
Max Muncy
2023 • Bowman
#BP-87

1985 Topps Chris Codiroli #552 — a vintage Topps baseball card from the Oakland Athletics era, ideal for collectors focused on 1980s sets and team collections.
1985 • Topps
Major League Baseball • Oakland Athletics
Near Mint
552
New
Shipping Calculated at Checkout
The 1985 Topps Chris Codiroli #552 is a period-specific baseball card that belongs to the broader Topps output of the mid-1980s. As a non-rookie, non-autograph card, it represents the everyday checklist style that set collectors and team builders seek when completing Topps sets from that era. The card’s design reflects Topps’ mid-80s aesthetic—clean photography, bordered layout, and the set numbering system that helps collectors track checklist progress. For collectors focused on Oakland Athletics history or 1980s baseball memorabilia, the Chris Codiroli #552 card slots into both player and team groupings, useful for completing team sets, assembling era-themed binders, or trading among collectors. SuperCatch lists this grouped product to help hobbyists compare offerings and make informed decisions without relying on specific grading claims. Whether you’re consolidating a Topps run, adding depth to an Athletics collection, or sourcing vintage cardboard for display, the 1985 Topps Chris Codiroli #552 is a relevant piece from a recognizable Topps era.
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Production details and format-specific attributes.
Material
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Language
English
Notable collectible traits associated with this card profile.
Chris Codiroli's 1985 Topps rookie sits firmly in the low-demand tier of mid-1980s Oakland Athletics cards, trading well below flagship rookies from the same era and set. With only a single active listing, the market is essentially illiquid, which is typical for journeyman pitchers whose careers did not produce sustained star-level recognition. The card holds minimal premium over raw common pricing, reflecting its position as a filler piece in set completion rather than a targeted collector pursuit.
As a standard base card from the 1985 Topps set, this Codiroli carries no serial numbering, parallel designation, or short-print distinction — it was produced in mass quantities consistent with the era's high-print-run manufacturing. Graded population reports for this card are negligible, as submission volumes for non-star commons from this period are extremely low, meaning PSA and BGS census numbers likely reflect only a handful of copies at most. The absence of scarcity mechanics means rarity is not a value driver here.
Codiroli compiled a modest MLB career spanning parts of six seasons without achieving All-Star recognition or postseason prominence, which significantly limits long-term collector demand and rookie card premium sustainability. There is no meaningful grading submission trend or speculative momentum surrounding this card, and broader market interest in mid-tier 1985 Topps commons has remained flat for years. Unless an unexpected biographical or cultural resurgence occurs, this card is best viewed as a set-filler hold rather than an appreciating investment asset.

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#BP-87

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#BTP-34

1992 • Upper Deck
#333