
Kurt Bevacqua
1983 • Fleer
#352

The 1982 Fleer Kurt Bevacqua #477 captures the Pittsburgh Pirates utility player during a pivotal era of baseball card production. A vintage collectible from Fleer's iconic early-1980s release.
1982 • Fleer
MLB • Pittsburgh Pirates
Near Mint
477
New
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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
Kurt Bevacqua's 1982 Fleer card occupies the lower tier of his overall cardboard footprint, consistent with his role as a utility player rather than a marquee star. Cards from the 1982 Fleer set generally trade at modest levels across the board, and Bevacqua's copy reflects that baseline without commanding any meaningful premium over comparable commons from the same checklist. His brief moment of national visibility during the 1984 World Series with San Diego adds a minor nostalgia bump, but this card predates that run and carries limited crossover appeal.
This is a standard base card with no known short print variation, parallel, or serial-numbered edition — it was produced in mass quantities consistent with Fleer's early 1980s print runs, which were substantial. Graded population for this card remains extremely thin, as few collectors have found economic justification to submit a common utility player card from this era. Raw copies are far more prevalent than graded examples, meaning a high-grade PSA or BGS slab would represent a true condition rarity rather than a manufactured scarcity.
Bevacqua is a retired player with no Hall of Fame candidacy and limited mainstream collector demand, which constrains long-term appreciation potential for this card. The single active listing signals a very illiquid market, making price discovery difficult and exit timing unpredictable for anyone holding multiple copies. That said, vintage Fleer commons from this era occasionally attract set builders and type collectors, providing a narrow but stable floor of demand rather than speculative upside.

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