
Kevin McReynolds
1992 • Upper Deck
#362

The 1989 Bowman Kevin McReynolds #388 captures the outfielder during his tenure with the New York Mets, representing a key entry point for vintage baseball card collectors.
1989 • Bowman
Major League Baseball • New York Mets
Near Mint
388
New
Shipping Calculated at Checkout
The 1989 Bowman Kevin McReynolds #388 is a standard baseball card from Bowman's widely collected late-1980s release. McReynolds played a significant role in the Mets' lineup during this era, making cards from his New York years popular among team collectors and vintage enthusiasts. 1989 Bowman cards are foundational to modern baseball card collecting, marking a period when Bowman re-entered the market after a multi-decade hiatus. This set is known for its clean design and accessibility, making it attractive to both new collectors building vintage collections and seasoned investors seeking period-appropriate examples. The McReynolds card appeals to Mets fans completing team sets, vintage baseball collectors focused on the late 1980s, and those assembling full Bowman runs. Whether raw or graded, this card represents solid collecting value and historical significance tied to a memorable chapter of Mets baseball. SuperCatch offers multiple copies to suit different collecting goals and budget preferences.
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Production details and format-specific attributes.
Material
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Language
English
The 1989 Bowman Kevin McReynolds sits in the lower tier of his card market, trading more as a period issue than as a key player-driven centerpiece. Even so, high-grade examples can command a premium over raw copies because this release is condition-sensitive around centering and edge wear, and McReynolds remains a recognizable everyday contributor from competitive Mets clubs. Within the broader 1989 Bowman set, it generally trails the headline rookie and star cards and does not trade above market unless the grade is strong.
This is a standard base card rather than a short print, insert, or parallel, and it comes from an era with substantial overall production, so supply is not naturally scarce. Limited supply only shows up at the very top of the grading scale, where clean copies become harder to source than raw examples suggest because many surviving cards were stored casually. With very few active listings visible at a given time, availability can appear tighter than the true long-term population, but it should still be viewed as a common veteran base issue.
McReynolds is a retired veteran with a stable but modest collector profile, so this card's outlook depends more on grade scarcity and Mets team nostalgia than on expanding player momentum. Rookie-card premium dynamics do not apply here, which caps upside relative to his more important career-year issues and the key stars in the set. Grading submissions are unlikely to accelerate meaningfully, so top-condition copies may hold firmer than raw, but overall demand should remain selective rather than broad-based.

1992 • Upper Deck
#362

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1991 • Topps
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