The blog for Mets fans
who like to read

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.

Got something to say? Leave a comment, or email us at faithandfear@gmail.com. (Sorry, but we have no interest in ads, sponsored content or guest posts.)

Need our RSS feed? It's here.

Visit our Facebook page, or drop by the personal pages for Greg and Jason.

Or follow us on Twitter: Here's Greg, and here's Jason.

Woke Up This Morning

On at least one meaningful count, I am not 100% well for the baseball season because I have not fully recovered the rhythms of the night. Yankees and Braves each finished their West Coast games long after I conked out on the couch. There was the satisfaction of snapping on WINS early this morning and learning both had been defeated, but I felt as if I'd lost valuable hours of gloating over their respective if temporary humblings. As Tony Soprano said about life Sunday night as he left the hospital, every new Yankee and Brave loss is a gift.

Though we are alone in first place (in the East and in the city), I also don't yet have the rhythms of rooting-against down pat. Sure I know who I want to lose, but I can't quite get it up to follow the necessary action and see it through. A couple of seconds of YES were a couple more than I could take (though I can't wait for another episode of Yankees BP — it comes on right after Yankees FU), while a glimpse of the Dodger-Brave game threatened more responsibility than I was willing to bear on April 4.

Die Yankees. Die Braves. But do it on your own time. I'll join your demise already in progress.

Wouldn't have been trawling for baseball had the Mets not left a winter-sized hole in their schedule on the second day of the new year, but that's regrettably necessary thinking. “Protecting the Opener,” Howie Rose calls it. “In case shit,” Chris Rock calls it (what he calls insurance, anyway). Of course I'm trying to imagine a scenario in which the Mets would turn away a crowd of 54,371 people holding bought-and-paid-for tickets.

It was a record crowd! It's almost always a record crowd! When did Shea start sprouting extra seats? And when did Opening Day, even the Home Opener, become an event of events attendancewise? I found two references made in the 'sphere to Opening Day 1975, which tickled me since it kicked off one of my favorite years. I was in sixth grade. Mr. Schneider turned the first inning on in class, and I raced home to watch the remainder to completion, skipping Hebrew School in the process (my Hebrew's for bupkis, but I speak fluent Del Unser). I'll bet a lot 12-year-olds and children of all ages were watching on Channel 9 because there were only 18,527 on hand.

This was more the norm than you'd imagine for Mets openers in the '70s, even in 1975 when there was a similar buzz about the reconstituted Mets being locked and loaded and when we still owned New York. The year before, the 1973 pennant running up the flagpole and all, drew 17,154. 1970, post-'69, didn't break 42,000. Attendance wouldn't top 30,000 again at a Shea Opener until 1982, when it edged past 40,000. Since then (which marked the debut of DiamondVision and George Foster, at least one of which might have affected flight patterns into and out of LaGuardia as the season ensued), the numbers have been what we're used to. But before then? It's a bit of a mystery to me. The Yankees, if you're wondering, did no better during the '60s and '70s until Yankee Stadium II opened in '76. Perhaps Opening Day, for all its romance, wasn't as big a deal in New York as it was in smaller Cincy and diminutive Detroit.

That's all behind us now. Opening Day is jam-packed and when the Mets win, people act so happy you'd think they lost.

I don't know if I have my rhythms in sync where reactions are concerned, either. I try to strike a balance between the Polyanna, my team right or wrong view and the sky is falling, anvils are dropping, we are doomed crowd. Particularly when I haven't had enough sleep (a couch conkout is never restful), neither of them is appealing.

Sorting through the litany I've picked up on here and there from both extremes since the last out Monday:

The Mets didn't look good winning. Sure as hell beats looking great losing. When they issue style points, I'll worry. Until then, it's 1-0 with 161 chances to improve on the more worrisome facets of Monday's performance.

Things went our way that we didn't deserve. What's the difference between selling a drop as a tag and injecting your ass full of hormones? I don't know, but the first one is fully acceptable, no matter our innate Met guilt at accepting it.

