Showing posts with label 2013 SEGA Card-Gen Extravaganza. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2013 SEGA Card-Gen Extravaganza. Show all posts

25 August 2017

2013 SEGA Card-Gen Extravaganza 17: Atlanta Braves

It's been over a year since I posted a team from the 2013 SEGA Card-Gen set I bought from an eBay seller in Japan. These cards were part of a now-extinct Japanese arcade game that never made it to the United States, although I believe there were plans to give it a try here. Today's team is the Atlanta Braves. They get 13 cards in the checklist, which exactly matches the 13 cards per team average for the set.


Since this set is now a few years old, a lot of players have moved on to other teams or even retirement. Brian McCann spent nine seasons in Atlanta, with 2013 being his last year there. He would go on to spend three seasons with the Evil Empire in New York, and now he's a member of my favorite team, the Houston Astros. I still forget sometimes that he's an Astro, as to me he will kind of always be the super-uptight keeper of the unspoken rulebook in Atlanta.


Freddie Freeman's third full year in Atlanta was 2013, and here in 2017 he's kind of the face of the franchise. If not for an injury that took a full 1-1/2 months away, he'd be leading the club by a large margin in nearly every counting stat. As it is, he's still among the leaders on the team in most things, although Nick Markakis is still holding onto a few categories for the time being.


Dan Uggla was a useful player for several years for the Marlins and Braves. The 2013 season is when the wheels started to fall off a bit, and after 2015 he hung it up for good.


Chris Johnson's best season was 2013, but his play was kind of bumpy and he struck out a lot without enough power to justify the strikeouts. Luckily, he had Dan Uggla and the Uptons on his team to strike out more than he did. Uggla, Justin Upton, and Melvin/B.J. Upton were #3-5 in NL strikouts for 2013, and in 2014 the Uptons were #4 and #5, Johnson was #8, and Freddie Freeman was tied for #10 in the NL with Matt Kemp. Chris Johnson is currently in the Orioles' minor league system.


Andrelton Simmons is currently a star, but he plays for the Angels now. He does his damage mostly with his glove, with Baseball Reference crediting him with leading the NL in Defensive WAR for 2013-2015, and the AL so far in 2017 (he was 4th in the NL in 2012 and 5th in the AL for 2016).


I mentioned B.J./Melvin Upton above in my blurb on Chris Johnson. He showed huge potential for several years, but never quite lived up to the massive hype. He signed with the Braves for 2013, and his numbers really took a dive from his time with Tampa Bay. He moved to the Padres alongside Craig Kimbrel in a trade that involved Carlos Quentin and Cameron Maybin going the other way. He picked things up a bit in San Diego, and they moved him to Toronto for the last part of 2016. Toronto released him and he signed with the Giants. They released him at his request just a couple of days ago, and he hopes that a contending team will pick him up for a playoff run.


Jason Heyward was an All-Star for the Braves in 2010 and produced several great seasons for them. He was traded to St. Louis prior to 2015 for Shelby Miller (oops!) and produced for St. Louis, too. In 2016 he signed for big money with the Cubs and was rewarded with a World Series ring. He just barely turned 28 years old, so it would appear that he's still got some productive years ahead of him. 


Justin Upton came up in Arizona, and was traded by the Diamondbacks to the Braves for 2013 in the same deal that brought Chris Johnson to Atlanta. He kept right on producing, and after the 2014 season the Braves moved him to the Padres. After an All-Star 2015 for the Padres, he signed with the Tigers for 2016. He is playing lights-out for Detroit this year, earning his 4th All-Star nod.


Tim Hudson was nearing the end of his career in 2013, but he still had some accolades to accumulate. The 2013 season was the last of his 9 seasons in Atlanta, which were preceded by 6 seasons in Oakland. He signed for the Giants in 2014, and made the All-Star game. He also won a World Series ring with them that year, although it took an epic relief appearance by Madison Bumgarner in a game that Hudson started to get it done in Game 7 of the World Series. After 2015 he was released by the Giants.


Brandon Beachy played with the Braves for a few seasons and the Dodgers for a while, but couldn't get over the injury bug. He had two Tommy John surgeries and left the Dodgers after a struggle with tendinitis in Spring Training 2016. 


Eric O'Flaherty was coming off of his two best years in 2013, but a third consecutive excellent season was sidelined by an injury requiring Tommy John surgery. He wound up on the A's roster and then the Mets before making his way back to Atlanta in 2016. They released him about a month ago, as he's never really found his pre-injury form again. At the time this card set was published, though, it was hard to find a more dominant bullpen than this Braves group.


Jonny Venters wouldn't play at all in 2013, as he started the year on the Disabled List with an elbow injury that would lead to his second Tommy John surgery. During his attempt to come back from that surgery, he again sustained an injury that led to a third Tommy John surgery. He signed a minor league deal with Tampa Bay and injured his arm again in 2016, leading to a fourth Tommy John surgery. He signed with them again on a minor league deal and has been pitching in their minor league system for a couple of months now, making 20 appearances across several levels so far.


Craig Kimbrel is about as dominant a reliever as you'll find in baseball. He led the NL in saves for four years in Atlanta from 2011-2014. He was traded to the Padres for 2015 and had a down year for him, if you can call a 2.58 ERA and 1.05 WHIP over 59.1 pressure-packed innings a down year. For 2016 he was traded to Boston, where he's earned two All-Star nods and continued to put up good numbers, especially so far in 2017.

That's it for the Atlanta Braves in 2013 SEGA Card-Gen. It's interesting to write these posts, especially now that a few years have passed and players have moved around. I'll put up installment #18 some day.

