Showing posts with label Wagner B.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wagner B.. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Philadelphia Phillies at Houston Astros - Messing with Texas

2005 Topps #117
2005 Topps #381

Tuesday, June 24th - 8:10
Wednesday, June 25th - 8:10
Thursday, June 26th - 2:10


Daikin Park - Houston, TX

The Astros host a Dollar Dog Night tonight at the ballpark formerly known as Enron Field (2000-02), Astros Field (2002, briefly) and Minute Maid Park (2002-24).
Philadelphia Phillies 47-31
1st Place in the N.L. East, 1 game ahead of the Mets

Phillies Probables
Ranger Suarez (6-1, 2.20)
Cristopher Sanchez (6-2, 2.87)
Zack Wheeler (7-2, 2.61)

Phillies Leaders
Average:  Trea Turner - .300
Runs:  Kyle Schwarber - 57
Home Runs:  Kyle Schwarber - 24
RBIs:  Kyle Schwarber - 55
Stolen Bases:  Trea Turner - 19

Wins:  Jesus Luzardo and Zack Wheeler - 7
ERA:  Zack Wheeler - 2.61
Strikeouts:  Zack Wheeler - 118
Saves:  Jordan Romano - 8
Houston Astros 45-33
1st Place in the N.L. West, 5 games ahead of the Mariners

Astros Probables
Framber Valdez (8-4, 3.09)
Colton Gordon (2-1, 4.54)
Hunter Brown (8-3, 1.88)

Astros Leaders
Average:  Jeremy Pena - .326
Runs:  Jeremy Pena - 47
Home Runs:  Isaac Paredes - 16
RBIs:  Isaac Paredes - 45
Stolen Bases:  Jeremy Pena - 15

Wins:  Hunter Brown and Framber Valdez - 8
ERA:  Hunter Brown - 1.88
Strikeouts:  Hunter Brown - 109
Saves:  Josh Hader - 19

Saturday, February 15, 2025

Hall of Fame Class of 2025: Phillies Cards

2009 Upper Deck Goodwin Champions #15
2004 Topps Pristine #7

As is usually the case each January, I let this blog go mostly dormant with the exception of posting a daily 2024 Chachi card.  Before spring training starts in earnest, I wanted to revisit something I used to do annually whenever a new class of Hall of Famers was announced.  For each new class of Hall of Fame inductees, I go through my Phillies Collection and see how many cards of each I have.  This would mean the new Hall of Famer is typically featured on a multi-player card with a Phillies player, or in the case of Dick Allen and Billy Wagner, the new Hall of Famer actually spent time with the Phillies.

This exercise is a little easier this year as I'm proud to report my entire Phillies Collection is now tracked in a massive Excel schedule, AND also available for me to browse and search on the Trading Card Database.  I started updating my collection at TCDB a few years ago, and with the Phillies and Complete Sets collections now updated, I'll turn my attention to the "Everything Else" catch-all category.

Here's a look at Cooperstown's 2025 class, and the baseball cards I have of them in my Phillies Collection.

Dick Allen - I have 55 cards of Allen in my Phillies Collection, and 65 cards of the slugger overall.  Back in December, I posted a gallery of his Topps flagship cards here, and I've also liked this 2009 Upper Deck card of his.

Dave Parker - Parker shows up twice in my Phillies Collection.  He's on a strange 1982 Fleer Stamps issue, pointing at the camera and putting his arm around a hesitant Steve Carlton.  He also shares space with Pete Rose and Bill Madlock on a 1984 Topps Active Career Leaders subset card.

CC Sabathia - Sabathia shows up twice on 2011 Topps Diamond Duos insert cards with Carlton and Cliff Lee.  My all-time favorite memory involving Sabathia can be found here.

Ichiro Suzuki - Ichiro shares a card with Richie Ashburn in the 2007 Topps Heritage Then and Now insert set, and he's on an incredibly random "Classic Combo" card with Chase Utley in the 2007 Topps Update set.

Billy Wagner - And finally, I have 40 cards of closer Wagner in my Phillies Collection, given he appeared in 120 games with the club in 2004 and 2005.  59 of Wagner's 422 career saves came while wearing a Phillies uniform, which is his third most by franchise behind the Astros and Mets.  Browsing a gallery of Wagner's Phillies cards, this 2004 Topps Pristine card is my favorite, non-team issue card of his.  His 2005 Topps flagship card is a close second.

