Sunday, June 23, 2013

Went to the Royals Game 6-22-2013





KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- The Chicago White Sox had the right reliever on the mound with the game tied in the eighth inning Saturday, especially when some miscommunication in the outfield allowed the Royals to put a runner on third base with one out.
Jesse Crain calmly retired Salvador Perez on a popup and then struck out Lorenzo Cain to end the threat, his 29th straight scoreless appearance -- and one that kept Chicago in the game.
"Luckily we had Jesse in there," White Sox manager Robin Ventura said. "You make a mistake and you have a guy in there who can still get you out of it."
It wound up being a decisive moment when Alejandro De Aza drove in Jordan Danks with a sacrifice fly in the top of the ninth, sending the White Sox to a 3-2 victory over Kansas City.
"I always have the feeling out there that I'm going to get through it no matter what," said Crain, who hasn't allowed a run since April 12. "Just make the best pitch you can."
Addison Reed handled a perfect ninth for his 21st save.
Mike Moustakas and Salvador Perez provided the only runs for the slumbering Royals, who have dropped four straight since climbing back to .500.
"The difference in the game was that we both had the same situation late -- had the winning run on third base -- and they executed and we didn't," Royals manager Ned Yost said.
Crain (2-1) may have made the clutch pitches, but it took a bunch of critical at-bats for the White Sox to escape with their second straight win in the three-game series.
Dayan Viciedo led off the ninth with a single off Aaron Crow (3-3), and Jeff Keppinger drew a walk to reach base for the fourth time. Yost brought in closer Greg Holland, and he got pinch-hitter Gordon Beckham to fly out to center field.
That allowed Danks, who was pinch-running for Viciedo, to reach third base. De Aza laid off a couple of pitches out of the strike zone, and then ripped a fly ball to right field that was just deep enough to allow Danks to slide home ahead of the throw with the go-ahead run.
It was the 25th one-run game the White Sox have played this season.
"It seems like we're always on the losing end of one-run games, so fundamentally to get a sac fly to get the winning run, it's a good feeling," Keppinger said. "Hopefully we can build off it."
The Royals struck first when Miguel Tejada, starting at second base for the ninth time in his 16-year career, hit a two-out single in the second inning. The 39-year-old then chugged all the way around on a double by Moustakas to give Kansas City the early lead.
It was the first RBI for Moustakas since May 23.
The White Sox threatened in the third when Keppinger singled and Tyler Flowers walked to start the inning. Alex Rios hit a ball down the right-field line that fell foul by just a couple of feet, and then he struck out looking to keep the White Sox off the scoreboard.
At least until the fourth.
Adam Dunn, who was hitting .186 coming into the game, walked leading off the inning. Paul Konerko followed with a single up the middle, and Conor Gillaspie's slow roller up the middle was enough to drive in Dunn with the tying run.
Wade Davis nearly escaped the inning when he got Viciedo to ground into a double play, but Keppinger delivered a single to right that gave the White Sox a 2-1 lead.
Kansas City was poised for a big sixth inning, tying the game on a single by Perez and putting runners on first and second with one out. But reliever Matt Lindstrom entered the game and got Cain to ground into a double play on his first pitch to end the threat.
"It's baseball, man. It's a hard game," Moustakas said. "Sometimes you get the job done, sometimes you don't get it done, and that's just kind of how it turns out."
White Sox starter Jose Quintana wound up going 5 1/3 innings, while Davis made it through seven innings on the warm afternoon. He also gave up two runs for the Royals.
"Tough loss," Davis said, "having a tie game in the ninth inning."

Game notes


The Royals (34-38) dropped to 11-33 when scoring three runs or fewer. ... Keppinger started at 2B in place of Beckham and finished 3 for 3. ... The White Sox secured their first series win since May 24-26 at Miami. ... The Royals activated OF Jarrod Dyson (right high ankle sprain) from the DL and optioned 2B Chris Getz to Triple-A Omaha. ... RHP Dylan Axelrod goes to the mound for the White Sox in Sunday's series finale. RHP James Shieldsstarts for Kansas City.
Copyright by STATS LLC and The Associated Press

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Trevor Rosenthal Rookie Card from Ebay

Trevor Rosenthal Rookie Card-He went to the same College as my daughter Cowley County Community College.



The Black Border Cards where  available only in specially-marked retail three-pack hanger packs, these cards are identical to the Chrome cards minus the chrome. The checklist is the same, but the numbering parallels the base set.

Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Topps Mini Warren Spahn Card number is TM-93

Yeah!!!pulled this out of a pack I got for Christmas
2012 Topps Mini Warren Spahn
Card number is TM-93

Thursday, July 26, 2012

I bought more !967 Topps

I bought 25 card lot of 1967 Topps baseball cards.  This lot includes 96, 104, 114, 115, 119, 127, 129, 130, 132, 133, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 141, 142, 144, 145, 146 Steve Carlton (HOF), 147, 148, 149, 151 World Series Game 1, and 152 World Series Game 2. 

