As fantastic as the Mets' pitching has been so far, it's really been all about Santana, Pelfrey and the bullpen, with a little bit of "that Jon Niese isn't half-bad" thrown in for good measure, followed always by, "Now if we can just get Maine and Perez on track, we'll be OK."
Well, John Maine looked pretty darn good Wednesday, throwing six solid innings in cold and windy conditions, ignoring the bluster to allow just four hits and three walks with nine strikeouts. Maine only topped off at around 90, but his pitches were on the mark, and he looked like the John Maine of old.
Thanks to Maine and some more timely hitting, especially by the middle of the order (in their last 10 games, the 3-6 hitters are batting .315 with RISP), the Mets wrapped up a 9-1 homestand -- the team has never had a better one -- and won their seventh straight ballgame to stay in first place as the prepare for a weekend series in Philadelphia.
The lead could have been even greater had Bruce Bochy not hand-delivered the Phillies a gift-wrapped comeback with a big bow on top.
The Giants had a 4-1 lead at home in the top of the ninth. Tim Lincecum, who had been allowed to bat for himself in the bottom of the eighth, retired the first batter in the ninth before walking Shane Victorino on four pitches.
To that point, Lincecum had walked no one and struck out 11. His pitch count was at 106. He had been dominating the Phillies all day.
So instead of giving the reigning Cy Young Award winner the chance to finish what he started, or even letting him try and get the next guy out, Bochy went by the book and brought in closer Brian Wilson.
Bochy later called Wilson one of the best closers in baseball. Wilson has four saves this season, but anyone who knows anything knows that Wilson is far from a sure thing. He's certainly not better than Lincecum, who said later that he could have continued, something no one should doubt given his track record.
Of course, the Phillies rallied to tie the game, and after some back-and-forth won the game in 11 innings.
So instead of flying across the country with a loss hanging around their heads (and a 1 1/2-game deficit in the NL East standinsg), the Phillies celebrated yet another "gritty, gutty" victory and enjoy some momentum heading into the series at home against the Mets.
I know, I'm getting greedy. But it would have been nice to see the Phillies come into the series on the down slide instead of riding the high of a dramatic victory.
In game one Friday, Niese faces Kyle Kendrick, who's sort of the Phillies version of Ollie Perez. Game two Saturday has Pelfrey against Halladay at 3:10 p.m. (clear your schedules), with Santana against Moyer in yet another Sunday night ESPN game.
Over/under for Moyer age-related references: 1,273.
Moyer always seems to kill the Mets. I advocate benching the starters and using all reserves, or better yet, calling up the AAA starters for one game. They'd hammer the sh*t out of him.
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Your first-place New York Mets
Hard to believe that less than two weeks ago, the SNY broadcast team was taking calls from despondent Mets fans, panicking at the Mets losing their third straight series to start the season.
As I write this, the Mets are in a virtual tie with the Phillies for first place in the NL East, no games behind but trailing Philly by a mere 8 percentage points. That could change in the next couple of hours, as the Phils currently trail the Giants in San Francisco by a run.
The doubleheader sweep showcased the good, the bad and some ugly defense by the Dodgers, but for the Mets it was almost all good.
Johan Santana gutted out six innings on a day in which the bullpen needed to be conserved as much as possible. After needing 52 pitches to get through the first two (scoreless) innings, Santana settled down and left the afternoon opener with a 2-0 lead. The second of the two runs came on Jason Bay's first homer of the season.
The Mets tacked on two more in the seventh on a two-run single by Luis Castillo.
At some point, Mets fans and a certain blustery radio host will realize that Castillo is the least of the Mets' problems, and is, in fact, probably one of their better assets.
Two scoreless innings by Fernando Nieve and a two-strikeout ninth by Pedro Feliciano closed out the 4-0 win.
We saw the bad Ollie in game two as Oliver Perez gave up a 3-0, first-inning lead (featuring an RBI triple by the percolating Bay), but we then enjoyed the greatness that is Hisanori Takahashi.
A strikeout machine despite the fact that he rarely breaks 90, Takahashi threw 3 1/3 innings and struck out five, allowing just one run -- and allowing the Mets to regain the lead. (Ron Darling said it best; Takahaski pitches with no fear.)
Three scored in the fifth on a single by David Wright and a two-run double by Ike Davis, and the Mets piled on four more in the sixth -- the first on a throwing error on a force at home by Jamey Carroll (playing there after Rafael Furcal's hamstring injury), and the next three on a bases-clearing triple by Mr. Wright.
Wright was 3-for-3 with four RBI in game two and was 4-for-7 on the night with two walks. He looked like the Wright of old, but really, did anyone really not expect Wright to get back on track? The guy is a streaky hitter, and now he's heating up -- just in time for the Phillies series. Nice.
And the Mets' pitchers for that Philly series? Pelfrey, Niese, Santana. Feeling pretty confident with that trio.
The Dodgers have looked as bad as the Cubs and Braves did, and while all three teams have indeed played poorly, credit the Mets for playing terrific baseball, with solid defense (nice catch by Bay!) smart baserunning (Henry Blanco going first to third!), improved hitting and mostly excellent pitching.
We'll see how John Maine comes back from his injury-shortened previous start, but if he can come up strong, the Mets will be looking at a second straight series sweep and a dominant 9-1 homestand.
Dominant? Terrific? These are the words we're using to describe a Mets team that so many wanted to bury after just two weeks of play. There's a lesson in there somewhere.
---
On a side note, Ryan Howard is a wonderful slugger but no way is he worth $25 million a year. Adrian Gonzalez is a better all-around player -- does he get $27 million per? That's more than A-Rod. And what about Pujols? $30 million a year? Insane.
As I write this, the Mets are in a virtual tie with the Phillies for first place in the NL East, no games behind but trailing Philly by a mere 8 percentage points. That could change in the next couple of hours, as the Phils currently trail the Giants in San Francisco by a run.
The doubleheader sweep showcased the good, the bad and some ugly defense by the Dodgers, but for the Mets it was almost all good.
Johan Santana gutted out six innings on a day in which the bullpen needed to be conserved as much as possible. After needing 52 pitches to get through the first two (scoreless) innings, Santana settled down and left the afternoon opener with a 2-0 lead. The second of the two runs came on Jason Bay's first homer of the season.
The Mets tacked on two more in the seventh on a two-run single by Luis Castillo.
At some point, Mets fans and a certain blustery radio host will realize that Castillo is the least of the Mets' problems, and is, in fact, probably one of their better assets.
Two scoreless innings by Fernando Nieve and a two-strikeout ninth by Pedro Feliciano closed out the 4-0 win.
We saw the bad Ollie in game two as Oliver Perez gave up a 3-0, first-inning lead (featuring an RBI triple by the percolating Bay), but we then enjoyed the greatness that is Hisanori Takahashi.
A strikeout machine despite the fact that he rarely breaks 90, Takahashi threw 3 1/3 innings and struck out five, allowing just one run -- and allowing the Mets to regain the lead. (Ron Darling said it best; Takahaski pitches with no fear.)
Three scored in the fifth on a single by David Wright and a two-run double by Ike Davis, and the Mets piled on four more in the sixth -- the first on a throwing error on a force at home by Jamey Carroll (playing there after Rafael Furcal's hamstring injury), and the next three on a bases-clearing triple by Mr. Wright.
Wright was 3-for-3 with four RBI in game two and was 4-for-7 on the night with two walks. He looked like the Wright of old, but really, did anyone really not expect Wright to get back on track? The guy is a streaky hitter, and now he's heating up -- just in time for the Phillies series. Nice.
And the Mets' pitchers for that Philly series? Pelfrey, Niese, Santana. Feeling pretty confident with that trio.
The Dodgers have looked as bad as the Cubs and Braves did, and while all three teams have indeed played poorly, credit the Mets for playing terrific baseball, with solid defense (nice catch by Bay!) smart baserunning (Henry Blanco going first to third!), improved hitting and mostly excellent pitching.
We'll see how John Maine comes back from his injury-shortened previous start, but if he can come up strong, the Mets will be looking at a second straight series sweep and a dominant 9-1 homestand.
Dominant? Terrific? These are the words we're using to describe a Mets team that so many wanted to bury after just two weeks of play. There's a lesson in there somewhere.
---
On a side note, Ryan Howard is a wonderful slugger but no way is he worth $25 million a year. Adrian Gonzalez is a better all-around player -- does he get $27 million per? That's more than A-Rod. And what about Pujols? $30 million a year? Insane.
It's OK to be happy about the Mets
Are Mets fans -- who if they are as old as I am can remember when the team was truly a National League doormat -- so damaged by the previous four seasons that they cannot simply enjoy when the team is doing well?
The team is above .500 at 10-9. They have won four straight, sweeping the hated Braves, and have taken six of the first seven games of a 10-game homestand that fans and media alike characterized as critical, not only for the team's hopes of playoff contention, but to the employment of Omar Minaya and Jerry Manuel.
So now that they are pitching well -- starters and relievers alike -- and starting to break out of the team-wide batting slump, you would think Mets fans would be thrilled. The season isn't over in April after all! We're watching good baseball again!
Instead, I've read and heard plenty of comments like, "Well, at least we can beat the bad teams," or, "the Cubs suck," or, "the Braves gave us those games."
The Cubs, by the way, went on to sweep the Brewers. The Braves, if you recall, were touted by many as a wild card contender and division sleeper thanks to their pitching. Maybe the Mets did get a break by catching both clubs at the right time. But so what?
You play whoever is in front of you, and a win's a win. And don't you think the Mets have gone through enough that they deserve a few breaks at this point? Rain-shortened win? I'll take it!
Just as it's too soon to start ordering 'World Champions' hats, it's also way too soon to scoreboard watch, or wonder where the Mets are in the standings, or put Manuel on the hot seat.
Mike Pelfrey is one of the top pitchers in baseball right now. Enjoy it.
Jonathan Niese looks like he's going to be a good one. Enjoy it.
Ike Davis looks like the real deal. Enjoy it.
Jason Bay is starting to hit again. Enjoy it.
Jose Reyes is back. Enjoy it!
