
Lynn Jones
1983 • Fleer
#333

The 1980 Topps Lynn Jones #123 rookie card captures the Detroit Tigers prospect from one of baseball card collecting's most recognizable decades.
1980 • Topps
Major League Baseball • Detroit Tigers
Near Mint
123
New
Shipping Calculated at Checkout
The 1980 Topps Lynn Jones #123 is a rookie card from one of the hobby's most foundational sets. Released during baseball card collecting's golden era, the 1980 Topps set remains a cornerstone for vintage collectors and set builders alike. Lynn Jones' card represents the Tigers organization during a period of significant team transition, making it relevant to both player collectors and Detroit-focused enthusiasts. Topps' 1980 design is instantly recognizable, with its bold borders and clean typography that defined the decade. The card's rookie designation adds collecting value for those pursuing complete rookie collections or building vintage Detroit Tigers sets. Whether you're completing a 1980 Topps set, collecting Tigers cards across eras, or exploring rookie cards from this era, the Lynn Jones #123 offers genuine vintage appeal. Collectors value 1980 Topps cards for their historical significance, iconic design, and role in the sport's trading card heritage. SuperCatch makes it easy to find this classic card and connect with other vintage baseball collectors.
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The player, team, league, and sport context tied to this card.
Production details and format-specific attributes.
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Language
English
Notable collectible traits associated with this card profile.
Lynn Jones' 1980 Topps base card occupies the lower tier of his collectible footprint, consistent with a utility outfielder who had a modest but respectable MLB career with the Detroit Tigers. With only one active listing currently available, the market is extremely thin, which can create artificial scarcity optics but does not necessarily reflect strong collector demand. Cards of role players from this era typically trade at modest premiums only when tied to team collector sets or vintage Topps completionists.
As a standard 1980 Topps base card, this issue carries no serial numbering, parallel distinction, or short print designation — it is part of a mass-produced set with hundreds of millions of cards printed. Graded population reports for Jones' cards are expectedly sparse, as professional grading submissions for non-star players of this era are rarely economically justified. Raw copies are far more common in the secondary market than graded examples, meaning a high-grade PSA or BGS copy would stand out significantly within the existing population.
Lynn Jones does not carry the Hall of Fame trajectory or rookie card premium that typically drives long-term investment momentum, making this card primarily a vintage set-collector or team-collector play rather than a speculative asset. The 1980 Topps set itself has stable demand among vintage completionists, which provides a modest floor for all cards in the issue regardless of player prominence. Grading submission trends for utility players of this era remain low, so a gem mint example could command relative attention within its niche population, though overall market momentum is limited.

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