Because I’m between items on my agenda this Saturday (the humidity’s calling into question my desire to finally repaint my hallway), I thought I might take time to clean house here, a bit.
Example: I’ve been negligent in responding to comments, which is rude of me. So, here they are, condensed:
After having the flu the other day, Ryan Church did have a great night last night.
Fernando
Nieve just had a bad night. It is going to happen in a young career, at
least it did not happen against a divisional foe like Philly.
But that is why we play three games series, the Mets just have to buck up and take the other two games.
Should be a great game tonight.
Rays Renegade
That from the owner of Rays Renegade (obviously). Also, almost two weeks ago. You can tell because, back then, Ryan Church played for the Mets.
“Pennies make dollars” is what my dad used to tell me, and wins like the one not had in this game are what hurt come late September. It’s the same as the Phillies winning by 21 runs one night, then losing by one run the next. The games don’t have to be against a divisional rival to have an impact on the race–and I don’t think Mr. Renegade was implying that–but they matter just as much as saving face and picking up slack a whole game at a time, rather than a half.
And God, is Nieve still kinda crummy. Carriage, meet pumpkin. He didn’t embarrass himself last night, but the start he had prior was abysmal. The thing about Niese–indeed, the thing about the AAAA Mets as a whole this year–is that there seems to be no object lesson in teaching the opposition that they need to press. With any pitcher not named Santana, the guys in the batter’s box must be thinking, “It’s just a matter of time before I get my pitch to hit.”
That profile photo, Mr. Renegade. Fantastic. I’ll need one similar, now.
This comment came the next day, as I tried to will the Mets to a win. They were two games below .500 then; it only took a week to go five games below. (That just means they can take them back in a week, too.) From Susan, at Perfect Pitch:
Good advice. Just hard for them to follow. But here’s hoping!
My tactic? Laughter:
http://perfectpitch.mlblogs.com/archives/2009/07/fowl_play.html
I’m Section 314, by the way…most every single game. Say hello anytime!
Susan
I gave Susan a shout-out when the Mets won, saying we’d done it together. However, for those trolling for hard luck writing who’ve stumbled onto this Mets blog and don’t know much about Citi Field, here’s something: those with seats in the 500s can’t really go down to see people in the 300s. Trust me, I’ve tried. You get a hard time from the ushers who think you’re trying to work a seat upgrade. It’s more politely handled at Citi Field than it was at Shea, but it’s firm.
So, Susan, I’m sorry I haven’t stopped by. I try to be a gregarious guy; I try to make strangers friends, because it’s one of the few natural thrills in modern comfortable life. But I can’t get there from here. Come by 528 anytime; no one cares if you stop by up there. Row 6, right across from the start of 529.
This one from Dillon, of Living The Baseball Life:
Injuries have been the biggest reason for the Mets’ non-success this
season. And yesterday Johan didn’t get a bunch of calls that he should
have gotten.
-Dillon
Amen, and no kidding, Dillon. Since then, the Mets have lost Fernando Martinez to knee swelling, so the injury bug is spreading to the replacements. I get the sense that David Wright’s pride is wounded, as well.
As for being a Yankee fan in Beantown… woof. And I like Boston a lot; I’ve made good money there and have some good friends who still live in the area. My favorite bar named after a writer (Charles Bukowski) is there, too. But I can’t imagine not even really being able to see games. Last time I checked, the cheapest seat for a game at Fenway was more than my total beer consumption on a Flushing night (and that’s not an inconsiderable amount of cabbage). Perhaps you do better than I. Good luck to you, sir.
This from mrmetnoel@optonline.net, on Tuesday’s day off:
That was a great article I enjoyed reading it & I agree some Mets gave up way to early still got 80 games left. LETS GO METS
I don’t think there’s necessarily a give-up with players; I meant that there was no game played that day, and that’s why they didn’t lose. Thanks for the comment. Let’s hope they don’t give up.
