
Drew Hall
1991 • Fleer
#236

The 1989 Bowman Drew Hall #221 is a vintage baseball card from Bowman's iconic late-1980s release, featuring the Texas Rangers pitcher.
1989 • Bowman
MLB • Texas Rangers
Near Mint
221
New
Shipping calculated at checkout
Create a listing from this sports-card catalog entry and use the same product details as a starting point.
See how many public collections currently include this card.
0 collectors have this card
The catalog profile below summarizes the card identity, featured subject, and notable collectible traits.
The player, team, league, and sport context tied to this card.
Production details and format-specific attributes.
Material
Card Stock
Language
English
Drew Hall's 1989 Bowman card sits at the very low end of the late-1980s baseball card market, consistent with overproduced junk wax era base cards that rarely command premiums regardless of condition. Hall's career was brief and unremarkable — a relief pitcher who bounced between the Cubs and Rangers — which limits collector demand and keeps this card anchored near bulk pricing. Even in high-grade condition, this card is unlikely to trade meaningfully above its current floor given the lack of player significance.
The 1989 Bowman set was produced in large quantities during one of the most overproduced eras in card history, meaning raw copies are widely available with virtually no supply constraints. There are no known short prints, parallels, or insert variants for this card, making it a standard base issue with no scarcity-driven upside. Graded population data for this card is minimal, reflecting the lack of collector incentive to submit low-value base cards from this era.
Drew Hall never achieved the career milestones — All-Star appearances, postseason success, or Hall of Fame consideration — that would drive long-term collector interest or grading submission trends. The junk wax era as a whole continues to face headwinds, with oversupply suppressing values across most base cards from this period regardless of team or player. With only a single active listing and no meaningful market momentum, this card is best viewed as a low-priority set filler rather than an investment-grade asset.

1991 • Fleer
#236

1989 • Topps
#593

1990 • Upper Deck
#631

1998 • Topps
#408

2008 • Topps
Allen & Ginter • #98