Showing posts with label 2009. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2009. Show all posts

Friday, June 7, 2024

2009 Philadelphia Phillies Photo Cards


Number of Cards:  41
Card Size:  4" x 6"

Description:  The Phillies went with black borders for the first time ever.  The cards have a very basic design featuring the team logo and the player's number, name and position in a digital font.  Other than the 2008 World Champions card, which is my all-time favorite card from a team-issued set, there's no indication the Phillies had won the World Championship in 2008 on the cards themselves.  The horizontal card backs feature biographical information and complete career statistics.

How Distributed:  The original 37-card set was available at Citizens Bank Park throughout the first half of the season.  Following the signing of Pedro Martinez on July 15th and the acquisition of Cliff Lee and Ben Francisco on July 29th, cards of Martinez, Lee and Francisco, along with back-up catcher Paul Bako, were inserted into the set.  With the addition of these four cards to the updated set, five cards available from the original set were removed - the 2008 World Champions card, along with the cards for Chris Coste, Tim Gradoville, Geoff Jenkins and Ronny Paulino.  Jenkins and Paulino had been released prior to the start of the season and Coste was claimed off waivers by the Astros on July 10th.

Complete Set Checklist (Unnumbered, presented here alphabetically with uniform number and position): 

1. 2008 World Champions
2. Mick Billmeyer (#17 - Bullpen Coach)
3. Joe Blanton (#56 - RHP)
4. Eric Bruntlett (#4 - INF/OF)
5. Clay Condrey (#55 - RHP)
6. Chris Coste (#27 - C)
7. Greg Dobbs (#19 - INF/OF)
8. Rich Dubee (#30 - Pitching Coach)
9. Chad Durbin (#37 - RHP)
10. Scott Eyre (#47 - LHP)
11. Pedro Feliz (#7 - 3B)
12. Tim Gradoville (#60 - Bullpen Catcher)        
13. Cole Hamels (#35 - LHP)
14. J.A. Happ (#43 - LHP)
15. Ryan Howard (#6 - 1B)
16. Raul Ibanez (#29 - LF)
17. Geoff Jenkins (#10 - OF)
18. Brad Lidge (#54 - RHP)
19. Davey Lopes (#15 - First Base Coach)
20. Pete Mackanin (#45 - Bench Coach)
21. Ryan Madson (#46 - RHP)
22. Charlie Manuel (#41 - Manager)        
23. Jamie Moyer (#50 - LHP)
24. Brett Myers (#39 - RHP)
25. Chan Ho Park (#61 - RHP)
26. Ronny Paulino (#23 - C)
27. Sam Perlozzo (#2 - Third Base Coach)
28. Jimmy Rollins (#11 - SS)
29. J.C. Romero (#16 - LHP)
30. Carlos Ruiz (#51 - C)
31. Matt Stairs (#12 - OF)
32. Milt Thompson (#25 - Hitting Coach)        
33. Chase Utley (#26 - 2B)
34. Shane Victorino (#8 - CF)
35. Jayson Werth (#28 - RF)
36. Phillie Phanatic
37. Phillies Broadcasters

Complete Update Checklist (Unnumbered, presented here alphabetically with uniform number and position):
1. Paul Bako (#23 - C)
2. Ben Francisco (#10 - OF)        
3. Cliff Lee (#34 - LHP)
4. Pedro Martinez (#45 - RHP)

One and Only Phillies Baseball Card (1):  Bako
First Appearance in Phillies Photo Card Set (8):  Eyre, Francisco, Ibanez, Lee, Martinez, Park, Paulino, Stairs
Returning Players in Phillies Photo Card Set (21):  Blanton, Bruntlett, Condrey, Coste, Dobbs, Durbin, Feliz, Hamels, Happ, Howard, Jenkins, Lidge, Madson, Moyer, Myers, Rollins, Romero, Ruiz, Utley, Victorino, Werth

Paul Bako wrapped up his 12-year career playing 44 games with the Phillies in 2009.  His card in this set is his sole Phillies baseball card.  Paulino was traded on March 27th to the Giants for Jack Taschner, and never appeared in a game for the Phillies.  He has a second Phillies card in the 2009 Topps Heritage set.

