
Jeremy Hellickson
2011 • Topps
#165

The 2011 Topps Series 1 Jeremy Hellickson #165 captures the Tampa Bay Rays pitcher during his early MLB career. A key card from one of baseball's most collected modern sets.
2011 • Topps • Series 1
MLB • Tampa Bay Rays
Near Mint
165
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.
Hellickson's 2011 Topps Series 1 rookie card occupies a modest tier within his overall cardboard footprint, reflecting a career that peaked early with a 2011 AL Rookie of the Year award but never reached superstar status. With only a single active listing currently available, the card's market is extremely thin, which can create artificial price distortion in either direction. Collectors familiar with Hellickson's arc will recognize this as a low-demand RC that trades at the lower end of the 2011 Topps rookie spectrum.
As a base rookie card from 2011 Topps Series 1, this is a mass-produced issue with no serial numbering or print run limitations, placing it in the highest-supply tier of the hobby. Graded population reports show modest PSA and BGS submission numbers, consistent with a player who generated collector interest around his Rookie of the Year season but not sustained long-term grading demand. Parallel and short print variants from this set command relatively more attention than the base version, which remains widely available in raw form.
Hellickson retired without Hall of Fame credentials, which significantly limits the long-term appreciation ceiling for his rookie card inventory. Grading submission trends for this card have been flat to declining, reflecting waning collector interest in a player whose career trajectory did not sustain early promise. Unless a major retrospective event or nostalgia wave drives renewed interest in early 2010s Rays cards, this RC is best viewed as a low-priority hold rather than an active investment target.

2011 • Topps
#165

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