Baseball Toaster Cardboard Gods
Log in | Register | Help
Mario Guerrero, 1976
2006-11-22 07:34
by Josh Wilker

In a field
I am the absence
of field.
This is
always the case.
Wherever I am
I am what is missing.
-- Mark Strand, "Keeping Things Whole"

So who is the all-time greatest player to be named later? That is, who most fully embodies the disembodied nameless faceless procrastinating essence of human driftwood embedded in the term player to be named later? The Harry Chiti transaction pointed out by my esteemed colleague, Pete Millerman, in the comments section attached to yesterday's post certainly bears repeating in any attempt to determine the answer to this question. The Harry Chiti page on Baseball-Reference.com (sponsored, somehow touchingly, by someone named Jo Chiti) summarizes the infamous boomeranging of Harry Chiti with brutal brevity:

April 26, 1962: Purchased by the New York Mets from the Cleveland Indians.
June 15, 1962: Returned to the Cleveland Indians by the New York Mets following previous purchase.

Man. That's tough to beat, especially since the team, the 1962 New York Mets, that preferred the absence of Harry Chiti to the presence of Harry Chiti is often celebrated as the worst team in the history of major league baseball. Add to that the fact that Harry Chiti had earlier in his career been a player to be named later in a deal to a team, the New York Yankees, that stashed him like a stack of old magazines in the cellar of the minor leagues for a couple years before allowing him to be scavenged in the Rule V draft by the awful 1957 Kansas City A's, and I think we may be talking about the Babe Ruth of players to be named later.

However, I believe Mario Guerrero also deserves consideration. I realize I have a personal bias in this matter, as I derived comfort throughout my often solitary childhood from the near-continuous, albeit transitory, presence of Mario Guerrero. But it has become clear to me in retrospect that Mario Guerrero's continuous presence at my side was haunted every step of the way by the specter of the player to be named later. Guerrero, shown here in his 1976 card, had been traded from the Red Sox to the Cardinals before the previously considered Mario Guerrero card, from 1975, ever reached my hands. He did not come to the Cardinals as the player to be named later, but was instead traded straight up for a player to be named later.

I find this somewhat chilling. You see, the player to be named later clause is generally added to a deal with other principles, other named players going back and forth between teams, but in this case there were no other principles. There was only Mario Guerrero, who though seemingly a useful, spirited reserve was offered to the Cardinals for nobody. Here, take him, the Red Sox said. Just take him. Maybe later sometime you can send us somebody. Or not. Whatever. We don't really care.

By the time this card came into my possession, my family had made another move, which I've described in further detail elsewhere, from bucolic Randolph Center, Vermont, to the bully-glutted unofficial northeastern United States' capital of defunct gravel pits, East Randolph, Vermont, and I had begun attending a hippie-run multiage class based on the experimental free-school philosophy of learning what you want to learn when you want to learn (but only if you want to learn). Right now I don't feel like getting into who broke whose glasses and who called who a pansy, a faggot, a tard, a pussy, a queerbate, and, somehow worst of all, a dufus, but suffice it say that the regular kids in the school, the ones with their desks in straight rows, did not lend full support to our utopian experiment.

Anyway, in the summer after that first school year, the Cardinals completed the Mario Guerrero deal. There was the possibility, of course, that Mario Guerrero could have joined Harry Chiti at the very pinnacle of dubious transactions by being the player the Cardinals sent to the Red Sox to complete their acquisition of Mario Guerrero. This did not occur; instead, the player to be named later turned out to be a man named Willoughby.

As anyone who has ever gotten a new year off to a roaring start by staring at hour after hungover hour of a New Year's Day Twilight Zone Marathon knows, the word Willoughby carries an especially disquieting resonance, particularly when used in terms of some sort of tradeoff. In the episode entitled "A Stop at Willoughby," a town with the same name as the player to be named later in the 1976 Mario Guerrero deal shimmers into existence as the final impossible refuge of a man who, according to Rod Serling (who would understand as well as anyone the existential implications of the concept of the player to be named later), is "protected by a suit of armor held together by one bolt.

"Just a moment ago," Serling continues, "someone removed the bolt, and [his] protection fell away from him and left him a naked target. He's been cannonaded this afternoon by all the enemies of his life. His insecurity has shelled him, his sensitivity has straddled him with humiliation, his deep-rooted disquiet about his own worth has zeroed in on him, landed on target, and blown him apart."

This man, who at thirty-eight happens to be exactly my age, ends up becoming more and more enamored of exchanging everything he has for what seems to be the long-sought completion of a trade he actually made long ago, subconsciously, pummeled by the slings and arrows of this world, for a yearning to be named later, a wondrous refuge of "sunlight and serenity," a town of kindness and calm. Willoughby.

