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2014 Prizm WC David Luiz Black 1/1 Sells for $12.5K
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2014 Prizm WC David Luiz Black 1/1 Sells for $12.5K

A PSA 7 copy of the 2014 Panini Prizm World Cup Black Prizm 1/1 David Luiz sold for $12,517 at Goldin. Here’s what it means for modern soccer collectors.

May 11, 202610 min read
2014 Panini Prizm World Cup Black Prizm #106 David Luiz (#1/1) - PSA NM 7

Sold Card

2014 Panini Prizm World Cup Black Prizm #106 David Luiz (#1/1) - PSA NM 7

Sale Price

$12,517.00

Platform

Goldin

2014 Panini Prizm World Cup Black Prizm #106 David Luiz (#1/1) – PSA NM 7 sells for $12,517 at Goldin

On May 10, 2026, Goldin closed a notable modern soccer auction: a 2014 Panini Prizm World Cup Black Prizm #106 David Luiz, serial-numbered 1/1 and graded PSA NM 7, sold for $12,517.

For collectors who focus on early modern soccer, World Cup issues, or rare parallels, this card sits at the intersection of several important hobby themes: the rise of Prizm in soccer, the 2014 World Cup’s legacy, and the appeal of true one-of-one cards.

Card overview

Let’s break down exactly what this card is:

  • Player: David Luiz (Brazil)
  • Team/National side: Brazil National Team
  • Year: 2014
  • Set: 2014 Panini Prizm World Cup
  • Card number: #106
  • Parallel: Black Prizm (serial-numbered 1/1 – a single copy exists)
  • Rookie status: Not a rookie card; David Luiz’s first cards predate 2014. This is a key World Cup and key parallel, not a true rookie.
  • Grading company: PSA (Professional Sports Authenticator)
  • Grade: NM 7 (Near Mint)
  • Attributes: Non-auto, non-memorabilia, ultra-low serial one-of-one flagship parallel

In PSA terms, a NM 7 allows for visible corner/edge wear or surface issues, but the card still presents strongly. With a one-of-one, the grade can matter less than the simple fact that this is the only copy that exists.

Why 2014 Prizm World Cup matters

2014 Panini Prizm World Cup is widely viewed as the foundational chromium set for modern soccer collecting:

  • It was Panini’s first mainstream, globally distributed Prizm release for a FIFA World Cup.
  • The set helped introduce “Prizm-style” collecting (base + rainbow of parallels) to many soccer-focused collectors.
  • Star checklists include Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, Neymar Jr., James Rodríguez, and a deep list of international stars.

For many collectors, 2014 Prizm World Cup plays a similar role to early Prizm basketball or football: a flagship chromium issue that people go back to when they want an iconic, easily recognizable card from the era.

Within that structure, the Black Prizm 1/1 is the top of the rainbow for base cards. It is effectively the “ceiling” parallel for each player in the set.

David Luiz in the context of 2014

David Luiz’s hobby profile is very different from the goal-scoring superstars of his generation, but he occupies a specific, memorable niche:

  • Long-time central defender/defensive midfielder for clubs such as Benfica, Chelsea, Paris Saint-Germain, and Arsenal.
  • Known for his distinctive hairstyle, long-range passing, set-piece ability, and sometimes chaotic defending.
  • A central figure for Brazil at the 2014 World Cup on home soil.

The 2014 World Cup was emotionally charged for Brazil, culminating in the infamous 7–1 semifinal loss to Germany. David Luiz’s image—tears, captain’s armband, and raw emotion—became one of the defining visuals of that tournament.

That context cuts both ways for collectors:

  • On one hand, not a traditional hobby superstar whose cards are routinely chased across all sets.
  • On the other, a highly memorable national-team figure from one of the most talked-about World Cups of the modern era.

This creates a niche but real demand from:

  • Brazil national team collectors
  • 2014 World Cup set and rainbow builders
  • Player collectors who focus on unique, one-of-a-kind pieces

What makes Black Prizm 1/1s important

In Prizm products, parallels (different colored, often serial-numbered versions of the base card) form what’s often called a “rainbow.” Within that rainbow:

  • Silvers, Reds, Blues, and standard numbered colors provide tiered scarcity.
  • Gold (/10) and similar low-serial parallels tend to be key chase cards.
  • Black Prizms 1/1 typically represent the rarest non-autograph parallel for each player.

A 1/1 is exactly what it sounds like: there’s only one copy. That has several implications:

  • No population report context: Grading company population reports (“pop reports”) show how many copies of a card have been graded at each grade level. For a 1/1, there can only be one graded example at a time, so “pop” is essentially a formality.
  • Grade vs. uniqueness: With a /99 or /199 parallel, a PSA 9 vs PSA 10 debate can heavily affect value. For a lone 1/1, the choice is “own it or don’t.” The grade still influences the price, but scarcity is the primary driver.
  • Collector-type tilt: These cards are often targeted by player supercollectors and high-end set/rainbow builders rather than casual buyers.

In this specific case, we have the only 2014 Prizm World Cup Black Prizm of David Luiz, graded PSA NM 7.

Market context and price comparison

This Goldin sale closed at $12,517 on May 10, 2026.

