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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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Distant Dispatches

Well, at least this time Mets pitchers didn’t walk anybody.

Luis Severino wasn’t giving out free passes Tuesday night in San Francisco, and for four innings he wasn’t let any Giant earn his way onto the bases either. But the well ran dry in the fifth as lousy sequencing and buzzards’ luck combined to turn a scoreless tie into a 3-0 Giants lead. That was more than enough for the Giants, as Logan Webb had all his pitches working. That Bull Durham line about ungodly breaking stuff in the Show? It could have been written for Webb, who dismantled the Mets with sinkers, changeups and the occasional sweeper: fifteen outs via ground balls. Webb is infuriating to watch as an enemy fan and no doubt as an enemy hitter: You want to moan “Don’t swing at that!” as guy after guy looks disconsolate after swinging at that. Easy advice from the comfort of the couch; at the plate, to borrow from another movie classic, would that it were so simple.

The recently rollicking Mets have now lost three in a row and sunk back to a lone game above .500, and I’m trying not to glower at the game logs from April 2023 and scream at anyone who’ll listen that it’s happening all over again. We’ll know soon enough if it is or not, if shoddy defense and nibbling at the elusive corners of the plate will prove fatal, or if this dip is just part of the normal ebb and flow of the season, maddening in the moment but not particularly consequential in review.

At the moment, though, I’m dwelling on something else I already knew: that these middle of the night games on the other side of the country aren’t conducive to alert viewing, happy recapping or amiable anything else. Come home, boys, home to 7:10 and blue and orange with pinstripes (and the occasional charcoal oddity) and one hopes better outcomes.

3 comments to Distant Dispatches

  • LeClerc

    Until he regains his mojo, it’s time to move Lindor down in the line-up when he’s batting from the left-hand side of the plate.

    He ended three innings (and the game) with weak ground outs with Marte on base.

  • John Farrell

    completely agree about Lindor. He’s hurting the team and needs to be dropped way down in the k
    Lineup

  • Seth

    I’m wavering between being supremely disappointed and trying to remember that this wasn’t ever going to be a championship team in 2024. I just don’t know who this team really is, and I definitely don’t know who Lindor is.