Results tagged ‘ Mike Pelfrey ’

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

 

 

Seize the Moment

The following is a running post since Wednesday night.  I apologize for any repetitiveness.

Just a reminder, if I’m not posting on mlblogs, it’s usually on my Blogspot first.  I work from there.

…and away we go..

 

 Wednesday’s Thoughts:

After Wednesday night’s completion of the series sweep, for one game;- their next,

I want the Mets to seize the moment.

Coming off a 9-1 home stand and fresh from sweeping the Dodgers,

the Mets need to seize the moment Friday by defeating the Phillies in their park.

 

                                                               

Thursday’s Thoughts, Off Day:

After sweeping a good old fashioned double-header from

the L.A. in Citi Field Tuesday and then the series Wednesday,

On the morning of April 28, 2010 when you woke up, the Mets were in first place by a half game

over the Phillies who lost in San Francisco late Wednesday night.

                               Hey Met fans…Who Wudda Thunk it?! See?! Ya Gotta Believe!

Amazin’ !!  That not only means me, but many fans METropolis over.

If that seems a little bi-polar to you, it’s not.  Trust me, I still have my issues.

But we just can not pooh-pooh the moment, can we?

                    “We’ll be right back with the Happy Re-cap.”  ~  the Late Great Bob Murphy

In the series vs. L.A., David Wright collected his 1000th hit of his Met career and is now the clubs all-time leader in doubles passing Steady Eddie Kranepool on the list.

                                                                        

Friday Afternoon, April 28th:

The Mets completed a rather remarkable home stand. They recorded 9 wins versus 1 loss. They haven’t had a series like this at home since 1988 and 1969 before that. Incidentally, those were two years we won 100 games in the season. Easy there everybody…easy. John Maine put forth what appears to be his best effort this season against the Dodgers. His ball danced quite a bit and he wound up striking out his season high 9 batters versus 3 walks in 6 innings.

I’m taking this home stand in stride and not getting too giddy about a turn around from a 4-8 motley crew to a 13-9 (14-9 when I finally posted this today) team. 

After a day off they’ll be in South Philly for what amounts to a battle for first place.

Let’s Go Mets!

                                                         

Friday Night Post-Game:

Every so often in the season games present themselves as statement games.  They are singular in importance but the cumulative effect these types of games have is immeasurable; be it for better or worse.

The ‘feel-good’ we’re all experiencing right now could have suffered devastating deflation causing Met Fan optimism to fall like the Hindenburg over the fields of New Jersey.  Nine wins versus one loss could have shrunk in our rear-view mirrors very rapidly.

But No…  Instead the Metropolitans came down the turnpike and announced their arrival in Philly with authority, but thankfully better than NUKE could.  Tonight (last night) they scored early and often against the defending N.L. Champs.  They hit the ball “very hard” and some hits were just “not playable” (reference? anyone?). 

Jon Niese, the rookie, stymied the Phillies for 7 innings, albeit without Jimmy Rollins and Victorino shortening the line-up further by batting second to compensate Jimmy’s absence..  However the happy thought of the day -  We still have Pelfrey and Johan to go.

I started this post last night just as April expired and turned into May 1st, 2010.  April is officially done and the Mets finished the month in first place.  Some may call the month bizarre; some miraculous.  Me?  I call it AMAZIN’ !  When you think about it, Amazin’ is the best way to encapsulate the fan’s angst while still keeping this hot streak in perspective.

The series can still go very wrong for this Mets team.  But that’s not what tonight was all about.  Tonight was one game that stands on it’s own.  Tonight the Mets needed to keep their momentum going and stake their claim.  From where this team was earlier in the month,  having salvaged April and buffing a shine out of the situation, the Mets needed to seize the moment tonight against their biggest division rival Philadelphia Phillies…, and they did!

Last night the Mets did what they’ve often failed at over the last few years. They seized the moment. “Seize the Moment” games come along for many different reasons. Sometimes personal reasons, sometimes team reasons are the impetus to Seize the Moment. Last night was important to me. After last night’s game, a loss today I dare say will be more bearable. A loss Friday last night would have been very deflating. Somehow they managed to give April a good buffing and behold…it shines.

