
Harold Reynolds
1990 • Donruss
#227

The 1980 Topps Bob Stinson #583 captures a moment from the Seattle Mariners' early years, offering collectors a vintage baseball card from one of the sport's most iconic decades.
1980 • Topps
MLB • Seattle Mariners
Near Mint
583
New
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English
Bob Stinson's 1980 Topps card occupies the lower end of the vintage baseball card market, consistent with a journeyman catcher who served as a backup across several franchises during his career. With only a single active listing currently available, price discovery is limited and the card trades in a thin market where individual seller pricing can skew perceived value. As part of the 1980 Topps base set — one of the more widely produced runs of the era — this card does not command a premium relative to star contemporaries in the same set.
The 1980 Topps set was produced in substantial quantities, and Stinson's card carries no short print designation, parallel variation, or insert distinction that would elevate its scarcity profile. Graded population reports show minimal PSA or BGS submissions for this card, reflecting low collector demand rather than true rarity — a distinction worth noting for any prospective buyer. Raw copies are the predominant form in circulation, and high-grade slabbed examples, while scarce by population, do not necessarily translate to meaningful demand-driven premiums.
Stinson retired without the accolades or Hall of Fame consideration that typically sustain long-term collector interest, making this card a poor candidate for appreciation-driven investment. The Seattle Mariners regional collector base provides a narrow but consistent source of demand, particularly for team set collectors building complete rosters from the franchise's early expansion years. Grading submission trends for common players of this era remain flat, and without a cultural moment or renewed media attention, market momentum for this card is unlikely to shift materially.

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