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Player Guide · Vintage Era

Roberto Clemente

The first Latin American superstar, a humanitarian whose career ended in tragedy, and the subject of one of the most important 1950s Topps rookie cards.

Position
Right Field
Team
Pittsburgh Pirates
MLB Debut
1955
Rookie Card
1955

The Great One

Roberto Clemente played 18 years for the Pittsburgh Pirates, collected exactly 3,000 hits (his last coming on September 30, 1972), won two World Series titles, four batting titles, 12 consecutive Gold Gloves, and the 1966 NL MVP. He was the first Latin American player elected to the Hall of Fame, the first to win a Most Valuable Player award, and the first to win a World Series MVP (1971). His career on the field would have placed him among the greatest right fielders in history on statistics alone.

What makes Clemente a singular figure in the hobby, though, is the context in which his career ended. On December 31, 1972, Clemente boarded a cargo plane in San Juan, Puerto Rico, to accompany a shipment of humanitarian aid to victims of the Managua earthquake in Nicaragua. The plane, overloaded and poorly maintained, crashed shortly after takeoff. His body was never recovered. He was 38 years old.

Within three months the Baseball Writers’ Association had waived the Hall of Fame’s five-year waiting period and elected him by special vote. His legacy — as the first Latin American superstar, as a tireless advocate for Latin American and Caribbean communities, as a humanitarian who died delivering aid to strangers — has grown steadily in the decades since. In the hobby, his cards have outperformed the broader vintage market meaningfully over the last decade, driven by his expanding cultural footprint and by the rapid growth of the Latin American collector market.

Key Cards to Own

1955 Topps #164 — the rookie

Clemente’s RC, issued during his rookie season with the Pirates. A classic 1955 Topps horizontal design with a youthful portrait. One of the most important rookie cards of the 1950s and the foundational card of any Clemente collection. PSA 7 copies trade in the mid-to-high four figures; PSA 8 in the low-to-mid five figures; PSA 9 copies in the high five to low six figures. Mid-grade PSA 4-5 examples in the $2,000-5,000 range.

1956 Topps #33 — the sophomore

A strong portrait-plus-action inset from the iconic 1956 Topps set. Widely available graded. PSA 7 copies in the mid four figures; PSA 8 in the high four to low five figures.

1957 Topps #76 — the first vertical portrait

A vibrant photographic portrait in the new 2.5” x 3.5” standard size introduced in 1957. Readily available graded. PSA 7 copies in the low-to-mid four figures.

1960 Topps #326 — the mid-career classic

A clean horizontal portrait from Clemente’s early prime. Affordable graded and an excellent value entry point. PSA 7-8 copies in the mid-to-high three figures.

1961 Topps #388 — the All-Star rise

Captures Clemente as he was establishing himself as one of the elite outfielders in the NL. Relatively affordable graded. PSA 7 copies in the low four figures.

1963 Topps #540 — the scarce high-number

The 1963 Topps high-number series is scarce overall, and Clemente’s #540 is one of the tougher common-era Clementes to find in high grade. PSA 7-8 copies command premiums relative to his other early-1960s cards.

1972 Topps #309 — the final contemporary card

Clemente’s last card as an active player, issued the year of his death. Particularly poignant for collectors and widely chased. Readily available graded; PSA 8-9 copies in the mid-to-high three figures.

How to Buy Clemente Cards

A practical progression:

  1. Start with a graded 1960s Topps Clemente in PSA 7-8. The 1960, 1961, 1968, and 1969 Topps Clementes are all affordable, beautiful, and genuine representations of him in uniform.
  2. Add the 1972 Topps final card — historically significant and relatively affordable. PSA 8-9 copies are accessible.
  3. Work toward the 1955 Topps rookie in PSA 5-7 as budget allows. This is the anchor card of any serious Clemente collection.

Clemente cards, like all high-value vintage, are subject to counterfeiting and restoration. Grading is essentially mandatory for the 1955 Topps rookie and strongly recommended for any early-career cards. Latin American collector demand is strong and growing, which supports prices but also attracts counterfeiters; buy only from reputable sources.