I couldn’t be happier with Jon Niese’s development.  He’s one of many prospects in METropolis these days.  This coming from the same farm system we all chided the organization about and accused it of being barren.  The Mets have more first and second year players on the current roster than they’ve had in a considerable time.  We all agree Tony Bernazard earned his release from his duties due to his behavior and recurring controversies.  He’s topical again because he just recently spoke about his Mets experience.  He believes he did nothing wrong last year and was scape-goated by the club for their ’09 failures.  But Omar appointed him Tsar of Minor League Operations back in the tail end of 2004 and we are now witnessing the results of his work while he maintained his job title.  With players such as Gee, Martinez, Parnell and Thole still on the way and Davis, Mejia, Nieve, Niese and Pelfrey already here, things look better health wise for this organization moving forward.  It’s some of the main-stays on this team that need addressing.  “the Kids are Alright”.

Here is Jon Niese’s line from last nights game vs. the Phillies:

7.0 innings pitched

4 hits

1 run, 1 earned

1 base on balls

7 strikeouts

3.10 season .era

Jon kept the 2,3 and 4 hitters, hit-less.

Saturday’s April Review:

The day?  April 17th.  That’s the day the Mets dueled the Cardinals for 20 innings.  That’s when this clubhouse decided they were going to get behind their embattled manager.  That’s when said manager, went toe to toe with LaRussa for 20 rounds and by tapping into his inner Buster Douglas, defeated the Great LaRussa.  Before that Saturday afternoon game started the Mets were 3-7.  Just before Saturday afternoon was about to change over to Sunday morning, the Mets won and up-ticked to 4-7.  They lost Sunday and sitting at 4-8 on April 18th wasn’t making anyone happy.  The Mets lost their 4th series in a row to start the season.  Pitchforks and torches were in hand and the angry villagers would be descending on Citi Field Monday night April 19th.

Opening Day was such a clean, efficiently played contest with a simple formula working for the Mets;   Johan pitched, David Wright hit and K-Rod closed.  But we lost 2 out 3 to the Marlins.  Then we lost the series to the Nationals; then the Rockies.  We went limping into St. Louis and only won 1 of 3 there.

But there was that 20 inning game.

During that time of perceived futility, two things became clearly evident.  The pitchers turned out to not be our biggest problem so far.  As a matter of fact they rank among Baseball’s best in early tallies.  And secondly,  the promotion of Ike Davis from AAA is paying huge dividends.  The Mets are getting production from 1st base and the middle of the line-up like they haven’t got since Delgado slugged in the 4 slot.

Jose Reyes came back to ignite this team.  He and Jeff Francoeur are in my opinion most responsible for getting these players to rally around their manager.

Getting back to April 19th and the game that started their remarkable turn-around versus the Cubs, the Mets went on to win 9 games while dropping only 1 on the home stand.  They are 11-5 at home for best in the majors and find themselves in first place as May begins with a 14-9 record, not including today’s game in which Mike Pelfrey is getting hammered after 5 innings to the tune of a 6-0 Philly lead.  But like I said earlier, because of last night this game is a little easier to reconcile.

What started out horribly wrong for the Mets this season has been reclaimed and restored.  Having achieved positive ground kind of wipes the slate clean for now.  They have this much to build upon.  Whether the strive forward or take steps backwards remains to be seen, today’s results withstanding.

As a motif, I believe in “seizing the moment”.  The Mets did that last night.  The month of April’s “Happy Re-Cap” is one for the books (a la Howie Rose).  Stay tuned for the musings of May.

                                                                     
Follow-up post after Saturday’s game:

Philly repays the favor.  They drubbed us 10-0 today.  I’m OK with that.  Just as Philly fans feel better about Friday’s results now that they’ve evened the series. The rubber game is tomorrow.  It’s not a seize the moment game.  Not this time.  It’s just a rubber game against a division rival as the two teams fight for first place.  The rest of the season is taking shape. 

One month is done and 5 remain.

Happy Baseball everybody!

 

METroSpections: Current HomeStand

…and so the beleaguered Mets seemed to find something in St.Louis against the Cardinals.

After admonishing Mayor Daley to pick up his team’s situation….METroSpection continues..

 

a/o April 23
Reyes is saying the right things and displaying the right attitude with regards to batting third…Now. He’s let his feelings about batting 3rd be known in the past. This is not a criticism. But Reyes does seem to be back and if I didn’t know any better, I dare say he is stepping up as a leader and elder statesman of this team in attitude and deeds. There’s a sense this team is rallying around their manager because of the grumblings in METropolis this early in April. A 26 yr old Reyes is behaving a little differently that the 23 or 24 year old Reyes did. Maturity? Injury’s way of reminding one of their mortality? Whatever it is, this Reyes will be better for it.

a/o April 24
You can’t win pennants in April, but you can loose them. You can blame ’07 on a September choke. I blame it on a poor first half. Getting to .500 showed some gumption by this team. And I dare say they are rallying around their manager. It’s nice to see and who are we to be kill-joys right now. With 6 days left in the month, the Mets can actually polish this month to a shine. Let’s Go Mets.?!

a/o April 25
And the Mets not only gained the elusive .500 mark, they’re a game above it now.  Just as things seemed to be getting mighty ugly awfully early around here, it seems the Mets are riding the other side of extreme right now.  That’s right.  I’m not going to get crazy because this is what inconsistent teams do.  But I’m not going to be a kill-joy today.  So here are some thoughts at face value.

