{"product_id":"framed-autographed-signed-jonathan-quick-35x39-los-angeles-la-black-hockey-jersey-jsa-coa","title":"Framed Autographed\/Signed Jonathan Quick 35x39 Los Angeles LA Black Hockey Jersey JSA COA","description":"\u003cp\u003e🏒 \u003cstrong\u003eAutographed Jonathan Quick Framed 35x39 Los Angeles Kings Black Hockey Jersey JSA COA — The Authenticated Signed Framed Kings Black Jersey of the Two-Time Stanley Cup Champion Goaltender, the Milford Connecticut Native Whose 2012 Playoff Performance Is Cited Among the Greatest Individual Goaltending Runs in NHL History and Who Anchored the Los Angeles Kings' Championship Dynasty With a 2012 Conn Smythe Trophy and Two Titles in Three Years\u003c\/strong\u003e\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e🏒 Goaltending in the Stanley Cup playoffs operates at a level of sustained pressure that separates performers from legends. Two months of nightly elimination hockey, where the difference between a dynasty and a footnote is a save made or not made in the final minutes of a deciding game, where every number a goaltender posts across twenty-plus games is a statistical record of whether the team behind him survived or did not. Jonathan Quick, born January 21, 1986, in Milford, Connecticut — a hockey town in a hockey state, a kid who developed his craft in the rinks of New England before taking it to the University of Massachusetts Amherst and eventually to the Los Angeles Kings as the 72nd overall pick of the 2005 NHL Entry Draft — produced one of the most extraordinary two-month stretches in that position's history in the spring of 2012.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e🏒 The Los Angeles Kings entered the 2012 playoffs as the 8th seed in the Western Conference — the lowest possible playoff position, a team that had barely secured its postseason spot and that drew the Presidents' Trophy-winning Vancouver Canucks in the first round. The conventional playoff analysis positioned the Kings as a team that was not supposed to advance. They eliminated the Canucks. They swept the St. Louis Blues. They defeated the Phoenix Coyotes in five games. In the Stanley Cup Finals, they dispatched the New Jersey Devils in six games, and when the cup was raised in Los Angeles for the first time in franchise history, the unambiguous engine of the run was the goaltender in the black jersey who had posted a .946 save percentage and a 1.41 goals-against average across 20 playoff games — numbers that belong in the discussion of the greatest individual goaltending performances the Stanley Cup tournament has ever produced.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e🏒 Quick won the Conn Smythe Trophy as the 2012 playoffs' Most Valuable Player. He joined a relatively small group of goaltenders who have claimed that award as the unambiguous reason their team won the Cup — players whose performance over two months was so elevated that the individual recognition was never in question. For Kings fans and for the broader hockey world that watched that playoff run, the image that fixed itself permanently was Quick in the black Los Angeles jersey, moving laterally, squaring shooters, making saves in situations that looked like goals before his reflexes resolved them otherwise.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e🏒 The Kings returned to the Stanley Cup Finals in 2014 and won again — two championships in three years, a level of sustained playoff excellence that places the Los Angeles Kings of the Quick era among the premier dynasties of the modern NHL. The 2014 title came against the New York Rangers, and Quick's playoff performance that spring was once again central to the franchise's success. Two rings. Two runs. The same goaltender in the same black Kings jersey both times.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e🏒 \u003cstrong\u003eThe Los Angeles Kings Black Jersey — The Signature Color of a Championship Career\u003c\/strong\u003e\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e📋 The Los Angeles Kings' black jersey is the visual identity most permanently associated with the franchise's championship years — the color worn in the winning moments of 2012 and 2014, the jersey covering the goaltender making the saves that defined both runs. It is the jersey that Kings collectors and hockey memorabilia collectors most strongly associate with Quick's career, and it is the jersey presented in this framed display.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e📋 The 35x39 frame dimensions make this a substantial wall piece. A full framed jersey at these dimensions commands attention in any space where it is mounted — a home theater, a dedicated sports memorabilia room, a sports bar, an office that tells you something about the person who occupies it. Framed signed hockey jerseys at this scale are among the most recognizable formats in the sports memorabilia collecting world, providing the complete jersey in a presentation that requires no additional context. The black Kings jersey, Quick's signature, and the JSA COA create a complete, self-contained piece of hockey history.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e🏒 \u003cstrong\u003eWhy Quick Memorabilia Holds Its Place in Hockey Collecting\u003c\/strong\u003e\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e🏆 Two-time Stanley Cup champions with individual trophy recognition occupy a permanent place in the sport's record. The 2012 Kings playoff run — specifically Quick's performance across those 20 games — is the reference point cited in every serious discussion of the greatest goaltending in the history of the tournament. His .946 save percentage in that run is a number that hockey analysts return to every spring when evaluating playoff goaltenders, because it represents a standard that has rarely been approached over a full playoff run in the modern era.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e🏆 For Los Angeles Kings collectors, the Quick framed black jersey is the centerpiece piece — the authenticated document of the goaltender who defined the franchise's greatest era. For hockey collectors whose focus is championship-era memorabilia, a two-time Cup champion with a Conn Smythe carries exactly the kind of dual-recognition pedigree that sustains collectible demand. For anyone who watched the 2012 or 2014 playoffs and still carries the memory of what Quick did in goal, this framed jersey is that memory made physical.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e🏆 JSA, James Spence Authentication, provides tamper-evident third-party certification of the signature's authenticity — one of the most recognized and respected authentication services in the sports collectibles market.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003e🏒 Jonathan Quick. Los Angeles Kings. Milford, Connecticut. University of Massachusetts Amherst. 2005 NHL Draft 72nd Overall. 2x Stanley Cup Champion 2012 \u0026amp; 2014. 2012 Conn Smythe Trophy MVP. Signed Framed 35x39 LA Kings Black Hockey Jersey. JSA COA. Hall of Fame Sports Memorabilia. Condition: NOS.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Hall of Fame Sports Memorabilia","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":48039518994664,"sku":"FJ-JONATHANQUICK-LAK-BLACK-JSA","price":499.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0597\/2718\/4037\/files\/framed-autographed-signed-jonathan-quick-35x39-los-angeles-la-black-hockey-jersey-jsa-coa-292.webp?v=1770205318","url":"https:\/\/vintageantiquesgifts.com\/products\/framed-autographed-signed-jonathan-quick-35x39-los-angeles-la-black-hockey-jersey-jsa-coa","provider":"Vintage and Antique Gifts","version":"1.0","type":"link"}