Results tagged ‘ Jeff Wilpon ’

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.
 
 
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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
 
 
 

The Saul B. Katz Dilemma ~ Son of ‘PON

 

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, and those who slow down to see the wreckage of an accident, 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 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.  Researching the “good Old days” and trying to retrieve articles covering Nelson Doubleday’s parting shots at the Wilpons I came across THIS ARTICLE in my travels.  Just giving due props.

So let us fast-forward now to September 1st, 2010.  I will 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.

Fred Wilpon ~ For as much as I like to rip him, there’s no place for that here at the moment.  Trust me, it’s unlike me to pass up an opportunity to criticize the Father of the Least.  But this is Jeff’s team now.  So that’s where I’m staying.  But before we leave Fred behind I will offer this ~ He, Fred, was never forthright with the fan base about the team’s financial health.  But how much of the Madoff situation can we say is “our business”?  Honestly, how much of the Bernie Madoff scandal IS our business?  We’d like to know; sure.  But when your owner maintains a payroll near the NL top spenders…how much can we badger Fred about team finances?  There are fair shots to be taken at Fred and some deserved.   But On Sept. 1st, 2010 we move forward with – (because I’m living in the here and now.  I’m trying to stay positive.) Jeff at the helm of the S.S. Wilpon.  And we need to figure out a way to keep Jeff, The Son of PON, from turning this ship into the iceberg.  So Fred actually gets a pass here.  I’ll save the shrine to the Brooklyn Dodgers and all that other stuff for another time.  It’s the son I want now!  Jeff is the Phantom Menace in the SAUL B. KATZ Dilemma.

I’m a real sucker for going all Soupy Sales on the Wilpons with jokes and barbs..  That is why I will end this first installment of FIXING the FAILURE in FLUSHING now. Tune in tomorrow as I methodically try and help Lil’ Jeff, C.O.O. of Mets R Us.

Mets R Us…….S.S. Wilpon, Wilponianism…whatever; –  We just need to keep the Kid from crashing his new car.  In a moment of clarity, this is the 30th year since the Mets were sold to Doubleday and Wilpon; and then there was one (..and son).  Back in December I went through a whole Blah blah blah…and said this was the most important season facing the Wilpons over the last 30 years.  Mr. Fred Wilpon has “Met” his crucible (pun intended).  That time is upon us now.

That was my warm up; my Swanny River (reference anyone?).  Tomorrow is September 1st.  The day of reckoning is a sunrise away.

DAY TWO; Son of PON ~ The Saul B. Katz Dilemma

September 1, 2010 by my Declaration is DAY ONE of the END of THIS MET ERA.

 

“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 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 say..  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 Wilpon has the whole “OUR GANG” involved in the decision processes of the club.  The philosophy was fostered by his Pop.  Jeff, John Ricco, Omar, the invisible Bob Melvin, 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 F.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.  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.  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 bonafide, 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 ramifications 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 do 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 at 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.

….I will make my suggestion for a Team President much later in this discourse.

NEXT ITEM OF CONTENTION….The Office of General Manager

September 2, 2010  Day Two of The End of this Mets Era.

In 1980 Frank Cashen was the first General Manager hired by the new Mets Ownership of Doubleday and Wilpon.  Cashen marks the first and only time Mets ownership has gone outside the organization to fill the office of GM.  Well, they had to…He was the first.  Well enough right?

If you’re an ardent Met Fan, I’ll save you all the particulars.  Let’s just run through the General Managers of the N.Y. Mets over the last 30 yeas.

Frank Cashen was the architect of the 1986 World Champion Mets.  But I’d be doing a tremendous disservice to the former GM and last who operated under the old regime of Joan Payson, and her Estate; Joe McDonald.  The new ownership asked Joe McDonald to stay on board but they also made it clear they wanted to hire their own guy for the GM position.  Joe stayed on one more year to make the Mets ownership transfer smoother.  He is currently a scout for the Boston Red Sox.  What Joe McDonald left behind for Frank Cashen to work with amounted to, without doing the hard math to get an exact figure, 25% of that ’86 team.

Lee Mazzili, Hubie Brooks, Wally Backman, Jesse Orosco, Niel Allen, Mookie Wilson ~ (and I’m sure I’m missing someone) ~ were all players developed in the Mets organization by Joe McDonald.  Some of those players stayed with the club.  The rest were used smartly by Mr. Cashen in trades that translated to players, directly or indirectly, like Kieth Hernandez, Gary Carter, Ron Darling, Sid Fernandez and Howard Johnson.  I’m sure I’m missing someone again.  But before we lurch forward I thought it necessary to include Joe McDonald in this conversation.

From 1980 through 1983 Frank Cashen rebuilt the minor league system and by 1984 the fruits of his labor started joining the big club starting with Darryl Strawberry in ’83.

Fast-forward now to1992.  Frank Cashen finally steps down as General Manager but remains in the front office.  He appoints Al Harazin, who had more of a business background than baseball.  It showed!  But what happened besides the fiasco on the field was Joe McLlvaine got tired of waiting around to get promoted within the Mets front office so he bolted to San Diego when they offered him their General Manager’s position.

Al Harazin was in over his head and Mets Ownership cajoled Joe McLlvaine into coming back to the organization to be GM of the Mets in time for the 1994 season.  He had a plan.  Met Fans were on board with said plan.  Everyone got emotionally invested with Generation -K and the whole youth movement.  It failed.  During those years another Mets front office prospect got tired of waiting for his chance.  Gerry Hunsicker was another “star” skyrocketing through the Mets front office, similar to Joe McLlvaine.  Gerry left the Mets front office to take the General Manager’s position in Houston in 1995.

Joe McLvaine got fired because no one ever knew where he was.  His priorities went askew and apathy was written all over his face.  When things got chaotic in METropolis and times demanded his presence, he was off on his own, scouting or doing whatever, somewhere else, while leaving no itinerary or contact information behind with the front office staff.

Enter Steve “HornDog” Phillips; another and the last protege left behind by Frank Cashen.  All the previous General Manager hires by the Mets were executives developed by Frank Cashen.

I think we’re all familiar with Steve Phillips’ record by now.  Moving forward, Steve brought in Jim Duquette as he did Omar Minaya bringing him over from Texas.  Steve Phillips got fired and the Wilpons gave the job to Jim Duquette.  Omar had already left for Montreal to become their General Manager.  Without ever firing Jim Duquette first, the Mets (eh hem, the Wilpons; Fred) begged Omar to come back to the organization to be the next GM after just one year and a half.  By the end of the 2004 season we were sporting two GM’s by default.  Needless to say Jim Duquette eventually recieved his pink slip over the winter and by 2005 Omar was the sole and new General Manager of the Mets.

