Tampa Bay Devil Rays Team Picture 2002 Topps – Sully Baseball Card of the Day for December 14, 2017

IMG_2409

Seriously, how awful a name was Devil Rays?

Nobody except for marine biologists knew what the hell a Devil Ray was. And those who did associated it with a flat fish that was a bottom feeder.

OK, in one sense it is a decent name because it had a connection to local marine life. But seriously, even in the movie The Rookie, the kid asks “What’s a Devil Ray?” when Dennis Quaid is promoted to the majors.

Christian groups hated the fact that the word Devil was in the name because, well, that is what is important.

The team pictured above was the 2001 Devil Rays. Larry Rothschild, the original Tampa Bay manager started the season but was fired 14 games into the year. That always made me scratch my head. If a manager was so close to being fired 2 weeks into the season, then the organization knew he was on thin ice going into spring training.

Why not just start spring training with a new manager? It wasn’t like the team was a world beater. Or it wasn’t like new manager Hal McRae was going turn anything around.

They lost 100 games in 2001. Under McRae, they lost 106 games in 2002. Clearly Rothschild wasn’t the issue.

Lou Piniella took over the next year and the lost only 99, quite the improvement. Their greatest season in DEVIL Rays history was a 70-91 record in 2004. That was their answer to the 1927 Yankees.

Their average season as the Devil Rays was 64 wins and 97 losses. Forget playoffs. Only once did they rise above last place.

Then came the name change. Sure it also coincided with the development of lots of talent and early draft picks. But the minute they became the Rays, they won 97 games and made it to the World Series. They made the playoffs several times after that.

Was the name change any part of it? Was changing their image from an obscure fish that lives at the bottom of a sandbar, eating whatever scraps it can find before burying itself in the muck the best image for a team? Or was the image of light peaking through the clouds and offering hope and a better day a lift for the team.

It certainly didn’t hurt.

Dan Wheeler 2008 Topps – Sully Baseball Card of the Day for February 27, 2017

img_8892

The Houston Astros have had some memorable pitchers throw for them over the years.

Nolan Ryan, J. R. Richard, Roy Oswalt, Mike Scott, Roger Clemens, Andy Pettitte, Randy Johnson, Larry Dierker, Joe Niekro, Billy Wagner and Cy Young Award winner Dallas Keuchel all pitched in an Astros uniform.

So the question is “What Astros pitcher is the only one to clinch a post season series for Houston?”

Now I am not including the one game playoff in 1980 nor the Wild Card Game of 2015. Just post season series.

You would think it would be one of those names above, or maybe a closer like Dave Smith or Brad Lidge.

Nope.

The answer is “Dan Wheeler.” Among all those famous names, it is middle reliever Dan Wheeler who gets the honor. You can argue he isn’t even the most famous person NAMED Dan Wheeler! (There is a QVC host by that name.)

The native of Rhode Island played baseball for Central Arizona College before being selected by the then Devil Rays in the 34th round of the 1997 draft. Most 34th rounders don’t make it to the majors.

He did not exactly dazzle for Hudson Valley, Charleston, Orlando and Durham between 1997 and 1999. But the Devil Rays staff was thin enough that in 1999, he got the call to the majors.

As a testament to not only the steroid era but also the thin Tampa Bay system, he would get the call to the big leagues in 2000 and 2001, despite posting ERAs over 5 in Triple A.

In 2001 he found himself in the Atlanta organization and again struggled in Triple A. The Braves had plenty of pitching and he never got to the bigs that year. But the next year, with the Mets, he earned his way back to the majors but in 2004 found himself bouncing between Norfolk and Shea.

Little did he know how that season would end for him. In late August, the Astros sent a minor leaguer named Adam Seuss to the Mets for Wheeler, looking for a healthy arm in the pen for the final month. He pitched well and the Astros found themselves in the playoffs.

At that point the Astros had never won a post season series. And Atlanta was their October nemesis, ending Houston dreams of advancing 3 times. 2004 looked like it might be more of the same. Rafael Furcal hit a walk off homer in Game 2 and the Braves rallied in the 9th of Game 4 to decide a 5th and final game in Atlanta. Wheeler did not see any playing time over the first 4 games.

In Game 5, the Braves and Astros were in a tight 4-2 game going into the 7th when years of Houston frustration came to a head. A home run by Jeff Bagwell highlighted a 5 run outburst, giving them a 9-2 lead.

In the 9th inning, with the Houston lead expanded to 12-3, Astros manager Phil Garner gave the honor of closing out the series to a player who wasn’t even an Astro until late August.

Dan Wheeler came out and pitched a scoreless 9th, ending the game with a Chipper Jones fly ball to left.

The Astros, after 42 years of existence, finally won a playoff series. And it was Dan Wheeler who clinched it. Granted, Garner was probably giving closer Brad Lidge a breather after being worked to the bone. But the highlight was Wheeler’s.

In the thrilling NLCS against St. Louis, Wheeler made 4 appearances, throwing 7 shutout innings and earning the win out of the bullpen for Game 4 which tied the series at 2. The Cardinals would win the series in 7, but Wheeler established himself as a reliable member of the bullpen.

2005 would see him have a bigger and more memorable postseason highlight, arguably the greatest moment in franchise history.

Wheeler had his best season in 2005, throwing 71 games, pitching to a 2.21 ERA. Primarily a middle reliever, he saved 3 games and was a big part of the team that started slowly and caught fire down the stretch.

