TORONTO — When Drake showed up to Game 1 of the NBA Finals in a signed Toronto Raptors Dell Curry jersey, it caught the attention of everyone in the arena as a master troll move. It also caught the eye of jersey collectors all over the city.

Joshua Roter, who co-owns In Vintage We Trust, a vintage store located in the Parkdale neighborhood of downtown Toronto, was impressed, mainly because decades of purchasing and sourcing vintage items including NBA jerseys have made him appreciate the rarity of them.

“The thing that makes the [Dell] Curry jersey so cool is when Nike produces jerseys for a team, the star player is always the most in production,” Roter said. “The only jersey that would have hit shelves would have been a Vince Carter. For a Hakeem Olajuwon or Dell Curry, you would probably had to have purchased it at Air Canada Centre. Finding one this many years later is really difficult.”

In the days leading up to the Finals, customers weren’t as astute when it came to understanding the painstaking efforts to track down a vintage Raptors-related piece. Even Drake had to track down the Curry jersey from Brooklyn and have it driven to Toronto for him in time for Game 1.

Roter has received a massive surge in Raptors memorabilia requests in his direct messages. One customer wanted to acquire an Oliver Miller jersey. Another wanted a Kyle Lowry Memphis Grizzlies jersey.

“A lot of people don’t understand the appetite for vintage Raptors stuff,” Roter said. “They think it’s just at the store waiting for them, like, hey dude, there’s a rack of dinosaur tees right here just waiting for you and no one else wants it.”

There’s been an increased demand both locally and internationally for old Raptors jerseys in recent years, especially for the original purple with the dinosaur logo. There are many reasons as to why, including the return of 90s nostalgia and basic supply and demand. According to Roter, because the team is based in Canada, their products weren’t always carried by big box distributors in the United States.

The most important factor, though, is the Raptors are finally good.

“The franchise was bad,” Roter said. “No one wanted to wear Raptors stuff because of that, and because it looked hilarious and ridiculous.”

The purple dinosaur jerseys might still look hilarious and ridiculous to people today, but there’s a different attachment now. The Raptors are in the NBA Finals for the first time in franchise history. For the very first time, it’s not embarrassing to wear their merchandise in public in May and into June.

Kai, another jersey collector in Toronto who has been a lifelong Raptors fan, was one of those people who wasn’t a huge fan. “I wasn’t crazy about it,” Kai said. “I thought it was a childish image. But now, the dinos are very hot.”

Kai grew up skateboarding in basketball jerseys and Jordan sneakers. After Carter’s iconic performance at the 2000 Slam Dunk Contest, Kai purchased his first authentic jersey, the same one worn by Carter that evening. Today, he estimates his Raptors jersey collection is at 50, a smaller amount than he says some of his Instagram followers might think, but they are all special pieces to him, including jerseys of Alvin Robertson and John Wallace.

View photos Kai's Raptors jersey collection is something else. More

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