The bullpen is pitching extremely well. Enjoy it!
Oliver Perez hasn't been nearly as awful as last season. Enjoy it!
An old-fashioned doubleheader later today -- not a day/night, separate admission deal -- with Ollie and Johan going for the Mets. Enjoy that!
It's a long season. Plenty of baseball left. More ups and downs are coming. David Wright is streaky and he will bounce back. Hopefully, so will John Maine. So have fun while you can!
The team is above .500 at 10-9. They have won four straight, sweeping the hated Braves, and have taken six of the first seven games of a 10-game homestand that fans and media alike characterized as critical, not only for the team's hopes of playoff contention, but to the employment of Omar Minaya and Jerry Manuel.
So now that they are pitching well -- starters and relievers alike -- and starting to break out of the team-wide batting slump, you would think Mets fans would be thrilled. The season isn't over in April after all! We're watching good baseball again!
Instead, I've read and heard plenty of comments like, "Well, at least we can beat the bad teams," or, "the Cubs suck," or, "the Braves gave us those games."
The Cubs, by the way, went on to sweep the Brewers. The Braves, if you recall, were touted by many as a wild card contender and division sleeper thanks to their pitching. Maybe the Mets did get a break by catching both clubs at the right time. But so what?
You play whoever is in front of you, and a win's a win. And don't you think the Mets have gone through enough that they deserve a few breaks at this point? Rain-shortened win? I'll take it!
Just as it's too soon to start ordering 'World Champions' hats, it's also way too soon to scoreboard watch, or wonder where the Mets are in the standings, or put Manuel on the hot seat.
Mike Pelfrey is one of the top pitchers in baseball right now. Enjoy it.
Jonathan Niese looks like he's going to be a good one. Enjoy it.
Ike Davis looks like the real deal. Enjoy it.
Jason Bay is starting to hit again. Enjoy it.
Jose Reyes is back. Enjoy it!
The bullpen is pitching extremely well. Enjoy it!
Oliver Perez hasn't been nearly as awful as last season. Enjoy it!
An old-fashioned doubleheader later today -- not a day/night, separate admission deal -- with Ollie and Johan going for the Mets. Enjoy that!
It's a long season. Plenty of baseball left. More ups and downs are coming. David Wright is streaky and he will bounce back. Hopefully, so will John Maine. So have fun while you can!
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
You didn't expect us to panic, now, did you?
There were 150 games left in the regular season, but you'd have thought it was late July the way many pundits, fans and hysterics were acting when the Mets returned home with a 4-8 record.
The Mets were doomed. "You are what your record says you are," as Bill Parcells liked to say, and the Mets were simply one of the worst teams in baseball. Left for dead. Written off. No hope.
There are now 148 games left in the season, and all of a sudden, it's a brand-new day.
The 6-8 Mets have won two in a row! Mike Pelfrey is awesome! Ike Davis is here! No more Mike Jacobs! Jose Reyes looks like his old self again! The Phillies and Braves are only 8-5!
The two wins over the Cubs (who are not playing well and must be giving Lou Piniella one doozy of an ulcer) certainly feel like a turning point, although perhaps the true pivot of the season was the 20-inning victory over the Cardinals -- not because it was won with dramatic flair, but because the team never said 'die.'
Currently, three (count 'em) starting pitchers are giving fans confidence in Santana, Pelfrey and Niese, and while John Maine is still struggling to right his own ship, even Ollie Perez has an air of, "You know what? I'm putting it all together" about him these days.
But the thing that gives the Mets and their fans the biggest jolt is Jose Reyes. We caught our first real glimpse of the old Jose Tuesday night, as he tripled in two runs and finished with four of the team's nine hits. And when he rose up from the cloud of dust after his triple, clapping his hands and pointing to the dugout, you thought, "Yes... he's finally back."
Imagine this team with a healthy Carlos Beltran. Then again, maybe it's best not to think about that.
Beltran visited Dr. Steadman in Colorado and while he was "making progress," he still can't run. Will Carroll initially tweeted that there was "no progress," and later SI's Jon Heyman clarified the situation somewhat by saying Dr. Steadman told Beltran he couldn't run until the bone bruises, or "hot spots," had healed.
What's most frustrating for me is how this situation opens the door for fans to become doctors and speculate as to how long Beltran will be out, why he didn't just have microfracture surgery last summer, and whether he really did have the surgery and it's all a cover-up.
To me, greater and more educated medical minds than I (and most of us) assessed the situation and did what was done. All we can do as fans is stop speculating and just get used to life without Beltran, and let Angel Pagan play that role for the foreseeable future.
And if that means Pagan batting third to "lengthen the lineup," then why not? Three switch-hitters followed by Wright, Bay and then either Francoeur or Davis depending on the pitcher, and then the catcher? If the starting pitching keeps it up, that lineup ain't that bad.
Eight games left in the homestand. Too early to panic, too early to think our problems are solved. Nothing to do but sit back and enjoy the games. What a concept.
The Mets were doomed. "You are what your record says you are," as Bill Parcells liked to say, and the Mets were simply one of the worst teams in baseball. Left for dead. Written off. No hope.
There are now 148 games left in the season, and all of a sudden, it's a brand-new day.
The 6-8 Mets have won two in a row! Mike Pelfrey is awesome! Ike Davis is here! No more Mike Jacobs! Jose Reyes looks like his old self again! The Phillies and Braves are only 8-5!
The two wins over the Cubs (who are not playing well and must be giving Lou Piniella one doozy of an ulcer) certainly feel like a turning point, although perhaps the true pivot of the season was the 20-inning victory over the Cardinals -- not because it was won with dramatic flair, but because the team never said 'die.'
Currently, three (count 'em) starting pitchers are giving fans confidence in Santana, Pelfrey and Niese, and while John Maine is still struggling to right his own ship, even Ollie Perez has an air of, "You know what? I'm putting it all together" about him these days.
But the thing that gives the Mets and their fans the biggest jolt is Jose Reyes. We caught our first real glimpse of the old Jose Tuesday night, as he tripled in two runs and finished with four of the team's nine hits. And when he rose up from the cloud of dust after his triple, clapping his hands and pointing to the dugout, you thought, "Yes... he's finally back."
Imagine this team with a healthy Carlos Beltran. Then again, maybe it's best not to think about that.
Beltran visited Dr. Steadman in Colorado and while he was "making progress," he still can't run. Will Carroll initially tweeted that there was "no progress," and later SI's Jon Heyman clarified the situation somewhat by saying Dr. Steadman told Beltran he couldn't run until the bone bruises, or "hot spots," had healed.
What's most frustrating for me is how this situation opens the door for fans to become doctors and speculate as to how long Beltran will be out, why he didn't just have microfracture surgery last summer, and whether he really did have the surgery and it's all a cover-up.
To me, greater and more educated medical minds than I (and most of us) assessed the situation and did what was done. All we can do as fans is stop speculating and just get used to life without Beltran, and let Angel Pagan play that role for the foreseeable future.
And if that means Pagan batting third to "lengthen the lineup," then why not? Three switch-hitters followed by Wright, Bay and then either Francoeur or Davis depending on the pitcher, and then the catcher? If the starting pitching keeps it up, that lineup ain't that bad.
Eight games left in the homestand. Too early to panic, too early to think our problems are solved. Nothing to do but sit back and enjoy the games. What a concept.
Monday, April 19, 2010
We all like Ike, and the No. 42
So is Ike Davis the missing link? The spark that finally ignited the Mets' moribund offense?
Davis went 2-for-4 in his major league debut, driving in a run while batting sixth in the order, and the Mets responded with a 6-1 victory, scoring five runs in the seventh to put the game away.
While Davis was the story, the real offensive hero was the red-hot Angel Pagan, who hit his first home run of the season, a two-run shot with no outs that gave the Mets a 3-1 lead. They piled three more runs on the Cubs' awful bullpen, one on an RBI double by Jason Bay (who had two hits to break out of his slump), one on a Davis single and the last on a wild pitch.
Jonathan Niese contributed 5 2/3 innings of solid, if not spectacular, pitching, allowing eight hits and three walks while striking out seven. He got the no-decision after the Cubs tied the score at 1-1 in the sixth, but Fernando Nieve threw 1 1/3 innings of one-hit relief for the win. Jenrry Mejia pitched the final two innings.
Jose Reyes asked for and received the day off but came in to pinch hit leading off the seventh; he was hit by a pitch and scored on Pagan's homer.
It was the second game in a week where everyone wore No. 42 in honor of Jackie Robinson, and the Mets won for the second time under those circumstances. They beat the Rockies, 5-0, last Thursday on a gem by Mike Pelfrey. Maybe they should honor Robinson in every game. Maybe the rotunda wasn't enough!
The starting pitching is looking better and the bullpen had another fine game. If the team-wide hitting slump is ending also, then maybe this homestand will be, you know, enjoyable. And maybe we can call off the "fire Jerry Manuel" watch for a while.
Davis went 2-for-4 in his major league debut, driving in a run while batting sixth in the order, and the Mets responded with a 6-1 victory, scoring five runs in the seventh to put the game away.
While Davis was the story, the real offensive hero was the red-hot Angel Pagan, who hit his first home run of the season, a two-run shot with no outs that gave the Mets a 3-1 lead. They piled three more runs on the Cubs' awful bullpen, one on an RBI double by Jason Bay (who had two hits to break out of his slump), one on a Davis single and the last on a wild pitch.
Jonathan Niese contributed 5 2/3 innings of solid, if not spectacular, pitching, allowing eight hits and three walks while striking out seven. He got the no-decision after the Cubs tied the score at 1-1 in the sixth, but Fernando Nieve threw 1 1/3 innings of one-hit relief for the win. Jenrry Mejia pitched the final two innings.
Jose Reyes asked for and received the day off but came in to pinch hit leading off the seventh; he was hit by a pitch and scored on Pagan's homer.
It was the second game in a week where everyone wore No. 42 in honor of Jackie Robinson, and the Mets won for the second time under those circumstances. They beat the Rockies, 5-0, last Thursday on a gem by Mike Pelfrey. Maybe they should honor Robinson in every game. Maybe the rotunda wasn't enough!