Parallels & Variations to Know

  • 1955 Topps centering: the 1955 set is known for centering issues, and the Clemente #164 is no exception. Well-centered PSA 7s carry meaningful premiums.
  • 1957 Topps back variations: the 1957 set has minor print variations; not a significant price factor but useful to note.
  • 1963 Topps high-number scarcity: the 1963 Topps high-number series (#507-576) was printed in smaller quantities. Clemente’s #540 falls in this series and is scarcer than his other common-era Topps cards in high grade.
  • 1966 Topps high-number scarcity: similar dynamics apply to the 1966 Topps high-number series. Clemente’s 1966 Topps #300 is not in that series, but collectors completing 1966 Pirates runs should be aware.
  • 1967 Topps poster insert and various 1960s inserts: Clemente appears in various insert and subset cards throughout the 1960s that are often missed by casual collectors.
  • Venezuelan Topps issues: Topps distributed regional Venezuelan sets in the 1960s that included Clemente. These are specialist issues with significant Latin American collector interest and can command premiums over their US counterparts.

Investment Outlook

Clemente has been one of the strongest-performing vintage names over the last decade. His premier cards have outpaced comparable Hall of Famers of the 1950s-1960s meaningfully, driven by his expanding cultural footprint, the growth of the Latin American collector market, and the permanent historical weight of his humanitarian death. The 2023-2024 vintage softening affected his lower-grade copies more than his high-grade examples, and his high-grade cards have continued setting ceilings through 2025 and into 2026.

The thesis for ongoing appreciation is durable: Clemente is increasingly recognized not only as a Hall of Famer but as one of the great humanitarian figures in sports history, and the Latin American collector base is one of the fastest-growing segments of the market. For collectors, PSA 7+ examples of his 1955 Topps rookie and 1956-1961 Topps cards are among the strongest long-term positions in all of vintage baseball.

As always, condition drives everything. The spread between PSA 5 and PSA 8 for the 1955 Topps rookie has widened significantly over the last decade, and that pattern is likely to continue.

Where to Buy Clemente Cards Today

Graded Clemente cards trade primarily through major auction houses (Heritage, Goldin, REA) and specialized vintage dealers, with particularly active trading through dealers with Latin American clientele. His later-career Topps cards in PSA 7-8 slabs occasionally surface on Amazon and eBay at reasonable prices. Vintage lot boxes and repackaged wax sometimes contain Clemente commons from his later career. We link to available options below.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Roberto Clemente's rookie card?
His rookie card is the 1955 Topps #164. The card is on the checklist between Ted Williams' 1954 Topps and Hank Aaron's 1954 Topps in most vintage collector's lists of the decade's most important rookies. It is one of the definitive cards of the 1950s.
Why did Clemente's cards surge so dramatically over the last decade?
Three factors: the broader recognition of Clemente's significance as the first Latin American superstar, the ongoing growth of the Latin American collector market, and the permanent historical weight of his 1972 death during a humanitarian mission to Nicaragua. His premier cards have outpaced the broader vintage market meaningfully since 2015.
What's a reasonable entry-level Clemente card?
His 1960 Topps #326 and 1961 Topps #388 are strong portraits, widely available graded, and accessible for mid-three-figure to low-four-figure budgets in PSA 7-8. His 1968 Topps #150 is also an approachable late-career option. Any of these is a legitimate Clemente card with long-term collector appeal.
Are Clemente cards affected by his December 1972 death?
Yes, permanently. Clemente died in a plane crash on December 31, 1972, delivering humanitarian aid to earthquake victims in Nicaragua. He was 38 and had collected his 3,000th hit earlier that fall. His premier cards have been influenced by that context ever since — he is collected not only as a Hall of Famer but as one of the great humanitarian figures in sports history. The Hall of Fame waived the normal five-year waiting period to elect him in 1973.