1982 Fleer
Stamps #241
2011 Topps Diamond Duos #DD-23
2007 Topps Heritage Then and Now #TN7
2007 Topps Update #UH279

Monday, October 3, 2022

Phillies at Astros: October 3rd to October 5th

2022 Chachi 2000 Topps Missing Links #30
2000 Topps #129

Monday and Tuesday 8:10, Wednesday 4:10

Minute Maid Park - Houston, TX

At the Ballpark:  All fans receive a Dusty Baker ALCS replica ring on Monday night.  Tuesday night is a Dollar Dog Night at the ballpark and Wednesday afternoon is the Astros' Fan Appreciation Day.

Phillies 86-73
3rd Place in the N.L. East, 14 games behind the Braves

Phillies Probables
Aaron Nola (10-13, 3.36)
Ranger Suarez (10-6, 3.37)
Bailey Falter (6-4, 3.90)

Phillies Leaders
Average:  Alec Bohm - .282
Runs:  Kyle Schwarber - 98
Home Runs:  Kyle Schwarber - 44
RBIs:  Kyle Schwarber - 92
Stolen Bases:  J.T. Realmuto - 21

Wins:  Zack Wheeler - 12
ERA:  Aaron Nola - 3.36
Strikeouts:  Aaron Nola - 226
Saves:  Corey Knebel - 12
Astros 104-55
1st Place in the A.L. West, 16 1/2 games ahead of the Mariners
Astros Probables
Lance McCullers (4-1, 2.38)
Justin Verlander (17-4, 1.80)
Framer Valdez (16-6, 2.89)

Astros Leaders
Average:  Yordan Alvarez - .301
Runs:  Jose Altuve - 102
Home Runs:  Yordan Alvarez - 37
RBIs:  Kyle Tucker - 104
Stolen Bases:  Kyle Tucker - 25

Wins:  Justin Verlander - 17
ERA:  Justin Verlander - 1.80
Strikeouts:  Cristian Javier - 194
Saves:  Ryan Pressly - 32

Monday, October 24, 2016

2016 Chachi #71 Leading Firemen - Gomez, Neris, Mariot


Perhaps the hardest thing to watch during the latter part of the Phillies season was the complete implosion of Jeanmar Gomez as the team's closer.  Unofficially removed from the closer's roll during the final weeks of September, Gomez tallied a 19.13 ERA (17 earned runs in 8 innings) over his final 12 games.  The emergence (and dominance) of Hector Neris as an extremely effective late inning reliever means that he's probably one of the few pitchers guaranteed a spot in the team's 2017 bullpen.

Memory Lane - Chachi Leading Firemen Cards
2005 - Billy Wagner, 38
2006 - Tom Gordon, 34
2007 - Brett Myers, 21
2008 - Brad Lidge, 41
2009 - Brad Lidge, 31
2010 - Brad Lidge, 27
2011 - Ryan Madson, 32
2012 - Jonathan Papelbon, 38
2013 - Jonathan Papelbon, 29
2014 - Jonathan Papelbon, 39
2015 - Jonathan Papelbon, 17 (no card created)
2016 - Jeanmar Gomez, 37
2005 Chachi #59
2006 Chachi #68
2007 Chachi #66
2008 Chachi #62

Sunday, March 17, 2013

2005 Topps Phillies

2005 Topps #550, #194, #689 and #481
I recently covered my detour from baseball card collecting in 2005.  Revisiting my 2005 Topps set and the few cards within my 2005 Phillies binder, I honestly felt as if I had never seen some of the cards before.  This is definitely my collecting black hole year.