Obviously that is a short summary of the GMs.  Their records and degrees of effectiveness do not really need to be dealt with for my purposes, other than for a point I will make shortly.

Omar is still chasing down the same problems he inherited back in 2004; LF, RF, CF, 1B, 2B, C, Starting pitching, and relief pitching.  That’s the truth.  Centerfield with Carlos Beltran was the only position we truly rectified.  In leftfield how can we forget Moises Alou and the LF match game that continues into the present with the questionable status and sub-par year Jason Bay is having.  Right Field? Shawn Green? Xavier Nady, Moe Larry and Curly? Many players have played RF since 2005 and the position is still unsettled with the depature on Jeff Francoeur (see Ryan Church).  Second base?  Remember Kaz Matsui?  That’s what Omar was charged to improve upon.  He still hasn’t.  The catching was and still is in flux ever since Mike Piazza was phased out.  Josh Thole seems like he’s finally going to settle the position for us.  The bullpen and namely a closer? Billy Wagner?  KRod?  Good in theory but they turned out to be more headaches that anyone bargained for.  Billy Wagner was maddening.  KRod is right there with him.  But as of right now, we have nothing to show for the position.  The starting rotation?  From Pedro, Tom Glavine and Trachsel…to Maine and Oliver…and the big catch with Santana, and the emergence of Pelfrey and Neise?  It’s taken 6 years to get to this?  But what exactly is this?

This is what happened in 2006 when the Mets were within a strike or a hit, pick your poison, of the World Series.  For one year, the multitude of Omar’s second tier type signings paid off in a big way, just as RA Dickey is earning more and more credibility today.  In 2006 Jose Valentin hit 22 home runs for us while at 2nd base batting 6th and 7th in the line-up.  On the night the Mets clinched the N.L. East flag in 2006, Jose Valentin hit 2 home runs.  In 2006 Paul LoDuca hit .300 out of the two spot in the line-up.  In 2006 Carlos Delgado made the line-up lethal; not Jose Reyes like most believe.  I may be in the minority on that.  But I believe strongly it was Delgado and not Reyes that made that 2006 line-up deadly.  It was Delgado that spear headed the charge back into contention in 2007 after a very sloppy start.  As of right now, 2006 is the abberation.  It stands alone.  What we witness today is where they are since steadily spiraling downward and becoming more and more out of control since that 2006 October night.  That team doesn’t exist anymore and this organization has been chasing it’s ghost ever since to no avail.

Take the 2006 season and make it a wash versus last season’s injury riddled campaign.  Look at the 2005, 2007, 2008 and 2010 and what do you have? Angst, frustrations, collossal chokes, revolving doors in postions still unsettled since 2005, a second manager, madenning mediocraty, a clubhouse which has experienced more drama than “All My Children”, Latino phobia, poor fundamentals but less so this season, and other items of contention that don’t really need to be listed in their entirety.  Look at the win loss record of the Mets since 2005 and what you see is a man who is a General Manager of mediocraty and let downs.

All the Mets’ General Managerial hires have been in-house or as is the case with Duquette and Minaya, the Wilpons were previously familiar to them, and likewise they to Fred.  Today, with Omar Minaya holding on precariously to his job title,  Asst. GM John Ricco emerges as the latest link in a chain threatening to snap.

The time has come for this administration to go off campus again.  Again is actually inaccurate.  Going off campus would in effect be the first time they did so, outside of Cashen.  The thought process of this front office is inbred.  There must me a new, outside, unrelated and independent thinker brought into this front office.  A new stimulus is needed to procure progress.  The Wilpons and this organization have stagnated. The need for a strong minded Baseball Executive, independent and free from familiarity with the Wilpons is needed.  This need is exasperated by the want of Jeff Wilpon to be a Baseball Man.  Who can tell the Owner’s son he has to step aside but the Owner himself?  We can only hope and pray Jeff is promulgated by epiphany and returns to “just” being the C.O.O. of this club and stays away from day to day operations.

John Ricco can not become the next General Manager of the Mets.  That would be an inconsequential move considering the Jeff Factor.  The move would be tremendously toothless.  The move would be incredibly un-impactful.  The hiring of John Ricco I’m sure would infuiate the Fan base.  The present scuttlebutt has Omar getting re-assigned within the organization in more of a super-scout role and would head up Minor League Development while John Ricco would be more of a front man for the club.  Translated, John Ricco’s body and suit; Jeff Wilpon’s mind.  It’s as simple as this; John Ricco can not be the next weak link in this lengthening chain of ever increasing homogenized front office thought.  The Wilpons must, - have to go off campus for the next General Managerial hire.  The organization is in dire need of an infusion of new blood.  That time may be upon them right now.   This decision should be made be a qualified Team President.  Whether Omar stays on or not, a Team President is still needed and it’s the Team President that should make the next GM hire.  With a Team President I am not opposed to Omar Minaya remaining as GM for the remainder of his contract.  But if Omar is in fact relieved of those duties, I will find every ounce of energy containing matter in my being to voice my opposition to John Ricco!  I will make my suggestion for a new General Manager later in this discourse.

NEXT UP….THE MANAGER ~ JERRY MANUEL

He did express interest in managing while Willie Randolph was still serving in that capacity.  Jerry Manuel has been accused of throwing Willie Randolph under the bus, or, being subversive towards the same end; Willie’s job.

Jerry Manuel went down yapping some negative Ghandi’isms in Chicago all the way to the bus station when Kenny Williams released him of his duties there.  Jerry Manuel did win a Manager of the Year though.  Jerry Manuel was also a coach on the 1997 World Series Champion Florida Marlins.  He’s been around the block and his resume is credible.

There are worse managers and there are certainly better managers.  But way more than most likely, Jerry will not be asked back as manager for the 2011 season.  At this very moment, Jerry is still managing and trying to win now as if a playoff spot was still attainable.  But he’s smart and realizes we wants to salvage some respectability for himself and this team.

There’s a saying ~ when you can’t dazzle people with brilliance, baffle them with bull$#!t.  If that doesn’t work, make jokes!  Somehow Jerry Manuel has kept the more blood thirsty media satiated with humor and jocularity.  Jerry has played it masterfully to his credit.  He figured out never leave them angry, always leave the media laughing.  Brilliant!  Brilliant because look at any other manager or head coach in whatever sport in this town, and the relationship between the media and him is pacifying at best.  Jerry has many of them eating out of his hand pecking at his next joke.  That is perhaps the single most biggest reason why the calls to have his head chopped off haven’t come sooner or more vehemantly.