The starting pitching is looking better and the bullpen had another fine game. If the team-wide hitting slump is ending also, then maybe this homestand will be, you know, enjoyable. And maybe we can call off the "fire Jerry Manuel" watch for a while.
And so it begins...
Mike Jacobs should have never been here in the first place. And with Chris Carter playing outfield and DH in AAA, and Daniel Murphy still a month or so away from returning, the logical move was made.
Your new first baseman: Ike Davis.
Omar Minaya said that Davis will not platoon, that you don't bring up someone like Davis to sit on the bench. He was getting AB's in Buffalo and he'll get that in Flushing, and he gets to make his debut in a 10-game homestand that could end up being a love-fest.
Omar also said that he doesn't expect Davis to be a savior. "I expect him to be Ike."
Hopefully, fans will take the same approach.
Davis is talented, to be sure. And while he tore it up in AAA, it was only 10 games. He is unquestionably the first baseman of the future, and should ultimately be the left-handed power source the Mets currently lack with Carlos Beltran (still not cleared for baseball activities) on the DL.
But this is really just a preview. When Murphy comes back, Davis should return to AAA to continue his development. Then again, if he has 8 home runs and is hitting .300, then the Mets will have one of those "good problems" and Davis could end up staying in place.
We'll worry about that later. For now, Davis is the man, we don't have to watch Jacobs anymore, and Jose Reyes gets a day off to rest and clear his head after a stressful and event-filled opening week with the team.
Everyone who has been clamoring for the Mets to play Davis have gotten their wish. Here's hoping they cut the kid some slack if he starts slowly.
And while the Mets are at it, they need to send Jenrry Mejia to Buffalo. They don't need him in the bullpen. They may very well need him to start later this season.
Your new first baseman: Ike Davis.
Omar Minaya said that Davis will not platoon, that you don't bring up someone like Davis to sit on the bench. He was getting AB's in Buffalo and he'll get that in Flushing, and he gets to make his debut in a 10-game homestand that could end up being a love-fest.
Omar also said that he doesn't expect Davis to be a savior. "I expect him to be Ike."
Hopefully, fans will take the same approach.
Davis is talented, to be sure. And while he tore it up in AAA, it was only 10 games. He is unquestionably the first baseman of the future, and should ultimately be the left-handed power source the Mets currently lack with Carlos Beltran (still not cleared for baseball activities) on the DL.
But this is really just a preview. When Murphy comes back, Davis should return to AAA to continue his development. Then again, if he has 8 home runs and is hitting .300, then the Mets will have one of those "good problems" and Davis could end up staying in place.
We'll worry about that later. For now, Davis is the man, we don't have to watch Jacobs anymore, and Jose Reyes gets a day off to rest and clear his head after a stressful and event-filled opening week with the team.
Everyone who has been clamoring for the Mets to play Davis have gotten their wish. Here's hoping they cut the kid some slack if he starts slowly.
And while the Mets are at it, they need to send Jenrry Mejia to Buffalo. They don't need him in the bullpen. They may very well need him to start later this season.
Saturday, April 17, 2010
Can this count as two wins?
We all saw it. Or at least most of it. I thought I missed the end, then ended up watching the final innings in semi-disbelief.
Put it in the books. The Mets win, 2-1, in 20 innings, scoring both runs on sacrifice flies hit against position players masquerading as pitchers.
But hey, a win's a win.
I have awful luck DVR-ing games. I watched the first four innings live and then started recording, as my son wanted to play some driveway hockey before heading out to dinner for his 8th birthday. Walking into the restaurant, I noticed on the TV over the bar that it was scoreless in the seventh. We got home and played some Wii, and then I put my son to be and settled in to watch the rest of the game around 9:30 or so.
Knowing no runs were scored through seven, I watched much of those innings on fast forward 'til it hit the eighth. Then watched the Mets continue to struggle to hit, glad that Jaime Garcia was finally out of there, but puzzled as to the continued weakness at the plate against Kyle McClellan and guys named Mitchell Boggs and Trever Miller.
The hitting was awful, but the pitching was strong. Johan Santana threw seven scoreless innings -- the team's third excellent start in as many games -- and the bullpen work of Igarashi, Feliciano and Nieve was perfect. Alex Cora even came up big at first base, making a diving catch into the stands.
And then, in the bottom of the 11th, the DVR reached the end of its record time. I had no way of anticipating a couple of extra innings, so there I was, a little after 10 p.m., thinking I was going to have to catch the recap on the Internet.
Imagine my surprise when I absent-mindedly clicked on Channel 5 to see the game was still on, and SCORELESS IN THE 18TH INNING!! Are you serious?
I missed the scoreless relief work of Nieve, Takahashi and Mejia, particularly Takahashi's Houdini-like escape in the 14th inning. Offensively, I didn't miss much -- just more outs by the Mets.
How did the Mets not score seven or eight runs against Felipe Lopez and Joe Mather? Henry Blanco and Mike Jacobs should be ashamed of themselves for flying out against Lopez in the 18th. Unreal. You have to cut Valdes some slack for getting tagged out at second since he's almost never on the basepaths but COME ON, SLIDE!!
Bases loaded, one out in the 19th, and Francoeur hits a ball to left -- you can't hit a homer off a batting-practice fastball by Joe Mather? At least it scored a run. Yeesh.
Then K-Rod comes in. Whereas Tony "I am a Genius" LaRussa left himself with no pitchers, Jerry Manuel still had K-Rod in reserve (granted, he'd warmed up a few times), so this game is over, right? Leave it to a guy named Yadier -- who's had some big hits in his career -- to kill the Mets. Again. Painful.
Luckily, Mather still has to pitch. Pagan and Jacobs (finally!) single, Reyes hits a sac fly (who needs RBI hits, anyway?) and the Mets regain the one-run lead. Then Castillo and Wright shame themselves by popping up. An exorcism may be in order, or some kind of goat sacrifice. Maybe the Mets need the dwarf woman from "Poltergeist" to come into the dugout and say, "These bats... are CLEAN."
A buddy texting me wondered why K-Rod wasn't in the game in the 20th, that he should have DEMANDED the ball. Hey, not his call. He threw 24 pitches and couldn't seal the deal. NEXT. This way, he's available on Sunday.
Plus, Pelfrey was going to throw on the side anyway, not scheduled to pitch again until Wednesday. Why not let the big man get the save?
It was a little dicey, but Pelfrey closed it out, ending the game almost seven hours after it began.
Sure, the Cardinals practically conceded the game with position players pitching, and the Mets came up as small at the plate as you possibly could while still scoring twice to win the game.
But maybe this is a turning point. One of those all-hands-on-deck experiences that pulls the team together. Maybe the hits start coming in bunches after this. The starting pitching has already started to turn around. The bullpen (save for K-Rod) bounced back nicely after a tough loss Friday night.
We can only hope. It's almost impossible to judge this game because there's almost nothing to judge it against, it was so out of the ordinary.
Here's hoping we look back at this game as the moment the cobwebs cleared, the game when the Mets took their first step towards taking back the season. The game when things finally changed for the better.
Oh, and John Maine -- you're on your own Sunday, dude.
Put it in the books. The Mets win, 2-1, in 20 innings, scoring both runs on sacrifice flies hit against position players masquerading as pitchers.
But hey, a win's a win.
I have awful luck DVR-ing games. I watched the first four innings live and then started recording, as my son wanted to play some driveway hockey before heading out to dinner for his 8th birthday. Walking into the restaurant, I noticed on the TV over the bar that it was scoreless in the seventh. We got home and played some Wii, and then I put my son to be and settled in to watch the rest of the game around 9:30 or so.
Knowing no runs were scored through seven, I watched much of those innings on fast forward 'til it hit the eighth. Then watched the Mets continue to struggle to hit, glad that Jaime Garcia was finally out of there, but puzzled as to the continued weakness at the plate against Kyle McClellan and guys named Mitchell Boggs and Trever Miller.
The hitting was awful, but the pitching was strong. Johan Santana threw seven scoreless innings -- the team's third excellent start in as many games -- and the bullpen work of Igarashi, Feliciano and Nieve was perfect. Alex Cora even came up big at first base, making a diving catch into the stands.
And then, in the bottom of the 11th, the DVR reached the end of its record time. I had no way of anticipating a couple of extra innings, so there I was, a little after 10 p.m., thinking I was going to have to catch the recap on the Internet.
Imagine my surprise when I absent-mindedly clicked on Channel 5 to see the game was still on, and SCORELESS IN THE 18TH INNING!! Are you serious?
I missed the scoreless relief work of Nieve, Takahashi and Mejia, particularly Takahashi's Houdini-like escape in the 14th inning. Offensively, I didn't miss much -- just more outs by the Mets.
How did the Mets not score seven or eight runs against Felipe Lopez and Joe Mather? Henry Blanco and Mike Jacobs should be ashamed of themselves for flying out against Lopez in the 18th. Unreal. You have to cut Valdes some slack for getting tagged out at second since he's almost never on the basepaths but COME ON, SLIDE!!
Bases loaded, one out in the 19th, and Francoeur hits a ball to left -- you can't hit a homer off a batting-practice fastball by Joe Mather? At least it scored a run. Yeesh.
Then K-Rod comes in. Whereas Tony "I am a Genius" LaRussa left himself with no pitchers, Jerry Manuel still had K-Rod in reserve (granted, he'd warmed up a few times), so this game is over, right? Leave it to a guy named Yadier -- who's had some big hits in his career -- to kill the Mets. Again. Painful.
Luckily, Mather still has to pitch. Pagan and Jacobs (finally!) single, Reyes hits a sac fly (who needs RBI hits, anyway?) and the Mets regain the one-run lead. Then Castillo and Wright shame themselves by popping up. An exorcism may be in order, or some kind of goat sacrifice. Maybe the Mets need the dwarf woman from "Poltergeist" to come into the dugout and say, "These bats... are CLEAN."
A buddy texting me wondered why K-Rod wasn't in the game in the 20th, that he should have DEMANDED the ball. Hey, not his call. He threw 24 pitches and couldn't seal the deal. NEXT. This way, he's available on Sunday.
