16. Scott Servais
Scott Servais started his career in Houston and was traded to the Cubs along with Luis Gonzalez in the middle of 1995 for Rick Wilkins, and he proceeded to tear shit up. He played in 52 games and hit .286/.371/.560. It didn't seem like the Cubs had just found their new catcher, it seemed like they might have the steal of the century. At least it did to me, who was only 11 years old at the time and thought that a 52-game sample size was plenty big enough to disregard his previous work for the Astros. Of course, if someone hit 3-4 in the first game of the season, I would think that maybe they could do that every game. I mean, they already did it once, just repeat that performance 161 more times.
Anyway, let's ignore how impressionable the young version of me was and focus on Servais. To the surprise of no one over the age of 12, his numbers came back to Earth. But he was still the Cubs starting catcher entering the 1998 season.
Scott Servais was as offensively productive as you would expect, which is to say not very. The highest batting average he had at any point in the season was .235, and that was on April 14. And things somehow find a way to get significantly worse. In the middle of July, he was hitting just .196 with a .289 slugging percentage.
Jim Riggleman tried to give Tyler Houston more playing time, but he was battling a groin injury and couldn't find his hitting stroke. So Servais kept playing consistently although definitely in a timeshare with Houston and occasionally Sandy Martinez. Servais did get better though, and his numbers rose to a not nearly as bad .222/.289/.338 line with seven home runs.
Scott Servais only got one start in the NLDS, but he made it count. In the sixth inning of Game 2, Mickey Morandini led off with a single and Servais followed with a base hit to right field. After a sacrifice bunt from Kevin Tapani, Lance Johnson knocked Morandini home on a ground out, giving the Cubs a 1-0 lead.
Although the Braves would tie that game in the ninth, Servais had another chance to make an impact in the tenth inning. He was already 2-3 on the day, but with two runners on, the Cubs chose to pinch hit for Servais. This led to Jeff Blauser shitting the bed on a strike 'em out, throw 'em out double play to end the rally.
That would be Servais's last game for the Cubs. He signed with the Giants in free agency and had a short stint with the Rockies before coming home to Houston to end his career. he would stay in baseball, starting off as a member of the front office for the Rangers and Angels before becoming the Manager of the Seattle Mariners. Although he has never admitted to this publicly, his greatest career highlight is meeting with my wife as an ambassador for the Angels.
In case you missed it:
Introduction
#47 - Matt Karchner
#46 - Jose Nieves
#45 - Rodney Myers
#44 - Justin Speier
#43 - Tony Fossas
#42 - Kennie Steenstra
#41 - Chris Haney
#40 - Bob Patterson
#39 - Pedro Valdes
#38 - Derrick White
#37 - Ben Van Ryn
#36 - Terrell Lowery
#35 - Don Wengert
#34 - Kurt Miller
#33 - Jason Maxwell
#32 - Kevin Foster
#31 - Mike Morgan
#30 - Felix Heredia
#29 - Jeff Blauser
#28 - Jason Hardtke
#27 - Dave Stevens
#26 - Manny Alexander
#25 - Marc Pisciotta
#24 - Kevin Orie
#23 - Sandy Martinez
#22 - Terry Adams
#21 - Matt Mieske
#20 - Amaury Telemaco
#19 - Tyler Houston
#18 - Geremi Gonzalez
#17 - Orlando Merced
Scott Servais started his career in Houston and was traded to the Cubs along with Luis Gonzalez in the middle of 1995 for Rick Wilkins, and he proceeded to tear shit up. He played in 52 games and hit .286/.371/.560. It didn't seem like the Cubs had just found their new catcher, it seemed like they might have the steal of the century. At least it did to me, who was only 11 years old at the time and thought that a 52-game sample size was plenty big enough to disregard his previous work for the Astros. Of course, if someone hit 3-4 in the first game of the season, I would think that maybe they could do that every game. I mean, they already did it once, just repeat that performance 161 more times.
Anyway, let's ignore how impressionable the young version of me was and focus on Servais. To the surprise of no one over the age of 12, his numbers came back to Earth. But he was still the Cubs starting catcher entering the 1998 season.
Scott Servais was as offensively productive as you would expect, which is to say not very. The highest batting average he had at any point in the season was .235, and that was on April 14. And things somehow find a way to get significantly worse. In the middle of July, he was hitting just .196 with a .289 slugging percentage.
Jim Riggleman tried to give Tyler Houston more playing time, but he was battling a groin injury and couldn't find his hitting stroke. So Servais kept playing consistently although definitely in a timeshare with Houston and occasionally Sandy Martinez. Servais did get better though, and his numbers rose to a not nearly as bad .222/.289/.338 line with seven home runs.
Scott Servais only got one start in the NLDS, but he made it count. In the sixth inning of Game 2, Mickey Morandini led off with a single and Servais followed with a base hit to right field. After a sacrifice bunt from Kevin Tapani, Lance Johnson knocked Morandini home on a ground out, giving the Cubs a 1-0 lead.
Although the Braves would tie that game in the ninth, Servais had another chance to make an impact in the tenth inning. He was already 2-3 on the day, but with two runners on, the Cubs chose to pinch hit for Servais. This led to Jeff Blauser shitting the bed on a strike 'em out, throw 'em out double play to end the rally.
That would be Servais's last game for the Cubs. He signed with the Giants in free agency and had a short stint with the Rockies before coming home to Houston to end his career. he would stay in baseball, starting off as a member of the front office for the Rangers and Angels before becoming the Manager of the Seattle Mariners. Although he has never admitted to this publicly, his greatest career highlight is meeting with my wife as an ambassador for the Angels.
In case you missed it:
Introduction
#47 - Matt Karchner
#46 - Jose Nieves
#45 - Rodney Myers
#44 - Justin Speier
#43 - Tony Fossas
#42 - Kennie Steenstra
#41 - Chris Haney
#40 - Bob Patterson
#39 - Pedro Valdes
#38 - Derrick White
#37 - Ben Van Ryn
#36 - Terrell Lowery
#35 - Don Wengert
#34 - Kurt Miller
#33 - Jason Maxwell
#32 - Kevin Foster
#31 - Mike Morgan
#30 - Felix Heredia
#29 - Jeff Blauser
#28 - Jason Hardtke
#27 - Dave Stevens
#26 - Manny Alexander
#25 - Marc Pisciotta
#24 - Kevin Orie
#23 - Sandy Martinez
#22 - Terry Adams
#21 - Matt Mieske
#20 - Amaury Telemaco
#19 - Tyler Houston
#18 - Geremi Gonzalez
#17 - Orlando Merced
No comments:
Post a Comment