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Sunday, April 28, 2013

1987 Mike Schmidt Redux

Moving forward with the Mike Schmidt Redux Project

The picture: Nearing the end of his career, Schmidt delivered one of his most memorable highlights on April 18, 1987. Down 5-6 to the Pirates with two outs in the ninth in Pittsburgh, he smashed a Don Robinson offering into the left-field stands for 3 run home run for the 500th of his career.

2013 - Game 26

Saturday, April 27, 2013

2013 - Games 23 / 24 / 25

Thursday, April 25, 2013

On this day...

Rick Monday proves he is faster than Tommy Lasorda...

2013 - Games 21 / 22


Tuesday, April 23, 2013

2013 - Game 20

Monday, April 22, 2013

On this day.... John Kennedy arrives

On this day in 1957 John Kennedy becomes the first African American to play for the Phillies. Philadelphia was last National League franchise to integrate, waiting exactly 10 years and 7 days after Jackie Robinson first broke the major league color barrier for the Brooklyn Dodgers.

Ironically enough, the game was a Brooklyn Dodgers "home game" in Jersey City, NJ. It was also exactly 10 years to the day after Philadelphia's famously racist manager Ben Chapman mercilessly taunted rookie Jackie Robinson to the disgust of the entire civilized world. Kennedy entered the game in the top of the 8th inning as a pinch runner for Solly Hemus, who had doubled, but did not score. The Dodgers won the game 5-1.

The irony continues because Solly Hemus, the man Kennedy ran for, was later branded as a racial prejudiced manager. He was in charge of the St. Louis Cardinals and tried to tell Bob Gibson and Curt Flood they weren't good enough to make it as Major Leaguers and "should try something else".

A baseball nomad and Negro League veteran, Kennedy was an infielder for the Birmingham Black Barons in 1954 & 1955 where he was a teammate of the famous country music singer, Charley Pride. In 1956, he was with the Kansas City Monarchs and led the team with a .356 average, second-best in the Negro American League.

In 1957, Kennedy makes the the Phillies roster out of spring training, but will only get two major league at bats. When the Carolina League season launched in May, the Phillies sent Kennedy to their minor league (Class B) affiliate High Point, North Carolina, where he played with a 22 year old hot headed right handed pitcher named Dallas Green.

Kennedy continued to play baseball after leaving pro game, participating in an over-30 league in the late 1990s at the age of 70. John Kennedy died in April 27th, 1998 and is buried in his hometown of Jacksonville, Florida.

2013 - Games 17 / 18 /19


Friday, April 19, 2013

Schmidt scores from 1st on a wild pitch...

Very cool post yesterday on The Hardball Times celebrating the 25th anniversary of Mike Schmidt proving he was a better baseball player than both Gary Carter and David Cone.
With Von Hayes at the plate, Cone threw an offering that was off the mark—well off the mark. Mets catcher Gary Carter couldn’t get to it, and the offering sailed to the backstop. Schmidt naturally enough moved into second.

However, the ball kept ricocheting around and bounced all the way to near the Phillies dugout. Seeing this, Schmidt didn’t let up and galloped over to third. Carter kept having trouble corralling the ball, and that’s when Schmidt made his move.

2013 - Game 16


Thursday, April 18, 2013

My Cards - 2012 edition

Most of the time, the cards I display on this site are "custom" digital versions of something I have created. Recently I got an updated list of actual in production baseball cards utilizing pictures I have taken.

Here are the latest additions to "my collection" along with my original image.










2013 - Games 14 and 15


Tuesday, April 16, 2013

2013 - Game 13


Monday, April 15, 2013

Happy Birthday Pete Rose

Pete Rose turned 72 yesterday. Happy Birthday to the all-time hit king. Hopefully one day soon baseball can celebrate Pete's career with an overdue induction to the Hall of Fame.

2013 - Games 11 / 12


Saturday, April 13, 2013

2013 - Games 8 / 9 / 10

Getting caught up because I've been in New York for the last couple of days.


Tuesday, April 9, 2013

2013 - Game 7

It is only April...
It is only April...
It is only April

Monday, April 8, 2013

2013 - Game 6


Sunday, April 7, 2013

2013 - Game 5


Saturday, April 6, 2013

2013 - Game 4


Friday, April 5, 2013

When the Royals come to town..

...I can't think of anything but this.

Thursday, April 4, 2013

2013 - Game 3


Wednesday, April 3, 2013

2013 - Game 2

It is a cruel, cruel game

Last night in Houston, Yu Darvish stood on the doorstep of baseball history. The Texas Rangers $56 million dollar man was one out away from tossing the 24th perfect game in baseball history.

In his first start of the 2013 season, Yu had breezed through 8 2/3 innings striking out 14 batters. His pitch count was barely over 100 pitches and there was no chance the Rangers were going to take him out. He simply had to collect that 27th out, against the worst hitter in the worst lineup in the majors.

If he was a player on any other franchise, Marwin Gonzalez would be toiling in the minors rather than serving as the backup shortstop for the Houston Astros. The man has a career .662 OPS in the minors. Prior to last night, in 80 MLB games, Marwin had reached base only 28% of the time in his 219 career plate appearances. He has a -0.1 WAR (Wins Above Replacement) -- which technically qualifies him a shade below a "replacement player". I have nothing against Marwin Gonzalez, but he really has no business sitting in a major league clubhouse wearing a big league uniform.
Unless you play for the Mets, I will always root for the pitcher once a no-hitter reaches the ninth inning. The accomplishment is just that special. However, something changed last night for me. From the moment I received the breaking news update on my phone, I was openly cheering against Yu Darvish and this sham of a perfect game. Maybe it is because we had all gorged ourselves on too many no-no's last season... maybe it was the ridiculous number of Rangers fans that had made the trip down IH45 to Minute Maid Park for the second game of the season. Perhaps it is my belief that tossing a perfect game against the Houston Astros is the major league baseball equivalent of beating up a special needs kid (I'm looking at you Matt Cain).

No matter the reason, I was yearning to see any of these "Walking Dead" Astros to break this thing up. As the bottom of 9th inning was starting, I tweeted a prediction that Jason Castro would be the man to do it, but he grounded out to the shortstop. I couldn't bring myself to publicly predict that Carlos Corporan could do anything as he quickly grounded out to second. With two out, as Marwin Gonzalez walked up to the plate I resigned myself to the fact that this was going to happen.

Then Gonzalez quickly reminded me why there is no other game like baseball. Instead of working the count, he aggressively swung at the first pitch -- smacking his 49th career major league hit through Darvish's legs and safely into center field. In one moment Marwin restored my sense of fairness and joined David Freese on the "it really is a cruel, cruel game" list as compiled by Texas Rangers fans.


Tuesday, April 2, 2013

2013 - Game 1

Welcome to the 2013 baseball season! I absolutely love this time of year. Everything is new and anything is possible. The frustration and disappointment from last season has faded and my Phillies are ready to compete again for the pennant.

This morning I decided to kick off a season long crusade chronicling the game by game progress of the 2013 Philadelphia Phillies. This project is a bit more ambitious than my 2011 Photo of the Game adventure, but now the card template is done it is just a matter of staying on top of the schedule. If anything, this will certainly get me back into a more regular posting routine. Stay tuned all season long for daily updates.