MLBMLB Toronto Blue jays1998–2013Hall of Fame · 2019

Roy Halladay Cards & Plaques

Cy Young in both leagues on the wall — for the fan who lived 2010.

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Roy Halladay Toronto Blue Jays Fan Gift Plaque 8x10 3 Cards Topps, Bowman 2024 2025 2026

Career snapshot

Career: 203 wins · 105 losses · 2,117 strikeouts · 3.38 ERA · 1.178 WHIP · 2,749 IP · 16 seasons · 1998–2013 across Toronto Blue Jays (12 seasons) and Philadelphia Phillies (4 seasons).

Hardware: 2× Cy Young Award (2003 AL Blue Jays, 2010 NL Phillies), 8× All-Star, 2× ERA Title. Perfect game (May 29, 2010 vs Marlins) and postseason no-hitter (Oct 6, 2010 NLDS vs Reds) in the same season. Baseball Hall of Fame, Class of 2019 (85.4%, first ballot).

Accolades

★ 2× Cy Young Award (2003 AL Toronto, 2010 NL Philadelphia) — both leagues

★ 8× MLB All-Star

★ Perfect game vs Florida Marlins (May 29, 2010)

★ Postseason no-hitter vs Cincinnati Reds (Oct 6, 2010 NLDS) — same year as perfect game

★ 67 career complete games — most by any pitcher since the 1990s

★ 20 career shutouts

★ 203 career wins · 2,117 career strikeouts

★ Baseball Hall of Fame, Class of 2019 (85.4%, first ballot)

The card collector's view

Halladay's flagship rookie is the 1995 Bowman #169 RC—his first prospect card from the Blue Jays system, with PSA 10 copies commanding premiums during Toronto and Philadelphia anniversary years. The 1996 Bowman Chrome #51 RC is his first chrome rookie. 1998 Bowman Chrome International is the premium parallel chase. His 2003 and 2010 Cy Young-season Topps Chrome and Bowman cards hold steady collector value. Panini retired-legends inserts in Diamond Kings feature Halladay in classic Blue Jays and Phillies uniforms.

About Roy Halladay Cards & Plaques at FreshDCards

Doc. Roy Halladay won the Cy Young Award in both leagues—the AL with Toronto in 2003 and the NL with Philadelphia in 2010—and threw a perfect game and a postseason no-hitter in the same calendar year (2010). Eight All-Star nods. The most complete-game pitcher of his generation, with 67 across sixteen seasons in an era when complete games had nearly disappeared from the league. 203 career wins, 2,117 strikeouts, 3.38 ERA. Baseball Hall of Fame, Class of 2019 (85.4%, first ballot). Halladay died piloting his own small plane in November 2017.