As the sequel to Topps' ground-breaking release the year before, 1994 Topps Finest Baseball further cemented the brand's legacy as a hobby innovator.
Released as a counter to Upper Deck's SP and Fleer's Flair brands, Finest gave Topps a footprint in the super-premium segment of the hobby.
And it brought two key innovations along with it...
1993 Finest Baseball gave the hobby its first look at chromium base cards and refractor parallels.
Many sports card products still utilize those features to this day.
But they can all trace their roots to 1993 Finest Baseball.
Needless to say, way back when 1994 Finest Baseball began hitting store shelves, collectors couldn't wait to see what Topps had in store for a follow-up.
While there weren't any innovations on par with the brand's debut, Topps more than doubled the checklist to 440 cards.
Of course, the design and quality remained sky-high.
And in this guide, we'll take a look at the 15 most valuable.
Let's jump right in!
1994 Topps Finest #241 Bo Jackson
Estimated PSA 10 Gem Mint Value: $150
Bo Jackson's baseball days ended with little fanfare but plenty of perspective.
Named Sporting News AL Comeback Player of the Year in 1993, Jackson declined arbitration with the Chicago White Sox to join the California Angels on a one-year deal.
At this point, the 31-year-old's mobility was severely compromised by a chronic hip problem.
However, he still had plenty of patience and pop to make a difference.
In 75 games for the Halos, Jackson set career highs in batting average (.279) and on-base percentage (.344).
He looked comfortable with the team that initially drafted him, and it translated to 13 home runs and 43 RBIs in just 201 at-bats.
The Angels lumbered to a 47-68 record before the strike wiped the season out.
However, Jackson seemed quite content.
So, when '95 Spring Training was delayed due to the labor dispute, Bo put his phone down and announced his retirement, ending one of the most unique pro sports careers of all time on a high note.
1994 Topps Finest #232 Ken Griffey Jr.
Estimated PSA 10 Gem Mint Value: $125
The 1994 season had plenty of enthralling storylines wiped out by the labor stoppage.
One was the high-octane battle for the Majors' home run title.
Six players sat within seven homers of each other at the time of the strike: Albert Belle (36), Barry Bonds (37), Frank Thomas (38), Jeff Bagwell (38), Ken Griffey Jr. (40), and Matt Williams (43).
Of the seven, Griffey felt like a betting favorite despite sitting three back with six weeks or so to play.
Sadly, he was cheated out of finishing what was arguably his best individual season.
His 1.076 OPS, 171 OPS+, and .674 slugging percentage are career bests.
He may have set other career highs if games had gone on as planned.
Instead, Griffey won the AL home run title by default, ceding the MLB crown to Williams.
He also finished second in the league MVP race to Frank Thomas, picking up three first-place votes to Thomas' 24.
1994 Topps Finest #201 Tony Gwynn
Estimated PSA 10 Gem Mint Value: $80
The 1994 MLB strike robbed us of so much.
We didn't get a postseason.
We didn't get a World Series.
And we didn't see the stirring conclusion of the last great .400 chase.
San Diego Padres legend Tony Gwynn was at the peak of his hitting powers in 1994, topping the magic mark as late as May 15th.
While he didn't get back there for the remainder of the year, he hovered nearby.
Nobody had reached .400 since the immortal Ted Williams in 1941.
While Gwynn remained unsure, many of his contemporaries believed he was the one to pull it off.
"Tony can hit .400 if anyone can," teammate Fred McGriff said.
On August 6th, Gwynn sat at .389.
He went 9-for-18 over the next four games, lifting his average to .394.
It was his best since June 1st.
One or two more hot weeks could have pushed him over the top.
As it was, Gwynn got a consolation prize: his fifth NL batting title.
1994 Topps Finest #392 Don Mattingly
Estimated PSA 10 Gem Mint Value: $75
Don Mattingly had his first October appearance ripped away by the 1994 labor stoppage.
The young New York Yankees had finally turned a corner.
Seemingly in a perpetual rebuild over Mattingly's first twelve years with the club, the '94 Bombers represented the captain's best chance of getting a ring or at least a taste of postseason baseball.
Despite losing their last three games, New York entered the August 12th strike as leaders of the AL East at 70-43.
