
Pete O'Brien
1989 • Fleer
#529

The 1990 Upper Deck Pete O'Brien #110 card features the Cleveland Indians outfielder from Upper Deck's landmark first baseball release.
1990 • Upper Deck
Major League Baseball • Cleveland Indians
Near Mint
110
New
Shipping Calculated at Checkout
The 1990 Upper Deck Pete O'Brien #110 card represents a key piece from Upper Deck's revolutionary 1990 debut set, which fundamentally changed the trading card landscape. This release marked Upper Deck's entry into the baseball card market with premium quality, glossy finishes, and modern design that set a new standard for the hobby. Pete O'Brien's card from this set captures the Cleveland Indians era and remains a solid addition for collectors building 1990 Upper Deck sets or pursuing complete player collections. The 1990 Upper Deck set itself is highly regarded for its photography, card stock quality, and lasting cultural impact on the sport. Collectors value 1990 Upper Deck cards for both their historical significance and the set's reputation for superior production quality compared to contemporaries. Whether completing a master set, collecting Cleveland Indians memorabilia, or investing in foundational 1990s baseball cards, the Pete O'Brien #110 offers genuine collector appeal. SuperCatch offers multiple copies across different grades and conditions, allowing you to find the right version for your collection.
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Production details and format-specific attributes.
Material
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Language
English
Pete O'Brien's 1990 Upper Deck card sits firmly in the low-tier segment of his overall cardboard footprint, consistent with most base cards from this era's mass-produced sets. Upper Deck's 1990 release was a significant quality leap over competitors at the time, but the sheer print volume keeps values suppressed across the board. O'Brien, a solid but unremarkable first baseman, does not command the kind of collector premium that drives meaningful price separation from comparable commons in this set.
This is a standard base card with no serial numbering, parallel designation, or short-print distinction, placing it in the highest print-run tier of the 1990 Upper Deck series. Population reports for graded copies are thin relative to stars from the same set, not due to scarcity but due to lack of collector demand driving grading submissions. With only one active listing in the current market, raw copies are largely treated as bulk material rather than candidates for professional grading.
O'Brien retired without Hall of Fame consideration, and his career arc does not support a nostalgia-driven resurgence in collector interest. Grading submission trends for non-star commons from early 1990s Upper Deck remain negligible, and there is no meaningful market momentum signaling a shift in that pattern. This card is best positioned as a low-cost set filler rather than a speculative hold, with limited upside unless a broader vintage base-card movement emerges.

1989 • Fleer
#529

1992 • Upper Deck
#388

1988 • Donruss
Baseball's Best • #167

1990 • Upper Deck
#719

1990 • Topps
Traded • #82T