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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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by Greg Prince on 6 August 2010 10:30 am
Welcome to Flashback Friday: Take Me Out to 34 Ballparks, a celebration, critique and countdown of every major league ballpark one baseball fan has been fortunate enough to visit in a lifetime of going to ballgames.
BALLPARK: Busch Stadium (New)
HOME TEAM: St. Louis Cardinals
VISITS: 1, including a tour
VISITED: August 2, 2006
CHRONOLOGY: 30th of 34
RANKING: 15th of 34
Oh dear lord, it was hot.
I thought it was hot in Phoenix in 1999 and in Cincinnati in 2003, but they take a cool, refreshing back seat to the swelter of St. Louis in early August 2006. The Dunkin’ Donuts commercials that ran incessantly that summer — the ones in which somebody sweaty and in need of a Coolatta sang about how it’s like one million/billion/trillion degrees — had to be written with Missouri in mind.
Or perhaps in Missouri.
It’s impossible for me to think about visiting new Busch Stadium without thinking about the literal heat that surrounded it upon our arrival. It all seemed like a great idea in April to spend one of our periodic ballpark-centered vacations there. We saw Busch’s opening via the magic of the Extra Innings package and it looked plenty cool in digital cable. I was up for it. Stephanie was up for it. So I planned our itinerary.
1) Fly to St. Louis.
2) Enter the flaming fires of hell.
Seriously, it was hot. Within seconds of exiting the air conditioned comfort of Lambert Airport, the oppressive furnace of St. Louis turned full blast on me and my Nordic-blooded bride. Guess who wasn’t crazy about triple-digit temperatures and killer humidity — I mean really not crazy about it. I am often reminded my wife is a good sport for indulging my ballpark wanderlust and all, but the truth is she’s generally a willing co-conspirator in these trips. She likes seeing each of them once.
I fear, however, her enthusiastic participation in our baseball outings is subject to instantly melting when placed within the figurative equivalent of, per Johan Santana’s warmup music, seven inches from the midday sun. We couldn’t have waited more than a few minutes for the light rail into downtown, but it may as well have been hours. And I wouldn’t leave anyone I love to broil for hours in the St. Loo sun if I could help it…even if it was literally only minutes.
Hence, Stephanie’s goodwill toward this visit became a minute-by-minute proposition. I had to deploy St. Louis judiciously to transport her in one dry piece from our drenched arrival on Monday afternoon to our game Wednesday night. Any local explorations that involved more than incidental walking would have to be completed by noon; everything else would have to take place within approximately a three-block radius of our hotel.
And god help anyone who turned the in-room air conditioning below anything but ARCTIC.
The good news is we chose our hotel for its proximity to Busch. Everything we really needed (save for our mandatory pilgrimage to Steak ‘n’ Shake, but for that there were plenty of cabs) was in our midst. Metrolink landed us practically outside the ballpark, practically around the corner from the hotel. The hotel was called the Ballpark Hilton and the baseball special package came with not just an Albert Pujols Build-A-Bear but a view of all things Redbird. We could see not just the ballpark from our room, but most of the field. The game we weren’t attending unfolded right before us in our veritable glass-enclosed luxury box. The Cardinal Hall of Fame, which used to share space with the Bowling Hall of Fame for some reason, was just as conveniently located. And when we got hungry, we could enjoy a lovely dinner downstairs at Mike Shannon’s restaurant, bearing the name of the old Cardinal third baseman and long-running Cardinal broadcaster.
The bad news is it was still frigging hot, and I had the not-so-sneaking suspicion that I couldn’t change it.
In any event, Busch was beautiful from the outside. I rank it a hair ahead of Citi Field and that’s probably because it did unquestionably better with the aesthetics in my purely subjective opinion. The interior reds and greens are perfect. Busch’s exterior, meanwhile, looks like it belongs where it’s situated. The bricks hum in harmony with nearby buildings. The arches pay homage to that one really big one a few blocks east. There are reminders that we are near a bridge, the Eads, laced into the steelwork. And when you’re inside the park, particularly if you take the tour — as we did, mid-morning — and get the home plate vantage point, the St. Louis skyline makes for a glorious backdrop. All those years watching the Mets play in an enclosed Busch (and Three Rivers and Riverfront) revealed nothing of the environs they were visiting. It was nice to know that baseball teams actually played someplace.
The attractiveness quotient was, like the temperature, high enough, but once we actually went to our game (praise be, the mercury plunged to 89 degrees at sunset and there was the slightest of breezes), it was less thrilling than I hoped it would be. I’d been far enough removed from despising the Cardinals during the Davey/Whitey wars of twenty years earlier to look forward to getting in on some of that Best Baseball Town in America stuff of which we were always hearing. It was indeed impressive watching the sea of red flow into Busch; Stephanie was overcome by a “when in Rome” impulse and purchased a Cardinal t-shirt (or maybe it was a symptom of heat stroke). Yet once inside, it felt like…
…it felt like Citi Field would three years hence.
Though Baseball’s Perfect Warrior/Perfect Knight Stan Musial stood guard at the third base entrance, and though we enjoyed fine displays of Cardinal heritage on the suite level when we took the tour, the regular folks en route to their regular seats got mostly ads. The Busch version of the outfield plaza seemed to exist only to sell Fords and phones. Carving out a direct path to our ultimate destination in the Outfield Terrace (how come an upper deck can’t be called an upper deck anymore?) proved difficult, as the presence of some fancy club forced us to take a circuitous route the same way the Acela thwarts any Promenade-bound fan who takes the wrong escalator at Citi. Once we were seated, as nice as St. Louis was to look at, I felt pretty far removed from the action below — we may as well have been watching from our air conditioned room.
