12 Most Valuable 1993 Score Football Cards
Though you won’t find any blockbuster hobby icons in the 1993 Score football card set, you will find some great-looking cards of the biggest superstars of the day.
From big-name rookies like Jerome Bettis and Drew Bledsoe to all-time greats like Joe Montana, Jerry Rice and Barry Sanders, the 440-card checklist packed plenty of punch.
And the design was really well done…
Score pulled off a clean and straightforward look that showcases each player in a terrific action shot.
The imagery certainly isn’t boring.
That attention to detail stood for something in a market flooded by over-printing and competition.
And in this guide, we’ll take a look at the 12 most valuable.
Let’s jump right in!
1993 Score Football Set Snapshot
SET DETAILS
440
GRADING ANALYSIS
0
TOTAL GRADED BY PSA
0
PSA 10 Population
0.0%
PSA 10 Grade Rate
MOST GRADED CARDS
1
2
3
Stay On Top Of The Card Market
Weekly pricing updates, grading insights, and new card guides — straight to your inbox. For free.
Join thousands of collectors. Unsubscribe anytime.

Ross Uitts – Owner

Ross’s Take
What I like most about this set is its design.
The team names, player positions and player names were placed around the outer edges in such a way that leaves the focus where it should be: on the full-color photography.
Sure, you could say the same for many sets.
But, I think it’s the font that makes it more apparent in this case.
The thin font with significant spacing in between characters works really well.
Design aside, the checklist is full of Hall of Famers and all-time greats, with the Jerome Bettis rookie card being the key to the set.
Like most sets of the era, Score included several different subsets to boost collector interest: Rookies (#306 – 315) Super Bowl Highlights (#411 – 412) Double Trouble (#413 – 416) Rookie of the Year (#417 – 420) 90 Plus Club (#421 – 430) 1992 Season Highlights (#431 – 434) Hall of Fame (#436 – 439) Man of the Year (#440) There aren’t any cards in this set that are going to break the bank, that’s for sure.
But what it lacks in monetary value it certainly makes up for in nostalgia.
If you’re not in the hobby for the money, then this set will offer plenty of memories of some of the biggest superstars of the early 1990s.
Love old cards? Get weekly updates from a fellow collector.
Pricing updates, grading insights, and new guides on the cards you actually care about — the junk wax era, vintage, and everything in between. One email a week. No fluff.
Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Ross Uitts – Owner