
Reed Johnson
2012 • Topps
Heritage High Number • #H622

A 2012 Topps Heritage High Number rookie card of Leonys Martin, Texas Rangers outfielder, from the popular Heritage set's high-number series.
2012 • Topps • Heritage High Number
MLB • Texas Rangers
Near Mint
H674
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.
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Language
English
Notable collectible traits associated with this card profile.
Leonys Martin’s 2012 Topps Heritage High Number Rookie Card sits in a lower price tier relative to the era’s star-level Rangers rookies, but the Heritage rookie designation gives it steadier collector interest than many standard flagship veterans from the same release window. High-grade examples command a premium because Heritage condition sensitivity around centering, edges, and surface gloss often separates top graded copies from raw copies. Within the broader Heritage High Number set, it generally trades above common rookie cards tied to brief MLB careers, supported by Martin’s recognizable role during his Rangers years.
This is a base rookie card rather than a serial-numbered parallel, so scarcity comes more from set distribution and surviving condition than from a fixed print run. Heritage High Number cards were issued in a more limited release structure than flagship Topps, which creates comparatively limited supply, especially for clean copies suitable for grading. With only one active listing available, the current market appears thin, and the balance between raw availability and graded population likely favors patient sellers when strong-condition examples surface.
As a retired player without Hall of Fame-level demand, Martin’s long-term upside is more niche than momentum-driven, so this card relies primarily on rookie-card collectors, Rangers team collectors, and Heritage set builders. The rookie logo and Heritage branding help sustain baseline interest, but it does not carry the same premium durability seen in elite prospect or legacy-name rookie cards. Grading can still improve liquidity for sharp copies, though submission trends are likely selective rather than aggressive given the card’s narrower buyer base.

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