Showing posts with label Co-Signers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Co-Signers. Show all posts

Friday, September 5, 2014

Matty Mo and Roger Rocket Together On One Card, For One Night Only.....

I picked up a really cool card this week from a fellow collector on Facebook.  This is my second copy of this card, I traded the other one for something really cool, and jumped at the chance to add this card back to my collection.  At one point, this was a pretty tough card, but Roger Clemens has kind of slid down the ladder a bit.....




The Morris signature is actually a little bit better on this copy and does not fade off at the end like my previous copy.  I am a big fan of the old Co-Signers autographs, even if sometimes the connection between the two players is a little bit hard to guess.   Clemens and Matt Morris?  They are both right-handed?  They are both wearing the same brand of shoes?  I'm not sure, but I am not sure it really matters.  Clemens (steroids or not) was one of the best pitchers I ever saw in person and Morris was a good Cardinals pitcher for nearly a decade.

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Matty Mo & Rocket Roger Co-Signers

I picked up a cool copy of a Tony Womack/Scott Spiezio Stadium Club Co-Signers autograph a few week ago and got on a slight kick with trying to find a few other Cardinals on some Co-Signers cards.  The search was a little bit slow at first, but I found a really cool one at a great price.  So, I wonder how Topps decided to put these two players on the same baseball card....


1998 Topps Stadium Club Co-Signers Matt Morris/Roger Clemens Autograph 


By themselves, both players are pretty cool.  Most people are more than familiar with Roger Clemens and need little to know introduction to the right handed pitcher.  Matt Morris had some nice seasons with the Cardinals in the late 90s and early 2000s, but bounced around between the Giants and Pirates at the end of career during a few more than forgettable seasons.  

I understand that both players are right-handed pitchers, but there is little to connect the pair outside of that one similarity.  They were both on different teams and they differed greatly in style.  Morris featured a big curve ball and was a successful ground ball pitcher.  Clemens struck out more than five thousand batters during his career.  

I took a quick glance over at Baseball Reference to see if Topps could have made a better combination of players on a Co-Signers card for Roger Clemens or Matt Morris.  The Cardinals really had a pretty poor pitching staff that year.  Sure, the offense was great, but Manny Aybar...No.  The Blue Jays actually offer a few combinations.  Namely two young pitchers on the 1998 Jays: Chris Carpenter and Roy Halladay.  How cool would a Clemens and Carpenter card be?  Halladay would be equally as sweet. 

Morris and Clemens are truly an odd combination, but a welcome addition to the collection.  

Sunday, May 26, 2013

1997 Topps Stadium Club Co-Signers Gregg Jefferies/Scott Rolen Autograph

In retrospect, I could think of many reasons why a Cardinals fan would put Scott Rolen and Gregg Jefferies on the same baseball card none of which are really great reason to remember a baseball player.  Gregg Jefferies came up with the Mets in the late 80s as a can't miss wonder prospect.  You know the kind that never fail and end up in the Hall of Fame shortly after their careers end.  Rolen came up in the mid 90s and was seem by Phillies fans as the next Mike Schmidt.  Both ended up on the Cardinals during the prime of their career making this card, though both are pictured on the Phillies, a cool collectible for Cardinals fans.


1997 Topps Stadium Club Co-Signers Scott Rolen Autograph 


Rolen is probably the more recognizable face on this card was a great young player when this card was issued.  Rolen spent his first half dozen seasons in Philadelphia where he won a few Gold Gloves and became one of the most feared offensive third baseman in the game.  He eventually had some differences with the management of the Phillies and was traded to the Cardinals in 2002 for Placido Polanco.  Rolen would continue to be recognized as the best all-around third baseman in the National League and probably could have won an MVP in 2004 if two other Cardinals players (Jim Edmonds and Albert Pujols) had not all had career years the same season.  In 2005, Rolen collided with the legendary Hee Seop Choi wrecking his shoulder and cutting short the prime years of Rolen's career.

The decreased production eventually led Rolen into a little squable with Tony LaRussa which led to his trade to the Blue Jays.  Rolen ended his career as a candidate for the Hall of Very Good Players and a nice contributor to some Reds teams the last two years.  While he helped the Cardinals win the 2006 World Series, he will always be remembered for his exit from the Cardinals (and the Phillies) more than some of the better moments in his career.  My favorite was always his 2004 NLCS home run off of Roger Clemens in Game 7.


1997 Topps Stadium Co-Signers Gregg Jefferies Autograph 


The other half of the card features Gregg Jefferies.  After a few years of not living up to his potential with the Mets, the team shipped him off to the Royals in exchange for Bret Saberhagen.  After one season with the Royals the team traded him to the Cardinals where he batted over .320 twice and made two National League All-Star teams.  Besides hitting .300 Jefferies excelled at throwing batting helmets and yelling frequently at anyone and everyone.  Great player, not a model of sportsmanship.   At the end of the 1994 season, Jefferies became a free agent and signed with the Phillies.  At the time the Cardinals were a low budget team, but according to almost everyone involved, the team actually tried to sign Gregg Jefferies.  Jefferies departure from the Cardinals allowed Topps to put together this fabulous card of a former top prospect, with what was at the time of the card's production, one of the current best prospects.  

Cardinals fans were not really happy that Jefferies bolted the team to sign with the Phillies, but he did not exactly play up to his contract with the Phillies.  The Cardinals took the money they saved on not signing Jefferies and picked up two-time American League All-Star, and St. Louis native, Scott Cooper and former Reds and Phillies ace Danny Jackson.  Neither player lived up to their contract with the Cardinals either.  

While these players are a little bit dubious in the eyes of Cardinals fans they were both above average players who made some good contributions to their teams during their time in St. Louis.  Rolen might be in the Hall of Fame if it were not for running into Hee Seop Choi.  Jefferies gave fans in St. Louis an All-Star player to watch during two of the leanest seasons in Cardinals history.  Not all Cardinals fans would love this card, but I am happy to give it a home.

106.

Blake Snell number 106 is just a red herring to make two other announcements.      Announcement #1- I have not written very often in this sp...