Monday, September 27, 2021

So Instead I Got This

So a little while ago I let the Luis Torrens BoChro super auto get through my grasp, reason being that I had two other things on my radar. Once the super actually was gone, the time was right to switch course.


That is an 8x10 autograph of Sarah Michelle Gellar. Mrs. Gellar is best known as Buffy the Vampire Slayer but I opted for one of her lesser known roles the Seventh Sister from Star Wars. Mainly because she's my favorite Star Wars character. She appeared in six episodes of Star Wars Rebels before being killed off but she's still my favorite in that entire franchise for reasons.

Even so it was pretty cool to nab an autograph of Buffy the Jedi Slayer. Doubly so since I also got her husband Freddie Prinze Jr.'s (another well known name from the 2000's entertainment world) autograph a few years ago since he also played a role on Star Wars Rebels. Although his character had a lot more than six appearances.

Normally I don't go for 8x10's as I'd prefer cards which are smaller and easier to store, but I thought this looked nice and went for it. The fact that it was from the now-defuct Topps Authentics line had me interested too.


That decision was made much easier thanks to me already have her autograph in card form. This one I picked up a few months ago and is my first ever "wood" autograph of any sort. I appreciate this a lot because it's got a picture of Seventh Sister that isn't used on another card (Topps reusing the same images happens in Star Wars too folks!).


It's hard to see but it's also serial numbered to 10 copies, another thing to appreciate.


A third autograph for good measure, although this was technically my first as I picked it up a few months ago. The serial number is hard to see again but it's actually limited to 5 copies. Also Topps reuses that image so much that I have ptsd just looking at it. It really doesn't help that that's her official stock photo.

These three presented an interesting dynamic where yes it's "SMG" and you'd think they'd go for a lot, but it's not her as Buffy the Vampire Slayer. It's her as a cartoon Star Wars character. Making it a whole lot easier for me to scoop these up. And that's to say nothing of the non-autographed stuff.

So all in all I missed out on the "holy grail" but instead got myself other pieces of treasure. I consider that a win.

As always thanks for stopping by and take care.

Sunday, September 19, 2021

Eh

My interests are very cyclical. One minute I do care about sports and sports cards, the next minute I very much do not. Right now I'm firmly in the latter. Honestly I've been like this for most of the year except for a two week period in August when the Hudson Valley Renegades came to Brooklyn and I caught the bug for a bit. That was around the time I was going to all those games and making all those pick-ups for New York Yankees prospect cards. But in the time since I've gone right back to having little to no enthusiasm for the sports card hobby.

The biggest sign of this is how I just let the Luis Torrens 2013 Bowman Chrome superfractor autograph go by. If this were fall/winter 2014 I would've spent every last cent at my disposal to get it. Here in 2021 I put in one bid and ended up letting someone else nab it at the last minute.

I'm pretty sure that when the baseball card collecting bug hits me again I'll regret letting that happen but as of right now my immediate mood is indifference. Gavin of Baseball Card Breakdown DM'd me not long after the superfractor auction ended to console my loss and I appreciated that greatly but I also had to be honest and say that I've had other things in mind. Which is to say that even before the auction ended I had my eyes set on other items that, if I'm being honest, I probably wanted more than the super. But that's another topic for another day since they're both being mailed to me as of the time of writing this.

My mood also really showed when I went to a Brooklyn Cyclones games yesterday. The game was between Brooklyn and the Jersey Shore BlueClaws (a Philadelphia Phillies affiliate), I went just to get Francisco Álvarez's autograph. Normally I don't go after the New York Mets' prospects but I thought I might as well since he was basically the only threat against the Renegades during the showdowns between the two former NYPL rivals.


Álvarez is currently the Mets' top prospect. Signed out of Venezuela as one of the best international free agent prospects in 2018, Álvarez has steadily developed into a very intriguing catching prospect. One who can hit. How far Álvarez goes from here depends on how he develops behind the plate but with a strong arm he's got a solid chance to be a real force in a few more years. As far as his bat goes, he can hit and he can hit the ball far as fuck.

There's a whole story behind this one single autograph (and why it's signed in black ink as opposed to blue ink) but I'm too tired and it's not particularly interesting. All I can say is that this will probably serve as my last IP autograph of 2021 and I'm okay with that.

