
Mark Macon
1992-93 • Fleer
#59

1992-93 • Upper Deck
NBA • Denver Nuggets
Near Mint
191
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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.
Mark Macon's 1992-93 Upper Deck rookie card occupies a modest tier within the broader early-90s NBA rookie card market, reflecting his limited impact as a role player rather than a franchise cornerstone. Upper Deck's 1992-93 set was produced in high volume, placing this card in a low-to-mid demand bracket compared to contemporaries like Shaquille O'Neal or Alonzo Mourning from the same era. With only one active listing currently available, the market is essentially illiquid, which can create artificial scarcity perception but does not necessarily indicate strong collector demand.
This is a standard base rookie card from Upper Deck's 1992-93 series, a set known for its wide print run and mass distribution — meaning raw copies are plentiful and population pressure keeps values grounded. There are no serial-numbered parallels or short print variations associated with this base issue, and graded population reports on platforms like PSA and BGS show modest submission totals, largely because collector interest has not historically driven grading activity for this player. The absence of premium insert or parallel versions limits the ceiling for this card's rarity narrative.
Macon played just four NBA seasons with limited statistical distinction, which significantly constrains long-term appreciation potential for his rookie card — Hall of Fame candidacy or a notable coaching/media career would be required to shift collector sentiment. Grading submission trends for low-tier early-90s base rookies remain sluggish, as the market continues to prioritize star power and scarcity over era nostalgia alone. This card is better positioned as a low-cost player collector piece than a growth-oriented investment, with minimal momentum indicators suggesting a near-term catalyst for increased demand.

1992-93 • Fleer
#59

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1990-91 • Skybox
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