
David Cone
1990 • Donruss
#265

The 1989 Bowman Sid Fernandez #377 captures the Mets pitcher during a pivotal era in baseball card collecting. This classic Bowman release remains a cornerstone for vintage baseball card enthusiasts.
1989 • Bowman
MLB • New York Mets
Near Mint
377
New
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Production details and format-specific attributes.
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Card Stock
Language
English
The 1989 Bowman Sid Fernandez sits in the lower tier of his cardboard market, typically trailing his earlier issue cards and any scarcer Mets-era inserts or oddball releases. Because this is a base veteran card from a widely recognized late-1980s set, top-grade examples can command a premium over raw copies, but the overall card still trades in line with common-star veteran material rather than marquee-name levels. Fernandez’s solid run with the Mets gives the card steady niche interest, though it does not trade above market within the broader 1989 Bowman checklist.
This is a standard base card rather than a serial-numbered parallel, short print, or insert, so its underlying supply is broad compared with genuinely limited Bowman issues from later eras. Population reports on cards from this period tend to show more graded copies for elite Hall of Fame names, while Fernandez examples appear less frequently slabbed because the grading upside is narrower than for key stars. With only light active listing volume at the moment, available supply can feel limited in the marketplace, but that reflects seller activity more than true print scarcity.
Fernandez is a well-regarded retired Mets arm, but his market lacks the Hall of Fame catalyst or rookie-card premium that usually drives stronger long-term momentum. This card’s outlook is more about stable collector demand and selective grade sensitivity than breakout appreciation, especially as grading submissions for 1980s base veterans remain disciplined. For investors, it profiles as a low-volatility team-collector piece with limited supply in high grade, rather than a card likely to see sustained trades above market.

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