Still, I managed to get Álvarez's autograph before the game and after it started I just couldn't really get into the game. I don't know if it's because there were no Yankees prospects I cared about being there but I was just bored. I was either staring at my phone or staring off into the Coney Island boardwalk. I eventually left around the time the Cyclones took a 4-0 lead because I was hungry and the lines at the concession stands were way too long (note: the Cyclones do a lot of fan-promo type things well but their food choices are awful, especially for the prices they charge). I think the Cyclones ended up winning that game but I'm not going to look.

Next to the Álvarez autograph, the biggest development for me yesterday was that I finally finished the book Two Years Before the Mast by Richard Dana Henry Jr. from 1840. The late-Dana was better known as a lawyer and politician during his time but the book was about his sea voyage from Boston to California in the 1830's when he was still a college student. This is only significant to me because I first picked up this book as something to read on my train rides to and from baseball games shortly before the six game series between the Renegades and Cyclones back in August began. Fittingly I read the first page on the first train ride and read the last page on the last train ride. If you ignore how I effectively put the book aside for a whole month without bothering to finish it, it's perfect. Also the book is pretty interesting. It's dated af but if you're up for old seaman stories from a bygone era, go for it.

So there we are at this point, finishing a book was more emotionally impactful than a minor league baseball game.

With that here's a little preview of what has been occupying my time and mind in terms of a hobby perspective in baseball's place.

As always thanks for stopping by and take care.

2021 IP Auto Count: 22

Wednesday, September 8, 2021

Smattering of Pickups

After many botched attempts at trying to make a blogpost with a coherent narrative with some cards to accompany it, here's instead a bunch of pictures of cards with words to accompany them because I bought them sometime this summer.


Starting with the first Luis Torrens card made in 2021 that I added to my collection. This is also my first card of Torrens as a member of the Seattle Mariners org, as well as him as a first baseman. This may be shocking to hear but Torrens showed that he was mortal earlier this season by having a slow start to the season after a promising September in 2020. It was enough that he was sent down to the triple-A affiliate for the M's and after a few weeks he was back up with the big league club and has proceeded to look like Mike Trout. Well okay not really. but he's been good enough that I embarrass myself on Twitter every other day by going apeshit whenever he hits a dinger. The M's also have firmly tried to keep Torrens' bat in the lineup but shifting him to the DH slot as they give catching reps to their catching prospect Cal Raleigh. Which is fine but that's a total waste of an elite talent. With roster management like that it's no wonder the Mariners have never accomplished anything and never will. Anyway, will Torrens finally get a card as a Mariner in this year's update offering? I don't know and I won't care until I notice eBay listings pop up. In the meantime I just hope Torrens dominates in the ALW and gets traded to a real winner by the trade-happy Jerry Dipoto so he doesn't waste his prime in Seattle like every other Mariners superstar who came before him and will come after him.


Also decided to go after Thairo Estrada's first card as a member of the San Francisco Giants organization. The Giants are not a very well run team so they yo-yo Estrada up and down the minors when they should be keeping him at the MLB ranks instead of continuing to go with unrecognizable no-names. I hope they lose the division to the Los Angeles Dodgers just for that.


The games I went to see in Brooklyn made me a fan of Anthony Seigler, on par with my fandom for Torrens and Estrada, so much so that I decided to nab a Bowman Platinum autograph as I begin to round out some kind of collection. Unfortunately Seigler's injuries have led to him being removed from the most recent top 30 New York Yankees prospects ranking from MLB Pipeline, but hopefully that eases the pressure off and Seigler can really begin to make huge strides going forward as an underdog. He's still incredibly talented and has enough time to have a monster comeback.


Luis Severino has been on the shelf for most of the past three years due to injuries and recovering from Tommy John surgery. Despite that the current card bubble has managed to keep his prices inflated just enough that his autographs are still double-digit territory, a little above the number of innings he's pitched at the MLB level since 2019 (12). I snagged this Topps Finest autograph for a fairly reasonable $15 (though who knows, it could be like $4 in like four years) since I do like the Finest design, and I wasn't going to pony up for a BoChro. Still, Sevy is a former top Yankees prospect and with this I finally have all of the top MLB Pipeline Yankees prospects from 2014 in autograph form, I'll have to revisit that project one day.


