It’s a raw deal being a
Pittsburgh Pirates fan.
The
current owner is cheap.
He
won’t sell the team.
He hires
clueless people to run his team.
And
he does so giving them more room on the leash that he should.
The
Pittsburgh Pirates have had 27 losing seasons in the past 31 years.
If I’m
correct, the Pittsburgh Pirates have the longest losing streak in all of the
major sports.
None
of the team’s prospects seem to pan out.
I’m
not going to be a fool and site the Pittsburgh Pirates being a small market
team, even though I’m firmly (and yes I’m union) in the camp of Major League
Baseball adding a cap/floor system. I can’t even defend the small-market
excuse, when teams in Cleveland, Milwaukee, Kansas City, and Detroit are all in
this year’s playoffs…or were.
The
Pirates went 76-86 in 2023.
The
Pirates went 76-86 again in 2024.
Only
with this guy on the mound for most of the season.
On
August 3rd, if you can believe it, the Pirates were actually in the
running (close running) for a Wild Card spot. But a total collapse that month
sealed the deal.
Again,
it’s a raw deal being a Pittsburgh Pirates fan.
You
have to look for silver linings when you can get them.
The
same goes for being a collector of Pittsburgh Pirates player cards and team sets.
My silver
lining is this guy.
On
April 2nd, 2024, the Pirates acquired Joey Bart from the San Francisco
Giant for current minor league pitcher, Austin Strickland. I’m sure to a lot of
you collectors out there, Joey Bart just comes to mind as once promising
prospect, who failed to deliver on his 2nd overall pick promise. And
maybe you’re right. I know in 2021 when there was a Bart card/Joey Bart insert
card in every Topps release, I just lumped him in with all of the other
big-shot rookies that people talk about that season, and then are done with by
the following year. As a collector, I get tired of “this year’s” big rookies.
To be
honest, I don’t know what happened with Bart in San Francisco. Did the Giants
push him along before he was ready in 2020, because Posey sat out there. Was
the pressure too much. I know Bart was hurt a few times in in San Francisco,
and in their minor league system, and maybe that had something to do with his
performance, and for the Giants finally souring on him.
But I’m
glad they did.
Even
though Joey Bart had two stints on the IL for the Pirates, he put up some
pretty good numbers. In just 80 games, Bart his .265 with 13 home runs and 45 RBI.
Granted it’s the Pirates, but Bart’s home run total tied him for 4th
place on the team. And he played solid defense as well. People in Pittsburgh
started calling him Joey Barrels, and when Bart hit one of those 13 home runs,
we said he’d hit, a Bart-Dart.
He
actually made a lot of fans forgot how much this kid was flailing, as our 1/1
pick only a few short years ago.
I
still have hope for Henry Davis.
But I
sure hope Joey Bart is wearing the black and gold for a lot of years.
In short,
I became Joey Bart collector in 2024.
These
were the Bart cards I already had gathering dust in assorted boxes.
And I
love these inserts from 2021.
I did
a recent ComC purchase (the same one in which I got those Danny O’Connell cards) and made sure to get myself some Joey Bart cards.
Now, THIS is a catcher's card!
I think 1983 is starting to become one of my all-time favorite sets.
Jackson
Holliday, Colt Keith, Wyatt Langford, Jackson Merrill, Jackson Chourio, and
Paul F-ing Skenes all have RC in 2024 Update.
But do
you know which player’s card I’m most excited about?
You
guessed it.
I
tend to latch on to Pirates catchers. Been doing so since I pulled this card
out of my very first pack of baseball cards in 1980.
I’m
glad Joey Bart is a Pittsburgh Pirate.
I
hope he has a healthy 2025 season as our number 1 backstop.
I’m
glad to be a Joey Bart collector now.
And
every night I go to bed praying that Bob Nutting sells the team, so that us Pirates
fans can have a chance to feel what those Tigers, Guardians, Padres, Brewers
and Royals fans are feeling right now.
Thanks for reading! Happy Collecting!