
A.J. Hinch
1998 • Topps
#487

The 1980 Topps Dave Heaverlo #177 is a vintage baseball card featuring the Oakland Athletics pitcher from the iconic Topps set of that era.
1980 • Topps
MLB • Oakland Athletics
Near Mint
177
New
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The catalog profile below summarizes the card identity, featured subject, and notable collectible traits.
The player, team, league, and sport context tied to this card.
Production details and format-specific attributes.
Material
Card Stock
Language
English
Dave Heaverlo's 1980 Topps card occupies the lower tier of late-career relief pitcher cards from this era, trading at modest levels consistent with common cards from the set rather than commanding any notable premium. As a middle reliever who never achieved star status, his cards reflect collector interest driven primarily by team collectors and vintage Topps set builders rather than player-specific demand. The Oakland Athletics connection adds a marginal bump given the franchise's storied history, but this card remains a budget-friendly acquisition within the broader 1980 Topps set.
The 1980 Topps base set was produced in massive print runs typical of the era, meaning this card exists in significant quantities with no serial numbering, parallels, or short print designation. With only one active listing currently visible, the market is extremely thin, though this reflects low collector demand rather than genuine scarcity. Graded population reports for this card are expectedly sparse, as submission costs rarely justify grading common cards of this profile, keeping most copies in raw, ungraded condition.
Heaverlo retired without Hall of Fame consideration, and his career statistics do not position this card for meaningful appreciation driven by player legacy alone. The vintage 1980 Topps set itself maintains steady demand among set collectors, which provides a modest floor but limits upside for individual commons like this one. Grading submission trends for non-star cards of this era remain low, and market momentum is essentially flat, making this a set-filler rather than a speculative investment target.

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