Plus, Pelfrey was going to throw on the side anyway, not scheduled to pitch again until Wednesday. Why not let the big man get the save?
It was a little dicey, but Pelfrey closed it out, ending the game almost seven hours after it began.
Sure, the Cardinals practically conceded the game with position players pitching, and the Mets came up as small at the plate as you possibly could while still scoring twice to win the game.
But maybe this is a turning point. One of those all-hands-on-deck experiences that pulls the team together. Maybe the hits start coming in bunches after this. The starting pitching has already started to turn around. The bullpen (save for K-Rod) bounced back nicely after a tough loss Friday night.
We can only hope. It's almost impossible to judge this game because there's almost nothing to judge it against, it was so out of the ordinary.
Here's hoping we look back at this game as the moment the cobwebs cleared, the game when the Mets took their first step towards taking back the season. The game when things finally changed for the better.
Oh, and John Maine -- you're on your own Sunday, dude.
Good Ollie, bad bullpen
My gut reaction when Jerry Manuel exited the dugout to replace Oliver Perez with one out in the seventh inning against the Cardinals? "Don't take him out!"
How's that for bizarre?
Perez gave Mets fans what they've been looking for and then some, throwing 6 1/3 shutout innings until the bullpen turned a 1-0 lead into a 4-1 deficit. Nice to see the Mets get two back in the ninth and show some fight, but a loss is a loss. This one, though, I can't get too upset about, despite the fact that it came via a grand slam by Felipe Lopez (who somehow has five of those).
If Perez could pitch like that just half the time, it would go a long way toward solving the Mets' pitching issues. He has always had the stuff, and when you see him put it together like he did, it's impressive. And a bit infuriating when you wonder why he can't pitch that way more often.
You can't blame Jerry for taking Ollie out when he did. He's been burned too many times in the past, because when Ollie goes, he goes fast. Sure, he could have left him in to face the struggling Ryan, but then the righthanded Holliday was coming up next anyway.
This was about a bullpen that has been tremendous so far not executing. Nieve started the season solid but has gotten hammered in two of his last three appearances. And Valdes, who had looked like a revelation, got burned on a bad pitch.
The Mets played terrific defense, especially from David Wright, and Francoeur also made a nice catch while getting two hits and scoring twice, including the first run on a baserunning mistake that the Cardinals turned into a run.
Carpenter, as Gary Cohen noted, should have been the Cy Young winner last season and was as sharp as Perez in what was a superb pitcher's duel. So I can't really lay too much blame on the offense, nor Perez for pitching great, nor Jerry for making reasonable moves (Feliciano was ill and unavailable), nor a defense that backed up Perez big-time -- with the lone exception of David Freese's infield hit on a grounder to Reyes, who usually makes that play. Of course, that led off the seventh and turned into the tying run.
This one is on Nieve and Valdes, and we hope that this doesn't mean the bullpen is starting to unravel.
How's that for bizarre?
Perez gave Mets fans what they've been looking for and then some, throwing 6 1/3 shutout innings until the bullpen turned a 1-0 lead into a 4-1 deficit. Nice to see the Mets get two back in the ninth and show some fight, but a loss is a loss. This one, though, I can't get too upset about, despite the fact that it came via a grand slam by Felipe Lopez (who somehow has five of those).
If Perez could pitch like that just half the time, it would go a long way toward solving the Mets' pitching issues. He has always had the stuff, and when you see him put it together like he did, it's impressive. And a bit infuriating when you wonder why he can't pitch that way more often.
You can't blame Jerry for taking Ollie out when he did. He's been burned too many times in the past, because when Ollie goes, he goes fast. Sure, he could have left him in to face the struggling Ryan, but then the righthanded Holliday was coming up next anyway.
This was about a bullpen that has been tremendous so far not executing. Nieve started the season solid but has gotten hammered in two of his last three appearances. And Valdes, who had looked like a revelation, got burned on a bad pitch.
The Mets played terrific defense, especially from David Wright, and Francoeur also made a nice catch while getting two hits and scoring twice, including the first run on a baserunning mistake that the Cardinals turned into a run.
Carpenter, as Gary Cohen noted, should have been the Cy Young winner last season and was as sharp as Perez in what was a superb pitcher's duel. So I can't really lay too much blame on the offense, nor Perez for pitching great, nor Jerry for making reasonable moves (Feliciano was ill and unavailable), nor a defense that backed up Perez big-time -- with the lone exception of David Freese's infield hit on a grounder to Reyes, who usually makes that play. Of course, that led off the seventh and turned into the tying run.
This one is on Nieve and Valdes, and we hope that this doesn't mean the bullpen is starting to unravel.
Friday, April 16, 2010
Can you smell what Big Pelf is cookin'?
See what happens when your starter throws a shutout? Piece of cake!
We've talked a lot about the potential of Mike Pelfrey, and maybe, just maybe, this is the season when he makes the leap. Pelfrey threw seven innings of scoreless baseball Thursday against the Rockies, allowing five hits while walking no one in a 5-0 Mets victory.
It snapped the Mets' four-game losing streak as the team heads to St. Louis for three games before returning home to Citi Field for a 10-game homestand.
While Pelfrey has never been a dominant strikeout pitcher, he struck out six and was in control throughout. Pelfrey has the size and stuff to be a commanding presence on the mound, and the final step will be to develop the attitude to go along with it. The Mets certainly can use it.
Jorge De la Rosa was all over the place and this game could have been a lot more lopsided had the Mets not imploded on the base paths in the third inning. Reyes signaled to Castillo that he was going to try and steal third, but decided not to when De la Rosa started paying attention to him. Though Reyes didn't go, Castillo did, with his head down, and got caught in a rundown. Reyes exacerbated the mistake by trying to steal third, and failing. So much for two on and no outs.
Oh, by the way, David Wright was at the plate. He struck out. Sometime aggression will cost you.
Stay classy, Phillies fans.
A Philly fan from New Jersey (now that's a winning combination) was arrested at Citizen's Bank Park for intentionally vomiting on an 11-year-old girl, who as at the game with her older sister and father.
Did I mention the father was an off-duty police captain? That's a bad life choice.
Seems there was a lot of foul language and spitting involved before Sir Stupid decided to stick his fingers down his throat and vomit on the victims.
Really? In Philadelphia? I'm shocked.
We've talked a lot about the potential of Mike Pelfrey, and maybe, just maybe, this is the season when he makes the leap. Pelfrey threw seven innings of scoreless baseball Thursday against the Rockies, allowing five hits while walking no one in a 5-0 Mets victory.
It snapped the Mets' four-game losing streak as the team heads to St. Louis for three games before returning home to Citi Field for a 10-game homestand.
While Pelfrey has never been a dominant strikeout pitcher, he struck out six and was in control throughout. Pelfrey has the size and stuff to be a commanding presence on the mound, and the final step will be to develop the attitude to go along with it. The Mets certainly can use it.
Jorge De la Rosa was all over the place and this game could have been a lot more lopsided had the Mets not imploded on the base paths in the third inning. Reyes signaled to Castillo that he was going to try and steal third, but decided not to when De la Rosa started paying attention to him. Though Reyes didn't go, Castillo did, with his head down, and got caught in a rundown. Reyes exacerbated the mistake by trying to steal third, and failing. So much for two on and no outs.
Oh, by the way, David Wright was at the plate. He struck out. Sometime aggression will cost you.
Stay classy, Phillies fans.
A Philly fan from New Jersey (now that's a winning combination) was arrested at Citizen's Bank Park for intentionally vomiting on an 11-year-old girl, who as at the game with her older sister and father.
Did I mention the father was an off-duty police captain? That's a bad life choice.
Seems there was a lot of foul language and spitting involved before Sir Stupid decided to stick his fingers down his throat and vomit on the victims.
Really? In Philadelphia? I'm shocked.
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Talking us off the ledge already? Please.
Before I launch into my screed, take a moment to enjoy the accompanying video, which harkens to better times (hat tip to Jake Levich).
Remember that John Maine? The guy who struck out 14 Marlins on the second-to-last day of the 2007 season to push the Mets into a first-place tie? Who as a throw-in in the Benson-Julio deal looked like one of Omar Minaya's biggest steals? Big-game pitcher? That John Maine?
The problem is, we do, and coming off a shoulder injury, Maine has not looked like himself in his two starts this season, and that has helped the Mets get off to a 2-5 start that has the media sharpening their knives and fans stepping out onto the nearest ledge. It got so bad in Tuesday night's blowout loss to the Rockies (Maine: 3 innings, 7 hits, 3 walks, 8 runs) that Gary Cohen and Keith Hernandez took calls from the viewers and SNY morphed into WFAN.
Guys, you're better than that.
I expect the media to salivate over situations like this, but they have taken it to another level with the Mets. Jerry Manuel has to do something! Other than start Angel Pagan every day in center, what would you have him do? He can't pitch.
The negativity is remarkable, and the Mets get it coming and going. The starting pitching is terrible. The sample size? Seven games. So we're not going to give them any time to get it together? No one is allowed a slow start, like Maine, coming off an injury? Not even a month? Insane.
Oh, but when you mention how well the bullpen is doing, then it's a miniscule sample size, and don't worry, give them time, they'll fail eventually.
So are we not giving them any time, or are we?
We heard so much about how the Mets NEEDED to get off to a strong start. Why? To erase the demons from seasons past? I blame Manuel for feeding into this nonsense when he agreed they needed to come out fast. Now they haven't, and the buzzards are circling. Last I checked, you don't carry losses over from season to season. Everyone starts 0-0.
The Mets are 2-5. How terrible! Had Rod Barajas's sinking liner sunk 6 more inches Saturday, maybe the Mets win that game and they're 3-4 with one series win. No matter, you'd still hear the complaining about how awful Mike Jacobs and Fernando Tatis are at first base.
That's the other thing -- no one can accept that the Mets had injuries to start the season. OH NO, IT'S HAPPENING AGAIN! Had they been at full strength and 2-5, then maybe there would be some small cause for alarm. But again, it's still just seven games.