However, for right now, for September’s sake, Jeff Wilpon must immediately tell Omar Minaya and more specifically Jerry Manuel, “It’s over Johnny”!  Jeff Wilpon must hand down the directive now, – Jerry, stop trying to win and forget getting back in the race.  The focus is now on the youngsters being farmed up to the big club.  Jerry Manuel is presently engaged in self preservation.  That is in conflict with the newly initiated rebuilding process.  It’s incumbent upon Jeff Wilpon to get his General Manager and his manager on the same page of music he is on for the remainder of this month.  The money for salaries is already spent.  The money is committed and will be doled out regardless whether the higher priced players on this team play or not.  Sit these players and play any and all prospects we call up.  Not intentionally because that’s not where the front office’s mind set should be, but just possibly a good benching of the old establishment on this roster may find them time for self-reflection and lend an opportunity to find inner gumption to play this game in a different state of mind other than melancholy.

 But Jeff needs to hand down that dictate to Jerry and do it now.  There is no plausible reason in Flushing why any, if not all the prospects are not playing on a given night.  What needs to happen on the part of Jeff Wilpon for this dictate to be implemented and followed out, is….Commitment.  In the absence of a Team President to navigate this for him, Jeff must be committed to a process with strong conviction and a determination to stay the course.  For too long this has been a reactive administration and the time for a proactive mentality is now.  In the absence of a Team President Jeff Wilpon must act with conviction regarding the “plan” and COMMIT.

 Jeff Wilpon must commit wholly, not just in parts, not in spurts of whimsy, not in time of reactive damage control; NO ~ Commit to the complete rebuilding of this team and make it the Mets’ business to correct, in every business sense of the word; CORRECT the expensive and insipid players signed to negative yielding contracts.  You know who you are!  But first what must happen post haste is Jeff informing Jerry Manuel that Dean Wormer has dropped the big one.  It’s over.

 We all share an understanding Jerry Manuel will not be manager next year.  His contract will expire and it’s unlikely the Mets will ask him to return.  He will most likely be dismissed with an inordinate amount of the blame for the Mets’ woes this season.  A manager can only put the best players he has in the best possible positions to succeed.  The General manger is responsible for procuring those players.  At some point the players need to be held with ultimate responsibility.  But you can’t fire a whole roster and you can’t fire the Owner or his Son.  The Mets have been-there-done-that with firing coaches, using them as sacrificial lambs.  So the only logically certain deletion from the Mets Media Guide will be Jerry Manuel’s.  He done some “not so smart” things.  What manager hasn’t?  But when a role player has to ask why pitch to Jeter with Mariano Rivera on deck during an Inter-League Subway Series Game?..C’mon.

 One barb is enough.  I don’t choose to kick him while he’s on the way down.  But I do want a new manager next season.  I’d like to say I never ever said, Fire Jerry Manuel.  But today it is very safe to say I don’t want him back.  I’ll say this about him; he’s gutsy, strong minded, he was never hesitant to shake things up and if you got beyond the jokes, he wasn’t afraid to say what he felt and it was usually said with tact…. Although there was that one time when…..

 

….more coming

Mike.BTB

This blog post is still in progress…I’m updating as I go along..

http://thebrooklyntrolleyblogger.mlblogs.com/

http://thebrooklyntrolleyblogger.blogspot.com/

 

 

 

The Kids are Alright!

These were three postings I made on my Blogspot while I was watching tonight’s game:

 

Welcome Home to the Citi…Boyz!!

10 August, 2010
METS vs. ROCKIES
The New York Mets’ line-up is in for tonight’s game.
 
Jose Reyes
Fernando Martinez
Angel Pagan
David Wright
Ike Davis
Chris Carter
Josh Thole
Ruben Tejada
Mike Pelfrey
 
This is NINE;
This is a completely home-grown line-up!
Thank You Baseball Gods!
Thank You.
 
FINALLY!
I’ve been longing for a day like this for a long time; since July 1st, 2007 to be precise.
OK Mets…Let’s kick this rebuilding process into high gear now.
I will take the time out to credit
JEFF WILPON.
I don’t know what they talked about when he flew down to Atlanta back in June.  But Omar and Jeff seem to be committed to this transition.
GOOD!
Because I was getting tired of complaining about them taking this course of action.
As a fan, this gives me a whole new perspective about my team.
Now I exercise patience with my boys as they try to get this ship back on a positive course.
Now I get behind my kids and see who’s going to stick around and who might be useful in a future transaction.  Now I can just relax and watch
BASEBALL.
Welcome Boys. 
Your arrival is long overdue.
The Mets are 55-56 and 8.5 games back entering into tonight.
The new Met Era starts now.
 

 

 

Meet The Mets! Day One Arrives

Tonight was sweet; very sweet.  Bare with me while I feed myself some “feel-good”. 

The Mets fielded Ike at first; Tejada at second; Reyes was at his usual short as was Wright at third.  Chris Carter started in left; Pagan in center and Fernando Martinez was tasked with right field duties.  On the mound was Mike Pelfrey and behind the dish is where Josh Thole could be found.

Nine home-grown players started for the New York Mets tonight.  I won’t be getting into all my previously disturbed rants about how angry I “WAS” (that can change quickly…it all depends on Jeff) with this club and the direction they should have been working towards.

Nine; count em.  Read the box score tomorrow morning.  It really happened.

Ollie Perez and Luis Castillo are still here taking up space on the roster and stealing Wilpon money.  That is at the moment, unavoidable and unfortunate.  We’ll deal with that.

The important thing is the direction the Mets are finally headed in.  The question is are they committed to this total youth movement?  Time, the rest of this season and the upcoming winter will go a long way towards answering that.  We shall see.  My hope is they realize this is the right thing to do; rebuild it from the ground up.

And now to you Mr. Jeff Wilpon, with your gesture tonight, I reciprocate with my presentation to you from me….a new leash.  I mean that not in jest.

I will consider this DAY ONE of our collective future.  Omar drafted most of these players we see and will be speaking about within the near future.  At this point he deserves to see them through during their opportunities on the big club.  Jeff apparently spearheaded that meeting back in June in Atlanta to discuss laying the groundwork for a Mets rehabilitation in personnel, attitude, organizational direction and the overall malaise affecting the denizens of Citi Field.

Sure some of the embellishment in this post is just that; embellishment for the sake of making a clear declaration of agreement and sending a respectful message to Jeff Wilpon for committing…..to?  No ~ for just committing to a focused idea instead of reactive, first-aid riddled roster moves.

Tonight’s line-up indicates something strictly PRO-ACTIVE…; precisely what I have been begging for.

In turn Jeff….I request Met fans from all parts accessible…let’s get out to Citi and Meet the Mets instead of Boo’ing the Mess.

Mets win tonight.  It just went final.  Mike Pelfrey gets the win.  Fernando Martinez made a real nifty play in left field late in the game.  Josh Thole got a big double off Jimenez.  And THAT ~ is a “Happy Re-Cap”.