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

1967 Topps on E-bay

I bought these cards on E bay from Sarita7 and he throw in a  nice surprise with a 1955 Eddie Waitkus Bowen

Sunday, January 1, 2012

Great Trade!


73Toppsmann at Sports card Forum sent me a six-for-one deal. For every 1975 card, I sent him,he sent me six 2011 cards. I had not trade at Sports Card Forum in a long time.Great Trade!!!! I got a Albert Pujols and Josh Beckett cards, in total I got a 150 topps 2011 cards

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Christmas card

My oldest card collecting friend sent a Christmas card and a baseball card





Saturday, August 27, 2011

Random Packs of Kindness


I got some great cards from Tribe Cards and his Random Packs of Kindness

Monday, August 22, 2011

August 21 ,2011 Royals Game

The kid had his good stuff Sunday, Ned Yost noticed, and his good command, too.

Despite yielding a leadoff walk — in which he kept trying to make the perfect pitch — Danny Duffy escaped the first inning of the Royals’ 6-1 loss to Boston unscathed. But Yost, the Royals’ manager, still wasn’t going to let his rookie left-hander overthink this. Not when he was matched up against one of the best pitchers on one of the best teams in the American League.

“Danny,” Yost told Duffy in the dugout, “let everybody play. You don’t have to strike everybody out.”

Duffy had heard the whole “pitch to contact, trust your defense” mantra from managers before, but never from Yost, so he figured he’d better listen. And while the Royals still fell to the Red Sox 6-1 on Sunday, it’s hard to imagine Duffy — who rebounded from a rough start in his last outing to allow only two runs on five hits in six innings — could have pitched much better.

“This is the best I’ve seen Duffy look in a while,” Royals infielder Mike Moustakas said. “He was in the zone, making pitches when he had to, keeping guys off balance. He gave us a chance to win.”

The Royals didn’t, of course. But a lot of that can be attributed to the performance of Boston’s own left-hander with top-notch stuff, Jon Lester. Lester, 13-6, carried a no-hitter into the fourth and allowed only one run and three hits in six innings as Boston , 77-49, took the finale of a four-game series at Kauffman Stadium.

“Jon Lester, he’s just bona fide,” Yost said. “He’s a premier pitcher in the American League, and he showed why today.”

Yet on this day, the difference between the 27-year-old Lester, a Cy Young candidate a year ago, and the 22-year old Duffy, who dropped to 3-8, wasn’t that wide.

When Duffy departed after the sixth inning, the Royals only trailed 2-0 — an encouraging sign for a rookie who is still feeling his way around the big leagues after he was pounded to the tune of eight runs in three innings in his previous start against the New York Yankees.

“The mistakes (Lester) made were way up out of the zone or way down out of the zone,” Duffy said, “while the mistakes I made were right over the middle of the plate.”

Two mistakes in particular cost Duffy. The first came in the fifth inning, when he hung a curve to Boston catcher Jason Varitek, who drove the pitch to right for a triple — his first in almost four years — that gave Boston a 1-0 lead.

The second (and more frustrating) mistake came in the sixth inning, when he wasted a 0-2 count to Darnell McDonald by throwing a 94-mph fastball that caught too much of the plate. McDonald, who entered the game with a .175 batting average and four home runs, muscled the ball to left for a homer that made the score 2-0.

Lester, meanwhile, was cruising. Through six innings, he’d allowed only one hit, a single to catcher Salvador Perez. But after the Red Sox tacked on another run in the seventh against reliever Aaron Crow, the Royals hoped to mount a comeback when rookie Johnny Giavotella led off the bottom of the inning with a triple. Perez followed with a walk, and Lester — who was well over 100 pitches at this point — allowed a RBI single to Moustakas.

With Boston’s lead trimmed to 3-1 and runners on first and second and no outs, Red Sox manager Terry Francona decided to call on his top setup man, hard-throwing right-hander Daniel Bard. And the combination of Bard, who retired the next three batters in order, plus a three-run eighth that made the score 6-1, immediately ended any hopes the Royals had of a comeback.

The defeat was another bitter one for the Royals, who dropped to 52-76 and ended a seven-game homestand against the Yankees and Red Sox with a 2-5 record.

But Duffy, who called the performance “a step forward,” says he will take it as a learning experience. It’s likely he will continue to battle himself, at least until he figures out how to control his aggression on the mound.

But Yost’s message in the first inning Sunday, and the results Duffy found after he listened, showed what can happen when he trusts his defense and doesn’t try to strike out everybody.

“Sometimes less is more,” Duffy said. “I’m going to come at you every start, but I’ve got to learn to ease up a little bit.”





