
Bill Robinson
1982 • Fleer
#494

The 1980 Topps Bill Robinson #264 captures the Pirates outfielder during a pivotal era of baseball card collecting. This vintage card represents the design and photography style that defined the early 1980s Topps baseball release.
1980 • Topps
MLB • Pittsburgh Pirates
Near Mint
264
New
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English
Bill Robinson's 1980 Topps card occupies a modest tier within his overall cardography, reflecting his role as a solid but not marquee contributor during Pittsburgh's late-1970s dynasty era. With only one active listing currently available, the card's market is extremely thin, which can create artificial price pressure in either direction depending on buyer demand. Robinson's connection to the 1979 World Series champion Pirates adds contextual value, though the card itself trades at the lower end of the era's utility player spectrum.
As a standard base card from the 1980 Topps set, this Robinson card carries no serial numbering, short print designation, or parallel distinction — it is a mass-produced issue typical of the era's large print runs. Graded population reports for this specific card are minimal, meaning high-grade PSA or BGS copies are genuinely scarce simply due to lack of submission volume rather than intentional scarcity. Centering and print quality are common challenges for 1980 Topps cards, making clean, well-centered copies command a relative premium over raw examples.
Robinson is a retired player without Hall of Fame status, which limits the sustained speculative demand that typically drives long-term appreciation for vintage base cards. However, the 1979 Pirates nostalgia market remains active among team collectors and set builders, providing a stable if modest collector base. Grading submission trends for late-1970s Topps commons have increased incrementally, and a high-grade example could attract set registry collectors willing to pay a premium for population-scarce copies.

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