
Todd Hundley
1997 • Pinnacle
Score • #493

A 1990 Topps Traded Todd Hundley #44T card in Near Mint condition—a vintage piece from one of baseball's most collectible Traded sets.
1990 • Topps • Traded
MLB • New York Mets
Near Mint
44T
New
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The catalog profile below summarizes the card identity, featured subject, and notable collectible traits.
The core identity of the card within the set.
The player, team, league, and sport context tied to this card.
Production details and format-specific attributes.
Material
Card Stock
Language
English
Notable collectible traits associated with this card profile.
The 1990 Topps Traded Todd Hundley rookie sits at the lower end of the value spectrum within his collectible footprint, reflecting his status as a solid but not elite MLB career contributor. As a mass-produced Topps Traded issue from the early 1990s, it competes in a crowded field of similarly accessible rookie cards with minimal condition premium at raw grades. High-grade examples, particularly PSA 10s, do command a relative premium over raw copies given the era's notoriously inconsistent print quality.
The 1990 Topps Traded set was produced in significant volume as a hobby staple of the era, meaning this card carries no serial numbering, short print designation, or parallel distinction — it is a standard base rookie issue. Population reports for graded copies are modest, not due to scarcity but rather low submission demand, as the economics of grading rarely justify the cost against current market positioning. Raw copies remain widely available, and the single active listing signals thin secondary market depth rather than true scarcity.
Hundley had a notable power-hitting peak with the Mets in the mid-1990s, including a then-record single-season home run mark for catchers, but his career arc and Hall of Fame probability remain low, limiting long-term speculative upside. Grading submission trends for early 1990s mass-produced Topps cards have generally softened as the market matures and collectors prioritize higher-ceiling investments. Momentum here is largely flat, with collector interest driven more by Mets team collectors and personal nostalgia than by broader market demand.

1997 • Pinnacle
Score • #493

1997 • Pinnacle
Score • #219

1997 • Topps
Finest • #171

2003 • Topps
Series 1 • #216

1990 • Upper Deck
#726