
Ed Whitson
1988 • Donruss
Baseball's Best • #322

The 1990 Upper Deck Ed Whitson #308 captures the San Diego Padres pitcher during the iconic first year of Upper Deck's premium baseball card production.
1990 • Upper Deck
Major League Baseball • San Diego Padres
Near Mint
308
New
Shipping Calculated at Checkout
The 1990 Upper Deck Ed Whitson #308 is a notable entry in Upper Deck's landmark debut baseball set. Released in 1990, Upper Deck revolutionized the trading card market with superior print quality, innovative photography, and a design aesthetic that defined the era. This card features Whitson, a veteran right-handed pitcher who spent significant time with the Padres during the 1980s and early 1990s. Collectors value 1990 Upper Deck cards for their quality construction and historical significance as the first major challenge to Topps' market dominance. The set's clean design, sharp image reproduction, and use of premium cardstock made it a watershed moment in hobby collecting. Whitson's card sits in the mid-range numbering of the set, making it accessible to builders completing the full 1990 Upper Deck checklist. Whether you're filling gaps in a 1990 Upper Deck set, building a San Diego Padres collection, or acquiring vintage baseball cards from the early 1990s, this card represents a key piece of trading card history. SuperCatch offers multiple copies of this classic card to suit different collecting goals and budgets.
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Language
English
The 1990 Upper Deck Ed Whitson sits at the lower end of the value spectrum, consistent with late-career base cards of journeyman pitchers from this era. Upper Deck's 1990 set was produced in significant volume, which suppresses premiums across most of its checklist, and Whitson's card reflects that reality. His most recognized tenure came with the Yankees and Padres, but his career arc does not generate the kind of collector nostalgia that drives sustained demand above baseline.
This is a standard base card with no noted parallel, serial number, or short print designation, placing it firmly in the high-print-run tier typical of mass-market late-80s and early-90s production. The 1990 Upper Deck set was one of the more widely distributed releases of its time, meaning raw copies are abundant and graded population reports for this card are minimal, with little incentive driving PSA or BGS submissions. The absence of any insert or parallel variant means there is no tiered scarcity ladder to climb within this card's ecosystem.
Whitson retired in 1991 and has no Hall of Fame candidacy or significant cultural resurgence driving renewed collector interest, which limits upside for this card in the current market. With only a single active listing, the market is essentially illiquid, making price discovery unreliable and position entry or exit difficult for a collector treating this as an investment. Grading submission trends for common base cards from this era remain flat, and without a catalyst such as a documentary, anniversary milestone, or broader 1990 Upper Deck set revival, meaningful appreciation is unlikely in the near term.

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