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ABOUT US

Greg Prince and Jason Fry
Faith and Fear in Flushing made its debut on Feb. 16, 2005, the brainchild of two longtime friends and lifelong Met fans.

Greg Prince discovered the Mets when he was 6, during the magical summer of 1969. He is a Long Island-based writer, editor and communications consultant. Contact him here.

Jason Fry is a Brooklyn writer whose first memories include his mom leaping up and down cheering for Rusty Staub. Check out his other writing here.

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Two Teams That Aren't Us

Congratulations and best of luck to the team with Tony Clark and the team with Kaz Matsui as they face off tonight for the honor of championing professional baseball's most venerable league.

How did it come to this? How did it come to the Diamondbacks and the Rockies in the NLCS? The recently insolvent and the eternally obscure? Mountain Standard vs. Mountain Daylight?

Don't take this the wrong way. Those are the two National League teams that deserve to be where they are. They won more games than anybody else, they defeated who they had to, they played the best. And now they are the best.

The Arizona Diamondbacks. The Colorado Rockies. One of them will be in the 2007 World Series. One of them will fall a little short. Neither of them is the New York Mets.

That, based on late-season returns, is to their credit. But would have you seen this coming as recently as, I don't know, three weeks ago? Wasn't this supposed to be our year? And if it wasn't, wouldn't you have thought it would be somebody else's year? Once it wasn't us, maybe it didn't matter, but at no point during the championship season was I thinking “we gotta watch out for the Diamondbacks and Rockies.”

Maybe I should have. Or somebody should have. They proved it where it counted. The Mets have scattered to their televisions, not unlike the Phillies, the Braves, the Dodgers, the Padres, the Cubs, the Brewers and the Cardinals, all of whom seemed more likely to have been in this position at some point since Spring Training convened.

Amazing how the two teams left standing refused to play this game on paper.

I'm at a bit of a loss to discuss with any authority the relative chances of the Rockies or Diamondbacks to advance to a pennant since the last time I watched either of them with total urgency was July 4. The Mets were done with both of them early this year, or should I say, they were each done with the Mets a long time ago. For the record, the Mets took four of seven from Arizona while Colorado beat the Mets four of six times. If a trend emerged from any of those series, it was that the Mets got worse the later it got.

Mets lost three of their final four versus the D'Backs, including two of three at Shea to begin June. You might remember June was the month when it all began to go to hell. Thank your Western Division champions for pushing us downhill.

Mets lost the last four they played against the Rockies, starting the day after the deceptively uplifting Endy drag bunt walkoff. The final three were astoundingly horrific beatdowns at Coors Field that came after the Mets had seemingly righted themselves versus Oakland, St. Louis and Philadelphia. Thank your Wild Card winners for sending us a message. Not their fault we didn't know what to do with it.

What I remember most of all about losing to the Diamondbacks and Rockies was how wrong it felt. It wasn't disappointing. It was unbecoming. We're the Mets! We're supposed to beat teams we hardly ever see and you hardly ever hear about! Enough of these nuisances! When do playoff tickets go on sale?

The sense of entitlement thing really doesn't work for us, does it?

My enthusiasm for the postseason usually runs in inverse proportion to our proximity to it. If we never had much of a chance (like when we were the team with Tony Clark and Kaz Matusi, albeit not quite simultaneously), then October is a delightful autumnal rebirth of baseball. If we were bounced from them or near them, I need at least one round to adjust. I watched little to almost none of the 1988, 1999 and 2006 World Series because I couldn't stand to look at what was supposed to our World Series. The divisional series last week were like that. I had no doubt we didn't deserve to go, but watching a ton of NLDS action that we were supposed to be in the thick of anyway — my Game Five tix are still atop a pile of stuff on my dresser (talk about “if necessary”) — was too much to bear. I checked in with the Diamondbacks and Cubs and the Rockies and Phillies only long enough to know what was going on.

The Mets seem a million miles away from this postseason now. They are happily irrelevant to what remains of our beloved sport in 2007. The fall festival is in full swing and I am ready to join it in progress, Chip Caray be damned. I have no overriding rooting interest in this one. I'll just be glad that National League baseball will be played and played with verve and vitality.

