30 Most Valuable 1990 Score Baseball Cards
Most collectors don’t think twice about 1990 Score baseball cards but they will always be special to me…
I really liked collecting this set as a kid.
The design was colorful but respectable.
There were plenty of draft picks and rookie cards to chase.
And what kid didn’t like those little, holographic trivia cards that were inserted into every pack?
I used to love expanding my knowledge about significant baseball milestones and achievements by reading those things.
And while many cards in this set aren’t worth anything, there are some that still do stick out in terms of value.
And in this guide, we’ll take a look at the 30 most valuable.
Let’s jump right in!
1990 Score Baseball Set Snapshot
SET DETAILS
TOTAL CARDS
704
KEY ROOKIES
KEY VETERANS
GRADING ANALYSIS
64,139
TOTAL GRADED BY PSA
13,317
PSA 10 Population
20.8%
PSA 10 Grade Rate
MOST GRADED CARDS
1
#697 Bo Jackson
43.3%
27,772
2
#663 Frank Thomas
18.5%
11,877
3
#558 Sammy Sosa
8.9%
5,709
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Ross Uitts – Owner
- #1
1990 Score #697 Bo Jackson
PSA 10 Value $425Total PSA Population 27,772PSA 10 Population 4,422PSA 10 Grade Rate 15.9% (Set Avg: 20.8%)This card is arguably one of the most iconic cards of the “junk” era.
It perfectly illustrates just what made Bo Jackson so special: his ability to play both baseball and football at the highest levels.
There’s no mention of the Raiders or Royals anywhere on the front.
We just get a straightforward, black and white image of Jackson sporting gear from both sports.
What a simple way to get a big point across.
One of Bo Jackson’s rookie cards, produced by Classic, used a similar concept of Bo wearing gear from both sports but this is the one everyone remembers.
In top condition, this card can go for over $400 or so these days.
- #2
1990 Score #250 Nolan Ryan
PSA 10 Value $115Total PSA Population 683PSA 10 Population 190PSA 10 Grade Rate 27.8% (Set Avg: 20.8%)There is a huge collector base out there for Nolan Ryan cards.
His rookie card is one of the hobby’s most sought-after cards in general while the rest of his cards are always among the most-demanded in any set in which he appears.
This one is no exception.
And while it may not be worth even close to what his rookie card is, it’s a really great-looking card nonetheless.
The red borders perfectly complement his Texas Ranger uniform and you gotta love that action shot of him ready to throw some major heat.
- #3
1990 Score #566 Bo Jackson All-Star MVP
PSA 10 Value $60Total PSA PopulationPSA 10 PopulationPSA 10 Grade Rate 0.0% (Set Avg: 20.8%)This is a fantastic card and a great tribute to Jackson’s 1989 All-Star MVP honor.
1989 would be the only season in which Jackson earned a trip to the All-Star game but this card (along with the other Bo Jackson cards in this set) of how much hype surrounded the two-sport star at the time.
The horizontal layout, blue borders and great action shot of Jackson’s compact, powerful swing make this one of the best-looking cards in the entire set.
- #4
1990 Score #560 Ken Griffey Jr.
PSA 10 Value $55Total PSA Population 3,240PSA 10 Population 517PSA 10 Grade Rate 16.0% (Set Avg: 20.8%)The blue and yellow borders on this card matched up perfectly with the Mariners uniforms back then.
And together with a great action shot of Griffey showing off his sweet swing, that color scheme makes this one of the best-looking cards in the set.
During the 1990’s, Griffey Jr. was one of the hottest stars in the sport and seemed destined to break all kinds of records.
Unfortunately, injuries really bogged him down in the 2000’s but he still managed to put up monster career numbers.
That’s a testament to how good he really was.
- #5
1990 Score #280 Bo Jackson
PSA 10 Value $50Total PSA PopulationPSA 10 PopulationPSA 10 Grade Rate 0.0% (Set Avg: 20.8%)Bo Jackson appeared on four different cards in this set but this is considered his “base” card.
On the back side of the card, then Royals manager John Wathan was quoted as saying, “The more he plays, the better he gets.
And I don’t have any idea when that will stop.” However, there are fewer versions where Score misspelled Wathan’s last name as “Watham”.
