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Sunday, April 27, 2008

Chipper Jones on the BQE

Just finished listening to Ed Randall interviewing Chipper Jones on WFAN. He happened to mention that he was in the car with Smoltz driving to Shea Stadium. Can you imagine driving on the Grand Central and you look over and see those two next to you?


If you haven't heard, Chipper won't be playing today because of back spasms, and might miss some of the Nationals series next week too.


Randall brought up the comment Chipper made years ago about Mets fans not needing to be so upset, they can just go put on their Yankees gear now. We all thought he was betraying Boston-type ignorance about the incapability of rooting for both teams, but the way he explained it today, it was more of a jibe than ignorance. He says he made the comment later after seeing one of those idiots behind the dugout who was wearing one of those half-Mets half-Yankees caps and was disgusted by it.


He also said he's not changing his son Shea's, name but that he hopes he grows up to be a great ballplayer one day and gets to hit in Citi Field.


So that's my interesting Larry Jones tidbit for the day.

Bring The Magic Back

Could Wagner completed his "Reliver No-Hitter" for the Mets be a turning point in the season? It's certainly the closest a Met has come to the real thing. Maybe this brings the magic back.

Friday, April 25, 2008

A Perez Idea

An Idea


This is just an idea I had yesterday while watching the game. Oliver Perez was obviously struggling, again, late in the game. I don't really have a problem with Willie pulling him, although I would've left him in, but something needs to be done with this guy. I was thinking about this in the 5th, and here's what I would've liked to see.


Just leave him in.


Let him give up 15 runs. Go to the mound, tell him Heilman and Sosa are sitting back and having a soda and he's finishing six innings no matter what happens. Perez has strived in pressure situations right? So take away the 'safety net' so to speak. Let him learn something about himself, and figure out how to get himself out of these situations, because it's an important lesson a good pitcher needs to learn.


Would this be an irreparable blow to his confidence if he did give up 15 runs? I don't really buy into that irreparable stuff anyway, but Perez has already had those in Pittsburgh before coming to the Mets and he managed to bounce back. We know he has great stuff, the problem is it's a coin flip on whether he'll be able to throw those great pitches. What will make him take that step to a great pitcher is being able to climb back to that peak after he's fallen out of stride during a game/inning/batter.


With Santana, Willie can prepare to use the best guys out of the bullpen and mentally prepare for which guys are going to come in that day, because Santana will pitch to within an inning or so of expectation nine out of ten times. Even John Maine usually can be expected to be pretty consistent, even if that consistency is a lower amount of reliable innings. However, with Perez there is still always that possibility that he walks 14 batters in the second inning and you need to piece together the rest of the game. If Willie leaves Perez in there last night, maybe he learns something. Or maybe we lose the game, which we did anyway, and the bullpen gets an extra inning of rest that it might need for tonight.


Getting Perez and most of the starters an extra inning or two I think could be the biggest key to this season. It would allow Willie to use his relievers that are struggling less, and able to go with the hot guys. It doesn't matter what bullpen you have, if you have to use too many pitchers in one game, likely someone won't be on his game that day.

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Too Early To Worry or Overreact

Three Game Losing Streak


Doesn't look good does it? The Sunday night game against the Phillies was probably just a result of Pelfrey not going to be excellent every single time out there, and Feliciano's occasional streakiness. Yesterday was probably a result of using the B lineup, coupled with the remaining A guys slumping.


There are some concerns, but it's still a little early to be panicking over them. Delgado has been declining, and it looked rather bad last year. The thing is, he had good stretches where he looked fine. So the ability is still there, and I suspect what he needs is some consistency, some warmer weather, and just some swings. For everyone screaming about Church batting 6th, you have to think that him hitting well in the 6th hole helps Delgado. As little as lineups matter when everyone's not hitting, there are pluses and minuses to each of them.


Luis Castillo has been bad early, but he's also still hurt. Maybe he'll be hurt for the rest of his life and he sucks, or maybe, like Delgado, time will help. I don't want to hear about the contract anymore. Stop thinking about 2011. If this was a one year deal, you wouldn't be complaining about it, and since this is the very first year you can't have a problem that he's on the team in 2011. I liked Gotay too, but he wasn't the greatest defensive player, and he only had a small small sample of hitting successfully. It's smaller than the sample size people are using to bash Castillo and Delgado even.


