
Steve Sax
1987 • Topps
#596

1990 • Upper Deck • Low Number
Major League Baseball • New York Yankees
Near Mint
172
New
Shipping Calculated at Checkout
Steve Sax from (1990)
Last Listing Activity 22 hours agoCreate a listing from this sports-card catalog entry and use the same product details as a starting point.
The catalog profile below summarizes the card identity, featured subject, and notable collectible traits.
The core identity of the card within the set.
The subject, team, league, and sport context tied to this card.
Production details and format-specific attributes.
Material
Card Stock
Language
English
Compare Prices, Grades, Photos, and Shipping from Verified Sellers
See how many public collections currently include this card.
0 collectors have this card
This 1990 Upper Deck Steve Sax card occupies the lower tier of his collectible market, consistent with high-print-run base issues from that era that are widely available in the secondary market. Sax's career significance as a two-time All-Star and 1982 NL Rookie of the Year provides modest collector interest, though his cards rarely command a premium without exceptional grading or special attributes. Within the broader 1990 Upper Deck set, this card trades at the floor level, reflecting the era's mass production and Sax's journeyman status in the hobby.
This is a standard base card from the 1990 Upper Deck series, which was produced in substantial quantities during one of the hobby's peak production years, resulting in virtually unlimited raw supply. There are no serial numbers, short print designations, or parallel variants associated with this issue, meaning population scarcity is essentially nonexistent. Graded copies exist across the PSA and BGS population reports, but high-grade submissions (PSA 10, BGS 9.5) are the only versions that separate meaningfully from the raw card market.
Sax is retired and not currently on a Hall of Fame trajectory, which limits the upside catalyst that typically drives sustained demand for a player's base cards. Grading submission trends for common 1990 Upper Deck base cards have slowed considerably, as the economics of grading rarely justify the cost relative to potential returns for this tier. With only a single active listing in the market, liquidity is thin, and this card is best viewed as a low-cost nostalgia hold rather than a growth-oriented investment.

1987 • Topps
#596

1987 • Topps
Minis • #15

1987 • Topps
#769

1990 • Topps
#560

1989 • Fleer
#70