Jose Reyes ~ Re-capping what I said the other day….His demeanor is different since he’s back.  If I didn’t know any better, I’d say he’s growing into himself now and he’s recognizing he needs to take his rightful place as a Mets elder statesman now.  He’s 26 this year.  I have noticed a different Reyes so far.  It may be simply because Reyes is not the 22 or 23 year old we sometimes chided for too many theatrics.  The reason could be he realized his mortality after loosing two almost complete seasons to leg injuries which book-end his career.  Maturity and injury have a way of shaping a players perspective.  It looks like Jose will be better off for it.  He is saying all the right things with regard to batting third and it seems as if he has taken the lead in rallying around Jerry Manuel.  Other players like Jeff Francueor and Pagan are echoing sentiments about their manager.  Reyes is clearly having a quick effect on the Mets.

Jerry Manuel ~ No one is screaming for his job today.  I stress today.  I’ve already expressed my position on the manager of the Mets.  I’ll say this much about him; he’s pro-active.  If he’s going down, he’s going down managing.  He’s making logistical decisions about his players and taking chances.  These decisions and chances might be born from desperation, but again, I am not pooh-poohing the day today.  Manuel was never a consideration long term for me.  He was a good and logical choice to replace Randolph.  I thought we’d have moved on over the winter.  Having said that, I am in no hasty rush to replace him with Valentine.  I think you all know my concerns weigh heavier when speaking of the GM and my front office.

David Wright? Howard Johnson?
WTF?
This is the third stance in three years for David Wright.  Each one has resulted in worsening results.  His strikeouts the last 3 years are through the roof and climbing like a bean-stalk.  In his earlier years he was striking out to the tune of 115 per 600+/- at-bats.  The last three years he’s averaging about 50 less at-bats and striking out at a 150 per clip.  He’s gone 12 consecutive games with at least one strike out.  He’s not just striking out.  He’s going 0-2, 1-2 in the count regularly!  His legs are like boiled spaghetti at the sight of a curve ball.  He’s missing fastballs right down the middle by huge margins.  He’s swinging at worm killers and guessing wrong on almost every pitch.  He is completely out of his mind right now.  He’s got IT real bad.
For this one particular player, Howard Johnson the Met’s hitting coach, has to be working against what is right for David Wright.  These two guys need to clean the slate and start over with a new plan.  Trying to scape-goat Hojo is foolish but obviously what he and David are doing is clearly not even close to being effective.  And maybe, just maybe, getting beaned in the head is still fresh in David Wright’s memory.  Something like that can haunt a player.  If you watch him jelly-leg the curve balls, it’s fair to think.

THE WEATHER BOYZ!!!
The WeatherBoyz?  I hear-by release every and all Mets starters from their weather related nooses I kept around their necks.   ALL EXCEPT, Mr. RAIN.  Yep.  He’s taking the term “April Showers” to new heights.  John Maine and his Rain Act are enough to make Noah and the animals say “Oi Vey!”  Jon Neise and Big Mike Pelfrey have been doing well and Better.  Pelfrey has been nothing short of great so far.  Niese has been a hard luck starter been has been very very effective.  Johan is always the battler and needs little words on my part.
Snow, Sleet and YES HAIL TOO!!  You are hereby released from your cumulonimbus bearing duties.  Oliver Perez’s efforts, like Niese’s could reflect better in the win/loss totals.  But his 3.50 (rounded) era is OK with me and it’s good enough to warrant some respect.

There!….A post about my Mets with almost a complete lack of negativity.  See?  It’s possible.
But now the truth…I have not wavered from the way I feel about the changes I want from this organization.  I still, as I always will, stand by my criticisms of this organization.

After taking the series from the Cubs, and finishing off the Braves yesterday, tonight’s opening game of the Dodgers series was rained out.  Tomorrow will be a truely classic Twi-Night DoubleHeader at Citi Field.
There will be no day/night nonsense.  Tomorrow is strictly two for the price of one starting at 4:30pm.  Good Job Mr.Wilpon!!  Good job indeed.