So give it time. Some of these things may turn into big problems, and then it becomes Willie and Minaya's problems to address, but for now they're merely points of interest. You can't fire the manager, bench your star first baseman, or promote question marks from Binghamton on April 22nd.

Monday, April 21, 2008

Series Two in the books

They didn't manage to put the Phillies away, but sometimes you're 4th/5th starter isn't going to be great, and the bullpen isn't always going to be spotless. They came back immediately after Utley's three run home run (And more people need to pitch this guy inside and hit him) to tie the game, which was nice.


They've been playing better now, and while a week ago people were prematurely screaming about how bad this team is, suddenly they don't look so bad. They got five games in a row, which is something they struggled to do last year, and it means that everyone in the rotation was able to keep them in the game. The bullpen has been much better than expected, the only concern I have is that it's kind of being overworked. But so far it's got a depth that was it's biggest weakness last year. If they can keep Schoeneweis and Sosa well rested, I think they'll be able to squeeze a little bit of consistency out of them, which would be nice.


So what if the Phillies didn't have Jimmy Rollins? We didn't have Pedro. Or Alou. Or El Duque. The injury card isn't valid, we beat the best they could throw at us.


The Mets recalled some of 2006 with a nice streak of scoring in the first inning. This fits well with their style of aggressiveness and putting pressure on the opposition, and it has a lot to do with Reyes getting on base. Now that we're a couple of weeks in, it's time to settle in and see how they do over a long period of time, let the slow starters catch up and the guys that are going to be carrying the team continue to step up and produce.



On a side note, I wish I had gotten to go down to Philly with the Metsblog crowd among all the others who made the trip, but I did get to visit Cooperstown for the first time this week.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Important Quotes

"I have to enjoy my game and be the way I am," Reyes said. "I can't worry about the other team getting mad because other teams they do that, what we do they do it, too. I don't care about that. I just care about this team."

"We don't care if these other teams get offended," Beltran said. "We're going to play the game like that."


This is what I like to see. My team, enjoying the game, playing the game hard, and winning the game. I don't care about Philadelphia or Atlanta or anything they have to say. Or any other team for that matter. The Mets should take these quotes, and focus on their own game and not worry so much about the media-fueled drivel that is sent their way.

On a side note, shouldn't John Maine have beaned Belliard last night?

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Booing New York

The Booing New Yorker


This post has been brought on by recent discussions about booing, and recent inaccurate statements by the media about how the Mets fan thinks, and how he boos, particularly of Santana on his first start at Shea.


I want to start by denouncing comparisons to places like Boston or St. Louis. These cities are often cited as good baseball/sports fans, as if somehow the way they choose to respond to their team's form of entertainment is somehow better than anyone else's. I'm pretty sure Red Sox fans boo, and their must be at least some Cardinal fans who boo, even if they're just transplanted New Yorkers or something, but it's irrelevant. In those towns the baseball teams are part of the culture, are part of the every day news cycle and the general small-talk conversations. “Did you see the Sox game last night?” Can almost always be met with conversation in Boston. In New York, there is so much diversity of culture and variety in choices of sports and entertainment that not everyone is into the same things. “Did you see the Mets game last night?” Can be met with anything from “I don't watch sports”, to “No, I was watching hockey, the Devils looks good last night.”, to the more derisive “Mets suck! Did you see the Yankee game?”


If the Cardinals or Red Sox are bad, people still watch and root, if with less enthusiasm. In New York, the Mets are competing with the Yankees (because there are, and always will be, thousands of band wagon fans), the Rangers, Islanders, Devils, Knicks, Nets, Giants and Jets. There are dozens of news programs, sports writers, newspapers, columnists and bloggers out there trying to cover these teams and write stories. Often times those stories are negative ones, and many times when a team isn't that good, less attention is paid to it and writers grasp at anything for a story, sometimes without getting all the facts. This leads to stories about players being booed, when the facts don't support it. Sure there were some boos, take any group of 50 thousand people and you're sure to get some ignorant losers, but even the audio clips I've heard seem to suggest more cheers than boos. I've heard accounts from three different parts of the stadium, and the worst account of it was 'mostly cheers'. The media has made this into a huge deal, and probably made Santana more wary, and less liking, of the fans in general. It is the media that is painting a picture of us Mets fans as a bitter hateful group that is going to panic at every road bump this year. This is the case for some, but many of us are ready to forget and move on. As David Wright said after the Opening Day loss, last year is over and the losing streak was at one as far as we are concerned.


