Showing posts with label Felske. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Felske. Show all posts

Thursday, April 1, 2021

Series Preview - Braves at Phillies: April 1st to April 4th

1986 Topps #51
1986 Topps #621

Thursday 3:05, Saturday 4:05 and Sunday 1:05

Citizens Bank Park - Philadelphia, PA

At the Ballpark:  Holy crap, we made it.  After 18 months of not being able to attend live Phillies baseball in Philadelphia due to the ongoing pandemic, 8,800 fans will return to the ballpark this afternoon to watch the Phillies take on the Braves.  For this entire opening series, all fans will receive a Rally Towel.

Braves 35-25 in 2020
1st Place in the N.L. East, 4 games ahead of the Marlins

Braves Probables - 2020 Records
Max Fried (7-0, 2.25)
Charlie Morton (2-2, 4.74)
Ian Anderson (3-2, 1.95)

Braves Leaders - Spring Training
Average:  Sean Kazmar - .409
Runs:  Ozzie Albies - 11
Home Runs:  Ronald Acuna, Jr. - 5
RBIs:  Ehire Adrianza - 12
Stolen Bases:  Braden Shewmake - 3

Wins:  3 tied with - 2
ERA:  Ian Anderson - 6.38
Strikeouts:  Huascar Ynoa - 28
Saves:  9 tied with - 1
Phillies 28-32 in 2020
3rd Place in the N.L. East, 7 games behind the Braves

Phillies Probables - 2020 Records
Aaron Nola (5-5, 3.28)
Zack Wheeler (4-2, 2.92)
Zach Eflin (4-2, 3.97)

Phillies Leaders - Spring Training
Average:  Bryce Harper - .343
Runs:  Odubel Herrera - 11
Home Runs:  Bryce Harper and Odubel Herrera - 4
RBIs:  Didi Gregorius - 12
Stolen Bases:  Johan Rojas - 5

Wins:  4 tied with - 2
ERA:  Zack Wheeler - 5.03
Strikeouts:  Zack Wheeler - 22
Saves:  JoJo Romero - 2

Sunday, May 31, 2020

1985 Game 45 - 1985 Drake's #27 Juan Samuel

Giants 4Phillies 3
Game 45 - Late Friday Night, May 31st in San Francisco
Record - 17-28, 5th Place, 11 games behind the Mets

One Sentence Summary:  A three-run home run from Ricky Adams sunk Charles Hudson and the Phillies in this 4-3 loss.

What It Means:  No offense to Adams, but his name was unfamiliar to me.  He was a back-up infielder for the Giants in 1985, occasionally filling in for Chris Brown at third base and Jose Uribe at shortstop.  His home run in this game was his third of four career big league home runs.  In two seasons with the Angels (1982-1983) and his year with the Giants, Adams appeared in 120 games, hitting .215.  He appeared on three mainstream baseball cards - in 1984 within the Donruss and Topps sets and again in the 1986 Topps set.

What Happened:  Hudson had cruised through six innings when Adams hit his unlikely blast.  The only other run he had allowed came on a first inning solo home run surrendered to Chili Davis.  Former Phillies Mike Krukow and Mark Davis held the Phillies line-up to five hits while striking out a combined eight batters.  Juan Samuel homered off Krukow in the eighth.

Featured Card:  I often used the end of each month to take stock of the Phillies season to date.  I took the time to handwrite the current roster, seemingly forgetting Darren Daulton and Kent Tekulve until after I was originally finished.

There aren't a lot of surprises below in the team leader categories, other than Steve Carlton's team leading ERA of 2.15.  His record was only 1-4, but Lefty continued to keep the Phils in the games he pitched.  Through the first 45 games of the season, only Von Hayes, Samuel and Glenn Wilson had appeared in every game.

May 1985 Leaders
Games:  Von Hayes, Juan Samuel and Glenn Wilson - 26
Average:  Ozzie Virgil - .278
Runs:  Juan Samuel - 14
Home Runs:  Mike Schmidt - 4
RBIs:  Glenn Wilson - 13
Stolen Bases:  Von Hayes and Juan Samuel - 6

Games:  Don Carman - 13
Wins:  Kent Tekulve - 2
Innings Pitched:  John Denny - 43 1/3
ERA:  Steve Carlton - 1.23
Strikeouts:  Kevin Gross - 22
Saves:  Kent Tekulve - 2
Cumulative Season Leaders
Games:  Von Hayes, Juan Samuel and Glenn Wilson - 45
Average:  Von Hayes - .313
Runs:  Juan Samuel - 28
Home Runs:  Mike Schmidt - 6
RBIs:  Glenn Wilson - 28
Stolen Bases:  Juan Samuel - 14

