Showing posts with label 1991 o-pee-chee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1991 o-pee-chee. Show all posts

07 January 2012

no more double plays!

i am almost done with double play cards - at least in terms of weeding out the pretenders from the contenders for the upcoming 'greatest double play card of all time' tournament.  i still need to finish the seeding.  my goal is to get this going before 2012 cards start pouring out.  anyway here are a few more that i am considering.

1991 o-pee-chee marty barrett
landscape with a soiled bottom.  not bad.

1995 score gold rush rafael belliard
decent air.

1996 pinnacle sportflix alex rodriguez
yes kids, he used to play shortstop.  very well, in fact.

1997 upper deck had a bunch.  here's mark lewis
spring training pivot

mark loretta
two future dodgers! one had a big hit and one a big fizzle

chris snopek
with a bonus shot on the back
john valentin
chili looks to be a long way away from the base.

randy velarde
big mac comin' at you!  on the back too!
walt weiss
i think there will have to be an honorable mention award in the tourney named after walt weiss.  he has a bunch of nice dp cards.  kurt stillwell too, maybe.

2010 topps ozzie smith sp
graceful.

1997 pinnacle delino deshields
not graceful

1999 fleer tradition eric young
a turn so nice, the cubs player lowers his head in respect.

ok, that's enough.  look for the tourney later this month.

19 December 2011

the evolution of the right fielder, part 2

we begin part 2 (here's part 1 if you missed it or want a refresher) with perhaps one of the greatest right-handed hitters in dodger history, who was eventually traded away and revealed to be a 'clubhouse cancer'.  come to think of it, we'll end part 2 the same way.

pedro guerrero (1981-1982)
petey took over for the injured reggie smith in 1981, although he wound up finishing the season as the dodgers' third baseman.  guerrero's .300 season (an all-star season, at that) helped the dodgers advance to the postseason, where he was playing third in the nlds against the astros, too. he hit only .176 in that series, although he did have a big solo home run in game 4 to give the dodgers the lead.  he was worse in the nlcs against the expos while playing right and center, but came up big in the world series where he was one of the triumvirate of mvp's as the dodgers beat the yankees.

in 1982, guerrero had his first monster season.  he hit 32 home runs, drove in 100, stole 22 bases, hit .304 with a .914 ops and finished 3rd in the mvp voting.  however, with the loss of ron cey in the offseason, guerrero was moved to third base for 1983, opening the right field door for...
mike marshall (1983, 1985-1989)
man, i was ready for marshall.  he had won the aaa triple crown in 1981 with some monster numbers, and was hitting .388 in albuquerque when he was called up for good in 1982.  now with a full-time gig in right, i was looking forward to some huge big league numbers.  what we got was pretty good.  in 1983, marshall produced a line of 17/65/.284, and capped his season with a 10th inning walk-off grand slam against the reds in september.  then, after a year in left, marshall went 28/95/.293 in 1985.  he had some ups and downs the following four seasons as the dodgers' primary right fielder, but had a big up in game 2 of the 1988 world series.  he drove in 3 runs with a triple and a home run to keep the momentum going that kirk gibson had created in game 1.  after the 1989 season, the dodgers traded marshall to the mets.  before that, however, another dodger minor league wonder patrolled right field.

candy maldonado (1984)
while mike marshall spent his sabbatical in left field after the loss of dusty baker, candido maldonado played right. he hit .268 with 5 home runs in 116 games in 1984, before joining in the game of musical outfielders and moving to center in 1985.

hubie brooks (1990)
so, the dodgers traded marshall to the mets for juan samuel after the 1989 season, and then signed another former met to play right field for them in 1990.  brooks came in and hit 20 home runs, drove in 91, and had an average of .266.  and, for the third season in a row, struck out exactly 108 times.  then, for the second year in a row, the dodgers traded their primary right fielder to the mets and signed a former met to take his place.

darryl strawberry (1991-1992)
it was christmas in november when the dodgers signed strawberry.  his first season was decent - 28 home runs, 99 rbi, .265 average in 139 games, and he made the all-star team for the eighth straight year (and final time in his career).  he helped the dodgers win 93 games in 1991, although they finished a game behind the braves in the standings.  they were actually up 1 game with 4 to play, but lost 3 in a row to lose the nl west crown.  i recall some griping in the local rags about strawberry's performance in the last couple of losses, as he was just 1 for 8 with 3 strikeouts.

1992 was supposed to be better, but he missed a lot of time due to injury, as was the case in 1993. still, strawberry made more starts (39) than any of the other 9 players the dodgers used in right in 1992. then, in 1994, he failed to show up for the freeway series and was found to have entered rehab. 

cory snyder (1993)
in strawberry's absence, the corndog took over most of the right field responsibilities in 1993, making 107 starts there to go along with his other appearances all over the diamond.  he helped the dodgers get back to .500 after their historically bad 1992 season, but was only a temporary stopgap as the dodgers had rauuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuul ready to go.

raul mondesi (1994-1997, 1999)
mondesi won the rookie of the year award in 1994, and spent the next 3 seasons continuing to kick ass in right field.  he led the league in outfield assists in 1994 and 1995, and won gold gloves in '95 and '97.  1997 was the year he became the first dodger to reach 30/30, and he matched the feat in 1999 when he returned to right from a year as the dodgers' centerfielder.  1999 was also the year when he hit the most dramatic opening day home run since saxy's leadoff job in 1988.  in fact, he had 2 dramatic home runs that day.  first, with the dodgers down 6-3 in the bottom of the ninth in davey johnson's first game as manager, mondesi came up with two outs and two men on base.  he launched a 3-0 pitch into the bullpen to tie the game, and then, in the 11th, he hit a 2-run walk-off to win the game.  still, he was seen as tempermental and was traded to the blue jays in the offseason for shawn green.

gary sheffield (1998)
before we get to green (in part 3), we need to recognize that gary sheffield roamed in right for the dodgers in 1998 while mondesi was patrolling center for a season. or, at least part of a season, as that all happened after the mike piazza trade went down in may of '98.  as a dodger, sheffield played in 90 games in 1998, and hit .316 with a .979 ops.  his next three seasons (as the dodgers' leftfielder) were monsters, but he had worn out his welcome and was traded to the braves, just as pedro guerrero was traded to the cardinals in 1988.

