
Mo Vaughn
2003 • Topps
Series 1 • #87

1991 • Topps • Traded
MLB • Boston Red Sox
Near Mint
123T
New
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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
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Language
English
Notable collectible traits associated with this card profile.
The 1991 Topps Traded Mo Vaughn rookie sits in the entry-level tier of his rookie card market, reflecting its mass-produced nature during an era when Topps printed heavily for the collector boom. As a former AL MVP and two-time Silver Slugger, Vaughn's career significance keeps this card relevant, though it trades at a modest level compared to his rarer parallels or premium-brand rookies from the same period. Condition plays an outsized role here — high-grade examples command a noticeable premium over raw copies given the card's age and typical centering issues found in the Traded series.
The 1991 Topps Traded set was distributed primarily through hobby dealers in factory set form, making truly well-centered, corner-sharp examples less common than the print run alone would suggest. This is a base rookie card with no serial numbering or parallel structure, placing it outside the short-print or low-population tier. Graded population reports show a relatively modest number of high-grade submissions, with PSA 10s representing a small fraction of total graded copies — making clean, gem-quality examples meaningfully scarcer than the base print run implies.
Vaughn's career arc — strong peak years in Boston followed by a decline in Anaheim and New York — limits the Hall of Fame premium that would otherwise drive sustained demand for his rookie cards. The market for this card is largely nostalgia-driven, appealing to Red Sox collectors and early-90s set builders rather than speculative investors. Grading submission activity for this issue remains low, which means a sudden influx of high-grade raw copies could suppress PSA 10 premiums, though the current limited active listings suggest soft but stable demand.

2003 • Topps
Series 1 • #87

1997 • Topps
Finest • #202

1988 • Topps
Traded • #120T

1988 • Topps
Traded • #119T

1988 • Topps
Traded • #118T