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Jun 10, 2010 · The condition of a card directly affects it's price. Somr price guides usually list several prices for a particular card, with each price assigned to a particular condition. The following is a general chart for price according to condition.
Jul 30, 2019 · I'll show you how to look up your baseball card values using Mavin. Get real market prices... see what your cards ACTUALLY sell for.
- 1989 Fleer Wade Boggs
- 1989 Fleer Roger Clemens
- 1989 Fleer Gary Sheffield Rookie Card
- 1989 Fleer John Smoltz Rookie Card
- 1989 Fleer Randy Johnson Rookie Card
- 1989 Fleer Mike Schmidt
- 1989 Fleer Craig Biggio Rookie Card
- 1989 Fleer Greg Maddux
- 1989 Fleer Barry Bonds
- 1989 Fleer Cal Ripken Jr.
Boggs hit .366 in 1988 to win his fourth straight American League batting title, and it seemed like he might hold onto the crown forever. As it turned out, he would never again lead the league in hitting, which is pretty hard to imagine looking back now. The next eleven seasons still brought plenty of hits, doubles, Gold Gloves, and other accolades...
Clemens “slumped” to 18-12 in 1988 and would slide all the way to 17-11 in 1989 before rejoining the 20-win club to christen the 1990s. Even so, Rocket was among the best pitchers in the American League during that (for him) down stretch. That all paled in comparison to his amazing work over the last decade-plus of his career, of course, but this ’...
Sheffield was the big-stick-swinging shortstop who also happened to be Dwight Gooden’s nephew and was going to make everyone forget about Ernie Banks. Sheffield ended up at third base and then the outfield in the Major Leagues, and the only person he made folks forget was Dave Magadan. Still, he swatted more than 500 home runs and should probably g...
Smoltz did most of his starting and finishing with the vaunted pitching staffs of the Altanta Braves in the 1990s and 2000s, and he joined rotation mates Greg Maddux and Tom Glavine in Cooperstownin 2015. Like many others on this list, the fireballer’s 1989 Fleer rookie card checks in at a buck or so ungraded, and a bit more in PSA 10. Value: $20-2...
In 1989, Randy Johnsonwas still a *ahem* huge enigma. Would he ever be able to harness the (sorry) enormouspotential in his left arm, or would his outsized (ugh!) walk rates continue to eat him up? The only way to be sure, it seemed, was to trade him to the Seattle Mariners, where his profile seemed a bit more modest in the shadow of the Space Need...
With injuries piling up, Schmidt abruptly announced his retirement early in the 1989 season, while this card was still pack-fresh all across the land. That put the finishing touches on the greatest all-around career by a third baseman and set up his cardsto maintain — and augment — their lofty hobby perch for decades to come. For fans of Schmitty, ...
Young players can take a while to find their lot in Major League life, just as with Gary Sheffield above. For Craig Biggio, that searching included a minor league career and a handful of Big League seasons toiling as a catcher before moving to his forever home at second base for the Houston Astros. Amazingly, Biggio became an All-Star behind the pl...
After a couple seasons of really ugly numbers in the majors, Maddux broke out for the Cubs in 1988, going 18-8 with a 3.18 ERA to garner his first All-Star selection. The future Proessor was just getting warmed up, of course, and those earl returns were just a prelude to the mastery to come — the Cy Young Awards, the Gold Gloves, the victories, the...
You can’t have a discussion about any late 1980s baseball cardset and not include Barry Bonds. The all-time home run leader is still the slender, base-stealing Barry many purists claim to prefer on this card, so what’s not to like? And, with 762 home runs — the all-time record — and scads of other ridiculous numbers, Bonds seems like a good bet to ...
Cal Ripken and the Orioles went through a tough year in 1988 — among the toughest ever, in fact — but the Iron Man was still a beloved hobby figure. Still is, courtesy of 3000+ hits, the 1983 American League Rookie of the Year award, two AL MVP awards, and The Streak heard ’round the world. This 1989 Fleer card wasn’t Cal’s greatest hunk of cardboa...
Value: $6000-7000. Check prices on eBay (affiliate link) Check prices on Amazon (affiliate link) 1956 Topps Roberto Clemente (#33) The head picture on this card exactly matches the one Topps used on Clemente’s 1955 rookie card, but the action shot against the outfield wall is different — and spectacular!
Sep 25, 2022 · Each of the design elements works seamlessly together to make the card visually pop as loudly as a Mantle longball headed for the seats beyond the outfield wall. Few Mantle cards are as instantly recognizable as this one. In this guide, we'll look at what makes it so unique, how much it's worth, and how to best go about buying and selling one.
Nov 12, 2024 · Wanting to know how much your baseball cards are worth? In this guide we break down how to determine baseball card values and why (or why not) they may be worth so much!
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Oct 18, 2024 · It includes over 400,000 prices for a host of different collectibles including, but not limited to: sports and non-sports trading cards, autographs, unopened packs, tickets, professional model bats and graded baseballs. PSA Price Guide covers all the major sports too.