Bondy and Beisbol

SIN is Being Lazy & Incorrect About NYC Baseball History

Really?

Click article to enlarge:

I rarely if ever do this, but on this occasion I could not resist.  I’m just a stickler about the Baseball History of our little city we call New York.  I did my own retrospective on the Giants about their earliest days here in New York City back on October 14th.  You can read that post here. 

But Mr. Bondy is the Pro here; I am just a sports fan with a blog.  You are however, welcome to compare my content of word versus his and make your own conclusions.  I already cede him being the better writer.  Besides my issue has more to do with his Headline Writer than Mr. Bondy himself.  But had I known Mr. Bondy would do a piece today (OCT. 27, 2010) like this I would have suggested someone conduct a little more detailed investigative field work.

Did anyone look down from Coogan’s Bluff for some perspective?  Did anyone try and locate the stairway which is one of the last links to those days; the stairway descending from the top of the Bluff down to Polo Grounds level? – The stairway still being discussed about and being pleaded with/appealed to the San Fransisco Giants Ball Club for assistance to refurbish it?  Had ya done that, you would have seen IT.

Alternately, all someone had to do was walk in from the sidewalk about 100 feet in and on the left IT was there to find.  At a minimum the Housing Employees know exactly where IT is.  How do you think I found IT.  What?   THIS:

(Click to enlarge)
Of all things…there’s a sign!  There’s a plaque to be more exact.
It’s right there for all to see affixed to the side of one of the residential buildings.
It basks in the sunshine unobstructed everyday not more than 50 feet or so from the base
of Coogan’s Bluff.
 
Here’s the difference I guess; I knew it was there when I went.
Perhaps you should have checked with me before going with that headline Dude.

No sign INDEED!
 
In a separate matter, I made a comment in my same NY Giants posting (if you read it) about the N.Y. Yankees pretty much stealing the idea of monuments and plaques in Center field from the Giants. But they also took the idea to surround the then, new Yankee Stadium with an old Polo Grounds staple;
the iconic frieze.
 
This first picture depicting “THE CATCH” by Willie Mays, shows the plaques and monument in CF,  in place since World War I and before.
Picture ~N.Y. Daily News/Bondy’s article

 

Below, notice the frieze on the exterior of Polo Grounds.  That decorative had been in place since the time they expanded Polo Grounds in the 20′s to create the LF, RF and bleacher stands.  However for most of the late 19th century and early in the 20th century, the interior upper and mid-decks were adorned with the frieze.
Picture~Julia Xanthos/NYDailyNews/NewsFile
 
Turn of the century Polo Grounds.
Yankee Tradition ~ Frauds.
Don’t get mad.
Mike.BTB
 
 
 
 
 

Winter Leagues Baseball; LINKS

WINTER LEAGUES BASEBALL
MEXICO * DOMINCAN REPUBLIC * PUERTO RICO * VENEZUELA
 
 
Mexico Pacific League:

Pacific League Web Site:
http://www.ligadelpacifico.com.mx/

Team Web Sites:

http://www.aguilasdemexicali.com.mx/index.asp
http://www.naranjeros.com.mx/
http://www.yaquis.com.mx/
http://www.mayosbeisbol.com/
http://www.verdes.com.mx/
http://www.clubalgodoneros.mx/
http://www.tomateros.com.mx/
http://www.venadosdemazatlan.com/


Venezuela Professional Baseball League:

Venezuelan League Web Site:
http://lvbp.com/scripts/home/index.asp

Team Web Sites:
http://www.leones.com/
http://www.magallanesbbc.com.ve/
http://www.tiburones.net/
http://www.tigresdearagua.net/
http://www.aguilas.com/
http://www.cardenalesdelara.com/
http://www.caribes.net/
http://www.bravosdemargarita.com/scripts/home/indexnew.php


Dominican Republic Professional Baseball League:

Dominican League Web Site:
http://www.lidom.com.do/

Team Pages:
http://www.lidom.com.do/index.php/equipos/aguilas
http://www.lidom.com.do/index.php/equipos/escogido
http://www.lidom.com.do/index.php/equipos/estrellas
http://www.lidom.com.do/index.php/equipos/gigantes
http://www.lidom.com.do/index.php/equipos/licey
http://www.lidom.com.do/index.php/equipos/toros

Puerto Rican Professional Baseball League:

Puerto Rican League Web Site:
http://www.puertoricobaseballleague.com/

Team Web Sites:  The P.R. Baseball League Website is currently down.
As soon as that gets straightened out, I will post the links.

WINTER LEAGUES coverage on MLB.com
http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/events/winterleagues/league.jsp?league=car

 
 
Last year the Dominican Republic won
The Caribbean Leagues Championship


Mike.BTB
 
http://thebrooklyntrolleyblogger.mlblogs.com/
http://thebrooklyntrolleyblogger.blogspot.com/
 
 
 

Four Bagger..

 

Latino Baseball Hall of Fame:

I originally came across this article through VinSculleyIsMyHomeboy regarding the Latino Baseball Hall of Fame and this year’s inductions.  The Latino Baseball Hall of Fame is located in the Dominican Republic.  The original article from MLB.com is a concise concatenate of Latino Baseball Heroes and speaks to the inspiration behind the creation of their Hall of Fame.  I sincerely hope to visit one day.  You can read that great article HERE.

Off the top of my head there are some names I would consider myself for induction into the Latino Hall of Fame that haven’t been so already.  They are Ed Figueroa, Mario Soto, Benito Santiago and Vinny Castilla.

This is something I definitely want to delve deeper into.  Look for a posting one day.

And if you remember last winter, I love me some Winter League Baseball.  I’ll be covering the games again this season.

****************************************************** 

Do You Remember Washington Park’s WALL?

You can read My Posting HERE about the WALL at 3rd Avenue and 3rd Street in Brooklyn and why it’s been a source of anxiety and concern among Brooklyn baseball fans and historians alike.  The good news is, the effort is finally under way to restore and preserve (and protect) a peice of Brooklyn’s old Baseball history.

This article appeared in Tuesday’s NY Daily News.

I have been in contact with two persons at Con-Ed about the wall, and they have provided me with a few more names and numbers to contact.  My question moving foward with their project is the issue of Historic Signage placed on or at the wall.  I’ll keep you updated about that.

Across the street at the other of the two Washington Park locations, I’ve been having a semi-ongoing conversation with ”admin” of the park (to protect the innocent).  The tid-bits of information I’ve learned regarding the Board’s apathy towards the preservation of Brooklyn’s historic Baseball past is disturbing.  However, I was told better sense is around the corner.  They are finally getting around to addressing the proper respect this park should be recieving regarding it’s history as former home to the Brooklyn Dodgers.  I speak with respect to the field where the Vintage Games I photographed were played.

The Board’s priorities always favored the history involving George Washington and this being a HQ for him during the Battle of Brooklyn and promoting that aspect of the park.  Baseball it was feared would over shadow that.  But there are more friendlies in administration these days and the park’s past will be revisited.

Likewise, stay tuned for more developments.

 

                       

 

The section of wall in the background

is the section of wall to be preserved

These pictures depict Federal League activities.

the Brooklyn TipTops are in white.

1914-1915

 

 

************************************************************

 

 

FREDDIE SEZ:  Be Well.

 

It’s been a tough year in the Yankee Family. 

Now, the beloved crowd favorite and ultimate Yankee Rooter,

“Freddie Sez”

FRED SCHUMAN

1924-2010

Has passed away at the age of eighty-five.

 

I’m honored to have met and spoken with Freddie Sez.

Above all it’s been my distinct pleasure to have 

“tapped-tapped-tapped Freddie’s pan”.

 

 

 

If you never met him inside or outside Yankee Stadium

and tapped on the pan for luck,

you’ve never truly been to Yankee Stadium then.

You will be dearly missed by all NYC.

 

Click the article  to enlarge.

 

These are pictures I took of Freddie over the years.

 

 

 

Be Well My Friend.

 

 

 

The curtain will also fall on this Classic in-between-innings Act:

It was a good run Boyz!  Good Job. 

A bunch of dummies in the bleachers

and one YouTube video ruined it for everybody.

You’ll have to find the story elsewhere.

 

 

 

OCTOBER 22, 2010

Autumn

BASEBALL

2010

American League

CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES

* * * * *GAME 6* * * * *

New York

YANKEES

VS.

Texas

RANGERS

The Ballpark at Arlington, Texas

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 

 

Baseball in October; There’s nuthin’ like it!

 

 

Pre-Game Thoughts:

Phil Hughes will try to pitch the Yankees into a Game Seven do or die.  As we know he was not effective his last time out.  Aside from Andy Pettitte, all pitchers are available for relief duty tonight.  The Yankees must sell-out tonight for there to be a tomorrow.  CC Sabathia is said to be available for up to 50 pitches should the situation need.  A seven out save from MO would not be out of the question.

Hughes the righty, and Posada behind the plate tonight mean one thing; the Rangers are going to run like drunk politicians. 

