Yankees Get Mickey Mantle Back in the Spotlight with Topps Baseball 75th Anniversary

New York Yankees Legend Mickey Mantle.
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Topps is celebrating 75 years of Topps Baseball by ranking the 1952 Topps Mickey Mantle as the No. 1 most iconic card on its new Topps “Iconic 75” list, and connecting that list to 2026 Series 1 through PSA-graded “Iconic Topps Buybacks” redemption inserts.

For Yankees fans, it’s a clean “why now” moment: Series 1 is the kickoff product every year, and this time Topps is building the entire anniversary storyline around the cards that made the hobby famous, with Mantle as the headline.


Why Mantle is always the headline (and what Fox highlighted)

Fox Sports didn’t just label Mantle’s 1952 card the “most iconic” – it also pointed out the card’s record-setting sale history: an SGC 9.5 copy sold for $12.6 million in 2022.

That price is the easy shorthand for why Mantle still dominates mainstream conversations about cards. Even if you’ve never bought a pack, you’ve probably heard “the Mantle card” used as the sport’s ultimate collectible reference point.

Fox also added a detail collectors care about: there are two versions of the 1952 Mantle – Type 1 and Type 2 – with differences in the signature and certain print elements. That’s the kind of nuance that tends to get lost in quick “Top 10” social posts, but it’s exactly why Mantle keeps drawing deep-dive interest.


The new wrinkle: Topps is tying the “Iconic” list to a pack chase

Here’s where 2026 Series 1 changes the conversation. Topps’ “Iconic Topps Buybacks” program is built on PSA-graded redemptions seeded into flagship product, starting with Series 1.

Topps’ Iconic 75 landing page repeatedly notes specific graded vintage cards will be available via redemption in 2026 Topps Series 1, turning the anniversary from a nostalgia campaign into an actual chase mechanic.

So even if you’re a Yankees fan who doesn’t live on checklist sites, the Mantle angle is simple: Topps is packaging the anniversary around the cards people already view as “the best of the best,” and then giving collectors a direct pathway – through redemptions – to graded icons.


What’s in Series 1 (the basics Yankees fans will ask first)

Topps’ hobby box configuration is straightforward: 12 cards per pack, 20 packs per box, and one autograph or relic per box as the baseline hit.

Topps also describes Series 1 as a 350-card base set with stars, rookies, Future Stars, league leaders and team cards.

And Topps’ Series 1 page listed the product timing as “Available February 11 at 12pm ET.”


The other anniversary hook that matters: the “1952 design” rule

If you want the second Yankees-adjacent angle (beyond Mantle), it’s the way Topps is treating the 1952 design in 2026.

Topps says the 1952 base card design now has an exclusive home: it appears only as a Base Card 1952 Variation within Topps Baseball flagship (Series 1, Series 2, Update), and once a player appears on that design, Topps won’t use it for that player again.

Topps also framed the “Iconic 75” project as more than a marketing list, saying it assembled a panel that included league and hobby leadership—like MLB historian John Thorn and PSA’s Nat Turner—along with longtime collectors inside Topps. That extra credibility is part of why the Mantle ranking will travel beyond hobby media.

That’s a “collect it now” mechanic built into the product, which will matter even more once early-season rookies start popping and collectors realize some players will only ever have one shot at the 1952 look.

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Yankees Get Mickey Mantle Back in the Spotlight with Topps Baseball 75th Anniversary

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