This concludes my METroSpections for the home stand thus far.

BTB  a/o April 26

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A Leap Off the SideWalk Into an OnComing Bus

The knock on Jerry Manuel in Chicago when he managed the White Sox was that as soon as things got a little bit hairy for him, he started throwing players under the bus.  He pointed fingers so fast in Chicago’s SouthSide that he looked like Neo in the Matrix.

: D        …don’t mind me.

Fast forward to 2009.  I or anybody else never understood what Ryan Church did to Jerry Manuel to get himself in Jerry’s doghouse, but Church was a permanent resident.  He did have a game where he failed to touch third as he rounded the bag…etc etc.  The real rub stemmed from Church’s post concussion syndrome.  Manuel interpreted the symptoms otherwise if at all and basically viewed Ryan Church as a malingerer.  If you’re asking me, Church was being scape-goated for the team’s troubles.  Ramon Castro, back-up catcher, was also being scape-goated by Manuel, if you’re asking me.  He was suffering nagging injuries and it rubbed Manuel the wrong way.  But in a year lost to injury all around, Church and Castro were identified by Manuel as malcontents because they showed a backbone against Jerry, who  instigated Omar to trade them.  Regardless of opinions about the trades, that’s the way it went down.

Just in this last week alone, there are three current Mets that if they’re not finding themselves under a bus, are speaking in open defiance of their manager.

A leap off the side walk into an on coming bus ~ CASE ONE: 
John “RAIN” Maine; -  After John Maine’s performance Tuesday night, among other things broached by reporters, and offered up by Manuel, was John Maine’s status in the starting rotation needed to be re-evaluated.  It warranted concern and perhaps a change may be needed is the way I summarize it.  He said they needed to have a discussion.  Things started going terribly wrong that same night with the “He said, She said”.  A Mets’ beat reporter, kept Manuel’s comments in mind and yesterday asked John Maine if he was feeling better about Jerry Manuel’s decision to keep him in the rotation.  (revised decision = Jerry decided Maine should pitch when his turn comes around again.  He hinted maybe a change was warranted Tuesday night, then decided Maine would stay in turn yesterday, all before or ever saying anything to John Maine since Manuel made his comments the previous night.)  John Maine was taken back by the reporter’s question saying he didn’t even know taking him out of the rotation was even an option!

Uh – OH!  A short time later on the Wednesday afternoon, John Maine was seen making a B-line into the manager’s office.  The team said it was a scheduled meeting.  So now guess what the latest plan is?  After pitching coach Dan Warthen and Maine looked over tapes and “stuff” (yea STUFF – because these guys are ponderous!)  John Maine insisted he was going back to his old way of pitching and reverting to his style and abandoning the team’s edict of concentrating on throwing strikes to minimize the big inning.  It’s their thinking folks…Not Mine!  He said his style is fastballs high in the zone.  John Maine must know something we don’t because he needs to make up about 4 to 5 mph on his fastball to be taken seriously.  Does he think those 5 mph are just going to come because he’s abandoning the old plan?  The team’s concept is low in the zone and strikes.  For a change I don’t think it’s the club’s fault this kid is coming in at 88mph, but the lack of communication is.  But John Maine has stated he is done with the Met’s plan and he practically said it in those words.  Me?  I like the attitude, but no one is going to like the results.  His 88 mph fastball looks like a grapefruit right now.

And lastly….Dan Warthen?  C’mon with this guy.  I wouldn’t trust him to mail a letter for me.  Rick Peterson was arrogant and instigated the Scott Kazmir trade, but we replaced him with Dan Warthen?  And he’s still here?  Someone…Please?

CASE TWO:  Jose Reyes ~  has stated over and over his reluctance to hit third in the line-up.  Jerry Manuel has flirted with that idea for two years now. Jerry said Jose Reyes will be batting third when they open the series with the Cardinals in St. Louis.  These two still have not seemed to reach a middle ground and Reyes continues to verbalize his displeasure with the idea.  It appears to be item number two where a player is in open defiance of the manager.

CASE NUMBER THREE:  Johan Santana ~ Monday the 12th was an off-day/travel day.  Jerry Manuel flipped the rotation for the upcoming St. Louis series choosing to start HAIL (aka Oliver Perez) Friday, thereby giving Johan an added day off and not having him pitch after his normal 4 days off.  Manuel said the extra day off would serve Johan well.  Johan Santana responded to this move by saying, “There are times when you feel a little beat up and need the time to rest.  This is not one of those times.”   This isn’t something I would classify as an incident.  It’s just a drifting scent in the air of something that is turning sour.

