
Jeff Reardon
1982 • Topps
#667

A Near Mint 1989 Bowman Jeff Reardon #148 card featuring the Minnesota Twins closer from one of baseball's most collected vintage sets.
1989 • Bowman
MLB • Minnesota Twins
Near Mint
148
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
The 1989 Bowman Jeff Reardon sits at the low end of the price spectrum, consistent with base cards from this era that lack grading premiums or special parallel designations. Reardon's career as a dominant closer — including his time with the Twins during their 1987 World Series run — provides some collector interest, but his cards from this period are widely available and trade at or below the broader 1989 Bowman set average. With only one active listing, the market is thin, meaning price discovery is limited and any single transaction can skew perceived value.
This is a standard base card from the 1989 Bowman set, which was produced in large quantities and carries no serial numbering, short print designation, or parallel distinction. Population reports for graded copies are minimal, reflecting low submission interest rather than scarcity — most copies circulate raw due to the economics of grading relative to the card's market position. The single active listing suggests collector demand is sporadic rather than sustained, and raw copies are readily sourced across the secondary market.
Reardon was a legitimate elite closer of his era and held the all-time saves record briefly, but his Hall of Fame candidacy has not gained traction, which limits the long-term premium potential of his cards. Grading submission trends for late-1980s Bowman commons remain low, and without a Hall of Fame induction catalyst or renewed mainstream interest, upward price momentum is unlikely. This card functions better as a player collection piece than an investment vehicle, with holding value largely dependent on niche demand from Twins or vintage closer collectors.

1982 • Topps
#667

1989 • Topps
#775

1991 • Topps
#605

1993 • Topps
Series 2 • #475

1990 • Upper Deck
#729