Showing posts with label Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Park. Show all posts

Friday, August 8, 2025

Philadelphia Phillies at Texas Rangers - Messin' With Texas

2025 Chachi 2005 Topps Missing Links #4
2005 Topps #41

Friday, August 8th - 8:05
Saturday, August 9th - 7:15
Sunday, August 10th - 2:35


Globe Life Field - Arlington, TX

Kids can run the bases following Sunday afternoon's game.
Philadelphia Phillies 65-49
1st Place in the N.L. East, 2 1/2 games ahead of the Mets

Phillies Probables
Cristopher Sanchez (10-3, 2.40)
Jesus Luzardo (10-5, 4.32)
Zack Wheeler (9-5, 2.64)

Phillies Leaders
Average:  Trea Turner - .284
Runs:  Kyle Schwarber - 79
Home Runs:  Kyle Schwarber - 40
RBIs:  Kyle Schwarber - 94
Stolen Bases:  Trea Turner - 25

Wins:  Jesus Luzardo and Cristopher Sanchez - 10
ERA:  Cristopher Sanchez - 2.40
Strikeouts:  Zack Wheeler - 182
Saves:  Jordan Romano - 8
Texas Rangers 60-56
3rd Place in the A.L. West, 4 1/2 games behind the Astros

Rangers Probables
Merrill Kelly (0-0, 3.18)
Jacob deGrom (10-4, 2.80)
Patrick Corbin (6-7, 3.91)

Rangers Leaders
Average:  Josh Smith - .266
Runs:  Josh Smith - 57
Home Runs:  Adolis Garcia and Corey Seager - 16
RBIs:  Adolis Garcia - 63
Stolen Bases:  Wyatt Langford - 15

Wins:  Nathan Eovaldi and Jacob deGrom - 10
ERA:  Jacob deGrom - 2.80
Strikeouts:  Jacob deGrom - 135
Saves:  Robert Garcia and Luke Jackson - 9

Thursday, May 12, 2022

Phillies at Dodgers: May 12th to May 15th

2022 Chachi 2000 Topps Missing Links #36
2000 Topps #264

Thursday, Friday and Saturday 10:10, Sunday 4:10

Dodger Stadium - Los Angeles, CA

At the Ballpark:  On Thursday night, the Dodgers are giving away a Max Muncy bobblehead, and there will be fireworks following the Friday night game.  On Saturday, the Dodgers are giving away yet another bobble head, this time for Dodgers' great Don Drysdale.

Phillies 14-17
Tied for 3rd Place in the N.L. East, 6 1/2 games behind the Mets

Phillies Probables
Zack Wheeler
Kyle Gibson
Ranger Suarez
Aaron Nola

Phillies Leaders
Average:  Alec Bohm - .311
Runs:  Bryce Harper - 24
Home Runs:  Kyle Schwarber - 7
RBIs:  Bryce Harper - 19
Stolen Bases:  Bryce Harper - 6

Wins:  Kyle Gibson and Ranger Suarez - 3
ERA:  Kyle Gibson - 2.94
Strikeouts:  Aaron Nola - 47
Saves:  Corey Knebel - 6
Dodgers 20-9
1st Place in the N.L. West, 1 1/2 games ahead of the Padres

Dodgers Probables
Tyler Anderson (3-0, 2.78)
Clayton Kershaw (4-0, 1.80)
Walker Buehler (4-1, 1.96)
Julio Urias (2-2, 2.10)

Dodgers Leaders
Average:  Freddie Freeman - .315
Runs:  Mookie Betts - 26
Home Runs:  Mookie Betts - 5
RBIs:  Trea Turner - 21
Stolen Bases:  Trea Turner - 5

Wins:  Walker Buehler and Clayton Kershaw - 4
ERA:  Clayton Kershaw - 1.80
Strikeouts:  Walker Buehler and Clayton Kershaw - 32
Saves:  Craig Kimbrel - 5

Monday, October 28, 2013

2009 Topps Phillies

2009 Topps #500, #200, #557 and #73
In the latter part of 2008 into the early part of 2009, all was right with the world if you were a Phillies fan.  The team had just been crowned World Champions and we were all living in the afterglow of the magical 2008 season.  My fellow Phillies fans wanted to talk about the team and relive the memorable moments from the championship season.  The Philadelphia Comcast station constantly re-ran the key games from the 2008 postseason, and played interviews with all our new heroes.  For me personally, I wanted to find a way to somehow connect with fellow Phillies fans and baseball card collectors.  I wanted to keep the magic going and show off some of the cool custom baseball cards I was creating.  So on the evening of March 30, 2009, I started this blog.

