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2009 Stafford Platinum SuperFractor PSA 10 sells for $31K
SALE NEWS

2009 Stafford Platinum SuperFractor PSA 10 sells for $31K

Goldin sold a 2009 Topps Platinum SuperFractor Matthew Stafford RC 1/1 PSA 10 for $31,720. See why this modern QB grail matters for collectors.

Feb 15, 20268 min read
2009 Topps Platinum SuperFractor #125 Matthew Stafford Rookie Card (#1/1) - PSA GEM MT 10

Sold Card

2009 Topps Platinum SuperFractor #125 Matthew Stafford Rookie Card (#1/1) - PSA GEM MT 10

Sale Price

$31,720.00

Platform

Goldin

2009 Topps Platinum SuperFractor #125 Matthew Stafford Rookie Card (#1/1) – PSA GEM MT 10

On February 8, 2026, Goldin sold a major modern football grail: a 2009 Topps Platinum SuperFractor #125 Matthew Stafford Rookie Card, serial‑numbered 1/1 and graded PSA GEM MT 10, for $31,720.

For collectors who focus on key rookie cards and true scarcity, this sale checks almost every box: rookie, SuperFractor, 1/1, and a top grade from PSA.

Card basics: what exactly sold?

Let’s break down the card details clearly:

  • Player: Matthew Stafford
  • Team: Detroit Lions
  • Year: 2009
  • Set: Topps Platinum Football
  • Card number: #125
  • Parallel: SuperFractor (gold, spiral “superfractor” pattern, 1/1)
  • Rookie card: Yes – it’s one of Stafford’s premium rookie issues
  • Serial numbering: Hand/foil-numbered 1/1 (one-of-one)
  • Grading company: PSA (Professional Sports Authenticator)
  • Grade: GEM MT 10 (PSA’s highest standard grade)

2009 Topps Platinum is a chromium-style (chrome-finish) product that sits alongside Topps Chrome as one of the key modern football lines of that era. The SuperFractor parallel is the top-tier chase card in many Topps chromium releases – usually a single copy per player for the entire print run.

When you combine a SuperFractor, rookie status, and a PSA 10, you’re looking at what many collectors would consider a “true centerpiece” card for that player.

Why this Stafford matters to collectors

1. A true modern-era cornerstone rookie

Matthew Stafford’s rookie year (2009) places this card firmly in the modern / early ultra-modern window – after the junk wax era, but before the very recent explosion in hobby products. That means:

  • Print runs were higher than vintage, but still much more controlled than today’s multi-release ultra-modern era.
  • Premium parallels like SuperFractors were genuinely scarce and heavily chased in group breaks and personal boxes.

As the SuperFractor rookie of a No. 1 overall draft pick who went on to:

  • Build massive counting stats in Detroit,
  • Win a Super Bowl with the Los Angeles Rams,
  • And establish a strong reputation as a high-level, long-career QB,

this card has become one of Stafford’s short-list key rookies, alongside high-end National Treasures, Exquisite/SP Authentic patch autos, and top Chrome refractor parallels.

2. The power of “SuperFractor” and “1/1”

A few terms worth defining for newer collectors:

  • Parallel: a version of the base card with different design features (color, pattern, or foil) and usually smaller print runs.
  • SuperFractor: in Topps chromium products, this is typically the most limited parallel, almost always serial-numbered 1/1. It features a distinctive gold spiral pattern.
  • 1/1 (one-of-one): the serial number indicates this is the only copy of that specific card version produced.

For Stafford’s 2009 Topps Platinum card:

  • There is only one SuperFractor rookie copy.
  • That single copy is now graded PSA 10.

So when people talk about “true scarcity,” this is what they mean. There is no “pop report race” here, because:

  • The population (pop) report for this specific parallel is effectively 1: this copy.
  • No other collector can own a competing SuperFractor example.

3. PSA GEM MT 10 on a 2009 chromium card

While 2009 isn’t ancient, it’s also not a brand-new release. Chromium cards from this era can have issues like surface scratches, dimples, soft corners, and edge chipping straight out of the pack.

A PSA GEM MT 10 means PSA found:

  • Sharp corners,
  • Clean edges,
  • Centering within tight tolerances,
  • And no significant surface flaws.

On a one-of-one, the grade does more than just help value; it gives the card a clear standing in the hobby:

  • There is only one copy.
  • It carries the highest widely recognized numerical grade.

