
Jerry Reuss
1989 • Fleer
#510

The 1989 Bowman Jerry Reuss #57 card captures the Chicago White Sox pitcher during the late 1980s. A vintage baseball card from Bowman's enduring set.
1989 • Bowman
Major League Baseball • Chicago White Sox
Near Mint
57
New
Shipping Calculated at Checkout
The 1989 Bowman Jerry Reuss #57 is a classic baseball card from one of the hobby's most recognizable brands. Bowman has maintained its reputation for quality photography and clean design since the 1980s, and this card exemplifies the aesthetic of late-1980s baseball card production. Jerry Reuss, a veteran pitcher for the Chicago White Sox, appears on this standard issue card as part of Bowman's comprehensive roster coverage that year. For collectors interested in 1989 Bowman, this card represents the set's straightforward approach to player representation—clear photography, legible stats, and straightforward design elements that defined the era. Vintage Bowman cards from this period appeal to set builders working toward completion, nostalgia collectors who grew up with 1980s releases, and those building team-specific collections around the White Sox. The 1989 Bowman release remains accessible to collectors at various budget levels, making it an approachable entry point for vintage baseball card collecting. Whether you're completing a Bowman set or adding to a White Sox player collection, this card offers authentic period appeal.
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Production details and format-specific attributes.
Material
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Language
English
Jerry Reuss’s 1989 Bowman sits in the low end of his card market, trading more like a late-career veteran issue than a key career-era collectible. In top graded condition it can command a modest premium over raw copies, but compared with star-driven cards from the same Bowman release, it generally remains a lower-priority card despite Reuss’s long MLB tenure and recognition as a durable major league arm.
This is a standard base card, not a noted insert, serial-numbered issue, or recognized short print, so its scarcity profile is driven more by condition than by print limitation. Supply is generally broader in raw form than in slabs, with graded examples appearing less often because the card’s market tier does not encourage heavy submission volume, making high-grade copies relatively more scarce than the base issue itself suggests.
As a retired player without the Hall of Fame catalyst or rookie-card premium that typically drives stronger long-term momentum, Reuss’s 1989 Bowman has a limited appreciation profile. The card can still trade above market in pristine grades when collector demand meets limited supply, but overall momentum is likely to remain tied to set builders and player collectors rather than broader investment demand.

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