Results tagged ‘ Josh Thole ’

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
 
 
 
 
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METrospections ~ Road Rage!

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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/

 

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Tryin to Dig up some Dirt on the Farm

I am the one who accused the Mets farm system of being dry, spent, and being a system that has come to an abrupt halt for the first time since the mid-60′s since Joe McDonald was over-see’er of operations.  I’ve said that more than once I suppose.  The last two impact players this system has developed were Jose Reyes and David Wright (and Scott Kazmir).  Those players were inherited by Omar Minaya when he assumed GM duties towards the tail end of the 2004 season.  There has not been a farm development of impact since.  That is the gist of what I’ve felt for some time now.

But even I can’t ignore what is transpiring in Met Camp this spring.  The Mets’ minor leaguers are holding their own in camp and some are even impressing.  The player/prospects in camp this year, last year and to a very lesser degree 3 years ago are not just prospects to speak of, they are here in a bunch.  And interestingly this is all after the Johan Santana trade.

Fernando Martinez, Josh Thole, Mike Pelfrey, Fernando Nieve, Jon Niese, Eddie Kunz and Bobby Parnell we already know and are familiar with.  This spring it’s hard to ignore what Henrry Mejia, Ike Davis and Miguel Tejada are doing.  I’ll be nice and toss in Daniel Murphy and even say there is hope yet for Nick Evans.  My point is, even I have to look around and admit that these guys are here in a bunch.  Where did they all come from?  I, many fans, critics and analysts all agreed the Mets farm system was barren of talent.
I guess they had more than we realized.

This forces me to rethink my whole position.  I’ll stick to this century.  As I mentioned Reyes and Wright (and Kazmir) were the last impact players the system produced.  They were drafted under the Steve Phillips/Duquette days.

For ten years I’ve watched the NYM Class A affiliate, the Brooklyn Cyclones stay in contention within their league.  They’ve won division titles, appeared in a couple of championship series and even won one.  These are low level prospects and signings from the June draft.  But for ten years I’ve watched most of them fizzle out at AA Binghamton.  I understand the minor leagues is a weeding out process.  But our prospects were getting outright deleted at Binghamton.  Under Steve Phillips, the Mets hired a Howie Freiling as manager of AA for the 2001 and 2002 seasons.  In 2003 John Stearns was given the job followed by Ken Oberkfell in 2004.

When Omar Minaya took over as GM of the Mets, he hired Tony Bernazard to be his Special Asst. to the GM.  In December of 2004 Tony Bernazard was made Vice President of Development.

The Binghamton Mets made the Eastern League playoffs in 2000 and 2004 and got bounced in the first round both times.  The AA Mets have not made the Eastern League playoffs since.

Upon his promotion, Bernazard purged AA operations and hired Jack Lind to manage Binghamton in 2005.  The next year he hired Juan Samuel to manage.  The team came in 3rd place in 2006.  The following year Bernazard hired Mako Oliveras and he lasted three years finishing 6th, 3rd, and 6th again.  As I mentioned and as you can see, no playoffs and quite poor finishes.

Now I’m stuck trying to make sense of all the possibilities swirling around my skull matter.  I need someone to blame for making me arrive at my original conclusions before I’m ready to admit I fell victim to my own propaganda.

We know Bernazard needed to be fired for his behavior and conduct unbecoming a Team Executive.  He ripped off his shirt and challenged team members of AA to fight in the locker-room.  We know all about that.
My question is, was Tony Bernazard addressing a very real concern and malignant attitudes within the AA team and just went about addressing it in an entirely inappropriate way?  I’m still convinced this farm system was suffering an aneurysm at the AA level.  Again, I have been watching the A-level Brooklyn Cyclones play and move on to A-Long Season and AA only to get caught in the prospect Black Hole.

We (Mets) are still looking for that one prospect we can call Omar’s.  There is yet that player we can point to and say, “Yea, that’s Omar’s guy”.  And by Omar we have to include Bernazard.  The quantity (and I am in no way discussing the quality of these prospects here, no.  I merely want to push forward the notion that we have a bunch, and they are working their way into the conversation) of farm hands we are discussing today is very different from the discussion being held just 3 years ago.

Tony Bernazard was fired for his actions in December of 2009.  Tim Teufel will be managing AA this season.  Teuful managed the Cyclones several years ago.