Manager (1):  Manuel
Coaches (7):  Billmeyer, Dubee, Gradoville, Lopes, Mackanin, Perlozzo, Thompson
Phillie Phanatic (1):  The Phanatic is shown atop the dugout is his alternate day-game uniform.
Broadcasters (1):  Harry Kalas, who passed away on April 13, 2009, is joined on this card by Tom McCarthey, Gary Matthews, Chris Wheeler, Larry Andersen and Scott Franzke.
Commemorative Cards (1):  2008 World Champions

The 2008 World Champions card (see below) features manager Charlie Manuel along with the team's main stars (minus Pat Burrell who had departed during the offseason) decked out in tuxedos with red bow ties flanking the World Series trophy.

Set Composition:  The Phillies created the first 37-card checklist a few days before the start of the regular season, accounting for the cards in the set for Paulino and Jenkins.  Miguel Cairo and Taschner, both on the opening day roster, got left out of the original set and the update set.  J.C. Romero started the season on the Restricted List, but he's in the set as well.


Omissions:
  The Phillies could have included a few more update cards, in addition to the four players who were added late in the season to the set.  Cairo and Taschner would have been in the set had the Phillies waited until early April to create the checklist.  Kyle Kendrick, John Mayberry, Jr., Sergio Escalona and Tyler Walker all spent sufficient enough time on the roster to merit cards as well.  Escalona spent quite a bit of time going back and forth between Philadelphia and Lehigh Valley, as the lefty pitcher was with the team in six different stints.

Variations/Rarities:
  I'm going to separate the known rarities into two different groups - non-set cards and cards with a 2009 National League Champions logo on the back.  14,000 Phillies featured a post many years ago containing a Jayson Werth card I had never seen before, and I've never seen since.  The card was distributed to kids participating in the team's annual Home Run Derby competition and contains a purple facsimile autograph and the Home Run Derby logo. The card uses a different photo than Werth's regular team issued card.

As pointed out in a comment from Steve F. in an earlier post, a card was issued for Placido Polanco in the style of the 2009 team-issued set.  Polanco was signed as a free agent on December 3rd.  Finally, fellow collector and invaluable resource Rick added a comment to this set's original post with a number of other rarities available - clipped and shown below.  Roy Halladay received his first Phillies baseball card in the style of this set, as the future Hall of Famer had signed with the Phillies on December 16, 2009.


Other than the Halladay card, which is an original, the cards featuring the 2009 National League Champions logo on the back use the same photos as the cards found in the set sold at the ballpark.
Non-Set Cards
1. Kyle Drabek (#4 - Reading Phillies)
2. Lou Marson (#3 - C)
3. Placido Polanco (#27 - blank back)
4. Brian Schneider (#23 - blank back)
5. Michael Taylor (#40 - Reading Phillies)        
6. Jayson Werth (#28 - Home Run Derby)
National League Champions
1. Chad Durbin (#37 - RHP)
2. Roy Halladay (#34 - RHP)
3. Cole Hamels (#35 - LHP)
4. J.A. Happ (#43 - LHP)
5. Brad Lidge (#54 - RHP)
6. Ryan Madson (#46 - RHP)
7. Jimmy Rollins (#11 - SS)

Also See:
  Here's my original post from August 31, 2009, covering the discovery of the updated team issued set.
Resources:  The Trading Card Database; Phillies collector Rick (@rickphils)

This set was originally featured in a post back in December 2014, and I'm going through these older team-issued photo card set posts to update them with new information learned (if any) over the past nine years.


2008 Philadelphia Phillies Photo Cards / 2010 Philadelphia Phillies Photo Cards - 1st Edition

Sunday, May 19, 2024

Game 45 - Phils Can't Complete Extra Inning Comeback

2009 MultiAd
Lakewood BlueClaws #11
Mets 6
Phillies 5 (11 Innings)
Game 45 - Thursday Night, May 16th in Philadelphia
Record - 31-14, 1st Place, 2 1/2 games ahead of the Braves

One Sentence Summary:  Phils can't complete the four-game home and home series sweep as the Mets push through in 11th inning win.

