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

21 December 2016

SEGA Card-Gen Deck Box

Here is a pretty cool collectible I picked up from Japan by way of eBay. It's a card box for the SEGA Card-Gen arcade game, similar to the deck boxes you see for other trading card games like Magic: The Gathering and Pokemon. I have never played the game itself (it was a Japan-only thing), but I have managed to accumulate a number of the cards that go with it. I'd never seen one of these deck boxes, though, so I placed a bid and wound up a winner.


Here's the front of the box in the packaging. It's your fairly standard card box with a Velcro closure. It's got Card-Gen branding all over it.


Here it is outside of the packaging. Not much else to say about it.


The back of the box has a celebration scene printed on it. It looks like someone just hit a walk-off home run and the team is waiting to celebrate a victory. Hopefully no one gets injured in the scrum.


I found a surprise inside when I opened it up. I'd made the purchase just expecting to get the case, but it had a card enclosed. Bonus cardboard is the best cardboard!


It's a pretty good card, too. This is a 2012 SEGA Card-Gen Yu Darvish EX card. Zippy Zappy commented on my post about an Ichiro card back in 2015, explaining that these cards (with cases) could be obtained when the Card Gen machine spit out a redemption ticket instead of a standard Card Gen card. You took the ticket to the counter, where the arcade worker would exchange it for a case with one of these special cards inside. I'd just never before made the connection between this case and that comment until I started writing this post. I've got a couple more of these cases on the way, one that looks like this one and one with different colors, so soon enough I'll find out if they hold any more treasures.

24 May 2016

Tim 'The Angel (of Anaheim)' Lincecum

I picked up a few SEGA Card-Gen cards of pitcher Tim Lincecum from a seller in Japan, and they arrived in the mailbox just around the time Lincecum signed a contract with the Angels in an attempt to get his career back on track. Actually they didn't actually land in the mailbox, because I had to sign for the package and the mail carrier brought it straight to the door.


This 2010 card came out just after Tim had won his second Cy Young award and just before he won his 1st World Series ring with the Giants. In SEGA Card-Gen terms, that means he gets 8 stars on the front of his card and a nice full ratings block on the back. I don't have many 2010 SEGA Card-Gen cards in my collection, so I am always happy to add a new one. This seller is the same guy I get most of my Card-Gen cards from. He doesn't post auctions all that often, but when he does there are usually a few things I jump on right away. I combined this Lincecum lot with some Japanese wrestling cards he posted to bring down the per-card cost for shipping.


This 2012 card features an identical number of stars and the exact same stat ratings on the back. Although Lincecum's 2010 and 2011 seasons were a step down from his Cy Young years, he was still among the best pitchers in the game, and when this card came out he was close to winning his 2nd World Series ring, this time pitching mostly in relief during the playoffs.


This 2013 card is not Lincecum's base card. This is his Foil Rare card, a special set that features a foil background with a SEGA Card-Gen logo on it and a slight ratings bump on the back over the base card, as well as a different picture and different numbering. You can see Evan Longoria's cards side by side on this post if you want to see how the Foil Rares differ from the base cards. For a long time R.A. Dickey's card from this set was my most-wanted card, but blogger Zippy Zappy helped me track it down from this same seller's webstore. The wheels were starting to come off on Lincecum's control by this point, but he was still a celebrity and a star, so he kept his high ratings in this set. If there had been future sets I imagine reality would have set in soon enough.

I hope Lincecum can revive his career with the Angels, as baseball is more fun when the exciting players are playing well. Of course I still want the Astros to catch up to the Angels and the rest of the AL West, but hopefully they can do that concurrently with a Tim Lincecum revival.

02 April 2016

2012 SEGA Card-Gen Zack Greinke Foil Rare

Yesterday I showed off a wrestling card I purchased from a seller in Japan. Today I'll show the baseball card that came alongside it.


This Zack Greinke card comes from the 2012 SEGA Card-Gen set. It's a Foil Rare card, which as I understand it was basically the insert set in SEGA Card-Gen. There is a separate set of Foil Rares that was given away as tournament prizes, but they look a little different. These regular Foil Rares have a different picture than the player's base card, a foil background, a different bio on the back, a one-point attribute increase, a different card number (denoting their place in the Rare checklist) and players of the actual arcade game noted that Foil Rare players generally did better in the video game.

I don't have any particular affinity for Greinke, but I don't necessarily seek out his cards. Back when he played for small-market teams I would draft him on my fantasy baseball teams, but once he hit the big time (and his numbers got even better) I stopped paying the price for him. Speaking of fantasy baseball, I had Greinke's new teammate, A.J. Pollock, on all of my rosters this year and he just broke his elbow. I think it's going to be a long season for me.

12 January 2016

2013 SEGA Card-Gen Extravaganza 15: Toronto Blue Jays

It's been months and months since I added a team to this series. I started this series of posts way back in May 2014 after I found a complete 2013 SEGA Card-Gen set on eBay. I still love these cards, but they might not be as fresh and exciting to my readers as they were way back then. Let's close out the AL portion of the set with the Toronto Blue Jays. After today it will be all NL teams. At my current pace I will finish the series on 06 September 2017. The Blue Jays get 15 cards in their team set, which is 2 more than the 13 per team average across the entire 390-card set.


