
Mike Scioscia
1991 • Fleer
#219

A 1989 Bowman Mike Scioscia #342 baseball card featuring the Los Angeles Dodgers catcher from Bowman's iconic late-1980s set.
1989 • Bowman
MLB • Los Angeles Dodgers
Near Mint
342
New
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Production details and format-specific attributes.
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Language
English
Mike Scioscia’s 1989 Bowman issue sits in the low-tier portion of his card market, well below his earlier playing-era releases and far behind any key Dodgers-era or manager-related novelty demand. As a base veteran card from a mass-produced late-1980s set, it generally tracks the broader 1989 Bowman market rather than separating on player prestige alone. High-grade examples can still command a premium because condition sensitivity in this release creates a noticeable gap between raw copies and sharp, well-centered graded cards.
This is a standard base card, not a serial-numbered parallel, short print, or insert, so overall supply is broad by vintage-adjacent standards and especially deep compared with true scarce Scioscia issues. The key scarcity factor is grade scarcity rather than print scarcity, with gem-mint outcomes typically harder to achieve than raw availability would suggest. Population dynamics matter here: there are usually far more raw copies in circulation than high-end graded examples, so top-condition slabs can trade above market relative to the card’s otherwise common profile.
From an investment standpoint, this card is more of a condition-driven collector piece than a momentum asset, since Scioscia’s legacy is respected but not fueled by the rookie-card premium or star-player demand that drives stronger MLB markets. Because he is retired and his playing-career cardboard already has a defined ceiling, long-term movement is likely to remain modest unless grading trends tighten perceived high-grade supply. The outlook is steady rather than explosive, with limited supply in premium condition supporting occasional strength when clean copies surface.

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