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  2. Donruss - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donruss

    The short printed cards did not have a significant effect on the cards values. [24] Also new to 1988 is a 336-card set called "Baseball's Best" and 27-card "Team Books" of the A's, Cubs, Mets, Red Sox and Yankees. "Baseball's Best" was issued late in the season and sold in big-box stores as a complete factory set.

  3. Baseball card - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baseball_card

    Price guides are used mostly to list the prices of different baseball cards in many different conditions. One of the most famous price guides is the Beckett price guide series. The Beckett price guide is a graded card price guide, which means it is graded by a 1–10 scale, one being the lowest possible score and ten the highest.

  4. Professional Sports Authenticator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Professional_Sports...

    “Defendant knew a certain sports card was i) a tampered card; ii) was not an authentic PSA-graded card; and iii) a card that had never been graded by PSA, by its own admission to Plaintiff.” (Cardregistry v. Collectors Universe, ¶ 5.) PSA authenticated the Graded Card, effectively legitimizing the fraudulent PSA 10 designation.

  5. Upper Deck Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upper_Deck_Company

    By the end of the 1988 season, Hemrick and Sumner received the license and by 1989, were making baseball cards. [ 26 ] By the time Buice retired from professional baseball at the end of the 1989 season, he had collected $2.8 million from Upper Deck.

  6. Trading card - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trading_card

    In 1933, the Goudey Gum Company of Boston issued baseball cards with players biographies on the backs and was the first to put baseball cards in bubble gum. [10] The 1933 Goudey set remains one of the most popular and affordable vintage sets to this day. [11] Bowman Gum of Philadelphia issued its first baseball cards in 1948.

  7. T206 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T206

    The T206 Wagner is the most valuable baseball card in existence, and even damaged examples are valued at $100,000 or more. [1] This is in part because of Wagner's place among baseball's immortals, as he was an original Hall of Fame inductee. More importantly, it is one of the scarcest cards from the most prominent of all vintage card sets.