Showing posts with label Wehrmeister. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wehrmeister. Show all posts

Friday, May 24, 2024

Phillies at Rockies - May 24th to May 26th

2024 Chachi 1984 Topps Missing Links #16
2024 Chachi Series Previews #2

Friday 8:40, Saturday 9:10, Sunday 3:10

Coors Field - Denver, CO

At the Ballpark:  Purchasers of a special Class of 2024 Ticket Package to the game tonight will receive a Class of 2024 Rockies t-shirt.  The Rockies will wear their City Connect uniforms on Saturday night.

Philadelphia Phillies 37-14
1st Place in the N.L. East, 6 games ahead of the Braves

Phillies Probables
Cristopher Sanchez (2-3, 3.31)
Aaron Nola (6-2, 3.05)
Ranger Suarez (9-0, 1.36)

Phillies Leaders
Average:  Alec Bohm - .323
Runs:  Kyle Schwarber - 38
Home Runs:  Bryce Harper - 12
RBIs:  Alec Bohm - 46
Stolen Bases:  Bryson Stott - 13

Wins:  Ranger Suarez - 9
ERA:  Ranger Suarez - 1.36
Strikeouts:  Zack Wheeler - 76
Saves:  Jose Alvarado - 9
Colorado Rockies 16-33
5th Place in the N.L. West, 15 1/2 games behind the Dodgers

Rockies Probables
Ty Blach (1-2, 5.14)
Dakota Hudson (1-7, 5.89)
Cal Quantrill (3-3, 3.59)

Rockies Leaders
Average:  Elias Diaz - .320
Runs:  Brenton Doyle - 30
Home Runs:  Ryan McMahon - 9
RBIs:  Ryan McMahon - 30
Stolen Bases:  Brenton Doyle - 10

Wins:  Cal Quantrill - 3
ERA:  Austin Gomber - 2.76
Strikeouts:  Ryan Feltner - 48
Saves:  Jalen Beeks - 4

Monday, November 9, 2020

1984 Tastykake Philadelphia Phillies Photo Cards


Number of Cards:  47
Card Size:  3 1/2" x 5 1/4"

Description:  The 1984 Tastykake photo card set got a little more ambitious than its predecessor by adding cards for all the coaches and a broadcaster card.  The fronts are nearly identical to the 1983 set, with the exception of the Phillies script logo added to the top.  The photographer also requested that everyone remove their hats for this set, which was unfortunate for some of the subjects and is reminiscent of the 1976 team-issued photo card set.  The backs of the cards feature a facsimile autograph of the player, coach or manager, and some of the cards include words of encouragement.

I really wish the Phillies had chosen, "Wherever you go, there you are" for the back of Larry Andersen's card.

How Distributed:  All fans 14 and under attending the Phillies game at Veterans Stadium on April 21, 1984, received a complete 40-card set, shrink-wrapped and containing a logo/checklist card on the top.  The back of the logo/checklist card advertised that additional sets could be purchased from the Phillies via mail order for $3.

There are also 7 somewhat rare "update" cards available, and by all accounts at least three of these cards were never released to the general public, at least not in very large quantities.  Here's a verbatim report from a reliable hobby source on the origins of these 7 cards:

"That set was a mess from day 1.  We obtained some uncut sheets from the printer right off the bat.  When the team started selling the shrink wrapped sets, we found that the seven players on one side of the sheets were not included.  I called a friend in the PR dept and asked him what was going on.  He was upset that we’d obtained the sheets and explained that they knew that prospects would be called up from the minors during the season and wanted to avoid making special print runs in order to have pictures for them.  So they picked 7 prominent players and filled out the sheet with their pictures.  When I spoke to him, all the cut cards were in stacks in a back store room.  He was concerned that, if word got out as to which 7 they picked, other players would be upset at not having been included.  As the season went on, I believe that they pulled and used the pictures for Carman, Russell, Stone and Wehrmeister but not for Daulton, Fireovid and Jeltz.  In speaking with the PR guy at the end of the season, he asked what I thought he should do with the supplies of the last three.  I told him I’d deep-six them as they hadn’t been “issued”.  They [the Phillies] ended up selling a bunch of the entire run to a dealer up around, I think, Wilkes Barre.  I believe he sold them as separate “extension” sets for a while."