Games:  Don Carman - 21
Wins:  Shane Rawley - 4
Innings Pitched:  John Denny - 72 1/3
ERA:  Steve Carlton - 2.15
Strikeouts:  Kevin Gross - 39
Saves:  Larry Andersen and Kent Tekulve - 2

1985 Virtual Phillies Wall / 1985 Season Summary Index


Monday, May 25, 2020

1985 Game 40 - 1985 Topps Traded #33T John Felske MG

Padres 4Phillies 1
Game 40 - Saturday Night, May 25th in Philadelphia
Record - 15-25, 5th Place, 9 1/2 games behind the Cubs

One Sentence Summary:  Andy Hawkins easily handled the Phillies, pitching a complete game and only allowing a solo home run to Ozzie Virgil in this 4-1 Padres win.

What It Means:  The win improved Hawkins' record to 9-0 and I was surprised to see he didn't make the N.L. All-Star team.  He was probably the victim of the Padres, the reigning N.L. Champs, having too many other players either voted into the game or equally as deserving.  The N.L. All-Star starting line-up boasted five Padres - Terry Kennedy (c), Steve Garvey (1b), Graig Nettles (3b), Tony Gwynn (of) and LaMarr Hoyt (p).  Kennedy was injured and was replaced on the roster by the Mets' Gary Carter.  Along with the five starters named, manager Dick Williams brought Garry Templeton as a reserve.  There just wasn't any more room on the roster for another Padre, and Hawkins got left out.

Hawkins would finish the season with an 18-8 record and a 3.15 ERA, his best season in a 10-year big league career.

What Happened:  This was the first rough start of Charles Hudson's season and there would be a few more on the way.  He fell to 1-4 while pitching five innings and allowing four runs on five hits.  He wasn't particularly hit hard in the three-run second inning as the Padres scored their runs on a walk, single, single, single, and suicide squeeze sacrifice bunt (from Hawkins).

The Phillies had six hits, including Virgil's home run and a first inning double from Mike Schmidt.

Featured Card:  The 1985 Phillies Yearbook features an article by Larry Shenk celebrating the 40th manager of the club, John Felske.  In his first 40 games, Felske guided his Phillies team to a 15-25 record.  Here's a look at the group of managers who came before and after Felske and what they did in their first 40 games.  (I'm not counting Paul Owens here, who had his first stint as the club's manager back in 1972 and took over for Pat Corrales in 1983 with the club in first place.)

Felske joins Terry Francona as the two Phillies managers in recent history to have gotten off to the roughest starts.  No Phillies manager in recent history has won more than 24 games in his first 40.  Hopefully Joe Girardi breaks that trend.

Danny Ozark (1973) - 16-24
Dallas Green (1979 and 1980) - 24-16
Pat Corrales (1982) - 21-19
John Felske (1985) - 15-25
Lee Elia (1987) - 24-16
Nick Leyva (1989) - 17-23
Jim Fregosi (1991) - 19-21
Terry Francona (1997) - 15-25
Larry Bowa (2001) - 24-16
Charlie Manuel (2005) - 18-22
Ryne Sandberg (2013) - 19-21
Pete Mackanin (2015) - 19-21
Gabe Kapler (2018) - 24-16
Joe Girardi (2020) - ?

1985 Virtual Phillies Wall / 1985 Season Summary Index

Thursday, April 30, 2020

1985 Game 19 - 1985 Fleer #256 Jerry Koosman

Phillies 11Expos 0
Game 19 - Tuesday Night, April 30th in Philadelphia
Record - 8-11, Tied for 4th Place, 4 1/2 games behind the Cubs and Mets

One Sentence Summary:  Jerry Koosman pitched a complete game shutout, Von Hayes tallied a four-hit game and Glenn Wilson drove in four runs in this 11-0 blowout win against the Expos.

What It Means:  Not a great start to the season, but April wasn't a complete disaster.  The Phillies would enter May riding a four-game win streak and within striking distance of fist place in the N.L. East.

What Happened:  Koosman allowed 11 hits in his complete game effort, but the Expos offense went 0 for 6 with runners in scoring position.  The Phillies offense scored all 11 runs against Expos starter Bill Gullickson and reliever Rick Grapenthin.  First baseman Razor Shines pitched the eighth inning for the Expos, allowing a hit but not giving up any more runs.

The big blow in the game was a bases-clearing double in the first from Wilson.  The Phillies kept piling on with Hayes, Schmidt and Jeltz each enjoying 2-RBI games.

