
Mark Carreon
1989 • Bowman
#389

The 1990 Upper Deck Mark Carreon #135 is a classic early-1990s baseball card featuring the Mets outfielder from Upper Deck's iconic inaugural set.
1990 • Upper Deck
MLB • New York Mets
Near Mint
135
New
Shipping calculated at checkout
Create a listing from this sports-card catalog entry and use the same product details as a starting point.
See how many public collections currently include this card.
0 collectors have this card
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
Card Stock
Language
English
The 1990 Upper Deck Mark Carreon sits at the lower end of the price spectrum, consistent with base cards from this era featuring role players rather than stars. Upper Deck's 1990 set was a landmark release in terms of print quality and photography, but the sheer volume produced means most base cards trade at minimal premiums. Carreon's limited career impact with the Mets keeps this card positioned firmly as a budget-tier collectible within the set.
This is a standard base card with no noted parallels, serial numbering, or short-print designation, placing it in the highest print-run tier of the 1990 Upper Deck release. The 1990 Upper Deck set was produced in massive quantities, meaning raw copies are abundantly available and graded population reports show little incentive for submission. With only one active listing on the market, current availability appears temporarily thin, but this reflects low seller interest rather than genuine scarcity.
Carreon's brief MLB career and modest statistical profile offer limited catalyst for future demand growth, making this card a poor candidate for speculative holding. The 1990 Upper Deck set does carry some nostalgic collector interest as a hobby milestone, but that sentiment tends to benefit key rookies like Ken Griffey Jr. rather than supporting players. Grading submission trends for this card are negligible, and without a significant pop culture or hobby narrative shift, market momentum is expected to remain flat.

1989 • Bowman
#389

1990 • Donruss
#265

1990 • Donruss
#270

1998 • Topps
#103

1998 • Topps
#153