 
 

 

 

“Big PELF”

I’m on an
ORANGE and BLUE
feel-good right now
Big Mike Pelfrey’s Line tonight versus
the Colorado Rockies’ Ace
Ubaldo Jimenez
(this year’s leading N.L. Cy Young candidate)
7 innings pitched  ~  4 hits  ~  0 runs
1 walk  ~  4 strikeouts  ~  122 pitches; 73 strikes
He improves his 2010 record to 11-6.
Ubaldo Jimenez’ line:
7 innings  ~  4 hits  ~  1 run/earned  ~  4 WALKS  ~  8 Strikeouts  ~  122 pitches/73 strikes
Pelf went Pitch for Pitch tonight.  Thanks dude!

METS have a Major League Leading
16 shut-outs this season. 
This is coming from a pitching staff that was supposed to be the team’s Achilles heal.

Go Figure.
 
 
It’s not snowing in August here in NYC…
but it was an early Christmas for me tonight.
 
Let’s go (Kid) Mets
 
 
 
MIKE.BTB
 
 
 
 
VOTE for WEEK 7′s
HALL of VERY VERY GOOD
Candidates

HERE

 

 

METrospections ~ Road Rage!

<a href="VOTE FOR WEEK 5 HOVVG HERE 

 

These are my last three METrospections that have been sitting on my Blogspot Page.  Just a friendly reminder…If I’m not here, I am definitely there.  I do all my publishing from there and move things over to this page.  My Blogspot is just more Brooklyn intensive and that’s where I scream about my other teams.  There’s plenty of Baseball related posts that don’t make it here also.  If you should visit, Thank You for your patronage.

 

 

Friday, July 23, 2010

Two Minutes To Midnight

Two minutes to midnight?  Well…not exactly.  It’s actually 1:22a.m. and I’m still trying to formulate words that describe this Left Coast trip.  After tonight’s loss to the Dodgers and yet another shut-out to ponder, the Mets are now losers of 7 out of 8 games on this swing.  If were not for The Umpire that Giveth and Taketh and Whatever’th…Mr. Cuzzi, we’d be win-less.  Remember the gift he gave the Mets in San Francisco by blowing the call at home?  We then went to Arizona and got dusted there.  In L.A. things are starting out status-quo.  The Mets coming out of the All*Star break, are misfiring on all pistons.  But the Mets were failing before the break also.  They are losers of something like 12 of 15 lately.

Two minutes to midnight means they are two games above the .500 mark now.  That is an 800 lbs. gorilla placed squarely on Jerry Manuel’s shoulders.  Suck it up Dude!  Just like your GM said today in passing as he viewed you getting grilled by the media earlier in the morning…He said, “Welcome to New York”.  Of course he said it in jest and as he was running away with his briefcase in hand.  This was Jerry’s media time and I guess Omar didn’t want to take away from that.  Jerry was good with the jokes earlier today in the reporters circle.  I wonder if he needs a good scolding of the likes Alex Cora gave Big Pelfry and some of the beat writers the other night for laughing too much after another loss.

Jerry shook up the line-up tonight.  He’s trying what he can with what he has.  Omar was captured a short time later and endorsed Manuel very plainly.  Omar said he is happy with the job Jerry is doing and he’s the manager.  Well the manager could have put the line-up in a blender tonight but even that wouldn’t have been enough to shake the Mets out of this offensive funk.  The Mets offense has score like 4 runs in their last 1,000 innings or something.  They’ve been wasting quality starts that we’ve been fortunate to get.

Two minutes to midnight refers to the dreaded Left Coast Vote of Confidence.  Remember how the Mets fired Willie Randolph out there under the cover of NYC darkness?  I’m not saying Manuel is getting fired; any time soon.  But his clock is set at two minutes to midnight.  There is only one bright spot I can find for the Mets and Jerry right now.  That silver lining is that this road trip WILL end.  That’s it.  That’s all I can say.  They can’t stay on the Left Side for ever.  I don’t know if the results will change once they leave but at least we can’t pick on them while they’re there.  We’ll just have to do that when they get back!

That piano falling out of the sky has a Mets logo on it.  Look out!

Mike

http://thebrooklyntrolleyblogger.blogspot.com/

 

 

 

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

WILPONIANISM

 
An e-mail I sent in to Bill Daughtry’s show on 1050ESPN Radio:

Let’s get right to the heart of Met Matters and WILPONIANISM shall we?

Are the Mets going to make a genuine effort to sign Cliff Lee this winter?   Are they willing to do what other clubs won’t?   Will they do enough to convince him to pitch here?

ANSWER ~ I’m leaning towards no; They won’t.

The time is coming soon when the Mets need to decide whether WRIGHT and REYES are going to anchor this team before they’re up for big money.   If the Mets don’t commit in theory one way or another now,  we’ll just continue to spin our tires in the mud when it gets to that.   If they know they are not committed to them long term for big money, Trade Them.  If they are committed in theory, hurry up and continue the re-build process we started (started out of desperation and we are still deciding whether it worked out by design or accident!).   MY OPINION?   I have no idea what the Wilpons think anymore.

So what exactly is the plan here Bill?   Have the Mets thought about these things?   I say no because they are practiced at the art of Band-aids.   They’re still a reactive ownership.

The Wilpons themselves represent the biggest problem for the Mets’ fan base.   They have NEVER been forthright, truthful, open…about the financial health of the club.   Additionally is the Mets Medical Staff that inept to still be getting (injuries in general) Reyes’ oblique injury somewhat wrong OR are the dictates of the Wilpons at work in such matters?

In business, CORRECTIONS hurt.   All business’ go through corrections.   The Mets need a correction Bill. If the Mets do not impose a correction upon themselves they will forever chase their tails in a circle.   The time is now.   It was started already.   They just need to recognize, follow through and finish the job.  Remember how the Rangers recognized they needed a correction because of the ARod contract?   Remember how Colorado recognized they had a problem on their hands with the Mike Hampton contract?  Corrections.   Look at Colorado and Texas in today’s standings after a rebuilding process and a painful correction.

Joe McDonald did it with the Mets in the 60′s.  Much of his work had a tremendous (if indirect) effect on the 1986 Mets also (after all, Hubie Brooks, Mookie, Orosco, Backman, Mazzilli and the trade return of Ron Darling…etc) .  The 80′s Mets built by Frank Cashen were the next example of harnessing a group of young players, seeing who is going to work out and building around them.  Joe McLvaine tried it also in the 90′s.  It didn’t work out but we were all on board with the plan.

These kids saved Manuel’s job.   They saved Omar’s credibility.   They kept this team in the mix.   The kids changed the whole atmosphere around the team.   The kids changed the fan’s whole perception about the Flushing Ballclub.

The Yankees used to have AURA and MYSTIQUE appearing nightly once.   Now that the Met regulars are back together again, our version ~ ANGST and ANXIETY start their summer tour through mediocrity.