The Set
2005 Topps #44 (Back)
Number of cards in the set:  There are a total of 733 cards in both series of the set, with card #7 getting omitted again to honor Mickey Mantle.  The traded set was rechristened as the Update and Highlights set, and it contained 330 cards.  The combined 1,063 cards breaks the record set in 2001 when Topps issued a combined 1,055 cards in its base and traded sets.
My very brief thoughts on the set:  Holy smokes, the set's designers just went for it didn't they?  To summarize - Gold foil big names on the top, sideways player name and team name on the sides and team script logo with gold foil year and Topps logo on the bottom.  To tie it all together, there are two team color coded interlocking lines surrounding the player photo.  It's like they had ideas for two or three different card designs and just decided to combine all of them at once.  In preparation for this post, I flipped through the set a few times and I still can't figure out if I absolutely love or hate this design.  I think I'm just confused by it.
Notable competition:  This was the final year that Fleer issued baseball cards under its own banner as the company was acquired by Upper Deck in time for some 2006 releases.  As a result, there were only a handful of Fleer sets issued in 2005, but still a ton of Playoff, Topps and Upper Deck sets.

2005 Topps #170, #76, #44 and #420
2005 Phillies
Record and finish:  New manager Charlie Manuel did a little better than his predecessor, guiding the Phillies to a 88-74 finish, two games behind the Braves in the N.L. East and a game behind the Astros for the N.L. Wild Card.  They were in the hunt for a postseason berth until the final weekend of the season.
2005 Topps #117
Key players:  Once again, Pat Burrell (.281, 32 home runs, 117 RBIs) and Bobby Abreu (.286, 24 home runs, 102 RBIs) had fantastic seasons.  Abreu took the spotlight at the All-Star Game, winning the Home Run Derby with a then record 41 home runs.  Jim Thome was placed on the disabled list on July 1st with right elbow tendinitis, ending his season.  His replacement, rookie Ryan Howard, hit .288 with 22 home runs and 63 RBIs on his way to being named the N.L. Rookie of the Year.  Second baseman Chase Utley enjoyed his first full season as a starter, hitting .291 with 28 home runs and 105 RBIs.  New acquisition Jon Lieber led the pitching staff with 17 wins and Billy Wagner bounced back from injury to record 38 saves.
Key events:  For the first time in 73 years, the Phillies had three players with at least 100 RBIs - Burrell, Utley and Abreu.  Jimmy Rollins ended the season with a 36-game hitting streak.  It would reach 38 games at the start of the 2006 season.

2005 Phillies in 2005 Topps
Cards needed for a complete team set:  There are 27 Phillies cards in the base Topps set and another 13 Phillies cards in the Update & Highlights set.
Who's in:
  • Cards of the eight starting position players - 7 cards
#170 Mike Lieberthal (c), #481 Chase Utley (2b), #76 Jimmy Rollins (ss), #44 David Bell (3b), #550 Pat Burrell (lf), #420 Kenny Lofton (cf), #194 Bobby Abreu (rf)

First baseman Howard is in the set, but he's on a multi-player Prospects card with Cole Hamels.  Hamels spent the '05 season with High-A Clearwater and Double-A Reading.

2005 Topps Update #UH63, 2005 Topps #69, #588 and #630
  • Cards of the starting pitching rotation - 5 cards
#UH63 Jon Lieber, #69 Brett Myers, #588 Cory Lidle, #630 Vicente Padilla, #11 Randy Wolf
  • Base cards of players who played with the Phillies in 2005 - 13 cards
#2 Placido Polanco, #25 Jim Thome, #117 Billy Wagner, #257 Tim Worrell, #430 Ryan Madson, #482 Todd Pratt, #492 Tomas Perez, #514 Jason Michaels, #525 Marlon Byrd, #582 Gavin Floyd, #UH4 Michael Tucker, #UH78 Endy Chavez, #UH80 Ugueth Urbina
  • Base cards of players who didn't play with Phillies in 2005 - 4 cards
#64 Doug Glanville, #312 Chris Roberson, #UH287 Kelvin Pichardo, #UH288 Scott Mitchinson
  • Phillies appearing on Prospects cards - 2 cards, #689 Ryan Howard and Cole Hamels, #UH100 Greg Golson
  • Phillies appearing on Draft Pick cards - 2 cards, #686 Michael Bourn and #UH330 Mike Costanzo
  • Phillies appearing on Season Highlights cards - 1 card, #UH113 Bobby Abreu
  • Phillies appearing on 2005 League Leaders cards - 1 card, #UH143 Pat Burrell
  • Phillies appearing on 2005 MLB All-Star cards - 1 card, #UH185 Bobby Abreu
  • Phillies appearing on 2005 Home Run Derby cards - 1 card, #UH195 Bobby Abreu
  • Team card - 1 card, #659
  • Manager cards - 2 cards, #288 Larry Bowa and #UH87 Charlie Manuel
2005 Topps Update
#UH195
Abreu received three cards commemorating his appearance at the 2005 All-Star Game, which is probably two cards too many.  Despite having been fired with two games remaining in the 2004 season, Bowa received a manager card in series one.  Back then, series one was still being released in November, so this is understandable.  However, the card back credits Bowa with a 86-76 managerial record in 2004 when in fact interim manager Gary Varsho guided the team for their final two games.