Featured Card:  This was the 33rd and final complete game shutout in Koosman's 19-year big league career.  He must have done something in this game to aggravate his bad left knee, as he'd go on the disabled list shortly after this start and not pitch again until June 8th.

I clipped the Phillies opening day roster from an April 1985 issue of TV Guide and preserved it within my scrapbook (see below). The listing didn't include Darren Daulton or Kent Tekulve, added to the roster after opening day, so I wrote them in with their uniform numbers.  Kiko Garcia and Luis Aguayo were on the opening day roster, but both had been used so sparingly I assumed they were also "New Players."

Looking at the coaching staff, manager John Felske's bench coach was Lee Elia.  Elia would eventually take over for Felske when his time as Phillies manager ran out in the middle of the 1987 season.  The 1985 Phillies media guide lists Elia's job as dugout coach and not bench coach, which is the term used more frequently today.  Claude Osteen was the pitching coach and Del Unser provided double duty as both the hitting coach and the first base coach.  Dave Bristol coached third, Mike Ryan was the bullpen coach and Hank King (pictured on the Tastykake coaching staff card below) was the team's batting practice pitcher.

Bristol, Ryan and Osteen were all holdovers from Paul Owens' coaching staff in 1984.  To start the 1985 season, Elia replaced Felske as the bench coach and Unser replaced Deron Johnson as the Phillies' hitting coach.

Friday, May 8, 2015

Mets at Phillies: May 8th to May 10th


Friday and Saturday 7:05, Sunday 1:35
Citizens Bank Park - Philadelphia, PA

Mets 18-10, 1st Place in the N.L. East, 4 games ahead of the Braves
Phillies 10-19, 5th Place in the N.L. East, 8 1/2 games behind the Mets

Mets Probables:  Matt Harvey (5-0, 2.41), Jon Niese (2-2, 2.40), Bartolo Colon (5-1, 2.90)
Phillies Probables:  Cole Hamels (1-3, 4.14), Aaron Harang (3-2, 2.35), Chad Billingsley (0-1, 9.00)

At the Ballpark:  Sunday is Mother's Appreciation Day at the ballpark (and Mother's Day everywhere else) and all women 15 and older will receive a Phillies Ladies Wristlet.  I will admit I'm not really sure what that is.  Is a wristlet just a fancy name for a bracelet?

Phillies Leaders
Average:  Freddy Galvis - .330
Runs:  Ben Revere - 13
Home Runs:  Ryan Howard - 5
RBIs:  Chase Utley - 14
Stolen Bases:  Odubel Herrera and Ben Revere - 5

Wins:  Aaron Harang - 3
ERA:  Aaron Harang - 2.35
Strikeouts:  Cole Hamels - 38
Saves:  Jonathan Papelbon - 5

1985 Topps #492
1985 Topps Traded #33T
1985 Topps Appreciation:  Former Phillies infielder Davey Johnson managed the Mets between 1984 and 1990, finishing in second place or better in each of those seven seasons.  The Mets of course won the World Series in 1986.  Within that time span, John Felske was the manager of the Phillies from 1985 until part-way through 1987.  Felske's teams finished fifth in 1985, a distant second in 1986 and ultimately fourth in 1987 under the guidance of Lee Elia who replaced Felske in mid-June that season.

The Phillies fared as follows against the Mets between 1985 and 1987, a dark time known in our household as the Felske Years:

1985 - 7-11
1986 - 10-8
1987 - 5-13
Overall - 22-32

Similar to the mid-1980s, it seems as if we're back in another era where the Phillies are looking up in the standings at the Mets.

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Phillies at Brewers: June 6th to June 9th

Thursday and Friday 8:10, Saturday 7:15, Sunday 2:10
Miller Park - Milwaukee, WI

Phillies 30-30, 2nd Place in the N.L. East, 7 1/2 games behind the Braves
Brewers 22-36, 5th Place in the N.L. Central, 15 1/2 games behind the Cardinals

Phillies Probables:  Tyler Cloyd (1-2, 4.76), Cliff Lee (7-2, 2.45), Kyle Kendrick (6-3, 3.12), Jonathan Pettibone (3-1, 3.40)
Brewers Probables:  Wily Peralta (4-6, 5.94), Alfredo Figaro (0-0, 3.67), TBD, Kyle Lohse (1-6, 4.39)

At the Ballpark:  On Saturday, the first 10,000 adults at the game will receive a Brewers T-Shirt.  Sunday afternoon is Carlos Gomez bobble head day.