The CORRECTION I speak of, of course is Beltran, Castillo, Maine, Perez, Barajas, and Francoeur.  Beltran, Castillo, Maine and Ollie need to be corrected post haste!   Find a way to rid the roster of these players or minimize their playing time and/or impact.   The money is spent!   That’s part of a correction. Within two years there’s a lot of money coming off their (Mets) books.   Those players are the OLD GUARD.   This ship needs to sail.   We need to move on.   The correction needs to be made.

If the Mets are not committed players at the trade deadline (and for what I have no idea), if they are not serious players for Lee this winter, if they are not thinking about Wright and Reyes with regards to the future…..what are they doing?  What exactly is the plan here?

Give me all the kids I can have if the Mets do nothing by the deadline.   I want Thole full time.   I want F-Mart and Tejada playing.   There’s a whole list of names I want involved on the big club between now and Opening Day next year Bill.   The rest of Baseball and the respective GM’s out there may not like our prospects but there are a handful I do like and want to see them now.   This is where the team is.   We are not a serious playoff contender.   Period.   Rebuild it now.   Complete what you started Jeff.   Do it!   So much of it has been done already.   Just finish the job.   We can then trade and use free agency to supplement, compliment and augment as needed.   Build a core and do it now.   There are players in this organization that can be somebody.

If you want to help this club right now…package Francoeur and a prospect for a right field upgrade and some bullpen help.   Oh yea…get another starter too; anyone at this point. Just do not overpay for something average if that will make Met fans happy.  Me?  I’m not interested in an average pitcher.  I’d rather give a kid a chance in our present context.

The OLD GUARD is back and so is the Met fan’s angst and anxiety.   Is it me Bill?   Do I just not get it? You know for three years I’ve been screaming for this.   And for three years all I’ve heard is people complain about the Mets and how bad this, and how bad that…..and they don’t this, and they don’t that crap.   And I was told I couldn’t have been anymore wrong than I was in 2007.   Oh Yea…I was called lost and lacking baseball acumen back then by someone.  Really Bill?   Really?   I’ll blow this horn till I die or get what I want (win or lose…just give us the chance to have a clean slate).

Bill…after all this, I can still go on about how the Johan Santana window is closing…and the ”then what” scenario; ~ About needing to replace K-Rod after next year (Parnell has stuff to be a closer). Those are more MET opportunities for applying Band-aids in the Wilponian world we live in. When will this vicious cycle end?

After that Bill….you know where my head is at. What kind of club does Jeff want his POP’s team to be? It’s all on him.

Gee I wish we had more forthright ownership.

Mike.BTB

http://thebrooklyntrolleyblogger.blogspot.com/

 
 
 
 
 
Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Hey Jeff ~ Feel the Breeze

On June 25th, I posted with glee the Mets were starting 7 home grown players out of nine for that night’s game.  A short time after that the Mets set an organizational record for the most consecutive games played with the most home grown players in the line-up.

Everyone knows by now how much I’ve been snivelling about how my ship has sailed regarding this team’s old guard.  Ollie, Maine, Beltran, Castillo, and Barajas and Francoeur too; I’m DONE, and have been and you all know this!  I’ve been screaming about all of this since I moved into the Hood over the winter…haven’t I?

If the Wilpons will not permit a quality deadline transaction to improve our pitching, I don’t want the old guard wasting my time anymore.  I realize I am alone on an island with my thinking.  Just remember I kept reminding everyone how badly I wanted this team broken up in 2007.  I also realize that my wishes and the Mets’ reality are in conflict.  These players I mentioned have contracts that just don’t disappear.  I get all that.  I guess I’m just killing myself over a philosophical debate here.  But having said that, finally, three years later after me asking for the team to be gutted, the Mets embarked on transitioning this team to it’s young farm hands (I think it came about through desperation but we can argue whether the Mets did it by design or got here by accident).

What do the Mets need right now to make a playoff push?  We know.  They need a top flight number two pitcher and a slugger better than Jeff Francoeur.  Francoeur can be packaged so he doesn’t bother me too much right now.  Pitching?  There’s a large price to pay for that.  I am not willing to pay a whole lot for anyone right now considering Lee is off the market. 

ROY OSWALT?  The Astros will want too much I believe.  What will the price be and how many of my kids do they want?  And I just don’t trust Oswalt in a Met uniform in a year two or three scenario.  I will just not do it.  Oswalt to me represents another expensive Met band-aid.  If the Mets want to get Lilly on the cheap or something like that?…Whatever!  Really.  Just don’t pay with anything good OR don’t do it at all.  In other words…forget it.  Keep your Lilly’z

What I am saying is I am willing to let the chips on 2010 fall where they may.  I do not want this front office to do anything short-sighted.  I am not interested in a three month fix.

Here’s my dream of Opening Day 2011:
catcher ~ JOSH THOLE
1st base ~ IKE DAVIS
2nd base ~ REESE HAVENS (AA) ~ JON MALO (AA) ~ RUBEN TEJADA (AAA)
shortstop ~ JOSE REYES ~ (see 2nd base candidates),  WILMER FLORES
3rd base ~ DAVID WRIGHT
left field ~ Jason Bay…we have no choice.  I was warm at best over his signing.
center field ~ ANGEL PAGAN
right field ~ FERNANDO MARTINEZ

Starter ~ Johan
Starter ~ MIKE PELFREY
Starter ~ JON NIESE
Starter ~ (AAA) DYLAN OWEN
Starter ~ (AAA) DILLON GEE
Starter ~ (AAA) HENNRY MEJIA
Starter ~ FERNANDO NIEVE

closer ~ BOBBY PARNELL
bullpen ~ EDDIE KUNZ

Now, will these names I mentioned win me a Championship?  C’mon…I don’t think so.  But you assemble them together and see what you have.  See if there is a core worth building around.  Do I think we have some players like that?  Yes.  Put them together and see if they can gel.  See which ones work well together.  Keep shaking the pieces and watch them fall into slots.  Then…, I say we take the steps necessary through astute trades and using free agency to compliment, augment and supplement that core of young, joyful, gamely, hungry players.

In a more simpler posting of mine…that’s it; That’s my plan as of today.  It hasn’t really differed.  I’m still pursuing the same things I wanted in April; the same things I wanted over the winter and the same things I’ve been looking to take place since July of 2007.

Do I think the Wilpons are going to blow this for me?  Absolutely!!

I don’t think they realize what they started and where they are right now.  Take a look.  Since the All*Star Game, the Mets are 1-4 (as of 7/21 they are 1-5 since the break; and have lost 11 of their last 15).  Beltran made his return and that lone victory we have since the break is when Beltran did not start.  For the first time this season, last night against Arizona, we fielded our Type-A Line-up.  Beltran, Reyes, Castillo and the rest of the starting cast finally played in a game together.  So what happened?  The D-Backs blew us out.  We left a lot more than our hearts in San Francisco when we got shut-out twice there.  Now we haven’t been able to win a game in the desert yet.