I’m not hinting at anything.  Am I?  I’m just bringing you up to date on what’s been going on and the reputation that followed Jerry out of Chicago.  That’s all.  This is not a Fire Manuel Rant….is it?  I think not.

Buses?  Dangerous.   Trolleys?  Safe.

****Elsewhere in METropolis****

Remember that Great January the Mets had?  Yea!  Neither do I.  In January the Mets signed two pitchers; Kelvim Escobar and R.A. Dickey.

R.A. Dickey.   *sigh*

****The very latest in METropolis****

Sleet (aka – Jon Niese) pitched unimpressively Wednesday night to a no decision after the Mets got him off the hook by tying the game in the 9th inning.  They wound up loosing the game on a walk-off HR in the 10th but what the hey…  Unfortunately he did separate himself from his name a little more with this outing and the Mets ensured they’d loose their third straight series to start the season.  Sorry kid.  It’s the WeatherBoyz (starting rotation) that concern me, not blowing Wednesday’s game in extra innings.

Here’s the SLEET line:
5 innings pitched
9 hits
5 runs, 5 earned
1 walk
2 strikeouts
1 home run
99 pitches
6.55 era
He’s a youngster and I’m taking it easy on him.  Keep at it Rook.

Today!  The Colorado mound was the EAST and MIKE PELFREY was the Sun!!  He was marvelous.  He threw 7 shut-out innings today salvaging one game for the Mets in the last game of this series.  He struck out 6 and walked none, gave up 5 hits and earned his second victory in as many tries.  Atta’ boy Mike!

They head to St. Louis now sporting a 3-6 record for the season.  If they want to finish this road trip at .500 they need to take two of three from the Cardinals.  Let me see….Next in line are HAIL, Johan and another dose of RAIN.  But Rain promised he’s going to be new and improved this time.  I’ll get back to you on that.  We may have to re-name him yet again to REBEL.

****Tonight’s Final Words of METrospection****

Assistant General Manager John Ricco had more to say this week and has gotten more press and face time than I care to see.  He dealt in minor issues but it shows the Wilpons are forcing this guy into the mix.  I am terrified by the prospect the Wilpons might be grooming this guy to be our next GM.  Please JOBU No!  Please tell me it isn’t so.

That is all.  Go back to your homes.  There’s nothing more to see here.

BTB

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Mets Soaked by RAIN in Colorado

(subliminal song of the day follows):

..Rocky Mountain Hiiiiiigh….Colorado   and Rain!
..Rocky Mountain Hiiiiiiigh….Colorado   and Rain!

Dear Colorado Head Grounds Keeper, on behalf of the NYM, I apologize for the large puddle of mud that used to be your mound.  I hope you can restore it in time for tomorrow’s game.

I oft wondered if fish really care if it’s Raining outside or not.  Wouldn’t that be the equivalent of making a sunny day sunnier for us?  What do they think about Rain?  Do they say, “Hey it’s raining out, don’t swim so fast today…Be careful.”  OR  “Hey it’s really raining out there, better put on some SPF-40!”

I’ve noticed in different parts of the country it Rains differently.  In South Florida, there are the obligatory random thunderstorms of the day.  They say it never Rains in California but if you watch CNN you know that aint true.  Here in the North East we usually get those blanketing steady downpours.

Native American Indians used to perform ritual dance to make it Rain.  PacMan Jones had his own methods of making it Rain too.  Yea-eeaya!  The Addams Family had a cloud constantly hovering and Raining down on their house.  And that reminds me this Gov’t is engaged in Cloud-Seeding to induce Rain.  Or so I think.  DUNn Dunn dunn!!!  Hoo Hoo hah hah hah hah hah!

Rain.  If you tune into the Weather Channel tonight and see something that looks like this on the screen:
3 innings pitched.
8 runs, 8 earned
7 hits
3 walks
4 strikeouts
1 HR
Rockies bat around in the third inning.
12.38 era in two starts
0-2 Mets’ record in games he started.

It just means there’s a lot of RAIN headed your way.  Ya might want to pack an umbrella.

There is a 25 mph wind blowing out tonight but only when the Rockies are at bat, otherwise Rain Rain Rain.  While it continues to pour in the Met dugout and on the Colorado mound, the Rockies are cruising with an 8-1 lead in the 7th.

