1991 Score Hal Morris #159

Hal Morris · Score · Base

1991 Score Hal Morris #159

Player

Hal Morris

Set

1991 Score

Year

1991

Card #

#159

Condition Grade

PSA 8 (NM-MT) - Corners appear sharp, but centering is slightly shifted to the left (approx 60/40). Surface shows typical gloss for the era.

Category

Base

Manufacturer

Score

Demand Level

Niche/Low. Interest is primarily from Cincinnati Reds team collectors or set builders completing the 1991 Score master set.

Valuation

Raw (Ungraded) Value

$0.05 - $0.25

Graded Value

PSA 8: $5-10, PSA 9: $12-18, PSA 10: $35-50 (Note: Grading cost exceeds current market value)

Comparable Sales

Raw copies routinely sell for $0.10 to $0.50 in bulk lots. Professional grading for this specific player and year is rare, with few recorded sales of high-grade examples.

Description

A classic 1991 Score baseball card featuring Cincinnati Reds first baseman Hal Morris. The design features a bold red name bar at the top and a vertical pinstripe border pattern. Morris is captured in a profile shot wearing his home Reds jersey and batting helmet. The lower right features the iconic Reds wishbone-C logo.

Key Features

Features a key member of the 1990 World Series Champion Cincinnati Reds; Iconic 1990s Score design; High-quality photographic finish for the era.

Authenticity Indicators

Authenticity confidence is High. The card stock is standard 1991 Score cardboard. This card is from the 'Junk Wax' era and is not a target for counterfeiting due to mass production.

Flaws to Note

Slight left-to-right centering bias; minor white chipping visible on the top edge; common manufacturing print dots in the black background area.

Selling Guide

Where to Sell

Best sold in bulk on eBay as part of a 'Reds Team Lot', listed on COMC (Check Out My Cards) for long-term inventory, or sold in a 'quarter box' at a local card show.

Selling Tips

Do not grade this card, as the grading fees ($19+) are significantly higher than the card's value. List as part of a lot with other 1990s Reds players (like Barry Larkin or Eric Davis) to maximize interest and justify shipping costs.

Scanned on 4/30/2026