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Monday, March 31, 2008

Letters to the NL East, part 5

Letters to the NL East, Part 5 of 5


Dear New York Mets,


Expectations soar this year. You disappointed us horribly last year, and I hope you disappointed yourselves too. Whether we like it or not, the marketing department has introduced the element of revenge into the advertisements. It's important that you guys keep this revenge fresh in your minds.


No more taking it for granted that you're good, instead you need to rub other teams faces in it. Up 9-2 in the ninth? No reason to take that for granted either; steal that base, bunt those runners over, score that extra run. It's never enough, and you should never be satisfied with being ahead, whether it's in a game, a series, or the division.


I want to see some attitude this year, and I don't care about how the other teams feel about it. I don't care if Jimmy Rollins thinks the Phillies are awesome or if Hanley Ramirez hates the Mets. You guys are better than they are, and there is no reason not to act like it. They don't like you dancing on your on-deck circle? Fine, dance on their on-deck circle. Don't be afraid to throw inside, and hard. It's punishment time for the rest of the NL East, and you are the enforcers. Your opponents should feel like they were in a wrestling match and body slammed to the mat repeatedly. You should be playing like the Phillies punched your mother, and the Braves knocked up your sister. Remember, there are no unwritten rules of baseball; Play tough, play hard, and it doesn't matter how you get there in the end, just get there.


Your lifelong fan,


Optimistic Mets Fan

Sunday, March 30, 2008

Angel in the Outfield

Everyone else is doing it, so why not me?


I'm actually surprised that Angel Pagan, Joe Smith, and Mike Pelfrey made the team over the veterans that have a combined age approaching infinity. I hope it they made it for themselves, and not because of injuries or failures on the part of the older options. At least now we have an Angel in the outfield as well as a Church. (And as I've mentioned earlier, how many variations of those headlines do you think the papers are going to use?)


I liked Gotay, but truthfully he didn't have a lot of places to play on this team. You can argue about sign Castillo, but they did so Gotay really was only going to be a pinch hitter and he didn't do amazingly in that role last year. However I wish they could've traded him for something rather than gifting him to the Braves. I wonder what it says about the Braves confidence in their guys that they felt the need to pick up Gotay though?


I think Pelfrey will turn it around, maybe Perez can give him some head-case advice.


Only about 24 hours until this is all secondary stuff to the actual baseball anyway, and I can't wait. I'm planning to attend the Metsblog.com happy hour in the city to watch the game, even though I expect it to be a zoo. If you come, look for me. I'll be the one in the Santana shirt. Can't miss me.


Look for my 5th “Letters to the NL East” letter late tonight or early tomorrow, which will basically be a rallying cry for the Mets.


Oh, and if you know anyone that is looking for a single ticket to all 13 home Saturday games..send them my way, I probably don't need to spend $300 to have a seat to put my bag on.

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Letters to the NL East, part 4

Letters to the NL East, Part 4 of 5


Dear Jimmy Rollins and the Philadelphia Phillies,


Cole Hamels! That's your biggest pitcher, a pitcher whose stats matched up well with our third starter, John Maine. I'd be willing to put money on Maine having a better year than Hamels this year, and you just can't win when another team in your division absolutely dominates you in pitching quality like that. I heard bartenders in Philadelphia did great business the day Johan Santana signed with the Mets, and I expect once the season starts they'll be there to help your fans drown their sorrows again.


Your biggest hope is that Brett Myers can manage to pitch well in the rotation, and that Brad Lidge figures out how to close again. I wouldn't hold my breath on either one, especially in that park. Even if both happen, all it means is that you'll stick around a couple of weeks longer before the Mets put you away. And make no mistake, they will be looking for blood this year.


You've opened a can of worms Jimmy Rollins, and helped to start this little rivalry we have going recently. It has the possibility of being an awesome competition, one that could rival even the Red Sox and Yankees, if you can hold up your end of the bargain. I doubt you're going to have as good a year as last year Jimmy so that means someone else is going to have to step up. This rivalry will quickly become a one night stand by July otherwise.


