stanley Cup champion who contributed a more complete, two-way game to a lineup that already had enough pure offense and physical presence. Where Leach was the natural goal scorer and Clarke the intense captain, Barber was the intelligent left wing whose positional awareness, defensive responsibility, and steady offensive production helped the Flyers maintain their championship-level performance across multiple seasons. He earned a selection to the NHL All-Star Game and was eventually inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame — recognition that validated what Flyers fans had always understood: Bill Barber was an essential component of what made those Philadelphia teams so difficult to play against, night after night, across an entire season.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e🏒 The 1974 and 1975 Stanley Cup championships are the defining achievements of the Broad Street Bullies era. In 1974, the Flyers defeated the Boston Bruins in six games to win the franchise's first Stanley Cup — the first title for a post-1967 expansion team, a milestone that announced the Flyers as a legitimate championship organization and not merely an expansion novelty. In 1975, they defended their championship against the Buffalo Sabres in six games, confirming that the 1974 title was not a singular achievement but the product of a team built to sustain excellence. Back-to-back championships define a dynasty, and Clarke, Leach, and Barber were on both of those teams. Their names and their signatures on a Philadelphia Flyers orange jersey carry the full weight of that history.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e🏒 PSA\/DNA is the autograph authentication arm of Professional Sports Authenticator, the most widely recognized third-party authentication service in the sports memorabilia world. When PSA\/DNA certifies a signature, expert examiners compare the autograph against their proprietary database of verified exemplars and determine that it matches the established signature for that player. Three-player authentication on a single jersey requires each signature to clear this standard individually, and PSA\/DNA's certification covers all three — Reggie Leach, Bobby Clarke, and Bill Barber — on this orange Flyers jersey. The PSA\/DNA COA is the gold standard for autograph authentication in the sports memorabilia market and the certification that collectors and buyers trust most widely when evaluating a signed piece.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e🏒 A triple-signed jersey carries a different character than a single-signature piece. It is not merely a document of one player's relationship with a team — it is a piece that captures an entire relationship network: three players who knew each other, competed alongside each other, won championships together, and have each put their name on the same jersey. The shared history between Clarke and Leach in particular — childhood friends from adjacent Manitoba communities who played together through youth hockey and junior hockey before landing on the same NHL team and winning back-to-back championships together — gives the combination of their signatures a personal dimension that goes beyond professional association. Bill Barber's presence completes the forward unit and broadens the historical scope of what the jersey represents. The Philadelphia Flyers' orange jersey is one of the most iconic uniforms in professional sports, and displaying it with three authenticated signatures from three Hall of Famers means displaying the Broad Street Bullies in a form that the men who built that identity have personally authorized. Condition: NOS.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e🏒 Bobby Clarke. Flin Flon, Manitoba. #16. Three-Time Hart Trophy. Selke Trophy. Two-Time Stanley Cup Champion. Hall of Famer. Reggie Leach. The Riverton Rifle. Riverton, Manitoba. #27. 61 Goals. 19 Playoff Goals. Conn Smythe Trophy 1976. Hall of Famer. Bill Barber. Callander, Ontario. #7. Two-Time Stanley Cup Champion. Hall of Famer. Philadelphia Flyers. Broad Street Bullies. 1974 \u0026amp; 1975 Stanley Cup Champions. Orange Jersey. Triple-Signed. PSA\/DNA COA. Hall of Fame Sports Memorabilia. Condition: NOS.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Hall of Fame Sports Memorabilia","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":48039553204456,"sku":"6S-8RBM-L25M","price":299.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0597\/2718\/4037\/files\/autographed-signed-reggie-leach-bobby-clarke-bill-barber-philadelphia-orange-hockey-525.webp?v=1770225948","url":"https:\/\/vintageantiquesgifts.com\/products\/autographed-signed-reggie-leach-bobby-clarke-bill-barber-philadelphia-orange-hockey-jersey-psa-dna-coa","provider":"Vintage and Antique Gifts","version":"1.0","type":"link"}