Fellow collector Steve sent me the scan of the uncut sheet shown here, showing the 7 "update" cards in the far right column.  I'm calling these update cards, but they could just as easily be labelled as unreleased rarities.

Complete Standard Checklist (Unnumbered, presented here based  on the numbered checklist found on the back of the header card): 

1. Header Card / Checklist
2. Team Photo
3. Phillie Phanatic
4. Veterans Stadium
5. Steve Carlton - Future HOF
6. Mike Schmidt - Future HOF        
7. Phillies Broadcasters      
8. Paul Owens MG
9. Dave Bristol CO
10. John Felske CO
11. Deron Johnson CO
12. Claude Osteen CO
13. Mike Ryan CO
14. Larry Andersen

15. Marty Bystrom
16. Bill Campbell
17. Steve Carlton
18. John Denny
19. Tony Ghelfi
20. Kevin Gross
21. Al Holland
22. Charles Hudson
23. Jerry Koosman
24. Tug McGraw
25. Bo Diaz
26. Ozzie Virgil
27. John Wockenfuss          
28. Luis Aguayo
29. Ivan DeJesus
30. Kiko Garcia
31. Len Matuszek
32. Juan Samuel
33. Mike Schmidt
34. Tim Corcoran
35. Greg Gross
36. Von Hayes
37. Joe Lefebvre
38. Sixto Lezcano
39. Garry Maddox
40. Glenn Wilson

Complete Update Checklist (Unnumbered, presented here alphabetically): 

1. Don Carman
2. Darren Daulton        
3. Steve Fireovid
4. Steve Jeltz
5. John Russell        
6. Jeff Stone
7. Dave Wehrmeister

One and Only Phillies Baseball Card (2):
  Fireovid, Wehrmeister
First Appearance in Phillies Team Issued Set (19):  Andersen, Campbell, Carman, Corcoran, Daulton, Garcia, Ghelfi, K. Gross, Hudson, Jeltz, Koosman, Lefebvre, Lezcano, Matuszek, Russell, Samuel, Stone, Wilson, Wockenfuss
Returning Players in Phillies Team Issued Set (12):  Aguayo, Bystrom, Carlton, DeJesus, Denny, Diaz, G. Gross, Hayes, Maddox, McGraw, Schmidt, Virgil

Manager (1):  Owens
Coaches (5):  Bristol, Felske, Johnson, Osteen, Ryan
Phillie Phanatic (1):  Uses the same ATV photo from the 1983 Tastykake set.
Broadcasters (1):  Chris Wheeler, Harry Kalas, Andy Musser and Richie Ashburn.
Commemorative Cards (2):  Carlton and Schmidt get Future Hall of Famer cards.  The back of the Carlton card features a list of all-time victories leaders, while the back of the Schmidt card features a list of all-time home run leaders.
Other Cards (3):  Header/checklist card, team photo and Veterans Stadium.

Surprises:  Knowing what I know now about the genesis of the 7 update cards, the Phillies PR department did a great job of predicting future roster additions.  Only Darren Daulton didn't see playing time with the club in 1984.  The set contains the entire 25-man opening day roster, plus pitcher Tony Ghelfi who started the season on the disabled list and Marty Bystrom who began the season with Triple-A Portland.

Omissions:  Minor leaguers who would ultimately appear with the Phillies in 1984 who could have received consideration for the update set are Francisco Melendez, Mike Lavalliere and Rick Schu.  And for completists, the Phillies added four players from outside their organization throughout the season - Jim Kern, Shane Rawley, Al Oliver and Renie Martin.  Kern and Martin would never receive actual Phillies baseball cards.


Variations/Rarities:
  Again, the 7 update cards could easily appear here as they're not technically true update cards and they're not readily available.