Who's out:  This was another good effort from Topps in terms of player selection.  Of course, they had 1,063 cards with which to work!  As is usually the case, it's the relievers who got left out.  Aaron Fultz (2.24 ERA in 62 games) had a fantastic year but he had to share his Topps Total card with Rheal Cormier, who was also left out of the flagship set completely.  Robinson Tejada (4-3 in 13 starts) and Geoff Geary (3.72 ERA in 40 games) also deserved cards.  Shane Victorino made his Phillies debut on September 3rd, so it would have been cool if he had somehow made it into the Update set.
Phillies on other teams:  Only Matt Kata (#71 with the Diamondbacks) didn't get a Phillies card in the Update set.  All of these guys did - Michael Tucker (#14 with the Giants), Jon Lieber (#149 with the Yankees), Endy Chavez (#511 with the Nationals) and Ugueth Urbina (#567 with the Tigers).
What's he doing here:  I'm getting fairly predictable in this category, as once again the honors for my "what's he doing here" go to prospects Pichardo and Mitchinson.  Pichardo was shipped to the Giants in August in the Michael Tucker trade and never reached the Majors. Australian Mitchinson never pitched above A-ball in his six years in the minors.
Cards that never were candidates:  I'd give Howard his own card, and I'd add cards for Fultz, Cormier, Tejada, Geary and Victorino.
Favorite Phillies card:  There are a lot of great action shots in this group of Phillies cards featuring the brand new Citizens Bank Park in the background, but it's hard to find a better card in the lot than the Howard/Hamels combo card.

2005 Topps Update #UH87, 2005 Topps #514, #430 and 2005 Topps Update #UH80
Other Stuff
Recycled:  I don't have enough baseball cards from 2005 to be able to tell if Topps used this design on sets other than its annual Chrome and Opening Day sets.  The Opening Day set replaced the gold foil with blue foil.
Did You Know?:  The Chachi set made its debut in 2005!  Did you know there's a page on this here very blog that serves as a portal to galleries of each of the Chachi sets?

Sunday, March 10, 2013

2004 Topps Phillies

2004 Topps #1, #384, #420 and #35
It was fun to be a Phillies fan in 2004.  It wasn't always necessarily fun to watch the Phillies play, but it was fun to be a fan.  I was absolutely giddy throughout the '04 season each and every time I entered Citizens Bank Park.  It was brand new, it was gorgeous, and it belonged to the Phillies.

The Set
2004 Topps #1 (Back)
Number of cards in the set:  There are 366 cards in series one, another 366 cards in series two and 221 cards in the traded series.
My very brief thoughts on the set:  For the first time since 1997, Topps went back to base cards with a white border.  And for the first time since 1988, Topps displayed each player's team name in large capital letters across the top of the cards.  Topps took the tiny-player-in-the-corner concept (first used on its 1973 and 1976 cards) to a whole new level with its 2004 set.  On every player's card in the bottom left corner, is a small silver foil outline of the player's larger photo.  Looking at the design a little closer now, I'm thinking it's probably one of the toughest Topps designs from the past 60 years for which to create a custom card template.  I wouldn't even know where to start if I were to try to recreate the little silver foil mini player for each card for a future Chachi set.  Another first, and perhaps my favorite part about the fronts of the cards, is the inclusion of each player's uniform number within the mini player silver outline thingy.
Notable competition:  As was the case in the prior several years, Topps, Fleer, Playoff and Upper Deck each released dozens of baseball card sets.  Over the next few years, the baseball card landscape would change dramatically as first Fleer, then Playoff and eventually Upper Deck would disappear.