I guess what is OLD is NEW again.  We’ve reassembled the cast of regulars and the chaos is back as well.
The Mets are already being appeasers with Beltran.  Instead of making him fit into the new context of this re-invented line-up, the Mets have acquiesced to Beltran by allowing him to play CF over Pagan because he’s “more comfortable” there.  He’s wearing a brace the size of a milk crate and he’s already back telling the team what’s good for him.  THAT’S why I have no more use for the old guard folks.  That’s why my ship has sailed.  The return of Castillo and Beltran have already caused ripples in the water and disruptions with positive efforts the young lings put forward to help keep us with-in sight of first place.  The other guys are back and we’ve stumbled out of the gate entering this 2nd half.

Is there a correlation?  Who cares.  It still doesn’t get me what I want.

Yea…the Wilpons are going to get this wrong; very very wrong.  They have no plan.  Omar MIGHT have one but it’s clear Jeff Wilpon is pulling all the strings and their end of the business is in bad and worsening shape…or so we hear.  That means the Wilpons are in somewhat in survival mode and people do desperate things when in that situation.  The lack of a plan and desperation is a horrible mix for me to fathom as it pertains to my team.

In 2011 we have expiring contracts and flexibility on the way.  Maybe the best thing the Mets can do at the trade deadline is…Nothing.(?)  That wouldn’t bother me.  Don’t do anything stupid JEFF.  Don’t over pay for OSWALT.  If there is another guy who will eat up innings and make a game of things in the 4th slot…….fine.  There’s a couple of names out there to chose from (who don’t impress me at all!)

The kids of this organization have saved Jerry Manuel’s job this season.  They also helped Omar save face.  The kids of this organization have given the fan base a whole new perspective.

Don’t blow this for us JEFF!  What is in your best interest right now is to start weaning yourself off the money siphoning players we have, cutting ties with the dead weight, promoting the players from within and signing Cliff Lee this winter.

Jeff promised us last Fall, his Father’s company was in good shape, the Mets were healthy, we would be active with trades and seeking free agents, and that payroll would not be a restrictive issue.  Oh yea, he also told us Omar is free to run this team as he sees fit.

Here’s the answer to that.  The Wilpons have never been forthright about their financial troubles.  I believe the only reason they signed Jason Bay was for appearances and fan perception.  Why? ~ Because they do things like that.  Oh yea, we got joined at the hip with Ollie Perez and Omar got lucky with R.A. Dickey.  Payroll?  Again…the Wilpons say one thing and behave a different way.  And it’s clear Omar can’t do anything unless Jeff approves it.

So…you tell me Jeff…!?  This is all up to you buddy.  Your season ticket holder’s faith lies in the balance.  Me?  The wind is picking up and I’m ready to sail Dude.  Everything is coming together.  Are we going to go full-blown re-build or what?  Most of it is here already.  Just finish the job and don’t blow it.  Feeling the Breeze Jeff?

mike.BTB

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

 
 
 

METrospection; Brought to you by The “V”

Loria, David Samson, Beinfest, and now Bobby Valentine and what coaches he brings in, make for one of the elite front offices in Baseball. If you throw in their very fertile farm system…when the Marlins get their new park they are going to be down right insane with the cash infusion. The Wilpons will still be their relenting, meek/mawkish selves and there-in stemmed my fear of Valentine at the helm for the Fish. The Nats soon will have money back in their pockets when Peter Angelos finishes getting his fill of territorial rights fees and GM Rizzo is fresh. The Braves front office doesn’t need detailing by me/us. The Marlin’s is better. That leaves us and the Phils. Is the Mets’ front office better than the Phil’s?  Amaro vs Omar?  Pfff ~ I’d have fun debating that but clearly the Phils’ run indicates theirs is better. If only Jeff Wilpon had a darker side.  It’s really up to Jeff how cunning or savvy he’s willing to be with his Pop’s company.  But with the way the Mets have shaped thing up with the younglings and a return of Reyes (have to credit Dickey too!) ~ It’s gotta make a Met fan think about the possibilities this team has presented for itself.  I’m thinking, are they aware enough to recognize what they have here, whether they got here by sheer luck or design?  This team is almost totally transitioned now.  Will they enhance an amazingly, quickly and remarkably rebuilt team?  And How?

Obviously I am totally in the NOW and rooting for my team every day.  But if we stay on this present course with regard to the changes towards young players we’ve incorporated and the select free agent signing, or a select trade, 2011 is something I’ll be extremely excited about.  If 2011 can give me 8 home grown players in Mets uniforms (a very real possibility if Fernando Martinez is in RF next year) starting in one game like they will tonight?  I’m crazy with delight. 

Understand my angst.  On July 1st, 2007 I called into “the show” and announced I wanted this team gutted.  I have stood by that comment!  It was very unpopular to say especially coming off the 2006 season.  It seemed even more ridiculous to suggest considering the Mets had just taken 2 of 3 from Philly that weekend.  I felt then I recognized what the team really was and I was committed to selling everything…and selling HIGH!  That’s as much as I will get into my feelings then…for now.  Just know I stood by that and meant it wholeheartedly!  Today finally, everyone has seen the results of turning that edition over.  Your proof is in the pudding.  Trust me; I know the argument against reasoning it wasn’t a good idea then and today’s players were not in the mix on July 1st of 2007.  To that I say DUH!  What I am saying is at the trading deadline of ’07 prospects were being given away like candy on Halloween for the pennant stretch.  I could have named a team for all cast offs I had in mind.  Well, I got laughed off and I had to wait an excruciating 3 years to get what I always wanted; my team turned over.

The Mets starting Nine tonight will consist of SEVEN home grown players; seven home-grown players with some who have legitimate chances at being Big Leaguers.  If F-Mart was in RF that would be eight with Jason Bay being the lone exception.  Josh Thole was called up from AAA and will start tonight in place of our injured regular.

…..I think this team is on the precipice of something very good.  And it has everything to do with not having the same cast of characters of 2006-2009.  Compare any of those clubhouses to the one which exists today.  You know the differences.  Just put the “success” of ’06 aside.  Jerry was here for those days of idiocy in the clubhouse with too many ”Latinos” (I’m half P.R. myself), and not talking to reporters, and accusations about Delgado throwing Randolph under a bus, and Wagner shooting off his mouth, and LoDuca shooting off his mouth, etc etc etc.  There was a lot of drama on that team. What ever players linger from those days…your Maine’s and Perez’ are safely in Jerry Manuel’s doghouse (DL’d but in the dog house none-the-less).  Beltran will be there too if he doesn’t play good soldier when he gets back.  I hope this organization gives Manuel their blessings in treating Beltran as he sees fit.  But because Manuel remembers an anxiety ridden locker room under Randolph, I think he’ll do what he needs to keep a condition like that at bay.  Yes, I believe Manuel has the gumption to take such a stance.  He seems to have no fear talking derisively of chosen players to the press.  If Beltran comes back a Diva, Jerry will have a good round of jokes and levity for the beat writers.  Count on it.

