Albert Pujols Cards & Plaques

703 home runs on the wall — for the Cardinals fan who lived the MVP run.

★★★★★ 4.9 from 100+ reviews Real licensed cards Made in USA
Albert Pujols #5 3 Card Plaque Topps Bowman 2023 2024 St Louis Cardinals

Career snapshot

Career: .296 BA · 3,384 hits · 703 HR · 2,218 RBI · 1,914 R · 3,080 games · 2001–2022 across St. Louis Cardinals (12 seasons), Los Angeles Angels (10), Los Angeles Dodgers, and a final season back in St. Louis. Career averages: .296/.374/.544 · 145 OPS+.

Hardware: 3× NL MVP (2005, 2008, 2009), 2× World Series Champion (2006, 2011), 2001 NL Rookie of the Year, 11× All-Star, 6× Silver Slugger, 2× Gold Glove. 4th all-time in home runs (703) and 2nd all-time in RBI (2,218). HOF eligibility begins 2028.

Accolades

★ 3× NL MVP (2005, 2008, 2009)

★ 2× World Series Champion (2006, 2011) with St. Louis Cardinals

★ 11× MLB All-Star

★ 6× Silver Slugger Award

★ 2× Gold Glove Award

★ 2001 NL Rookie of the Year

★ 703 career home runs (4th all-time) · 2,218 career RBI (2nd all-time)

★ Ten consecutive 30+ HR seasons to open career

The card collector's view

Pujols' flagship rookie is the 2001 Bowman Chrome #340 RC—the recognized standard, with refractor parallels in PSA 10 commanding strong premiums. The 2001 SP Authentic #126 RC is numbered and a key chase. 2001 Topps Heritage #347 RC is the premium vintage-style chase. His 2003-2010 Cardinals MVP-era Topps Chrome and Bowman cards hold steady collector value. Panini retired-legends inserts feature Pujols in classic Cardinals red-and-white.

About Albert Pujols Cards & Plaques at FreshDCards

One of the great right-handed sluggers in baseball history. Albert Pujols won three NL MVPs in St. Louis (2005, 2008, 2009), claimed two World Series rings with the Cardinals (2006, 2011), and finished his twenty-two-year career with 703 home runs (fourth all-time), 3,384 hits, and 2,218 RBI (second only to Hank Aaron). Eleven All-Star nods, six Silver Sluggers, 2001 NL Rookie of the Year. The most consistent decade-long peak the National League has seen since Hank Aaron—ten straight 30-HR seasons to open his career. Retired 2022.