If you’ve followed my work here or on Twitter over the past
couple of years, it’s become evident I’ve dove full steam into card collecting.
While I’ve dabbled in basketball (hi, Anthony Edwards), and will grab my first hockey
card soon (Kirill Kaprizov is in Upper Deck Series 2 out later this month),
baseball is obviously the sweet spot.
I’ve gone through a bit of a collecting lull in wanting to refocus
my efforts and make sure I’m enjoying my collection for what it is. I’ve kicked
around similar versions of this idea over the past couple of seasons and am now
going to write it into existence. With the way cards have exploded, I want to notate
a few players I think are worthy “investments” for the 2021 season.
Here’s the deal, this isn’t a get rich quick type of
situation, and I also shy away from the notion of prospecting. Bowman cards are
often exorbitantly priced only to come cascading back to earth when prospects don’t
pan out. No, my goal here is to identify a few undervalued players that will
turn a nice ROI in the next 12 months.
Before coming forward with the names let’s outline a couple
of ground rules. No single card can cost more than $20. With that intention, it
rules out grading any raw cards. Even at the lowest value submission level a
card would be pushed beyond that threshold. The goal would be for nothing less
than a 50% growth rate by March 2021.
Alright, let’s get into it.
2018 Topps Jack Flaherty #93 PSA 9 - $12
2018 Topps Update Shohei Ohtani #US1 PSA 9 - $19.99
There’s clearly a theme here in that the value of 2018 Topps
baseball product remains untapped. Yes, Ronald Acuna Jr. and Juan Soto are the
headliners right now, but there’s a reason the boxes are at astronomical
prices. Shohei Ohtani won the 2018 Rookie of the Year and has since been seen
as slipping. While there’s no denying his 2020 was poor, 2019 featured an .848
OPS and 18 longballs in a season where he was kept off the mound. He’s back to
pitching, looked great in his Spring Training debut, and remains the only
player in history capable of both throwing 100 mph on the bump and launching
balls over the fence with 100 mph exit velocities. If he’s anything close to
what he was in 2018 or 19 at the plate, and even a middle of the rotation
starter, his cards should rebound nicely.
2018 Topps Rafael Devers #18 PSA 9 - $19.99
Another 2018 entrant includes one of the young stars in
Boston. I don’t expect the Red Sox to be any good in 2021, but Devers still
seems entirely too slept on. He’s a year removed from a .916 OPS as a 22-year-old
and plays in a premium market. Mookie Betts is gone, Andrew Benintendi is gone,
and Jackie Bradley Jr. is gone. Devers gives the BoSox a face-of-the-franchise
type hope and a rebound at age-24 should surge his cards upwards. ZiPS projects
him for 3.2 fWAR and 32 dingers this season. He whiffed well above career norms
in 2020 and getting back to a stronger level of plate discipline should aid his
offensive game nicely.
2015 Topps Kris Bryant #616 SGC 9.5 - $15
There’s a lot of belief here, but there’s also an
opportunity that I saw an undervalued offering given the slab it resides in.
PSA 9’s of this same card goes for between $25-30 right now and despite SGC
being more well known for vintage offerings, the 9.5 is a superior grade.
Bryant is in his final year with the Cubs, one Chicago angled for by manipulating
his service time all those years ago. He recently turned 29 and is coming off
an injury plagued 2020. Throw out what took place during the pandemic and the
Vegas native owns a career .901 OPS and posted a .903 mark in 2019. He should
surpass the career 200 home run mark (needing 28) this season, and he’s playing
for his first big payday. Health, most notably the back, remains a key question
for him but otherwise the talent remains through the roof.
Honorable Mentions:
I was intentional in targeting quick flips with these
players, but I think the shortstop class for 2022 is an equally appealing
proposition. Unfortunately, graded copies of rookie offerings for Trevor Story,
Carlos Correa, and Javier Baez already fall beyond the rules for this exercise.
I do also like Trea Turner quite a bit, and Gleyber Torres may be my favorite long
term hold right now.