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Showing posts with label Ruben Mateo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ruben Mateo. Show all posts

Sunday, October 8, 2017

He's Pretty Good!

Did you file a tax extension?  I work for a large accounting firm whose clients mostly extend.  I've had time to sneek peaks at Twitter  {how did I manage w/o Twitter?}  and read a few of your posts during some down time.  After spending endless daytime hours {are daytime hours endless?} on a computer, posting hasn't been a top priority.  Going to bed early has won out every time!  The final deadline looms with Oct 16th.  Quality time on the blogs is just around the corner!

The Tigers' 2017 season was over months ago.  I am still a fan {it's too much trouble to redesign the blog} but do follow the Astros heavily.  Altuve has been one of my favorite players in the game since I returned to the hobby in 2012.  He had a lot to do with it actually.   Altuve - smiling, joking and playing to win - made collecting a worthy and fun endeavor once more.  

I learned a painful lesson in the 90s with prospecting.  Not once did I get it right. Here are just a few examples:






For each of these cards there were nearly all possible variations stored away in a closet - refractors, autographs, parallels - all waiting for the pay-off.  These players alone filled a 1000 count box. Ouch. All are still waiting but not in my collection.  During my summer clean up, most went to the Salvation Army along with dupes and commons. 

In 2012, Altuve became the one to build my new collection around.  Other young players I enjoy by keeping cards pulled or received in trades.  A smiling Altuve drove me to ebay and COMC.  I began picking up his first cards rather inexpensively.  I don't recall ever spending more than $6-10 for any higher end cards.  There are more limited versions of his rookies but I'm happy with what I own.  If I were to begin collecting today, most Altuve RCs would already be out of my price range. 

While working to organize his cards, I put the rookies together and found these pleasant surprises:

2010 Lexington Legends, several versions of 2011 Bowman
2011 Topps base, cognac    2011 Bowman Sterling base, refractor

2010 Bowman Chrome - base, purple and X
Since 2012, I've amassed several hundred Altuves including autos, fancy patches and cards #'d to ten, five and one.  None of these cards were purchased with any thought given to future value.  This is what makes the hobby work for me.   It doesn't hurt however, that Altuve is pretty good!



Monday, February 13, 2017

This Gal Has Balls


I spent some time Sunday afternoon working on organization, sorting through the last of the first and smallest stack of boxes.  The box tackled contained a few items which no longer fit my collection.   There were some miscellaneous sets to be completed, a sealed 91 Topps Traded set and several slabbed cards.  Graded cards never really caught on for me. I'm a touchy-feely person. I want to hold the cards, enjoy the texture of the many papers used to create them.  New cards smell good!  Plastic robs me of these small pleasures.

My prospecting days are well behind me.  A good thing because I didn't choose too wisely.


Ruben Mateo tore up the minor leagues.  Between 1999 and 2004, he was with four different MLB teams - Rangers,  Reds, Pirates and Royals.  In 2005, Ruben spent a year in South Korea with the LG Twins.  Coming back to the States in 2007, he joined the Brewer's AA team the Huntsville Stars and the Atlantic League's Newark Bears.  2009 sent him to Mexico with the Broncos de Reynosa.  He was once the top prospect in the Rangers system.

Junior Spivey is from Oklahoma City, my hometown.  He was on the World Series winning D'back team in 2001.  The D'backs, Brewers and Nationals all gave him playing time between 2001-2005. The Cardinals signed him for 2006 but he spent the whole season with the Redbirds, Triple A.  Junior gave the Atlantic League a whirl too, playing with the Bluefish in 2007 and the Riversharks in 2009, moving onto the Golden Baseball League in California for the last part of 2009.  Junior retired with a .270 BA, 48 HR and 201 RBI.

Then there's this guy:


Carlos made a career bouncing between the minors and MLB.  In 2001, I caught a AAA Redhawks game in OKC.  Carlos was playing first base.  I had seats in the front row near the bag.  He missed a play because he was too busy flirting with girls on my row.  By then, I already owned these cards. Apparently I can pick sports anchors.  Pena is now with the MLB Network.  So too, is Sean Casey.


Sean had a good MLB career: .302 AVG; 130 HR; 735 RBI.  He was inducted into the Reds Hall of Fame in 2012. The best slabbed card of the bunch!  Then there's Raffy, a member of the 3000 hit/500 home run club and once a shoo-in for the HOF - now a  victim of the steroid era.  When I began collecting, Rafael was a fave PC. This is the last Raffy in my collection.  These are all the slabbed cards in my collection, minus one old tobacco card which I'll share another time.

I found this odd little item from 1999.  It had to have been the last one on the shelf.  I wouldn't have chosen McGwire over Jeter, Maddux or Ripken.




And now we've come to the balls portion of the post. I got 'em - five to be exact.  Five balls that must go.  I obtained these autographs at minor league games.  The PCL ball was a foul I caught at a game in OKC in 2000.  The Redhawks were playing the Iowa Cubs.  Julio Zuleta was a Cubs first base prospect whose MLB career never really happened.  He played 13 seasons in the minors, majors, Japan and Mexico.



I attended the 2002 Triple A All-Star weekend and game in OKC and picked up autos of Jack Cust and Todd Sears.  Drafted out of high school in 1997 by the D'backs, Cust was the All-Star game MVP.  Cust was signed by no less than six MLB teams but spent most of that time in the minors.  While with the A's in 2008, he broke the AL record for most strikeouts in a season with 187! He last signed with the Rays in 2013 but was released in Spring Training.  Cust was named in the Mitchell Report in 2007.

Sears spent 11 years in baseball, mostly the minors.  He was drafted by the Rockies in 1997, played briefly [40 games] with the Twins and Padres then back to the minors until he retired.

Ryan Minor is most famous for taking Ripken's place on the field to end the consecutive games played streak. Between 1998-2001, he played for the O's and Expos.  He played in the minors through 2004.  I obtained his signature at a Rangers game. Lesson: never have someone named Minor sign your major league baseball.

A Rangers prospect, Ramon Nivar was once the Minor League Player of the year, another AAA wonder who couldn't make the majors.  He spent nearly all of his 11 year career in the minors.  After 2010, he seems to have disappeared.  He signed two balls for me in OKC.


Now I turn to you for advice.  What should I do with these items?  None are worth selling on Ebay.  Perhaps you have some ideas?  I was tempted to keep Zuleta simply because it was a caught foul ball but I actually have a few of these.  I did well in the minors too.