
Cory Snyder
1990 • Topps
#770

1990 • Upper Deck • Low Number
Major League Baseball • Cleveland Indians
Near Mint
126
New
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Cory Snyder from (1990)
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The subject, team, league, and sport context tied to this card.
Production details and format-specific attributes.
Material
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Language
English
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The 1990 Upper Deck Cory Snyder sits at the lower end of the price spectrum, consistent with late-career base cards of players whose MLB tenure did not culminate in sustained star power or Hall of Fame recognition. Upper Deck's 1990 flagship set was a premium product for its era, but Snyder's card commands no meaningful premium over comparable base cards from the same release. With only a single active listing, the market is effectively illiquid, making price discovery unreliable and positioning this card as a low-priority acquisition for most collectors.
This appears to be a standard base card with no noted serial numbering, parallel designation, or short-print variation, placing it among the most widely produced cards in the 1990 Upper Deck checklist. The 1990 Upper Deck set had substantial print runs, meaning raw copies are abundant and graded population reports typically show high submission counts for star players but very limited graded examples for role players like Snyder. Without a special insert or parallel distinction, there is no scarcity driver to support elevated collector interest.
Snyder retired in 1994 without achieving the breakout trajectory that would sustain long-term card demand, and there is no credible Hall of Fame candidacy or legacy narrative to fuel renewed collector interest. Grading submission trends for this card are likely minimal, as the cost of grading would exceed the card's market value, making PSA or BGS slabs rare but not meaningfully scarce in a desirable way. The broader junk wax era suppresses upside for this type of base card, and market momentum remains flat with no identifiable catalyst for appreciation.

1990 • Topps
#770

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1987 • Topps
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1992 • Upper Deck
Low Number • #504