
Jason Giambi
2002 • Topps
T206 • #204B

2002 • Topps • T206
Major League Baseball • Milwaukee Brewers
Near Mint
97
New
Shipping Calculated at Checkout
Ben Sheets from 206 (2002)
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English
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Ben Sheets' 2002 Topps T206 rookie card occupies a modest tier within his overall cardography, reflecting a career that showed genuine brilliance — including a 2004 season where he led the NL in strikeouts and ERA — but was ultimately curtailed by injuries. Within the T206 set, which carries a strong collector following due to its throwback aesthetic and broad checklist, Sheets' card trades in line with mid-tier pitchers of his era rather than commanding a significant premium. With only one active listing currently available, the thin market makes accurate price benchmarking difficult, though low demand generally keeps this card accessible rather than competitive.
The 2002 Topps T206 set was produced at mass-market print runs typical of early 2000s Topps releases, meaning this is a base-level rookie card without serial numbering or short-print designation. Parallel and insert variants from this set — such as the T206 Mini or Team Topps Legends parallels — carry more collector interest than the standard issue. Population report data from major grading services shows relatively few submitted copies in high grades, which is more a reflection of low submission demand than true scarcity, suggesting the card remains widely available in raw form.
Sheets retired in 2012 without reaching Hall of Fame consideration, which caps the long-term ceiling for his rookie card market. Collector interest tends to be driven by regional Brewers fans and early-2000s set completionists rather than broad speculative demand. Grading submission trends for this card remain low, and without a Hall of Fame narrative or significant cultural resurgence, sustained market momentum is unlikely — though condition-sensitive collectors may find value in securing high-grade raw copies before any niche demand spike.

2002 • Topps
T206 • #204B

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