Why the Graded Population Matters
Graded population is a useful supply signal. A card can have an active raw market but still have very few PSA 10 examples. When the PSA 10 population is low, a single sale can look unusually high or low because buyers have few comparable examples. This page should be read with the price guide, card condition, print run and recent sales history.
Latest population data date stored: May 29, 2026.
Graded Population by Card and Variant
| Card | Variant | Driver | PSA 8 | PSA 9 | PSA 10 | Total Pop | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
7 George Russell |
Gold Mini-Diamond Refractor /50 |
George Russell Mercedes-AMG PETRONAS |
0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | View Card Search eBay |
|
7 George Russell |
Orange Mini-Diamond Refractor /25 |
George Russell Mercedes-AMG PETRONAS |
0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | View Card Search eBay |
|
7 George Russell |
Purple Mini-Diamond Refractor /199 |
George Russell Mercedes-AMG PETRONAS |
0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | View Card Search eBay |
|
7 George Russell |
Base |
George Russell Mercedes-AMG PETRONAS |
1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | View Card Search eBay |
|
7 George Russell |
Blue Mini-Diamond Refractor /150 |
George Russell Mercedes-AMG PETRONAS |
0 | 1 | 1 | 2 | View Card Search eBay |
Graded Population FAQ
Why do graded population counts matter?
Population counts show how many graded copies have been reported at each grade. Low PSA 10 populations can make prices less stable because each new sale may carry more weight.
Does a low PSA 10 population always mean a card is valuable?
No. Value also depends on driver demand, print run, card condition, completed sales, buyer interest and how many raw copies remain ungraded.
Why are some graded prices unavailable even when population exists?
A card may have graded copies but no recent tracked public sales in that grade. In those cases, the population count is useful context but not a direct price.