Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Have you ever flipped through an old box and stumble across an Upper Deck Griffey that's been hiding for years? I did earlier this ...
There was always that guy whose rookie card would help fund an early retirement. If only things were that simple. Here's a look at some 90s ballplayers whose rookie cards we thought would make people ...
The exact card is a 1997 Topps Finest Refractor, graded a PSA GEM Mint 10. While it looks like an insert, the Power cards were actually a subset of Series 1 of the product. Other subsets included Blue ...
Though Ken Griffey Jr.’s 1989 Upper Deck rookie card is by far his most famous card — and among the most iconic in history — it isn’t his most valuable card. That distinction currently belongs to his ...
Ken Griffey Jr. was everything you could possibly hope for when it came to baseball. He was young, vibrant, walked with a swagger of a veteran, and he made baseball cool again. The first overall pick ...
Recently in the past several months there has been a craze over Ken Griffey Jr.'s "Bubble Gum" card. Collectors and super collectors have been trying to get their hands on the 1995 Pinnacle base card ...
Ken Griffey Jr. has not played in a game since May 2010. It has been nearly a decade since he was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. Outside of a recent appearance as a photographer working at ...
Sports card collectors normally chase the highest graded examples of the card they’re seeking, and they pay a pretty penny for the privilege. But there’s a subset of the community that is chasing the ...
Shohei Ohtani’s popularity within the sports card hobby isn’t slowing down as a nears a milestone currently held by the king of ’90s baseball cards. Ohtani ranks No. 2 only behind Hall of Famer Ken ...
The year was 1988. The sports card industry was booming, led by Topps, Donruss and Fleer. A new company called Score had just put out their first major set, and a new brand called Upper Deck—named ...