Yankee fans have been cringing at the sight of Posada’s defensive lapses lately.  Tonight he needs to buckle down and be Posada; one of the team leaders.  As many times as we’ve seen the back of his jersey for chasing down a passed ball or wild pitch, Jorge gets clutch hits ~ flat out!  What he lacks behind the dish Jorge corrects when he steps up to that same dish.  There is a lot of pride and passion in the Yankee back-stop.  It’s always had a way of surfacing and influencing big games.

Jorge Posada will never get the true credit for being, in a most literal sense, the Yankees Back Bone.  Jorge has always been willing to stick his neck out for his team mates, when so many of them over the last 9 years have not.  He was always willing to do what needed to be done when so many wouldn’t, even if it meant going against the “Yankee Way”.  Who else, I ask you? Who? – …took it upon himself to send an occasional message to the American League, Don’t Mistake Our Kindness For Our Weakness!   I defy you to compile that list for me. Jorge always had his team mates backs! So many would never step their play up and bring to the game what, at times, the situation dictated.

Casey Stengel used to say of Yogi Berra, “I never play without my Guy”.  Whether Yogi was behind the dish, left field or first base, Casey always played with his Guy.  The Yankees more than ever are reliant on their GUY! ~ Jorge Posada.  

He gets knocked, disrespected, barreled over, nicked and under appreciated for all of it.  Pitchers and their issues are no less guilty towards contributing to Jorge’s defensive phenomena.   But I will tell you those same pitchers love him when he connects in clutch moments. 

WHO’S Knocking Jorge Then?  You know who you are!!   And I’m Not Even A Yankee Friendly!!  I’m talking to you “select” Yankee fans. You know who you are.

Whatever shenanigans that have transpired whether this guy catches that pitcher and that pitcher can’t pitch to Jorge nonsense, know that Jorge is STILL the fiery soul of this team.  The pervasive and relentless passion on this team has always come from Jorge.

Hip HIP….JORGE!!

ENJOY THE GAME.

 

Mike.BTB

 

http://thebrooklyntrolleyblogger.mlblogs.com/

http://thebrooklyntrolleyblogger.blogspot.com/

 

 


 

Empire City; Land of GIANTS

 

 

Five years after the famous “ground-breaking” of Baseball by the New York Knickerbocker Ball Club in Hoboken, N.J. on Elysian Field, the Knickerbockers accepted a challenge to play the Washington Baseball Club of New York.  This game was played June 3rd, 1851 at the RED HOUSE GROUNDS located at 106th Street and 2nd Avenue in Manhattan, NYC.

 

The Knickebockers won that game 21-11 in 8 innings.  The rematch was played two weeks later in Hoboken.  The Knickebockers beat the Washington Club again, this time 22-20 in 10 innings.

In April, 1852, the Washington Baseball Club was reorganized and The Gothams Baseball Club of New York is formed.  Their team offices were in the Bowery section of lower Manhattan and their home field would now be located in Staten Island at the St. George Cricket Club.

 

The Gothams played the New York Knickerbockers 5 more times over the next 3 years.

 

In April 1853 the first newspaper article covering baseball was written.  The author of that article was Senator William Cauldwell; owner and editor of the New York Sunday Mercury.  From then on, Baseball would be covered by local newspapers.  The article itself was to promote an upcoming match between the Knickerbockers and the Gothams.  The game mentioned in that article was finally played in New York City on October 26, 1854.

 

That game is significant for two reasons.  It was the first match to result in a tie as sunset and darkness arrived.  It was also the first match to be scored by individual innings played (versus the sum total of the match).

Scene on Broadway and Broome St., circa 1860′s,

site of the first Baseball Convention.

 
 

The first Baseball Convention met at Smith’s Hotel on the corner of Broadway and Broome Street in today’s SoHo neighborhood of Lower Manhattan.  On March 10, 1858, the GRAND CONVENTION took place “open to all clubs”.  William H. Van Cott (left) of the Gothams BBC of NY was named the convention’s first officer and President. (click to enlarge).

Twenty -five clubs were represented at the convention which formed the National Association of Amateur Baseball Players; the first over-seeing body of Baseball prior to 1871 and the age of Professionalism.

 

This team fell to uncompetitive levels in the new age of professionalism.  But by the 1870′s they reorganized themselves again.  They absorbed players from the recently folded Troy Haymakers and remained a viable operation as they joined the National League in 1883.

 

1884 Gothams BBC of New York;  Member National League

 

In 1883 they also moved into their new home field.  The grounds were owned by James Gordon Bennett who was a publisher of the New York Herald.  The park had been in operation since 1880 and was used to host polo matches.

 

In 1889, the Gothams were forced to vacate the premises for a season.  The city pulled eminent domain at the location because they wanted to run 115th Street from 5th to 6th Avenues.  So they went back to the St. George Cricket Club in Staten Island until the new field was reconstructed.

 

1883 Polo Grounds

 

With the completion of their new home, the team also re-branded itself.  They were now the NEW YORK GIANTS and their home was the POLO GROUNDS.

 

At the turn of the century the Manhattan ball club would bring in a smallish figure from Baltimore who would turn out to be a Titan of the city..  He was truly a Giant among men; more disliked and feared than respected.  He was absolute ruler of his domain and NYC was his Empire (City).  He was John McGraw and he was manager of NYC’s first modern dynasty.

 

Under John McGraw the New York Giants won National League Titles in 1904, 1905, 1911, 1912, 1913, 1917, 1921, 1922, 1923, 1924, 1933.  The Giants won four championships for their manager winning in 1905, 1921, 1922 and 1933.

 

 

 

 

 

Fans exiting Polo Grounds; 1913 World Series

 

In 1951 the Giants faced off against the Brooklyn Dodgers in the famous N.L. Playoff series.  That series culminated in Bobby Thompson’s ”Shot Heard ‘Round The World” that catapulted the Giants into the World Series against the cross town Yankees.

 

 

 

 

 

Those were the “Say Hey” days of Willie Mays.  Those were the days of “The Catch” against Vic Wertz and  the Indians in the 1954 World Series.  These were the days when NYC was the center of the Baseball Universe.

 

The Giants; the New York Giants, unlike my beloved Ghosts ~ the Brooklyn Dodgers, and unlike the come-lately team from Baltimore who became the Yankees; it was the Giants who ruled this town to all a New Yorker’s delight early in the new twentieth century.

 

Joltin’ Joe DiMaggio at-bat versus Giants in World Series.

It was this team and John McGraw who made policy in this town.  John McGraw evicted the Yankees from the Polo Grounds; his realm.  The branch of NYC Baseball history that ensues in the Bronx as a result of McGraw’s eviction is for another time.  But know, the iconic frieze which adorns the upper deck of Yankee Stadium past and present, come from the Polo Grounds.  Plaques of honor in center field come from the Polo Grounds, first, before anywhere else.

 

By the end of 1957, they were gone. 

 

Mr. Stoneham was already in talks with Minneapolis to move the team there.  He, like Walter O’Malley of the Dodgers, was in discussions with the city (NYC) for a new ball park.  As MLB would not allow the Dodgers to move to the west coast alone, San Fransisco, having had discussions with Mr. Stoneham already, struck a deal with him and the Giants along with the Dodgers headed west.

Now, the San Francisco Giants are making their 9th playoff appearance since moving to California 53 years ago and will be facing, an over one-century old Philadelphia Phillies team for the National League Pennant.

The oldest baseball team in existence today has not won a World Series title since they left New York City.  Their last came in 1954.  These days, as denizens of San Francisco, they will try to correct that little fact in their long team history.

 

 

The Cincinnati Reds might be the first openly Professional team established in 1869 which would make them the oldest team in that regard.  But the Giants predate even those days.  The Giants, formally the Gotham Baseball Club of New York, after the New York Knickerbockers, were the second team….EVER.

 

 

My how time flies.

 

The Polo Grounds today.

 

 

Enjoy the Championship Series!

Mike.BTB

http://thebrooklyntrolleyblogger.blogspot.com/

http://thebrooklyntrolleyblogger.mlblogs.com/

 

HORRORwood and Hate

Don Mattingly in HORRORwood

These are my brief thoughts concerning Don Mattingly, the L.A. Dodgers and the on-going McCourts Divorce Drama. 

Comments I made on DodgerBobble:

http://www.dodgerbobble.com/2010/10/tim-wallach-joins-dodgers-coaching.html
 
and on Prince of NY’sBaseball Blog:
http://princeofny.blogspot.com/2010/10/sunday-lightning-10102010.html
 
 
… are what got this notion out of me.

**L.A. cbslocal.com

Even if a court makes the McCourts sell the team, that is still a ways away.  Don Mattingly will be the manager of an imploding infrastructure and look all the worse for it.  Donnie Baseball is going to wind up as collateral damage out there and I wish he wouldn’t take the manager’s job because of it.  He’ll be a scapegoat for everything that WILL go wrong out there.  Besides that, he’s just not ready.  Tim Wallach would have been a much better choice for L.A.  They hired Tim as a coach for next year.  One, Mattingly is already being shown he won’t be bringing in his own staff. And two, this ensures Mattingly will officially have to look over his shoulder while trying to do his job.  Donnie, please, ~ get out of there while you still have your reputation because the McCourts will ruin that too, as they’ve done everything else Dodger Blue; former power players of Baseball.