I won't spoil the ending of the episode, but I do want to point out Mario Guerrero's expression of unsinkable cheer in the photograph on this 1976 card. Here is the man who was traded for either nothing or for the inhabited malignant phantasm of nothing known as Willoughby. The position on his card--third base--is not even really his position. But he's not throwing in the towel. Let others give up and get off the train at Willoughby. Mario Guerrero still has some more years to appear on baseball cards to comfort the solitary bespectacled youth of America. Mario Guerrero endures.

 

Comments
2007-04-05 15:20:29
1.   Josh Wilker
1 comment from old CG site:

"the sidekick" (flava flav) said...
Willoughby?
Maybe it's wishful thinking nestled in a hidden part of a man's mind, or maybe it's the last stop in the vast design of things -
Or, perhaps, for a man like Mario Guerrero, who climbed on a world that went by too fast, it's a place around the bend where he could jump off.

Willoughby?
Whatever it is, it comes with sunlight and serenity, and is part of the Twilight Zone...

11:39 AM

Post a comment   (Help)

To comment, please log in.

Not a member? Register!
Voice of the Mathematically Eliminated
Hot from the Toaster
Search
Google Search
Web
Toaster
Cardboard Gods
Archives

2008
07 
06  05  04  03  02  01 

2007
12  11  10  09  08  07 
06  05  04  03  02  01 

2006
12  11  10  09 
About The Author

Josh Wilker

Email: jawilker68 at yahoo.com

Lowlights and Miscellany

Team Archives
Atlanta Braves
Hank Aaron
Brian Asselstine
Barry Bonnell
Bobby Cox
Adrian Devine
Jamie Easterly
Carl Morton
Rowland Office
Jim Wynn
Baltimore Orioles
Mark Belanger
Al Bumbry
Mike Cuellar
Rich Dauer
Tippy Martinez
Kevin Millar
Jim Palmer
Boog Powell
Sammy Stewart
Boston Red Sox
Jack Brohamer, 1979
Bill Buckner
Bill Campbell
Denny Doyle
Dwight Evans
Mario Guerrero, 1974
Mario Guerrero, 1975
Bill Lee, 1977
Fred Lynn
Mike Paxton (with Don Aase)
Jim Rice
George Scott
Bob Stanley
Luis Tiant, 1975
Mike Torrez
Ted Williams
Larry Wolfe
Carl Yastrzemski, 1975
Carl Yastrzemski, 1977
Carl Yastrzemski, 1978
Carl Yastrzemski, 1980
Carl Yastrzemski, 1981
California Angels
Don Aase (with Mike Paxton)
Mike Barlow
Lyman Bostock
Ken Brett
Andy Etchebarren
Mario Guerrero, 1977
Mario Guerrero, 1978
Bob Jones
Rudy Meoli
Rick Miller
Jerry Remy
Nolan Ryan
Frank Tanana
Chicago Cubs
Larry Biittner
Bill Buckner
Jose Cardenal
Cubs, 1977
Ivan DeJesus
Carmen Fanzone
Bruce Sutter
Geoff Zahn
Oscar Zamora
Chicago White Sox
Cy Acosta
Bucky Dent
Brian Downing
Rich Gossage
Ken Henderson
Fred Howard
Wayne Nordhagen
Ron Santo
Ron Schueler
White Sox Future Stars
White Sox, 1977
Wilbur Wood
Cincinnati Reds
Bob Bailey
Johnny Bench
Darrel Chaney
Dave Concepcion
George Foster
Joe Morgan, 1976
Joe Morgan, 1979
Dale Murray
Pete Rose
Champ Summers
Cleveland Indians
Larry Andersen
Jack Brohamer, 1976
Jackie Brown
Bernie Carbo
David Clyde
Ed Crosby
Dennis Eckersley
Toby Harrah
John Lowenstein
Sid Monge
Jeff Torborg
Rick Waits
Rick Wise
Detroit Tigers
Ed Brinkman
Mark Fidrych
John Hiller
Willie Horton
Lerrin LaGrow
Ron LeFlore
Ron LeFlore (update)
Ben Oglivie
Dick Sharon
Johnny Wockenfuss
Houston Astros
Astros, 1978
Brad Ausmus
Mike Cosgrove
Ken Forsch
Bo McLaughlin
Joe Niekro
Randy Niemann
Gene Pentz
Gene Pentz (flipped)
Gordy Pladson
Terry Puhl
J.R. Richard, 1977
J.R. Richard, 1978