2004 Topps #152, #117, #76 and #69
2004 Phillies
Record and finish:  The Phillies fell short of the postseason once again, finishing with a record of 86-76 - ten games behind the Braves in the N.L. East and six games behind the Astros for the N.L. Wild Card.
Key players:  Jim Thome (.274, 42 home runs, 105 RBIs) and Bobby Abreu (.301, 30 home runs, 105 RBIs) paced the offense with David Bell (.291, 18 home runs, 77 RBIs) and Pat Burrell (.257, 24 home runs, 84 RBIs) enjoying nice come-back seasons.  The homer-friendly new ballpark contributed to a record nine players with double digit home runs - Thome, Abreu, Burrell, Bell, Mike Lieberthal (17), Placido Polanco (17), Jimmy Rollins (14), Chase Utley (13) and Jason Michaels (10).  New acquisition Eric Milton led the pitching staff with 14 wins, although his 4.75 ERA is a testament to his struggles throughout the season.  Injuries slowed new closer Billy Wagner (21 saves) and he shared ninth inning duties with Tim Worrell (19 saves).
Key events:  The big event was the opening of Citizens Bank Park and the promise of a new era of Phillies baseball.  Injuries to Vicente Padilla, Randy Wolf, Wagner, Burrell and Polanco played a huge part in the team's struggles.  The disappointing season cost manager Larry Bowa his job as he was dismissed with two games left to go in the season.  On the positive side, Thome hit his 400th career home run on June 14th and Bell hit for the cycle on June 28th.

2004 Phillies in 2004 Topps
Cards needed for a complete team set:  There are 33 Phillies cards in the base set and another 7 Phillies cards in the Traded & Rookies set.
Who's in:
  • Cards of the eight starting position players - 8 cards
#152 Mike Lieberthal (c), #1 Jim Thome (1b), #117 Placido Polanco (2b), #76 Jimmy Rollins (ss), #35 David Bell (3b), #420 Pat Burrell (lf), #69 Marlon Byrd (cf), #384 Bobby Abreu (rf)

2004 Topps #488, #551, #11 and #222
  • Cards of the starting pitching rotation - 5 cards
#488 Eric Milton, #551 Brett Myers, #11 Kevin Millwood, #222 Randy Wolf, #59 Vicente Padilla

For the third year in a row, Topps went 13 for 13 in including cards of the eight main position players and five main starting pitchers.
  • Base cards of players who played with the Phillies in 2004 - 11 cards
#181 Jason Michaels, #434 Doug Glanville, #445 Tomas Perez, #468 Chase Utley, #493 Ricky Ledee, #561 Shawn Wooten, #571 Roberto Hernandez, #618 Todd Pratt, #630 Rheal Cormier, #T15 Billy Wagner, #T113 Jim Crowell

2004 Topps Traded #T113
How in the world did Topps decide to issue a card for Crowell?  Not that I'm complaining, mind you, but Crowell - a journeyman middle reliever - is the perfect example of the kind of player Topps typically shuts out of its sets.  Crowell appeared in two games with the Reds in 1997 and then wouldn't make it back to the Majors until the Phillies called him up for four games in May.  Somehow Crowell, who was assigned #75 as a non-roster invitee in Spring Training and kept the number for his May call-up, ended up with a base card in the Traded & Rookies set.
  • Base cards of players who didn't play with Phillies in 2004 - 7 cards
#68 Carlos Silva, #182 Terry Adams, #202 Jose Mesa, #T146 Danny Gonzalez, #T179 Lee Gwaltney, #T187 Rob Tejada, #T205 Terry Jones

