
Lorne Worsley
1962 Topps Hockey Bucks · 1962
Lorne Worsley prices by grade
| Grade | Value | eBay |
|---|---|---|
| Ungraded | $83.88 | Buy on eBay ↗ |
| PSA 7 | $192.50 | Buy on eBay ↗ |
Live on eBay
Affiliate — we may earn a commission1962 Topps Hockey Bucks Lorne Worsley value & prices
The 1962 Topps Hockey Bucks Lorne Worsley is a Hockey card released in 1962. In ungraded condition it carries an estimated value of about $83.88, with professionally graded copies commanding more.
Use the grade table above to compare values across PSA, BGS, CGC and SGC, and the eBay links to find live listings. Scan your copy with Ripbin to track it in your locker.
About this card's market
Vintage cards from this era were printed long before collectors thought about preservation, so well-centered, sharp-cornered copies are genuinely scarce. That scarcity is what drives the gap between raw and graded prices.
Hockey cards trade in a tighter but dedicated market — key rookies and vintage stars hold value well.
Smart buying guide
Before buying a Lorne Worsley, compare several live listings — prices for the same card can vary widely depending on condition, seller reputation, and whether an auction is ending soon. The live eBay listings above update throughout the day.
Selling? List smart: photograph corners and surface clearly, state the condition honestly, and price against the grade table above. Or scan it into your Ripbin locker and let bids come to you.
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Frequently asked questions
- How much is the 1962 Topps Hockey Bucks Lorne Worsley worth?
- An ungraded Lorne Worsley is worth approximately $83.88. Values change with the market — check the live eBay listings for current pricing.
- Where can I buy the Lorne Worsley card?
- Lorne Worsley 1962 Topps Hockey Bucks cards are available on eBay — use the grade-specific links above to find current listings, or browse the live listings carousel on this page.
- What affects the value of the Lorne Worsley?
- Condition and grade matter most, followed by the player's performance and career trajectory. Parallel versions, print runs, and overall hobby demand also move the price.