See people?  I know this team and how it works.  I know my baseball.  I may be snarky in how I describe things, but I will not be denied.  Panic?  No!  I’m a pragmatist.  I call it as I see it.  Tonight Luis Castillo was thrown out at 2nd base trying to stretch a single into a double in the top of the 6th with one out.  When you’re down 8-0 at the time, you just don’t do that.  But he did and was promptly gunned down.  On the very next pitch and first to David Wright in his at-bat, he pulled a first pitch fastball to left for a HR.  In the top of the 7th, with one out, and Fernando Tatis at second, Tatis did not tag up and advance to third on a fly to left center that was mid-warning track!  Tatis wasn’t even on the bag.  He did some Cha-Cha step off second as if he was willing the left fielder to drop the fly ball.  Ponderous!  Matthews stranded him anyway by striking out.  Matthews?  What are Matthews and Tatis doing on this team?  Matthews does not figure into any future plans.  Tatis the Perp was stealing playing time and money tonight at 1st base.   WHY are they on this team when we don’t need them, and their replacements had fantastic springs and have not slowed down one bit since the AA and AAA season kicked off?  Fernando Martinez and Ike Davis must be called up to the club and this nonsense of Matthews and Tatis must stop.  In the bottom of the 7th Angel Pagan and Jason Bay didn’t communicate on an easy fly ball and it dropped in between them allowing another run to score making it an 11-2 game.

Panic Indeed!!! 

You can continue to question me, or just stop being contrarians and take my word for it.
Some people just need to find out for themselves.  I don’t begrudge that.  But if you needed the proof for any blanket statements I may have made….there ya go!  I submit to you today’s example of just one day in the season with our supposed #2 guy and the feeble play that seems to possess players when they don a Mets uniform these days.

Karma.  Someone in this organization upset the Great JOBU and we’re paying the price for that mis-step.

Everyone keeps pointing to the talent on this team and how it can change on the drop of a dime for us.  Don’t you know I get that?  I get it.  Why do you think I’m so discombobulated by the performance of this team over the last 3 years?  They are the ultimate under-achievers.  That’s the rub!!  We have as many stars around here as a Dean Martin Roast, and to watch them fail with such lugubriousness gives me pins and needles all over my body.

Let’s assume SLEET earns a name tomorrow and the Mets win.  The rubber game of this series will fall on Mike Pelfrey.  That’s not a bad spot to be in from my perspective.  I welcome that.  And I say that to also show I can be fair.  If we can take 2 of three the way our pitching lines up for the next two games, I’ll feel a lot better about HAIL opening the series against the Cardinals in St. Louis.  Should HAIL fail, again, I have Johan next to salvage a game for us before RAIN blows in again.  I can therefore end this road trip .500 going 3-3 and be very satisfied.  That’s the optimistic slice of pie for ya.

You know what happens when you get old?  You understand Rain doesn’t make the grass grow.  Blood makes the grass grow.  You’d have to take out your history books and deal in reality to get the meaning of that statement.  Reading between the lines help.  I know that’s a little dark for a baseball blog.  Every so often I burp out something politically uncivilized.  I’m Ok now.

Rain can have devastating effects.  Water erosion is no joke.  Rain eroded my patience a little more tonight.  Sleet goes tomorrow.  That poor Colorado Grounds Keeper.  Sorry dude!

The game is going into the bottom of the 8th.  Rockies 11 – Mets 3.  The Mets telecast team is resorting to taking calls from fans now.  This is all so very yawn inspiring if I may say so myself.  What else can they say without blurbing out the truth about what their eyes see and getting reprimanded for it.

RAIN on ME…Rain On Me…LOOOOVVVE!!!  RAIN ON ME!!!  RAIN on Me!!

The game is now final.  Rockies 11 ~ Mets 3   Jerry Manuel’s Snoozers are now 2-5.  I hope there is someone in the locker room smashing flat screens, throwing trash cans, knocking over the buffet table and screaming his head off in a rage about tonight’s game, insisting this can not happen, this can not happen again, this can not happen again this early.  I don’t mean the Ground’s Keeper either.
I’ll say it a million times if I have to.  I believe in good starts.  I believe every game matters when you loose a division by one game as this team has, surrendering division leads late in September as this team has.  You can point to any reason you want for that as long as you agree that poor play in April is as good as any reason you may have for loosing a division by a game.  You can’t win pennants in April, but you can loose them.  2007 was like that.  They came on like gangbusters after a miserable start and were in the mix till the end.  However their April and May were lethargic.  In 2008 we lost the division by a game.  Again I can point to a .500 April if you chose to blame Tom Glavine (don’t get me started on him) for offering up a stinker.  And what a stinker it was!  Having seen it all with basically this same cast, I don’t want to go thr
ough that again.  Simple.