There is no doubt that all the prospects listed in this post are attributable to Omar’s regime and in part to Bernazards work.  The two have been over-see’ers of the minor league operation since 2004 (with no AA playoff appearances).  Are we now starting to see the fruits of drafting over the last 4 years? 

Some of the better drafting teams around the league are Milwaukee, Oakland, Boston, L.A., Phila, L.A.A,  etc. – but that’s a short list with obvious omissions.  Was Tony Bernazard and Omar Minaya doing a better job than anyone realized and keeping it on the down-low?  That remains to be seen.  These are still prospects and nothing is ever certain with them.  What I am certain of however, is there are more of them to talk about than there have been in the last 6 years.

My position has been that during Phillips as GM the farm system was still operating but in dire need of rejuvenation.  Under Omar Minaya, 2004 through 2007 were meager harvests from the farm; an exhausted soil was producing no more I thought/think.  But then again those year’s players would have been some of the previous regime’s drafts.  But the trickle which started in 2007 seems to have graduated to a stream it appears.  There is a very healthy amount of young players in camp making a case for themselves why they should be breaking camp with the Mother Ship.

Now again I ask you to judge, did I sell myself on self-hyped, self inflicted propaganda?
Did I jump the gun too early on Omar and Bernazard’s effectiveness building the system back up, and we are only now beginning to see the benefits of a couple of years of revamping operations?
Am I wrong to think that in Phillips’ last days everything was going to pot and the minor league operations with it?

It’s hard to ignore all the prospects and options (if you want to stretch things further) currently in camp being supplied by the farm.  This is Omar and Bernazard’s work.  As such Bernazard should be given credit if in fact many of these prospects pan out.  But Damn It!!!  He was a social misfit, quite unprofessional to say the least, and completely out of line with his behavior and absolutely needed to be fired.  But if in fact we are starting to realize the fruits of his unorthodox ways, the only thing I can really say is “Only in Met’s Ville”.

Maybe that aneurysm I thought the farm suffered from at the AA Level was what Bernazard was looking to correct and he just took the wrong course of action.  Maybe the system’s screeching halt I accused the Mets’ higher ups of causing was merely the adjustment period from one regime to the other.  I accused Omar of not living up to his reputation as being a talent evaluator.  I accused the system of breathing it’s last breaths.

If this is the beginning of a flow of prospects we’ll get to see in years to come, then Omar and even Bernazard deserve more credit than I eve
r gave them regarding this.  Perhaps that aneurysm I thought existed was really the Phillips regimes last gasp of  breath and we’re finally seeing the sytem’s resuscitation.

Getting a good read on players in spring training is not an exact science.  Minor league player development is.  There’s no doubt Tony Bernazard acted like a punk many times, not only during the incident that got him fired.  But if in fact he is the one who fixed the pot hole at AA, all I can say is – What a Shame.  If in fact Omar is equally responsible for a re-invigorated farm, then let’s trust him to find another Seargent-at-Arms in spite of Bernazard’s current replacement..
That’s if he (and Jerry Manuel) last the season.  These kids just might save both of their jobs.  Only time will tell at this point.

Now if I’ve over-reacted over the last few years I’ll admit being too hard on management.  If I’m wrong, I’ll be wrong.  It wouldn’t be the first and it won’t be the last time.  I just want to wait a little longer and see what happens.  I still feel I’m right about some things, I’m willing to bend on the others.  But we shall see.

The early feel of the 2010 season is tasting eerily similar to last years BeatLoaf so far.  Yep!  These kids could save some jobs, make a lot of fans happy and prove a lot of baseball pundits wrong.  Yep.

This is a work in progress.  There will be no conclusion for this post tonight.  I’m trying to be open when it’s easier to just abuse them.  I also had to think about Tony Bernazard in a way no one has really taken the time to consider.  Him being, and acting out like a street punk and the fans not seeing anything coming up the pipe may have eclipsed what good he may have actually affected.  Time will definitely tell.
happy Mr. Met.jpgBut today, I post as a pleasantly surprised Met fan, who over the last 2 to 4 days took notice of  the collective group of prospects and said to myself, this looks healthy.  When you deal in quantity you can pick out the quality.  The thing is the numbers.  There’s strength in numbers.  Old adage; Same truth.