 
 
Mike.BTB
 
 
 
 
 

Yankee Hating all the way to the Bank

Who can afford to purchase the free agents they continually do ~ not to mention spending half a-billion dollars in one winter, and committing to one player for quarter of a billion dollars (twice in theory);
make trades that substantially increase payroll by replacing stars with stars
(see Sheffield/Abreu);
spend rewardingly to retain their own farm procured talent;
who continually outspend their mistakes (see laundry list of pitchers over last 9 years) without so much as a wincing of pain;
who can pay a pitcher $40 million dollars and banish him to AAA for life (you know who);
…manage ALL these things, ALL at the same time AND STILL…..
..pay AJ BURNETT a hamper load of money Not To Pitch in the playoffs.  I don’t know exactly what he’s making without checking, but I believe it’s $17 million.  He was brought to the Yankees to be the number two starter, assuming Andy Pettitte’s retirement.
But because he is what he has been, the Yankees very nonchalantly decided
he would not start.
If AJ Burnett were on the TWINS, RANGERS, RAYS, REDS, BRAVES, or 20 other teams..etc etc;
(before I go further ~ YES! The Giants benched Zito ~ big hole in my theory…I get that!)
…But, my point is, any other team has no choice but to start him.  There’s no way in hell he would be benched if he played elsewhere.  A healthy pitcher?  A team paying him $17 million-per, purchases him for one reason; to pitch!
Before you get all bent out of shape, remember I asked who/what team has the ability to manage ALL of what I pointed out….AND STILL go forward benching AJ.
The two answers are the Yankees
 
and
No one else.
That’s not my opinion.  That’s fact.
ALL these assertions are verifiable.  Opinion plays no part in this.
How do you think the Yankees would fare if they continually had a payroll of say $140 million; still a high end number in Baseball expenditures.  I’ll be generous and say $150 Million; $165 Million.  Those two numbers would still represent the highest payrolls.  Add in the $50 and $60 million on top of that…and…..
Now, if you’re emotionally invested in the game of Baseball and the Yankees as a fan
and you find exception with what I said…that’s the facts speaking to you.  Not me.
If you find yourself fuming while reading this because you imply that I’m injecting opinion, you have a complex then.  I haven’t said anything yet.
Now…,you don’t need to say it; I’ll say it for you,
THE YANKEES ARE DOING NOTHING WRONG!!
Hear that America?  Was that loud enough Yankee fans?
Don’t hate the messenger.  Hate the “Game” cause I’m just saying….
Everyone is welcome to interpret this any way they like.
Enjoy the Championship Series!

 

HAhahahahah!
“signed ~ The Classic Yankee Hater”
 
 
Me?  I’m just Mike.
BTB
http://thebrooklyntrolleyblogger.mlblogs.com/
http://thebrooklyntrolleyblogger.blogspot.com/
 
 
 

The Day METropoliS Stood Still

The Age of Fred’s WILPONianism

Get what ever you need to take care of, out of the way first.  Make sure you have your snacks and creature comforts.  Do you have to go to the bathroom?  Go first.  Heck, you might even want to put this off till later.  But if you want your Mets fed to you Matrix style, get really comfortable and kiss away the next 15 minutes of your life for my Mets Compendium.  The next two posts from the past say everything I ever needed to say concerning  where I have always stood regarding the Mets, and never ever wavered from.
**Note to MLBlogs ~ I cut and pasted this from my alternate page.  And yes, I failed to edit out the more relaxed language from this post.  My apologies.  Ya can take the kid out of Brooklyn but ya can’t take the Brooklyn out of the kid.
 
 
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

A Concise Concatenate of Mets GM’s and
Life Under WILPONIANISM
Originally posted by me on December 27, 2009
No need to click it;  It’s just to show you the time stamp.
I got it ALL right here; TRUST ME.  The post is as follows:
SHEA STADIUM, 1976

The Metropolitans Baseball Club of New York

Our Matriarch; Mrs. Joan Payson

The partnership group headed by Nelson Doubleday and Fred Wilpon purchased the NY Metropolitan BBC on Jan. 4, 1980 from Charles Shipman Payson, (who took control of the team after his wife Joan passed away 5 years earlier), and their daughter, club president Lorinda de Roulet. The Mets’ original and only owner to that point passed away October 4, 1975. We owe everything as Met fans to Mrs. Joan Payson, the New York Baseball Giants fan and season ticket holder at the Polo Grounds, and to Mr. William Shea.

Joe McDonald had been the General Manager for the previous 5 years under the old ownership. The way I understand it, the new ownership told Mr. McDonald the last few years at Shea weren’t his fault but they (Doubleday and Wilpon) wanted to go in a new direction. The club made an offer to Mr. McDonald to stay with the team in a different capacity which he did for one year to help make the new ownership’s transition smoother. But by 1981 he was gone from the Mets’ employ moving on to other endeavours.

The Mets chose Frank Cashen, architect of the mighty Baltimore Orioles teams of the late 60′s and early 70′s to be their new General Manager.

But before we get into Frank Cashen these are the things I didn’t know about JOE McDONALD in 1978 when I was 11 years:

FIRST ~ He was Director of our Minor League Operations in the 60s busy farming-up Tom Seaver, Jerry Koosman, Gary Gentry, Nolan Ryan, Tug McGraw and a bevy of our positional players that went on to win the World Series in 1969 and a N.L. flag in 1973.

SECOND – One of my favorite seasons EVER was 1976. By then, collecting baseball cards, going to games, watching on TV, listening on the radio, flippin’ cards in the schoolyard and playing stick ball on the block all came together for me. It’s all I lived for as a nine year old in Brooklyn.

My team for the most part was still in tact. What I didn’t understand then was, it was time, unbeknown-st to me, to break that edition of the Mets up. THAT TIME had come for the Mets. Huh? From 1977-1979, one by one, I watched all my beloved Mets disappear. I was stung when they traded Tug McGraw, Cleon Jones and Rusty Staub in ’74 and ’75, but those were only tremors. The big shake-up started in earnest in ’77. Tom Seaver, Koosman, Kingman, Grote, Harrelson, Wayne Garrett, Skip Lockwood, John Matlack, John Milner, Roy Staiger were all gone. Eddie Kranepool retired and ED OTT, catcher of the Pirates, ended Felix Millan’s career with a WWE wrestling style body slam. I thought Lee Mazzilli was going to play with these guys. But I watched and thought who’s responsible for this? My Dad was a Yankee fan so no help there.

What I didn’t understand then about Joe McDonald was, like I said it was time to break the team up, but I certainly didn’t know that Lorinda de Roulet ordered every budget in sight slashed and ground up into fine powder. Not even pencils and paper clips were safe. The team was hemorrhaging money and the Mets were looking for a buyer. I was nine, ten and eleven. WHO KNEW?! I didn’t and I blamed him for everything back then, to include trading Tom Seaver.

This is what I now know about JOE McDONALD:

FIRST ~ If the choice to replace him was anyone other than Frank Cashen,- It could have gone down as one of the worst decisions the post-Payson Mets ever made. There is more to Joe McDonald’s resume no one bothers to address, in part because Frank Cashen is the best executive hire the post-Payson Mets ever made. I will revisit this later and elaborate.

SECOND – Even as bad as it got between ’77 and ’79, the farm system was working fast and furious. Joe McDonald still had blood pumping through the system. He just was not allowed to make any free agents signings or make trades that would increase payroll. He was operating under a mandate from the Team President. I will elaborate later in this post on what kind of talent he was grooming in those dark years..

C’mon…He’s it’s part of my grand plan to discredit the Wilpons for my grand finale. There! Cat’s outta th’bag OK?

OK…The FRANK CASHEN ERA, 1980-1991 General Manager and Executive Lord of all things METROPOLIS: The first and to date only Mets Executive that came from off the Campus.

He presided over the greatest period of Mets’ prosperity. Between 1984-1990 no other team in baseball won more games. I’ll spare you all the details. I forget I’m 43yrs old sometimes but you should be pretty up to snuff with 80′s Baseball. Mr. Cashen gutted a bad team even further between 1980-1982, refitted an already effective farm system with even more pistons and they were off and running.

Many say under his watch, that team partied too much; – drinking and drugging, getting into on and off field brawls at clubs, and getting arrested. They reveled in their cockiness. Read Darryl Strawberry’s recent book for tales of more high jinx. Hindsight says they underachieved. Regardless, the Whole Time, Fred Wilpon was acting like FLOUNDER from ANIMAL HOUSE. Remember at the end of the movie how the Delta Guys wrought havoc on the Home-Coming Parade? – And Flounder, after purchasing 2000 marbles for his part, looked around at the chaos and thought to himself aloud, – “OH BOY, THIS IS GREAT!”. Well? That was Fred Wilpon in the 80′s!

Throughout Frank Cashen’s years, the thriving farm system Joe McDonald left behind continued to thrive pumping out prospects. In addition to the farm system, Frank Cashen procured a lot of executive talent that was at the time, the envy of Baseball. The Wilpon’s continued to feed off the buffet into the present day with Omar Minaya (that connection will be tied together later in this post). The next 5 NY Met GM hires would all stem directly or indirectly from Frank Cashen and cover the next 20 years.