As for the fans, a.k.a. The Best Fans In Baseball, it may not be fair to form impressions about a tribe based on a small sample you encounter only once, yet these people, synchronized outfits or not, did not strike me as the good-natured baseball geniuses they were cracked up to be. They booed bad things, they cheered good things, they said lame things, they wore red things.
Except for the color scheme, the same could be said of ballpark patrons anywhere, even Shea in those days. Still, they were supposed to be better than us, better than everybody. They were supposed to be so supportive and tradition-minded and the great red mass in front of whom every major leaguer desired to play.
I didn’t see any evidence of this magic fandom. Perhaps I just didn’t find the right Outfield Terrace row. Perhaps there were guys two sections over trading charming remembrances of Stan the Man while showering unwavering support upon Jeff Weaver, that night’s starting pitcher. Perhaps, but I doubt it. Where Stephanie and I sat, we were subject to the rantings of a Missouri moron (unless he crossed the Eads Bridge from Illinois, in which case, sorry Show Me State). As Weaver wove his way into deeper and deeper trouble, this is what one of The Best Fans In Baseball yelled over and over and over:
“Hey! Do you wanna be in the MINORS or do you wanna be in the MAJORS? Do you wanna be in the MINORS or do you wanna be in the MAJORS? Do you wanna be in the MINORS or do you wanna be in the MAJORS?”
There was also an adjacent slack-jawed yokel exchange that went something like this:
“You say you like to play catch?”
“Yeah.”
“Then why don’t you go catch us some beers?”
Tough to judge 42,000 by the actions of a few, but I didn’t sense a great deal of baseball savvy at Busch Stadium on one particular hot August night. Not a lot of engagement, just a lot of red. Blame it on lousy play (Cards were losing all week), blame it on that heat wave, blame it on me falling for Bob Costas’s perpetual odes to the local wonderfulness, blame it on Midwestern bearing…which is not a crime, just a difference; let the record show I love Midwesterners so much I married a gal from Wichita.
Whatever the cause, Cardinals fans could have been Astros fans if I didn’t know where I was. That’s not a compliment.
Naturally I didn’t know it at the time, but loads of foreshadowing hovered over our visit to Busch, beyond the ample evidence that global warming was in full swing. When we flew out of LaGuardia, everything was peachy in Metsland. We had just swept the Braves out of Turner Field for the first time ever, we had a mammoth lead in the East and WFAN was sizzling with talk of the Mets maybe, just maybe getting Roy Oswalt at that afternoon’s deadline. Moments after we settled into our room and turned up the AC, I tuned into ESPN to find out what our team was up to.
Well, let’s see:
• Duaner Sanchez was in a Miami taxi accident overnight and was out for the season.
• The Mets, desperate to fill Duaner’s bullpen innings, sent starting right fielder Xavier Nady to the Pirates to reacquire Roberto Hernandez.
• The Buccos threw in erratic lefty starter Oliver Perez, though the ESPN crawl was reporting Perez would be flipped to San Diego for another reliever, Scott Linebrink.
• Nope, scratch that. No Linebrink. We’re keeping this Perez guy. It says he was a good a couple of years ago. Sounds like a project.
The 2006 season became unnecessarily more interesting in the time it took us to fly halfway across the country. The 2006 postseason was still a couple of months away, but it, too, would involve flights between LaGuardia and Lambert along with evidence that we missed Duaner Sanchez pretty badly. No, I wasn’t done watching ballgames from, if not at, Busch Stadium. The last one the Mets played was Game Five of the NLCS, with T#m Gl@v!ne being outpitched by Jeff Weaver, who apparently decided he preferred the majors. I must say, seeing Busch on TV in the context of the Mets trying to win the pennant so soon after visiting it for kicks was quite odd.
Seeing the Cardinals extend their postseason at Shea was something else altogether, but you didn’t need a trip to St. Louis to figure that out. FYI, Stephanie’s innocently purchased Cardinal t-shirt was cast out of rotation about the moment Yadier Molina rounded third — and the Pujols Build-A-Bear had already been given a Met makeover in September.
As for the other foreshadowing from August 2006, let’s just say I saw the future of the Mets’ under construction home, and its name might as well have been Busch Stadium.
Busch Stadium and Citi Field strike me as very close in their reasons for being: the Cardinals and Mets each went from memory-laden large stadia where loyal fans could almost always score a reasonably priced ticket — and were showing up in healthy numbers right to the end of their respective hulking existences — to substantially smaller facilities where demand would theoretically be goosed and prices could rise accordingly. Each team’s marketers laid in the amenities (great root beer floats at Dizzy’s on the Terrace level) and gussied up their trimmings so as to evoke a mythic, bygone era when baseball was so much simpler, yet both new places felt on contact as if they had simply been plucked from Ye Olde Retro Catalogue and outfitted mainly with a ton of ads and ATMs. Neither necessarily felt anymore like a “ballpark” than either of the immense structures they replaced. Really, they both felt like craven cash grabs.
What really surprised me is new Busch felt lacking in Cardinal history the way Citi would feel devoid of Metsiana its first year. I’d have an easier time signing up for U.S. Cellular service than I would divining inspiration from the likes of Pepper Martin unless I detoured to that since-shuttered bowling museum (which was pretty cool, actually). Before Yadier Molina made me hate the Cards as I had in the ’80s, I rather wanted to be wrapped up in Redbird rapture for a few hours. It wasn’t happening.