I tracked every game of the 2009 campaign on this blog, including the team's return to the postseason for the third straight season.  I discovered other baseball card and Phillies-related blogs and I've made some genuine friends along the way.  The 2009 season didn't end the way I wanted it to end, but I definitely enjoyed the ride.

The Set
2009 Topps #525 (Back)
Number of cards in the set:  Remember the good old days, when Topps base sets had 792 cards, and 792 cards only?  There weren't any gimmicks, no short-printed cards sharing the same number in the set as another card and once you had all 792 cards - you stopped?  Topps rolled out two series of 330 cards in 2009 (for a total of 660 cards), but they added 35 short-printed cards of various Hall of Famers and one gimmick card of C.C. Sabathia with his new team, the Yankees.  The update set added 330 regular cards and 25 short-printed cards.
My very brief thoughts on the set:  This set's design has really grown on me.  My one complaint would be that the silver foil text on the front of the cards is a little too difficult to read, particularly on the postseason highlight or league leaders cards.
Notable competition:  Sadly, this was the final year Upper Deck held a MLB license.  They produced some memorable sets in their final year with a license, including the retro (and popular) O-Pee-Chee set and the super-retro Goudey set.  For the record, I'm still trying to complete a 2009 Upper Deck set.

2009 Topps #397, #525, #107 and 2009 Topps Update #UH203
2009 Phillies
Record and finish:  For the first time in franchise history, the Phillies reached the World Series in consecutive seasons.  Their 93-69 record was a game better than their record in 2008, and they finished 6 games ahead of the Marlins in the N.L. East.  The Phillies defeated the Rockies in four games in the N.L.D.S. and they once again took out the Dodgers in five games in the N.L.C.S.  Unfortunately, the Yankees trumped the Phils in six games in the World Series, and a repeat was not to be.  Neither the Phillies or the Yankees have been back to the World Series since.

Key players:  The Phillies had four big bats in the middle of their line-up that carried the offense throughout the season.  Chase Utley batted third most of the season, and he finished with a .282 average, 31 home runs and 93 RBIs.  Batting clean-up, Ryan Howard once again had a huge season, hitting 45 home runs while driving in 141.  Jayson Werth continued his emergence, hitting .268 with 36 home runs and 99 RBIs, while newcomer Raul Ibanez contributed 34 home runs and 93 RBIs.

On the mound, Joe Blanton, J.A. Happ and Jamie Moyer each finished with 12 wins.  Cole Hamels suffered from poor run support (a recurring theme) and finished with a 10-11 record and a 4.32 ERA.  Hamels led the team with 168 strikeouts.  The Phils added two key starting pitchers for the second half of the season.  Cliff Lee (see key events below) went 7-4 with a 3.39 ERA in his 12 starts.  Future Hall of Famer Pedro Martinez joined the rotation in mid-August and went 5-1 with a 3.63 ERA in 9 starts.  Brad Lidge struggled mightily after his perfect 2008, converting 31 of 42 save opportunities and owning an astronomical ERA of 7.21.  Ryan Madson continued to impress with 10 saves.

Key events:  On April 13th, long-time Hall of Fame broadcaster Harry Kalas passed away before the Phillies game at Nationals Park.  The team honored Kalas with several moving memorial ceremonies and the players and coaches wore a black circle bearing the initials "HK" on the fronts of their jerseys for the remainder of the 2009 season.  Howard became the fastest player in Major League history to hit 200 home runs on July 16th, breaking Ralph Kiner's record.  Prior to the non-waiver trade deadline, the Phils pulled off a blockbuster deal, acquiring starting pitcher Lee and outfielder Ben Francisco from the Cleveland Indians for four prospects.