11 September 2011

another dodger lurker

i was recently looking through my 1991 o-pee-chee set when i came across this card of yankee backstop and recent a's manager bob geren
which features a photo from a spring training game with dodger juan samuel sliding in to home.  it's always nice to see dodgers lurking on other people's cards, especially when they can turn a yankees card into a keeper for me.

i have a soft spot for samuel because i followed his early years as a second baseman with the phillies pretty closely.  by the time he came into the league for good in 1984, i was playing pretty much nothing but second base.  so, i paid a lot of attention to samuel, ryne sandberg, and of course steve sax.  by the time the dodgers acquired samuel in a december 1989 trade for alejandro pena and mike marshall, he was playing center field.

the dodgers moved him back to second base and he even made the all-star team there in 1991.  after that season, the dodgers re-signed him to a big free agent deal but wound up releasing him halfway into the 1992 campaign.

samuel has recently been a coach with the orioles (and was their interim manager for a while before buck showalter was hired late last season), and that's where i sent him some cards to sign through the mail.  he came through a couple of times.  here's his 1990 topps traded card
and a 1991 donruss
here's samuel's 1991 topps card (his o-pee-chee card looks the same)
i'm glad there are no yankees on it.

his 1991 upper deck card may well be my favorite card of samuel's from his tenure as a dodger
it shows samuel breaking for second in dodger stadium.  samuel did steal 38 bases in 1990, but was caught 20 times.
i also like his 1992 pinnacle card
which again features a dodger stadium photo along with a double play turn

his 1992 card is pretty generic when compared to the pinnacle
i assume samuel wore number 10 instead of 8 (which he wore for most of his time in philadelphia) because joey amalfitano was wearing 8 for the dodgers and didn't feel like giving it up.  whatever the reason, samuel took over the penguin's number from dave anderson who left for san francisco.  when anderson returned to the dodgers in 1992, either he didn't ask for 10 back, or samuel refused to give it up so he wore 12.  it must not have meant too much to andy, since he kept number 12 even after samuel was released.

finally, i sent a 1988 topps all star card
because i couldn't find a 1984 fleer and i wanted something from his days as a phillie when he was one of the most exciting players in the league. just like back then, samuel didn't disappoint.

thanks juan!

27 August 2011

nefariously upgraded!

it's been a long wait for bill travers.  he has sat on my nefarious 9 list as the 'bonus non-dodger card' for months.  he was there because, even though my 1977 topps set is not really very condition sensitive, the travers card i owned (which was pulled from the very first pack of baseball cards i ever opened) looked like this
a while back, someone said they were going to send me a copy, but alas, it was never received.  then, in a moment of weakness, i started buying 2011 topps and had a knack for pulling diamond giveaway cards.  a 1992 brian harvey all-star and a 2006 billy wagner wound up getting me this
sweet, sweet upgrade.  i will post another time about the other diamond giveaway goodies i redeemed. 

as for the rest of the nefarious 9, i have picked up a few other longtime residents, such as the 1991 o-pee-chee jose gonzalez
which is really bill bean, and a couple others courtesy of some recent trades (which i will post later as well).  so, the list is re-populated over on the right.  it's getting heavy with oddballs as i have decided to complete the dodgers' 1970 decade.  let me know if you can help!  you will be rewarded!

26 March 2010

topps or o-pee-chee?

the first time i did this, i went with an apparent text variation.  this time, take a look at this 1991 keith comstock card - it's a team variation, right?  classic o-pee-chee.
well, no.  it's a topps error.  o-pee-chee stopped doing the team variations after 1987 (you'd know that if you'd been following my other blog).  for some reason, topps jumped on the error bandwagon (and not the uer bandwagon, either) in 1991.  here's the o-pee-chee card, which is identical to the corrected topps version (on the front, anyway)
comstock had no affiliation with the cubs during his 6-year major league career, which ended after just one-third of an inning in 1991.

07 March 2009

a 2009 goose joak original in the o-pee-chee spirit

i am a big fan of o-pee-chee cards. more specifically, of the variations they created when a player switched teams in the off season. i have posted about them here and here and here and even one here.

so, while putting together some more 2009 goose joak originals, i decided to forego the images coming from spring training and do some o-pee-chee tribute for a veteran spring training invitee.

i give you the 2009 goose joak original doug mientkiewicz.it's more of a 70's/80's o-pee-chee tributethan a 90's one.i don't know why they stopped changing the card design to reflect the player's new team in the '90's.

anyway, i am actually a big mientkiewicz fan, having watched him during his time here in minnesota. he was a big fan favorite, despite the fact that he publicly called out manager tom kelly, and has remained so even after his departure to the red sox and beyond.

doug has been a one and done player since leaving the twins, spending half of 2004 with the red sox, 2005 with the mets, 2006 with the royals, 2007 with the yankees, and 2008 with the pirates.

here's hoping he wins a spot (as long as he deserves it) backing up loney and blake.