They’re not too difficult to find, but in high grade they are worth a bit more than the correct version.
Some have sold for as high as $60 or more but I think you could likely expect to pay around $35 for a PSA 10 copy.
- #6
1990 Score #663 Frank Thomas Rookie Card
Rookie CardPSA 10 Value $50Total PSA Population 11,877PSA 10 Population 2,924PSA 10 Grade Rate 24.6% (Set Avg: 20.8%)Even during his rookie year, Frank Thomas was more of a folktale than a regular ballplayer.
Selected seventh overall by the Chicago White Sox in the 1989 MLB Draft, the “Big Hurt” came into professional baseball as 240-plus pounds of pure power.
His six-foot-five frame cast a large shadow in the batter’s box, causing pitchers to think twice before grooving him a fastball.
Thomas skipped Triple-A altogether, joining the White Sox to stay in 1990 after 109 games at Double-A.
Chicago had an outside chance of catching the A’s for the AL West title, and Thomas’ presence gave their lineup a booSt. However, the Sox couldn’t gain ground on a world-beating A’s squad.
Regardless, Thomas was a sensation as soon as he stepped on the diamond at Old Comiskey Park.
Rather than timing up pitchers in the on-deck circle with a regular bat, Thomas often instilled fear in opposing hurlers by swinging a piece of rebar found in the debris of Comiskey’s ongoing renovation project.
The carnival-style display added to his mystique.
And it didn’t hurt that he backed it up in the box.
Thomas balled out in a part-time role, slashing .330/.454/.529 with seven homers and 31 RBIs in just 191 at-bats.
One year later, he’d go full-time and announce himself as the best power hitter in baseball.
- #7
1990 Score #619 Bernie Williams Rookie Card
Rookie CardPSA 10 Value $45Total PSA Population 692PSA 10 Population 191PSA 10 Grade Rate 27.6% (Set Avg: 20.8%) - #8
1990 Score #687 Bo Jackson
PSA 10 Value $45Total PSA Population 1,065PSA 10 Population 437PSA 10 Grade Rate 41.0% (Set Avg: 20.8%) - #9
1990 Score #696 Nolan Ryan
PSA 10 Value $40Total PSA Population 570PSA 10 Population 181PSA 10 Grade Rate 31.8% (Set Avg: 20.8%) - #10
1990 Score #90 Ryne Sandberg
PSA 10 Value $40Total PSA Population 107PSA 10 Population 51PSA 10 Grade Rate 47.7% (Set Avg: 20.8%) - #11
1990 Score #4 Barry Bonds
PSA 10 Value $35Total PSA Population 166PSA 10 Population 44PSA 10 Grade Rate 26.5% (Set Avg: 20.8%) - #12
1990 Score #360 Rickey Henderson
PSA 10 Value $35Total PSA Population 231PSA 10 Population 110PSA 10 Grade Rate 47.6% (Set Avg: 20.8%)1990 was the year of Rickey.
Oakland A’s center fielder Rickey Henderson was the most valuable contributor to the game’s most dominant team.
He hit homers, hammered clutch hits, and tallied “Rickey runs,” an affectionate term for a walk or single followed by two stolen bases and a sacrifice fly.
No one did it better or with more style than the game’s most colorful, outspoken figure.
Henderson led all of baseball in runs scored (119), on-base percentage (.439), OPS (1.016), and OPS+ (189).
He topped the AL in stolen bases (65), hit at a .325 clip, and hammered 28 homers and 33 doubles.
As Rickey went, so did the A’s.
Oakland won 28 of the 33 games that Henderson crossed the plate in the first inning.
The AL MVP race was a two-player sprint between Henderson and Detroit Tigers superstar Cecil Fielder.
Rickey beat out Fielder for his first-and-only MVP award, bringing home 14 of 28 first-place votes.
Henderson followed up his remarkable regular season with a productive postseason.
He went 5-for-17 in Oakland’s four-and-done beatdown of Boston, followed by a .333 average and 1.111 OPS in the four-and-out loss to Cincy in the 1990 World Series.