To be fair, as I’d learn in 2009, it takes some time to imbue a ballpark with a soul. I’m guessing the 2006 world championship with which the Cardinals were able to instantly decorate their gilded cage helped immensely in that task.
Just the thought of it leaves me cold.
by Jason Fry on 5 August 2010 10:03 pm
1. Ike Davis made an ugly error last night. But you were surprised, weren’t you? When Daniel Murphy or Carlos Delgado made an error, you weren’t surprised at all. And Ike’s still learning.
2. Somewhere out there, some kid spent today staring at the back of his or her first Mets baseball card, soaking up information like a sponge and secretly delighted by how much there was to learn.
3. Pretty soon you’ll have one of those days where it’s beautiful weather, everything goes smoothly at work, and you leave a bit early because you’ve got tickets for Citi Field.
4. Pretty soon you’ll have one of those days when you saunter through the subway in your Mets gear waiting for someone to ask you who won today, because you’ve got a tale to tell.
5. We get Gary Cohen, Ron Darling, Keith Hernandez and Howie Rose to tell us what’s going on down there on the field.
6. Baseball fandom is full of Ryan Thompsons and Lastings Milledges and Alex Escobars who go from prospect to suspect in the blink of an eye. But every so often an Angel Pagan figures it out while he’s wearing your uniform.
7. Mr. Met’s new ads — yes, the ones by Citi — are fricking awesome. As is Mr. Met.
8. The black cat really did cross Beckert’s path. Swoboda really did catch it. Agee really did catch both of them. They really did nail Zisk at the plate. The Mets really did beat Atlanta at 4 in the morning. Lenny really did go deep to end it at Shea. Gary really did finally get to Kerfeld. It really did get by Buckner. Jesse’s glove really didn’t ever come down. Darryl really did hit it off the clock. Pratt really did hit it over the fence. Dunston really did work the walk. Robin really did hit it back to Georgia. Piazza really did cap the comeback on Mulholland’s first pitch. Franco really did freeze Bonds for strike three. Mike really did beat the Braves on the first game after 9/11. Lo Duca really did tag out two runners on one play. Endy really did make the catch. Close your eyes and you can see all these things any time you like.
9. There will never be another ’69, but there will be another year that feels like ’86, or ’73 or ’99 or ’00 or ’06. Sooner than you think, you’ll be jumping up and down in the stands with your arms stuck kind of halfway up, waiting to throw them all the way into the air and scream like a happy idiot.
10. That moment when you get to scream like a happy idiot again? It just got a few seconds closer.
by Greg Prince on 5 August 2010 5:38 am
As Games Behind go, my rule of thumb for holding out the slightest Met hope before September is 7½. I adopted it in August of 1973. The Mets were buried in the National League East cellar, but it was a shallow enough grave so that I could invest a modicum of faith in the concept of life after death. I’m not sure why 7½ seemed doable and 8 seemed impossible, but that was my view on things. Baseball Reference shows us the 1973 Mets were last 7½ out of first place on August 17, when they sat in sixth place with a record of 53-66.
So in that regard, You Gotta Believe the 2010 Mets — in third place, 54-54, 7½ games behind — are still alive, still reasonably well, still something of a presence (besides that of a speed bump) in the N.L. East race.
But that’s the only regard. Otherwise, they’re dead and they’re buried and they did it to themselves as much as the first-place Braves did it to them.
I’m not delusional, I swear I’m not. I knew it was a long shot once the West Coast beckoned and the Mets slipped through the San Andreas Fault by losing nine of eleven. Contending teams, even barely contending teams, have to win on the road once in a while. That’s about as often as the Mets do. If you’re going to go 2-9 in your most daunting road trip of the year, you have to do better than 3-3 where you allegedly enjoy a trademarked Home Field Advantage. Finally, if you’re going to remain ever so slightly viable heading into a six-game journey through the ballparks of the two teams ahead of you, you can’t not, at the very least, win one of those series — preferably the first, against the statistically better team of the two.
The Mets were zombies Monday night. They pulled themselves together Tuesday night. They were in position Wednesday night, at 6½ back, to gain ground from where they began the week.
They didn’t. They emphatically didn’t. They didn’t at every phase of the game. They didn’t pitch well. They didn’t hit at all. They fielded atrociously. They were managed poorly.
They failed as a team.
It was a Must Win, but they didn’t heed the the urgency of the moment. Now all they have going for them is my 7½-game rule of thumb; the slightest of chances to partially redeem themselves against the other team ahead of them; and the precedent of 1973.
It’s probably not enough to plan one’s final of a third season around, but at the moment, it’s all I’ve got.
THE METS DIDN’T HIT
The Mets almost never hit anymore. The Mets have scored 8 runs in 4 games, or as many as the Braves scored last night. The Mets have scored as many as 4 runs in only 8 of their last 25 games, more than 4 runs only 5 times. The Braves’ good young starter Kris Medlin left in the fifth inning with an injury, and the Mets still couldn’t hit.
There’s nobody doing the job with a bat in his hand. Nobody. Angel Pagan was the last consistent difference-maker. He’s on an eight-game hitting streak, actually, yet it’s not making any difference. He’s driven in three runs in those eight games, which may be why he attempted to bunt his way to first with Reyes on second early — it served as a sacrifice but more as an admission. I assumed Wright and Davis would bust out at some point. My assumption has been sadly mistaken. They are both in helpless funks that show no signs of relenting.
