
Clyde Drexler
1996-97 • Topps
Finest • #23

2005 • Topps • Finest • Refractor
National Football League • New Orleans Saints
PSA 10
FA-AM
New
Shipping Calculated at Checkout
Adrian McPherson from Finest (2005)
Last Listing Activity 2 hours agoCreate a listing from this sports-card catalog entry and use the same product details as a starting point.
See how many public collections currently include this card.
0 collectors have this card
The catalog profile below summarizes the card identity, featured subject, and notable collectible traits.
The core identity of the card within the set.
The player, team, league, and sport context tied to this card.
Production details and format-specific attributes.
Material
Card Stock
Language
English
Notable collectible traits associated with this card profile.
Adrian McPherson's 2005 Topps Finest rookie sits in a niche tier within the set, appealing primarily to Saints collectors and deep-cut NFL enthusiast collectors rather than commanding broad market demand. The Finest brand carries an inherent refractor premium, and autographed copies in particular trade above the base card tier due to the on-card signature format Topps Finest employed during this era. With only one active listing available, the market is extremely thin, meaning pricing is largely seller-driven and may not reflect true liquidity.
The 2005 Topps Finest lineup includes refractor parallels with tiered serial-numbered print runs — gold, blue, and superfractor variants — each carrying progressively limited supply that commands a premium over base refractors. Autographed versions are especially scarce, as McPherson's NFL career was brief, limiting the total volume of certified autos produced across his rookie year releases. Population reports for graded copies are expected to be very low, making high-grade PSA or BGS slabs genuinely difficult to source and appealing to condition-sensitive collectors.
McPherson's NFL career with the Saints was short-lived, which caps mainstream demand, though his cards retain a cult following among collectors drawn to underdog narratives and low-population rookie autos. The investment case rests more on scarcity and set-registry appeal than on player trajectory, as there is no active career momentum to drive speculative buying. Grading submission trends for mid-2000s Finest rookies have seen modest renewed interest as that era enters a nostalgia cycle, but this card remains a patient hold rather than an active momentum play.

1996-97 • Topps
Finest • #23

1996 • Topps
Finest • #280

1997 • Topps
Finest • #34

1997 • Topps
Finest • #10

1997 • Topps
Finest • #13