And lastly I offer you this little tid-bid.  My right fielder Jeff Francoeur, said, “It’s probably good if we got out of town for a while”…referring to the current road trip.  I didn’t say that folks; My right fielder did.  Whose panicking now?

Rockie Mountain Hiiiiigh….Colorado   and Rain!
Rockie Mountain Hiiiiigh….Colorado    and Rain!

BTB

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Johan and the WeatherBoyz

Jose Reyes started at shortstop for the Mets today!  I’ll get to him another time.

The Mets’ Pitching Staff made it’s first go ’round of the season.  All four mound loiterers paid to be a part of, and start a game for the Mets this season and Johan Santana have one game under their belt.  I guess you can call this the initial evaluation through the first five games for Johan and the WeatherBoyz, aka my Starting Rotation (some names with-held).

As we broke camp and headed north, the Mets Starting Rotation was named as follows:

1) – Johan Santana
2) – Rain  
3) – Snow
4) – Sleet  
5) – Hail

Johan Santana won his Opening Day start. 

In Game Two, Rain had his chance and did nothing to change his name.  He will continue to be referred to as Rain until his clouds start to break-up or BTB notifies you otherwise. 

Then came Game Three started by Snow.  Snow is nice.  I appreciate snow while it’s falling and while it’s still, quiet and white.  Then life takes over and makes slush.  I am not disappointed with Snow’s performance in Game 3.  He’s a rook, and he showed some good stuff.  It just got slushy at the end.  So I give Snow an E for Effort.  Snow looks like he’ll earn his stripes fairly quickly if his first start is an indication.  Hang in there Rook.  You’ll earn your name back soon.

In Game Four, Sleet, aka, Mike Pelfrey got his first win of the season.  He’s got a real hard sinker that’s always caught my attention.  He’s working hard on a third pitch.  He pitched himself a good game and the BTB decided he is to be called by his rightful name.  Welcome in from the weather Mike.

Ahh.  Game Five and el Lanzador (that’s pitcher) Senor Hail.  I’ve seen worse outings from him than the one he offered up today.  We lost to the Nationals today by the way.  Remember I told you we’d do squat against them?….Just like the lead Bugs Bunny had on Cecil Turtle and still lost.  Ponderous!  I digress.
Hail?  How did we get into this situation?  Omar resigned him for $36 Million!  Ponderous!  I wouldn’t recommend driving every 5th day in NYC due to threats of  HAIL coming off Flushing Bay when he’s pitching.

So as for the Mets’ Starting Rotation we have two hard names on the list, one push but coming on, and we still have some weather phenomena to deal with every 2nd to 5th day of the cycle.

Sometimes it Snows in April folks.  If you live in the northern parts of this country, you know what I’m talkin about.  The weather is always wacky in April.  That’s fair enough.  I guess my mistake was the day I forgot to read the paper to learn the Mets signed El Nino to pitch for us.  Omar, why don’t you sign Global Warming and Al Gore to round out the top four?  Why Omar Minaya chose to use my starting rotation to play X-Files? –  I’ll never know.

Johan is on the mound for us again tomorrow and then we’re off to Colorado where I’m sure the weather is tropical compared to all the wintry slush we’ve been pitching up at Citi Field.

Mike, BTB

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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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Pitchers & Catchers: Met’s Pitchers, My Angst

This shouldn’t take long at all.  The Mets’ starting rotation:

1 – Johan Santana
2 – pray for rain
3 – pray for snow
4 – pray for sleet
5 – pray for hale.

There is no shot gun to JOHAN SANTANA.  There is no number two guy here.  Additionally Johan is coming off injury.

JOHN MAINE is coming off two consecutive injury years.  I like the guy, I really do.  His durability is a huge question.  If he does not step up and fill the shot-gun role behind Johan this year, I’m not sure we can compete with the Phillies.

OLIVER PEREZ is slimmed down and supposedly with a repaired knee.  Even during the Baseball Classic his weight gain was noticeable.  I don’t think he is the head case everyone makes him out to be.  I know that’s surprising coming from me.  But I think his problems are strictly mechanical and correctable.  His landing foot is like lightning; it never strikes the same ground twice.  His landing foot is closed and not open perpendicular to his catcher.  That throws everything else off as you are throwing against your body and with nothing but arm support behind the pitch.  I can’t believe for the life of me why Dan Warthen can not see this.  Ollie could be the Mets’ Phantom Menace or saving grace this year but it still comes back to Maine if Ollie can even help and be a factor and give the Mets depth.