What It Means:  The Phillies took three of four games from the Mets, and the Nationals come to town next for a three-game weekend series.  With the Braves off on Tuesday, their division lead dropped to 2 1/2 games.

What Happened:  Trailing 2-0 in the sixth inning, the Phillies scored their first run when Alec Bohm singled home J.T. Realmuto.  Nick Castellanos would launch a sacrifice fly to left to tie the score, and the Phillies took a 3-2 lead in the seventh when Kyle Schwarber doubled home Bryson Stott.  Reliever Jeff Hoffman had a rare less than stellar outing when he allowed the Mets to take the lead in the eighth.  But in the bottom of the ninth, the Phillies again got to Mets' closer Edwin Diaz.  Brandon Marsh walked to start the inning, went to second on a wild pitch, and came home to tie the game 4-4 on Stott's single to right.

The Mets quickly took the lead in the 11th when J.D. Martinez singled home ghost runner Francisco Lindor off Jose Alvarado.  The Phillies threatened in their half of the 11th, but former Phillies' reliever Jake Diekman held them off to deliver the win for the Mets.

Featured Card:  This marks Diekman's first appearance on the blog since 2018, and this is his first baseball card from the 2009 Lakewood BlueClaws team set.  He's put together a solid 13-year big league career, spending time with eight different teams since departing the Phillies in 2015.

Sunday, May 8, 2022

2022 Chachi #29 Joe Girardi MG


#25
Joseph Elliott Girardi
Manager

Bats:  Right  Throws:  Right  Height:  5'11"  Weight:  195
Opening Day Age:  57
Born:  October 14, 1964, Peoria, IL
Contract Status:  Signed through 2022 with a club option for 2023
Major League Teams:  Chicago Cubs 1989-1992; Colorado Rockies 1994-1995; New York Yankees 1996-1999; Chicago Cubs 2000-2002; St. Louis Cardinals 2003
As a Coach:  New York Yankees 2005
As a Manager:  Florida Marlins 2006; New York Yankees 2008-2017; Philadelphia Phillies 2020-

First Phillies Card:
  N/A
Newest Card Added:  2020 Topps Allen & Ginter Field Generals #FG-6
Topps Flagship Set Appearances (16):  1990-1998, 2000-2003, 2008-2010

1 - Girardi baseball card in my collection per The Phillies Room Checklist as of 5/7/22.

1990 Topps #12
1993 Topps #425
1997 Topps #291
2003 Topps #521
2009 Topps #555


Friday, April 15, 2022

Game 7 - Miami Misery Continues

2009 Bowman Draft
Prospects Blue #BDPP37
Marlins 4
, Phillies 3
Game 7 - Thursday Night, April 14th in Miami
Record - 3-4, 2nd Place, 2 games behind the Mets

One Sentence Summary:  The Phillies offense produced 11 hits, but couldn't push across enough wins to defeat the Marlins, taking a 4-3 loss.

What It Means:  The team's Miami nightmares continue.  For whatever reason, the Phillies seem to struggle whenever playing the Marlins on the road, and they've now dropped three games in a row.

What Happened:  Kyle Gibson battled through 4 2/3 innings, and he looked to be getting squeezed by the home plate umpire.  Gibson allowed four runs on five hits and three walks, while striking out six.  The unlikely bullpen quartet of Andrew Bellatti, James Norwood, Brad Hand and Corey Knebel held the Marlins scoreless over the final three frames.  Bellatti and Norwood were making their Phillies debuts.

J.T. Realmuto went 4 for 4, with four singles.  Johan Camargo continued to swing a hot bat with a double, and he continued to provide stellar defense.  Kyle Schwarber had a double, and his 1 for 5 performance improved his season average to .111.  Bryce Harper is hitting .160, Bryson Stott is hitting .222 and Matt Vierling is 0 for 15 to start the season.