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Spring Training: The Other Side of the Ball

Spring Training: Met’s Positional Players, My Anxiety

In no particular order, here is the Good, the Bad and the Ugly…
Mets Spring Training:  Positional Players

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CATCHER – ….has been a problem for the Mets since MIKE PIAZZA’s last game and has gone unresolved to the present.  Omar has never really found a stable solution for this position.  Omar brought in PAUL LoDUCA to replace Piazza and was servicable for a year and 1/2.  It’s been a revolving door ever since.

I would give the job outright to JOSH THOLE.  It’s easy to get caught up in the sparkle of a promising September call-up like he experienced in ’09.  Having said that, I don’t think I’m getting caught up by a sparkling Sept. call-up.

The other options are OMIR SANTOS and HENRY BLANCO.  Bengie MOLINA chose against signing with the Mets for less money to stay in S.F.  Omar tried.  I cede him that.  But by no means was Molina a solution for the catching position.  At best he would have been the latest through the revolving door.

Back to Santos and Blanco, they are considered the defensive specialists.  Problem is they are both offensively challenged.  Let’s be honest.  If you’re going to tell me one of them is the starter while we continue to look for someone else and we’re sending Thole to the farm for more seasoning…..That’s fair.  If I’m being forced to be pragmatic about this….that’s fair.  But my official stance is I would give the job to Thole.  My official opinion is Omar hasn’t been able to give this position stability entering the 5th year since Piazza last played here.  And my sarcasm asks…Santos and Blanco?  Really?  Make the arguement why one of those two should start over Thole and get back to me.

I’m going to admit, all I want from my catchers is superlative defense.  I’m a Jerry Grote guy if that gives you an idea what I’m talking about.  Having said that….gimmie Thole.

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FIRSTBASE – I made it quite clear…I wanted Carlos Delgado back under a one-year deal…Like Jane wanted Damon back!  He is so close to 500 HR and 1600 RBI and I wanted him to do it as a Met.  If you know me by now and how I followed the Winter Leagues, even I have to admit he was not moving well and struggled in Puerto Rican League play.  I saw it for myself.  Ask me and I will tell you, in better days, it was Delgado and not J.Reyes that made the Mets’ line-up dangerous. 

A quick digression which leads me into our other options…. When Carlos Delgado was a free agent he chose to go to Florida over us.  There were rumors and speculation it was because Tony Bernazard was playing the Latino Card and it turned Delgado off.  Omar traded to get Carlos Delgado anyway.  He traded a kid of ours at the time, Mike Jacobs.  Now we just re-signed Jacobs.

DANIEL MURPHY – This is tough for me.  We need more slugging from 1B.  It’s just too hard to “hide” him in our line-up.  I like the kid and I want to be patient with him.  In 508 at-bat he only struck out 69 times and had 38 doubles, while batting .266 in his first full year.  It’s something to work with.  He makes contact and maybe he can build upon and translate those doubles into something else.  Oh yea…He’s still learning how to play the position.  He’s still raw out there, but I won’t say his glove is for self-defensive purposes only.  But this is such a tough call.  After you look at our options, we don’t have much choice.

FERNANDO TATIS – …again?  Really?  C’Mon!!  I’m all for a strict platoon at firstbase.  But are we doing this Tatis thing again?  Not happy.

MIKE JACOBS – …is very interesting.  I was sorry to see him go in the Delgado deal.  He never lived up to the promise he showed here once he left.  He topped 30 HR in his career but has struggled away from “Shea”.  I have mixed emotions about him.  I’m glad to see him back.  Maybe he can pick-up where he left off here and recapture some of that swing we saw and actually win the 1B job.  But Jacobs completes a cycle of sorts as he is here and Delgado is not.  Omar is literally back to where the 1B situation was when he arrived here for the 2005 season.

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SECOND BASE – …Luis Castillo had a nice bounce back season.  He really got a bad rap around here for the foolish contract Omar signed him to, then offering up a stinker of a season in 2008.  But the truth is he’s always been a .300 hitter with very solid defense.  Omar was killed routinely about Luis Castillo and still is.  All the talk here in NYC is Luis Castillo is the reason why we don’t have Orlando Hudson playing 2B for us.  The Mets won’t eat Castillo’s contract.  I’m not drinking that HUDSON Kool-Aid.  I think Castillo can give us another season like he offered last year.  He was one of the few things that went right around here last year.  But he still gets a bad rap.  I myself don’t like the contract Omar gave him, but I could be more critical of this situation than I am.  Side note…There is no one worth mentioning coming up from the farm.  It’s Luis Castillo or bust Met fans.