Phillies Leaders
Average:  Domonic Brown - .284
Runs:  Domonic Brown - 30
Home Runs:  Domonic Brown - 18
RBIs:  Domonic Brown - 44
Stolen Bases:  Ben Revere - 14

Wins:  Cliff Lee - 7
ERA:  Cliff Lee - 2.45
Strikeouts:  Cole Hamels - 77
Saves:  Jonathan Papelbon - 11

1973 Topps #246, #71, #526 and #332
1973 Topps Flashback:  There's another foursome of players with Phillies and Brewers connections for today's flashback.  As reported when the Brewers visited Philadelphia, Ken Sanders spent less than a month as property of the Phillies after being acquired from the Brewers in the Don Money deal.  It's a shame that someone on the Topps payroll went through the trouble to airbrush such a cruddy P on Sanders' hat.

Johnny Briggs spent the first eight years of his career with the Phillies before being traded to the Brewers in April 1971 for Pete Koegel and Ray Peters.  His best season may have been 1972 when he hit 21 home runs and drove in 65.  Briggs appears as a Phillie within Topps sets from 1965 to 1971.

Downtown Ollie Brown was a teammate of Briggs in Milwaukee in 1972 and 1973.  The Phillies brought him to town in June 1974 after he had been waived by the Astros.  Brown wrapped up his 13-year career with parts of four seasons with the Phils, and he earned his only postseason playing time in the N.L.C.S. with the club in 1976 and 1977.

John Felske was a back-up catcher with the Brewers in 1972 and 1973, appearing in 50 games and hitting .137 with one home run.  His playing career ended following the 1973 season, and he started a 13-year coaching and managing career that had him holding positions within the Brewers, Blue Jays and Phillies systems.  After guiding the Reading Phillies in 1982 and the Portland Beavers in 1983, Felske served as then-manager Paul Owens' bench coach during the 1984 season.  He was named the team's manager in 1985 and guided the Phils to a 190-194 record before getting replaced by Lee Elia in the middle of the 1987 season.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

1985 Topps Phillies

1985 Topps #500, #454, #265 and #611
Name just about any Topps Phillies card from the 1980's and I can close my eyes and picture it in my head.  I wonder if the same could be said about kids and baseball cards today?  I sincerely hope there's some young collector out there who will one day have the same nostalgic memories about the Topps sets from the 2010s as I do about any Topps set from the 1980s.  

Go ahead and queue up "We Are the World," as we're about to look back to 1985.

1985 Topps #265 (Back)
The Set
Number of cards in the set:  Once again, it's a 792-card set with a 132-card traded set added at the end of the year.
My very brief thoughts on the set:  I'm starting to sound like a broken record, but I loved this set.  Team logos on the fronts of cards always make me happy and this set had a bunch of really cool subsets.  Had I not gone with the 1979 Topps design for the 2012 Chachi set (for sentimental reasons), the 1985 Topps design probably would have been chosen.
Notable competition:  1985 was the first year that I remember packs of Topps, Fleer and Donruss being readily available at our Wawa.  My Dad would bring home a pack or two or three upon each and every of his Wawa visits, and I was able to put together two complete Topps sets.  I collected the entire Fleer set as well, and I'm somewhat close to a second Fleer set.  (I believe Santa brought me the 1985 Donruss set.)  As kids, we loved the black borders on the Donruss cards and the gray borders on the Fleer cards.  Topps must have had a focus group of kids in place somewhere, as they decided to go with a partial black border with its 1986 issue.

1985 Phillies
Record and finish:  New manager John Felske led the Phils to a 75-87 record - the team's worst record since 1973.  They finished in fifth place, 26 games behind the Cardinals.
Key players:  By his own high standards, Mike Schmidt had an off year, hitting .277 with 33 home runs and 93 RBIs.  His ill-fated switch over to first base to make room for up-and-comer Rick Schu may have had something to do with his slight offensive drop.  Glenn Wilson led the team with 102 RBIs as his "Glennbo" commercials hit the airwaves.  Ozzie Virgil and Juan Samuel each had 19 home runs.  Steve Carlton was at the beginning of the end, as he went 1-8 with a 3.33 ERA in just 16 starts.  Kevin Gross led the pitching staff with 15 wins, followed by Shane Rawley's 13.  Kent Tekulve, acquired in a late April trade from the Pirates for Al Holland, led the team with 14 saves.
Key events:  One of the sole highlights of the season was the team's demolishing of the Mets on June 11th by a score of 26-7.  I highlighted the game in a previous Scrapbook Sunday post.  In what seemed like an earth-shaking trade at the time, the Phillies traded catcher Bo Diaz to the Reds in August for Tom Foley, Alan Knicely and Fred Toliver.

