The final (or nearly final) Card Totals and Tier Breakdown for each team.
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I have not posted a chart in a while and since we are almost done with new cards here is the Final (more or less) of the cards and some interesting facts

(I exclude Ranked 1000 from the below totals)

Interesting Notes
These are based on the Team Rarity Tier Breakdown-
Most total cards: New York Yankees (124).
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Most total diamonds (85+): Yankees (81), which is 65.3% of their entire set.
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Biggest “diamond-heavy” gap: Yankees have +38 more diamonds than non-diamonds (81 vs 43).
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Yankees diamonds vs entire team inventories: Yankees’ 81 diamonds outnumber the entire card totals of 7 teams — White Sox (70), Diamondbacks (70), Marlins (71), Rockies (73), Rays (75), Nationals (77), Royals (80).
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Most 99s: Yankees (32). Dodgers are right behind at 30.
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Highest 99 concentration: Dodgers — 30/114 = 26.3% of their cards are 99s.
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Yankees 99s vs other teams’ diamonds: Yankees’ 32 99s exceed the total diamonds of 4 teams — White Sox (25), Marlins (27), Rockies (29), Diamondbacks (31).
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Dodgers 99s vs other teams’ diamonds: Dodgers’ 30 99s exceed the total diamonds of 3 teams — White Sox (25), Marlins (27), Rockies (29).
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Lowest diamond share: Chicago White Sox — 25/70 = 35.7% diamonds (lowest in the table).
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Most “bronze-heavy” team: White Sox — 23 Bronze is 32.9% of their whole set (23/70), and it’s almost 1-for-1 with their diamonds (23 Bronze vs 25 Diamonds).
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Most Bronze cards (tie): Angels, Guardians, and White Sox (23 each).
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Fewest Silver cards (4-way tie): Angels, Guardians, Rockies, Diamondbacks (4 each).
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Largest Common share: Rockies — 16/73 = 21.9% Common (highest share).
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Fewest Common cards (tie): Cubs, Phillies, Padres (4 each).
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Common “scarcity” standouts: Cubs have 24 99s and only 4 Commons (6.0× as many 99s as Commons); Dodgers match that ratio (30 99s / 5 Commons = 6.0×).
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Most Gold cards (tie): Dodgers, Cubs, Blue Jays (12 each).
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Fewest Gold cards: Athletics (3) — despite having 44 total diamonds.
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Most 90–94 diamonds: Reds (16).
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“Mid-diamond” oddity: Rangers are the only team where 90–94 diamonds outnumber top-end diamonds — 14 (90–94) vs 13 (99 + 95–98) (107.7% as many).
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Most top-end-heavy diamonds: Mets — 34 of 48 diamonds are 99 or 95–98 (70.8% of their diamonds).
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Least 99s: White Sox (5).
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Least 95–98 diamonds: White Sox (4).
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Two perfectly balanced teams: Pirates (44 diamonds / 44 non-diamonds) and Tigers (43 / 43) are exact 50/50 splits.
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Most non-diamonds: Reds (46 non-diamonds), even though they’re tied for 5th in total cards (97).
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Blue Jays “top-heavy” note: Blue Jays have 22 99s with only 88 total cards (25.0% 99 rate) — same 99 count as the Mets and Phillies, but with fewer total cards than either.
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