When Frank Cashen stepped down as General Manager heading into the 1992 season, he stayed on as a Vice President and Team Consultant into the late 90′s. As a matter a fact, he resumed his GM post briefly in 1998 when Steve Phillips was out whoring around and had to take a leave of absence from his GM’ship. GOOD GRIEF!! – More about that dummy later.

Al HARAZIN, METS’ GENERAL MANAGER 1992-1993:

First off, I don’t know how the hell this guy rose through the ranks faster and higher than Joe McIlvaine within the Mets’ executive talent pool. He was the accountant for crying-out-loud. Secondly, I don’t know who’s decision it was to make him GM and not Joe McIlvaine. Was it Cashen’s idea or was that decision lobbied by.., by someone else? How could it be? Did Doubleday/Wilpon have a say? Was that really Cashen’s hand picked replacement? I don’t really know. What I do know is that he was an unmitigated disaster as GM.

Al Harazin is the genesis of when I believe Fred Wilpon first became gun shy about going out and pursuing free agents with vigor.

Al Harazin, in part because of the overwhelming backlash from the Mets not signing Darryl Strawberry, went out and spent all kinds of’ cash on Vince Coleman, Willie Randolph, Bobby Bonilla, Saberhagen et’al. The only professional outta the motley crew Harazin signed was Eddie Murray (I’m sorry, and Willie; but an over-aged Willie). Outside of Eddie Murray, 1992-93 was…FUGGEDABOUDIT Horrendous.! Those were two dark years in Flushing.

Doc Gooden couldn’t stay clean, Jeff Kent was always angry with the fans, Bonilla was threatening to show reporters “the Bronx” (as in kick their ***), Vince Coleman was throwing fireworks at L.A. fans in the parking lot, Saberhagen using a super-soaker filled with bleach to spray down reporters and manager Jeff Torborg couldn’t keep his foot out of his mouth. Oh my, how the media wrecked Jeff Torborg. *sigh*

Fred Wilpon deserves credit for showing a backbone and in a press conference declaring, “Vince Coleman will never wear a Mets’ uniform again” over the fireworks show. But it was from this time on Fred Wilpon began his aversion with free agency until Omar Minaya came back in 2005 and convinced him to up the ante a little.

Things went very wrong for the Mets in 1991-93, and Wilpon seemed proactive in wanting a new direction. Nelson Doubleday didn’t say much about anything. He was really backround’ish but he was the Board Chairman. Nelson was the Big Daddy but Fred Wilpon was always the front man. Nelson always knew how to let the Baseball people do their jobs. Fred was always buzzing around. But they were fast becoming Frick and Frack.

The Mets, like I said, had executive talent on the books. Bob Mandt seemed to be in the mix but seemed to top out along the way and slipped. Joe McIlvaine was the rising star. Other teams knew it too. But somehow the Mets GM chair went to Harazin. Because McIlvaine was impatient and tired of waiting for the Mets job he took the S.D. Padres offer in ’90.

If Cashen knew he was going to retire in another year…..then..? Why not…? …nevermind.

That’s one the Mets let get away. But not for long. Al Harazin was fired during that infamous 1993 season, not able to complete his second year on the job.

This is lucky break number two for the Mets. The first was getting Frank Cashen in the first place. The Wilpons were lucky McIlvaine came back. Fred Wilpon pretty much begged Joe McLvaine to return to the nest. Joe Mac obliged. I’m omitting all the in-fighting McIlvaine supposedly tired of, that went on behind the Mets’ scenes, which was part of the reason for his motivations to accept the San Diego job. But that part of the story just seems too petty for this blog’s purpose. I will not leave you hanging however and offer that all the in-fighting previously eluded to was basically between Fred Wilpon and Nelson Doubleday. Yes, at times it was often ugly and public.

JOE McILVAINE, METS’ GENERAL MANAGER 1993-1997:

This is the last GM for the Mets who had a clearly defined PLAN and put it into effect, post haste! Joe McIlvaine was coming in to completely rebuild this team. It would be piloted by the firm but fair Dallas Green. I was all for it. I was in total agreement with everything McIlvaine wanted to do. The whole plan was built around Generation-K. It was gonna be great, Man! The new product was to be home grown. From this era comes a member of my very select Mets I call “MY GUYS” – TODD HUNDLEY.

The plan to rebuild the Mets was an utter failure. GENERATION-K never took off due to injury (to all of them). Joe McIlvaine got fired in 1997 because he was a little thick headed. Fred Wilpon always used to get on him for being away from the team too much and not keeping the owners in the loop or returning their calls. McIlvaine just had his own way about him. He was a bit of a Diva. But the truth is he deserved to get fired because he stopped caring. He would literally dissappear for days. When situations demanded his presence, he seemed to always be off scouting somewhere; or so he said. Bobby Valentine, the manager at the time, started complaining out loud about him. Steve Phillips was turning tricks in the back allies of the organization as a young up-comer by this time. Steve Phillips bided his time, waiting for his chance too.

Jerry Hunsicker, another highly prized executive in the Mets’ Front Office also tired of sitting around waiting for his chance and by 1996 went to be GM of the ASTROS.

Fred Wilpon’s hand was forced by the departure of Hunsicker. He then tapped on the shoulder of Cashen’s last available pupil. McLlvaine was out, STEVE PHILLIPS the rising (porn)star was in.

STEVE PHILLIPS METS’ GENERAL MANAGER 1997-2003:

This is where it all goes awry for Fred-A-Licious (Wilpon), my fellow Brooklynite, the Dodger fan, – the man who went to high school in my neighborhood, like Lee Mazzilli and John Franco before him…; my team’s owner who pitched for Lafayette H.S. in Bensonhurst while Sandy Koufax played first base.

Whatever assessment you have concerning the years 1997 through 2000 (2001-2003 LOL!!!) if they’re positive, attribute them to Bobby Valentine; do yourself that favor.

Steve Phillips had been a part of the Mets executive pool since 1990. He was the last of the personnel brought in under Cashen to work for the Mets. Besides being horny, here’s Steve Phillip’s major achievment ~ Steve Phillips was the beneficiary of a Florida Marlins’ fire sale. The inability of the Marlins to retain their talent was the biggest reason behind the acquisitions of Mike Piazza and Al Leiter and Dennis Cook. After the Florida fire sale and the 2000 season, his acquisitions were incredible failures and that includes the Melvin Mora trade. You know the names. Don’t make me do it.

Steve Phillips did draft David Wright, whom would turn out to be the compensation for losing Mike Hampton to free agency. He also drafted Jose Reyes and Scott Kazmir. That’s not bad work right there!

But Steve Phillips obliterated any respect he built for himself leading up to the 2000 season. He ignited his reputation with the acquisitions made between 2001-2003 in a great ball of fire stoked by Wilpon’s cash, shell shocking Fred Wilpon even further. For the second time, Fred Wilpon was stuck with one of the highest payrolls in baseball with nothing to show for it but shame, like in 1993.

Fred always had a delicate psyche. He doesn’t like bad press and contoversy. A guy named Steinbrenner loved it; not Fred though.

Back to Mike Piazza, only Nelson Doubleday knew enough to sign Piazza for his worth. Fred didn’t want to write that check and that kind of thinking drove Nelson crazy. Fred Wilpon’s partnership with Nelson Doubleday was falling apart like wet toilet paper during this time.

STEVE PHILLIPS also had to take a leave of absence from the team because he was out and about being a ****. No this isn’t 2009 and ESPN I’m talking about. He was an adulterous ***** back in 1998 too. Frank Cashen had to come in from the BULLPEN and temporarily take over while the Mets dealt with the Phillips Scandal (Pt.1).

Moving forward ~ After sitting by while Roberto Alomar, Mo Vaughn, Kevin Appier, Mike Bordick, Jeremy Burnitz and company stole his money, Wilpon, sporting the second highest payroll in baseball, was kicking around with a last place 2003 team, a bickering GM and a rabbid manager.

Fred Wilpon backed Phillips in his blood feud with Bobby Valentine and the manager was out. It was a bad move and definitely the easier choice to make. Valentine didn’t hesitate venting frustration with the organization, and with Wilpon that’s a no-no. So, Valentine basically got to fill-out his own pink slip. But Phillips also read the writing on the wall and knew Wilpon was tired of his act too. The Wilpons fired Steve Phillips shortly after.

By the time Fred limped into the offseason after 2003, all direct remnants of Frank Cashen were gone and the resources he left behind were suddenly exhausted.

Nelson Doubleday couldn’t deal with his partnership with Wilpon anymore. The sentiment was Nelson found Fred Wilpon insufferable. Nelson and Fred finally worked out a deal and Doubleday’s half of the team would be bought by the Wilpons. “FLOUNDER” has now lost BLUTO, D-DAY, OTTER and HOOVER.

The S.S. Wilpon officially became rudderless.

Doubleday left with the team’s fortitude to gamble and dream big in tow. Frank Cashen took away all the team’s brains and know-how. FLOUNDER was about to find out things can and would get worse….and more tretcherous. Fred Wilpon and the Mets made their first 10 degree turn towards the ICEBERG.

But what’s a Wilpon to do?