There was no production from the Carloses. Good thing they have teammates who produced. Most days will feature some guys doing good things, others not. It's called a team for a reason.

Booooooooo! It's stupid and self-defeating enough to get on Beltran, but Jorge Julio? He's what — 0-0, 0.00, 0.0 IP? Unless that was Juuuuuuuuulio, in which case never mind. But that doesn't explain Beltran. Does Carlos Beltran look like the kind of guy who's going to get all fired up if you abuse him? And if he doesn't, will you feel better that you were prescient enough to show your displeasure with his Opening Day ohfer come October when you're home watching others compete on TV? Then will it occur to you, gee, maybe I shouldn't have contributed to the mental breakdown of one of our most important regulars, but I sure showed some guy who makes a lot of money how displeased I was with him six months ago?

Delgado wasn't seen during “God Bless America”. As long as he wasn't on the clubhouse phone giving away troop positions to the enemy (or signals to Frank Robinson), his whereabouts for those 75 or so seconds are none of my concern.

Billy Wagner's song is the same as Marian… Sorry, I can't get through this sentence without breaking up into fits of hysterical laughter. It's pretty obvious, however, that the Yankees co-opted the whole idea of not winning the World Series after they saw us do it 2000 and you don't hear us complaining. Is not winning the World Series a Mets thing because we've been doing it longer or is it a Yankees thing because they seem to have trademarked it on a bigger stage more recently? Either way, it's made for a rousing chorus of Enter Also-Ran.

This looks like the best-balanced lineup since 1986. The memory hole is a despicable place. Don't tell me 1999 — Rickey-Fonzie-Oly-Mike-Robin generating tons of runs — has tumbled down there already.

Traffic was beyond the usual Opening Day horrible. Yeah, that'll happen when 54,370 of your close, personal friends join you at the game. Too bad there's not a mass transit line or two that run parallel to the ballpark.

SNY struck out not looking. Hard to argue on behalf of a network that takes off the third inning; they would have helped their cause had they not kept running promos telling us how amazing (if not Amazin') they are while the contest they were supposed to be airing went on without them. A baseball telecast is not a Mars probe — just show us the whole game and don't insult our intelligence (not employing Fran Healy remains an excellent start) and you'll be fine. Subcomplaint that there wasn't enough post-game coverage is another growing-pains symptom. If you can remember the early WFAN, you'll recall it sounded more concerned with adhering to a format than reflecting the mission at hand. Now the FAN is an indispensable part of the New York sportscape, except between 1:00 and 6:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, when it's dumber than dirt and proud of it. (All apologies to dirt, which isn't dumb let alone pretentious enough to whine that “Yankee fans will have an issue” with which reliever uses which METallica song.)

No complaints for KingmanFan who alertly notes the strong shoutout in this week's Sopranos to his namesake. For those of you not immersed, Tony, Paulie Walnuts, the now-late Dick Barone and his then-tiny son Jason all attended the 1981 Home Opener.

That's at least the sixth Mets reference, direct or implied, that I can remember in six seasons of paying close attention. Previously on the The Sopranos

• Tony (Tony Uncle Johnny) and cousin Tony (Tony Uncle Al) watch a Mets game on television (well before Tony Uncle Johnny takes out Tony Uncle Al, and not to the ballgame).

• Junior and Livia plot against Tony, with Junior arguing, “Yeah, and I'm playing shortstop for the Mets.”

• A.J. objects to being told by Grandpa Hugh that you're not Italian if you don't eat your vegetables: “Mike Piazza eats nothing but artichokes? I mean, that's dicked up.”

• Svetlana tells Tony that her boyfriend Bill is not around because he is in Port St. Lucie “watching his Mets”.

• Tony and Johnny Sack rendezvous in a deserted Shea parking lot, Tony joking that they could be “getting in line early for Opening Day.”

Which is certainly one way to get around the traffic, even if you're coming from Jersey.