The Mets hold all the leverage with Beltran.  The money on his contract is spent already.  If he comes back and is useful, fit him in.  Platoon him.  Rotate the outfield of 4 players with time for each.  If he feels anything in his knee, he himself will shut it down.  You think he’s going to risk further injury for the Mets?  Pfff ~ Yea right.  If he’s an uncooperative Diva insisting on things, put him in the dog house!  Carlos Beltran has no choice but to play hard next year regardless of how much of a Diva he wants to be.  It’s his contract year.  What’s he gonna do?  Dog It?  Blame a twinge in his knee?  The Mets should not allow Beltran to come back on this team and disrupt something positive happening at Citi Field so far.  If he comes back with a team first mind set and understands the team’s and his own situation, everything should work out fine.  But I am counting on Carlos Beltran for nothing.  My ship has sailed.

I’ve always said these kids were going to save Jerry and Omar’s job.  Who cares about being right.  I’m just happy it’s happening.  Manuel and 2011 is a different conversation.

If Josh Thole starts tonight we’ll be fielding an all home-grown diamond,- Pagan in CF and with Pelfrey on the mound?…Snap a picture because this doesn’t happen often. As a Met fan ~ OUTSTANDING! Give me more! This team is a far cry from the Opening Day edition. They should continue this direction. Keep all those malcontents in the doghouse. I’d like F-Mart in RF by 2011. Dillon Gee and Dylan Owen were promoted to AAA. Infielders Reese Havens and Jonathan Malo are doing quite well in AA.  Stinson and Kunz are still growing up and the more current Mejia and Nieve round out a little list of chips. I smell something brewing in METropolis. I hope!  Mets are in a good spot for a Cliff Lee trade we all want. I don’t want to rent him but we can do this.   It’s really all about what kind of club Jeff wants his Pop’s Mets to be. This team has a 1984 feel to it now.  That notion may have been mentioned along the way but it’s undeniable.  Not earlier this season or in any of the last 3 seasons but today?- I’m feeling 84′ish.

Mike BTB

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

 

SUNDAY is last day to vote on this week’s HOVVG candidates.  Check the links to the right of the page, learn about the Hall of Very Very Good and VOTE.

 

Maelstrom of Discontent

“Well,  I still have my uniform on?!”
That’s what Jerry Manuel does.  He makes the “beat guys” feel like they’re all his buddies.  Every QandA with Jerry is a Bud-Lite moment.  Jerry embraces them and makes em all feel good about their jobs because he makes jokes and feeds them just the right blend of corn-meal and grass-mix by-product to satiate their sensationalized article writing their editors demand.  Effective?  It’s especially effective for Jerry Manuel.  If it weren’t for Jerry holding the Media close to his bosom with humor, jocularity and random acts of gangsta sarcasm, the maelstrom to have Jerry Manuel would have gotten him fired long ago.  That maelstrom is usually whipped up by the Media first; not the fans.  The only reason Jerry Manuel is still manager of the New York Mets is because Jerry outsmarted the media this long.
Keep your friends close; but keep your enemies closer.
The media never created a maelstrom to have Jerry Manuel fired.  Sure they’ve had the burner on simmer and it even got HOT for Jerry once in a while; - as is the current situation after a 90 minute meeting with Met Brass in Atlanta of all places.  When Jerry Manuel emerged from that meeting his Maenad’s were there to greet him.  When the Chorus asked of their Bacchus what happened in the meeting, their deity squeezed a grape into this goblet of wine:  “I still got my uniform on?!”  …And because they’re all buddies, the on-site Media nod their heads in a collective, “yea…we got your back dog!”…and then go write their spin.  Take care to understand I’m talking about the beat writers here.  Through wittiness and with an acknowledgment by the writers Omar assembled these players, Manuel gets a nice slice of slack in the daily(s).  When a guy like Mike Lupica decides to chime in about sports these days it’s only when the fishing is good.  Today he served up this big plate of obvious   …- I say be gone with you and go continue chasing your political aspirations.  I used to read his articles all the time but he’s slowly turning himself into a writer’s Howard Cosell of his later angrier years.
 
Allow me to digress.  For two years Manuel has floated the idea of batting Reyes third in the order.  Jerry thought it was part of Jose Reyes’ natural progression as a hitter.  This year, due to circumstances that dictated alternative measures, Jerry got his way and Reyes was inserted into the third slot (he has recently been returned to batting lead-off again).  Before I go on a tangent, here’s my question.  If Jerry felt so strongly about batting Reyes third, why does he ask Reyes, his three hitter, to bunt in two consecutive games?  These are just moves to ponder.

Back to my points….The 90 minute meeting between Jerry Manuel, Omar Minaya, Asst. GM John Ricco and Jeff Wilpon was as Jeff puts it, “…just Baseball talk.”  He stated he didn’t come to Atlanta to fire anyone.  He admitted if he was happy with the current situation he wouldn’t be having this meeting.  When pressed, Jeff offered he would have made a change over the winter regarding a manger and or a General Manager, but he did not act.  So today he explains they are assembled together in an effort to “work this out”.  Jeff Wilpon reminded the assembled media about his expectations of Omar Minaya and Jerry Manuel and about his lack of satisfaction so far.  But it appears the Wilpons are more committed to keeping Omar under contract than entertaining issues of being penny foolish-dollar wise.  Jerry Manuel is a lame duck manager which ever way you look at this.

I have been through all this before.  I’ve been doing it since December.  My displeasure with the way this organization is run is pretty well known by now.  But here we go again anyway.

If the Mets fire Manuel and replace him with Bob Melvin, I will be highly upset.  I’d rather let Manuel finish the season.  I am not in favor of Omar Minaya specifically, hiring Bobby Valentine.  I do not believe that relationship will work.  Omar Minaya was a Steve Phillips front office import.  Bobby Valentine and Steve Phillips could not get along.  Valentine wanted more say in personnel matters.  Phillips was strongly opposed.  Valentine will want as much input now as he wanted then.  Valentine has a very strong character and his baseball intellect is of superior quality.  But Valentine will exercise every bit a savvy and cunning intellect against Omar Minaya who has himself been looking over his shoulder at John Ricco.  To also put a very dead-spin on that relationship, Valentine will out think and counter Omar at every turn.  Valentine will spin circles around Omar.  A Valentine/Minaya duo will not work in my opinion.  And I’m not even so sure Omar deserves to hire a third manager.

