Tap Handle #779: Helmar - Big League Brew
Rarity: small scale, beer retired
Mounting: 3/8" gold ferrule on 5/16" anchor bolt
Helmar's tap is prized by tap collectors as well as by sports memorabilia collectors, due to the fact that it features the likeness of Babe Ruth, one of the most (if not THE most) well-known baseball players in history. I don't usually go out of my way to acquire sports-themed taps, but there's something special about this one. The uniform features the famous New York Yankee pinstripes with the number "3" on the back of the uniform. Ruth is in a pose suggesting he has hit one of his many home runs. He stands on a red base that features the name of the brewery in raised letters, along with the beer name, on the front and back. There is a curious design choice I'd be remiss if I didn't point it out, and that's leaving fill material attached to parts the sculpting. This happens in two places: the green patch between Ruth's legs; and also between the bat and Ruth's upper back. It contributes to a very odd look; from the back, the green, which is most likely represents grass, looks more like Ruth is having a severe case of diarrhea after eating green curry, while the bat looks like it has stuck to Ruth's uniform and is pulling it away from his body. I understand why it was done - to give the piece more stability and make it less prone to breaking - but it's still strange to see and I don't recall another tap where such a design is implemented to this degree. Given the brewery's small size, their difficulty landing accounts for draft (most of their beer was bottled), and the owner's focus on baseball trading cards at the expense of beer production, it's likely that not many of these were made. I've seen less than 20 hit the secondary market since they first appeared 2008, although some of those could be the same taps exchanging hands. Some have surely been damaged and discard over the years. And sports memorabilia collectors, if they possess this tap, are known to hang on to their treasures so you wouldn't see them for sale from such collectors. If I had to guess, maybe 25-50 were made. As little as 3 years ago the price point for acquiring one was approaching $200, but last year one sold for a quarter of that.
Helmar Brewing was founded in Pleasant Ridge, Michigan in 2001 by Charles Mandel. A Michigan native, Mandel graduated from Michigan State University with a degree in advertising. A baseball card collector, he manufactured card supplies for two decades and then became an art and antique importer, but he spent too much time traveling and not enough at home. This led Mandel to look into brewing, or more specifically, using contract brewing since he didn't have the capital to start a brewery. By not having to run a production brewery, he was able to focus on marketing and sales instead. He settled on the name Helmar, which was the same name as a tobacco company that gave away baseball cards in packs of cigarettes, at a time when baseball cards were a new novelty. Mandel settled on producing a single pale ale.
The beer was contract brewed by Michigan Brewing Company and was a critical success, as Mandel's Helmar Big League Brew won a gold medal at the 2005 World Beer Festival. Commercial success, however, was more elusive. He had hired artists to create striking labels and caps for the bottles, as well as for advertising posters, using player portraits as some old style baseball card manufacturers had done. However, retailers told Mandel that they didn't have space for his beer on their shelves. Instead, they mentioned multiple times how much they loved the advertising. Pivoting his career path once more, he temporarily suspended the production of Helmar Beer and turned instead to creating baseball cards with the same artists that had done his advertising. He hoped to boost the Helmar brand, and subsequently increase demand for his beer.
The trading cards did achieve moderate success among card collectors who prized the artwork, and combined with a Helmar potato chip business that sold bags of chips with cards inside them at multiple ballparks, were enough to help sustain the brand through the years. Brewing was soon resumed, and by 2009 production had reached an estimated 500 barrels per year, although that number had dropped to an estimated 400 barrels in 2010. Michigan Brewing Company went out of business in 2012. That, combined with the declining production numbers, likely spelled doom for Big League Brew, which has not been seen for years.
Helmar's Big League Brew is an English Style Pale Ale featuring the images of old-time baseball greats on the bottles and 24 collectible caps. It won a gold medal at the 2005 World Beer Festival.
Ratebeer: 3.13 out of 5
Beer Advocate (listed as Michigan Brewing Big League Brew): 82 out of 100 (good)
Helmar Brewing Company
87 Oakdale Boulevard
Pleasant Ridge, MI 48069
Helmar Brewing Official Website
Source Material
Helmar website (mostly about trading cards and almost nothing about the beer)
The Big Green Dump.
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