They stood 6.5 games ahead of the Orioles, and the first-ever AL Wild Card spot lurked as a fallback plan.
Mattingly's production mirrored the rise of his young teammates.
He hit over .300 for the first time since 1989 (.304) with a new career-best .397 on-base percentage.
He wasn't hitting home runs like he used to, but he was a fantastic table-setter for a potent Yankees lineup.
Everything was lined up for the Yankees' first postseason since 1981.
And then...
...nothing.
1994 Topps Finest #204 Kirby Puckett
Estimated PSA 10 Gem Mint Value: $65
When you think of the glory days of the Minnesota Twins, it's hard not to think of Kirby Puckett's smiling face.
After all, Puckett joyfully shouldered the Twins to two World Series championships in 1987 and 1991.
Not only that, but the Hall-of-Famer's name is also stamped all over the franchise record books.
Puckett notched his 2,000th career hit early in the '94 campaign.
A couple of months later, he took over sole possession of the Twins' all-time record, passing the great Rod Carew with a three-hit day.
"Rodney was definitely an idol of mine," Puckett said. ". He was a first baseman for the Angels when I came up, and I talked to him every chance I could about hitting."
Puckett ended the year with 139 base knocks in 108 games, a pace that would have notched him a fifth 200-hit campaign over a regular 162-game schedule.
He ended his career with 2,304 hits, over 200 clear of Carew's previous mark (2,085).
1994 Topps Finest #223 Rickey Henderson
Estimated PSA 10 Gem Mint Value: $65
No matter how often he left, Rickey Henderson was an inextricable part of Oakland baseball.
And he left a lot.
The all-time stolen base king played parts of 14 seasons with the A's over four different stints.
He played with eight other teams in the eleven campaigns that he did not wear the trademark green and gold.
In 1994, Henderson rejoined the A's for his third go-around.
Going nowhere at the '93 Trade Deadline, Oakland dealt Henderson to Toronto on essentially a rental deal.
Despite poor production from their new leadoff hitter, the Jays won their second title in a row.
During the offseason, the 35-year-old outfielder sidestepped offers from multiple teams to once again return to his Coliseum roots.
"This was always a possibility from the moment Rickey was traded last July," A's GM Sandy Alderson said.
Despite some injury issues, Henderson had a solid year, hitting .260 with 22 stolen bases and a 111 OPS+ in 87 games.
1994 Topps Finest #235 Cal Ripken Jr.
Estimated PSA 10 Gem Mint Value: $65
The guy credited for bringing baseball back after the 1994 MLB strike did quite fine for himself before it.
Baltimore Orioles shortstop Cal Ripken Jr. entered the '94 season just over 200 games behind Lou Gehrig for the all-time consecutive games streak.
He weathered injuries, slumps, and personal concerns to keep the counter running at all costs.
It sure helped that he was the best-hitting shortstop in the American League.
Awarded his third Silver Slugger in four years and eighth overall, Ripken slashed .315/.364/.459 with 13 home runs and 75 RBIs in 112 games.
Most importantly, the Orioles sat at 63-49 and within shouting distance of the Yankees in the AL East and just a couple of games back of the first-ever AL Wild Card spot.
It was shaping up to be one heck of a playoff race.
Ripken would also get to play just under 50 more games, setting up his potential record-breaker for the summer of '95.
Instead, the rest of the season disappeared.
1994 Topps Finest #78 Mark McGwire
Estimated PSA 10 Gem Mint Value: $55
Mark McGwire found himself at rock bottom of his professional baseball career in 1994.
And it was all due to injuries.
In 1993, the Oakland A's first baseman missed all but 27 games with a left heel injury.
Details about McGwire's condition remained vague as the season went on, which only raised the ire of both media members and fans in the Bay Area.
1994 didn't start any better.
While McGwire's heel seemed to be in solid shape to start Spring Training, his back was not.
The 30-year-old missed time to heal up, and once he returned, the heel started acting up again.
McGwire missed six weeks of the season with a stress fracture and was ultimately forced out of action for good on July 26th after tearing even more tissue.
Overall, the future Home Run King played just 47 games in 1994 due to his various ailments, slashing .252/.413/.474 with nine home runs and 25 RBIs.