- #13
1990 Score #589 John Olerud Rookie Card
Rookie CardPSA 10 Value $35Total PSA Population 164PSA 10 Population 42PSA 10 Grade Rate 25.6% (Set Avg: 20.8%) - #14
1990 Score #1 Don Mattingly
PSA 10 Value $30Total PSA Population 160PSA 10 Population 56PSA 10 Grade Rate 35.0% (Set Avg: 20.8%) - #15
1990 Score #66 Dale Murphy
PSA 10 Value $30Total PSA Population 86PSA 10 Population 46PSA 10 Grade Rate 53.5% (Set Avg: 20.8%) - #16
1990 Score #375 Jose Canseco
PSA 10 Value $30Total PSA Population 60PSA 10 Population 29PSA 10 Grade Rate 48.3% (Set Avg: 20.8%) - #17
1990 Score #385 Mark McGwire
PSA 10 Value $30Total PSA Population 196PSA 10 Population 63PSA 10 Grade Rate 32.1% (Set Avg: 20.8%) - #18
1990 Score #586 Deion Sanders Rookie Card
Rookie CardPSA 10 Value $30Total PSA Population 931PSA 10 Population 137PSA 10 Grade Rate 14.7% (Set Avg: 20.8%) - #19
1990 Score #637 Juan Gonzalez Rookie Card
Rookie CardPSA 10 Value $30Total PSA Population 1,496PSA 10 Population 156PSA 10 Grade Rate 10.4% (Set Avg: 20.8%) - #20
1990 Score #650 Dave Justice Rookie Card
Rookie CardPSA 10 Value $30Total PSA Population 258PSA 10 Population 66PSA 10 Grade Rate 25.6% (Set Avg: 20.8%)Dave Justice didn’t break camp with the Atlanta Braves in 1990.
It didn’t take long for manager Russ Nixon to realise his error.
Selected in the fourth round of the 1985 MLB Draft, Justice was inconsistent and hit by injuries for his half-decade on the farm.
However, it was easy to see he was MLB-bound as his swing developed and his patience grew.
Still, the 24-year-old right fielder was sent back down to the Minors to start the year.
12 games later, Nixon reached back for him after Justice scorched Triple-A for a .356 average, two homers and a 1.087 OPS.
What’s ironic is that Justice played more games (127) than Nixon managed (65) before his midseason firing.
And while the Braves were a bust under Nixon (and his replacement, Bobby Cox), Justice was a thrilling standout.
Named NL Rookie-of-the-Year with 23 out of 24 first-place votes, Justice slashed .282/.373/.535 with 28 home runs, 11 stolen bases, and 78 RBIs in 504 plate appearances (439 at-bats).
- #21
1990 Score #698 Rickey Henderson
PSA 10 Value $30Total PSA Population 219PSA 10 Population 118PSA 10 Grade Rate 53.9% (Set Avg: 20.8%) - #22
1990 Score #2 Cal Ripken Jr.
PSA 10 Value $25Total PSA Population 186PSA 10 Population 89PSA 10 Grade Rate 47.8% (Set Avg: 20.8%) - #23
1990 Score #245 Wade Boggs
PSA 10 Value $25Total PSA Population 66PSA 10 Population 37PSA 10 Grade Rate 56.1% (Set Avg: 20.8%) - #24
1990 Score #255 Tony Gwynn
PSA 10 Value $25Total PSA Population 140PSA 10 Population 75PSA 10 Grade Rate 53.6% (Set Avg: 20.8%) - #25
1990 Score #285 Ozzie Smith
PSA 10 Value $25Total PSA Population 84PSA 10 Population 36PSA 10 Grade Rate 42.9% (Set Avg: 20.8%) - #26
1990 Score #400 Kirby Puckett
PSA 10 Value $25Total PSA Population 114PSA 10 Population 75PSA 10 Grade Rate 65.8% (Set Avg: 20.8%)The Minnesota Twins tweaked their usage of Kirby Puckett in 1990 with a unique, fun flourish.
Before an August contest at Cleveland, Twins manager Tom Kelly told Puckett to take a deeper look at the day’s lineup card.
Rather than being slotted in his center field spot, the 30-year-old was ticketed for right.
It was the first time in his MLB career that he played anywhere but center.