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SHORTSTOP – this is easy.  If Jose Reyes is fully healthy, he’s one of the most dynamic players in all of baseball.  If Jose Reyes, who has now lost two complete seasons to leg injuries that sandwich his career, is not healthy, meaning if his legs aren’t the same, he is not Jose Reyes and is no longer one of the most dynamic players in baseball.  It’s that simple.  His legs are what make him special.  If his legs are compromised, his unique skill is over.  Simple.

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THIRD BASE – David Wright.  He waited till his 5th full year in the league to have his Sophomore Jinx.  What happened to him last year?  Ya can’t blame his lack of HRs on CitiField.  He was equally futile on the road.  His strike outs went through the roof.  Now it could have been because everyone dropped like flies around him in the line-up and it was just easier not to give David Wright a good pitch to hit.  Why would anyone have done that last year?  Maybe getting beaned in the head shook his batter’s-box confidence a little.  That’s just speculation on my part.  I expect David to bounce back and get back to what he’s done between ’05-’08.  But he needs a healthy Carlos Beltran in the line-up also.

****

INFIELDERS – ALEX CORA, can play 1B, 2B, 3B and SS.  Another one of the few bright spots for the Mets last year with his ability to step in for injured players and actually improve the defense in the absense of the starter.  His attitude and leadership were heralded throughout the clubhouse.  He is rehabbed from thumb surgeries and ready for the season.

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LEFT FIELD – JASON BAY.  I can’t knock this signing.  As a matter of fact it’s about time.  LF has been another of Omar’s revolving door postions.  One of Omar’s fetishes is trying to capture lightning in a bottle from older players at the end of their careers and injury comebacks.  Omar, not once but twice, mistakenly signed Moises Alou for this position.  First time shame on me….second time shame on OMAR!  At least now with Jason Bay the position is settled for a few years.  There are some health concerns that scared the Red Sox away and a few other teams felt likewise.  The fact that I wouldn’t trust the Met’s Med Staff to put on a band-aid at current,  has to leave a small fraction of uncertainty in Met Minds.

****

CENTER FIELD – CARLOS BELTRAN….out till June.  Surgery-Gate.  Who knew…Who didn’t…who gave the OK?…..NON-SENSE!!  Front office buffoonery.  We just have to bide our time and wait, and that hopefully he comes back healthy and ready to contribute.  Carlos Beltran is a player who asked the Yankees to sign him for less money the Mets offered him.  He wound up here.  His first year here was a rough start especially with the fans.  The fans really got on his case his first year here.  I’d admit it, but I was not one of them.  Met fans can not get the image of him watching a curveball fall in for strike three to end the 2006 NLCS out of their minds.  And now because of this surgery snafu, I fear the Mets and Beltran are headed towards an ugly divorce.  That’s just me.  I am a Beltran fan.  He is one of the few players, as they go, who signed for the big money then performed and delivered above his career averages after signing.  Usually teams fall into the trap of paying for past performance.  Beltran had his career years here.  Yet he gets critisized at every opportunity.  The rumor is he told Bengie Molina not to sign here.

****

Until he gets back there’s ANGEL PAGAN and FERNANDO MARTINEZ

ANGEL PAGAN is someone I’ve liked since he played with the Brooklyn Cyclones (A) in 2001.  In spring training of 2008 he was winning the day and himself a LF job.  Injury ended that.  Last year was another season waisted to injury also.  He’s not a kid anymore however much Met fans thinks he still is.  But when he was on the field he always seamed in the mix, part of a rally and doing good things.  Beltran’s injury is probably Pagan’s last chance to show his worth here but he has to stay healthy.  If he can manage that he can be a good player for us.  I am pulling for him.
FERNANDO MARTINEZ, a product from the farm I claim doesn’t exist anymore.  He was MVP of the Caribbean Series for his Dominican Republic team this winter.  He is still only 21 and seems to be our only “blue chipper”.  That remains to be seen.  But I like this kid and want to see him get substantial time in CF in Beltran’s absence.

