
Glenn Davis
1991 • Topps
Traded • #28T

The 1989 Topps Glenn Davis #765 is a vintage baseball card featuring the Houston Astros outfielder from one of Topps' most recognizable sets of the late 1980s.
1989 • Topps
MLB • Houston Astros
Near Mint
765
New
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The catalog profile below summarizes the card identity, featured subject, and notable collectible traits.
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Production details and format-specific attributes.
Material
Card Stock
Language
English
Notable collectible traits associated with this card profile.
Glenn Davis's 1989 Topps rookie card sits firmly in the budget tier of his collectible footprint, trading at entry-level prices consistent with late-1980s Topps base rookies from players who had solid but not Hall of Fame careers. As a two-time All-Star and one of the more productive power hitters in Astros history during the late 1980s, Davis carries regional and era-specific collector appeal that keeps demand modest but consistent. Within the broader 1989 Topps set, this card competes with dozens of notable rookies, which dilutes its individual market presence.
The 1989 Topps base set was produced in massive quantities during one of the hobby's highest-print-run eras, meaning raw copies are abundant and supply far exceeds demand. This is a standard base rookie card with no serial numbering, no parallel variants in this release, and no short-print designation, placing it among the most common configurations in the hobby. Graded population reports reflect a relatively low submission rate, as the low price point rarely justifies grading costs, keeping high-grade PSA or BGS slabs scarce but not commanding meaningful premiums.
Davis retired in the early 1990s and has not experienced the Hall of Fame consideration or viral cultural moment that typically reignites demand for a player's rookie cards, limiting near-term upside. The broader 1989 Topps market remains stagnant for most non-marquee names, with collector interest concentrated on Ken Griffey Jr. and a handful of others from that set. Grading submission trends for Davis show minimal activity, suggesting the market is not anticipating a significant revaluation, making this card more suitable as a nostalgic or team-collector acquisition than a growth-oriented hold.

1991 • Topps
Traded • #28T

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