Houston won the Wild Card again and once again battled Atlanta. Wheeler made 3 appearances including throwing 3 shutout innings in the 18 innings Game 4 marathon. The Astros won that game, and the series, on Chris Burke’s home run. The Astros advanced to the NLCS.

Houston stunned the Cardinals by winning 3 of the first 4 games. In Game 5, Wheeler threw a shutout inning in the 8th to set up closer Brad Lidge in the 9th to clinch it. Houston’s Minute Maid Park was rocking to witness a pennant clinching for the first time in franchise history. Instead, Lidge served up the massive and dramatic homer to Albert Pujols with 2 outs in the 9th that gave the Cardinals the lead. The stadium was stunned and the Cardinals sent the series back to St. Louis.

In Game 6, Roy Oswalt earned his series MBP with 7 strong innings. The Astros bats came to life and with Houston up 5-1 in the 9th, normally the ball would be handed to the closer.

But with memories of Lidge’s homer still fresh in everyone’s mind, Garner gave the ball to Wheeler.

In the 9th, he struck out Larry Walker (in his final at bat) and veteran John Mabry. Mark Grudzielanek singled but any hopes of another Cardinals miracle comeback were dashed when Yadier Molina flew out to right.

The Astros, after all the near misses, after the agonizing NLCS defeats in 1980, 1986 and 2004, finally won the pennant.

And it wasn’t Clemens, Pettitte, Lidge, Oswalt, Nolan Ryan, J. R. Richard etc on the mound.

It was Dan Wheeler.

Wheeler did not fare as well in the World Series, allowing 3 runs in 2 innings of work. Lidge lost a pair of games and the White Sox swept the Astros out of the World Series.

He would pitch for 7 more seasons. Some years he was quite effective. Others not as much. He returned, around the time this card was printed, to Tampa Bay in time to be part of their unlikely run to the World Series. He exacted a little bit of revenge against the White Sox by earning a save against them in Game 1 of the 2008 Division Series. He would pitch in the ALCS victory against Boston and the World Series loss to the Phillies. In 2010, he made his final playoff appearance in the Division Series for the Rays.

He retired in 2014 after attempts with the Indians and Royals did not pan out and lives in the Tampa Bay area.

But Astros fans should long remember that 9th inning in St. Louis where the team reached the highest point they had ever climbed. And to date, Wheeler is the only Astros pitcher to close out a post season series… and he did it twice.

B. J. Upton 2007 Topps – Sully Baseball Card of the Day for January 14, 2017

uptonimg_7853

This is a first for The Card of the Day series: A player who is still active.

What is in a name?

For Melvin Emanuel Upton Jr., there seems to be no shortage of awesome names.

The second overall pick in the 2002 draft by Tampa Bay (right after Bryan Bullington of the Pirates) Upton was a shortstop drafted into a franchise whose fates had never risen above “Awful.”

Back then he went by the name “B.J.” which I assumed meant Billy Junior or Bob Junior or something like that.

Nope. The B stood for “Bossman.” He was Bossman Junior Upton. His father, Melvin Senior, was nicknamed Bossman and Melvin was Bossman Junior.

Please take a moment to savor that amazing nickname. Bossman is cool enough on its own. Bossman JUNIOR implies that we need to make a distinction and the player who skyrocketed through Tampa Bay’s farm system was the younger one.

Bossman Upton Senior saw another son, Justin Upton, become the first player taken in the insanely deep 2005 draft. and he of course became an MVP candidate in Arizona.

Meanwhile B. J. made it to the bigs in 2004 and to stay in 2006. The stats of this Topps card go through the 2006 season.

By 2007 he was a 20 homer, 20 stolen baseman and part of a strong youth movement for the Devil Rays. Listed as a third baseman on the card, he struggled defensively all around the diamond. filling it at second and shortstop along the way. He shifted to the outfield for good that season to make way for Evan Longoria.

By 2008, with the Devil Rays Rechristened the Rays, Upton became a postseason hero. The 23 year old son of Bossman homered 3 times in the Division Series against the White Sox. Then he launched 4 homers, drove in 11 and batted .321 with an OPS of 1.180 in the dramatic 7 game ALCS victory over the defending World Champion Red Sox to lead Tampa to their only pennant as of this writing.

When he won player of the month in June of 2009, it looked like B. J. Upton was solidifying his position as one of the game’s rising stars.

But his career became plagued with inconsistencies. He was not the same threat in the Rays postseason appearances in 2010 and 2011 before leaving for Atlanta. There he joined his brother Justin and made for a feel good story as the Upton’s joined a perennial playoff contender.

But B. J. was a disaster in Atlanta, batting sub .200 and seeing his home run totals drop to single digits. He was reduced to a pinch hitter’s role in the post season. He remained a non factor in 2014 before he and his brother landed in San Diego for an ill fated post season push in 2015.

In San Diego, he started going by Melvin Upton Jr., a more direct honoring of his father than Bossman Junior. He had a decent if not great 2016 for the Padres with his new name before being sent to Toronto where he got another post season berth.

So Melvin Upton Junior, AKA B. J. Upton, AKA Bossman Junior may not have emerged as a superstar. He will be entering his 13th season in the majors and has seen his share of postseason games along the way (and become a millionaire many times over along the way for his troubles.)

The back of this Topps card points out something kind of amazing about him.

img_7854

Evidently, former Devil Rays slugger Greg Vaughn nicknamed him “Easy” because of how gifted he was.

Easy Upton. That’s a pretty bad ass name right there. He already has too many nicknames!

But that being said, no name was cooler than Bossman Upton Junior.

Why did he never go by that?