Omar Minaya was previously brought into the fold by Steve Phillips via the Texas Rangers. He was the Mets Assistant GM and Lord over minor league and international developement since Sept.1997. He left to take a precarious Expos GM job in 2002. So with Frank Cashen’s influence a distant memory, Wilpon turned to another Phillips appointment, Jim Duquette. It would be Fred Wilpon’s first decision as a solo artist. He had no choice. He was the only one around. And well, Wilpon was UNPLUGGED now.

Minority Partner Saul Katz was kicked up a notch from his position of obscurity within the ownership group. And we were all left thinking what the Son of ‘Pon, Wilpon the Younger, Lil Jeff, really knew about Baseball? So, at this point the Mets’ fan base is about to be thrown to the whims of two Steve Phillips’ imports; Jim Duquette and Omar Minaya.

Big Jim…cousin of Dan Duquette. *sigh*
JIM DUQUETTE, METS’ GENERAL MANAGER 2003-2004:

Ya have to feel sorry for this guy. Fate cut him a little slack by bringing in Art Howe to manage and getting the era named after him (i.e. the Art Howe years). Howe only bought Jim a little time, for Jim was determined to put his ineptitude on display for all to ridicule. Somehow, pitching coach Rick Petersen got into the right ears and polluted his/Jim’s, and Jeff Wilpon’s judgement. It cost us Scott Kazmir, because Petersen thought he’d be able to get more out of Victor Zambrano. Really? Between Art Howe, Duquette trading Kazmir, poor play on the field and no indication things were going to get better in the era of Wilpon’s sole ownership, Met fans were stewing.

Shea Spoke!

Wilpon sensed it and before even firing Duquette, he hired Omar Minaya. No…, the Wilpons begged Omar to come back and work for the Mets in effect creating a two-headed GM for the latter part of 2004. The appointment making Omar the official GM, and Duquette’s formal dismissal from his position didn’t occur officially till the 2004 season was over. It just wreaked of desparation by the Wilpons. But they had their man most Met fans were content with.

During Jim Duquette’s very brief tenure, in a quite publicly known secret, he was ordered to freeze payroll. The new Mission Statement called for Met Mediocrity. Band-aids would plug the team’s needs just fine, and buy the Wilpons a little more time to see if they could come up with a clue.

Ever since Fred Wilpon had to pay down the 2003 disaster of a season, his mandate became to do things second rate, second city and from a mindset shackled with timidity. It’s hard to argue against paying up for Piazza and Ventura and that over-achieving team of 2000 but it was the Alomar’s, Mo Vaughn’s and Baerga’s that made Freddie break out in a rash, just like Vince Coleman and Bobby Bonilla made him schizoid before that.

Wilpon is always monitoring what we’re saying because he’s that paranoid, not because he’s that in touch with the fan base. But with our increasing decibles of discontent, an idea was born. “I know – Let’s ask Omar Minaya to come back ~ Because the bottom line here is, I don’t know anybody else. Where’s Frank Cashen when you really need him?”

Jim Duquette, since day one never had a chance. He was manipulated by Wilpon like a Jim Henson Muppet the entire short time he was GM.

Scott Kazmir?! Good Grief.

Fred Wilpon used his third and last “Lucky Break” card. Omar was someone who Fred Wilpon was familiar with. Fear of the unknown is paralyzing for some..(Fred). Wilpon had a comfort level with Minaya. Omar had a good reputation. But c’mon, the truth is Wilpon just couldn’t pool together a well educated baseball braintrust since Frank Cashen left. This organization is at the mercy of Steve Phillips’ proteges now. I do not believe the Wilpons have the industry insight to hire someone better than Omar. So yea, here in this instance, Fred Wilpon lucks out; again. Omar came back like Joe McIlvaine did once befor him, both at Fred Wilpon’s behest.

OMAR MINAYA, METS’ GENERAL MANAGER Sept. 2004-present:

Omar’s record since 2005 is 427-383. However, 2006, as the years pass seems to be the abberation. The win totals each year are 83, 97, 88, 89 and 70 in 2009. Ninety seven wins in 2006 seems to be standing alone. Ever since Carlos Beltran watched that curve ball fall in during the ’06 NLCS, it seems like this team put it’s tail between it’s legs and has been heading in the opposite direction since. I’ll be fair and take last year off Omar’s docket. Injuries crippled the team. But from 2005 to 2008 the team is a plus six. The ’08 team was six games better than the ’05 edition. You decide. The book is still open with Omar. We’re all watching. I wouldn’t be telling you anything you don’t already know.

But if Fred Wilpon fires Omar Minaya because he can’t turn the S.S. Wilpon around, this team will be in a world of hurt, more-so moving forward than at the present time, and we’ll head into the uncharted depths of Tartaros. I mean it. Duquette didn’t leave any hand picked executives behind. He was here for a cup of coffee really. He was like a front office version of Stump Merrill. DOH ! SO who else is there?

One of Omar Minaya’s closest lieutenants, Tony Bernazard sizzled up in a blaze of Binghampton MMA Bravado and then there was Omar’s own Flubbering Flushing Meltdown at the press conference announcing the termination of said Tony Bernazard. It truly was BIZARRO WORLD wasn’t it? Another Minaya guy, Manny Acta took a managers job with the Nationals. So who do the Wilpons look to if they relieve Omar?

Here’s another concurrent problem folks. Our minor league system has come to a grinding halt pretty much for the first time since 1965. I’ve watched for 9 years now, my graduating Brooklyn Cyclones of NYPL sent to Binghampton AA and get stuck in the mud. Additionally, there are no more prospective executives the Wilpons can tap into anymore. They are all done. Cashen started a line of executive hires that were all in-house. At present they’ve all been exhausted by the Wilpons.

Fred Wilpon is at a crucible. This is his most important year of his enire time owning the Metropolitan BBC.

If he fires Omar Minaya, the next decision he makes could have cataclysmic and far reaching ramifications. The dark ages are looming for this franchise. I am a little thin on confidence the Wilpons will get this right. I fear ICEBERG DEAD AHEAD. There is still time to save this however. There’s plenty of time to prevent panic. This operation is very salvagable. Fred is not an imbecile. Mawkish? Perhaps. Ignorant and dumb? Certainly not. Lacking baseball acumen, timid and paranoid? You betcha.

And finally, I’d like to bring Joe McDonald back into the conversation. Even though the Mets were miserable on the field between ’77-’79 under Joe, the farm sytem was busy. Get your knife and forks Met fans and dig into this.

Wally Backman, Jesse Oroscoe, Neil Allen, Mookie Wilson, Hubie Brooks, *Mike Scott, *Jeff Reardon were all getting farmed-up during that time. Hubie Brooks allowed us to acquire Gary Carter. Neil Allen allowed us to acquire Kieth Hernandez and Lee Mazzilli got us Ron Darling in return; and we reacquired him. Honorable mention goes out for 2/3 of the 1986 season pitched by Ed Lynch; he deserves credit too. Is it fair of me to say that Joe McDonald directly and indirectly deserves credit for..oh…28% of the World Champion New York Mets of 1986? Am I way off on that? The only reason I point that out is if we’re going to truley assess the body of work of this ownership group, it’s imperative we know how they got to this very moment, attribute the credit where it’s due examined what needs explaining.

Joe McDonald has truley been the gem of the Mets organization. He gets a bad rap for those late 70′s teams. What was closer to the truth of the Mets demise back then was the dynamic between Joan Payson’s husband and daughters, and an infamous Boris Kolaff of an executive, M. Donald Grant; Board Chairman. He was the real reason Tom Seaver got traded. He is where my childhood rage should have been directed towards. He was the Mets’ true Phantom Manace of that ERA. But that’s for another day.

Today, I’m worried for the future of the Mets franchise under Wilpon/Katz control moving foward. If the last 6 years of Wilponianism UNPLUGGED is any indication, I wanna get put back in the Matrix.

This is the way I see it. I’m not saying I’m right or wrong. It’s just how I see life going into Met Year 8 A.D.

“After Doubleday”

end.

It’s really an excersize in insanity complaining about the same things over and over again.
Let’s please fast foward to August 31, 2010 when I penned this post 8 months later and one month left in season.
No, no; you don’t need to click.  It’s all here.  Just giving you a time stamp.  Post is as follows:

SON of ‘PON ~ The SAUL B. KATZ Dilemma

Met Year 8 A.D. ~ Year 8 AFTER DOUBLEDAY.

OR

The Age of WILPONianism.

Welcome.

Back in 2003 Nelson Doubleday sold his half of the New York Metropolitan Baseball Club to his partner Fred Wilpon, ending a very acrimonious relationship between the two.  I’m not going “there” because the Mets only won one World Series while he was still half owner.  No, I only bring that to your attention because I’d like to remind Met Fans about the parting shots Nelson Doubleday took at the Wilpon’s and more specifically, Jeff Wilpon ~ Son of PON….Fred Wilpon’s son that is ~ Lil’ Jeff, C.O.O. of Mets R Us.

Harsh of me?  Read what Mr. Doubleday had to say to ESPN about Jeff Wilpon HERE.

The quote I’d like to extract for your reading pleasure is this little screwgie from ESPN Archives as Nelson Doubleday said what he really felt.  He was working without a filter.  There was a lot of disdain for his “Partner and Son” of which he kept no secrets about such feelings. 

