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The 100 Greatest Angels: #33 Scott Spiezio

#33 Scott Spiezio, IF

Career Stats

Nice that the votes should tabulate the redemption represented by Scott Spiezio right after the tragedy of Donnie Moore. Without his amazing performance in the 2002 post-season, capped off by the single biggest homerun in franchise history (sparking the biggest come-from-behind rally in a World Series elimination game ever), it is safe to say that Scott Spiezio would be ranked lower on this list.

But how much lower?

Probably not much, as Scott stuck around Anaheim with a lot less benchwarming and much more contributing than was ever expected of him.

For Angels with 2000 or more Plate Appearances (and Scott had exactly 2,000!), Speez ranks 9th all-time (in between Brian Downing and Don Baylor) with a .446 Slugging % and 10th all-time with a .787 OPS.

With an OPS+ of 117 in 2002, he contributed mightily to that campaign (the franchise's most successful) to get into that postseason in which he so shined.

From personal in-stadium observations, Spiezio was the most popular Angel during the 2002 season and was a close 2nd to David Eckstein in the plethora of fans in T-Shirts in 2003. Angel Fans cupie and Brent Carter selected Scott at #31 on his Top 40 Ballot and Brent's comments sum up the view from the stands: It is unfortunate to see what has happened to Spiezio since his departure from the Angels. Things were looking so good. He was a World Series hero, his band Sandfrog was beginning to get recognition. He will always be remembered fondly by Angels fans and it was good to see him get the reception he did when he came back to Angels Stadium for first time as a Mariner. Hopefully he will get another shot and latch on somewhere. He is a great guy and was a great Angel.

The reception he received, a big thank you on the jumbotron, rocketed the Angels to the top of baseball's classy franchises. All things considered, Scott Spiezio is the gift to the Angels that keeps on giving.

Rob McMillin of the 6-4-2 Southern California Baseball Blog has a geat overview of Scott's career as the first post in the comments section...

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My $0.02
(Rev, I know I mailed this to you but it must have gotten stuck once again. Damn Yahoo!)

---

 I think the Rev must have had a little Beethoven's Fifth Symphony in him when he assembled this list. By posting Scott Spiezio right ahead of Donnie Moore -- a worst-to-first Angels scenario -- we go from the team's darkest moment to its greatest, Speez's homer that transformed the franchise.

There was little in Spiezio's background to predict his coming, brief stardom. The son of major leaguer Ed Spiezio, a utility infielder/outfielder and sometime starter for the Cards, Padres, and Chisox, the switch-hitting Scott was a sixth-round pick by the A's in the 1993 draft who raised few eyebrows. Drafted out of the University of Illinois, he showed enough promise to make the big club as the team's starting second baseman in 1997, spending about half his time at third in 1998. But in 1999, the advent of power-hitting Eric Chavez cut his time at third, and the A's acquisition of former Angel Tony Phillips to play second relegated him to a migratory role with the club, filling in whatever infield spot needed a player that day. He lost the starting job at second base to veteran Tony Phillips, and actually spent a significant amount of time at AAA Vancouver; to make the indignity worse, the A's traded with the Angels for Randy Velarde three days after he was promoted back to Oakland.

Allowed to walk as a free agent that offseason, the Angels picked up Spiezio in January, 2000, as the first major free agent signing by new GM Bill Stoneman. Stoneman had signed three second basemen that offseason, the other two being Pat Kelly and Jason Bates, both signed to minor league contracts, and Trent Durrington. Former president Richard Brown thought the acquisition wasn't nearly enough, rebuking Stoneman's claim that the team would contend as an "insult" to the fans. With an offseason trade of Jim Edmonds yielding promising newcomer Adam Kennedy, Spiezio mostly spent time at DH that year.

With the discovery of a ruptured tendon in Mo Vaughn's leg in January, 2001, the Angels' first base job opened up. The heir apparent was old Angels favorite Wally Joyner, but a strong spring training by Spiezio made the choice tough on sophomore manager Mike Scioscia. But Spiezio had a bit more pop, hitting 17 homers the year before, versus Joyner's five. The answer finally came on opening day, when Spiezio started at the position. Managing only 13 home runs, he started an unfortunate Angels tradition on recent teams of having weak-hitting first basemen.

Spiezio's 2002, while not a barn-burner for home runs (he only hit 12), marked the high point of his OBP (.371) in any season with more than 400 at bats. The Mo Vaughn trade cemented Spiezio's position as the starting first baseman, and any lack of power from first was balanced by the acquisition of righty-masher Brad Fullmer.

Of course, Spiezio's postseason outburst of 19 RBIs on 18 hits was the stuff of legends; while Angels fans will forever replay his Game 6 homer, he also played a critical role in the ALDS against the Yankees as one of four Halos to homer in the crucial Game 2 the Angels won 8-6 at Yankee Stadium. Too, he helped provide the exclamation point on the club's ALCS win against the Twins in Game 5 with a solo shot against Joe Mays in the fifth that tied the game followed by Adam Kennedy's second shot on that historic day.

Spiezio's heroics put the club in a precarious position with regards to his then-expired contract. On the one hand, he was essentially a utility infielder playing out of position at first, but on the other, the fans would riot if he were allowed to simply walk. Bill Stoneman made a good choice, re-signing him for one year. A significant drop in his batting average from .285 in 2002 to a more pedestrian .265, along with a much more shocking drop in his OBP to .326, led to his release at the end of a disappointing, injury-plagued season for the Angels. Signing a three-year contract with the Mariners, his production collapsed partly due to injuries in 2004, leading to virtually zero playing time in 2005 and an embarrassing .064 average in 47 at bats. Released in August 2005, he was charged with assaulting a Chicago cabbie in October; the AP article referred to him as a "former Major League Baseball player".

The early bird gets the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

by scareduck on Jan 25, 2006 7:25 AM PST reply actions   0 recs

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