There is only one situation I am agreeable with regarding the hiring of Bobby Valentine.  If Omar is allowed to hire him, the Wilpons must turn and fire Omar outright and do one of two things; promote Bobby Valentine to General Manager and let him hire his own manager; OR seek permission from the Tampa Rays for the services of Jerry Hunsicker to be GM with Valentine managing under him.  The two are very familiar with each other dating back to more stable and successful days in the Mets’ organization.  Before Bobby Valentine ever managed a game for the Mets, he served as a coach here.  A return to Hunsicker and Valentine, both with connections to those earlier Met successes, under these circumstances is something I’d welcome.

That is my Bobby Valentine scenario; a path which I am not inclined to follow but I would be agreeable to.  However, the Wilpons have been there and done that with Bobby Valentine.  Valentine was critical of the Wilpons and they have memories like elephants.  They do not take criticism too well.

Of course my ultimate pipe-dream is for the Wilpons to do what it takes to get Larry Beinfest in the Mets’ fold.  He is the guy I want.  I said it before.  I say it here again now.

I believe Jerry Manuel and Omar Minaya should be joined at the hip.  Another terribly kept secret of mine is my total vote of no confidence in Asst. GM John Ricco.  If he is indeed named the next GM of the Mets, like the Bob Melvin situation, I will be highly upset!  No John Ricco!  No Bob Melvin!  If those are my choices for change I will stick with Omar and Jerry!  Thank you but no thanks Mr. Wilpon.

I have stated my support for Omar Minaya in the past.  I cling to him because he is the last resource Frank Cashen directly or indirectly left behind (Cashen brought in many executives the Wilpons have exhausted and through Steve Phillips, a Frank Cashen import, we arrived at our last two GM’s in Duquette and Omar.)  Omar is the last executive familiar to the Wilpons and vice-versa over the course of 30 years.

The next General Manager of the New York Mets must be an off-campus hire.  Period!  The cycle of inbred thought and a watered down if not diluted executive staff must be infused with new blood if not now, when Omar is relieved of his duties.  Anything other than what I posted here will not make me happy.

Met fans need to give me more names other than Bob Melvin and Bobby Valentine (for reasons I stated above) before I say fire Jerry Manuel.  Who are the replacements Met fans are contemplating?  All I hear is fire Manuel.  I’m cool with that, but who’s the replacement folks?

Here’s another old line of mine.  The S.S. Wilpon just turned into the iceberg!  I dropped the life boats a long time ago.  I’m not about to raise them back up.

 
…And so as to not end this post on a negative note, Jeff Wilpon said everything I wanted to hear from this situation and from my ownership.  He does that.  He is very comfortable with the media and handles himself very well.  I just need for all that to translate into something more.  More what?  More Better.  I’m trying folks.

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

 
 

F-Mart, You Forgot Him Didn’t You? We’re Gonna Need Him

Fernando Martinez. He even came with a built-in nickname…F-Mart.

What happens to him now? Where does he fit into the Mets’ future plans now that they signed Jason Bay? Is he a trade chip now? Did he turn off any advanced scouts with his play? Did he turn any on? Funny how our once most prized prospect’s name wasn’t even mentioned once this winter, about anything. Does he at least get to go back to being our top prospect again? Hmmm?.

I like Angel Pagan coming off our bench. I like Angel Pagan, period. He just needs to stay injury free if he wants to stay here and play for the Mets. Carlos Beltran is the X-Factor here. Is he going to stay healthy? He’s becoming quite the fragile one. Can Jason Bay cover enough of CitiField’s expansive left/center field. Heck, can Beltran’s creeky knees keep after it in that big outfield? These are the things that concern me. Jason Bay can leg out a double OK, but he’s not the swiftest of foot shagging balls in the gap. Jason doesn’t have the Monster behind him here. At Citi he’ll have an overly contrived, impotently high, black wall lined with orange laughing at him behind his back all game long.

The CitiField outfield demands swift footed fielders with good arms. The dimensions practically demand it. With Jason Bay out there I fear all we did was give city pigeons another statue to land on. This is not the second coming of DoNN Clendenon here folks. Donn’s team had better PITCHING!

In a couple of years, 2 or 3, Jason Bay’s contract and the contract of 7 other players will account for $110 million alone as a result of these back loaded contracts Omar has been giving out. Fred WILPON is going to freak!-just like he did in 1993 and 2003. He’s going to be up to his earlobes in bad, late ballooning contracts of aged players and be fielding a miserable team with no young talent coming up from the farm in the near or distant future. I will scream this all day and all year. We keep mindlessly throwing money at second rate solutions to revolving and repeating problems, (see everyone other than Reyes, Wright & Beltran, the only stable elements the last 5 years). Meanwhile, we keep losing draft picks signing these free agents, and our farm system that has come to a grinding halt, a system with drying blood and lacking pulse, a thriving system since 1964, a proud system, is blue and orange in the face suffering lack of talent as a partial consequence. Whatever Tony Bernazard was or wasn’t doing, and Omar Minaya not really following through with his reputation of scouting and evaluative acumen he originally was reknown for, sped up the decay of our lethargic minor system.

I’m a capitalist folks. I do not want a salary cap. You can’t begrudge the Mets. They spend money. All I’m asking for is a plan…A freakin’ PLAN and stop throwing away perfectly good money on mindless out the door purchases. Be smarter. Use free agency sparingly to put you over the top or to get that last piece of the puzzle. It shouldn’t be used to stock your roster. Farm production, astute trades then free agency, in that order, is what I’m all about. Any dummy can write a check. Any GM can spend over a billion dollars in 10 years and walk away with one World Series to show for it. *(Holy Cow…I went there!)* You think that’s smart GM’ing? I call it going to Vegas and doubling-down until you win back your losses and walking away with some cash too.

Where are my TUMS?

METS’ HISTORY is, was and always should be ensconced in Pitching and Defense. With CitiFiled’s dimensions, that traditional Mets’ philosophy is never more appropriate, never more ideal, for this team, than right now!

Captain Chaos and his sidekick Confusion (that would be Mets-R-Us featuring lil’Jeff), need now, more than ever to hire outside consultation.

We are heading into the iceberg but in the First Class section no one has a clue.

Jason Bay is another patch in the quilt, not a piece to a puzzle.

Another short sighted move fostered by an organization that has no real plan in place? Check.

This team has not developed anyone since Wright and Reyes that have had impact. That covers a 4 to 5 year drought. I like Pelfrey. Yep, I sure do. Just don’t talk impact to me yet.

Fernando Martinez. Don’t forget about him Met fans. I know you did! Someone is going to get hurt in our outfield in a New York Minute. I hope he’s there to step in and step up.

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