Showing posts with label Bruntlett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bruntlett. Show all posts

Monday, August 5, 2019

3rd Annual Doug's Big Night of Autographs (Part 2)

Here are the rest of the cards I created featuring Phillies alumni signing for Doug during Saturday night's Wall of Fame celebration.


Memory Lane - Past Induction Ceremonies/Alumni Weekends
2009 - Harry Kalas
2010 - Darren Daulton
2011 - John Kruk
2012 - Mike Lieberthal
2013 - Curt Schilling
2014 - Charlie Manuel
2015 - Pat Burrell
2016 - Jim Thome
2017 - Tribute to Jim Bunning, Dallas Green and Darren Daulton
2018 - Roy Halladay and Pat Gillick
2019 - Bobby Abreu (Part One and Two)

Sunday, August 12, 2018

Game 110 - Doug's Big Night of Autographs, The Sequel


Phillies 8, Marlins 3
Game 110 - Saturday Night, August 4th in Philadelphia
Record - 62-48, 1st place, 1 1/2 games ahead of the Braves

Another Post-Vacation Catch-Up, Part 1 of 7

One Sentence Summary:  Four home runs backed another impressive outing from Zach Eflin as the Phils downed the Fish, 8-3.

What It Means:  The win extended the Phillies' lead in the division to a game and a half over the Braves.

What Happened:  Nick Williams (15), Asdrubal Cabrera (19 overall, 1 with the Phillies), Carlos Santana (17) and Cesar Hernandez (9) all homered.  Eflin went eight strong innings, allowing 3 runs on 4 hits.

Featured Cards/Field Report:  We were fortunate enough to be able to take two separate vacations this summer and before leaving for vacation #2, Doug and I decided to attend the Phillies Wall of Fame ceremony for the late Roy Halladay and former General Manager Pat Gillick.  We really wanted to witness the ceremony (which was fantastic, as expected) but Doug also wanted to try to get some alumni autographs in the Hall of Fame Club.

It seemed much more crowded than last year (see link below) and Doug wasn't able to wiggle his way to the front of the roped off area outside the suite where the alumni were gathering . . . or so we thought they were gathering.  He just missed getting a Pat Gillick signature and managed autographs from Dickie Noles and Pete Mackanin before frustration and some boredom set in.

That's when I noticed that the players were leaving the suite by another door, mostly unnoticed, and heading down to a different suite.  With most autograph hunters positioned by the first door, the casual fans walking through the Hall of Fame Club didn't notice the alumni leaving by the second door.  But I did.

We stationed ourselves there and Doug was able to top his record from last year by gathering 20 autographs.  Players such as Clay Condrey, Scott Eyre, Pedro Feliz and Eric Bruntlett stood casually in the open while Doug asked them politely for an autograph.  Once other fans saw someone signing something, a slightly bigger crowd gathered.  Some of the returning players and coaches were happy to sign for Doug as long as he walked quickly with them to the second suite down the hall.  Brett Myers, Geoff Jenkins and Jamie Moyer were too quick for me to get pictures, but I managed to get a photo of Moyer from the back, featuring his glorious ponytail.

When the evening was through, Doug had collected autographs from most of the returning alumni, and I've included a legend above of his signed Wall of Fame print for our future reference.  (We're in the process of getting this framed.)  Some of the players/coaches lingered around long enough that he was able to get a second autograph to be included in my collection.  Eyre, Feliz, Rich Dubee and Milt Thompson signed photo cards for Doug along with his Wall of Fame print.  The prize of his collection was Pat Burrell.  Burrell personalized his Wall of Fame print from 2015 and he actually chatted a little with Doug before disappearing.  I don't know if Burrell signed for anyone else.

It was another memorable night, and we'll be back for more next year!  Of course I needed to make a very limited edition insert set to mark the occasion, and those cards are featured here.


Memory Lane - Past Induction Ceremonies/Alumni Weekends
2009 - Harry Kalas
2010 - Darren Daulton
2011 - John Kruk
2012 - Mike Lieberthal
2013 - Curt Schilling
2014 - Charlie Manuel
2015 - Pat Burrell
2016 - Jim Thome
2017 - Tribute to Jim Bunning, Dallas Green and Darren Daulton
2018 - Roy Halladay and Pat Gillick

Friday, January 1, 2010

Ex-Phils on the Move II

2010 Chachi Ex-Phillies #X9 Eric Bruntlett

Since early December, the following former Phillies have found new homes. Most of these transactions involve the players signing minor league contracts with invitations to Spring Training:

Marlon Byrd (2002-2005) - Signed with the Chicago Cubs.
Eric Bruntlett (2008-2009) - Signed a minor league deal with the Washington Nationals.
Jack Taschner (2009) - Signed a minor league deal with the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Rodrigo Lopez (2009) - Signed a minor league deal with the Arizona Diamondbacks.
Carlos Silva (2002-2003) - Traded to the Chicago Cubs from the Seattle Mariners for Milton Bradley.
Joe Thurston (2006) - Signed a minor league deal with the Atlanta Braves.
Geoff Geary (2003-2007) - Signed a minor league deal with the Texas Rangers.
R.J. Swindle (2008) - Signed a minor league deal with the Tampa Bay Rays.
Francisco Rosario (2007) - Signed a minor league deal with the Kansas City Royals.
Mike Cervenak (2008) - Signed a minor league deal with the New York Mets.
T.J. Bohn (2008) - Signed a minor league deal with the Chicago White Sox.