Adams and Mesa left the team via free agency following the 2003 season and Silva was part of the deal with the Twins that brought Milton to Philadelphia.  Of the prospects receiving cards in the traded series, only Tejada spent time with the Phillies, appearing in 26 games with the club in 2005.
  • Base cards of players appearing on Future Stars cards - 1 card, #328 Ryan Madson and Elizardo Ramirez
  • Phillies appearing on Season Highlights cards - 1 card, #333 Kevin Millwood
  • Phillies appearing on National League Leaders cards - 2 cards, #345 Jim Thome (Home Run Leaders) and #346 Jim Thome (RBI Leaders)
  • Phillies appearing on multi-player combo cards - 1 card, #695 Jim Thome and Mike Schmidt (South Philly Sluggers)
  • Phillies appearing on Sporting News All-Stars cards - 1 card, #727 Randy Wolf
  • Phillies appearing on 2004 Draft Pick cards - 1 card, #T73 Greg Golson
  • Team card - 1 card, #659
  • Manager card - 1 card, #288 Larry Bowa
2004 Topps Traded #T15, 2004 Topps #59, #630 and #468
Who's out:  Topps actually did another fantastic job with player selection with this set.  The biggest omission is reliever Worrell who should have had a Phillies card in the traded set.  (Again, Crowell gets a card but Worrell doesn't?  I don't get it.)  Cory Lidle was acquired from the Reds in August, so I understand why he was left out.  Other omissions include relievers Amaury Telemaco (42 games, 4.31 ERA) and Geoff Geary (33 games, 5.44 ERA).
Phillies on other teams:  Worrell (#38 with the Giants), Wagner (#145 with the Astros) and Lidle (#528 with the Reds) appear on cards with their original teams.
What's he doing here:  Other than the four prospects in the traded series and reliever Crowell, there aren't any puzzling inclusions this year.  What is puzzling however is the use of a photo of Wagner covering first in a Spring Training drill for his first Topps base card as a Phillie.  It's not a very closer-ish shot.
2004 Topps #181
Cards that never were candidates:  As mentioned previously, Worrell, Lidle, Telemaco and Geary are good candidates for cards that never were.  I'd also give interim manager Gary Varsho a card.  Varsho took over at the helm for the final two games of the season after Bowa was fired, guiding the team to a 1-1 record.  And hot prospect Ryan Howard made his Major League debut on September 1st.  Howard could have easily replaced any of the other prospects who ended up with cards in the traded series.
Favorite Phillies card:  With all due respect to Michaels and his comically huge glove, I've always loved the card featuring Thome and Schmidt together during the closing ceremony of Veterans Stadium.

Other Stuff
Recycled:  Topps used the design again for its Chrome (shiny), Opening Day (gray borders) and its Retired Signature set.
Did You Know?:  Similar to last week, this isn't so much of a "did you know" feature as it is a "check this out" kind of thing.  Jenna and I travelled to Montreal in September 2004 to witness a few of the last home games in the existence of the Montreal Expos.  It was a surreal scene, as there were seemingly more protesters outside Olympic Stadium than inside the actual stadium watching the ballgame.  The Expos were destined to move to Washington for the 2005 season and being younger (and childless) we decided to head north of the border for the Phillies-Expos series on September 24th, 25th and 26th.  I remember a few things distinctly about the "ballpark" experience - it was dark, the food was awful and it the atmosphere felt more like a JV high school basketball game than a professional baseball game.  Still, I miss the Expos.  (Click to enlarge.)

Saturday, September 15, 2012

2005 Ultra #96 Billy Wagner

Astros 6, Phillies 4
Game 144 - Thursday Night, September 13th in Houston
Record - 72-72, 3rd Place, 17 1/2 games behind the Nationals

One Sentence Summary:  The Phillies let one get away by not capitalizing on scoring opportunities, and letting the Astros take advantage of a stretched bullpen.

What It Means:  Following this game, the Phils were four games back in the race for the second Wild Card.  The loss snapped a seven-game win streak.

What Went Wrong:  The Phils plated four early runs and were then shut out for the final six innings.  The Astros scored six unanswered runs - three in the fourth and three in the eighth - against starter Tyler Cloyd and relievers Phillippe Aumont and Jake Diekman.

Featured Card:  The Astros have given the Phillies a rough time of it over the past decade, and as this article from Phillies Nation points out, the Phillies are 3-12 against the Astros from August-onward between 2009 and 2011.  (Now 3-13 following this latest loss.)

