
Wilbert Montgomery
1983 • Topps
#144

A vintage 1983 Topps M&M's Olympic Heroes boxing card featuring George Foreman at card number 14. Part of the iconic M&M's promotional series that captured boxing's greatest athletes.
1983 • Topps • M & M's
PSA 7
14
New
Shipping Calculated at Checkout
The 1983 Topps M&M's series represents a unique moment in sports card history, blending mainstream candy marketing with collectible sports cards. This George Foreman card from the Olympic Heroes subset celebrates the legendary heavyweight boxer during a period when Topps was expanding beyond traditional baseball releases. The M&M's branding and Olympic Heroes theme make this card distinctive within the broader 1980s boxing card landscape. Collectors seek out this era for its nostalgic design, cultural significance, and the prominence of iconic athletes like Foreman. The 1983 Topps M&M's George Foreman #14 appeals to boxing enthusiasts, vintage card collectors, and those completing the full Olympic Heroes subset. As a non-rookie, non-serial-numbered card from this promotional series, it represents an accessible entry point into 1980s boxing collectibles while maintaining solid collector demand due to its subject matter and set identity.
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The catalog profile below summarizes the card identity, featured subject, and notable collectible traits.
The core identity of the card within the set.
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Material
Card Stock
Language
English
The 1983 Topps M&M's George Foreman commands a notable premium within his broader cardboard catalog, largely due to its tie-in promotional origins and the relative scarcity of vintage Foreman material in general circulation. As a boxing legend and two-time heavyweight champion, Foreman's cards consistently trade above comparable promotional sets from the same era. Condition sensitivity is high here — even minor surface wear significantly impacts desirability, making graded examples considerably more sought after than raw copies.
This card originates from a limited M&M's promotional distribution rather than a standard retail print run, which inherently restricts the surviving population compared to mainstream Topps base issues of the period. With only graded copies currently available and just a single active listing in the marketplace, the graded population appears extremely thin — suggesting either low submission rates or natural attrition of surviving copies. No serial numbering applies given the era, but the promotional nature of the set functions as a de facto print run limiter.
Foreman's Hall of Fame status and crossover cultural appeal — spanning both sports and mainstream celebrity — provide a durable demand floor that insulates his key cards from typical market volatility. The scarcity of this specific promotional issue, combined with low graded population, positions it well for long-term appreciation as registry collectors and vintage boxing specialists compete for limited supply. Grading submission trends for 1980s boxing cards are accelerating, meaning population reports could shift, but current scarcity gives existing graded examples strong market momentum.

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