1994 Topps Finest #136 Ozzie Smith
Estimated PSA 10 Gem Mint Value: $50
We talk about assists a lot in basketball.
We should pay more attention to them in baseball, too.
According to the MLB rulebook, any fielder who registers a touch earns an assist before a putout is recorded.
This includes turning double plays, relay throws, and more.
On July 14th, 1994, St. Louis Cardinals shortstop Ozzie Smith moved into second on the all-time list with four assists against the Colorado Rockies.
His 8,375 helpers are the most by a player in the post-World War II era.
Smith's acrobatics at short were why "The Wizard" nickname stuck so well.
However, his dependability at the infield's most vital position secured him thirteen consecutive Gold Gloves from 1980 to 1992.
By 1994, Cincinnati's Barry Larkin usurped Smith as the NL's perennial Gold Glove recipient.
However, he remained a marvel of defensive efficiency with one of the game's most valuable glove/arm combos.
1994 Topps Finest #203 Frank Thomas
Estimated PSA 10 Gem Mint Value: $50
Frank Thomas' 1994 season was a massive achievement, small sample size notwithstanding.
The Chicago White Sox first baseman/DH was the equivalent of a hitting cyborg among men.
He led all batters in runs (106) and walks (109) and topped the AL in OPS+ (212) and slugging (.729) among other categories.
The 26-year-old placed second in the Junior Circuit with 38 home runs and crossed 100 RBIs (101) in just 113 games.
For players never connected to steroids, Thomas' 1.217 OPS sits just behind Ted Williams' 1941 and 1957 campaigns for the best single-season outputs of all time.
In terms of repeat bids by a reigning MVP, the only parallel you can speak of is Barry Bonds' unparalleled (yet tainted) run from 2001 through 2004.
When the strike struck and the season was canceled, there was little suspense in the awards race.
Thomas took home 24 of 28 first-place votes, becoming the 11th player in MLB history to be named Most Valuable Player in back-to-back campaigns.
1994 Topps Finest #210 Ryne Sandberg
Estimated PSA 10 Gem Mint Value: $50
Chicago Cubs second baseman Ryne Sandberg was notorious for starting slow.
It was almost a rite of April passage at Wrigley.
Ryno stumbled out of the gate before playing like an MVP the rest of the way.
1994 was different, though.
Sandberg looked spent from day one.
The 14-year veteran slumped through the first month and wore his dejection on his sleeve.
May didn't offer much better, and Sandberg, unwilling to let it go any further, abruptly pulled the brakes.
Leaving $16 million in salary behind, Sandberg announced his retirement on June 13th, 1994.
"The reason I retired is simple," Sandberg said. "I lost the desire that got me ready to play on an everyday basis for so many years."
Sandberg had every intention of quitting.
However, he caught the itch again after visiting the club during the team's final home series of 1995.
By Spring Training the following year, the Hall-of-Famer was back in a Cubs uniform.
1994 Topps Finest #222 Jose Canseco
Estimated PSA 10 Gem Mint Value: $50
The Texas Rangers finally got the Jose Canseco they'd hoped for in 1994.
Once they did, they sold high as quickly as they could.
After a passable yet subpar 1993 season, Canseco locked in and rejoined the ranks of the AL's best power hitters.
Officially moved out of right field into a full-time DH role, the 29-year-old thrived, hitting 30 home runs (31) for the first time since 1991.
And he did so in a strike-shortened 111 games.
The rest of Canseco's numbers were just as encouraging.
His .386 on-base percentage and .939 OPS were his best since his 1988 MVP campaign.
Canseco also posted an impressive 3.0 WAR despite not playing in the field, striking out 114 times, and grounding into an MLB-worst 20 double plays.
Despite Canseco's faults, he was still a dangerous middle-of-the-order presence.
The Rangers used that to their advantage at the negotiation table, shipping him off to Boston before the '95 campaign in exchange for Otis Nixon and Luis Ortiz.
1994 Topps Finest #209 Greg Maddux
Estimated PSA 10 Gem Mint Value: $45
When you put Greg Maddux's 1994 NL Cy Young season under a microscope, it may very well be the greatest pitching performance of the modern era.
In 1992, Maddux's first of four consecutive Cy Young campaigns, MLB teams averaged 4.12 runs and .72 home runs per game.
