
Christian Friedrich
2017 • Topps
Series 1 • #24

A 2024 Topps Series 1 Bobby Witt Jr. #254 card featuring the Kansas City Royals shortstop in Near Mint condition. A solid addition for baseball card collectors building modern sets.
2024 • Topps • Series 1
MLB • Kansas City Royals
Near Mint
254
New
Shipping calculated at checkout
Create a listing from this sports-card catalog entry and use the same product details as a starting point.
See how many public collections currently include this card.
0 collectors have this card
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
This 2024 Topps Series 1 base card of Bobby Witt Jr. sits at the entry-level tier of his collectible market, reflecting standard print run pricing rather than any scarcity premium. As one of the most exciting young shortstops in the American League, Witt's base cards trade with consistent demand but are outpaced significantly by his parallels, autos, and rookie-year cardboard from 2022. Condition remains a key differentiator here — clean centering and sharp corners on this card can still command a modest premium over heavily circulated raw copies.
This card carries no serial numbering or parallel designation, placing it firmly in the base set tier with a standard mass-print run typical of Topps Series 1 flagship production. With only one active listing noted, current market depth is thin, though this likely reflects low seller motivation at base pricing rather than true scarcity. Graded population for base Topps flagship cards tends to be modest relative to raw supply, as high-grade submission rates are generally reserved for short prints, parallels, and autographs within the same set.
Witt Jr. is firmly positioned as a cornerstone franchise player for Kansas City, and his trajectory as a perennial All-Star candidate sustains long-term collector interest across his entire cardboard footprint. However, base Series 1 cards from his post-rookie years typically hold steady rather than appreciate meaningfully — the stronger investment case lies in his 2022 rookie-year parallels and low-numbered autos. Grading submissions on base flagship cards of active stars remain selective, so a high-grade certified copy could differentiate from the raw market, though the ceiling on appreciation is modest without a significant career milestone catalyst.

2017 • Topps
Series 1 • #24

2017 • Topps
Series 1 • #42

2017 • Topps
Series 1 • #255

2017 • Topps
Series 1 • #308

2017 • Topps
Series 1 • #275