J.R. Richard, 1979
Bob Watson
Kansas City Royals
Doug Bird
George Brett
Jim Colborn
Clint Hurdle
Hal McRae
Marty Pattin
Dan Quisenberry
U.L. Washington
Willie Wilson
Jim Wohlford
Los Angeles Dodgers
Ron Cey
Steve Garvey, 1976
Steve Garvey, 1978
Tommy John, 1978
Davey Lopes
Johnny Oates
Team Picture, 1980
Derrel Thomas
Bob Welch
Steve Yeager
Milwaukee Brewers
Hank Aaron, 1976
Hank Aaron, 1975
Kurt Bevacqua, 1976
Bob Coluccio
Bob Hansen
Von Joshua
Sixto Lezcano
Gorman Thomas, 1975
Gorman Thomas, 1980
Bill Travers
Clyde Wright
Minnesota Twins
Vic Albury
Steve Braun and Steve Brye
Tom Burgmeier
Rod Carew
Ray Corbin
Dave Johnson
Ken Landreaux
Jose Morales
Harmon Killebrew
Montreal Expos
Stan Bahnsen
Bob Bailey
Dennis Blair
Dave Cash
Nate Colbert
Pepe Frias and Pepe Mangual
Woodie Fryman
Ed Herrmann
Tom Hutton
Bill Lee, 1980
Chris Speier
New York Mets
Bob Apodaca
Bruce Boisclair
Steve Henderson
Dave Kingman
Jerry Koosman
Lee Mazzilli
Len Randle
Tom Seaver
Craig Swan?
Joe Torre
New York Yankees
Wade Boggs
Ron Guidry
Steve Howe
Reggie Jackson, 1977
Tommy John, 1980
Alex Johnson
Sparky Lyle
Billy Martin
Rudy May
Gene Michael
Thurman Munson
Lou Piniella
Luis Tiant, 1980
Cecil Upshaw
Oakland A's
Vida Blue
Dick Bosman
Steve Dunning
Mario Guerrero, 1980
Rickey Henderson
Reggie Jackson, 1975
Mickey Klutts
Paul Mitchell
Joe Wallis
Herb Washington
Philadelphia Phillies
Warren Brusstar
Steve Carlton
Terry Harmon
Bud Harrelson
Tom Hilgendorf
Greg Luzinski
Garry Maddox, 1976
Ron Reed
Pete Rose
Pittsburgh Pirates
Mike Easler
Dock Ellis
Tim Foli
Richie Hebner
Grant Jackson
Tim Jones
Doc Medich
Bob Moose
Ed Ott
Willie Stargell
Kent Tekulve
St. Louis Cardinals
Rich Folkers
Bob Gibson
Mario Guerrero, 1976
Bake McBride
Ken Reitz
Reggie Smith
Garry Templeton
Mike Tyson
John Urrea
San Diego Padres
Paul Dade
Rollie Fingers
Danny Frisella
Oscar Gamble
Randy Jones
Willie McCovey
Vicente Romo
Ozzie Smith
Bobby Valentine
Dave Winfield
San Francisco Giants
Jack Clark
John D'Acquisto
Darrell Evans
Vic Harris
Garry Maddox, 1975
Greg Minton
Bobby Murcer
Joe Strain
Seattle Mariners
Kurt Bevacqua, 1977
Bruce Bochte
Pete Broberg
Larry Cox
Skip Jutze
Larry Milbourne
Mike Parrott
Stan Thomas
Texas Rangers
Jim Bibby
Bert Blyleven
Jeff Burroughs
Leo Cardenas
Dock Ellis
Bill Hands
Bill Hands (correction)
Jim Mason
Brandon McCarthy
Jim Sundberg
Don Stanhouse
Bump Wills
Toronto Blue Jays
Bob Bailor
Rick Bosetti
Bob Davis
Luis Gomez
Dave Roberts
John Scott
Tony Solaita and Craig Kusick
Otto Velez
Behold The Unsortable
Big League Brothers
Bobby Bonds
Mitch Cohen
The Cardboard God All-Stars
Carmen Fanzone?
Father & Son
Mario Guerrero, 1979
Mike Kekich and Fritz Peterson
Byung-Hyun Kim
Eddie Leon
Cory Lidle
Paul Lindblad
Major League Leading Firemen, 1975
Paul Mather
1976 Victory Leaders
Dick Pole and Peter LaCock
Tim Redding
Rookie Infielders
'78 Checklist
'78 Rookie Outfielders
Turn Back the Clock
Roundball Interludes
The Basketball Kid, Part 1
The Basketball Kid, Part 2
The Basketball Kid Takes a Stand
The Basketball Kid Takes a Victory Lap
The Basketball Kid's Official Results
Bucks '80-'81 Team Leaders
Darryl Dawkins
Gerald Henderson
Swen Nater
Mike Newlin
Dennis Johnson
Magic Johnson
Wayne Rollins
Play Ball!
Love versus Hate
The World Is a Cardboard Rectangle
The World Is a Cowhide Sphere
The World Is Wide
Syndication

rss2.0

Add to My Yahoo!