Your new rival,


Optimistic Mets Fan

Friday, March 28, 2008

Letters to the NL East, part 3

Letters to the NL East, Part 3 of 5


Dear Atlanta Braves,


I know Omar has a problem with not trusting young guys, the recent Gotay/Tatis situation shows that, but in Atlanta the problem is probably the crux of the season. Your rotation is old. Glavine was very hit or miss last year, and we all know which side of the fence he was on on the last day of the season. He's not going to get better, or healthier. The same thing could be said about Smoltz, who while slightly younger, is still old. He also is already having health issues at the beginning of this season, and while he says he feels good and is on track to start April 6th, how will he feel on August 6th? You traded your young catcher for Teixeira at first, who might not even play 200 games for the team. Hudson is 33 this year, and probably your most reliable starter, Hampton is going to be 36 and he can't stay healthy as it is.


Granted, you do have some young players, particularly position players, but we all know it's pitching that wins. You don't have Leo Mazzone as a pitching coach anymore, and your rotation is a mixture of age and brittleness. It won't last all season, and you're going to find too many games pitched by 6th, 7th and 8th starters. On top of that, many of these guys aren't going to be able to make it deep in games, which is going to stress and tire a bullpen that isn't that great.


You'll have some good stretches where things are clicking, pitchers are healthy, and everything is coming up roses. However, by the end of the season the biggest thing you'll be striving for is if you can beat out Philadelphia for second place.


Your longtime enemy,


Optimistic Mets Fan

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Letters to the NL East, part 2

Letters to the NL East, Part 2 of 5


Dear Lastings Milledge, Paul Lo Duca, and the Washington Nationals,


Ooo, A shiny new ballpark! Now lets see if you can use the revenue that usually comes along with a new ballpark and an increase in attendance to keep it filled for years to come. On paper you look like you might be a little better than last year, improving slowly. Someone has to fill out the bottom of the division, but luckily It looks like you'll easily be able to stay ahead of the Marlins in that regard.


Milledge and Lo Duca, we get it, you don't like how you were treated or the opportunities you were given or not given in New York. Unfortunately, that's life in New York and baseball. Talk all you want in spring, but the season is starting now and it's time for you to stop worrying about New York and start worrying about Washington. Turns out, I actually wanted both of you to stay on the team, but you both had to open your mouths enough to piss off the powers that be, which only hurt the possibility of you sticking around. Now that you're in the political correctness capital of the country, no one's watching you guys to see if you're saying the right things.


Your Former Fan,


Optimistic Mets Fan


Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Letters to the NL East, part 1

Letters to the NL East, Part 1 oletf 5


Dear Florida Marlins,


I don't have much to say to you, except shame on you! I can't take you seriously or give you any respect, even for your two World Championships, while you still are so obviously profiting off your team. Between licensing money and luxury tax money, you could probably pay all your ushers the same as the players and still make money. When Babe Ruth hit more home runs than some teams, it was a great thing for baseball. When Alex Rodriguez makes more money than your entire roster, it's not a good thing. I understand you have complaints about getting a new stadium, but that doesn't excuse your AAA behavior. Your team was laughed at in attendance figures last year, including that one game where people had whole sections to themselves.


I understand Hanley Ramirez doesn't like the Mets, and there was that whole bench clearing incident on the final Saturday of the season last year, but I just can't be bothered to think about your team. You're so bad, that the media and fans will give the Mets less credit for having a good season just because they play you 19 times. So here's my advice: Sign some players, get some fans, and come back up the the majors when you're ready.


Your dismissive rival,


Optimistic Mets Fan

Monday, March 24, 2008

Letters to the NL East, part 0

Part 0 of the 5 park series, “Letters to the NL East”


Letter to Hank Steinbrenner and the New York Yankees.


Dear Yankees,


We get it, you've won a lot. Guess what? You haven't won a lot recently. You've lost four consecutive playoff series, and the first in historic fashion. You haven't made a significant acquisition during that stretch, and you didn't this year either. You're biggest claim in the offseason was retaining the guys you had, but the guys you had didn't get you anywhere.


Joba and Ian and Phil are gods? Well, we'll see. I'm sure you don't need anyone to tell you about Generation K, or that less than 10% of top prospects succeed in the majors. Hughes and Chamberlain have already had some success, but that doesn't mean they'll be successful over a full season. Pettite's only older and it's unlikely Wang wins more than the 19 games he won last year.