On the heals of the Houston Astros' signing of Pedro Feliz, Eric Bruntlett's departure represents the second player from the 2008 World Championship team to leave Philadelphia so far this offseason.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

2010 Chachi Prototype #EB Eric Bruntlett

2010: A Chachi Odyssey, Part 9
In which certain contenders are eliminated

This elimination may be a little controversial, but the 1972 Topps set was given the boot from consideration for the 2010 Chachi set.

Pros: It's 1972 Topps. It's super groovy and far out. Can you dig it?

Cons: I'll be the first one to say I love this baseball card set. It's quirky, it's got bizarre subsets (Pictures of Awards, Boyhood Photos, In Action cards that in some cases display no action) and who could argue with the Electric Company vibe of the design? In the end, I just don't know if I have it in me to create a 70 to 80-card Phillies set using just this design. And the card fronts don't feature the player's position - a virtual must for any good Chachi set.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

2009 Chachi #55 Eric Bruntlett HL

Phillies 9, Mets 7

Eric Bruntlett's day went a little something like this:

- He arrived at Citi Field to find his name in the starting line-up, giving Chase Utley a well-deserved day off.
- He singled in the 1st inning, coming around to score on a Carlos Ruiz 3-run home run.
- He singled in the 3rd inning.
- He singled in the 5th inning, matching his career high for hits in a game and raising his average to .154.
- According to second base umpire Rob Drake, he tripled in the 9th inning for his first career 4-hit game. Unfortunately for Eric, Jeff Francoeur had clearly caught the ball on the fly (Drake initially ruled Francoeur had trapped the ball), the umpires discussed, and Eric was ruled out. Charlie Manuel argued and was ejected from the game.
- In the bottom of the 9th, he booted two ground balls (only one was ruled an error) and spent roughly three minutes most likely looking for a hole to crawl into.

With Daniel Murphy on first (Bruntlett error) and Luis Castillo on second (Bruntlett boot), Jeff Francoeur came to the plate as the potential winning run. With the runners inexplicably running on the pitch, Francoeur hit a line drive straight up the middle. Eric was breaking to the bag to cover since Murphy was running . . . and he caught the line drive (1 out). He stepped on second to double up Castillo, who was just about to third base (2 outs). He then applied the tag to a stunned Murphy (3 outs) for the 15th unassisted triple play in Major League history. It was the second time in history a game has ended on an unassisted triple play. The Tigers' John Neun did it the first time back in 1927. Can you believe it?

Phillies win the game, Pedro returns to New York, Jayson Werth hits a 3-run home run . . . and Eric Bruntlett (Eric Bruntlett!) ends up in the history books. I love this game.

Friday, April 24, 2009

2009 Goose Joak Original Eric Bruntlett

I love this card. This card appeals to me as a Phillies fan, as a father, as a husband, as someone with a beard, and as someone who spends entirely too much time creating his own baseball cards.

Before starting this blog, I spent a lot of time surfing, reading, exploring and enjoying the baseball card blogs of others on the interwebs. Somehow, I stumbled upon Dave's Goose Joak blog and I spent several hours reviewing his custom creations from the past few months.

In January, Dave decided to launch his own original 2009 card set. You can read about the 2009 Goose Joak card set and the impetus behind the project here. You can enjoy the many Phillies cards appearing in the inaugural 2009 set here. Who would have thought my 2 favorite baseball card sets from 2009 would take their names from a few lucky dogs?

Saturday, April 11, 2009

2009 Chachi #13 Eric Bruntlett

Steve Bedrosian, Garry Maddox, John Kruk. None of these highly-regarded former Phillies had as impressive a beard as super utility man, #4 Eric Bruntlett, now has. It is a fantastic beard.

Phillies debut: April 3, 2008
Major League debut: June 27, 2003
Former team: Houston Astros 2003-2007
How acquired: Acquired from the Houston Astros with Brad Lidge for Michael Bourn, Geoff Geary and Mike Costanzo, November 7, 2007
2008 Postseason: Scored the game-winning runs in both Games 3 and 5 of the World Series.
Pictured: October 29, 2008 - World Series Game 5b, Eric crossing the plate in the 7th inning after Pedro Feliz' single knocked him in.