
Alex Trevino
1988 • Donruss
#376

The 1989 Bowman Alex Trevino #326 is a vintage baseball card featuring the Houston Astros catcher from Bowman's classic late-1980s release.
1989 • Bowman
Major League Baseball • Houston Astros
Near Mint
326
New
Shipping Calculated at Checkout
The 1989 Bowman Alex Trevino #326 represents a key piece of late-1980s baseball card collecting. Bowman's 1989 set captures the era when the brand was establishing itself as a premium alternative to Topps, with clean design and strong player selection. Trevino, a veteran catcher for the Houston Astros, appears in this standard issue card that appeals to both team collectors and vintage enthusiasts. 1989 Bowman cards have become increasingly sought after as collectors recognize the set's historical significance and design quality. The card number 326 positions Trevino within Bowman's broader checklist, making it a natural fit for set completion projects. Whether building a complete 1989 Bowman set, assembling an Astros team collection, or acquiring vintage catcher cards, the 1989 Bowman Trevino offers authentic 1980s cardboard with solid collector demand. The set's production quality and player roster continue to drive interest among vintage baseball card investors and hobbyists alike.
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Language
English
The 1989 Bowman Alex Trevino sits in the low-demand veteran tier within both his personal card catalog and the broader 1989 Bowman baseball release. Because Trevino is a longtime MLB catcher rather than a star-level hobby name, this base issue generally trades in line with commons, with only top-condition examples and strong grading results commanding a premium. Compared with key rookies and star veterans from the set, this card remains well below the set’s headline market level.
This is a standard base card, not a serial-numbered issue, insert, or parallel, so its original print availability was broad relative to scarcer late-1980s specialty releases. Supply is mostly driven by surviving raw copies, while graded population tends to be light because collectors have had little incentive to submit a common veteran unless the card shows exceptional centering and surface quality. With only limited active marketplace visibility, perceived scarcity is more about low listing volume than true short-print status or limited supply at production.
Trevino’s retired-player profile and lack of rookie-card premium make this a low-momentum holding from an investment standpoint, with demand tied more to Astros team collectors and set builders than to mainstream speculation. Long-term performance is unlikely to outpace stronger Hall of Fame names or key rookies from the same era, though pristine graded copies can trade above market when registry or high-grade set demand appears. Submission trends should remain muted, which may help top-pop examples hold niche interest, but broad appreciation drivers are limited.

1988 • Donruss
#376

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