Not to say that booing can't or shouldn't happen. It will happen, and that's fine, the players have to get over it, and the best way to do that is to not pretend they don't deserve it. We want to cheer you, we want to scream and yell and shout your name, but you have to earn it.


I personally don't think players should ever be booed while trying. You can boo Schoeneweis when he is announced. You can boo Delgado when he grounds into yet another double play with runners on, but while they're pitching or batting they should be cheered. Nothing could be clearer that we're rooting for you, but are displeased with your performance when you routinely fail us. We, most of us, aren't booing you, but the job you are doing.


Book Review: Working at the Ballpark

Book Review: Working at the Ballpark by Tom Jones

Skyhorse Publishing


This book is basically a collection of different stories from different people working around baseball, from players and front office guys, to ushers and street vendors. I thought this book would have a few interesting tidbits surrounded by a bunch of boring stories, but I was surprised at the information contained in those stories, and how few of them were actually boring. The book is written in a style where if one guy's story is boring the life out of you, you can just skip it and read someone else's.


Of the on the field guys the one whose comments were most interesting was Leo Mazzone. He talked a lot about pitch counts and arm strength, and a lot of it was very thought-provoking. When he was the pitching coach in Atlanta before they started putting the pitch count on the board, he says he used to cheat and not count pitches for Glavine, Maddux and Smoltz. According to him, pitch counts are just a way of talking the pitcher into being tired. He also talks a little about Little League and how having pitch counts actually prevents kids from learning how to pitch properly. It was very insightful and really makes the Orioles look even worse for firing him.


One of the other interesting stories was trainer Todd Hutcheson with the San Diego Padres. The amount of training and work they do on players, particularly pitchers, every day is mind boggling. After reading it I felt like if a pitcher didn't have these guys, their arms would fall off by June. I know it's not true, but they've got everything down to a science. He goes into details about the work they do on Trevor Hoffman everyday, about some of the rehab work they do on pitchers, and about all the different types of treatments they do from joint mobes and vibration therapy to ultrasound stimulations.


The book encompasses so many different intricate parts of baseball, and it's surprisingly enlightening.


Luke Yoder, who is the director of landscape and field maintenance for the Padres talks about the dangers of covering the field with the tarp. Maybe just because I never thought about it, but I had no idea that it weights 2300 pounds. Yoder says that if you get a good gust of wind and some of the guys let go, it's possible for the people that were still holding on to be whipped 10 feet up in the air.


Jim Trdinich, the director of media relations for the Pirates, discusses many of the uneasy relationships between the media and the team. He talks about allowing the manager to vent and scream at him after a tough loss to let him to cool before allowing the media in to ask their questions.


Kurt Schloss, the director of Merchandising for the Cleveland Indians, talks about products that were busts, and how they come up with some of their ideas. He mentions how he finds out with the other fans, and how much it sucks for merchandise sales, when a player has been traded. Which is a very good point; I've noticed the Bryant Park Mets clubhouse shop still had about a dozen Kazuo Matsui shirts.


Steve Liddle, the bench coach for the Minnesota Twins, talks about signs and using the information from the advance scout to help figure out where to play hitters, and when is a good time to steal a base or hit and run. He talks about trying to steal signs during the game, and about all the signs that get passed around that most people never even see.


Bob Watson tells a story about the only time he was thrown out of a game.


“You called that a strike?”


The umpire says, “Yes, the ball was on the corner.”


Watson says, “On the corner of Fifth and Main. If you call that a strike, you need these.” and handed the umpire his glasses.