** (picking up mid-article…) Doubleday especially had some harsh words for Jeff Wilpon, Fred’s son, who is heavily involved in the daily operation of the franchise.

“Mr. Jeff Wilpon has decided that he’s going to learn how to run a baseball team and take over at the end of the year,” Doubleday told the newspaper. “Run for the hills, boys. I think probably all those baseball people will bail.”

In fact, Doubleday still owns box seats at Shea Stadium, but apparently does not attend games partly due to the presence of the younger Wilpon.

“Jeff sits there by himself like he’s King Tut waiting for his camel,” Doubleday told the paper. “Hump one. Hump two. They like that, two for the price of one.”

That ESPN article was as of July 2003.

So let us fast-forward now to September 1st, 2010 and omit everything I’ve been screaming about regarding this club since winter past and beyond..  September 1st, for all intent and purposes should be, symbolically or real, Day One of the Beginning of the END of the current Met Era.

The Failure in Flushing must be corrected. The Misery in METropolis must end.

FIRST ITEM OF CONTENTION: OWNERSHIP ~ Fred Wilpon, Saul Katz, Jeff Wilpon. OR as I like to sometimes call this administration….The SAUL B. KATZ Dilemma

“Meaningful Games In SEPTEMBER” will elude the Mets in this 2010 season.  Mr. Fred Wilpon’s stated goal to have his club play meaningful games in September has been denied by his uniformed employees and mid-level management….again.  Barring a “Miracle” the Mets will not participate in this year’s post-season just as they have missed the playoffs for 7 out of the 8 years Fred Wilpon is the sole principle owner of the Mets.

In 1992-93 both Nelson Doubleday and Fred Wilpon were stuck with an onerous bill for an embarrassing last place team assembled by Al Harazin.  In 2003 Steve Phillips masterfully crafted the worst team money could buy and Fred Wilpon, who by then was the sole principle owner, got stuck with another payroll albatross and a last place club.  I empathize with the Wilpons in so far as I know they do care.  Fred Wilpon has never been cheap per se.  The Mets have always maintained a higher end payroll for players.  So that’s not up for debate.

What is up for debate is how the Wilpons maintain a blurred line of demarcation separating Ownership and Baseball Operations.  The well publicized and criticized “collegial” structure the Wilpons promote in their front office is nothing more than a nursery for Chaos.

As Nelson Doubleday declared in 2003, and as we’ve witnessed with our very own Met Eyes, Jeff Wilpon really does want to be a Baseball Man.  While Omar Minaya perhaps wielded a lot more influence and operated with more autonomy back in 2005 and 2006, let’s be clear, Jeff Wilpon is calling the shots.  Today Omar is a completely watered down version of the man the Mets re-employed by asking him to become GM of the club at the end of the 2004 season.  I do not want to get ahead of myself, but Omar’s power has been diminished somewhat by his own machinations also.  But back to the point about Jeff, he has taken the line of demarcation between Ownership and Baseball Operations and knocked it completely out of focus.  As a matter of fact, there is no line and there never has been one.

Jeff/Fred Wilpon has the whole “OUR GANG” involved in the decision processes of the club. The philosophy was fostered by his Pop and Saul Katz.  Jeff, John Ricco, Omar, the invisible man, Bob Melvin from the shadows, before his dismissal *Tony Bernazard, and a small list of others comprise(d*) The Brain of this organization.

Before moving forward, let’s revisit this clubs finances for a second because we still do not know the motivations for some moves made and the motivations for a lack of transactions made.  The Wilpons have stated the club’s financial health is strong in spite of the Madoff Scandal.  There’s speculation Fred has lost a very substantial sum.  There are also reports Fred Wilpon may have even made money in the process.  But while they say the team’s financial health is good, they behave in a very contradictory manner.  Fred Wilpon has said nothing to silence the wild speculations consuming print, on-air and electronic media.  So that’s where we are with that.  We just don’t know how much the Wilpon’s finances influence their, Jeff’s, Jeff’s dictates to Omar(‘s)…, decisions.

Moving forward now, Jeff Wilpon is what he is; the Owner’s son.  He’s the Owner’s son and he wants to be a Baseball Man; The Baseball Man.  That’s a problem.

Omar may have precipitated Jeff’s increasing involvement in Baseball Operations, however I do not think anything would have prevented Jeff’s encroachment upon Baseball Operations. 

George Steinbrenner was consumed with Baseball Operations but he was transparent in such dealings.  His word had a high credit rating with the Fans in that regard.  When George made decisions there were no secrets.  If he wanted to fire someone, he told you why.  If he wanted to sign someone, he told you why.  We do know George operated his club at a financial paper loss in his last few actively participating years.  He didn’t tell us that; the newspapers did.  But what he told his fan base was that he would do what was necessary to… and don’t worry about……. and he followed through.  He dipped into his own pockets to deliver on his word.  And here is one of the few if any times, I compare Met and Yankee business.  My point is, as stated earlier, the Wilpons say one thing and behave another way, in part because I feel they, the Wilpons aren’t being truthful with their fan base about the Owner’s ability to financially afford or manage the team.  So, what translates into the Baseball Operations side strikes us as being somewhat conflicting and confusing as Fans, and perhaps to the media also.

So let’s just say, Omar remains on-board as the GM.  If that be the case, a dramatic change in the relationship/structure between Omar and Jeff must take place. If Omar is retained as the General Manager, I suggest the Mets need to hire a bona-fide, Baseball experienced Team President to separate Omar and Jeff. If Jeff wants to be a Baseball Man, let him buzz the ear of the President; not Omar’s.  A Team President must assure the Wilpon’s financial interests in the club are being met in return for full autonomy.  A Team President then turns and delegates autonomy to his General Manager to implement the Organizations will concerning Baseball Operations.  Omar is accountable to, and answers to said Team President.  A Team President then delivers a state of Baseball Operations report to the Owners.  Yes, this entails Jeff Wilpon relinquishing baseball concerns to said President.  If you’re Jeff, this is a rather large pill to swallow.  But the homogenized duties of the front office….pffft ~ the direct connect between Omar and Jeff must be severed.  If Omar is to be retained, he must be handed a clear budget parameter and be left to make decisions autonomously.  Jeff always retains the right to question and inspect his club of course.  But as things stand right now, Omar has been rendered impotent because Jeff engages in baseball operations with an owners mind and his Father’s wallet in his heart, and secondly, Omar helped create the condition due largely to diminished effectiveness on the major league level, besetting the club with paralyzing contracts and an inability to seize the moment in matters of crisis management.

All of which I said is IF Omar is retained as General Manager of the Mets.  But Omar is a later topic of discussion.  Jeff is still topic one for now.  And to summarize, if Omar is indeed retained in his present capacity, of which I am not opposed to, the direct pipeline between Jeff and Omar must cease and a Team President must be found.  A Team President is the only one who can have a Team Owner’s, a General Manager’s, and the over-all best interest of an organization as his primary interest all at the same time without bias.  Anything else is just hands in the cookie jar or too many chiefs and not enough Indians.  You choose. But the overlapping of ideas, interests and concerns is just creating standing water spawning mosquitoes.  The ramif
ications of the inbred thought process by this front office has been clearly evidenced and we’ve watched it bleed onto the field of play.

Regardless if Omar or whom-ever is General Manager of the Mets, something has got to give; that something is Jeff Wilpon. If he wants to be a Baseball Man so badly, I’m afraid he’ll have to do it vicariously through a Team President.  Jeff Wilpon and his on-the-job-training is the Phantom Menace at work here.  If part of the reason I think what I think is because they, the Wilpons haven’t exactly been truthful with us….isn’t that his fault and not my misinterpretation?

There’s another side of me that actually likes Jeff.  I’ll just quickly make use of his trip to Atlanta back in May, when he addressed the angst surrounding the team.  He’s pretty darn good speaking his way through crisis management and Atlanta wasn’t the only display, unfortunately.  He comes, speaks to the media very plainly/frankly but effectively, and gives Met fans a sense as if he said, “All is well. There’s nothing more to see here. Go back to your homes”. He’s good at that.  Maybe there-in lies his niche on this team.  If Omar is still the GM next year, I’m sure Jeff will have more opportunities to smoke screen us.  But I still hold firm in my belief one of the ways to go about solving Saul B. Katz’ Dilemma is with a good Team President. The Son of PON must be contained.

A Team President is needed within the New York Mets Front Office regardless whether Omar is retained as the General Manager or not.  How else can we keep nepotism from ruining this club?  If Jeff is the one who hires the next GM…, is Jeff really hiring the next GM or someone who just plays one on TV?

The Saul B. Katz Dilemma continues.

WELCOME, finally to October 7, 2010 ~ THE DAY METropoliS STOOD STILL.

This will be quick.

Welcome to the day Mets fans have clamoured for.  Omar Minaya and Jerry Manuel have been relieved from their respective duties.  Jerry Manuel’s club option will not be picked up and Omar’s remaining two years owed him under terms of his contract will be made whole.  Omar was asked by the Wilpons about a re-assignment within the organization, but both Omar and Jeff agreed it would have to be the new GM’s decision to maintain such an employment agreement.  I honestly do not see that happening.  Omar will most likely move on and in all likelyhood do very well somewhere else.