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RIGHT FIELD – …anyone the Braves don’t want anymore I am skeptical of.  JEFF FRANCOEUR gives me the willies.  Another postion Omar has never straightened out is RF.  Remember Shawn Greene?  Remember all the other shleps we threw out there?  I bet you don’t.  That’s my point.  If the Braves gave up on him and accepted Ryan Church in return, whom they themselves did not retain, what does Omar see in Francoeur that John Schuerholz didn’t?  If Schuerholz doesn’t want him, I want everyone who reads this to ask themselves, why would I want him? I know he did well in the short time he was here last year.  Maybe a change of scenery will do him good.  Maybe we’ll get the Francoeur of 2006-07.  Bottom Line > Jeff Francoeur is a roll of the dice.  I’m hoping we don’t roll craps.

****

That about covers the impotant stuff about the Mets positional players. The Mets offense will be living a precarious existence this season if ANYTHING goes wrong. There is just no room for error on this team and I don’t see this team washing out the taste from our mouths in reference to the way the last 3 seasons have gone. I’m trying folks….I’m trying to be optimistic.

Let’s Go Mets !!
(sigh)
 
(haven’t quite come down from loosing my internet connection for the last 30 hrs)

There’s a (paper)TIGER on the Loose in Flushing

Ever since Carlos Beltran watched a final curveball drop in the strike zone finishing our 2006 season and playoff run, it’s been a pretty frustrating 3 seasons since.  2007?  I’ll go along with the crowd and call it a choke.  2008?  Not so fast.  I don’t call that one a choke regardless if you do.  You can’t win pennants in April and May, but you can loose them that early.  That’s my take on ’08. And 2009?  Well?  Yea.  It was everything you want to say about it.  Things have been pretty rotten lately.  Look what it did to this poor little girl.

 

crying met fan.jpgSo let’s take a look at where we stand as of this present 2010 winter:

CATCHER –

they say Santos & Blanco.  I say I’m ready to give the kid,  Josh Thole the job.

FIRST BASE -

Murphy.  I hope his doubles totals are leading to something more from him.  I want Carlos Delgado back for one year.  He needs 27 home runs for 500.  He needs 88 rbi for 1600.  I want him to do it in a Mets uniform.  I think the numbers are very attainable.

SECOND BASE –

Luis Castillo is that guy right now.  I’m not sure how a Castillo for Mike Lowell deal helps things.  In defense of Castillo, he had a good year in ’09 and seemed healthy throughout.  They jury is still out.

SHORT STOP -

How is Jose, Jose, Jose?  If he can’t run, he’s not Jose Reyes.  I’m concerned.

THIRD BASE –

David Wright.  He’ll be OK.  He’ll be fine.

LEFT FIELD -

Jason Bay.  He’ll be OK.  He’ll be fine.

CENTER FIELD –

Carlos Beltran. Health.  Health.  Health.  If he’s healthy, he’ll be OK.  He’ll be fine.

RIGHT FIELD –

Jeff Francoeur.  Oh Brother!  I’m not havin good vibes here.  The Braves didn’t want him and took Ryan Church knowing his cranium was a little sore.  Jury is definitely out.

 

STARTERS: 

1) – Johan Santana, showing signs of wear and tear.  Not terribly concerned here.

2) – BaaaHahaha!  There is no shotgun to Johan.  The Mets say Pelfrey is #2 man.  Really?  Uh-oh.

3) – BaaaHahaha!  John Maine?  Pray for rain!  We have no indication he’s healthy yet.

4) – BaaaHahaha!  Ollie Perez?  Good Grief!!  I’d rather have Charlie Brown.  I’m actually an Ollie supporter.  I think he can be fixed.  Till then watch the RedSox when he pitches.

5) – BaaaHahaha!  The Mets are saying and rookie tandem of J.Niese and Nieve.  I’d rather have those two old guys up in the balcony heckling the Muppets.

Don’t ask me where Kelvim Escobar fits into this equation.  He can come out of the pen and he can start.  But I’ll be quite honest, unless we catch that lightning in a bottle, it doesn’t matter much.

 

When you look at the names and put aside the injuries, it’s not a bad looking squad.  It can be a damn good squad.  But this game is played on a field of grass and not in physical therapy, doctor’s offices and running around for second opinions.  I wish I can make that poor little girl feel somewhat better but the team as currently constituted is only a Paper Tiger.

met tiger.jpg

 

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