Resources:  Beckett.com14,000 Phillies - Dave Wehrmeister, Worst Phillies Card of All Time; Fellow collectors Steve F., Rick G. and Bill W.

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


Thursday, September 6, 2018

Just One Card - 1980s Phillies Edition

1984 Tastykake Phillies Update
1989 Tastykake Phillies Update #35
I'm not sure why this post has been sitting in my draft folder since last July, but I felt the need to do some late summer cleaning and let his post out into the wild.

Back when I was putting together my original series of posts on the Phillies Missing Links, I neglected to take into account the team-issued photo cards which at the time I knew very little about.  So now equipped with better knowledge of the team-issued photo card sets, here's a more complete listing of those Phillies players who appeared on one (and only one) Phillies baseball card to mark their time in red pinstripes.

As of this writing, I'm still searching for the 3 cards noted below from the 1980 Phillies Postcards set as well as the elusive Steve Fireovid card from the 1984 Tastykake Update set.

1980
Lerrin LaGrow - 1980 Phillies Postcards #14
Dan Larson - 1980 Phillies Postcards #15
Jay Loviglio - 1981 Topps #526
Scott Munninghoff - 1980 Phillies Postcards #21

1982
Julio Franco - 1983 Donruss #525

1984
Steve Fireovid - 1984 Tastykake Phillies Update
Dave Wehrmeister - 1984 Tastykake Phillies Update

1985
Alan Knicely - 1986 Topps #418
Rich Surhoff - 1985 Tastykake Phillies
Pat Zachry - 1985 Tastykake Phillies

1986
Greg Legg - 1987 Tastykake Phillies #11

1987
Doug Bair - 1987 Tastykake Phillies #58
Joe Cowley - 1987 Tastykake Phillies #39
Greg Jelks - 1987 Tastykake Phillies #45

1988
Bill Almon - 1988 Tastykake Phillies #15
Danny Clay - 1988 Fleer Update #U-108

1989
Jim Adduci - 1989 Tastykake Phillies Update #37
Eric Bullock - 1989 Tastykake Phillies Update #35
Randy O'Neal - 1989 Tastykake Phillies #27
Tom Nieto - 1989 Tastykake Phillies #24
Mark Ryal - 1989 Tastykake Phillies #31

Just One Card Links
1980 to 1989
1990 to 1995
1996 to 1999
2000 to 2004
2005 to 2009

Saturday, August 21, 2010

The Curious Case of Dave Wehrmeister

Scrapbook Saturday (Special Report): June 3, 1984

The World Today
The college class of 2014 will soon start their fall semesters, and I recently read an article with regards to how much technology and life in general has changed since these new freshmen entered the world. With the advent of iTunes, they have no idea what it’s like to sit patiently by the radio waiting for your favorite song so that you could simultaneously hit “play” and “record” on your tape recorder for repeated listening. If they have a question about a specific scene within the Star Wars movie (which they now know as Episode IV), they can skip to whatever chapter in the movie they want on their DVD player, whenever they want. I saw Star Wars in the theater once, had to go off my memory of the movie to recall plot points and scenes, and I didn’t see it again until we brought home our first VCR five or six years later. Life was tough.

And they don’t ever have to ask the question, “Who in the world is Whrmster?”

The World Then
Throughout the 1984 baseball season, I’d spend every morning scanning and studying the newspaper’s boxscores for the previous day’s games. Occasionally, a name would appear with which I was completely unfamiliar. It was usually a rookie or a fringe player who had the misfortune of not appearing in that year’s Topps, Donruss or Fleer baseball card releases. This very rarely happened with the Phillies’ boxscores, as I was very much familiar with their players and the top prospects in their farm system. (I knew about their top prospects because their 1984 Yearbook contained a section highlighting these up and comers.)  I'd clip each day's Phillies' boxscore from the paper and happily place it in my 1984 Phillies Scrapbook.