The team set starts out with catcher J.P. Arencibia. He had a rough 2013, both on and off the field. He had such a rough time that he closed his Twitter account. After the Jays released him he spent 2014 and 2015 bouncing around a bit. Most recently he signed on with the Phillies' minor league system.


Emilio Bonifacio came to the Blue Jays in the big trade with the Marlins, which is why it seems like half the guys in this team set are wearing Miami uniforms. He got traded to the Royals partway through the 2013 season and subsequently has been with the Cubs, Braves, White Sox, Cubs, and Braves in a series of trades, releases, and signings. Not a lot of job security, but Baseball Reference says he's made $11.545 million so far in his career. I'm sure that makes up for some of the inconvenience.


Lawrie got traded to the Athletics in the Josh Donaldson deal. Donaldson went on to an MVP season in 2015. Lawrie was serviceable and then got traded last month to the White Sox in exchange for prospects.


Jose Reyes was traded to the Rockies in the Troy Tulowitzki deal in 2015, a move he was publicly unhappy with, then he got arrested in the off-season for a domestic dispute with his wife. I used to kind of like pulling his cards, but now I just consider him a lousy wife-beater.


Melky Cabrera signed with the Blue Jays for 2013 after coming off his 50-game suspension for PED usage. A friend of his tried to help him talk his way out of the charges by building a fake website and proclaiming that Cabrera had unknowingly purchased supplements from the site. The site was traced back to Cabrera and he admitted guilt. He played two years with the Blue Jays and then got paid by the White Sox.


Colby Rasmus played a decent role in the Astros big run in 2015. Then he made history by becoming the first player ever to accept a qualifying offer in the 2015 off-season. He's had a bit of a roller-coaster career, but overall has played well. I think the knock on him has often been chemistry in the locker room, something he seems to have fixed with Houston. His hair always seems more wet than it should be. I should probably look into starting a Rasmus PC, but I've probably got too much other stuff going on right now. He's also not a guy who makes it onto a lot of checklists, because he's not really a hot prospect or a star. Those days passed a while back, probably while he was still with the Cardinals.


Now we're getting into the real meat of this team set, with star bat-flipper and home run hitter Jose Bautista. I would PC his cards, but I can't afford them. He's sporting a nice blue glove in the photo, and a nice 8-star rating on his card.


Edwin Encarnacion is another elite hitter to round out the batters in the team set. Four of the top fifteen AL MVP finalists were Blue Jays in 2015, with Encarnacion (12th) coming in behind Donaldson (1st), Bautista (8th), and David Price (9th).


R.A. Dickey is my favorite player, although his star has fallen quite a bit since his 2012 Cy Young season with the Mets. He still goes through periods when his knuckleball is dancing and his numbers are elite, but he also is prone to getting shelled from time to time.


Josh Johnson didn't really work out with the Blue Jays. He has spent the 2014 and 2015 seasons in the Padres organization, mostly working on recovering from his 2nd and 3rd Tommy John surgeries. He's already been ruled out for the 2016 season. I guess he's still in his early 30's and could still come back, but after a certain number of arm injuries I would think you'd just call it a career and be done with it.


Mark Buehrle has had a pretty good career to this point, with a couple of no-hitters (one of them a perfect game) and many years as a consistent innings-eater. He was left off the Blue Jays' 2015 postseason roster and to my knowledge hasn't decided if he'll come back in 2016.


Romero pitched 7.1 innings in 2013 and hasn't been able to put anything together since, struggling through minor league stints in the Blue Jays' and Giants' minor league systems.


Morrow followed up a pretty good 2012 with some mediocre pitching in 2013 and 2014 for Toronto. After signing with the Padres he had a good start to 2015 but wound up on the DL after 5 starts and needed surgery on his shoulder. He got a minor league deal with an invitation to spring training for 2016.


Luis Perez pitched 5 innings in 2013 after coming back from an injury. He has battled injuries on various minor league deals since then, most recently signing a deal with the Blue Jays again with a 2016 spring training invitation.


Casey Janssen was the Blue Jays closer for most of 2013 and 2014, although he had plenty of struggles in the role. He signed with the Washington Nationals for 2015 and pitched in their bullpen for most of the season with mixed results. He doesn't currently have a contract in place for 2016.

It's amazing to me how much the league changes in just a couple of years. This set is still only a couple of years old and it seems like nearly every player has had some kind of significant career change, whether it is a move to another team (or three), a change in career trajectory, legal trouble, or injury. This wraps up the AL portion of the set. I am hoping that it won't take me until mid-2017 to get through the NL teams. I think my current average in this series is about one post every 40 days. I should be able to beat that. I already have the next several teams scanned, but I need to separate and crop all the photos. I don't really need to do the write-ups on the players, either, but I feel like I need to put something in between the pictures and I have a little bit of fun looking up each player and getting a snapshot of their career.