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Monday, May 27, 2024

Blog Bat-Around: Last Card

Image by Freepik
 
Happy Memorial Day! I am thankful of those that gave their lives so that I may enjoy this day with my family.
 
Last week, John at John's Big League Baseball Blog posted a bat-around tasking fellow bloggers to post the last base set card from your favorite player's career.

My first thought - easy enough! Even though I don't have a single favorite player nowadays, my childhood favorite would be a logical choice!

Then I thought about it. There's a good reason why I don't have a single favorite player now. Sometimes, the guy that childhood-aged you hung a poster of on your bedroom wall does stupid things. Stupid things like take PEDs, or engage in an affair with a 15-year old. And that's all after he stupidly became a Yankee.
 
2008 Topps #105 Roger Clemens
 
Yeah, sorry. I can't have the focus of a bat-around be a Yankee card of great ball player/lousy human. At least my personal fandom with The Rocket (who I still have a soft spot for, not going to lie) taught me to engage more in a player's story or the connections I feel towards that player rather than the individual himself.
 
2011 Topps #123 Mike Lowell
 
Players like Mike Lowell, who like me is a testicular cancer survivor. He was a secondary piece in the trade that brought him to the Red Sox, a throw in the Marlins practically begged the Red Sox to take in order to trade Josh Beckett. All he did was become a fan favorite and World Series MVP. It wasn't until after his career ended that I learned he also played for my hometown's summer collegiate league - one more connection we share!
 
2018 Topps #591 Daniel Nava
 
Players like Daniel Nava, who had one of the most inspiring journeys to the Major Leagues as anyone in recent memory. I've always said his story would make a great feel good movie in the vein of "The Rookie". He's a guy that worked hard for every opportunity that baseball ever gave him. Guys like that often become journeyman if they are lucky enough, which is why Nava's final base card is for a team he never suited up for in a regular season game.
 
1983 Topps #178 Luis Tiant
 
Players like Luis Tiant, who finished playing Major League baseball when I was in grade school and someone I can say confidently that I never saw pitch. Tiant is one of those players that I always recognized that's to that glorious mustache, but never really counted as a favorite. That changed in 2013, when I had my first opportunity to attend Spring Training games in Florida. Of course the Red Sox facility (JetBlue park in Fort Myers) was one of the stops. We got there early to take in some batting practice, and hopefully get an autograph of one of the players. As I stood along the the 3rd base line, a cart drove down the field. The man driving the cart stopped near us, and out stepped his passenger, the one and only El Tiante. He spent some time signing autographs, and made his way to me.
 
 
That one small act made me delve more into his career and become a fan (even though he too joined the Yankees after his Boston tenure. He's forgiven, though!)
 
So how about you, fellow bloggers? Care to join the bat-around?

5 comments:

  1. Appreciate the participation!

    Saw Clemens at his best in Fenway Park while I was in the Navy...that's what's so unfortunate, that guys like him destroyed legacies and young fans hearts

    Great Job! 👍

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  2. The affair with the 15-year-old was in 1990, when Clemens was still very much a Red Sox.

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  3. Tiant is a good choice... since Topps hooked him up with a sunset card. But where's the scan of the card back? This is a great opportunity to show off Tiant's glorious 19 season career.

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  4. I hadn't been aware of Roger's "relationship" with a little girl. That's just gross.

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