But then one day, on June 3, 1984, to be precise, the name “Whrmster” appeared in the Phillies’ boxscore. This stumped me. There was no Whrmster in the prospects section of the Phillies Yearbook. No Whrmster existed within that year’s baseball card sets. Could this be a mistake? Was the boxscore editor of the Atlantic City Press messing with my mind (again)?   I figured that Whrmster was probably the same guy (Wehrmeister) who hit Gary Matthews with a pitch, just with a few extra vowels.  The name appeared again in a Phillies’ boxscore a few days later, this time with all vowels in place. Wehrmeister. What did this guy look like? Where did he come from? What is an 11-year-old obsessive-compulsive fan of the Phillies to do?  Wehrmeister?

The Wehrmeister Enigma
In today’s day and age, whenever a baseball team makes a move or thinks about making a move, there are hundreds of internet resources available to check on that player’s statistics and vital signs from Little League to Winter League to Minor League. Back in the day, back before Star Wars was available on VHS, I had the transaction blurbs of the Atlantic City Press to tell me the comings and goings of players. Somehow, for some inexplicable reason, I had missed the Phillies’ acquisition of the mysterious Mr. Wehrmeister. His name appeared a few more times throughout the month of June, and then it stopped appearing. Wehrmeister was gone.  Whither Wehrmeister?
1982 Topps #694

A Clue
Months later, I was thumbing through my 1982 Topps cards (as we used to do back then) and upon reaching card #694, I stopped cold. Dave Wehrmeister, pitcher, Yankees. Behold! He does exist and he’s been on a baseball card before! Maybe he'll be in the 1984 Topps Traded set!  He wasn't.  Well surely he’ll be featured in one of the Big 3’s 1985 baseball card releases! Again - nothing.  I plodded through the '80s and the early '90s without a clue as to how or when Dave Wehrmeister came to pitch for the Phillies and without a Phillies baseball card of Wehrmeister in my collection.  It was only after Al Gore invented the internet I was able to track down some vital information.

1986 Fleer #220
The Truth is Out There
A few years ago I discovered Dave Wehrmeister had been signed by the Phils as a minor league free agent in early June 1984. (I don’t know where he came from, as Baseball Reference indicates his team prior to the Phillies signing him was . . . the Phillies. Will all of your mysteries ever be completely known to us, Monsieur Wehrmeister?) He spent most of 1984 pitching with the Phils’ AAA team in Portland before signing with the Chicago White Sox in the offseason. He bounced around the White Sox’ system in 1985 and 1986 before hanging up his spikes.

Finally, a Phillies Card
1984 Topps #PR16
Other than his appearance in the ’82 Topps set, Wehrmeister’s only other appearance in a mainstream baseball card set is his appearance in the 1986 Fleer set as a member of the White Sox.  Once I set upon creating baseball cards for every player to have pulled on a Phillies’ uniform throughout the ‘80s, one of my first subjects was the elusive Dave Wehrmeister. This card was created using the picture from his 1984 Cramer Portland Beavers baseball card (the big picture) and the picture from his 1982 Topps rookie card, now featuring a poorly edited Phillies hat.  (As a side note, I picked up the 1984 Cramer Portland set a few years back on the cheap.  I was absent-mindedly going through the cards in the set until I reached Wehrmeister's card.  The sight of his card brought a smile to my face, since, as a 10-year-old, I would have loved to have had this baseball card in my collection.  "Finally you're mine, Wehrmeister," I probably said under my breath.)

1977 Topps #472
Wherever You Go, There You Are
In conclusion, my message for the Class of 2014 is simple. Reach for the sky and chase your dreams.  But most importantly, count your blessings that you live in a glorious age when a Phillies baseball card of Dave Wehrmeister exists.

Postscript
So I wrote this post, scheduled its future posting time and walked away.  The Dave Wehrmeister Phillies baseball card saga was now complete.  Or was it?  In my travels over the past few days, I came across Wehrmeister's true rookie card.  It's not his 1982 Topps card, but rather a 1977 Topps multi-player rookie card from 5 years earlier featuring him with the Padres - the team that originally drafted him back in 1973. 

Join us next time as we explore the Fascinating Fable of Steve Fireovid.