
Dave Henderson
1989 • Fleer
#10

The 1989 Bowman Dave Henderson #200 captures the Oakland Athletics outfielder during the franchise's dominant late-1980s run. A vintage Bowman release from the set's final year of production.
1989 • Bowman
Major League Baseball • Oakland Athletics
Near Mint
200
New
Shipping Calculated at Checkout
The 1989 Bowman Dave Henderson #300 is a vintage baseball card from Bowman's final release before the brand's long hiatus. Dave Henderson played a key role in the Oakland Athletics' 1989 World Series championship team, making this card a period piece of one of baseball's most successful franchises of that era. Bowman's 1989 set is notable as the company's last baseball release for decades, giving these cards historical significance among collectors of late-1980s cardboard. The set features clean, straightforward design typical of Bowman's era—a stark contrast to the glossy, ornate designs that dominated the market during the late 1980s. For collectors building vintage Oakland Athletics collections or pursuing complete 1989 Bowman sets, the Henderson card represents an accessible entry point into late-1980s Bowman baseball. Whether graded or raw, this card appeals to vintage set builders, Athletics team collectors, and those focused on pre-1990 cardboard. SuperCatch offers multiple listings of this card across different grades and conditions, making it easy to find the version that fits your collection goals.
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Production details and format-specific attributes.
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Language
English
The 1989 Bowman Dave Henderson sits in the low-tier segment of his card market and generally tracks as a common-era base issue rather than a key career card. Because Henderson is remembered as an important contributor on elite clubs rather than a marquee hobby headliner, high-grade copies can command a premium relative to raw examples, but the card still trades in line with the broader 1989 Bowman commons pool. Within the set, it does not carry the same demand profile as rookie-driven or star-centered names, so condition is the main driver of any value separation.
This is a standard base card with no noted parallel, insert, serial numbering, or short-print designation, so supply is tied to the full 1989 Bowman production run. Limited supply is not a defining feature here, although truly clean, well-centered examples are less common than typical raw availability suggests because the issue is condition-sensitive. Graded population tends to be modest more from low submission incentive than true scarcity, meaning there are usually more raw copies in circulation than encapsulated examples.
For a retired player like Henderson, demand is driven primarily by team collectors, player specialists, and vintage-era Oakland Athletics builders rather than broad speculative momentum. Rookie card premium sustainability is not a factor on this specific release, so long-term movement depends more on registry-grade scarcity and nostalgic set demand than on player trajectory. As a result, the card is generally a stable depth piece with limited upside, though elite grades can trade above market when collector competition is concentrated.

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