Reyes hasn’t been right since the oblique. Thole is a rookie again. Jeff Francoeur takes one effective swing per week. Carlos Beltran is, as we speak, a former star. Honestly, if it wasn’t for Luis Castillo, there’d be nobody doing anything. And if you’re relying on Luis Castillo to carry that weight you’ll be waiting on your delivery for a mighty long spell.
THE METS DIDN’T FIELD
Best Infield Ever, Jr. — the three-quarters that’s here anyway — sure had its growing pains Wednesday night. Reyes (twice), Davis and Wright all rushed things and forced errors that the Braves gladly took and ran with. Yip City. Davis is a rookie. What are the excuses for Wright and Reyes at this stage of their careers? Why does David still sidearm balls to second. On his double play attempt in the sorry sixth, when I instantly wished he would have gone for the one out at home, you could see the car wreck developing from clear on the other side of I-85. David’s gonna throw this away, isn’t he? He is so much a better third baseman than that, yet I get the feeling he thinks he can make up for his lack of bat by growing six extra arms. Dude, you’re David Wright. You don’t have to be an octopus.
Jose? He was having his best defensive season to date until a few weeks ago. Finally gonna get the Gold Glove, I thought. But he just seems clueless sometimes, rarely more so than he did in firing poorly to Davis at first. You look past one error as one of those things, but you get concerned when there are two from one guy or four from three, especially when three of them occur in the same damn inning.
On the other hand, Luis Castillo was quite sharp defensively.
THE METS DIDN’T PITCH
I stared at two sets of numbers before the season as if they held within them some magic answer for something I was anxious to divine. The numbers were these:
510 Innings
29 Wins
38 Losses
493 Strikeouts
3.58 ERA
1.398 WHIP
and
479 Innings
28 Wins
32 Losses
275 Strikeouts
4.58 ERA
1.489 WHIP
Different results born of different roles, different times and different skill sets, but similar sample sizes and a similar sense of frustration linked Nolan Ryan’s Met years and the first four seasons in which Mike Pelfrey pitched in the bigs. Pelfrey never threw as hard as Ryan, while Ryan was always more wild than Pelfrey. Ryan had some adventures. He could strike out eight, he could walk eight and he could do it in the same three-hit complete game victory (no wonder he preaches against pitch counts).
It’s often mentioned that the Nolan Ryan deal was one of the worst any team has ever made, yet it is rarely mentioned what a handful a Nolan Ryan start could be between 1966 and 1971, that the stupendous results — like the 16-strikeout four-hitter of May 29, 1971 — never left him free and clear of suspicions that he was really the pitcher he was on September 28, 1971: four consecutive walks and a two-run single to start the first and then removed for the last time as a Met. Nolan Ryan could be the best and worst of John Maine and Ollie Perez rolled into one tantalizing, exasperating package.
Then the Mets traded him and he almost immediately became Nolan Ryan.
Mike Pelfrey’s a different story, but often over his first four seasons, particularly his fourth, 2009, I was personally ready to give up on him. Maybe the only thing that held me in check was that Nolan Ryan didn’t look like much after a comparable time frame and trading a pitcher of Ryan’s potential before he turned 25 years old — washed up Jim Fregosi or no washed up Jim Fregosi in exchange — was dadburn stupid.
Pelfrey, 26, made me feel none too bright for doubting him once 2010 got underway. It took approximately 500 innings, I decided, but the kid had figured it out. If it’s not Ryan all over again, it’s close enough. We had faith in this guy and he has affirmed it. Mike Pelfrey, ERA down 2.23 on June 8, had arrived.
Well, that Mike Pelfrey has departed, and this Mike Pelfrey (ERA up to 4.10 on August 4) is every bit as much a handful as Nolan Ryan before he underwent his Angel metamorphosis or — shudder — John Maine and Ollie Perez the last time we saw either of them start.
Mike Pelfrey, quite simply, has reverted. His starts aren’t even tightrope affairs. He doesn’t stay aloft long enough for that. Big Pelf crashes through the net below as if he was drawn by Tex Avery for Warner Bros. He’s a cartoon catastrophe every frigging start now. You know the plunge is coming — and it saddens you because you know there’s no trampoline below the net.
He doesn’t bounce back. He gets down on himself. He gets distracted. He loses his focus. He loses his confidence. I don’t know what it is with Mike Pelfrey since June. Before June, I was convinced he had turned the corner, that holding onto him was the smartest thing the Mets had done in years. I am now wondering what they could have gotten had they sold high.
In general, I root for the starting pitcher, whatever name on the back of the jersey on a given night. I don’t like to see starters come out of games if they have any chance at all of wriggling out of a jam. Ideally, that’s a choice to be made late in a game — the manager considers his options and sticks with a Seaver or a Gooden or a Santana reaching back and firing and justifying the faith. Let the ace take care of Bench or Schmidt or Pujols. That’s baseball at its best.
The fifth inning is no time to conjure such manfully competitive visions, not when the batter, Brian McCann, is as close to that Hall of Fame level as you need to see right now and is on a killing spree against your staff; not when the fifth inning may very well be the last inning anything you do really matters for the rest of your season; and not when Mike Pelfrey has grease on his tightrope shoes.
Jesus, what was Jerry Manuel doing letting Mike Pelfrey pitch to Brian McCann with the inning, the game and pretty much all of 2010 on the line? It’s first and third, there’s two out, the Mets are down by one, Pelfrey just semi-intentionally walked Chipper Jones and it’s only two innings since McCann homered off him. Before the fateful fifth, he was 14-for-33 lifetime against Pelfrey.