MIKE PELFREY is Omar Minaya’s only hope right now of ever proving what used to be written in bold letters on his resume…: Talent Evaluator.  Pelfrey’s freshman and sophomore years have produced a .500 win pct. and an era around 4.30 +/-.  The kid has ability.  I’m certainly patient with him as I am most kids.  I believe too much was demanded of him last year because of the way things went.  His hard sinker is a very miss-able pitch and if he can improve on his change-up this kid could be dangerous.  I think he’s got mental toughness and he eats up innings.  If the season turns sour on the Mets this year I don’t think it will have anything to do with Pelfrey.

The number 5 starter – I don’t know and neither do the Mets.  JOHN NIESE is a kid I like and I would give him the job out of the box.  I believe in telling a kid “here’s the ball. We’re gonna give it to you every five days. Make the most of it and we’ll talk after a couple of starts.”  I think that way you give the kid confidence and relieve him the stress and pressure of thinking his next pitch gets him yanked and sent back down to the minors.  NELSON  FIGUEROA is a useful spot starter and good for long relief.  I’m not ready to give him the 5 spot yet in spite of a rather impressive effort in Venezuela this winter.  The only other credible option in the 5 spot is FERNANDO NIEVE.  Again, I’m not averse to give a 5 spot to a kid.  My choice is Niese.  It’s the best we can do considering what we have to work with.  Does Kelvim Escobar fit into this rotation?  I dunno.  Maybe.  But it seems like he’s destined to be out 8th inning guy.

To summarize the NYM starting rotation, this is my feel:

Johan
big IF
bigger IF
Maybe
and Who?…(not to be confused with Who the 1st baseman)

Can you feel my angst?

This is what we need to know about the Mets’ bullpen.  

K-ROD has been pitching competitively and continuously since last February when he began preparing for the Baseball Classic.  He pitched through the season and pitched in Winter League in Venezuela right up until February 1st.  I fully expect him to have a dead arm by August.  It’s just too much of a load with no recuperation time to speak of.

KELVIM ESCOBAR, another pitcher coming off a two year recovery from injury has credible work on his resume.  That is before he got hurt.  Omar Minaya is trying to catch that lightning in a bottle that CAN be found from time to time when these players come back from injury.  Omar has said he’ll begin the season as our 8th inning guy.  This has been a position with bad luck attached to it between Duaner Sanchez and JJ Putz lately.  Will Kelvim be the latest guy to suffer the 8th inning voodoo?  I guess his arm will answer that for us.

EDDIE KUNZ and BOBBY PARNELL are two more youngsters I think can be tremendous contributors.  I like these kids a lot and sort of blows back in my face my complaints about our farm system coming to a screeching halt.  But let’s see.  Time will tell who’s right.

There it is, the Mets pitching information as told by me.  After Johan Santana we have two question marks, followed by Hope and a Mystery in the five spot.  Omar Minaya is putting all his eggs in the Maine and Perez basket.  He belongs in Vegas if he’s such a gambler.  I will say this in his defense about the Mets’ apparent lack of activity this winter, Jason Bay aside.  The free agent pool wasn’t all that.  While I can’t explain their head-in-the-sand approach with John Lackey knowing full well their number one need is a #2 starter, I’ve thought, like the Mets and Omar it’s best not to have signed the other pitchers still available.  They would have commanded too much for a minimal return and cost us more in the way of a mismatched and mediocre roster with onerous contracts.  So you see, I can be fair minded and not be so narrowly focused on complaining.

The New York Metropolitan’s positional players and offense with be addressed in my next posting.  Blog ya later.

Omar is in a real pickle.  I like him.  I wanted him in 2004.  I’m still on his side.  I’ll complain and disagree with him.  I’m not in favor of firing him as a purely reactive measure.  I want to ensure we can get someone with some real clout first.  That requires back room wheeling and dealing.  I’m afraid that’s not the Wilpon’s gig.  And if the Mets idea of change is another in house move, I’d rather keep Omar.  I digressed.

The Mets starting rotation has a 65% chance of stinking like hot garbage this summer.  However if they cash in on the other 35%, they can be very good.  Maine and Ollie are former 15 game winners.  When Ollie is on he can be electric and his strikeout totals become impressive. If…only if.  If my aunt had hair on her back she’d be my uncle.

That’s the Met’s and Omar’s idea of the 2010 Pitching Staff with my opinion about it.

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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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