The book is riddled with these interesting tidbits, whether they come from a scoreboard operator, an usher, a guy who designs ballparks or the the mascot. There are thousands of people working behind the scenes around baseball who aren't as noticed as the players, but they all contribute to bringing us this great game. This book does an excellent job of bringing us their stories, and helping us understand the complex nature of a ballgame.



Monday, April 14, 2008

Aggressiveness and Finding the Balance

This team still feels like it's trying to find that right balance between aggressive and sloppy. The problem seems to be, and this was probably the case last year too, is that when they're unsure they're leaning towards aggressive, which leads to sloppy mistakes like forgetting to check a runner back to third, or breaking for the plate like Clark did on the double play Sunday. It translates into hitting too. This is why I don't believe, and never did, that the team was ever 'flat' or 'uninterested'.


They played hard last September, and they are playing hard now. Maybe too hard. Think about how often Reyes was thrown out last September. He wasn't doing it just for stats, or selfishness, he was playing aggressively, trying to make things happen, just like _everyone_ says he should do/does. So what happened this year? He seems to be trying to tone down the aggressiveness a little bit, be smarter, but so far it's not working. Just like it didn't work when they tried to change how he ran. Reyes, like the rest of the team, needs to find that balance of aggressiveness and smart baseball, and when they do the difference is going to be remarkable.


The difference this year is that last year they succeeded with the aggressiveness early, and maybe they stubbornly stuck to it when it turned bad. This year it's failing for them early, and they'll be able to adjust to it and turn it around. It's not Willie's fault either. He can only teach, he can't execute. If they players can't execute on what they're being taught, it doesn't really matter who or what they're being coached to do. However, this team is too good, and wants it too much, to not be able to execute all season. I thought as much before this season, but so far it doesn't look like Atlanta or Philadelphia is capable of running away with the division to a point where the Mets can't catch up; In fact, neither team is ahead of the Mets in the standings.


The biggest concern I have is still the bullpen. Even if Sanchez is as good as he was two years ago, he's going to almost definitely replace either Muniz or Smith on the roster, and both of those guys have been good. It's Heilman, who you hope will turn it around like he always does, Schoeneweis and Sosa who have been the biggest culprits, and they won't be replaced. As the weather gets warmer and the pitchers get more comfortable, I have to believe both Maine, Santana, and hopefully Perez and maybe even Pelfrey will be able to go a little deeper into games more consistency, and allow Willie to more regularly use only the top three or so guys in the bullpen who are doing well, instead of routinely having to trot out the 5th and 6th best relief options they have.

Friday, April 11, 2008

it's 2008 and the Mets win

Last night's game had questionable managing decisions, some poor plays, some inability to hit in the clutch, or to execute in certain situations at the plate, and even some base-running issues. The Phillies had all of these problems, and they lost because of it. It was a rough and tumble series, but the Mets take two of three. Naysayers may want to question how they won them, but that doesn't matter, just that they did. If you want to go back to last year.. And I really don't want to go back to last year, it doesn't help anything. Just as going back to 2006 didn't help the 2007 team. If you go back to last year, plenty of those games against the Phillies could've gone on the other way on some very minor things.


It's the bullpen that's important, and despite Wise's home run, despite Heilman's struggles, it looks like the Mets have started trying to take the right steps into addressing this issue. The bullpen was the strength in 2006, and we need more consistency out of it this year. Part of this is getting starters deeper into games, but part of it is also one or two more guys stepping up and being able to execute when Willie calls on them. Did the Mets lack fight last year? I don't know that they did, there were plenty of games where they came back two or three times in a game, only to have the bullpen blow it again and again. That can be mentally exhausting, just like amping yourself up for a fight and having your pitcher pitch you into a deep hole in the first inning can do. This isn't an excuse by any means, but the Mets have the tools, the attitude, the leadership and the drive to win, and they've had it all along; You just have to know where to look.

Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Bring Back Professor Reyes!

Bring back Professor Reyes!

I know Jose Reyes decided to focus more on baseball and cut out some of the dancing and theatrics. It's a move I disagree with, but whatever makes him play better. His replacements for the Professor Reyes' Spanish Academy are pathetic though. I'm glad John Maine is getting some attention, but Maine Street USA is very lame. It's basically the same thing they did last year without him, with giving three hints and having you guess the city. The other one is even worse, with David Wright. I believe it was called Do The Wright Thing, and it was all about making sure you 'always wear your helmet'. It was very bad, and he must've repeated the sentence 15 times. Good intentions..maybe the other ones will be better, but I doubt it.

