Do you think you own a lot of custom NHL sweaters? You’ll have to compare your collection to that of Washington Wizards forward Mike Scott, who told the Washington Post’s Candace Buckner that his stockpile of customized hockey jerseys has ballooned to “around 55.” Yes, nearly enough sweaters to wear a different one every day for two months.

The six-year NBA veteran wears a different one to each game.

Mike Scott said his customized NHL jersey count is hovering around 55 right now.



Even for big, nat'l TV games, you'll never catch him in a suit. Only in his NHL jerseys.



Last game in MIA, his jersey name plate read: "AYEBAYBAY" — Candace Buckner (@CandaceDBuckner) November 17, 2017

Apparently this has become a thing for Scott, a 29-year-old Virginia native who joined the Wizards in the offseason after five seasons in Atlanta. He owns sweaters for every NHL team, so it’s not like he’s pointing his allegiances in any direction. He just likes wearing hockey sweaters, and he doesn’t care who knows it.

Here’s a customized Sharks sweater from a chilly November night:

And because this is becoming a tradition: Mike Scott’s latest customized NHL (San Jose Sharks) jersey.



It’s soooo cold in the D (C) pic.twitter.com/1SytbH1OJb — Candace Buckner (@CandaceDBuckner) November 2, 2017

And here he is rocking a Hurricanes sweater 10 days later. Why “MARSUPIALS” on the back? Who knows?

Mike Scott’s latest customized NHL jersey, ladies and gentlemen.



He inspired Chris McCullough & Kelly Oubre Jr. to wear hockey jerseys too pic.twitter.com/x80IWgHcXG — Candace Buckner (@CandaceDBuckner) November 12, 2017

The NHL shop charges $225 for a brand-new Adidas sweater with a player’s name on it, and $180 for a blank sweater, so this definitely wasn’t cheap for Scott. He’s currently on a one-year, $1.7 million contract with the Wizards, though, so he probably has some spare change lying around.

Most hockey fans dream of having a collection this big, even if they don’t have the closet space. Hopefully Scott has somewhere nice to flip through all his sweaters.