Manufacturer: Topps
Set: 1978 Topps Baseball ➡️
Player Name: Mario Soto
Position/Team: Pitcher for Reds
Card #: 427
Card Size: 2-1/2” x 3-1/2”
Card Values: See Pricing Table Below
Few pitchers in the 1980s featured a more devastating weapon than Mario Soto. Armed with what many contemporary hitters considered the absolute best circle-changeup of the era, the right-handed ace was the heart and soul of the Cincinnati Reds’ rotation during some incredibly lean transition years between the “Big Red Machine” and the 1990 championship squad.
Soto wasn’t just an accumulation-stats pitcher; at his best, he was purely electric. In 1982, he punched out 274 batters over 257.2 innings. He followed that up in 1983 by finishing second in the NL Cy Young race to John Denny, throwing a staggering 18 complete games and pitching 273.2 innings.
His signature changeup broke away from left-handed hitters and dive-bombed out of the zone, making his mid-90s fastball twice as effective. He was notoriously hyper-competitive on the mound, a trait that occasionally led to high-profile, fiery on-field brawls (most famously with modern adversaries like Claudell Washington and Lary Sorensen in 1984).
Unfortunately, that massive workload caught up to his shoulder. By 1986, shoulder injuries severely diminished his velocity, and he retired in 1988 at just 31 years old.
Soto makes his cardboard debut in this standard 1978 Topps set. It is a standalone card (not a multi-player rookie card), featuring a classic portrait of a young Soto in his bright red Cincinnati pullover uniform.
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Pricing Data For This Rookie Card
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Pricing chart includes raw card price & some graded card value estimates.
These values are collated from a variety of resources including recently sold listings, sales averages and a variety of other sports card pricing data sources. Please see full disclaimer on “Terms Page” for more information. (Rookiecardprices.com only shows values for regular base set cards. No prices are shown for errors, parallels, subsets, misprints or other cards unless noted.)
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Did You Know? Mario Soto spent his childhood playing as a catcher and didn’t even pick up pitching until he was 17, largely because he was a self-admitted terrible hitter who couldn’t hit a lick. He also completely abandoned throwing a curveball or slider early in his career because they caused severe pain in his previously broken elbow, forcing him to rely entirely on an overpowering fastball and a devastating circle changeup that became his ticket to stardom.
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