Perhaps the most devastating loss at the hands of the Astros came back on September 7, 2005, when Craig Biggio hit a crushing three-run home run off Phillies closer Billy Wagner.  The home run was unearned, thanks to a costly David Bell error, and it gave the Astros an 8-6 lead and the eventual win.  The Phils finished 1 game back in the Wild Card race that year and many Phillies fans (including this one) point to the Biggio homer off Wagner as the moment when it all started to slip away for the '05 Phils.

Friday, June 4, 2010

2005 Topps #117 Billy Wagner

Braves 7, Phillies 3
Game 51 - Tuesday Night, June 1st in Atlanta

I had hoped to listen to this game during a long drive to New York on Tuesday night, but an hour-long rain delay cut into my listening time. I watched ESPN's broadcast of the final innings from my hotel room.

The Phils ran into bad weather, a frustrating start and Tim Hudson in Atlanta on Tuesday night, dropping their 8th in their last 10 games. On a positive note, the team's offense did show some signs of life as they collected 10 hits on the night. The Phils' 68-inning homerless draught ended in the 6th when Ryan Howard homered to right off Braves' starter Tim Hudson. And Jayson Werth broke an 0 for 21 skid with a 7th inning double.

Cole Hamels threw only 24 pitches in his rain-shortened outing, but he hung around long enough to allow a 1st inning 3-run home run to Troy Glaus. The hour-plus rain delay in the 1st was deemed too long a lay-off to allow Hamels to return to the game, so his night was over. With their long-man, Nelson Figueroa, having been designated for assignment a few days back, the Phils turned to the rest of the bullpen as everybody but Brad Lidge saw action in the game.

The Phillies actually managed to bring the tying run to the plate in the 9th. They scored a run and loaded the bases for Howard. However, it was not to be as Braves' closer Billy Wagner induced the slugger to weakly ground out to second to end the game.

Monday, May 31, 2010

Phillies at Braves: May 31st through June 2nd

Monday 1:05, Tuesday 7:10, Wednesday 1:05

Records: Phillies 28-21, 1st Place in NL East (½ game ahead of the Braves); Braves 28-22, 2nd Place in NL East (½ game behind the Phillies)

2005 Chachi #25 Billy Wagner

I wish I could say I was looking forward to this series, but I'm not. I'm worried. I'm a life-long Phillies fan, so this feeling of pending dread comes natural to me. The Phils enter play this afternoon having scored 7 runs in their past 7 games. The 5 game lead in the NL East they enjoyed on May 17th has dwindled down to just a half game over the Braves. They look lifeless. The swagger is gone. Something's got to give.

And our old friend, #13, is 4-0 with a 1.89 ERA and 6 saves in 8 chances. I've got a bad feeling about this.

Phillies Probables: Joe Blanton, Cole Hamels, Kyle Kendrick
Braves Probables: Tommy Hanson, Tim Hudson, Derek Lowe

Monday, March 1, 2010

2004 Topps Heritage #9 Billy Wagner

Please stand by.

Over the past few days, I've been suffering from a stomach virus so gruesome I wouldn't even wish it upon new Braves closer Billy Wagner.

(Well, maybe I would. Just a little bit.)

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

2005 Topps Total Phillies #16 Billy Wagner

The Phillies Room Salutes Phillies All-Stars of the 2000s

All-Star Games: As an Astro - 1999, 2001, 2003; As a Phillie - 2005 (Comerica Park, Detroit); As a Met - 2007 & 2008
All-Star Game Performance: As a Phillie, Billy didn't get into the 2005 All-Star Game in Detroit. Overall and over 5 different All-Star Game appearances, Billy's been knocked around by the American League. He has a 10.80 ERA in 3.1 innings pitched, and he's allowed home runs to Jason Giambi and Victor Martinez.

Sunday, May 3, 2009

2005 Chachi #40 Billy Wagner AS

Curt Schilling, Scott Rolen, Billy Wagner . . . perhaps Endy Chavez? When you ask a Phillies fan to list his or her least favorite ex-Phillies, these names are undoubtedly going to be on the list.

Billy saved 59 games for the Phillies in 2004 and 2005, and was named to the NL All-Star team in 2005. He left the Phils after the 2005 season and signed with the arch-rival New York Mets. (Pat Burrell would later reportedly refer to Billy Wagner as a "rat".)

Billy had Tommy John surgery in late 2008, which will cause him to miss the entire 2009 season.