24 June 2016

2013 SEGA Card-Gen Extravaganza 16: Arizona Diamondbacks

It's been over five months since I last posted a team set from the 2013 SEGA Card Gen set, finishing out the AL teams with the Toronto Blue Jays. These posts are time-consuming and labor-intensive to write, but I do enjoy seeing what each player has been up to since these came out in 2013. Today we start out in the NL with the Arizona Diamondbacks. The average number of cards per team in this set is 13, but the Diamondbacks got 16 cards on the checklist. They got at least one player for each fielding position, as well as a decent complement of players in the rotation and bullpen.


As usual, the team starts off with the catcher position. This card came out after the 2012 season, which was the last in a pretty good four-year run for Montero, with an All-Star appearance in 2011 and a couple of MVP votes in 2011 and 2012. His performance has tailed off a bit since then, although he was an All-Star again in 2014. He joined the Cubs for the 2015 season and is currently a little banged up.


At the time this set came out, Paul Goldschmidt was coming off a very good year and getting ready for a monster 2013 that saw him garner an All-Star appearance, Gold Glove and Silver Slugger awards, and finish 2nd to Andrew McCutchen in the MVP voting. He's been a monster in subsequent seasons as the Diamondbacks main star, and looks to be continuing his great play this year.


Aaron Hill seems to have a really good season every couple of years in between stretches of being replacement-level or slightly-better-than-replacement but injured for part of the season. He left Arizona for the 2016 season and is so far having an up year for the Brewers.


Eric Chavez played in 13 seasons for Oakland, and he was pretty good for about 9 of them. After that he couldn't stay on the field, then spent two years not being able to stay on the field for the Yankees, then moved to the Diamondbacks in 2013 for two seasons where he couldn't stay on the field. Then he retired at the end of July 2014.


Cliff Pennington joined the Diamondbacks by way of trade for 2013 after 5 years with the Athletics. He lasted a couple of years in Arizona before getting traded to the Blue Jays for a small part of the 2015 season. He then signed a 2-year contract with the Angels, where he has played in 27 games this year and is currently on the DL with hamstring issues.


Jason Kubel spent the first few years of his career in Minnesota, with 2009 really being his one standout year. Just going by the numbers, he was a pretty good offensive player during that time but his defense erased almost all of the good that came from his bat. He spent 2012 and 2013 in Arizona, then played 8 games for the Indians and closed out his career in 2014 with his original team, the Twins. They released him partway through that season.


Martin Prado was traded by the Braves to the Diamondbacks before the 2013 season as part of a package for Chris Johnson and Justin Upton. In 2014 he got traded to the Yankees for Peter O'Brien (who?), and in later 2014 he got traded to the Marlins in a deal that included David Phelps, Nathan Eovaldi, Garrett Jones, and Domingo German. He has been pretty solid basically ever since 2008, and is putting together a decent year for a surprising (to me) Marlins team that is currently tied with the Cardinals and Mets for a Wild Card spot.


In 2013 Parra was coming off of a couple pretty good years for Arizona. Partway through 2014 he was traded to the Brewers. Partway through 2015 he was traded to Baltimore, and he signed on with Colorado for 2016, where he is currently on the DL with an ankle inury.


Cody Ross played for a million (actually 8) teams during his 12 years in MLB, hitting paydirt with an NLCS MVP award and a Championship ring in 2010 with the Giants. He was a streaky player, dealt with quite a few injuries, and was apparently a good chemistry/fan favorite kind of player. He signed as a free agent with the Diamondbacks for 2013 and spent a good portion of 2013 and 2014 injured. In 2015 he signed with the Athletics and played in 9 games before being released.


2011 was Ian Kennedy's big year, although his 2012 for the Diamondbacks wasn't awful. In 2013 things started going downhill, and he was traded to the Padres. He had a pretty good 2014 for them, but that's about it. After 2015 he was granted free agency and signed with the Royals for this season, where he has not been great through 14 starts.


Trevor Cahill started out pretty strong in Oakland with some pretty good seasons in 2009-2011. He got traded to Arizona and had a decent 2012, but in 2013 the wheels started to come off. He got moved to the bullpen and then was traded to Atlanta to start the 2015 season. That stint wasn't very successful, and he was released and signed by the Cubs for the remainder of the 2015 season. He's been pretty decent for them in a relief role, and got signed by them again for 2016.


2012 was pretty good to Wade Miley. He finished 2nd to Bryce Harper in the Rookie of the Year voting and earned an All-Star berth. He's been average or worse since then, moving to Boston for 2015 and Seattle for 2016.


David Hernandez was coming off arguably his best career year when this card was released. Things have been down for him since then. He signed with the Phillies for 2016 and had a chance to compete for the closer role, but hasn't been effective enough for that.


Oakland and Arizona seem to exchange a lot of players, and Ziegler is one of those guys. He played a couple of years for Oakland, putting up pretty good numbers in relief. He was traded to Arizona in 2011 for a couple of guys I've never heard of. He has continued to play well for the Diamondbacks and has taken the closer role and run with it after J.J. Putz and Heath Bell lost the job in 2013.


Josh Collmenter has been bounced around a bit, logging quite a bit of time as a starter and a reliever. His numbers have been pretty good throughout his six seasons with Arizona, although it looks like he's benefited from defense and luck.


J.J. Putz was a relief pitcher for all of the 12 years he played. He spent some time as Seattle's closer, had a bad year with the Mets, an okay year for the White Sox, and then signed up with the Diamondbacks. He held down the closer role for them in 2011 and 2012, but lost the job in 2013 to Heath Bell, who subsequently lost the job to Brad Ziegler.

That's about it for the Diamondbacks. Not really a lot of highlights here for the number of cards they were allocated. Sorry if the player descriptions were a bit boring. I usually try to find more anecdotes and whatnot, but I was really just trying to get through this one.