In '94, those totals soared to 4.92 runs and 1.03 home runs per contest.
Although total offense was up nearly 40%, Maddux's ERA dropped from 2.18 in '92 to a league-leading 1.56.
To put that into perspective, the league-average ERA in '94 was 4.21.
Bob Gibson's 1968 campaign is often used as a benchmark for great single-season pitching performances.
His 1.14 ERA in 304.2 innings remained mind-boggling.
Yet, Gibson's historic showing came in the "Year of the Pitcher" when scoring was at its nadir.
Comparatively, Maddux's 1.56 ERA in '94 is right there with Gibson's performance when adjusted to the era.
The Atlanta Braves ace posted an ERA at 37.1% of the league average, compared to 37.6% for Gibson.
1994 Topps Finest #230 Barry Bonds
Estimated PSA 10 Gem Mint Value: $40
In 1994, it felt like Barry Bonds was competing against himself for MVP honors.
After winning the NL award in three of the previous four seasons, Bonds set a sky-high bar for himself to clear.
Voter fatigue was real, and it didn't help that the San Francisco Giants star was standoffish with seemingly everyone.
That's not to say that he deserved the award every year.
In fact, the voters got it right in '94 when they unanimously chose Houston's Jeff Bagwell.
Bagwell had a better year than Bonds in the most impactful metrics, including OPS, runs, and RBIs.
However, it's perplexing that Bonds fell all the way to fourth in the balloting.
His 6.2 WAR trailed only Bagwell among NL position players, as did his 1.073 OPS.
You can argue that his teammate, Matt Williams, earned his runner-up finish with an MLB-best 43 home runs.
Yet, Bonds objectively had a better overall year at the plate and received only half of Williams' voting share.
1994 Topps Finest #1 Mike Piazza
Estimated PSA 10 Gem Mint Value: $35
You can stack Mike Piazza's first three campaigns against anyone else in history, and they'd hold their own.
That's how great the Los Angeles Dodgers catcher was from 1993 to 1995.
In '93, Piazza ran away with NL Rookie-of-the-Year honors, putting together one of the best offensive debuts for a catcher and any first-year player.
He followed that up with a brilliant sophomore effort in '94.
The 25-year-old slashed .319/.370/.541 during the strike-shortened campaign, with 24 home runs and 92 RBIs in 107 games.
It was good enough for a sixth-place MVP finish and his second consecutive Silver Slugger award.
One year later, Piazza placed fourth in the MVP balloting and grabbed another Silver Slugger with a .346 average.
Add it all up, and nobody other than Babe Ruth and Ted Williams has hit as many home runs (91) with as high of a batting average (.327) in their first three full seasons.
1994 Topps Finest Baseball Cards In Review
Topps did not disappoint with the design and quality of this set.
The chromium continued to impress collectors throughout the hobby and the refractors only added to the overall excitement.
And you'll notice that cards come in one of two designs, both of which pack incredible eye appeal.
Most cards in the set, like the Mark McGwire, Bo Jackson, Ozzie Smith and Don Mattingly cards shown in this article, feature the standard design.
However, both Series 1 and 2 contained 40 cards that feature special backgrounds with circular, multi-color figures radiating from behind the player.
The breakdown of these 80 cards includes 20 rookies from 1993 (#1-20), 40 veterans (#201 - 240) and 20 rookies from 1994 (#421-440).
I've always wondered how Topps created that list of 40 veterans.
Many of them are no-brainers.
Guys like Cal Ripken Jr., Rickey Henderson, Tony Gwynn and many more were all but guaranteed future Hall of Famers by 1994.
But some guys like Travis Fryman, Marquis Grissom, Darren Daulton, and others probably could have been left out.
That case is especially strong when you consider that other no-doubt future Hall of Famers, like Wade Boggs, Ozzie Smith, and Eddie Murray, were left out in place of them.
Even big names like Bo Jackson, Don Mattingly, and Mark McGwire would have made more sense than some who were included.
No offense to any of those who were included, it's just an observation.
And it's always interesting to look back on any set, really, and ponder these kinds of things.
Regardless, the 1994 Finest Baseball set was a successful sequel to the iconic brand's landmark debut and continued to pave the way for future hobby innovation.