NFLNFL Miami Dolphins Trading Cards1983–1999Hall of Fame · 2005

Dan Marino Cards & Plaques

The smoothest release on the wall — for the Dolphins fan who watched 1984.

★★★★★ 4.9 from 100+ reviews Real licensed cards Made in USA
Dan Marino Miami Dolphins HOF Fan Gift Plaque 8x10 Stats 2 Cards Donruss Score Panini Topps Prizm 2024 2025 2026

Career snapshot

Career: 61,361 passing yards · 420 passing TDs · 252 INTs · 17 seasons · 1983–1999 Miami Dolphins only. Career averages: 59.4% completion · 86.4 passer rating.

Hardware: 1984 NFL MVP, 9× Pro Bowl, 3× First-Team All-Pro, 1984 NFL Offensive Player of the Year, 1983 Offensive Rookie of the Year. Held NFL career passing yards and TDs records at retirement. Pro Football Hall of Fame, Class of 2005.

Accolades

★ 1984 NFL MVP

★ 1984 NFL Offensive Player of the Year

★ 1983 NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year

★ 9× Pro Bowl

★ 3× First-Team All-Pro

★ 1984: NFL records for passing yards (5,084) and TDs (48) — both stood for years

★ Held NFL career passing yards and TDs records at retirement

★ Pro Football Hall of Fame, Class of 2005

The card collector's view

Marino's flagship rookie is the 1984 Topps #123 RC—the recognized standard from one of the most-collected football sets of the 1980s. PSA 10 copies command strong premiums during Dolphins anniversary years. His 1990s Topps, Score, and Upper Deck cards from the second half of his career hold steady value. Panini retired-legends inserts in Mosaic and Donruss Optic feature Marino in classic Dolphins aqua-and-orange.

About Dan Marino Cards & Plaques at FreshDCards

The most prolific passer of his generation, no rings to show for it. Dan Marino threw for 61,361 yards and 420 touchdowns in seventeen seasons with the Miami Dolphins—all NFL records when he retired. His 1984 season was unlike anything the league had seen: 5,084 passing yards (first to break 5,000) and 48 touchdowns. He won that year's NFL MVP. The Dolphins reached Super Bowl XIX in his second season and lost to Joe Montana. They never got back. The smoothest release in football history. Pro Football Hall of Fame, Class of 2005.