2009 Phillies in 2009 Topps
Cards needed for a complete team set:  Thanks to appearances on various postseaon highlight and league leaders cards, the complete Phillies team set from 2009 Topps consists of  41 cards.
Who's in:
  • Cards of the eight starting position players - 8 cards
#397 Carlos Ruiz (c), #500 Ryan Howard (1b), #200 Chase Utley (2b), #525 Jimmy Rollins (ss), #107 Pedro Feliz (3b), #UH150 Raul Ibanez (lf), #73 Shane Victorino (cf), #557 Jayson Werth

2009 Topps #650, #207, 2009 Topps Update #UH30 and 2009 Topps #428
  • Cards of the starting pitching rotation - 5 cards
#207 Joe Blanton, #650 Cole Hamels, #UH30 J.A. Happ, #428 Jamie Moyer, #UH218 Cliff Lee
  • Base cards of players who played with the Phillies in 2009 - 12 cards
#12 Drew Carpenter, #20 Brad Lidge, #103 Kyle Kendrick, #186 Ryan Madson, #291 Chris Coste, #632 Brett Myers, #UH72 John Mayberry, Jr., #UH80 Matt Stairs, #UH93 Pedro Martinez, #UH203 Ben Francisco, #UH248 Chan Ho Park, #UH267 Miguel Cairo
  • Base cards of players who didn't play with the Phillies in 2009 - 2 cards
  • Postseason Highlights cards - 4 cards
#139 Matt Stairs (N.L.C.S. Game 4), #191 Shane Victorino (N.L.D.S. Game 2), #278 Brad Lidge (World Champs), #299 Cole Hamels (World Series Recap)
  • 2008 National League Leaders cards - 2 cards
#81 Ryan Howard (Home Run Leaders), #147 Ryan Howard (RBI Leaders)
  • Classic Combos cards - 1 card, #601 Ryan Howard & Jimmy Rollins
  • 2009 MLB Home Run Derby cards - 1 card, #UH26 Ryan Howard
  • 2009 National League All-Star cards - 5 cards
#UH71 Chase Utley, #UH129 Shane Victorino, #UH136 Raul Ibanez, #UH151 Jayson Werth, #UH260 Ryan Howard
2009 Topps Update #UH218, #UH93, 2009 Topps #20 and 2009 Topps Phillies #PHI13
Who's out:  Pinch-hitter extraordinaire Greg Dobbs is the biggest Phillies omission from the 2009 Topps set.  Dobbs appeared in 97 games and hit .247 in 154 at-bats.  Back-ups Paul Bako (44 games) and Eric Bruntlett (72 games) should have also appeared on cards.  Bruntlett could have earned a card solely on the important role he played in the 2008 postseason.  (The light-hitting infielder scored the winning run in World Series Game 3.)  Four key relievers also got omitted:  Chad Durbin (4.39 ERA in 59 games), Clay Condrey (3.00 ERA in 45 games), Tyler Walker (3.06 ERA in 32 games) and Scott Eyre (1.50 ERA in 42 games).

Phillies on other teams:  A number of players appearing as Phillies in the update set had cards in the base set with their former teams - Ibanez (#6 with the Mariners), Cairo (#82 with the Mariners), Lee (#180 with the Indians), Park (#272 with the Dodgers) and Francisco (#624 with the Indians).  Bako appears with the Reds on card #491.  (I altered Bako's Topps Heritage card here to give him his sole Phillies Topps card, in virtual form only.)
What's he doing here:  I have no complaints with Topps giving cards to both Jenkins and Burrell.  This would be Burrell's final Phillies card before departing for Tampa Bay, and Jenkins provided a key hit in the clinching World Series Game 5 in '08.
Cards that never were candidates:  There are six players who were on the 2009 Phillies World Series roster who didn't have base or update Topps cards - Bruntlett, Dobbs, Bako, Durbin, Eyre and rookie reliever Antonio Bastardo.
Favorite Phillies card:  Without a doubt, it's card #278, featuring Lidge in the midst of the celebration following the final out of the 2008 World Series.