So while I didn't get a Sevy BoChro, I did get Anthony Garcia. Garcia is one of the more recent names to join the top prospect ranks for the Yankees. He was signed out of the Dominican Republic in 2017 and he's already made it stateside. Garcia's key weapon is his power, he has the kind of power where you'd think he could legitimately hit a baseball out of every baseball stadium ever. Garcia's been slowed down a bit due to leg injuries ruining his 2019 season and there being no 2020 season period, but he's making up for lost time in the rookie ball ranks and making a lot of noise with his bat. If you're a fan of absolutely clobbered dingers, Garcia is a must watch when he connects.


The 2020 Bowman Chrome class for the Yankees was an absolute goldmine for IFA talent folks, Raimfer Salinas got overshadowed by bigger names in the checklist but he's an interesting prospect in his own right. Salinas was signed by the Yankees as an IFA out of Venezuela back in 2017 and was considered to be one of the top international prospects of that draft class. On the whole Salinas is a solid all-around prospect who is very much a long term project, but if that clicks he could be an incredible MLB talent. Salinas defensively has been said to be a capable center fielder with enough speed to cover a lot of ground and an incredibly strong arm. Offensively Salinas has a lot of adjustments to make in order to capitalize on his power and make steady contact, but as an amateur he was noted for his keen batting eye and his ability to be very patient. Fingers crossed things go well in his development and he piles onto the Yankees logjam at centerfield.


The 2021 Yankees Draft Class was an anomaly in that their first round pick Trey Sweeney didn't have any cards already on the market. Of the other 19 draft picks the Yankees selected and signed to pro contracts only a handful had cards. Which is probably how it should be. One of those few was Chandler Champlain, who the Yankees took in the ninth round of the draft. A right-handed pitcher out of USC, he's armed with a fastball, changeup and a curveball (which has a lot of spin on it as the Yankees tend to like pitchers with an insane amount of rpm on them). Interestingly enough around the time of the draft all I could find were already autographed cards of Champlain, no unsigned ones.


Brock Selvidge was drafted by the Yankees in the third round of this year's draft and is the highest draft position to already have a card. Selvidge is a lefty handed pitcher out of Arizona high school. Armed with a low 90's fastball, a slider and changeup, Selvidge impressed many scouts at the MLB Draft Combine (yes, baseball got one of those too) and became one of the notable players who participated in the combine and improved his draft stock tenfold. Selvidge is still young that there's a long ways to go but if all goes right he could be a very solid MLB starter.


Took me an incredibly long time but a Jonathan Loáisiga autograph is finally mine. Loáisiga's bloodline is chock full of baseball talent as his father was a minor leaguer in the Montreal Expos organization and his brother was a minor leaguer in the Los Angeles Dodgers organization. Initially signed by the San Francisco Giants as an international free agent, two injury filled seasons led to him getting cut and eventually scooped up by the Yankees. With the Yankees he continued to get hurt and needed Tommy John surgery but shortly after he enjoyed a meteoric rise through the minors and made his MLB debut in 2018. Loaisiga was brought up as a starter but as of 2021 he's enjoyed most of his success in the bullpen thanks to his ability to throw absolute heat.


Next up is a fancy shmancy mojo refractor autograph of Alexander "A&G" Vargas. Hailing from Cuba, Vargas was seen as one of the top IFA prospects and the Yankees made sure to nab him by even trading away MLB assets to get IFA bonus pool money to get him. Vargas is a solid shortstop with lots of exciting potential with both the glove and the bat and given how he's already made it stateside it should be fun to see him start to tap into his power in the coming years.


Another autograph that took a long time to fall into my grasp, Deivi Garcia. Garcia's been on my radar for a few years now but I never pulled the trigger and got myself an autograph until recently. The reason why is simply because I was worried what's happening to him now would happen. Deivi had a fast rise through the Yankees farmsystem since being signed out of the Dominican Republic in 2015. His curveball and changeup were practically unhittable during his rise and hopes were high that he'd be able to handle a key role as a starter for the Yankees' big league rotation. Unfortunately 2021 has not gone that way at all. The rest of the farmsystem's arms are wracking up insane numbers of K's but Deivi is going in the opposite direction, he gets hit hard and hit often. He's fallen off Top 100 lists and dropped significantly on the Yankees' top 30 lists as others like Luis Gil usurped him. Why he's having such a down year appears to differ, mostly delivery issues that lead to command and control issues. Leading to runs, lots of runs. That said there is hope that Deivi can regain some form and bounce back next year. Lord knows the Yankees always need whatever rotation help they can get.