Hank, you are a fiery guy who is always commenting on something. The new manager, Girardi, is also a fiery guy. I'm looking forward to the stories when you two bump heads during a tough patch down the road. Is this Steinbrenner v. Martin part two? Have you ever noticed how the biggest Yankee stories seem to be about non-baseball stuff? That's not a good thing.


Enjoy being the second team in New York this year, the buzz is all here in Queens.



Your Anti-Fan,



Optimistic Mets Fan


Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Letters to the NL East

Baseball starts soon, and that means I'll probably start updating with a little more regularity once there is actual content. For now I'm planning a 6 part series of "Letters to the NL East" which I'm envisioning as a sort of rally cry/smack talk analysis of what I think of those teams.

the 6th team being the Yankees, as they are close enough to warrant a little attention.

Letters to the NL East: Yankees

Letters to the NL East: Nationals

Letters to the NL East: Marlins

Letters to the NL East: Braves

Letters to the NL East: Phllies

Letters to the NL East: Mets

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Betting on 2008

Pending wagers for the upcoming season.


I like to place a couple of simple wagers every year, and this year is no different.


My first one is the Mets to win the World Series. I made this wager pre-Santana so I have 15-1 odds.


Hanley Ramirez, Under 27.5 Home Runs. I don't expect Hanley to have as good a year as he had last year, as pitchers will figure him out a bit.


Mariano Rivera, Under 36.5 Saves. 37 is a lot of saves, and I think the Rivera is in decline, plus the Yankees with a shoddy bullpen and inning-limited young pitching are unlikely to give him as many opportunities in years past. I made this bet last year and won.


Tampa Bay (Devil) Rays, Over 75 wins. 76 is a lot of wins, would be a franchise record. I was hoping this number would be lower, but I still think they can do it. I think they're a better team pitching-wise this year, and the division is worse, if only by a little.


New York Yankees, Under 93.5 wins. From the Yankees perspective I think the division is about the same as last year, Tampa improved, Orioles downgraded, Boston and Toronto remained about the same. I won this bet last year(I think the number was 96) and I would've won it with 93.5 last year too. The Yankees didn't get better, in fact they got worse. (A-Rod and Posada won't do better, and they didn't acquire any new talent. Unless the young pitching blows everyone away, they're in for a tough year)


Philadelphia Phillies, Under 87.5 wins. Did the Phillies get better? I'm not a big fan of Myers anyway, I think Lidge doesn't give them much of an improvement. Just give the Mets two more wins against them and I'd win this. Philly will probably stick around though May and then fade. They just don't have any pitching.


New York Mets, over 93.5 wins. Can the Mets fight off their stagger last year, and does Johan add what it takes? I actually think the Mets will annihilate this number, because I think Johan and Pedro will have years that make us drool. I lost this bet last year, when the number was 89.5, which I thought was practically a given.


So there are my bets for this year, I may add others if I see them, I'd love to bet on over strikeouts for Pedro, but I didn't see one anywhere. Anyone else make any wagers, or think I'm crazy on any of these?





Friday, March 07, 2008

Pagan to start in left

Angel Pagan is going to make this team.

Stay tuned for other wagers I've been making on baseball, including Over/Unders on the Mets, Rays, Phillies and Yankees. Haven't seen a wager out there for over/under Pedro strikeouts, but I'm for the over.

Thursday, March 06, 2008

Metamerica

Red Sox Nation, Yankee country? How about Metamerica? My Santana t-shirt provoked plenty of comments walking around downtown San Diego, on one March evening. I had a conversation about Santana, about Delgado, and about El Duque 3000 miles from Shea Stadium. I didn't hear one peep from Padres fans, and I didn't see one Yankees or Red Sox cap. This isn't a very representative sample; it's March and I was wearing a Mets shirt and hat. However, there were certainly Mets fan about, and people were excited enough to cheer “Let's Go Mets!” at me as they walked by.


I'm not suggesting we have an election for “America's team”, I'm just suggesting that maybe Hank shouldn't count the Mets out so easily. There are plenty of relocated New Yorkers, and plenty of them are Mets fans. There are also plenty of people out there who will always remain National League fans, never jumping on an American League DH team's bandwagon.


And remember, no one's talking about how the Yankees kept the same roster they had last year, they're talking about the biggest trade in baseball and New York; Johan Santana to the Mets.



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