2009 Topps Update #UH150, 2009 Topps #278 and 2009 Topps Update #UH248
Other Stuff
Recycled:  Until flipping through my 2009 Phillies binder in preparation for this post, I had completely forgotten that Topps didn't issue an Opening Day set in 2009.  The set debuted in 2005, took the year off in 2009, and came back in 2010.  It's worth noting that the 15-card Topps Phillies retail set contains nine cards with player pictures different from what ended up in the flagship set.  I was happy to see this when I bought the set, and I wish they'd make this a regular occurrence.
Memory Lane:  In the early spring of 2009, I booked a trip to Walt Disney World for our family beginning on Halloween.  I picked that arrival date figuring the World Series would be over and I could even attend the World Series parade if the Phillies were lucky enough to repeat.  However, thanks to the money grab that is the World Baseball Classic, the whole season got pushed back a week and we arrived in Disney just in time to for me to watch Games 3 through 6 while on vacation.  I chronicled the 2009 World Series, and our Disney trip, in a series of November 2009 posts:

Game 1 - Phillies 6, Yankees 1 - Chase & Cliff Bomb Bombers
Game 2 - Yankees 3, Phillies 1 - Phils, Pedro Drop Game 2
Game 3 - Yankees 8, Phillies 5 - Werth's 2 Homers Not Enough
Game 4 - Yankees 7, Phillies 4 - Excruciating Loss: Yanks Up 3-1
Game 5 - Phillies 8, Yankees 6 - Chase Utley, You are the Man!
Game 6 - Yankees 7, Phillies 3 - Repeat Bid Falls Short

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

2009 Topps Update & Highlights #UH248 Chan Ho Park

Yankees 8, Phillies 3
Game 62 - Tuesday Night, June 15th in New York

Returning to the scene of the crime (2009 World Series Game 6), the Phillies managed to continue their craptastic ways, losing tonight, 8-3.

Roy Halladay lasted just 6 innings against the Yankees, allowing 6 runs on 8 hits. The Yankees started their scoring in the 2nd on a 2-run triple by Brett Gardner. 3 home runs followed - a solo shot by Curtis Granderson to lead off the 3rd, followed by a 2-run homer from Nick Swisher a few batters later and capped by a solo home run in the 5th from Mark Texiera that just cleared the right field wall. Two more Yankee runs came home in the 7th when Juan Castro allowed a Francisco Cervelli ground ball to scoot under his glove. (It was ruled a hit.)

The Phillies managed just three 4th inning runs off CC Sabathia. Chase Utley singled up the middle (off Sabathia's hand), followed by a Placido Polanco single. After Ryan Howard was hit by a pitch to load the bases, Jayson Werth singled home Utley. Raul Ibañez singled to score Polanco and DH Ben Francisco grounded into a force out, scoring Howard. And that was it.

Outside of the 4th inning, the Phils managed just one other hit on the night - a 5th inning single from Utley. In summary: 5 singles, 3 runs, a shaky Halladay and one very frustrated Phillies fan. Chan Ho Park, who received his NL Championship ring before the game, came on in the 9th to record the final three outs of the game. And I still despise the Yankees.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

2009 Chachi #77 National League Champs HL

Other Game 5 thoughts . . .

First Pitch: Prior to Game 5, the only two managers to guide the Phillies to World Championships took the field. Charlie Manuel caught the ceremonial first pitch thrown by Dallas Green. The Phils have always maintained a reverent connection to their past and this was just a very cool moment.

Going to Disneyland: It appears more and more likely Game 1 of the World Series will be played in the Bronx. If that’s the case, Charlie Manuel and his coaching staff can at least look forward to a visit to Anaheim for the 2010 All-Star Game on July 13th. (Although the Angels just took the Game 5 lead in the 8th.)

