
Mike Scioscia
1990 • Fleer
#407

A 1989 Bowman Mike Scioscia #342 baseball card featuring the Los Angeles Dodgers catcher from Bowman's iconic late-1980s set.
1989 • Bowman
Major League Baseball • Los Angeles Dodgers
Near Mint
342
New
Shipping Calculated at Checkout
The 1989 Bowman Mike Scioscia #342 card captures the Dodgers catcher during a pivotal era for both player and manufacturer. Bowman's late-80s releases are foundational to modern baseball card collecting, marking the brand's return to prominence after a long hiatus. Scioscia's tenure with Los Angeles spanned over a decade, and his consistent performance behind the plate made him a fixture in Dodgers lineups throughout the 1980s and early 1990s. This card number 342 belongs to Bowman's 1989 base set, a comprehensive release that documented the sport's talent across all teams. The 1989 Bowman set is prized by vintage collectors for its design clarity, photographic quality, and the roster of players it preserved from that season. Collectors pursuing complete 1989 Bowman sets, building Dodgers team collections, or seeking vintage catcher cards often target cards like this one. Whether you're assembling a set, focusing on Dodgers memorabilia, or exploring late-80s baseball cardboard, the 1989 Bowman Scioscia offers solid collector appeal and era authenticity.
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Production details and format-specific attributes.
Material
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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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