Believe it or not this is my first certified Bowman Chrome auto from 2019. Michael King's been in the NYY system for so long that I kinda forget he was originally a Miami Marlins prospect who was acquired in the Caleb Smith and Garrett Cooper trade. King made his MLB debut in 2019 and eventually became a member of the Scranton shuttle/taxi-squad being yo-yo'd up and down triple-A and quad-A whenever the Yankees needed an arm. King's 2021 season started off shaky but he eventually came into his own a few weeks into the season, he has an immaculate inning to his name after all. Unfortunately a finger issue put him on the IL back in July and he was transferred to the 60-day DL not long after, injury bug's at it again.

There were a few more acquisitions I've made but I'll end it here since this is getting far too long. The key note is that now I've filled in the gaps for many holes in my Top 30 MLB Pipeline NYY Prospects project. 2014 and 2020 are effectively done and many others are within my grasp (blasted Garrett Whitlock having a good year in Boston). But this scattered splurge finally accomplished what TTMs and IPs weren't going to be able to do (or at least serve as a placeholder until they do).

As always thanks for stopping by and take care.

Sunday, September 5, 2021

Month-End TTM Roundup: 8/2 - 9/4

 

Received On: 8/11/2021

My first return this month was from Taylor Otto.
I received a return from Otto last month but I sent out a follow-up/Promising Prospects insert as well. Big thanks to Ms. Otto for signing both. I wish I could attach a video of her NWSL highlights but it's a bit tricky to parse out where she is so here's one from her college days.


Hopefully she'll have highlights like this to come in the NWSL too.

Received On: 8/16/2021

Next up is a return from Yankees prospect Mitch Spence.
Spence was drafted by the New York Yankees in the 10th round of the 2019 MLB Player Draft out of USC Aiken. Spence is armed with a fastball, curveball and changeup and has made the most out of his opportunities. He got off to a pretty good start for the Pulaski Yankees back when he was first drafted and he's had a solid season so far for the high-A Hudson Valley Renegades. So much so that Spence was briefly in the top 30 prospects list on MLB Pipeline before getting removed in the latest update. Spence's long term output is a bit murky but given the promising results put up so far it's fun to see just how far he'll end up going forward.

Received On: 08/24/2021

Here's a return from actress Cindy Morgan.
Morgan is best known for her roles as Lacey Underall in the 1980 movie Caddyshack but not too far behind that is her role as Yori for the 1982 movie Tron. She's appeared in other films and even TV shows including CHiPs and Matlock but surprisingly the pool of cards she appears on is rather limited. She switched to more of a behind the scenes role in various productions in the years since but still makes public appearances here and there.

Received On: 08/26/2021

Next is a really cool return from Brittany Ratcliffe.
Ratcliffe was originally drafted by the Boston Breakers in the second round of the 2016 NWSL College Draft out of the University of Virginia. Considered the 18th best high school soccer player before college, her college tenure is filled with notable highlights en route to All-ACC Third Team honors, twice. Since turning pro Ratcliffe's spent time on NWSL teams that unfortunately no longer exist as she went from the Boston Breakers to the FC Kansas City to Utah Royals FC. Although there was a brief Chicago Red Stars stint in there, before landing with the North Carolina Courage for the 2021 season.


The coolest part of this return is that Ratcliffe was nice enough to send back a note.


AND a ribbon. Very cool. The second such cool momento I ever got via TTM.

Received On: 9/1/2021

Here's a return from Ally Haran.
Haran was originally drafted by the Seattle Reign in the third round of the 2018 NWSL College Draft out of Wake Forest University. During her time with Wake Forest she was captain of the soccer team and a key cog of this defense during her entire tenure. For her pro career instead of going to Seattle she played in Úrvalsdeild kvenna, one of the top women's soccer leagues in Iceland, to start her career with the Selfoss team. She later returned to play for the North Carolina Courage and later the Houston Dash. She spent 2020 with the Orlando Pride and signed a one-year contract to stay with them for 2021.


Also got a letter from Haran as well. Always super cool.

And those were my returns this past month. Big thanks to Ms. Otto, Morgan, Ratcliffe and Haran as well as Mr. Spence for the awesome autographs (and then some!).

As always thank you (the readers) for stopping by too. Take care.

2021 TTM Count: 38

Sources: