A Donruss Ken Griffey Sr card number 469 has a book value of about .20 cents in near/mint -mint condition. Professionally graded cards will sell for more. Condition is important.
Common flaws with Baseball cards include: rounded edges, creases, off centered, and faded color. Any or all flaws will devalue the card significantly.
A 1990 Fleer Ken Griffey Jr card number 513 has a book value of about .75 cents in near/mint -mint condition. Professionally graded cards will sell for more. Condition is important.
Common flaws with baseball cards include: rounded edges, creases, off centered, and faded color. Any or all flaws will devalue the card significantly.
Less than 25 cents.
Less than 25 cents.
A 1989 Fleer Ken Griffey Jr rookie card number 548 has a book value of about $6.00 in near/mint -mint condition. Professionally graded cards will sell for more. Condition is important. Common flaws with baseball cards include: rounded edges, creases, off centered, and faded color. Any or all flaws will devalue the card significantly.
Less than 15 cents.
Less than 25 cents.
Less than 25 cents.
Less than 10 cents.
Less than 15 cents
Less than 25 cents.
Less than 10 cents.
The Topps, Donruss, Fleer, and Score 1989 Griffey cards all currently list at $2.50-$6.00. The most interesting Griffey rookie card is the 1989 Upper Deck card, which lists at $15-$40. Baseball card companies flooded the market in the late '80s and 1989 may have been the worst year of over-production. There are probably still millions of 1989 baseball cards still sealed up in packs. The number of Griffey rookie cards out there is astronomical. Still, the 1989 Upper Deck Griffey is the card of a generation and should retain it's value.
In mint Condition around 30 cents