1985 Topps Traded #62T, #104T, 1985 Topps #476 and #68
1985 Phillies in 1985 Topps
Cards needed for a complete team set:  There are 32 Phillies cards in the regular set and another 7 in the traded set, for a total of 39 1985 Topps Phillies cards.  That's a seven-card drop from 1984.
Who’s in:
  • Cards of the eight starting position players - 8 cards
#611 Ozzie Virgil (c), #500 Mike Schmidt (1b), #265 Juan Samuel (2b), #62T Steve Jeltz (ss), #104T Rick Schu (3b), #476 Jeff Stone (lf), #68 Von Hayes (cf), #454 Glenn Wilson (rf)
  • Cards of the starting pitching rotation - 5 cards
#325 John Denny, #584 Kevin Gross, #636 Shane Rawley, #379 Charles Hudson, #15 Jerry Koosman

1985 Topps #325, #584, #636 and #379
  • Base cards of other players who played with the Phillies in 1985 - 14 cards
#39 John Wockenfuss, #117 Greg Gross, #185 Al Holland, #235 Garry Maddox, #302 Tim Corcoran, #360 Steve Carlton, #428 Larry Andersen, #663 Luis Aguayo, #737 Bo Diaz, #763 Kiko Garcia, #16T Don Carman, #98T Dave Rucker, #117T Kent Tekulve, #121T Derrel Thomas
  • Base cards of players who didn't play with the Phillies in 1985 - 7 cards (with new teams listed)
#130 Al Oliver (Dodgers), #157 Tug McGraw (Retired), #209 Bill Campbell (Cardinals), #531 Joe Lefebvre (Injured), #556 Sixto Lezcano (Pirates), #688 Len Matuszek (Blue Jays), #791 Ivan DeJesus (Cardinals)
  • Phillies appearing on Record Breaker cards - 1 card, #8 Juan Samuel
  • Phillies appearing on Father-Son cards - 1 card, #143 Ozzie Virgil
  • Phillies appearing on National League All Star cards - 1 card, #714 Mike Schmidt
  • Manager cards - 2 cards, #92 Paul Owens and #33T John Felske

1985 Topps #235, #302, #360 and 1985 Topps Traded #16T
Who’s out:  Phillies farm hands John Russell and Darren Daulton were again excluded from the Topps set, despite playing in 81 and 36 games respectively.  Reliever Dave Shipanoff appeared in 26 games with the club, but he didn't merit a card in the traded series either.  (Daulton made his debut in the 1985 Fleer Update set.)
Phillies on other teams:  There are three players who eventually made it as Phillies in the traded set - #125 Kent Tekulve (Pirates), #421 Dave Rucker (Cardinals) and #448 Derrel Thomas (Expos).  And three players who didn't make it - #57 Pat Zachry (Dodgers), #107 Tom Foley (Reds) and #723 Dave Stewart (Rangers)
What’s he doing here:  I don't have any qualms with the player selection.  McGraw receives a well-deserved final tribute card, as the lefty reliever had announced his retirement over the winter.  I guess Lezcano could have been replaced with another Phillie - he had become a free agent way back in November 1984.
Cards that never were candidates:  I've already shown off the ten cards that never were, but the four truly deserving players are Russell, Daulton, Shipanoff and Foley, who didn't join the club until August.
Favorite Phillies card:  Teke's first Topps Phillies card with The Vet in the background is very cool, but Wilson was a fan favorite in '85 and I have to go with his card.  Samuel's card receives an honorable mention.

Other Stuff
Recycled:  I'm sure I'm missing something here, but I can't find any instances where Topps has re-used this design for a Phillies card.  I tweaked the design with the team's modern colors for a Chachi Prototype card a few years ago.
Blogs/Websites:  Watch this space.  Night Owl has recently announced the creation of a 1985 Topps blog, set to debut in January 2012.  Totally awesome.
Did You Know?:  The big collecting hub-bub in the summer of '85 were the Team USA cards included as a subset within the 1985 Topps set.  No one in my young collecting circle was chasing the Mark McGwire card yet.  We were more interested in the cards of Oddibe McDowell, Cory Snyder and local product John Marzano.  Not one of the 15 players featured in the subset ever played for the Phillies, although Marzano played a year in the Phillies minor league system before becoming a very popular local sports personality.  Sadly, Marzano passed away in 2008 at the way too young age of 45.
Did You Know? Bonus:  I only just noticed this while placing cards from the base set next to cards from the traded series.  Topps tilted the Phillies logo a little to the right for the traded set.  I find that very strange and fascinating.

1985 Topps #8, #714, #92 and 1985 Topps Traded #33T