The mention in this week's episode filled my heart since it would have had to have taken place in 1981 (“the year Kingman was back from the Cubs”), meaning it was the makeup of the rainout Joel and I experienced in high school. There's your reason they don't schedule anything the day after the Home Opener, as lame as it is to go without so soon after one stinkin' game.

Paid attendance for the 1981 Home Opener: 15,205. I doubt anybody needed Barone Sanitation-type connections to get a box seat.

Finally, in a dream sequence worthy of comatose Tony, I dreamt last night, sleeping with the television on, that I was dining in a Manhattan deli owned by Jon Stewart. Though I complained to him about the food and the service, he delighted in telling me the best part about running a restaurant is that he doesn't have to let Mike DeJean hit a double off the wall. “I just tell him to get out,” Jon said.

Good policy.

How did the New York Giants do in their opener Monday at the Polo Grounds? According to Gotham Baseball, things were quiet…again.

7 comments to Woke Up This Morning

  • Anonymous

    Greg wrote: “It's pretty obvious, however, that the Yankees co-opted the whole idea of not winning the World Series after they saw us do it 2000 and you don't hear us complaining. Is not winning the World Series a Mets thing because we've been doing it longer or is it a Yankees thing because they seem to have trademarked it on a bigger stage more recently? Either way, it's made for a rousing chorus of Enter Also-Ran.”
    Thieving SOBs! They'll steal anything! You just know they're working on a “Yankee Magic” top hat for their new yard that will shoot an apple up every time Jeter check swings one into that ridiculously close right field corner!

  • Anonymous

    The Mets seem to schedule an off day after the opener every year now. I'm guessing it's so that, if the weather is so terrible they can't possibly play the opener, they would have a shot at making it up the very next day, and not have those 47,000 fans rain-checked to other games scattered through the season.
    Also, they used to heavily promote an Opening Day II, as I recall, though I didn't notice that this year; I'm sure they wouldn't want to have to accommodate the bumped festivities and ticketholders from one promo date at another one, if they could help it by having an open date in between to use instead.
    Even so, it's a big letdown. I always feel a little blue on off days even in August; having one right after the season finally starts is bummerama.

  • Anonymous

    It's worse than you think, Dave. Look what went up on Saturday, April 1!
    Speaking of April 1, our favorite free agent pitcher has apparently been hanging out with Spike TV's own John Rocker. Thanks to the man, the myth, the Metstradamus for bringing it to the attention of this dry cleaner's grandson. May Clemens fall into a vat of benzene.

  • Anonymous

    The first Opening Day II was in 1986 (though its festivities were postponed by rain). The last one, if I'm reading the promotional schedules in my yearbooks correctly (we spare no expense when it comes to research) was in 1991. It drew 16,013. There went the novelty.
    Agreed that the rain date is a drag, but it was a lot worse last year when all there was to do was dwell on Braden Looper, Adam Dunn and Joe Randa and wait endlessly for redemption…which didn't come for almost a week.

  • Anonymous

    The Mets really are permeating one's every day life, and not just in the Sopranos. On my way to the subway today I stopped dead in my tracks and wondered. By the side of the street were blue wooden barriers, like those the cops have for blocking traffic. They were adorned with white lettering that proclaimed matter-of-factly: “NYM.” I soon realized that the letters referred to “New York Methodist,” but it was still a strangely reassuring experience.

  • Anonymous

    Kingmania is running wild! The Missus reported that on one of her Opening Day strolls to seek warmth, as she took shelter in the Clubhouse Shop behind the plate she saw an expensive Kingman jersey. She didn't tell me about it until the ride home for fear of a beer-fueled impulse buy. She'sunder the strange impression that one such jersey is enough.

  • Anonymous

    Even more telling than the recurring Met references in the Sopranos is the most prominent reference the show has ever made to a Yankee fan.
    You may recall the episode in which Vito invited Meadow's boyfriend to watch the Yankees play San Diego and that Finn stood him up, left him waiting by the bat.
    And that was not nearly the most memorable scene from that episode.
    Hey, if it's David Chase's position that Yankee fans in general are a bunch of c**k suckers, who am I to argue?