Let’s  understand this will be the third General Manager the Wilpons will be hiring since they became sole owners.  Remember, this will be the first GM hired from off-campus.  Jeff Wilpon said very plainly there are no in-house candidates for the position at this time.  The office of GM will be filled by an outside entity for the first time since Frank Cashen himself.  The Wilpons will not be dealing with a Frank Cashen or Steve Phillips disciple this time around.  Jeff and Fred both seemed to re-emphasize and even champion themselves for running their organization in a very uncorporate-like manner.  They proudly repeated they, the club, more resemebles a Family Operation, during today’s press conference.  And that’s all OK for me.  Besides, we know all that already.

Here’s the dilemma.  Is Jeff hiring this GM?  Jeff said he and John Ricco will brainstorm together  to formulate a plan to move forward with.

Jeff and John Ricco?  See?  Here’s the problem regarding Jeff Wilpon thinking he’s a Baseball man.  I’d prefer Jeff did something prudent like bring in a consultant and assemble a think tank and move forward towards a GM from there.  All Jeff has is on-the-job training on his resume.  Do we not see an inherent problem here?

Is Jeff going to hire a General Manger or someone who just plays one on TV? 

Does Jeff even have enough Baseball acumen to conduct interviews?  After all,  this will be a whole new process for the Wilpons.  These are uncharted waters for the S.S. Wilpon.

If the Mets really want to get this right, they should be seeking professional consultaion, or at minimum creating a think tank to brainstorm ideas.  Jeff nor Fred, just do not have the practical experience, in my humble opinion, to conduct the interviews that will land us our best option for the future success of the Mets.
They’v never had to scour the country side for an executive before.

Separation between Jeff Wilpon and the office of GM is something I’d really like to have ironed out.  A Baseball qualified Team President is needed by this team because Jeff and a GM must be separated.  If Jeff insists on keeping his thumb prints all over Baseball Operations, then it’s into the ICEBERG we go.

…And that’s the way I see things in Flushing.

Thanks a lot!

Mike.BTB
 
 
 

BTB ~ Hit By Pitch

The Summer of 2010 continues for me.  The recently expired season of warmth has put me outside of my comfort zone.  I mean a lot of things by that, but as it pertains to this blog, my normally well planned Baseball summer usually filled with Mets, Yankees, Cyclones, Atlantic League games and obligatory road trips took on small arms fire from all directions this year.  The season was a wash for me.  

 Now…, I love me some FALL, but not when it starts like this.

The demands of work (and freakin’ college tuition!!!) has been my biggest nemesis this year.  I just don’t take very well when reality chews into my personal time.

But reality is doing just that, and continues to do so; but this time for a different reason.  We’ve had a death in the family this week and tomorrow morning we’ll be moving this to Florida for the final phase.

I’ve been trying to get back on a routine again but to no avail.  Well.., not these last two weeks at least.  It’s a shame too because there’s a load of stuff I’d like to get off my chest about the Mets; mostly about how right I was about…oh..everything I ever said about this team since December?

 Whatever.

Today, apparently Jerry Manuel and Omar Minaya have been put on notice by the club.  They will not be returning to the NY Mets next year in their current capacity.  Translation ~ “Jerry, you’re fired.  Clean out your desk by Monday before we have you arrested for trespassing.”  Omar ~ “You don’t have to go, but you can’t stay here.  If you’ll accept a demotion, you can stay.  Otherwise…You know wussup Amigo.”

I’d like to really sink my teeth into Met Matters in Metropolis right now, but I can’t.  Gotta go.  I have time to make a go round of the Blogosphere, then life calls.  I’ll catch up with you fine folks again Monday.

Congratulations to everyone who’s team will play in the post-season.

Regardless of what I have on my docket right now,  I was actually planning to throw a 70′s style PITY PARTY on my blog for me, my Mets and all of you not playing deeper into October because like mine, your team sucks.  I had this whole thing planned out.  But for now, just get ready to party when I get back with a bunch a losers like you.  Should be fun.  Till then..

 

Mike.BTB

 

I have tons of stuff on my other page that never make it here.  I invite you to check out a posting or two; or to just take a look around. I’m more locally intense over there.

http://thebrooklyntrolleyblogger.blogspot.com/

 

Talk to ya Monday.

 

 

Three Hands Down, 24 to go; Vintage Baseball Returns to Brooklyn

 
 
Back in Brooklyn; Where Baseball Grew-Up…
 
 
 

The gentlemen from the Vintage Base Ball Association came back to Washington Park this year for a doubleheader featuring the New York Gothams Baseball Club and the Flemington Neshanock Baseball Club.

 

 

If you remember last year (2009), The New York Gothams participated in a three team round-robin along with the Brooklyn Atlantics and Newark Eurekas.  And while Brad “Brooklyn” Shaw was on hand representing the Flemington Neshanock BBC, the team itself did not play.  The Flemington Club made their way to Brooklyn this time for a two game match against the returning Gothams.

 

On the left is Gotham’s Rafael “Wickets” Garcia
and on the right is Flemington’s 3rd baseman Jon”Hammer” Hepner
 

That would be Brad “Brooklyn” Shaw on the left.
There’s no smiling allowed, remember?
 
The Neshanock Club was kind enough to pose for a team picture.
 
The Gotham’s John “Stacks” Hyslop on the left;
Matt “Monk” Gebhart on the right….. 
 
 
They were absent from last year’s team pic. (2009)

 

Once again these ”Jolly-Young” skilled gamesmen graced us with their displays of vintage athletics; being steady at bat, accurate and strong with arm, resolved, quick and swift of feet in the field of play and ever the Gentlemen.

 

 
 
 
Game Action.
 
 
“Wickets” at the bat
 
 
A developing play at home.
 
 
 
Game Action
 
 
 
 
 
In this video please take notice to the fine hand work by the Catcher.  His hands were like magnets.  Think about this/his smoothness without a glove, then take some time to envision how good players were and how excellent the brand of Ball would have been, back 150+ years ago.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Game Action
 
 
“Stacks” reminded everyone why third base is referred to as
the Hot Corner.
 
 
Closing Ceremonies, Appreciation for those in attendance and a Gentleman’s Salute.
 
 
 
 
 
And now I’d like to introduce to you the Official of today’s match, former Vintage Player and co-author of the vast amount of research done concerning Baseball History
and particularly with regards to Brooklyn’s Baseball History;
One of the men behind,
 
Mr. David Dyte
 
 
 
It’s some-what of a sacrifice for these gentlemen to play here in the modern version of Washington Park.  It is after all, a public city park, with a newly installed artificial surface.  These players are accustomed to playing on real dirt and grass surfaces with more conducive dimensions and conditions than this location can afford.
So for my part, I thank you sincerely, as a Baseball Fan and a native Brooklynite passionate about his Borough’s role in the game’s history…, for coming out and sharing this brand of Baseball, your enthusiasm, not to mention all your hospitality and affable personalities; again I thank you.
It is my sincerest hope not only to take in a tournament next season, but that you fine gentlemen return to Brooklyn and continue these “Manly Displays” of Base Ball.
“Any Un-Manly Behavior will be made to pay a fine to The House”
No Rounders !
No Rounders !
 
 
Catch up on last year’s posting to learn more about the
History of Washington Park, The Federal League and the Brooklyn Tip Tops,
concerns about preserving historical baseball sights in the Borough and plenty of pictures from last year’s action during the Vintage Base Ball Association’s time in Brooklyn; 2009.
 
 
 
Mike
 
 
 
 
 

“Wait Till Next Year” ~ A New Generation

2010
NEW YORK-PENN LEAGUE
CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
Get your programs.
 
Pre-game Introductions
Tri City Valley Cats  vs.  Brooklyn Cyclones
 
Singing of the National Anthem.
 
First Pitch.
Cyclones’ dugout watches Cory Vaughn’s at-bat while the Valley Cats’ bullpen stays quiet.
 
 
Moon over the Parachute Jump
 
The Brooklyn Cyclones lost tonight to the Tri City Valley Cats in Game 2 of the New York Penn League Championship Series.  In a scene eerily reminiscent of the time when the Auburn Doubledays danced in celebration on this field in 2007; in a scene eerily reminiscent of the time the Williamsport CrossCutters danced in celebration on this field in 2003, so too did the young men from Troy, N.Y. celebrate tonight and dance on our field.

 
The Tri City Valley Cats; the team from Troy, N.Y.
are the NYPL Champs…and the celebration is on!
 
 
 

Troy should be congratulated for taking two straight from
 the Cyclones looking impressive doing it and showing
tremendous fight in their game the whole time. 
This team had power, comeback capabilities
and a knockout punch.

 

 
 

The Cyclones were sloppy at times during the two game series.  There is never a good time for erratic play.
But when it reared it’s ugly head and stared at the Cyclones, they quivered.  But that wasn’t it.  That’s not what did this team in. 

The offensive juggernaut that was this team’s line-up simply shut down.  There was no discernible slugging emanating from this Cyclone team; a team which set individual, team and league records for offensive production.  They scored one run tonight and only two in Game 1.  A combined 8 hits and 4 errors for the two games does not a champion make.