After the fateful fifth, he was 15-for-34, with another double and another RBI. Yet Pelfrey remains on the mound. He intentionally walks Eric Hinske to get to Matt Diaz. Then he hits Diaz. It’s 5-2 Braves.
That was it. That was it for Pelfrey in the fifth. That was it for my Nolan Ryan comparison, too. Mike Pelfrey’s Met career has consisted of two or three very nice months in 2008, two or three very nice months in 2010 and pitching in circles otherwise. Whether it’s mental, physical or that he’s just not that good, I am re-convinced that it’s never going to happen for Mike Pelfrey with the Mets. I don’t care how much stuff he has. He doesn’t know how to use it, and this organization apparently has no one capable of teasing it out of him for an extended period.
Somebody will think he can figure out what to do with Big Pelf. I invite all bidders and encourage the Mets to entertain all potentially beneficial offers in the offseason. This time, however, if you do go that route, please get more than Jim Fregosi in exchange.
Until shopping Pelfrey can be thoroughly explored, he’s not automatically in my rotation. He goes to the pen or Buffalo or wherever before he gets the same opportunities we shouldn’t have kept giving Maine and Perez. Brooklyn Cyclones manager Wally Backman recently told Bob Klapisch of the Record, “At this level, it’s supposed to be about player development, but to me, development is winning.”
Wally was talking about Single-A ball. He could have been talking about the majors. Development is winning. Pelfrey’s development has clearly stalled and the Mets stand little chance of winning with him as a starter. Thus, if you’re going to cut Ollie (good god, please do), you can’t keep pretending Pelf is one start from finding himself again. He is too lost for that.
Whether the Mets are 7½ back and barely breathing or prohibitively out of it, there is something to be said for trying to win games. Mike Pelfrey in his ongoing state, is not positioning them to do that.
Not even close.
THE METS DIDN’T MANAGE
What exactly is it that Jerry Manuel does? Two or three very nice months in 2008, two or three very nice months in 2010 — he’s the Mike Pelfrey of skippers, except I can understand why people have seen potential in Pelfrey. Manuel? What has he ever been for this team other than Not Willie Randolph when that was considered therapeutic?
He leaves Pelfrey in to face McCann Wednesday just as he left Feliciano in to face McCann Tuesday. McCann was 8-for-24 against Pedro and came out of that battle 9-for-25. Do they keep track of batter-pitcher matchups for the edification of fans or do they share them with the manager?
And what was with Pagan bunting in the third inning? Is there no NO BUNT sign in Jerry Manuel’s arsenal? Or did Angel just think that’s what we’re supposed to do on the Mets? If the players show no confidence, it’s no wonder. The manager thinks it’s 1908 and that he’s John McGraw. It isn’t and he’s not. You’re allowed to play for more than just one run these days.
There are all kinds of minefields to negotiate as a major league manager among the fragile egos and the glaring media eye and the need to balance a sense of urgency with the reality that no game is statistically more than 1/162nd of your season. Those caveats invoked, what exactly is it that Jerry Manuel does other than chuckle mordantly? Is a manager responsible for motivating a team that appeared revved up when it won in dramatic fashion the night before? Those Mets who lost 8-3 to the Braves looked like the motivation got sucked right out of them once McCann doubled off Pelfrey.
It may not be Jerry Manuel’s fault, but none of what’s been going on since June 28 (11-22) is to his credit. You can release Perez and seek new homes for Castillo and Francoeur (though Bay’s extended DL stay makes immediately jettisoning Frechy somewhat impractical) and kick Cora to the curb before his 80-game option vests, but you really want to help this team in the short-term?
Say goodbye to Jerry Manuel.
Don’t wait. Why wait? When was the last time you thought to yourself, “Good call, Jerry” or “Nice move, Jerry” or “Jerry showed good judgment sticking with that guy”? Pagan got a chance to shine because there were no other options once Gary Matthews was given multiple opportunites to not succeed. Same for Dickey in the wake of the John ‘n’ Ollie mess. Other than deciding to not put up with Maine fibbing about the condition of his arm, I’m at a loss to see how Manuel’s made a positive, lasting impact on this club in 2010.
It so happens that we have reached the two-thirds juncture of the 2010 season. I’ve continued to track that bromide about how “You win one-third of your games no matter what you do, you lose one-third no matter what you do, it’s what you do in the other third that determines your season.” True to what I discovered through the first third of this year, the math is off. Here are my updated Determining Third Index Standings:
28 Wins of the “gonna” win variety
25 Losses of the “gonna” lose variety
26 Wins that “determine your season”
29 Losses that “determine your season”
That’s slightly more than half of your games deciding your fate. Usually I’d slot Game 108, Wedensday’s desultory five-run defeat, among the losses that are going to be losses no matter what you do. But I list it among the 29 that are serving to screw us over. it may have definitively determined our season, and it was not out of these players’ or this manager’s hands. It wasn’t fate that they’d slide to the very outer edge of viability on Wednesday. They had a lead. They could have played better. They could have been managed better.
They didn’t. That’s not fate. That’s them, all of them.
On Sunday, before the Mets were so fired up by the presence of their 1986 predecessors that they stormed forth and lost by thirteen runs to a last-place team, Davey Johnson spoke to the enduring meaning of this franchise’s last championship season:
“The one lesson we all learned from that year is no matter what in life, we always have a chance, no matter how bleak it looks.”