The reality is that Carlos Beltran is out til mid- or late May, as is Daniel Murphy. Jose Reyes missed the first four games. That's going to have an effect. Deal with it.
You have people calling for Ike Davis. Yes, he's hitting well at AAA -- for a week. He'll be here eventually. I hate Mike Jacobs as much as the next guy, and think Chris Carter deserved the shot to play instead, but it is what it is.
Then you have Mike Francesa, to whom I avoid listening as much as possible. But today, going to lunch, I turned on the FAN in time to hear how Luis Castillo is the problem, that he is "unhappy" and has to go. In one breath, Francesa says he "is not knocking" Castillo, and in the next he implies that his calf injury is one of many false injuries that are signs that wants out. You're accusing him of jaking it, and Castillo has a reputation of being very competitive. I can't think of a more serious knock than that.
In fact, Francesa said the whole right side should go, including Jacobs, Tatis and Murphy, who hasn't even played yet.
Francesa's antipathy to Murphy is well-documented. I don't know what Murphy did to Mike -- raped his dog or killed his sister or took the last cruller at Dunkin' Donuts -- but he HATES Murphy. The guy, at 24, in his first full season above AA (not AAA), hit 12 homers, drove in 63 runs, hit .266 and had 38 doubles. He's a gap hitter in a gap-hitter's park. But Francesa finds it completely unreasonable that (a) Murphy's numbers (and defense, which wasn't bad) might actually improve with experience and (b) the Mets could win with a first baseman who only hits between 15-20 homers. Despite the fact that Murphy -- who is only a placeholder for Davis anyway -- would be expected to be a complementary player behind the true run-producers in Reyes, Wright, Bay, Beltran and Francoeur. Whatever.
But what really gets me mad is not the media or the radio hosts, but my fellow fans. So many of them have bought into the sad-sack, woe-is-us, here-we-go-again, Omar-sucks, Jerry-must-go, why-are-we-still-hurt mentality that I am reacting to them as if they were (gulp) Yankees fans.
They might as well be. I was at last Thursday's loss to the Marlins and the two guys sitting behind me were your typical, cynical, overly sarcastic Mets fans, who had something bad to say about just about everyone and everything, and felt the need to say it loud enough so that everyone around could hear just how witty they were. It was as if they were pretending they were hosting their own talk show.
I wanted to tell them to leave if it was that bad. Why are you here? Go to the Bronx. Better yet, become a Cubs fan, or a Pirates fan, or a Royals fan, and let me know how that works out for you.
There are 155 games left in the season. Yes, there are holes while Beltran and Murphy are out, but the problems so far have been starting pitching and a slow start hitting. There's plenty of time to turn things around. It is only April 14.
Seven games, people. Relax. Please.
Remember that John Maine? The guy who struck out 14 Marlins on the second-to-last day of the 2007 season to push the Mets into a first-place tie? Who as a throw-in in the Benson-Julio deal looked like one of Omar Minaya's biggest steals? Big-game pitcher? That John Maine?
The problem is, we do, and coming off a shoulder injury, Maine has not looked like himself in his two starts this season, and that has helped the Mets get off to a 2-5 start that has the media sharpening their knives and fans stepping out onto the nearest ledge. It got so bad in Tuesday night's blowout loss to the Rockies (Maine: 3 innings, 7 hits, 3 walks, 8 runs) that Gary Cohen and Keith Hernandez took calls from the viewers and SNY morphed into WFAN.
Guys, you're better than that.
I expect the media to salivate over situations like this, but they have taken it to another level with the Mets. Jerry Manuel has to do something! Other than start Angel Pagan every day in center, what would you have him do? He can't pitch.
The negativity is remarkable, and the Mets get it coming and going. The starting pitching is terrible. The sample size? Seven games. So we're not going to give them any time to get it together? No one is allowed a slow start, like Maine, coming off an injury? Not even a month? Insane.
Oh, but when you mention how well the bullpen is doing, then it's a miniscule sample size, and don't worry, give them time, they'll fail eventually.
So are we not giving them any time, or are we?
We heard so much about how the Mets NEEDED to get off to a strong start. Why? To erase the demons from seasons past? I blame Manuel for feeding into this nonsense when he agreed they needed to come out fast. Now they haven't, and the buzzards are circling. Last I checked, you don't carry losses over from season to season. Everyone starts 0-0.
The Mets are 2-5. How terrible! Had Rod Barajas's sinking liner sunk 6 more inches Saturday, maybe the Mets win that game and they're 3-4 with one series win. No matter, you'd still hear the complaining about how awful Mike Jacobs and Fernando Tatis are at first base.
That's the other thing -- no one can accept that the Mets had injuries to start the season. OH NO, IT'S HAPPENING AGAIN! Had they been at full strength and 2-5, then maybe there would be some small cause for alarm. But again, it's still just seven games.
The reality is that Carlos Beltran is out til mid- or late May, as is Daniel Murphy. Jose Reyes missed the first four games. That's going to have an effect. Deal with it.
You have people calling for Ike Davis. Yes, he's hitting well at AAA -- for a week. He'll be here eventually. I hate Mike Jacobs as much as the next guy, and think Chris Carter deserved the shot to play instead, but it is what it is.
Then you have Mike Francesa, to whom I avoid listening as much as possible. But today, going to lunch, I turned on the FAN in time to hear how Luis Castillo is the problem, that he is "unhappy" and has to go. In one breath, Francesa says he "is not knocking" Castillo, and in the next he implies that his calf injury is one of many false injuries that are signs that wants out. You're accusing him of jaking it, and Castillo has a reputation of being very competitive. I can't think of a more serious knock than that.
In fact, Francesa said the whole right side should go, including Jacobs, Tatis and Murphy, who hasn't even played yet.
Francesa's antipathy to Murphy is well-documented. I don't know what Murphy did to Mike -- raped his dog or killed his sister or took the last cruller at Dunkin' Donuts -- but he HATES Murphy. The guy, at 24, in his first full season above AA (not AAA), hit 12 homers, drove in 63 runs, hit .266 and had 38 doubles. He's a gap hitter in a gap-hitter's park. But Francesa finds it completely unreasonable that (a) Murphy's numbers (and defense, which wasn't bad) might actually improve with experience and (b) the Mets could win with a first baseman who only hits between 15-20 homers. Despite the fact that Murphy -- who is only a placeholder for Davis anyway -- would be expected to be a complementary player behind the true run-producers in Reyes, Wright, Bay, Beltran and Francoeur. Whatever.
But what really gets me mad is not the media or the radio hosts, but my fellow fans. So many of them have bought into the sad-sack, woe-is-us, here-we-go-again, Omar-sucks, Jerry-must-go, why-are-we-still-hurt mentality that I am reacting to them as if they were (gulp) Yankees fans.
They might as well be. I was at last Thursday's loss to the Marlins and the two guys sitting behind me were your typical, cynical, overly sarcastic Mets fans, who had something bad to say about just about everyone and everything, and felt the need to say it loud enough so that everyone around could hear just how witty they were. It was as if they were pretending they were hosting their own talk show.
I wanted to tell them to leave if it was that bad. Why are you here? Go to the Bronx. Better yet, become a Cubs fan, or a Pirates fan, or a Royals fan, and let me know how that works out for you.
There are 155 games left in the season. Yes, there are holes while Beltran and Murphy are out, but the problems so far have been starting pitching and a slow start hitting. There's plenty of time to turn things around. It is only April 14.
Seven games, people. Relax. Please.
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Being a Mets fan means testing your faith
I took my son to 5 o'clock Mass on Saturday, less than an hour after watching Willie Harris kill the Mets with a ridiculous catch for what seemed like the 63rd time. I like the Saturday evening Mass because it means not having to get up early on Sunday, and this particular one was timely, as the language I used in the immediate aftermath of the Harris catch was decidedly un-Christian.
The gospel in this first weekend after Easter concerned the disciple Thomas, who wasn't around when the resurrected Jesus first appeared before the other disciples. When Thomas returned, the disciples told him what had just happened, and of course Thomas did not believe them (hence the term, Doubting Thomas). After all, Thomas had seen Jesus crucified and buried in a tomb. He must have thought his friends were either still in terrible mourning and therefore not thinking straight, trying to pull a fast one on him, or high on frankincense.
He told them he would believe it when he could stick his fingers in Jesus' wounds.
A week later, Jesus returned again to the disciples, and this time Thomas was there. Jesus invited the chastened Thomas to touch his wounds, and then said, "Blessed are those who have not seen, and yet still believe."
Now I know I should have been focused on what the priest was saying and not thinking about baseball, and I don't mean to compare Mets fandom to religion or the return of Jose Reyes to the resurrection of Jesus Christ (although this was Jose's first game back), but having just seen the Mets lose yet another heartbreaker, I took the message of the gospel and immediately applied it to my feelings as a Mets fan.
We have not seen much this season, just six out of 162 games, but as fans we want to believe that our team has what it takes to compete. And while there are plenty of Doubting Thomases out there, in the stands and in the media, it is our nature as fans -- or at least, it is in my nature -- to believe in the players and coaches, the manager and the organization.
I don't see how you can be a fan and not believe, at this point in the season. Maybe when the evidence becomes so overwhelming and the numbers don't lie -- like last season, when every player with any talent when down with an injury -- do you concede that it just isn't our year. But one week into April is a little early to panic, and yet there will be plenty of fans willing to jump off the bandwagon while the engine is still cold.
Being a fan means having your faith tested, like when the ace of your staff walks two batters and gives up a first-inning grand slam while your hitters are befuddled by a guy throwing in the 70s (who also happens to be a former teammate). It's times like these when you want to throw your new cream-and pinstripe Jason Bay jersey into the fireplace.
But you're a fan, and you believe. It's a long, long season. And while the Mets started 2-4 at home, we have seen some positive signs. Jeff Francoeur and Rod Barajas have pounded the ball, Mike Pelfrey looked very good in his first start, Jon Niese appears ready to step up, and the maligned bullpen, with new blood, has been pretty solid. And, of course, Reyes is back.
