
Mickey Tettleton
1988 • Topps
Traded • #120T

1991 • Topps • Traded
Major League Baseball • Chicago Cubs
Near Mint
107T
New
Shipping Calculated at Checkout
Gary Scott from Traded (1991)
Last Listing Activity 4 hours agoCreate 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 core identity of the card within the set.
The player, team, league, and sport context tied to this card.
Production details and format-specific attributes.
Material
Card Stock
Language
English
Notable collectible traits associated with this card profile.
Gary Scott's 1991 Topps Traded rookie card occupies the lower tier of early-90s Cubs prospect cards, a period when mass production kept print runs extraordinarily high and suppressed long-term value for most players from this era. With only a single active listing currently available, the card trades in a thin, low-velocity market rather than commanding a premium driven by collector demand. Scott's brief MLB career — spanning parts of two seasons with limited statistical impact — places this card well below the career-significance threshold that typically elevates rookie cards in the broader 1991 Topps Traded set.
As a base rookie card from the 1991 Topps Traded set, this card carries no serial numbering, parallel distinction, or short-print designation, making it one of millions produced during the hobby's overproduction era. Graded population reports for this card are minimal, reflecting both low collector interest in submitting copies and the card's modest market footprint. The absence of insert or parallel variants means there is no premium tier within this specific card's ecosystem to differentiate raw copies from graded examples in any meaningful way.
Scott's trajectory as a player who never established a sustained MLB career significantly limits the long-term investment case for this rookie card, as Hall of Fame candidacy and sustained star power are the primary drivers of rookie card appreciation. The overproduction era of the early 1990s continues to weigh heavily on cards from this period, with grading submission trends for similar low-demand players showing little momentum. Collectors seeking exposure to 1991 Topps Traded would find stronger market momentum in higher-profile rookies from the same set rather than speculative holds on fringe player cards like this one.

1988 • Topps
Traded • #120T

1988 • Topps
Traded • #119T

1988 • Topps
Traded • #118T

1988 • Topps
Traded • #13T

1988 • Topps
Traded • #121T