For long-term collectors, that combination has a certain clarity: if you want the best graded example of this exact card, this is it, full stop.

Market context and price

  • Realized price: $31,720 (Goldin)
  • Auction house: Goldin
  • Sale date (UTC): 2/08/26

How does $31,720 fit into Stafford’s market?

Because this card is a 1/1 SuperFractor with a PSA 10 grade, there are no direct “same-card” comparisons in the usual sense. One-of-one cards trade infrequently, so we have to look at closely related categories instead:

  • Other Stafford rookie 1/1s (from different sets)
  • Premium patch autos from brands such as National Treasures, Exquisite, SP Authentic, or Topps Chrome/Topps products
  • High-end gold or low-serial parallels from the 2009 season

Looking at prior public records for Stafford’s high-end rookies across major auction houses and marketplaces, the market has generally valued:

  • Top-tier RPAs (rookie patch autographs) and brand-defining parallels in a similar overall range when they appear in top grades and at peak interest moments (for example, surrounding his Super Bowl run with the Rams).

This $31,720 result lines up with that pattern:

  • It reflects the fact that this is Stafford’s top chromium parallel rookie from Topps Platinum.
  • It also reflects the ongoing interest in QB-centered collecting, where elite or near-elite quarterbacks often see their best rookies command a premium relative to other positions.

Because SuperFractors and other 1/1s do not change hands often, there isn’t a clean “this is up/down X% from last sale of this exact card.” Instead, the price should be read as:

  • A data point in the upper tier of Stafford’s card market.
  • Consistent with how collectors have treated his top rookies once his Hall-of-Fame discussion became realistic.

Why 2009 Topps Platinum matters

Within Stafford’s rookie portfolio, collectors often talk about a short list of important chromium or premium issues. 2009 Topps Platinum is relevant because:

  • It continued the Topps chromium tradition, with refractor-style parallels and visually distinct chase cards.
  • It offered some of the most visually recognizable premium parallels of the year, including SuperFractors.

For many collectors, especially those active in the late 2000s and early 2010s, ripping 2009 Topps Platinum or Chrome and hoping for a Stafford parallel was part of the hobby experience. That nostalgia layer adds to the appeal of seeing his best Platinum parallel surface at a major auction.

Player and hobby backdrop

By early 2026, Stafford’s profile in the hobby is shaped by:

  • A Super Bowl win with the Rams,
  • Strong passing totals and longevity,
  • And sustained discussion about his eventual Hall of Fame case.

Quarterbacks often anchor modern football collecting. Even without making any predictions, it is clear that:

  • Stafford is one of the more significant QBs of his era,
  • And his top-tier rookie cards remain the focus for collectors who believe long careers and key postseason moments matter.

Cards like this SuperFractor PSA 10 are less about short-term swings and more about planting a flag: this is one of the defining Stafford rookies.

Takeaways for collectors and small sellers

For newcomers, returning collectors, or small sellers, here are a few practical lessons from this sale:

  1. True scarcity behaves differently than serial-99 or serial-25 parallels. One-of-ones and SuperFractors don’t trade often. When they do, each sale sets its own context.

  2. Grading still matters, even for a 1/1. A PSA 10 label on a one-of-one can support a stronger result than a raw or lower-graded copy, particularly on chromium cards that are condition-sensitive.

  3. Quarterback focus is central in modern football. While skill players can spike, long-career QBs with playoff and Super Bowl resumes tend to anchor the higher end of the market.

  4. Auction houses like Goldin are where many one-of-ones surface. For unique or very high-end pieces, major auction houses create a wider audience than typical fixed-price marketplaces.

  5. Use comps as guidance, not a final answer. With one-of-ones, the closest comparables may only be other rare rookies or similar-tier cards. They help give a range, not a guarantee.

Final thoughts

The $31,720 sale on February 8, 2026, at Goldin of the 2009 Topps Platinum SuperFractor #125 Matthew Stafford Rookie Card (#1/1) – PSA GEM MT 10, gives collectors a clear snapshot of how the market is valuing one of Stafford’s absolute top rookie issues.

For Stafford collectors, modern QB-focused investors, and anyone who grew up opening 2009 products, this card represents more than a single auction result. It’s a reminder of how far early chromium-era rookies have come—and how unique a true SuperFractor 1/1 PSA 10 really is.


If you track high-end football cards, this is the kind of sale that’s worth bookmarking. It offers a clean reference point the next time a major Stafford rookie, or another 1/1 SuperFractor from this era, comes to market.