
Todd Lyght
1991 • Score
Supplemental • #90T

A 1991 Score Supplemental rookie card of Mo Lewis, the New York Jets linebacker who became a defensive cornerstone. Card #63T captures Lewis at the start of his professional career.
1991 • Score • Supplemental
NFL • New York Jets
Near Mint
63T
New
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The catalog profile below summarizes the card identity, featured subject, and notable collectible traits.
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English
Notable collectible traits associated with this card profile.
Mo Lewis's 1991 Score Supplemental rookie card occupies a niche tier within his overall cardography, as the Supplemental set was a limited mid-year release rather than a flagship issue, which historically commands a modest premium over base-year equivalents. With only a single active listing currently available, the market is extremely thin, meaning price discovery is difficult and individual sales can skew perceived value significantly. Lewis's career significance is anchored largely by his infamous hit on Drew Bledsoe in 2001 that launched Tom Brady's starting career, giving this card a quirky cultural cachet beyond his on-field statistics alone.
The 1991 Score Supplemental set was distributed in limited quantities compared to Score's main flagship release, making individual cards inherently harder to source than standard base set rookies from the same era. This is a base rookie card with no serial numbering or parallel structure, so rarity is driven purely by surviving population and condition rather than print-run designation. Graded copies in PSA or BGS holders are scarce in population reports, as few collectors historically submitted early 1990s Score football cards, meaning high-grade examples could be genuinely difficult to locate.
Lewis is retired and not a Hall of Famer, which naturally caps long-term speculative upside compared to enshrined players, but his cultural footprint in NFL lore — tied directly to the Brady dynasty origin story — sustains collector curiosity well beyond what his career accolades alone would support. The extremely thin market with a single active listing suggests low liquidity risk but also limited exit opportunities if a seller needs to move the card quickly. Grading submission interest for early 1990s football rookies has been gradually increasing as that era gains nostalgia traction, and a high-grade example of this Supplemental issue could attract disproportionate attention given its scarcity in top-tier slabs.

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