It turned out to be part of a show.
Kelly moved Puckett to four different positions during the game, adding stays at shortstop, second, and third, those moves being more jokey than anything else.
“I’m glad Puck’s one of us utility guys now,” teammate Al Newman quipped.
“Maybe he’ll raise the salary structure a little.” While it was all good fun, it was more of a shift than people knew.
The Twins were slowly rolling out a plan to occasionally shift Puckett to right to preserve his legs for years to come.
- #27
1990 Score #558 Sammy Sosa Rookie Card
Rookie CardPSA 10 Value $25Total PSA Population 5,709PSA 10 Population 370PSA 10 Grade Rate 6.5% (Set Avg: 20.8%)In 1989, Chicago White Sox general manager Larry Himes dealt Hall-of-Famer Harold Baines and Fred Manrique to the Texas Rangers for a three-player package.
20-year-old Dominican prospect Sammy Sosa, an intriguing, unpolished prospect with plenty of upside, headlined the return.
And while the young right fielder was far from ready to live up to that comparison, his game definitely had a wow factor.
Sosa leaned on his athleticism in his rookie season, sometimes to the team’s detriment.
He was speedy enough to track down most balls, but his overconfidence in right was often costly (as 13 errors would atteSt.) He was also a swing-first, ask-questions-later hitter to the highest degree.
Sosa struck out 150 times in 579 plate appearances, wildly flailing at balls well out of the strike zone.
When Sosa was able to make contact, the ball exploded off his bat.
He hit 15 home runs on the year and tacked on 26 doubles, 10 triples, and 70 RBIs.
On the other hand, Sosa’s base-running decisions could be questionable.
He stole 32 bases but was caught 16 times.
The White Sox finished nine games behind the Oakland A’s in the AL West, yet still finished with a sparkling 94-68 record.
Sosa’s season was a microcosm of the year on the Southside, exciting and fun, yet frustrating as heck.
- #28
1990 Score #631 Larry Walker Rookie Card
Rookie CardPSA 10 Value $25Total PSA Population 1,202PSA 10 Population 148PSA 10 Grade Rate 12.3% (Set Avg: 20.8%)An unheralded prospect, Larry Walker scratched and clawed for recognition from his first day in professional baseball.
Signed as a free agent by the Montreal Expos in 1985 for a pittance, Walker slugged his way through Single and Double-A in 1986 and 1987.
His ascension to the Bigs took a sharp left turn in 1988 when a brutal knee injury suffered in winter ball cost him the entire year.
Yet, it was only a temporary detour.
Walker moved up to Triple-A in 1989, mending as he went.
He did just enough in 114 games to earn a call-up but hit just .170 in his first 20 MLB games.
Rather than sending him back down to the Minors for more seasoning, Montreal went all-in on Walker for the 1990 season.
After losing Hubie Brooks to free agency in the offseason, Expos manager Buck Rodgers named the 23-year-old as his starting right fielder.
Despite hitting just .241 and racking up a groan-inducing 112 strikeouts in 478 plate appearances, Walker earned his keep.
His 19 home runs tied Andre Dawson’s rookie franchise record, and his steady play in right field was a critical contribution to the 85-win Expos’ first winning season since 1987.
- #29
1990 Score #581 Curt Schilling
PSA 10 Value $20Total PSA Population 246PSA 10 Population 39PSA 10 Grade Rate 15.9% (Set Avg: 20.8%) - #30
1990 Score #672 Chuck Knoblauch Rookie Card
Rookie CardPSA 10 Value $20Total PSA Population 210PSA 10 Population 82PSA 10 Grade Rate 39.0% (Set Avg: 20.8%)

Ross’s Take
So there you have it, the ten most valuable 1990 Score cards.
As you can see, it will take them being professionally graded in gem mint condition to be worth much.
The checklist in this set contains 704 cards total and in general, the centering and print quality were pretty good.
But like many sets of that era, 1990 Score was massively printed.
And that has severely hurt their value over the years: they’re just not that hard to find.
But, for those of us who grew up collecting these as kids, they’ll always have a huge nostalgic factor to them despite not having the highest monetary value.
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Ross Uitts – Owner