Thank you Ruben: Ed Wade laid the foundation, Pat Gillick made a few repairs, but current general manager Ruben Amaro, Jr. made all the right moves to help the Phillies return to the World Series in 2009. His offseason signing of Raul Ibañez was key in fortifying an already potent line-up, despite Raul’s mid-season decline. Ruben pulled the trigger on the Cliff Lee trade, bringing the team a legitimate World Series Game 1 starter, made all the more necessary by Cole Hamels' recent struggles. Finally, he brought in Pedro Martinez. It was still a little surreal seeing Pedro (in a Phillies uniform) spray champagne all over the field and into the stands following last night’s victory. But he stabilized the rotation when they needed it the most and who’s not looking forward to seeing him start a World Series game against the Yankees? (Probably the Yankees.)

Friday, October 16, 2009

2009 Phillies Team Issue #61 Chan Ho Park

Other NLCS Game 1 thoughts . . .

Chan Ho!: Rangers fans and Dodgers fans alike may be somewhat perplexed as to why Chan Ho Park was deemed worthy of a spot on the Phillies' 25-man NLCS roster, especially after his lackluster tenures with those two aforementioned teams. His performance last night in the bottom of the 7th immediately justified his inclusion on the roster. Rookie reliever Antonio Bastardo began the inning by allowing a double to Phillie-killer Andre Ethier. Enter Chan Ho. He needed just 15 pitches to shut down Manny Ramirez, Matt Kemp and Casey Blake, in order, squelching the rally and preserving the Phils' precarious 5-4 lead. He hadn't pitched in about a month due to a hamstring injury, but last night his fastball reached 96mph on the Dodgers somewhat generous radar.

All-Time RBI: Ryan Howard's 18 career postseason RBIs now gives him the Phillies all-time lead in that category over Mike Schmidt's 16. Schmitty accumulated his total over 36 games and 140 at-bats. Ryan did it in just 22 games and 83 at-bats. Pretty impressive.

Padilla's Flotilla: The Dodgers' Game 2 starter, former Phillie Vicente Padilla, has faced his former team just once in his career. On June 28, 2008, Vicente (as a Texas Ranger) started and lost an Interleague game in Arlington. He lasted six innings, allowing seven runs, including home runs to Ryan Howard and Chase Utley.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

2009 O-Pee-Chee #416 Chan Ho Park

Phillies 12, Cubs 5

Before the game last night, Phillies analyst Ricky Bottalico correctly predicted the team's offense was going to explode. On the night Pedro Martinez made his Phillies debut, here's a quick run-down of the offensive damage done:

Jimmy Rollins: 2 for 4 with a 3-run home run in the 4th inning
Shane Victorino: 2 for 5 with a 2-run home run in the 3rd inning and a full beer dropped on him as he caught a fly ball in deep center field
Chase Utley: 3 for 4 with a double
Raul Ibañez: 3-run home run in the 4th inning

Don't look now, but the Phils' most effective relief pitcher is none other than Chan Ho Park. Chan Ho entered the game in the 6th inning following Pedro's departure and proceeded to record nine straight outs on just 26 pitches.

The team goes for the 3-game sweep this afternoon at Wrigley as Cliff Lee takes the mound for his third start as a Phillie.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

2009 Chachi #18 Chan Ho Park

A national celebrity in his native South Korea, #61 Chan Ho Park beat out J.A. Happ, Kyle Kendrick and Carlos Carrasco for the Phillies' 5th starter's job.

Phillies debut: April 7, 2009
Major League debut: April 8, 1994
Former teams: Los Angeles Dodgers 1994-2001, Texas Rangers 2002-2005, San Diego Padres 2005-2006, New York Mets 2007, Los Angeles Dodgers 2008
How acquired: Signed as a free agent formerly with the Los Angeles Dodgers, January 6, 2009
2008 Postseason: Pitching for the Dodgers against the Phillies, appeared in all 4 games of the NLCS, working 1.2 scoreless innings.
Pictured: March 15, 2009 - Spring Training action