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About The Author

Josh Wilker

Email: jawilker68 at yahoo.com

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Skip Jutze
2007-09-16 10:12
by Josh Wilker
 


We have been mathematically eliminated. We are playing out the string.

We will be let go. We will be exchanged for other nonentities, or for no one yet named, or left unprotected, or designated for assignment, or cut, or waived. It will happen sooner than we expect.

The seats behind us are empty. We take a swing through the empty air. We look to the empty sky.

Any records left behind will show us as unphenomenal, late to the game, rarely necessary, transient. 

Maybe we will have had our day in the sun. We will have hit the first grand slam home run in the history of an expansion team. We will have tagged out a man at home to complete a rare 6-4-3-2 triple play.

But in the end we will be unable to hold back elimination. We will grow a mustache. It will do as much as anything else, which is nothing. We will finish 38 games behind the team that hit into the triple play. We will then be called into an office.

"It is over," we will be told. "You've been released."

We will wait for a phone call to refute this claim. The phone will not ring.

Comments
2007-09-16 10:59:43
1.   Peanut
George Brett batted leadoff in that triple play game.
2007-09-16 11:09:31
2.   Josh Wilker
Looks like he did that a fair amount in '77, actually leading the team in appearances in the lead-off spot (scroll down for "most common" stats):

http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/KCR/1977_bo.shtml

2007-09-16 13:43:20
3.   be2ween
I really feel like Skip Jutze today.
2007-09-17 02:25:29
4.   snydes
i hope they let him keep the uniform.
2007-09-17 05:48:40
5.   Joe Romano
He looks like Father Guido Sarducci. I recall him having been on the Astros prior to the Mariners. I looked him up and if Wikipiedia is correct he was born in Bayside, NY, is an alumnus of Central Connecticut State University, and taught Junior High School in Dix Hills, NY prior to his debut.
2007-09-17 06:29:06
6.   JL25and3
Why on earth would the Mariners ever drop such a cool-looking logo?
2007-09-17 07:56:45
7.   Josh Wilker
3 : I've found that Sundays are often particularly Skip Jutze-ish.

5 : "He looks like Father Guido Sarducci."

Good lord, could this mean the chicanery I examined previously on Cardboard Gods (see links for each installment of the 3-part series below) is even more widespread than I imagined?

http://cardboardgods.baseballtoaster.com/archives/609752.html

http://cardboardgods.baseballtoaster.com/archives/609750.html

http://cardboardgods.baseballtoaster.com/archives/609748.html

I saw that great bit about Skip Jutze teaching junior high before playing pro. I also found contact info for Skip Jutze at a Colorado company called Jeffco, which provides "vocational training and job placement assistance for adults with developmental disabilities."

6 : Boy, that's a good question.

2007-09-17 09:14:05
8.   chiros13
Funny....first thing I thought wasn't Fr. Guido Sarducci, but that somehow Jim Croce faked his own death and created a new name in order to have a career shift from siger/songwriter to little-used Mariner catcher.
2007-09-17 09:19:25
9.   Monkey Head
I'm proud to live in a world where Skip Jutze has a Wikipedia page.
2007-09-17 13:30:59
10.   springer
The M's ditched the upside-down trident logo because it was associated with nearly twenty years of futility. Which is probably why readers of this site like it so much (and why I won't wear the newer compass rose merchandise).

Hurray for ignoble failure.

2007-09-18 09:40:18
11.   Raf
6 Marketing, I presume. I miss the Brewers' "MB Glove" logo, the Expos' pinwheel caps, and the Orioles' "smiling Oriole" logo.
2007-09-18 10:05:26
12.   Joe Romano
Good lord, could this mean the chicanery I examined previously on Cardboard Gods (see links for each installment of the 3-part series below) is even more widespread than I imagined?

WOW! That's pretty scary. The first thing I actually thought when I saw the Skip Jutze was not Guido Sarducci, but Carmen Fanzone!

2008-05-30 13:11:52
13.   sg schier
Skip Jutze was my Summer League coach, 40 years ago- fine coach, better person.

Wilker, you got it wrong- he had his years- not just a "day" in the sun, in MLB and other levels of baseball. Also, I believe he was a quarterback in college. Injuries, not lack of talent, ended his career.

2008-05-30 13:25:51
14.   Josh Wilker
13 : Thanks for chiming in, sg schier. I appreciate it. I intended no disrespect to Mr. Jutze, who by making the major leagues obviously surpassed any professional accomplishment I'll ever attain. These card profiles are generally meant to be extensions of my own doubts and failings and secret joys rather than accurate representations of the figures in the cards.
2008-07-01 17:49:43
15.   mike hutter
sg - I was a high school teammate of Skip on football and baseball teams. He was a great athlete. He quarterbaked our team to an undefeated season in 1962, led the basketball team to its best record in years in the winter and then was all league in baseball in the spring. While I did not see him play in college, he qb Conn Central State for 2 years.
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