MLBMLB Kansas City Royals1973–1993Hall of Fame · 1999

George Brett Cards & Plaques

Royals lifer on the wall — for the Kansas City fan who lived 1980 and 1985.

★★★★★ 4.9 from 100+ reviews Real licensed cards Made in USA
George Brett 3 Card Plaque Topps Bowman 2023 2024 Kansas City Royals

Career snapshot

Career: .305 BA · 3,154 hits · 317 HR · 1,596 RBI · 201 SB · 2,707 games · 1973–1993 Kansas City Royals only. Career averages: .305/.369/.487 · 135 OPS+.

Hardware: 1985 World Series Champion, 1980 AL MVP, 3× AL Batting Title (1976, 1980, 1990 — only player in MLB history to win in 3 different decades), 13× All-Star, 3× Silver Slugger, 1× Gold Glove. Baseball Hall of Fame, Class of 1999 (98.19%, first ballot).

Accolades

★ 1985 World Series Champion (Kansas City Royals)

★ 1980 AL MVP

★ 3× AL Batting Title (1976, 1980, 1990) — only player to win batting titles in 3 decades

★ 1980 season: .390 BA, closest to .400 since Ted Williams in 1941

★ 13× MLB All-Star

★ 3× Silver Slugger Award

★ 3,154 career hits · 317 career home runs

★ Baseball Hall of Fame, Class of 1999 (98.19%, first ballot)

The card collector's view

Brett's flagship rookie is the 1975 Topps #228 RC—a true vintage standard, with PSA 10 copies clearing four figures during Royals anniversary years. The card sits in iconic 1975 set territory alongside Robin Yount and Gary Carter rookies. 1975 Topps Mini #228 is the premium parallel chase. His 1976-1993 Topps run features the .390 1980 season and 1985 World Series cards. Panini retired-legends inserts in Diamond Kings feature Brett in classic Royals blue-and-white.

About George Brett Cards & Plaques at FreshDCards

Royals lifer. George Brett hit .390 in 1980—the closest any player has come to a .400 season since Ted Williams in 1941—and won that year's AL MVP. He went on to claim batting titles in three different decades (1976, 1980, 1990), the only player in MLB history to do so. The 1985 World Series Champion played all twenty-one seasons in Kansas City and retired with 3,154 hits, 317 home runs, and a .305 career average. Thirteen All-Star nods. Baseball Hall of Fame, Class of 1999 with 98.19% of the vote.