
Mike Hampton
1997 • Topps
Finest • #64

A 1993 Topps Traded Mike Hampton #58T baseball card in Near Mint condition—a key card from Topps' mid-90s Traded release featuring the Seattle Mariners pitcher.
1993 • Topps • Traded
MLB • Seattle Mariners
Near Mint
58T
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
Card Stock
Language
English
Notable collectible traits associated with this card profile.
The 1993 Topps Traded Mike Hampton rookie card occupies a modest tier within his overall cardography, as Hampton's career — while solid — never reached the superstar stratosphere that drives sustained premium pricing. With only one active listing currently available, the card's market is extremely thin, making price discovery difficult and transactions infrequent. Collectors familiar with the 1993 Topps Traded set will note that the set itself carries limited prestige compared to higher-end contemporaries, which tempers any condition-based premium.
The 1993 Topps Traded set was produced in significant quantities typical of the early-90s overproduction era, meaning raw copies are widely available and population reports for graded examples remain low primarily due to lack of submission interest rather than true scarcity. There are no serial-numbered parallels or short prints associated with this base issue, and it is a standard base rookie card without insert or refractor variants to differentiate it. The graded population is sparse, and high-grade copies (PSA 9 or 10) do surface occasionally but attract limited competitive bidding.
Hampton had a notable career highlighted by his 2000 World Series appearance with the Mets and a strong run with the Rockies, but he is not a Hall of Fame candidate, which significantly caps long-term rookie card appreciation potential. The overproduction era of the early 1990s continues to suppress demand for base Topps issues from this period, and grading submission trends for Hampton cards remain minimal with little sign of renewed collector momentum. Unless a significant posthumous recognition or nostalgic collecting wave emerges around this era, this card is best viewed as a sentimental piece rather than a growth-oriented investment.

1997 • Topps
Finest • #64

2002 • Topps
206 • #107

1988 • Topps
Traded • #120T

1988 • Topps
Traded • #119T

1988 • Topps
Traded • #118T