This from birdland of Birdland Blog:
hhahah, you have a very nice blog here. Sorry that the Mets are not in
first this year though. Who knows? Maybe they could make a push and win
the East? Maybe! My blog is birdland blog if you wanna comment! 🙂
-O’s birdland blog
Thanks for the kudos on the blog. I don’t think we’re yet at the point of desperation. Certainly they need to get on a good run and hope the Phillies and the Marlins and the Braves run short of steam, and both things happening are quite possible. However, they both need to happen at once.
**
If the Mets offense can give the opposing pitching reason to be cautious, that’ll go a long way towards re-establishing parity in match-ups. But veterans can’t catch up to the pitch they know they could hit, and rookies and super-rookies are too impatient to wait for them. Prime-time stars are left hanging.
This is the long-term result of injuries. It wasn’t by design. It wasn’t on purpose. But it’s what’s happening. For all the back and forth on whether the trade for Francoeur was bad or good, we’re not addressing the fact that the team approach is incorrect at present. Strong pitching, yes. Flaweless defense, yes. But offense: sit in there and work counts. Make those games four hours long. Tire them out on the other side. Learn what’s coming from the pitcher and how the defense is going to play you in various situations.
If that program is sound, then I don’t know that getting Francoeur is going to help it. I don’t know that getting young for the sake of getting young is reason enough to make a trade. If the knock on Omar Minaya is that he prefers older players over younger players, then shouldn’t we be doubly grateful that he didn’t bring in another Hispanic player? I mean, while we’re perpetuating myths and stereotypes…
Let’s see if bringing back that old chestnut stirs some conversation.
…The opposition may not yet be able to ascribe a narrative to your line-up, in part because they don’t have to: they can pick you off one at a time. But you, Mets bats, need the team narrative. Like when Jose Reyes would get on base, steal second, get bunted over (for better or horribly worse) by Luis Castillo, and Carlos Beltran would get him in with an opposite field double. Then David Wright gets Carlos in with an RBI single.
It’s at this point that Delgado would hit a home run. But, y’know. Anyway, that was nice reliving those days.
Fellas, you need a story. You need to write your movie. The injuries are Act One. The swoon is Act Two. The rise is Act Three. Work counts to get on base or extend the game and knock the opposing pitcher out. Once you know that story and can tell it well, the opposition will try and upend that story. The only way I can see to defending against a team that consistently works at-bats is to throw heat past the rookies and crafty stuff against the veterans. And the rookies will hit the speed balls while the veterans smack that garbage around the field.
See? It’s that easy. Why am I not a manager?
**
David Wright should bat third only in emergencies. This situation is a crisis. It’s not an emergency.
Troubles rank in the following order, from least to most dire:
Issue
Problem
Emergency
Crisis
Ragnarok
Crises are prolonged emergency situations. Problems are solvable in situ; Ragnarok is the destruction of the Gods. Which I guess means that, should we get to Ragnarok, the Wilpons will have to do battle with the evil Norse wolf Fenrir and Jormungand; think they traded those two for Shawn Green.
Think about it: Ragnarok is to be preceded by three winters with no summers. I’d say 2007 and 2008 qualify as winters of the nuclear variety. And it’s pretty cold out in Flushing these days.
I can’t count how many line-ups Jerry Manuel has presented but I’m sure the number rivals the number of games won, if not games played. But this lefty-righty nonsense has got to stop; these hitters have no margin for error on the bench, and need to learn to hit pitches from right handers and left handers. Regularity will breed familiarity. Familiarity is important, as the alternative–mixing and matching on a day-by-day basis–is obviously not working.
David Wright hitting third in a line-up does not give him the opportunity to produce, given the poor hitting usually placed ahead of him. And look at the man: he desperately wants to produce. He feels better when he does. He feels looser.
I don’t have an answer as to how the line-up should be constructed beyond this, because we’ve not seen a consistent line-up, especially since the loss of Beltran. Can Daniel Murphy be a great hitter in the two-hole? How do we know? He doesn’t hit in that position every day. Can Gary Sheffield be trusted to hit doubles while in the three-hole? I doubt it, but who’s to say he won’t instead hit a homer?
David Wright needs not the protection of power hitters ahead of him and behind, but the ego boost of contributing to the team offensively and defensively. Captains need to feel useful.