
Reed Johnson
2012 • Topps
Heritage High Number • #H622

The 2012 Topps Heritage High Number Alfredo Aceves #H611 captures the Boston Red Sox pitcher in a vintage-inspired design that echoes classic Topps aesthetics from baseball's golden era.
2012 • Topps • Heritage High Number
MLB • Boston Red Sox
Near Mint
H611
New
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Alfredo Aceves's 2012 Topps Heritage High Number card occupies a lower tier within the Heritage High Number set, reflecting his role as a supporting bullpen piece rather than a marquee star during his Boston tenure. Heritage High Number cards generally command a modest premium over base Heritage due to their shorter print run and collector-focused distribution, though Aceves's limited career significance keeps overall demand measured. With only one active listing currently available, the market is essentially illiquid, making price discovery difficult and any single sale potentially unrepresentative of true market value.
The 2012 Topps Heritage High Number set was distributed in a more limited fashion than the standard Heritage release, giving all cards in the set a naturally tighter supply profile compared to base series cards. Aceves's card carries no noted parallel, autograph, or relic designation, placing it squarely in the base tier of the High Number checklist without serial-number scarcity to drive collector competition. Graded population for this card is expected to be minimal, as submitting base cards of non-star players to grading services rarely pencils out economically, meaning raw copies dominate the available supply.
Aceves retired without the sustained performance or cultural cachet needed to generate long-term collector demand, limiting the upside for this card as a standalone investment. The Heritage High Number format does retain a dedicated collector base that values set completion, which provides a floor of demand but rarely drives significant price appreciation for role-player cards. Market momentum for this card is largely flat, and any future interest would likely be driven by set registry collectors or nostalgia buyers rather than speculative investment activity.

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