Easy for him to say, what with a rotation so deep that his best pitcher in the second half, Rick Aguilera, didn’t even get a start in the postseason. But yeah, like Davey said, we always have a chance. The ’86 Mets didn’t need to worry about 7½-game margins, but the ’73 Mets overcame one in August…as did the ’69 Mets, come to think of it.
Ancient history but our history. It’s what keeps me hanging on — that, and what Richard Gere cried to Louis Gossett, Jr., in An Officer and a Gentleman:
“I got nowhere else to go!”
C’mon, I’m a Mets fan. This is the Mets’ season. The moment the Mets dip absolutely out of the pennant race with which they are, at most, technically associated, what good is that? This, the season, is what I wait October to April for. I want it to continue in ways that encompass more than motions being gone through. And please don’t tell me about football training camps, for crissake. I’m here for the Mets. The Mets start playing out the string, it’s that much closer to not being baseball season. 2011 means nothing to me until 2010 is all the way over, and even then, 2011 has to wait another six months, another October to April, another altogether unending winter in a lifetime that includes too many of them already.
Why would I welcome that void? I did last year because last year yearned to be gotten on with, yet all that did was leave me in the cold and dark of it not being baseball season. Sheesh, what’s the rush? The urgency should be for the Mets to win a game Friday, another Saturday and another Sunday. The rush should be to leave Philadelphia, at minimum, with two wins in their steamer trunk and, with any luck at all, a little closer to first than they are now. Can’t do anything about the Braves at the moment. Had our chance and didn’t take advantage. We’ll have another chance at the end of August. I’d like that chance to represent something other than a chance to briefly hinder their chances.
After Philadelphia, it’s Colorado and the Phillies at home. Then it’s two lousy teams on the road, Houston and Pittsburgh (though lousy Arizona on the road didn’t exactly yield gold). Then it’s home cooking again with the Cantu-less Marlins and the lousy Astros. Then, on August 30, back to the Ted. By then, with 22 games between visits to Atlanta, the idea that somebody sat here on August 5 and calculated the Mets’ schedule with any sense of purpose because the margin was “only” 7½ will almost certainly look absurd.
Almost certainly. As Davey said, we always have a chance — though it couldn’t look a whole lot bleaker than it does right now.
by Greg Prince on 4 August 2010 1:47 am
’Twas a victory of and for the Damned. Damned Castillo. Damned Francoeur. Damned Rodriguez. Damned Mets and their perpetually damning fans.
We won the damn thing!
Y’know what, I’m not even gonna give ya the spiel about it’s just one game. Of course it’s just one game. That’s what a baseball season is: 162 episodes of just one game. Tuesday night, the night after a damned awful game, we were treated to a damned lovely game, thanks in great part to the second baseman none of us wants and the right fielder we’ve all dismissed as fatally flawed and the closer whom nobody trusts. They’re all issued checks by an ownership group we’d all wrest the keys from if we could — and we’re not so hot on the upper-level management it employs to keep an eye on things.
Things haven’t been so great lately. Boo-bleeping-hoo.
Y’all can bury; I’ll be contrary.
It’s baseball season. Still.
It’s 2010. Still.
The Mets are alive ’til they’re not. Still.
The Mets have picked up a game on the Braves. For a change.
Hey, you know who else is having a season that could be going better by the druthers of those who follow them? The Atlanta Braves, that’s who. Check out this lede from Dave O’Brien in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
The Braves were miserable again with runners in scoring position Tuesday night against the New York Mets, and this time that recent deficiency came back to haunt them. So did a former Brave.
After new Braves reliever Kyle Farnsworth blew a 2-1 lead in the seventh inning, Jeff Francoeur hit a ninth-inning home run off closer Billy Wagner to lift the Mets to a 3-2 win against his former team at Turner Field.
“They’ve been struggling just as much as we have to get that one run across, and tonight they got it,” said Wagner, who has two losses and two blown saves in his past six appearances. “It was a good pitch. Pull hitter, hits the ball to the opposite field — tip your hat.”
Everybody’s got their problems, according to the sage John Mellencamp, ain’t no news here. The Braves have problems. The Phillies, minus Howard and Utley and Victorino, have problems. Their problems aren’t quite as daunting as ours given that they’ve each won an extra handful or two of games (and made some pre-July 31 roster renovations), but the season is just as unfinished for them as it is for us. They’ve clinched nothing…and all we’ve been eliminated from is an easy route from here to whatever comes next.
In the meantime, a couple of big hits and nice plays from Castillo; a monstrously huge home run from Francoeur; an untraumatic ninth from Rodriguez; invaluable contributions from Chris Carter and Manny Acosta; and, as always, nothing but good out of the heart, head and knuckles of one R.A. Dickey, the pitcher so tough he’s got extra guts where his ulnar collateral ligament is supposed to be.
Is R.A. Dickey supposed to be anywhere near a major league rotation in 2010? Near the top of ours? At the core of our comfort zone? He persevered on a night when he said conditions weren’t “optimal”. He actually used that word. He also likened pitching in humid and rainy conditions to “straight guerilla warfare”. Again, how many pitchers talk like R.A. Dickey? Better yet, how many pitchers stand in and battle like R.A. Dickey? After Francoeur turned Melky Cabrera’s single into a run-scoring triple in the sixth, a Met meltdown would not have been unexpected. It certainly would not have been unprecedented. But R.A. did not give into either Matt Diaz or Omar Infante, and our deficit remained no more than one.
