
Jose Offerman
1998 • Topps
#222

The 1980 Topps Jerry Terrell #98 captures the Kansas City Royals infielder during the classic Topps era of early 1980s baseball card design.
1980 • Topps
MLB • Kansas City Royals
Near Mint
98
New
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Language
English
Jerry Terrell's 1980 Topps card occupies the lower tier of his sparse cardboard footprint, consistent with a utility player who saw limited action across his MLB career with the Royals and Twins. With only one active listing in the market, price discovery is essentially absent, meaning any transaction becomes the de facto benchmark. Condition plays an outsized role here — a high-grade copy commands a disproportionate premium simply due to collector scarcity rather than player demand.
This is a standard base issue from the 1980 Topps set, carrying no serial numbering, parallel distinction, or short-print designation, placing it firmly in the high-print-run category typical of that era's mass production. Graded population reports for Terrell's 1980 Topps card are negligible, with very few PSA or BGS submissions on record, reflecting minimal collector motivation to pursue professional grading. Raw copies are the norm in the market, and even gem mint raw examples rarely attract competitive bidding.
Terrell retired without Hall of Fame consideration and his career statistics do not generate the nostalgia-driven demand that sustains long-term card market momentum. The 1980 Royals team context offers some peripheral appeal given Kansas City's World Series run that year, but Terrell's supporting role limits any spillover collector interest. Grading submission trends for this card are essentially flat, and without a significant pop culture or hobby catalyst, meaningful appreciation is unlikely in the near term.

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