Tuesday, April 08, 2008

Home Opener 2008

Now that was a rather depressing game. My camera died before the game even started and the spare batteries I brought were duds, and then the Mets were duds. The game pivoted on that double play ball that Delgado field and hit Utley in the back with.


First time they've ever lost to Philadelphia on opening day. I was really hoping that we could put last year behind us, but with losing to Atlanta and Philly so far and the poor bullpen, it feels like last year.


It seems like they need some time to really mesh well with each other, the way one screaming fan was pointing out as he stormed out of the building after the 8th inning because no one was standing in the bullpen clapping or cheering for Church to get a hit. You could see it in Sunday's game where David Wright was surprised by Santana fielding a bunt, and wasn't at third to field a throw. Little things like this that they'll hopefully fade away as they get comfortable with each other and really click.


It's Reyes and Castillo offensively that have been having the biggest problems, but once the lineup balances out a little more with slumps and streaks, things should be fine. The Mets are very much like Mike Pelfrey right now; They can be great, but they need to find their confidence.


All the pre-game stuff was pretty cool, with them unveiling the retired Shea in left field, or the game countdown. It was very neat seeing Citi Field so nice looking in the beginning, sort of a window into next year's Opening Day. There was a lot of curiosity about how it may affect wind patterns in Shea and make it more hitter friendly, but judging by the way Easley's and Wright's long fly balls flew, I'd say it's much the same.


Opening Day jitters out of the way, I can't wait for tomorrow. Hopefully the Mets find their strike, and start mashing this poor pitching team that Philly has.

Thursday, April 03, 2008

Ups and Downs

As harrowing as Tuesday's game was, last night's game was pleasant. It was basically against a minor league team, but it still counts. Oliver Perez still pitched well, and the offense still swung the bats well.


One thing it was good to see was runs in the top of the 9th to make it 13 to 0. There was no mailing it in, or signs that anyone thought 'Hey, maybe we got enough tonight.' Excepting Casanova, the rest of the bench and bullpen got their first appearances out of the way. Billy Wagner managed to come into a non-save situation and not pitch like me.


The news about Pedro is not good. Four to six weeks plus rehabilitation. The biggest impact this has is on Mike Pelfrey. If Pelfrey can figure out how to be consistent and pitch like he seems to be capable of, Pedro will barely be missed. We'll see how that goes, against Glavine of all people, on Saturday. Maybe Pelfrey will make his case that it's him that will replace Glavine's innings from last year, and that Santana's are just icing on the cake.


The baseball season is here, and it's even been christened with it's first wrinkle. You didn't really think the entire season was going to be as easy as Monday did you?


Tuesday, April 01, 2008

April Fools of Silly promotion?

I assume this is a silly April Fools joke since I can't find any other reference to it.

From the Mets Press Pass for today's game:

"The club has decided to honor unique angles from players who not only put on the Mets uniform but also featured rare talents off the field ...Dyar Miller, who pitched for the Mets in 1980-1981, will be the first player to be so honored...In 1980, Miller was 4-0 in cow milking contests across the league...Miller will be recognized prior to the Mets-Nationals game on May 14th when New York holds its' first annual Farm Night at Shea...Miller will reenact his cow milking skills prior to the game."

It's funny though.

Opening Day

BASEBALL! It's begun, and so far Johan Santana appears to be the real thing. After watching the Nationals, and David Wright's good pal Ryan Zimmerman, hand the Braves their first loss of the season last night it was a good feeling to watch the guys take the field for the first time and come through like they should. And the best part is we get to flip on the television and see them do it again tonight! That's eight strike-outs for Santana, now lets see how many Pedro gets.


In other news, the biggest story in “Yankee Country” was again not baseball, but weather. The ghost of Babe Ruth is giving them grief, 86 years after he christened the structure with a home run, they're knocking it down.


For an interesting article I wrote about why Opening Day should be a national holiday to celebrate our national pastime, click here.

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