1999 Pacific Mark McGwire Home Run History #64 (Sept 18, 1998)
Mark McGwire · Pacific · Insert / Subset

Player
Mark McGwire
Set
1999 Pacific Mark McGwire Home Run History
Year
1999
Card #
#64
Condition Grade
PSA 6 (EX-MT) - Centering appears shifted top-to-bottom; visible white corner wear on the bottom right and top right corners. Potential surface edge chipping.
Category
Insert / Subset
Manufacturer
Pacific
Demand Level
Low to Moderate - Highly niche market for McGwire player collectors or 90s nostalgia set builders.
Valuation
Raw (Ungraded) Value
$1.00 - $3.00
Graded Value
PSA 6: $8-12, PSA 7: $15-20, PSA 8: $25-30
Comparable Sales
Recent sales for single raw cards from this 70-card set range from $0.99 to $2.50 plus shipping. Full sets of all 70 cards typically sell for $40-$60.
Description
This card commemorates Mark McGwire's 64th home run of his historic 1998 season hit on September 18, 1998. The card features a horizontal layout with a gold-bordered sidebar on the left containing the player name and home run details. The main image shows McGwire following through on his swing in his St. Louis Cardinals uniform.
Key Features
Commemorates the historic 1998 home run race; iconic Pacific brand photography; specific date-to-home-run tracking subset popular with 90s collectors.
Authenticity Indicators
Authentic gold foil text and Pacific crown logo; period-correct card stock thickness and matte photo finish. High confidence - this card is rarely counterfeited due to low market value.
Flaws to Note
Significant corner wear/whitening especially on the bottom right corner; top-to-bottom centering is unbalanced with a thicker top border; likely edge wear along the top side common with Pacific card stock.
Selling Guide
Where to Sell
eBay (as a 'Buy It Now' or part of a lot); COMC; Facebook Marketplace local lots. Not recommended for major auction houses.
Selling Tips
Group this card with other Mark McGwire 1998 home run pursuit cards to sell as a 'lot' for better value. Shipping via eBay Standard Envelope (PWE) is the only cost-effective way to sell this individulaly. Do not grade, as grading fees will far exceed the card's market value.