Note: On the off chance you're awaiting the rest of the 2007 retrospective promised on Monday, it should be up next week. Apologies for my lethargy, but it's not like last year is going anywhere soon.

12 comments to Two Teams That Aren't Us

  • Anonymous

    Props to the Rockies. I'm rooting for them.
    Yeah, they swept us late but they swept the Yankees too. Are they the first team to ever do that in a season?

  • Anonymous

    Hey, our 10,000th comment. Awesome! What does she win, Greg?

  • Anonymous

    Hi Greg,
    We obviously don't get to Shea as frequently as you do, but on June 2nd we saw the Mets beat Arizona 7-1 improving their record to 35-19. Delgado and Gotay both homered, Reyes tripled and Sosa, Smith and Feliciano combined on a six-hitter . On the scoreboard it was showing that Boston was in the process of whipping the lifeless Yankees 11-6 at Fenway. Little did we know that had anyone guaranteed only one New York team making the playoffs and that we were also watching a team headed to the NLCS we never in our right minds had thought that New York team to be the Yankees and the team headed to the NLCS the visitors (even though Arizona was nine games over .500 at the time).
    The future is never what it seems to be.

  • Anonymous

    Jason,
    Does that mean my comment below begins the next 10,000?

  • Anonymous

    Yes, you are the proud owner of comments #10,001, 10,003 and 10,004.

  • Anonymous

    But Jason,
    Does your comment about comments count as number 10,002 considering you are the co-blogger?

  • Anonymous

    Because of the inability to separate 'em out, yes.
    On that score, I always wonder why I enter my Web site when commenting, since all I do is create a rather pointless loop-the-loop for unwary readers.

  • Anonymous

    Sigh…
    I wish the Mets were still playing…

  • Anonymous

    “Deceptively uplifting” is right. Not to say I saw *everything* coming but I was at the Endy bunt-off game and it was evident even then this Met team was going to struggle and that the Rockies just might be good. I mean, that was Aaron Cook that shut us down (+ Manny Corpas, pre-closing) for 10 innings. I sat field level near 3rd base and you could hear a whizzzzzz on Tulowitzski's throws.
    Though we got out of there with a win, it was a reason why I was very reluctant to give into this notion that this was ever necessarily “our year.” When the Rockies swept the Yankees in Denver (a few weeks before beating the crud out of us) I officially adopted them as my backup team in case of emergency.
    Then one came up.

  • Anonymous

    Well, one has to prepare in advance to offset that long winter void without the Mets and MLB (and in this case, winter unfortunately beginning in October) .
    I have a modest collection of Met games. Videos of games 2, 3, 4 and 5 of the '69 series, game 2 of the '73 set, games 6 and 7 of the 1986 classic (taped as they occured so besides complete game telecasts without commericials there are also the post-game wrapups and the local newscasts that followed). Also have the first home game after 9/11 plus ceremonies of Ralph Kiner Appreciation Night and last year's 1986 World Championship reunion. CD broadcasts include games played in 1962 (the first in St. Louis, the return of the Dodgers to New York on Memorial Day and the famous Marv Thronberry missed first contest), the first game played at Shea in 1964 plus gems from 1969 – Seaver's near-perfecto and Koozman beating Chicago.
    There are also videos and CDs of non-Met classics (Thompson home run, Larsen perfect game, Koufax striking out 15, Flood's misplay against Detroit, the Fisk home run, etc) plus the complete Ken Burns' “Baseball” series, just in case those 14 Met games aren't enough to offset any depression.
    Again, remember the old Boy Scout motto: “be prepared”.

  • Anonymous

    Our heartiest thanks.
    I'm glad PLAY ONLINE POKER! wasn't No. 10,000.

  • Anonymous

    thing is… it just wasn't our year. and i'm happy that we're not yankees fans, with the eternal expectation of ring after ring. our rings are special. what's more, our elderly pitching staff was made to break. i congratulate those plucky rockies and those “how do they pay for all those players?!” diamondbacks. they have the youth and the upside.
    and we'll be back.