
Mickey Tettleton
1988 • Topps
Traded • #120T

1991 • Topps • Traded
Major League Baseball • Toronto Blue Jays
Near Mint
121T
New
Shipping Calculated at Checkout
Mike Timlin from Traded (1991)
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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.
The 1991 Topps Traded Mike Timlin rookie card occupies a modest tier within his overall cardography, as Timlin's career — while respected — never generated the sustained collector frenzy of elite contemporaries from that era. The Topps Traded set carries a slight premium over base Topps issues due to its limited retail distribution through hobby shops rather than mass-market channels, which historically supports stronger condition-sensitive pricing. With only one active listing currently available, the market is thin, making price discovery difficult and individual sales potentially volatile.
The 1991 Topps Traded set is a standard-print base issue with no serial numbering, meaning raw copies are widely available and graded population counts tend to be high for star players but sparse for role players like Timlin. PSA and BGS population reports for this card reflect low submission volume, which is typical for non-marquee pitchers of his generation — graded copies in PSA 10 or BGS 9.5 carry a disproportionate premium simply due to scarcity of high-grade submissions rather than inherent rarity. No short print or parallel variants exist for this card, making condition the primary differentiator.
Timlin's career as a durable and reliable reliever — including multiple World Series rings — gives his rookie card a niche appeal among team collectors and completionists focused on Blue Jays and Red Sox championship rosters, but broad market momentum remains limited. The grading submission trend for early 1990s Topps Traded cards has been largely flat, with collector interest concentrated on higher-profile names from the same set. Long-term upside is modest absent a Hall of Fame conversation, though low-population high-grade copies could see incremental appreciation driven by scarcity rather than player narrative.

1988 • Topps
Traded • #120T

1988 • Topps
Traded • #119T

1988 • Topps
Traded • #118T

1988 • Topps
Traded • #13T

1988 • Topps
Traded • #121T