Daily Times (Primos, PA)

After trailblazi­ng career, Abreu happy to be back in Philly

- By Matthew DeGeorge mdegeorge@21st-centurymed­ia.com @sportsdoct­ormd on Twitter

PHILADELPH­IA >> Bobby Abreu sat at home in Marlton, N.J., in October 2008, champagne at the ready.

Abreu’s heyday in Philadelph­ia was too early for the Phillies to be sustained contenders, the two-time All-Star outfielder dealt at the trade deadline in 2006 to the Yankees.

But a part of Abreu was with the Phillies as they made history against Tampa Bay in that Fall Classic.

“I know I wasn’t there, wasn’t a part of that, but in my heart, I’m a part of that,” Abreu said Friday night at Citizens Bank Park. “I feel like I’m a Philly player, a Philly family (member).”

The almost-there scene of 2008 fits perfectly with Abreu’s arc in Philadelph­ia. He developed in the organizati­on just a year or two ahead of its critical mass of homegrown stars. His name litters the list of statistica­l leaders in club history, yet he’s not always regarded as one of the fans’ all-time favorites.

But as Abreu takes his place on the Phillies’ Wall of Fame, he’ll feel plenty at home.

“I would say my best times of my career, my great years, I would say I did it over here in Philadelph­ia,” Abreu said. “I think the years that I had, my best times, it was here in Philadelph­ia.”

Abreu also played for the Yankees, Angels, Dodgers and Mets before retiring at age 40 in 2014. He shared his gratitude Friday for former general manager Ed Wade, who acquired him in 1997 in exchange for Kevin Stocker from the Rays after the Astros (who had signed him in 1990 as a free agent from Venezuela) left him unprotecte­d in the expansion draft.

Abreu would stay with the Phillies for nearly a decade, winning a Gold Glove and a Silver Slugger award, before Pat Gillick shipped him to the Yankees with Cory Lidle for a pittance of prospects who never made it. So Abreu missed out on the parade in 2008 in body, if not spirit.

He ranks in the top 10 in Phillies history in wins above replacemen­t, on-base percentage, slugging, runs, doubles and a slew of advanced metrics. But Abreu also carries a unique mantel as a pioneer for Venezuelan players. A nation once known exclusivel­y for its exceptiona­l middle infielders — Omar Vizquel, Hall of Famer Luis Aparicio and Dave Concepcion — Abreu broke the mold.

He is fourth all-time in games played among Venezuelan­s; trailing only Miguel Cabrera in career WAR, among position players and pitchers. His 2,088 outfield starts in the bigs are the most among Venezuelan­s, and only four others have more than 1,000 (Magglio Ordonez, Carlos Gonzalez, Tony Armas and Gerardo Parra).

For a Phillies organizati­on with a long history of finding Venezuelan ballplayer­s (five are on the 40-man roster, while Freddy Galvis had a long tenure in town), that history resonates.

“Obviously there was always that sense of pride,” said second baseman Cesar Hernandez through a team translator. “Bobby is from Venezuela, he participat­ed in the Home Run Derby and he won it (in 2005), had the Venezuela flag around him, it was very emotional to see him do that. It was definitely encouragin­g and motivating to see someone who’s from where I’m from accomplish something like that because that really inspires you and motivates you to try to be like him or follow his footsteps.”

“Before when you talk about Venezuelan­s, you talk about the shortstops, Omar Vizquel and those guys,” Abreu said. “You never talked about outfielder­s. When I came, you wanted to show you can be a good player to follow, too, and to show your skills and show that outfielder­s can do good things, too.”

Hernandez said he gravitated toward watching the infielders his country produced in abundance, and understand­ably so. He got to meet Abreu during a Venezuelan Winter League season in which he played on a team with Abreu’s brother. In Hernandez’s youth, the Winter League games garnered the most attention back home, and Abreu played a big part in that community, too.

“It was great any time I went to Venezuela to play winter ball because we knew we were going to see really high quality baseball and have a chance to meet him or play a game with or against him,” Hernandez said.

That career WAR of Abreu’s, in addition to being a nice even 60.0, is squarely in Hall of Fame considerat­ion territory. It’s ahead of several in Cooperstow­n, including Aparicio, Mike Piazza, Vladimir Guerrero, Willie Stargell, Whitey Ford, George Sisler, Tony Perez and the unanimous Mariano Rivera (positional difference­s play a role).

Yet chatter about Abreu’s Hall candidacy isn’t all that robust. He’ll be on the ballot for the first time in 2020, trailing only sure-fire first-ballot candidate and former Yankees teammate Derek Jeter

(72.4) among the newcomers. And while Abreu’s traditiona­l numbers are solid

(288 homers, 2,470 hits, 1,363 RBIs and

1,453 runs scored), he knows he’s shy of some of those magic numbers that Cooperstow­n desires.

“I do think about it,” he said. “There are some numbers there. I think everybody now has more time to see what I’ve done in baseball. … I know I don’t have 500 homers. I didn’t used to hit a lot of homers. But stolen bases, I did a lot of things, and right now everyone is starting to see what is going on.”

For now, he’s going to enjoy his trip back to Philly. He hasn’t spent much time here since his career ended as a Met (after being released as second-tenure Phillie in March of that year). He’s mostly been spending time with family and he balked when asked if he had interest in a postplayin­g career in baseball.

The next thing on his retirement list is this weekend’s enshrineme­nt. Getting to be around his many former teammates on the 2009 team, celebratin­g its 10-year anniversar­y, will be special for him, even if he was only part of that in spirit, too.

“To have the opportunit­y to be in the Wall of Fame, it’s exciting for me,” Abreu said. “It means a lot to be a part of the history and the traditions of the team.”

 ?? CHARLIE NEIBERGALL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Bobby Abreu last donned Phillies colors in the spring of 2014. Though he missed the club’s championsh­ip seasons, he still followed his old club in spirit, a connection that was solidified with enshrineme­nt to the Phillies Wall of Fame.
CHARLIE NEIBERGALL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Bobby Abreu last donned Phillies colors in the spring of 2014. Though he missed the club’s championsh­ip seasons, he still followed his old club in spirit, a connection that was solidified with enshrineme­nt to the Phillies Wall of Fame.

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