
Ricky Jordan
1990 • Upper Deck
#576

The 1989 Topps Ricky Jordan #358 is a vintage baseball card from one of Topps' most collected sets, featuring the Philadelphia Phillies player during his career.
1989 • Topps
Major League Baseball • Philadelphia Phillies
Near Mint
358
New
Shipping Calculated at Checkout
The 1989 Topps Ricky Jordan #358 card captures a moment from one of baseball's most nostalgic collecting eras. Released during the late 1980s boom in sports card collecting, the 1989 Topps set remains a foundational reference for fans and investors seeking vintage baseball cardboard from that decade. Ricky Jordan's card represents the Philadelphia Phillies roster of that period, making it relevant for team collectors and those building complete 1989 Topps sets. The card's design reflects the clean, straightforward aesthetic that defined Topps' output in the late 1980s—a stark contrast to the glossy, ornate designs that emerged in subsequent years. Vintage Topps cards from this era appeal to multiple collector segments: those pursuing set completion, vintage baseball enthusiasts, and investors tracking the 1989 Topps market. Card condition and availability vary widely across the secondary market, affecting collector interest and pricing. Whether you're filling gaps in your collection or exploring 1989 Topps as an investment category, SuperCatch offers access to this established vintage card.
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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
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Language
English
Notable collectible traits associated with this card profile.
Ricky Jordan's 1989 Topps rookie sits at the lower end of the late-80s Topps rookie card market, reflecting the era's notorious overproduction and the player's modest career trajectory with the Phillies. As a first baseman who showed early promise but never developed into a star, this card trades well below contemporaries from the same set who went on to Hall of Fame or All-Star careers. Condition sensitivity is minimal at this price tier, as even high-grade copies command only a modest premium over raw examples.
The 1989 Topps base set was printed in enormous quantities, making this a high-population card with virtually no scarcity premium — raw copies are abundant across the secondary market. There are no meaningful short prints or parallels in the standard 1989 Topps base issue to differentiate this card from millions of identical copies. Graded population data reflects low submission rates, as the economics of grading rarely justify the cost relative to the card's market position.
Jordan's post-playing career has not generated the kind of renewed collector interest that typically drives demand for overlooked players, limiting upside momentum for this card. The late-80s Topps overproduction era continues to suppress values across the board, and there are no visible catalysts — Hall of Fame consideration, media exposure, or nostalgia surges — that would shift market dynamics here. This card functions primarily as a low-cost set filler or entry-level player collection piece rather than a growth-oriented investment.

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