Do the questions surrounding the starting pitching remain? Absolutely. And the Mets now embark on a tough road trip through Colorado and St. Louis before returning for a 10-game homestand. We'll learn a lot more about this team in those next 16 games, and then we'll get to the point that Jerry Manuel has been referring to when asked if the Mets need a fast start. "Talk to me after 20 games," he's said. Well, after that homestand, it will have been 22 games, not quite a seventh of the season, but a fair enough barometer.
Until then, we gotta believe.
The gospel in this first weekend after Easter concerned the disciple Thomas, who wasn't around when the resurrected Jesus first appeared before the other disciples. When Thomas returned, the disciples told him what had just happened, and of course Thomas did not believe them (hence the term, Doubting Thomas). After all, Thomas had seen Jesus crucified and buried in a tomb. He must have thought his friends were either still in terrible mourning and therefore not thinking straight, trying to pull a fast one on him, or high on frankincense.
He told them he would believe it when he could stick his fingers in Jesus' wounds.
A week later, Jesus returned again to the disciples, and this time Thomas was there. Jesus invited the chastened Thomas to touch his wounds, and then said, "Blessed are those who have not seen, and yet still believe."
Now I know I should have been focused on what the priest was saying and not thinking about baseball, and I don't mean to compare Mets fandom to religion or the return of Jose Reyes to the resurrection of Jesus Christ (although this was Jose's first game back), but having just seen the Mets lose yet another heartbreaker, I took the message of the gospel and immediately applied it to my feelings as a Mets fan.
We have not seen much this season, just six out of 162 games, but as fans we want to believe that our team has what it takes to compete. And while there are plenty of Doubting Thomases out there, in the stands and in the media, it is our nature as fans -- or at least, it is in my nature -- to believe in the players and coaches, the manager and the organization.
I don't see how you can be a fan and not believe, at this point in the season. Maybe when the evidence becomes so overwhelming and the numbers don't lie -- like last season, when every player with any talent when down with an injury -- do you concede that it just isn't our year. But one week into April is a little early to panic, and yet there will be plenty of fans willing to jump off the bandwagon while the engine is still cold.
Being a fan means having your faith tested, like when the ace of your staff walks two batters and gives up a first-inning grand slam while your hitters are befuddled by a guy throwing in the 70s (who also happens to be a former teammate). It's times like these when you want to throw your new cream-and pinstripe Jason Bay jersey into the fireplace.
But you're a fan, and you believe. It's a long, long season. And while the Mets started 2-4 at home, we have seen some positive signs. Jeff Francoeur and Rod Barajas have pounded the ball, Mike Pelfrey looked very good in his first start, Jon Niese appears ready to step up, and the maligned bullpen, with new blood, has been pretty solid. And, of course, Reyes is back.
Do the questions surrounding the starting pitching remain? Absolutely. And the Mets now embark on a tough road trip through Colorado and St. Louis before returning for a 10-game homestand. We'll learn a lot more about this team in those next 16 games, and then we'll get to the point that Jerry Manuel has been referring to when asked if the Mets need a fast start. "Talk to me after 20 games," he's said. Well, after that homestand, it will have been 22 games, not quite a seventh of the season, but a fair enough barometer.
Until then, we gotta believe.
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Guess we can shake up that lineup now
Wednesday's night extra-inning loss to the Marlins was one of those weird games. You felt good that the Mets came back from a five-run deficit, until you realized that the Mets made up that gap without actually getting any RBI hits.
The Marlins did everything they could to give the Mets the win, including walking and balking in two runs to tie the score in the bottom of the eighth, after Ricky Nolasco dominated for six innings. But the Mets gave Florida a gift of its own when Fernando Tatis tried to score on a not-that-wild pitch with two outs, the bases loaded and David Wright at the plate. Not a smart play.
So the Mets look to win the series Thursday night with Jon Niese on the hill, and with lefty Nate Robertson starting for Florida, there is a pretty good chance that Mike Jacobs will be on the bench. Unless Jerry Manuel wants to break up all those righties!
Jacobs looked awful again for most of game two, striking out twice in three at-bats before singling in the eighth. Of course, he gets some credit for sliding hard into second base, perhaps affecting the wild throw by Dan Uggla that scored Wright. But otherwise, Jacobs has looked like the player we all know him to be -- a free swinger who rips at everything and strikes out a ton.
I other words, a black hole in the cleanup spot.
I'll be at the game, so I'm hoping to see Angel Pagan in center and leading off, with a 3-4-5-6 of Wright-Bay-Francoeur-Tatis. Line up those right-handed hitters, Jerry!
As for Jennry Mejia, Keith Hernandez made an excellent point, noting that in his day, he paid close attention to how the young players striving to prove themselves or win a roster spot pitched, adding that the veterans gave him nothing. Florida has seen Mejia pitching at his best, and seen him a lot thanks to the spring training schedule. So when it was time to play for reals, they know exactly how to attack him.
You like to see the 97 on the gun, and maybe it was debut-night jitters, but Mejia's performance did nothing to alter the opinion of those -- myself included -- who think that Majia is better off in the minors, working on developing as a starter.
Which, looking at the rotation now, may be a much bigger need this season than bullpen help.
John Maine, hopefully, just needs some time to get comfortable and back to where he was prior to 2009. The fastball just was not there. He needs it back.
The Marlins did everything they could to give the Mets the win, including walking and balking in two runs to tie the score in the bottom of the eighth, after Ricky Nolasco dominated for six innings. But the Mets gave Florida a gift of its own when Fernando Tatis tried to score on a not-that-wild pitch with two outs, the bases loaded and David Wright at the plate. Not a smart play.
So the Mets look to win the series Thursday night with Jon Niese on the hill, and with lefty Nate Robertson starting for Florida, there is a pretty good chance that Mike Jacobs will be on the bench. Unless Jerry Manuel wants to break up all those righties!
Jacobs looked awful again for most of game two, striking out twice in three at-bats before singling in the eighth. Of course, he gets some credit for sliding hard into second base, perhaps affecting the wild throw by Dan Uggla that scored Wright. But otherwise, Jacobs has looked like the player we all know him to be -- a free swinger who rips at everything and strikes out a ton.
I other words, a black hole in the cleanup spot.
I'll be at the game, so I'm hoping to see Angel Pagan in center and leading off, with a 3-4-5-6 of Wright-Bay-Francoeur-Tatis. Line up those right-handed hitters, Jerry!
As for Jennry Mejia, Keith Hernandez made an excellent point, noting that in his day, he paid close attention to how the young players striving to prove themselves or win a roster spot pitched, adding that the veterans gave him nothing. Florida has seen Mejia pitching at his best, and seen him a lot thanks to the spring training schedule. So when it was time to play for reals, they know exactly how to attack him.
You like to see the 97 on the gun, and maybe it was debut-night jitters, but Mejia's performance did nothing to alter the opinion of those -- myself included -- who think that Majia is better off in the minors, working on developing as a starter.
Which, looking at the rotation now, may be a much bigger need this season than bullpen help.
John Maine, hopefully, just needs some time to get comfortable and back to where he was prior to 2009. The fastball just was not there. He needs it back.
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
Speed it up fellas; Mets are tres internationale
With no game on Tuesday night, SNY aired a "Mets Classic" from August, 1986, an extra-inning Mets victory on the road against the San Diego Padres.
The game ended with your basic 8-2-5 double play, as Len Dykstra threw out Gary Templeton at home plate, with John Gibbons blocking the plate spectacularly before throwing out Tim Flannery -- who had singled to center off Doug Sisk -- at third base, with Howard Johnson making the tag.
But what really struck me about the game, other than how thin Tony Gwynn was once upon a time, was how quickly the game moved along. And this wasn't a result of video editing. The pitchers received the ball, got the sign, and threw, and the hitters spent less time stepping out of the box and more time setting up for the pitch.
Goose Gossage was particularly relentless on the mound, but he was old school even then. It was refreshing to experience that again, when today's game is often slowed down by the interminable signal flashing (often from dugout to catcher to pitcher) and batting glove adjusting.
So it was nice to see that MLB is trying to do something about it. Buster Olney notes in his Wednesday ESPN column that umpires have been instructed not to allow timeouts willy-nilly, thus forcing batters to stay in the box. Olney also correctly points out that the delays are just as much the fault of pitchers and catchers taking forever to get their signals straight.
Olney refers to the Yankees-Red Sox game when umpire Angel Hernandez refused a timeout to Marcus Thames. Derek Jeter, however, got his after trying to step out twice. Figures.
Olney's column also has a link to David Waldstein's Tuesday New York Times article on the Mets' international flavor. Of course, we all know how English is almost a second language in the Mets clubhouse, but you forget that Jason Bay, being Canadian, counts towards the United Nationization of the dugout. And the fact that the season opener featured three straight Venezuelans -- Santana, Nieve and K-Rod -- eluded me.
It got me thinking -- will the Mets now have a "Canadian Night" at Citi Field? I can see the Barenaked Ladies playing a postgame concert, with all the Molsons you can drink and Canadian bacon burgers on the grill. Not bad, eh?
The game ended with your basic 8-2-5 double play, as Len Dykstra threw out Gary Templeton at home plate, with John Gibbons blocking the plate spectacularly before throwing out Tim Flannery -- who had singled to center off Doug Sisk -- at third base, with Howard Johnson making the tag.
But what really struck me about the game, other than how thin Tony Gwynn was once upon a time, was how quickly the game moved along. And this wasn't a result of video editing. The pitchers received the ball, got the sign, and threw, and the hitters spent less time stepping out of the box and more time setting up for the pitch.
Goose Gossage was particularly relentless on the mound, but he was old school even then. It was refreshing to experience that again, when today's game is often slowed down by the interminable signal flashing (often from dugout to catcher to pitcher) and batting glove adjusting.
So it was nice to see that MLB is trying to do something about it. Buster Olney notes in his Wednesday ESPN column that umpires have been instructed not to allow timeouts willy-nilly, thus forcing batters to stay in the box. Olney also correctly points out that the delays are just as much the fault of pitchers and catchers taking forever to get their signals straight.
Olney refers to the Yankees-Red Sox game when umpire Angel Hernandez refused a timeout to Marcus Thames. Derek Jeter, however, got his after trying to step out twice. Figures.
