
Termarr Johnson
2023 • Bowman
#BP-88

A 1980 Topps baseball card featuring Pittsburgh Pirates shortstop Rennie Stennett, card number 501 from the classic Topps set.
1980 • Topps
Major League Baseball • Pittsburgh Pirates
Near Mint
501
New
Shipping Calculated at Checkout
The 1980 Topps Rennie Stennett #501 captures the Pirates shortstop during a pivotal era in baseball card production. Released in 1980, this Topps card represents the golden age of vintage baseball cards when Topps dominated the market with colorful designs and sharp photography. Stennett, a reliable infielder for Pittsburgh, appeared in numerous Topps sets throughout the 1970s and 1980s, making his cards accessible to collectors building vintage Pirates collections or pursuing complete 1980 Topps sets. The 1980 Topps design is instantly recognizable among vintage enthusiasts, featuring bold team colors and clean typography that defined the era. Collectors value 1980 Topps baseball cards for their historical significance, affordability compared to earlier decades, and strong demand among vintage set builders. Whether you're completing a Pirates team collection, pursuing a full 1980 Topps run, or investing in classic baseball cardboard, the Rennie Stennett #501 offers genuine vintage appeal. SuperCatch makes it easy to find this card in varying conditions to match your collecting goals and budget.
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Production details and format-specific attributes.
Material
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Language
English
The 1980 Topps Rennie Stennett is a late-career base card for a player best remembered for his historic 7-for-7 performance in 1975, which gives it modest but stable collector interest beyond what a typical utility infielder card would command. With only one active listing currently available, the market is extremely thin, meaning price discovery is difficult and the card trades more on opportunistic buys than consistent demand. Within the 1980 Topps set, Stennett's card sits in the lower-mid tier, trailing key stars and rookies from that checklist in terms of collector priority.
As a standard base card from the 1980 Topps set, this issue carries no serial numbering, short print designation, or parallel distinction — it was produced in mass quantities typical of the era. Graded population reports reflect minimal PSA and BGS submissions, as collectors rarely prioritize high-grade pursuit of commons from this period unless tied to a significant player milestone or set registry completion. Raw copies vastly outnumber graded examples, meaning a high-grade certified copy would stand out significantly within its small population.
Stennett is not a Hall of Famer and his playing career concluded shortly after this card was issued, limiting the long-term speculative upside that active players or HOF inductees typically generate. However, his 1975 single-game hitting record remains a genuine piece of baseball history, providing a niche but durable collector base that sustains periodic interest. Grading submission trends for 1980 Topps commons remain low overall, so a high-grade example could attract set registry collectors or vintage completionists willing to pay a meaningful premium over raw copies.

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