Featured Card:  A non-roster invitee to spring training, Bellatti entered the game in the fifth with runners on first and second and two outs.  He was bailed out of any trouble with a fantastic diving catch by Camargo in foul territory to retire the side.  Bellatti appeared in 17 games with the Rays in 2015 and three games with the Marlins in 2021.  His only mainstream baseball card to date can be found in the 2009 Bowman Draft Picks & Prospects set.

Transactions:  Following the Wednesday afternoon game, Connor Brogdon (rhp) and Damon Jones (lhp) were optioned to Lehigh Valley.  On Thursday, Norwood (rhp) was activated from the bereavement list and Bellatti (rhp) had his contract purchased.

Thursday, October 14, 2021

Phillies Name Kevin Long New Hitting Coach

2009 Topps Heritage #465
On Wednesday afternoon, the Phillies officially announced Kevin Long as their new hitting coach for the 2022 season, their sixth hitting coach since the team's playoff drought began in 2011.  Like Joe Dillon before him, Long is highly regarded in baseball and the hope is he can connect with the Phillies offense better than Dillon and John Mallee before him.

Long has previously served as a hitting coach for the Yankees (2007-2014), Mets (2015-2017) and Nationals (2018-2021).  This will be a Yankees mini-reunion as Phillies manager Joe Girardi, bench coach Rob Thomson and Long all worked together in the Bronx between 2008 and 2014.  Bryce Harper and Long were together in Washington in 2018.

Long was drafted by the Royals in 1989 and spent eight seasons in their minor league system, never reaching the majors.  He appeared on a bunch of minor league baseball cards between 1988 and 2005, both as a player and a minor league coach.  He shares a floating head coach's card in the 2009 Topps Heritage set with Thomson.

With Long's hiring, the Phillies are down to needing an assistant hitting coach and a new infield coach, rumored to be Bobby Dickerson, who was with the Phillies previously in 2019.  Here's a look at the list of Phillies hitting coaches since 1970, with Billy DeMars still the undisputed dean of the group.

  • Billy DeMars 1969-1981 - DeMars also served as first base coach (1969-1972) and third base coach (1972-1979).
  • Deron Johnson 1982-1984 - Johnson also served as first base coach during his coaching tenure.
  • Del Unser 1985-1988 - Unser also served as first base coach (1985-1987).
  • Denis Menke 1989-1996
  • Hal McRae 1997-2000
  • Richie Hebner 2001
  • Greg Gross 2002-2004; 2011-2012
  • Milt Thompson 2005-2011
  • Steve Henderson 2013-2016
  • Matt Stairs 2017
  • John Mallee 2018-2019
  • Charlie Manuel 2019
  • Joe Dillon 2020-2021
  • Kevin Long 2022

Saturday, August 21, 2021

2009 Topps Phillies Team Set

#496 Charlie Manuel MG
#601 Ryan Howard / Jimmy Rollins CL
#81 Ryan Howard LL
#147 Ryan Howard LL
#207 Joe Blanton
#245 Pat Burrell
#12 Andrew Carpenter
#291 Chris Coste
#107 Pedro Feliz
#650 Cole Hamels
#500 Ryan Howard
#44 Geoff Jenkins
#103 Kyle Kendrick
#20 Brad Lidge
#186 Ryan Mason
#428 Jamie Moyer
#632 Brett Myers
#525 Jimmy Rollins
#397 Carlos Ruiz
#200 Chase Utley
#73 Shane Victorino
#557 Jayson Werth
#191 Shane Victorino PSH
#139 Matt Stairs PSH
#299 Cole Hamels PSH
#278 World Champions PSH

Updates & Highlights
#UH26 Ryan Howard HRD
#UH260 Ryan Howard AS
#UH136 Raul Ibanez AS
#UH71 Chase Utley AS
#UH129 Shane Victorino AS
#UH151 Jayson Werth AS
#UH267 Miguel Cairo
#UH203 Ben Francisco
#UH30 J.A. Happ
#UH150 Raul Ibanez
#UH218 Cliff Lee
#UH93 Pedro Martinez
#UH72 John Mayberry Jr.
#UH248 Chan Ho Park
#UH80 Matt Stairs