Olney's column also has a link to David Waldstein's Tuesday New York Times article on the Mets' international flavor. Of course, we all know how English is almost a second language in the Mets clubhouse, but you forget that Jason Bay, being Canadian, counts towards the United Nationization of the dugout. And the fact that the season opener featured three straight Venezuelans -- Santana, Nieve and K-Rod -- eluded me.
It got me thinking -- will the Mets now have a "Canadian Night" at Citi Field? I can see the Barenaked Ladies playing a postgame concert, with all the Molsons you can drink and Canadian bacon burgers on the grill. Not bad, eh?
Monday, April 5, 2010
Another Opening Day Happy Recap
Some thoughts on today's 7-1 victory over the Marlins at Citi Field:
- That's one.
- I guess spring training ERA doesn't count for much, at least for Johan Santana.
- Love the cream-colored unis with the pinstripes. Yeah, I know, leaving the black shadow around METS doesn't make it truly retro, but they look sharp and are a good option next to the snow whites.
- Players who we wanted to see get off to a strong start did, for the most part. Jason Bay tripled, had two hits, made a nice throw to second base and showed some speed on the bases. Of course, Wright's two-run homer in the first was huge for him. Even Gary Matthews got in the act with two hits.
- I've had the toughest time spelling FRANCOEUR. Maybe it's because I didn't take French in high school. I always want to spell it O-U-E-R. Then I realized that the end is EUR, like Europe, or euro, and that part comes after FRANCO, a la Matt or John. So it's FRANCO plus EURO, minus the O. It's so easy now!
- It's fitting that the Mets are so dominant on Opening Day, now 32-17 in their history. The Mets have always been about BELIEVE, and you never have more belief in the possibilities than on opening day. It's the rest of the season we have to worry about.
- Nice work by Fernando Nieve. Maybe he can be the right-handed counterpart to Pedro Feliciano in a two-headed bridge to K-Rod, with Hisanori Takahashi in more of a long relief role. Then again, don't forget about Kiko Calero, who could be back with the club soon. Guy was dominant last season.
- I'll have more to say about this after I go to Thursday night's game, but I like what I've seen so far re: the changes to Citi Field. I never thought there was a lack of Mets-ness (or what Gary Cohen called 'Metitude'), but the additions are all positive, particularly the Shea Bridge and the old Home Run apple now out front in the plaza. Also like the gates named for Hodges and Seaver, the big banners -- it's all good, and I'm looking forward to the Mets Hall of Fame and McFadden's. The Wilpons got hammered last season by fans who couldn't grasp Citi Field as a work in progress, and they should get credit now for listening to the fans and doing it right.
- Great to see another team struggle with the fundys. May want to work on the pickoff play some more, Fredi G.
- SQUEEZE! It didn't work, but I loved the applause the effort got from the crowd. Manuel likes to run, Bay said he wants to run more, and hopefully we'll see more of this kind of play this season.
- Watching the Encore broadcast, I'm reminded once again how great we have it with Keith, Gary and Ron in the booth. Outstanding job again. We're spoiled.
Opening day lineup: Huh?
First pitch is in an hour, so let me get this off my chest. The opening day lineup is a horror show.
I've been clear on my feelings regarding Mike Jacobs. He may be the starter against righties, but there is no way he should be batting cleanup. You want to start Alex Cora over Ruben Tejada, the vet over the rookie, fine. But Angel Pagan has earned the right to start in centerfield, not only because of how he played last season but because he is a legitimate leadoff option.
Cora should not be batting leadoff. Gary Matthews Jr. should be a spot starter only in centerfield. Jason Bay should be hitting cleanup. Instead we have:
Cora
Castillo
Wright
Jacobs
Bay
Matthews
Francoeur
Barajas
Santana
Good god! I'd hit Castillo first before Cora. How about:
Pagan
Castillo
Wright
Bay
Jacobs
Francoeur
Barajas
Cora
Santana
I understand the L-R-L thing and "lengthening" the lineup, but that's a luxury you indulge in when you have the personnel. With Reyes and Beltran out of the lineup, you have to get your best available players the most opportunities.
Good luck, Johan!
I've been clear on my feelings regarding Mike Jacobs. He may be the starter against righties, but there is no way he should be batting cleanup. You want to start Alex Cora over Ruben Tejada, the vet over the rookie, fine. But Angel Pagan has earned the right to start in centerfield, not only because of how he played last season but because he is a legitimate leadoff option.
Cora should not be batting leadoff. Gary Matthews Jr. should be a spot starter only in centerfield. Jason Bay should be hitting cleanup. Instead we have:
Cora
Castillo
Wright
Jacobs
Bay
Matthews
Francoeur
Barajas
Santana
Good god! I'd hit Castillo first before Cora. How about:
Pagan
Castillo
Wright
Bay
Jacobs
Francoeur
Barajas
Cora
Santana
I understand the L-R-L thing and "lengthening" the lineup, but that's a luxury you indulge in when you have the personnel. With Reyes and Beltran out of the lineup, you have to get your best available players the most opportunities.
Good luck, Johan!
Sunday, April 4, 2010
2010 Season Preview: Are We Kidding Ourselves?
My true feelings about the upcoming season may have been betrayed by my initial reaction to the rotation announced for the first week.
I'm attending game three on Thursday, and when I learned that Jonathan Niese would be the Mets' starter, I was thrilled and relieved, primarily because I wanted to avoid seeing Ollie Perez. And nothing against John Maine and Mike Pelfrey, who have not impressed this spring (then again, who has), but other than Johan Santana, Niese is probably the most exciting starter the Mets have.
That's right, Niese, the fifth starter who is coming off an injury (like seemingly everyone else).
Is that a bad sign?
When spring training began, I felt nothing but optimism. Jose Reyes was healthy and in camp, Jason Bay was in the lineup, and we figured we'd survive six weeks or so without Carlos Beltran. The vibe was positive, which is how spring training should be.
Reyes' thyroid acted up, which turned out to be an annoyance and not a crisis. But then the pitchers started, you know, pitching, and the results were less than positive.
Of the five starters' spring ERAs, Pelfrey's was the best, at 6.15. Santana had some rough outings, but no one's too worried, mainly because Santana is Santana and spring stats mean nothing. That, and if Santana really is having trouble, we may as well all jump off a bridge.
Pelfrey has been inconsistent and has been unable to find his inner Randy Johnson, prompting Jeff Francoeur to joke that he wanted to punch Big Pelf in the face before every start. Ollie has been mostly Bad Ollie, and it looks like an attempt is being made to improve his command, which has left his lively fastball lifeless. Probably better to let Ollie be Ollie and let the chips and home runs fall where they may.
Niese had his own share of troubles but showed signs of life, and scouts generally feel that he has a good future in the league. Let's hope so. Maine, meanwhile, has struggled, but there is hope that he'll get back to the pitcher who has come up big in big games.
That word, hope, has a lot riding on it. The Mets had an opportunity to improve the rotation but passed after John Lackey took his spotty medical history and ran to the Red Sox and their monster contract offer. There were others the Mets could have signed (why not roll the dice on Chien-Ming Wang??), but they stood pat, and we are where we are.
Some have suggested the bullpen is worse, but Pedro Feliciano has been outstanding against lefties, and two seasons ago, he held righties to a .215 average. If he can get closer to that number, maybe he can be the eighth-inning bridge. Or perhaps it's Hisanori Takahaski, who has been terrific so far and could even be a fallback starter.
What the Mets lack is an effective right-hander out of the pen (it isn't Sean Green), unless you're talking about Jennry Mejia, who has been lights-out. I'm on record saying that Mejia should be starting in the minors, but if the Mets want him to get his feet wet in the majors in the bullpen, then so be it. There were recent references to how the Cardinals developed Adam Wainwright in that fashion, and it turned out quite well for them -- but Wainwright had more than 100 minor-league starts before they brought him up. Mejia's minor-league experience is much less, and his numbers there were underwhelming.
On offense, the Mets will miss Daniel Murphy at first base, and as a result Mike Jacobs is the starter.
That, to me, is as depressing as any of the recent Mets developments. Not so much because I think Murphy is going to be gangbusters (though I do think he will have a solid year), but because Jacobs is going to not only going to play first, but apparently bat FOURTH.
Why Jerry Manuel is hitting him fourth is beyond me. If anything, he should just fill whatever spot Murphy was going to have, sixth or seventh. But in an attempt to go right-left-right in the absence of Beltran, he's got Jacobs and his donut-hole swing batting cleanup. Insane.
Why not have a top five of Angel Pagan, Luis Castillo, David Wright, Bay and Francoeur? In the sixth spot, I'd have used Chris Carter instead of Jacobs, who should be in the AL or in the minors somewhere. Carter is younger (not very young, I know), hungrier, a better fielder and had a much better spring. Jacobs is a retread. Period.
Bay will be fine at Citi Field, which is a pitcher's park but not the death valley the media makes it out to be. In fact, had the Mets not lost so many games to injury last season they likely would have finished around the league average in home runs. Francoeur was resurgent in trying times and has quickly become a positive clubhouse presence. Pagan is a capable fill-in for Beltran (as long as it's only for two months), and Castillo doesn't deserve half of the flak he gets, even for his defense, which is limited.
Wright should bounce back from a season in which the injuries, the stadium and an altered plate approach conspired to knock down his power, and contradictorily raise both his batting average and strikeout totals. The key, as always, is Reyes. If he stays healthy, and I think he will, that makes a tremendous difference in a lineup that will get a similar jolt when Beltran returns.
Which brings us back to pitching. Had the 2-4 section of Pelfrey, Maine and Perez looked strong in the spring, there might have been more hope, even though the past is littered with spring training heros turned regular-season bums. It's just that we needed to see SOMETHING, and instead got nothing but more questions on the mound. Someone has to step up to make K-Rod worth what they're paying him.
One thing I do like is the underdog status. For the first time in five years, the expectations are low. No one anticipates the Mets to make the playoffs or do much better than .500, and maybe this group will respond to that. Maybe Perez swings back to his Good Ollie self, and Maine bounces back, and Pelfrey gets mean, and Niese is the real deal.
