All the years of playing tabletop baseball, and I don’t think I’ve ever played this series.
Stay tuned!
The Table Top Sports Games of Chris Saguisag
Welcome to Opening Day 1986!
Final from Three Rivers Stadium:
Doc goes the distance to secure the Mets’ first win of the season.
And I just realized that I’ve started my first non-Giants full season replay since 1989, when I replayed the Mets 1988 season.
Also, for some reason, rolling a game in APBA seemed less strenuous than any baseball game that I’d been playing lately, namely Ball Park Baseball and Payoff Pitch Baseball.
Go figure.
Next: The Mets travel to Philadelphia for a weekend series against the Phillies.
Stay tuned!
In preparation of the arrival of the new APBA Baseball box, I began to put together the lineups for Opening Day 1986 for the Mets and the Giants.
I looked up the lineups for the Mets-Pirates season opener on April 8th, 1986, started to sort out the lineups, and found that the 1986 set does not have Steve Kemp carded for the Pirates.
Hmph. I hate when that happens, but there you go.
So I started looking at possible solutions.
Option 1: purchase the updated 1986 APBA Baseball Season set, where all players are carded.
Nope. Not interested in purchasing any new APBA Baseball sets.
Option 2: play the game with Payoff Pitch Baseball 1986, where Kemp *is* carded.
Possible/probable route I’ll take, as I was thinking of rolling home games using APBA and away games using Payoff Pitch.
Option 3: same as #2, but just sub players in when playing APBA.
More probable since I had to do that with some games/players in my Ball Park Baseball 1971 SF Giants replay.
Option 4: APBA only and sub players as needed.
Most probable if I only want to use one game system. Which I kinda do, at least with either or both the Mets or Giants.
For starters I think I’ll play with the APBA Baseball 1986 season, basic set, with advanced fielding rules.
I’d like to also score these games by hand, there’s a website called Digital Dugout that will print out a blank scoresheet with lineups for any ball game from 1906 to now, but BallStat makes it easier on my arthritis and stat keeping.
I’ll figure it out after the new box arrives.
Stay tuned!
It appears that I have the following seasons for APBA Baseball:
1986 (from my brother, Robert)
2000 (50th anniversary set, fancy set and cards)
2002 (at the time I thought this was going to be the last hurrah for World Series appearances by the Giants)
I’m getting a new boxed basic APBA Baseball set this weekend. I have no plans to pick up any new teams.
I just wanted something simple as an alternative to Ball Park and Payoff Pitch Baseball, which is why I have no plans to get the Master Addition booklet.
For 1986, I plan to play both the Mets and Giants, maybe abbreviated seasons, using APBA for the road games and Payoff Pitch for the home games for both teams.
Not sure about 2000 and 2002, though I do plan to replay the 2000 Subway World Series at the very least.
From the scorecards I found Robert did play the 2002 World Series, with a different outcome.
There’s also a team envelope with the 1971 San Francisco Giants.
I think back then I was planning to play at the very least the 2000 season since that’s the boxed set that I have.
REALLY fancy cards in this set.
I’ll figure it out after the new box arrives.
Stay tuned!
I want to take a chunk out of all the baseball replays I’m currently running, so I’m going to try to play one game a night for as long as I can do that.
If I were more focused last year I would have finished at least one of these replays.
I have about 3 where I’m close to 40-50 games in, so I’ll start there, though I think I may start the 1986 dual replay that I’ve been itching to play, tonight.
Stay tuned!
ESPN is showing a 30 for 30 documentary on my beloved 1986 New York Mets, titled Once Upon a Time in Queens.
So of course I now want to start a 1986 Mets replay.
We’ll see if I do or not, considering the other 5 full season team replays that I have in progress.
Stay tuned!