That was impressive. Acosta bailing out Feliciano (why let him face McCann?) on a double play grounder was impressive. Francoeur’s homer to right off Wagner? Shoot, that was just doggone enjoyable. It no more makes Francoeur a long-term fixture than Castillo’s run in the third or double in the fifth or sacrifice in the seventh calls for an extension to be grafted onto Luis’s already endless contract. But you gotta, just gotta love it if you’re a Mets fan who is willing to remember the future is utterly unknowable and that the present — any present — requires nights like Tuesday.
Maybe it was just one game. Or maybe it’s the game before the next game that can be another just one game. Team Torpid from the game before gave way to a bunch that had rarely looked as alive as it appeared after Frenchy’s homer. Dickey spoke afterwards of recapturing the “fire” this team had when it was going gangbusters. My pitcher is R.A. Dickey, and R.A. Dickey says…
Well, when R.A. Dickey pitches, Mets fans listen, whereas when Mike Pelfrey pitches, Mets fans have cause to cringe. But look at it this way: Big Pelf is listed at 6’7” — the good Pelf from earlier in the season has got to be hiding in there somewhere.
The good Mets from earlier in the season aren’t necessarily off hunting and fishing already, either. They could have found themselves just in time. They are an imaginable (if not particularly manageable) 6½ out of first with yet another Must Win staring them square in the Pelf. Turner Field is an unoptimal a place as one would choose for a stay of contention execution, but they’re getting another shot at the team they Must Win against if they are to have any hope at all. Jerry Reed, in serenading the legendary Banditry of Mr. Burt Reynolds, once apprised us that, “The boys are thirsty in Atlanta.” Now would be a good time for them to be hungry, too.
Let it all hang out, ’cause we got a run to make.
by Jason Fry on 3 August 2010 12:33 am
By now I’m not even mad at them.
No, the worst I can manage while watching the Mets stagger around and lose is a weary exasperation. The competitive portion of the 2010 season is nearing its end, and whatever disappointment I felt over that has dissipated by now. You never know, as baseball sages will tell you, but sometimes you can make a pretty educated guess: The Mets don’t have the horses to stay in this thing. I know it, you know it, and the Mets themselves know it.
Which is not the end of the world. Really, it isn’t. Provided the Mets don’t spend the next two months trying to put one over on us, it could even be a good thing.
Tonight belonged to the past tense awful quick, as the Mets were quickly awful. There was Johan Santana struggling with the first inning again, Luis Castillo botching a double play, Angel Pagan juggling a transfer, and Carlos Beltran looking very sluggish in turning a single into a double. Then it was a sad parade of pop-outs and grounders until Billy Wagner walked off the field triumphant, dropping the Mets to .500. If .500 seems dispiriting, just wait: It will be a minor miracle if they end this firing squad of a road trip at that level.
So enough about tonight.
Look, despite the usual blaring New York headlines, the Mets were absolutely right not to make a move at the deadline, unless you count trading Mike Jacobs for Someone Who Isn’t Mike Jacobs as of note. My biggest fear was that Omar would try to save his own battered skin with Kazmir for Zambrano II, shipping out Josh Thole or Jenrry Mejia or Wilmer Flores or even Fernando Martinez for some middle-of-the-rotation starter who wouldn’t move the needle in any meaningful way. (Let’s be generous and assume that not doing so was an act of responsibility, instead of speculating that it was cheapness or a failure to execute whatever plan was formulated.)
The 2010 Mets’ streakiness has hid that they’re pretty much what we figured they’d be back in March: an OK team with a good core and lousy complementary players. But they’re more or less healthy, and they play hard, and while they may be a disappointment right now, they’ve never been an embarrassment the way the ’07 and ’08 teams were at the bitter end and the ’09 team was from midsummer on. In fact, they offer plenty of reasons to be optimistic about the future: Ike Davis, Josh Thole, Angel Pagan, Jon Niese, Bobby Parnell, R.A. Dickey and Ruben Tejada have been great fun to get acquainted with and cheer for and wonder about. Going into this year, I figured the Mets would struggle in 2010 and then fall off a cliff in 2011. Now, I think I was half-right — and I’m very happy about where I was mistaken. Give the aforementioned players some more seasoning, add them to David Wright and Jose Reyes and a healthier Carlos Beltran and a more relaxed Jason Bay and Johan Santana and Mike Pelfrey, and I feel pretty good about the starting point of 2011.
Which isn’t to say that the Mets should sit around and wait for next year. They can reward our faith by starting to position themselves as well as possible for the 2011 season. A deplorable amount of time was wasted in 2010 on the likes of Jacobs, Gary Matthews Jr., Frank Catalanotto and a too-young Mejia. A deplorable amount of time is being wasted on the likes of Luis Castillo, Alex Cora, Jeff Francoeur and Oliver Perez now.
It’s not realistic to expect the Mets to excise all four of those guys, not to mention Omar and Jerry Manuel. But I would like to see them make two moves that would clearly show us that the team won’t continue penalizing us for its own mistakes: Dump Castillo and Perez posthaste.
Castillo’s inability to do anything of use to a major-league team was once again on sad display tonight: Even if you believe in ancient canards about wasting the No. 2 spot in the lineup on a banjo hitter with bat control, Castillo’s lack of range is a liability that will continue to kill this team until the final minute of his unfortunate contract. And do I even need to make the argument about Perez? Very well: I will be astonished if Oliver Perez ever has three good starts in a row, and promise not to blame the Mets even one little bit if he somehow does.
Those would be expensive displays of penance, I know — just as I know it’s not my money. But they would send the right signals about where this club is going, and reassure us that better days are coming sooner than we might think.
by Greg Prince on 2 August 2010 5:20 am
“Thank you. This is really, really amazing. And it feels so good to be home.”