Maybe. Hey, it's something.
I'm attending game three on Thursday, and when I learned that Jonathan Niese would be the Mets' starter, I was thrilled and relieved, primarily because I wanted to avoid seeing Ollie Perez. And nothing against John Maine and Mike Pelfrey, who have not impressed this spring (then again, who has), but other than Johan Santana, Niese is probably the most exciting starter the Mets have.
That's right, Niese, the fifth starter who is coming off an injury (like seemingly everyone else).
Is that a bad sign?
When spring training began, I felt nothing but optimism. Jose Reyes was healthy and in camp, Jason Bay was in the lineup, and we figured we'd survive six weeks or so without Carlos Beltran. The vibe was positive, which is how spring training should be.
Reyes' thyroid acted up, which turned out to be an annoyance and not a crisis. But then the pitchers started, you know, pitching, and the results were less than positive.
Of the five starters' spring ERAs, Pelfrey's was the best, at 6.15. Santana had some rough outings, but no one's too worried, mainly because Santana is Santana and spring stats mean nothing. That, and if Santana really is having trouble, we may as well all jump off a bridge.
Pelfrey has been inconsistent and has been unable to find his inner Randy Johnson, prompting Jeff Francoeur to joke that he wanted to punch Big Pelf in the face before every start. Ollie has been mostly Bad Ollie, and it looks like an attempt is being made to improve his command, which has left his lively fastball lifeless. Probably better to let Ollie be Ollie and let the chips and home runs fall where they may.
Niese had his own share of troubles but showed signs of life, and scouts generally feel that he has a good future in the league. Let's hope so. Maine, meanwhile, has struggled, but there is hope that he'll get back to the pitcher who has come up big in big games.
That word, hope, has a lot riding on it. The Mets had an opportunity to improve the rotation but passed after John Lackey took his spotty medical history and ran to the Red Sox and their monster contract offer. There were others the Mets could have signed (why not roll the dice on Chien-Ming Wang??), but they stood pat, and we are where we are.
Some have suggested the bullpen is worse, but Pedro Feliciano has been outstanding against lefties, and two seasons ago, he held righties to a .215 average. If he can get closer to that number, maybe he can be the eighth-inning bridge. Or perhaps it's Hisanori Takahaski, who has been terrific so far and could even be a fallback starter.
What the Mets lack is an effective right-hander out of the pen (it isn't Sean Green), unless you're talking about Jennry Mejia, who has been lights-out. I'm on record saying that Mejia should be starting in the minors, but if the Mets want him to get his feet wet in the majors in the bullpen, then so be it. There were recent references to how the Cardinals developed Adam Wainwright in that fashion, and it turned out quite well for them -- but Wainwright had more than 100 minor-league starts before they brought him up. Mejia's minor-league experience is much less, and his numbers there were underwhelming.
On offense, the Mets will miss Daniel Murphy at first base, and as a result Mike Jacobs is the starter.
That, to me, is as depressing as any of the recent Mets developments. Not so much because I think Murphy is going to be gangbusters (though I do think he will have a solid year), but because Jacobs is going to not only going to play first, but apparently bat FOURTH.
Why Jerry Manuel is hitting him fourth is beyond me. If anything, he should just fill whatever spot Murphy was going to have, sixth or seventh. But in an attempt to go right-left-right in the absence of Beltran, he's got Jacobs and his donut-hole swing batting cleanup. Insane.
Why not have a top five of Angel Pagan, Luis Castillo, David Wright, Bay and Francoeur? In the sixth spot, I'd have used Chris Carter instead of Jacobs, who should be in the AL or in the minors somewhere. Carter is younger (not very young, I know), hungrier, a better fielder and had a much better spring. Jacobs is a retread. Period.
Bay will be fine at Citi Field, which is a pitcher's park but not the death valley the media makes it out to be. In fact, had the Mets not lost so many games to injury last season they likely would have finished around the league average in home runs. Francoeur was resurgent in trying times and has quickly become a positive clubhouse presence. Pagan is a capable fill-in for Beltran (as long as it's only for two months), and Castillo doesn't deserve half of the flak he gets, even for his defense, which is limited.
Wright should bounce back from a season in which the injuries, the stadium and an altered plate approach conspired to knock down his power, and contradictorily raise both his batting average and strikeout totals. The key, as always, is Reyes. If he stays healthy, and I think he will, that makes a tremendous difference in a lineup that will get a similar jolt when Beltran returns.
Which brings us back to pitching. Had the 2-4 section of Pelfrey, Maine and Perez looked strong in the spring, there might have been more hope, even though the past is littered with spring training heros turned regular-season bums. It's just that we needed to see SOMETHING, and instead got nothing but more questions on the mound. Someone has to step up to make K-Rod worth what they're paying him.
One thing I do like is the underdog status. For the first time in five years, the expectations are low. No one anticipates the Mets to make the playoffs or do much better than .500, and maybe this group will respond to that. Maybe Perez swings back to his Good Ollie self, and Maine bounces back, and Pelfrey gets mean, and Niese is the real deal.
Maybe. Hey, it's something.
Thursday, April 1, 2010
Let's all take a deep breath
So the Mets' opening day first baseman is going to be... Mike Jacobs.
Sigh.
To me, Jacobs is a DH and has no business in the National League, but his presence as a starter is sadly unavoidable, thanks to the knee injury suffered by Daniel Murphy. In fact, of all the Mets' health issues, the Murphy injury bothers me the most, even more than those concerning Jose Reyes or Carlos Beltran.
Why? Because we knew Beltran was going to be out until sometime in May, and as for Reyes, making opening day was always a long shot, so if he misses the first week, no big deal. He'll be back 100%.
Murphy's injury, besides being a setback for the man himself, served to revisit the idea of Ike Davis making the big club. Like Jennry Mejia, Davis tore it up in spring training to the point that many people, especially media folks, clamored for the Mets to bring the kids to Flushing.
That's a mistake for both players, even with Murphy's injury.
Yes, Davis looked great in camp. He hit some bombs. He is the first baseman of the future, no question about it. But he hasn't played above AA, and in just a couple of minor league seasons, he hasn't proven he can hit lefties or breaking pitches consistently. Like Fernando Martinez, the Mets want to see Davis get at-bats at the AAA level and continue developing. There is no doubt that both of them -- health permitting, of course -- are going to be solid major league players.
As for Mejia, I fear the Mets are going down the Joba path. Mejia has been a starter. He has ridiculous stuff. I'm sure he would do great in the bullpen, but so soon? His minor league numbers have been pedestrian, and we all know that spring training stats mean nothing once the season starts.
Even if he isn't the eighth-inning guy, why throw him into the MLB fire now? Let's say he gets lit up -- why risk damaging his confidence? Plus, he is a starter and several scouts have pegged him as a No. 1 or No. 2 guy. Best to let him develop in the minors, because that kind of a starter is infinitely more valuable than a reliever, regardless of the state of your current bullpen.
Think about Mariano Rivera. He used to be a starter. That didn't work out, and then he was sent to the bullpen. Let's give Mejia a chance to start. If not, fine -- maybe he becomes a dominant reliever after all.
Of course, Omar Minaya and Jerry Manuel need the team to win now, and so Mejia may very well be in the bullpen to start the season. I'd rather see Feliciano and Takahashi share setup duties.
Murphy, meanwhile, has to feel lower than a snail's belly these days. He had an awful spring, and then he gets hurt in an avoidable baserunning mistake. Now we're stuck with Jacobs at first base, and you know he's going to homer on opening day. Which, if it helps the Mets win, would be great. But Jacobs is not the answer. At all.
It's pretty messy. But did we expect anything less?
Sigh.
To me, Jacobs is a DH and has no business in the National League, but his presence as a starter is sadly unavoidable, thanks to the knee injury suffered by Daniel Murphy. In fact, of all the Mets' health issues, the Murphy injury bothers me the most, even more than those concerning Jose Reyes or Carlos Beltran.
Why? Because we knew Beltran was going to be out until sometime in May, and as for Reyes, making opening day was always a long shot, so if he misses the first week, no big deal. He'll be back 100%.
Murphy's injury, besides being a setback for the man himself, served to revisit the idea of Ike Davis making the big club. Like Jennry Mejia, Davis tore it up in spring training to the point that many people, especially media folks, clamored for the Mets to bring the kids to Flushing.
That's a mistake for both players, even with Murphy's injury.
Yes, Davis looked great in camp. He hit some bombs. He is the first baseman of the future, no question about it. But he hasn't played above AA, and in just a couple of minor league seasons, he hasn't proven he can hit lefties or breaking pitches consistently. Like Fernando Martinez, the Mets want to see Davis get at-bats at the AAA level and continue developing. There is no doubt that both of them -- health permitting, of course -- are going to be solid major league players.
As for Mejia, I fear the Mets are going down the Joba path. Mejia has been a starter. He has ridiculous stuff. I'm sure he would do great in the bullpen, but so soon? His minor league numbers have been pedestrian, and we all know that spring training stats mean nothing once the season starts.
Even if he isn't the eighth-inning guy, why throw him into the MLB fire now? Let's say he gets lit up -- why risk damaging his confidence? Plus, he is a starter and several scouts have pegged him as a No. 1 or No. 2 guy. Best to let him develop in the minors, because that kind of a starter is infinitely more valuable than a reliever, regardless of the state of your current bullpen.
Think about Mariano Rivera. He used to be a starter. That didn't work out, and then he was sent to the bullpen. Let's give Mejia a chance to start. If not, fine -- maybe he becomes a dominant reliever after all.
Of course, Omar Minaya and Jerry Manuel need the team to win now, and so Mejia may very well be in the bullpen to start the season. I'd rather see Feliciano and Takahashi share setup duties.
Murphy, meanwhile, has to feel lower than a snail's belly these days. He had an awful spring, and then he gets hurt in an avoidable baserunning mistake. Now we're stuck with Jacobs at first base, and you know he's going to homer on opening day. Which, if it helps the Mets win, would be great. But Jacobs is not the answer. At all.
It's pretty messy. But did we expect anything less?
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)