Because we’re dealing with a one-of-one, exact comparison points are limited. Instead, collectors typically look at:

  1. Other David Luiz key cards
  2. Other 2014 Prizm World Cup Black 1/1 cards
  3. Price tiers across stars vs. role players in the same set

1. Other David Luiz key cards

The market for David Luiz cards is relatively thin compared to global superstars. His more common cards (base, low-end parallels, non-1/1 autos) generally trade at accessible price points, often well below $1,000 outside of special pieces.

This makes a $12,517 sale clearly a top-end outlier for his market, aligned with the idea that a World Cup flagship 1/1 sits in a completely different category from standard inserts or parallels.

2. Other 2014 Prizm World Cup Black 1/1s

Within 2014 Prizm World Cup, Black Prizms of top-tier stars (Messi, Ronaldo, Neymar) have historically sold at significantly higher figures when they appear, often establishing personal records for those players within this specific set.

By contrast:

  • Black 1/1s of mid-tier national-team regulars tend to sell in the low-to-mid four-figure range when they surface.
  • National icons with strong followings but not global “GOAT” status might slot into the mid-to-upper four-figure range depending on the specific player and timing.

A $12,517 result for David Luiz therefore sits toward the high side of what you would expect for a defender from the set, but still well below superstar territory.

3. Context vs. other positions and roles

Defenders and goalkeepers usually lag far behind forwards and attacking midfielders in the hobby. So when a defender’s card reaches a five-figure price, it signals one or more of the following:

  • Set importance: 2014 Prizm World Cup is a cornerstone set that attracts cross-player demand.
  • Parallel prestige: Black 1/1s are the top rung for many collectors.
  • Collector-specific demand: A committed player or national-team collector can meaningfully move prices in thin markets.

Taken together, this $12,517 sale appears strong but not irrational relative to what we see in this set and format. It fits the pattern: top-tier parallel from a landmark set, even for a defender, can command serious attention when the right bidders meet.

Role of the PSA 7 grade

For a one-of-one, the grade has a different weight than it would for a mass-produced base card:

  • There is no PSA 9 or PSA 10 alternative unless this specific card crosses over or is regraded, which doesn’t create a second copy anyway.
  • A PSA 7 signals real, visible flaws (edges, corners, or surface), but also confers authenticity and encapsulation.
  • For many collectors of 1/1s, owning the card at all is the main objective; the exact grade is secondary as long as it’s not miscut or altered.

That said, if the card had somehow graded a PSA 9 or 10, a higher result would be plausible. The current price reflects a balance of:

  • One-of-a-kind status
  • Iconic set
  • Memorable national-team player
  • Sub-gem grade

What this sale suggests for the market

Several takeaways emerge from this Goldin result:

1. Depth of interest in 2014 Prizm World Cup

Seeing a defender’s 1/1 reach five figures underscores how much respect 2014 Prizm World Cup has built over time. Collectors increasingly treat it as:

  • A reference set for early modern soccer chromium
  • A go-to year for collectors starting or anchoring a soccer portfolio

Even outside the headline names, the set continues to produce noteworthy sales.

2. Established value for niche but iconic players

David Luiz is not a GOAT candidate, but he is:

  • Highly recognizable
  • Strongly associated with a major tournament
  • A long-time top-level club and national-team defender

That combination—plus an ultra-rare parallel—supports a market where serious collectors are willing to fund significant purchases when unique opportunities appear.

3. Thin supply and price volatility

With a one-of-one from a popular set, supply is fixed at exactly one card. That leads to:

  • Large price swings between appearances
  • Outcomes heavily shaped by who shows up in that specific auction window

As a result, while this $12,517 sale is a meaningful data point, it shouldn’t be treated as a firm “price guide” number. Instead, think of it as evidence of what serious bidders were willing to pay at a particular moment for this precise piece.

How collectors might use this information

For different types of collectors, this sale offers different lessons:

For set and rainbow builders

  • If you’re building out 2014 Prizm World Cup runs, this illustrates the top-end cost of completing true rainbows when a key 1/1 surfaces.
  • It’s also a reminder that, for many players, full rainbows are a long-term project that depend on rare cards emerging from collections.

For player and national-team collectors

  • A sale like this helps frame what a true “grail” (a collector’s term for a pinnacle card) might cost—even for non-attacking players.
  • It reinforces the idea that national-team context and set importance can elevate certain cards far above a player’s everyday market.

For newer or returning collectors

A few practical takeaways:

  • “Comps” (short for comparables) are past sales you use to estimate today’s value. For truly unique items like 1/1s, comps are more art than science.
  • Focus on set reputation and parallel rarity when you evaluate higher-end modern cards.
  • Don’t assume that five-figure sales are only for goal scorers—unique, culturally memorable cards of defenders and keepers can also attract strong bidding.

Final thoughts

The 2014 Panini Prizm World Cup Black Prizm #106 David Luiz (#1/1) PSA NM 7 sale at Goldin on May 10, 2026, is a clear signal of how mature the 2014 Prizm World Cup market has become.

While David Luiz isn’t at the same hobby tier as Messi or Cristiano Ronaldo, the combination of:

  • Landmark World Cup set
  • True Black Prizm 1/1
  • Recognizable, emotionally linked player

was enough to drive the card to a $12,517 result.

For collectors watching the evolution of modern soccer cards, this sale is another data point showing that set importance and parallel scarcity can sometimes outweigh traditional star-power hierarchies—especially when the card in question is literally the only one of its kind.