1989 Topps Coins Baseball Card Checklist

The Topps Coins baseball card set was released in 1989. The set consisted of 60 baseball cards and each card from the 1989 Topps Coins baseball card set is listed below. Note: Baseball cards which featured a player who did not appear in a regular season game during the most recently completed season, do not link to their major league statistics.

"Collectors often decried how money had ruined their hobby, making it hard for them to form meaningful friendships through their cards. Money, however, made the hobby not only profitable but also more serious, more instrumental, and therefore more manly. The same collectors who complained about greed often bragged in the same interview about the value of their cards. Yet money, in turn, made the hobby less akin to child's play and more like work: lonely, competitive, unfulfilling, and alienating." - Author John Bloom in A House of Cards (1997)
1989 Topps Coins

Return to Baseball Card Database

1Kirk Gibson
2Orel Hershiser
3Chris Sabo
4Tony Gwynn
5Bobby Bonilla
6Brett Butler
7Jack Clark
8Will Clark
9Eric Davis
10Glenn Davis
11Andre Dawson
12John Franco
13Andres Galarraga
14Dwight Gooden
15Mark Grace
16Pedro Guerrero
17Ricky Jordan
18Mike Marshall
19Dale Murphy
20Eddie Murray
21Gerald Perry
22Tim RainesRock Raines on coin
23Juan Samuel
24Benito Santiago
25Ozzie Smith
26Darryl Strawberry
27Andy Van Slyke
28Gerald Young
29Jose Canseco
30Frank Viola
31Walt Weiss
32Wade Boggs
33Harold Baines
34George Brett
35Jay Buhner
36Joe Carter
37Roger Clemens
38Alvin Davis
39Tony Fernandez
40Carlton Fisk
41Mike Greenwell
42Kent Hrbek
43Don Mattingly
44Fred McGriff
45Mark McGwire
46Paul Molitor
47Rafael Palmeiro
48Kirby Puckett
49Johnny Ray
50Cal Ripken, Jr.
51Ruben Sierra
52Pete Stanicek
53Dave Stewart
54Greg Swindell
55Danny Tartabull
56Alan Trammell
57Lou Whitaker
58Dave Winfield
59Mike Witt
60Robin Yount
1989 Topps Coins


Did you know that baseball card sets in the Baseball Card Database which do not have numbers on them are listed in alphabetical order? Same applies for sets in which the "number" on the back is not numerical in nature.

Your input, assistance, suggestions and / or corrections are sincerely wanted. Send us an email with details or volunteer you time helping us make the largest free baseball card database on the Internet. For ALL your collecting needs, Baseball Almanac recommends Sportlots - where more than 21 million cards are listed online for sale:

Sportlots.com

Which card from this set is your favorite? Which card is your least favorite? Which card is the most valuable and why? Share your knowledge of the 1989 Topps Coins set (or just come and discuss baseball memorabilia with us) on Baseball Fever.

     

Baseball Almanac on Facebook