Saturday, September 25, 2010

My very own Baseball Card

I got this last week at the Royals and Indians Game

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Link Exchange with The Dugout Cards and Collectibles




Wow!! I haven't did a link exchange in a year. But today we have one with
The Dugout Cards and Collectibles
This is a great site and the manger of this site told me that
My name is John and I have started a new website that I thought would interest you. I have created the second largest website selling individual/common/single sports cards. I currently have over 200,000 cards for sale from 1974 to 2009. I had got back into collecting a couple of years ago and I went to go buy a couple of cards from a Local Card shop to finish some sets and they charged me an arm and a leg. When I looked on the net, there really wasn't one place for me to buy cards from. EBay and others are just multiple users that you can never trust. I have a 100% guarantee on my cards because I send all of them out personally. All the cards I send out are NrMint to Mint unless other wise noted. I was hoping that you could maybe do an article on your blog about my site or maybe post a link on your page. If you have any comments or suggestions to make it better, please let me know!!!!!

Saturday, January 30, 2010

1966 Bazooka Baseball Cards COMPLETE SET 1-48!!


My friend has these cards for sale on E bay
I was with him when he bought them at a auction.This is the only complete set of 1966 Bazooka I have ever seen

COMPLETE SET of 1966 Bazooka handcut baseball cards!!!!!!!

  1. (1) Sandy Koufax L.A. Dodgers P - Has crease running 3/4 across the bill of his hat
  2. (2) Willie Horten Detroit Tigers OF - Nice Card
  3. (3) Frank Howard Wash Senators OF - Nice Card
  4. (4) Richie Allen Phil. Phillies 3B - Nice Card
  5. (5) Mel Stottlemyre N.Y. Yankees P - Nice Card
  6. (6) Tony Conigliaro Boston Red Sox OF - Nice Card
  7. (7) Mickey Mantle N.Y. Yankees OF - Nice Card
  8. (8) Leon Wagner Clev. Indians OF - Light crease 1/2 inch long bottom right from bottom up to wagner name
  9. (9) Ed Kranepool New York Mets 1B Nice Card
  10. (10) Juan Marichal S.F. Giants P - Nice Card
  11. (11) Harmon Killebrew Minn. Twins OF - Nice Card
  12. (12) Johnny Callison Phila. Phillies OF - Nice Card
  13. (13) Roy McMillan New York Mets SS - Nice Card
  14. (14) Willie McCovey S.F. Giants 1B - Nice Card
  15. (15) Rocky Colavito Cleve.Indians OF - Nice Card
  16. (16) Willie Mays S.F. Giants OF - Nice Card
  17. (17) Sammy McDowell Cleve. Indians P - Nice Card
  18. (18) Vern Law Pitts. Pirates P - Nice Card
  19. (19) Jim Fregosi Calif Angels SS - Nice Card
  20. (20) Ron Fairly L.A. Dodgers OF - Nice Card
  21. (21) Bob Gibson St. L. Cardinals P - Nice Card
  22. (22) Carl Yastrzemski Boston Red Sox OF - card has small dimple on his right shoulder
  23. (23) Bill White Phila Phillies 1B - Nice Card
  24. (24) Bob Aspromonte Houston Astros 3B - has small scratch under his right arm
  25. (25) Dean Chance Calif. Angels P - Has line indention side to side across under his neck
  26. (26) Bob Clemente Pitts. Pirates OF - Light line indention side to side across chest barely noticable
  27. (27) Tony Cloninger Atlanta Braves P - line indention across side to side at chin
  28. (28) Curt Blefary Balt. Orioles OF - light line indention across side to side through elbow
  29. (29) Milt Pappas Cincinnati Reds P - Nice Card
  30. (30) Hank Aaron Alanta Braves OF - Light line indention side to side across neck
  31. (31) Jim Bunning Phila. Phillies P - Nice Card
  32. (32) Frank Robinson Balt. Orioles OF - Nice Card
  33. (33) Bill Skowron Chi. White Sox 1B - Nice Card
  34. (34) Brooks Robinson Balt. Orioles 3B - Nice Card
  35. (35) Jim Wynn Houston Astros OF - Nice Card
  36. (36) Joe Torre Atlanta Braves C - Nice Card
  37. (37) Jim Grant Minn. Twins Pitcher - Nice Card
  38. (38) Pete Rose Cincinnati Reds 2B - Nice Card
  39. (39) Ron Santo Chicago Cubs 3B - Nice Card
  40. (40) Tom Tresh N.Y Yankees OF - Nice Card
  41. (41) Tony Oliva Minn. Twins OF - Has brown spot /stain right side border towards bottom
  42. (42) Don Drysdale L.A. Dodgers P - Nice Card
  43. (43) Pete Richert Wash Senators P - Nice Card
  44. (44) Bert Campaneris K.C. Athletics SS - Nice Card
  45. (45) Jim Maloney Cincinnati Reds P - Small Dimple on chin
  46. (46) Al Kaline Detroit Tigers OF - light line indention side to side through arms
  47. (47) Eddie Fisher Chi. White Sox P - Light line indention side to side above chicago
  48. (48) Billy Williams Chicago Cubs OF - Light line indention across neck & upper right corner is creased




Friday, December 25, 2009

Cards for Christmas 2009



I am now doing a history bog for the town I live in, so I haven't time to do the baseball card blog.But here is some of the cards I got for Christmas!!!