
Mike Boddicker
1989 • Topps
#71

A 1989 Bowman Mike Boddicker #21 baseball card featuring the Boston Red Sox pitcher in Near Mint condition. A solid vintage addition for 1980s card collectors.
1989 • Bowman
MLB • Boston Red Sox
Near Mint
21
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 Mike Boddicker card occupies a modest tier within his overall checklist, reflecting his status as a solid mid-career veteran rather than a marquee star. With only a single active listing currently available, price discovery is limited and the card trades in a thin market where condition plays an outsized role in positioning. Boddicker's career significance as a key contributor to the 1983 World Series champion Baltimore Orioles provides some collector nostalgia, but his Boston Red Sox years generate comparatively softer demand.
This is a standard base card from the 1989 Bowman set, which was produced in significant quantities as Topps relaunched the Bowman brand, meaning no serial numbering, short print designations, or parallel variants apply here. Graded population reports across major grading services show relatively low submission volume, as the set's mass production and modest collector interest have not driven significant PSA or BGS grading activity. The card's commonality in raw form means high-grade graded copies — particularly PSA 10s — carry a disproportionate premium relative to ungraded examples due to the set's notoriously inconsistent print and centering quality.
Boddicker is a retired pitcher whose career numbers, while respectable, fall short of Hall of Fame consideration, which limits long-term speculative upside for his cards. The 1989 Bowman set has seen periodic renewed interest among vintage Bowman collectors, but sustained momentum for non-rookie, non-star subjects remains difficult to maintain. Grading submission trends for this card are minimal, and without a significant Hall of Fame case or pop culture resurgence, market momentum is likely to remain stable rather than appreciating meaningfully.

1989 • Topps
#71

1988 • Donruss
Baseball's Best • #317

1990 • Upper Deck
#652

1991 • Topps
Traded • #12T

2008 • Topps
Allen & Ginter • #62