It didn’t take long for Topps to immortalize the Los Angeles Dodgers’ latest title run.
According to the official Topps website, the company has unveiled a 2025 Fall Classic Champs commemorative set. These Dodgers World Series cards capture baseball’s most recent dynasty of the modern era, and the first team to win back-to-back titles since the New York Yankees in 1999-00.
While the initial sale window on Topps.com has already closed (it ran from November 1-8), there are still ways to get your hands on these pieces of cardboard.
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How to Get the Dodgers World Series Cards Now
The original offering on Topps.com was priced at $74.99 and included 15 base cards plus one guaranteed numbered parallel, image variation, or auto. These sets were scheduled to ship within 10-15 business days after the November 8 expiration date.
Your best bet now is the secondary market. Keep an eye on platforms like eBay, COMC, and Beckett Marketplace, where sellers will likely list sets and individual cards. Card shows and local hobby shops might also receive inventory from dealers who bought in bulk.
While it might not seem like an ideal situation, the beauty of waiting is that you might land specific parallels you’re hunting for, rather than taking a chance on the mystery parallel.
Every Variation and Parallel Available in the Set

As I mentioned above, each set comes with 15 base cards, but the real chase is the extras. Topps loaded this release with numbered parallels ranging from obtainable to incredibly rare.
The foil parallels: Green Foil (/99), Gold Foil (/50), Orange Foil (/25), Black Foil (/10), Red Foil (/5), and the crown jewel – the FoilFractor numbered to one copy.
Topps also created image variation short prints for certain players featuring different photos than the standard base cards. The variation subjects include Shohei Ohtani (obviously!), Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Clayton Kershaw, and Roki Sasaki.
The autograph chase is equally intriguing. There are signed cards featuring 10 players: Ohtani, Blake Snell, Freeman, Will Smith, Tommy Edman, Max Muncy, Yamamoto, Will Klein, Kershaw, and Sasaki. A Shohei Ohtani autograph from a championship set could be worth a decent chunk of cash.
The Triple Autograph Relic cards also feature multiple signatures plus game-used memorabilia, making them the ultimate hits.
The Dodgers’ Historic Back-to-Back Championships
These types of cards are always fun and meaningful, but the historical context for the 2025 set makes it a little more special.
Not only was Los Angeles the first team to repeat as champs since the turn of the century, but they’re also the first National League club to do it since the Cincinnati Reds in 1975-76.
The parity in today’s game makes this even more impressive. Between free agency, competitive balance taxes, and (most importantly, at least in my eyes) expanded playoffs, sustained excellence and multiple titles require talent, incredible depth, and maybe also a little bit of good fortune.
The Dodgers’ formula? A combination of homegrown stars, shrewd trades for players like Tommy Edman, and a willingness to spend big on top talent like Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto.
Why This Release Matters for Collectors
Championship sets hold a special place in the collecting hierarchy. They’re frozen moments that commemorate teams at their peak. Dodgers World Series cards carry a little more weight than standard flagship releases.
The numbered parallels create natural scarcity that should help these cards hold value. A /10 Black Foil of Shohei Ohtani from a championship set is one that I’d like to manifest into my possession.
Whether you’re chasing that 1/1 FoilFractor, hunting for Ohtani autos, or just want to own a piece of baseball history, these Dodgers World Series cards are tangible memories of a team that achieved something we haven’t seen in quite some time.
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