See you next year Pee Wee.
 
The team which achieved 51 victories, on cruise-control since perhaps the 2nd week of the season, who clinched their division earlier than the rest and by a substantial margin to boot, has left older Brooklynites and newer Lil’ Bumz rooters reciting a mantra, as true today as the days when it was more common to hear around these part;  ~ “Wait Till Next Year”.  The saying originated here.  It must be something in the water I guess.

The Coney Island Nine fell short of their quest for a championship.  And whether they bring back yellowed and frayed memories to mind or you’re a couple of generations down the line experiencing this resurrected Brooklyn phenomenon for the first time over these last ten years…, it’s painful all the same.

The events of 9/11 prevented a clear cut champion in 2001.  Clearly, no one was in any mood for dancing on any field then.  The Cyclones and Williamsport were declared co-champions.  Before having the opportunity to watch these Boys by the Beach have a party in our “Backyard”, as of tonight I have had the misfortune of watching three teams partake in such merriment.

“Wait till next year” ~ A time honoring(?) tradition passed down from generation to generation?

Yea…..Fugheddaboudit! 

Egg Cream Society*…, you may stand down now.  The summer season at Coney Island is now ended.  Further down Surf Avenue “The Cyclone” is giving her last rides of the season.  She’s only coming out to play on the dwindling weekends of Summer now.  Even Nathan’s Famous will pull in the tables soon as the days get shorter and they start feeding us behind closed doors.  They’ll again resume their annual duty as the standing Lone Sentinel on Surf Avenue (pictured left) until the calendar says it’s OK for things to get green again.  Till then, the Boardwalk is always available for lazy walks through Winter.

 
The games are over; the season is done. 

 
It’s time to prepare MCU Park for her off-season hibernation.
 
Cyclone’s GM Steve Cohen walks off into the night
pondering what could have been.
 
Last one out shut off the lights…
Parting shots:
 
Can you see why I love this place so much?
We’ll get ‘em next year.
Mike.BTB
 
 

An Heirloom of Kings

Transcendental;
Born of a by-gone era and passed down through generations
like a family heirloom ~
I speak, quite possibly, of something wholly foreign to anyone living outside the NYC limits,
and still then, there are the unlearned amongst us right here.
But to those who’ve lived, and know; or resided on the block between
Memory Lane and Remember Ave;
To those who cling on to the best in our lives; to those who wear our memories and future dreams on our chests like Cub Scout Badges or ribbons if you were a Brownie,
To those of us who proudly call the Borough of Kings home ~
A TOAST
TO MY DEAR FRIENDS
This picture watered the eyes of a Dreamy Doll this afternoon.   
But this picture also gave her a snapshot of life as a member of
THE EGG CREAM SOCIETY*;
as a denizen of Brooklyn.
The $2.18 elixir of goodness is always money well spent for my part,  but I think someone else
made a connection with memories that are priceless.
 
If there’s something more you want from life sometimes it helps if you remember where you came from.  If you’re in the neighborhood, take a time out from the 21st Century and spend some time in a place where it’s still cool to look at pictures in black and white.
All Hail the EGG CREAM!
For over 60 Years..
Bay Ridge, Brooklyn
5th Avenue off 86th Street
 
 
 
Trying to start up a new week of voting for
HOVVG
There’s one problem ~ Need More E-MAILS!!!!
I have one from Randy.
Send in a candidate post haste to
 
 
 
 
Mike
 
 
 

Cyclones’ Celebration by the SeaShore

My Baby Bumz are going to play for the New York Penn League Championship against the Tri City Valley Cats this weekend.  This is my post for last night’s clinching game.  I respectfully invite everybody to visit my Blogspot page to read up on the First Round action, my thoughts and hopes for Backman’s Boys ~ my Cyclones by the Sea, as they vie for a Championship.  The posts are pact full of pictures.  I apologize for neglecting this page, but I’ve been caught up with the Cyclones and trying to get there as early as I possibly can after work and meeting up with the usual bunch of characters for pre-game high-jinks.  Truth is I can blog and do most things, like link pics, from my phone and post to my other……on the go.  Just know I do love you all, find you all fascinating and think you are authors of time well spent.  I like to remind you all of that sometimes. I enjoy this time.

OK..you saw my soft side….Shut up!

It’s Friday, I have plenty of time on my hands today and I’m about to go cruising the neighborhood in search of everyone’s posts.  See You There!

 

These were my thoughts for the playoffs as the Cyclones’ season came to an end.  The Baby Bumz set individual records, new team records and NYPL records this year.  This team finished with 51 wins; one short of their all*time record of 52 set in 2001..the frst and last time this club won the NYPL Championship.  Lot’s of pics.!http://thebrooklyntrolleyblogger.blogspot.com/2010/09/wild-times-at-coney-island-ahead.html

Dum Dee-Dum-Dum!  Rain and losing made for a bad night.  A two hour rain delay and an extra inning loss left me feeling un-easy.  These NYPL playoffs are best 2 out of 3.  After dominating the League all season long and being top seed, it was time to worry …already! Jamestown needed something to think about.  I thought perhaps a Coney Island style Attitude Adjustment was in order… Yea…that’s it!  More pics.http://thebrooklyntrolleyblogger.blogspot.com/2010/09/brooklyn-cyclones-facing-elimination.html

Game Two was a THRILLER!!!  Cyclones win in 12 innings.  What a great game!  What a great night.  I have no finger nails left…  Fugheddaboudit!!  The deciding Game Three is next.   Pics..Pics..Pics…Meet the players.  and more pics. http://thebrooklyntrolleyblogger.blogspot.com/2010/09/oh-doctor-mercy-cyclones-game-2.html

 

 

Friday, September 10, 2010

Celebration by the SeaShore

The Brooklyn Cyclones Win; Qualify for Finals.

We do’d it!  Well…, some of it. 

The Cyclones are half way there.  Where? – A New York Penn League Championship that’s where.

The Brooklyn Cyclones defeated the Jamestown Jammers tonight in a nail biter.  The final score was 6-4.  The Jammers had the bases loaded in the top of the 9 inning with no outs.  A force play at home plate off a grounder to first base secured the Cyclones’ first out.  The next batter struck out looking.  The final batter struck out swinging the the beach party down by the seashore was underway.

The Cyclones will face off against the Tri-City Vally Cats this weekend, who eliminated the Batavia Muckdogs for the New York Penn League Championship.

Either way, someone will be dancing on our grass.  The Cyclones are the top seeded team in the League this year and will enjoy home field advantage through the remainder of the playoffs..  The first game will be up in Albany/Schenectady N.Y.,  before the remainder of the series returns to Coney Island.

Batavia vs. Brooklyn would have been ideal; One against Two.  But this is the way it worked out and That’s Baseball.

The Cyclones dropped the first game to the Jammers but then won the following two games to clinch the first round series.

The game itself was full of thrills.  I even saw the longest home run I ever witnessed at MCU Park.  The field measures 414 feet to straight away center field and a home run by Blake Forcythe barely cleared the wall; but clear the wall it did.  The Cyclones maintain the longest home to center distance in all Minor League Baseball.

The first game in Coney Island will be Sunday.  The series opens up in Albany, N.Y.

New York Penn League Playoffs
Game 3
Brooklyn    6
Jamestown 4
Brooklyn wins series 2 games to 1;
advance to play Tri City Valley Cats for
2010 NYPL Championship
Game Three Gallery:
5:45 pm..the Early Birds started to file in…This young Cyclones fan
was armed with a “Biggie” riff and ready with his sign.
This is what this guy thought of Jamestown and their grapes.
Wally Backman signing autographs.
Top of the 9th inning…Brooklyn leading 6-4…
Jamestown loaded the bases.. 
After a force play at home (3 to 2 if you’re scoring) for the first out…,
Took this pic after the game was over but
#23 was pitching at the time of the pic above.
..Bases loaded; one out…
Batter looks at a called strike three during this at-bat..

…Two outs……..
STRIKE THREE!!!…(swinging)
Cyclones Win!!!
Infielders mug the pitcher…dugout rushing in…
Outfielders coming in to join…
..and here come the bullpen guys on the right…!
WooooHoooo!
Just a tad bit more to the right and they would have been exactly on the pitcher’s mound.
That could have been a great picture..  But this was special enough!
…finally the coaches made their way out to join the Lil’ Bumz in their celebration.
Skip, Wally ~ “Backman’s Boyz” ~ is the last one to make it out to the mound.
…And the Beach Bums with their annoying little pom poms sneak into the picture!
Fans start rushing the home team’s dugout to party with our
Seashore Sensation.  The Beach Party at Coney Island was on!
 
The final score shines brilliantly in the Coney Island Night.
The beach beyond the center field wall is dark with night but the lights of MCU Park shine down on Brooklyn’s backyard as it empties out.
Pee Wee on the left gives tonight a Thumbs-Up .
Sandy the SeaGull reminds us all, who’s Number One!
 
 
“Coverboy” Darrell Ceciliani
NYPL 2010 Batting Champion  .351 Average

 

Good Night from MCU Park,
Coney Island,
Brooklyn Sea Shore,
Earth!
 
Mike.BTB

 

 

 

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