So said Doc Gooden Sunday as he was inducted into the New York Mets Hall of Fame, and he couldn’t have been more correct — for him or for us.
On some level, Dwight Gooden’s been wandering the periphery of Metsdom since the day after his team won the World Series in 1986. He didn’t show up for the ticker-tape parade a grateful city threw its champions. Five months later, he tested positive for cocaine and wasn’t present on Opening Day when the flag his team earned was raised and the rings with which they were to be rewarded were distributed. He’d be pitching again in June and would be a mainstay of the rotation for another seven years, but Doc was never quite at the heart of this operation again.
If he had been, it would have seemed more tragic or heartbreaking when he tested positive a second time in 1994. It may have been tragic yet it didn’t seem all that heartbreaking. Regrettable, yes, but the hue and cry was muted. He had his problems in 1987, he was welcomed back. They reignited in 1994, the door was over there — be sure to use it. The Mets of post-1993 were a whole different story, a whole different vibe from the Mets of post-1986. There was no patience for an addict or a junkie or a recidivist user, whatever he was. Go away, Doc, was the prevailing verdict. Fix your life on your own time.
We stopped caring diligently about Dwight Gooden because Dwight Gooden apparently didn’t care about himself. We had to move on. We did and he did. He had his moments of success and so did we. We had our slipups and so did he. We’d hear about him from time to time, but he wasn’t our concern and there was no way of telling if we were any of his. Any opportunity that arose when he might have re-emerged, he wouldn’t or, more likely, couldn’t. Whether by conflicting commitments or by law or by personal discomfort or even choice, the estrangement proved immovable.
It would go on that way until September 28, 2008, when Doc Gooden materialized out of the shadows and into the Met midst. The occasion was the final afternoon of his old address. He was one of dozens of former players to take the Walk of Shea that day, but he was the one who jumped out at you. He was the one who owned the place as no more than maybe three or four others owned it, and he was the only one to never set Met foot in it after his title on the property lapsed.
Doc was just visiting, just checking in before Shea would check out. But after fourteen years in which his absence was occasionally noted, his presence was genuinely felt.
Two years after that, he came home for good. Dwight Gooden — Doc — is a Met again. Not because he signed a one-day contract in order to symbolically retire as a Met. Not even because there now hangs a plaque that says he was a Met. It’s because every effort to certify his standing as a pre-eminent Met of Mets was made and achieved. The Mets did their part and so did Gooden.
He’s no longer the NO PHOTO AVAILABLE in our alumni newsletter. He’s no longer on the outs. There are no grudges or grumblings or self-imposed exiles anymore. Doc’s one of the Met family again. Better yet, a Met family at last exists for him to be a part of.
My happiness for Doc Gooden’s happiness on Mets Hall of Fame Day is an emotion I reproduced in quadruplicate Sunday so as to include Darryl Strawberry, Davey Johnson and Frank Cashen in my loud ovations and quiet satisfaction. I was beaming on each of their behalves from the Promenade as each made brief but heartfelt remarks about what it meant to them to be inducted into the New York Mets Hall of Fame.
Did you hear that? There’s a New York Mets Hall of Fame! It’s real. It’s a living, breathing, functioning entity. It’s not shunted away in the Diamond Club. It’s not just two display cases of sculpted heads. It’s not just those couple of pages in the media guide that never require updating. There was an election for it in January, there’s been a museum housing it since April and there’s been a parade of promotional announcements beating the drum that there’d be inductions into it for weeks. Yet not until I actually saw Cashen, Johnson, Gooden and Strawberry express their thanks for being a part of it did I really and truly believe it was real and true.
Each of those gentlemen treated membership as an honor of the highest order, a pinnacle to their long and distinguished baseball careers. I’d been to three previous HOF days at Shea — Mookie Wilson in ’96, Keith Hernandez in ’97, Gary Carter in ’01 — and while those were delightful, they didn’t rise to this occasion. Those were outliers, nice tributes, but essentially a “Day” the same way you might see Copiague Day recognized forty minutes before first pitch.
This was serious, nearly solemn business. I don’t mean to imply it didn’t have its lighthearted moments (Davey complimenting us as the most intelligent fans in baseball because he always heard us on the radio telling him how to manage was a hoot), but this ceremony had gravitas. The Mets organization made as big a deal as it could out of this and the honorees seemed truly humbled. It wasn’t just one more rubber chicken circuit award they were scooping up. These guys actually cared about being Mets Hall of Famers.
What a worthwhile endeavor this was, reviving this thing that barely existed before, and making it bigger, better and more beautiful than it’s ever been. Kudos to all involved on a classy, meaningful presentation — and some unsolicited advice below to Dave Howard, who rained, or at least drizzled in advance, on his own parade when he told Brian Heyman of the Journal News, “I don’t think it’ll necessarily be an annual thing.”
Make sure it’s an annual thing, Dave. Build on this tradition. You just did it for the first time in eight years. The last time you did it, you inducted a great Met, Tommie Agee, a year after he died and thirty years after he last played for the Mets. Then you let it wither. It’s back and it’s blossomed on your watch. You should be proud of these ceremonies and that museum and those plaques (even though the end date on Doc’s plaque says 1995 and his last Mets game was 1994). You should be proud to honor Met greats and even Met very goods every single year.
Mike Hessman just became the 890th individual to play as a New York Met. Fourteen players are in the New York Mets Hall of Fame. I’m thinking there have to be at least a couple of Mets worthy of strong consideration on an annual basis among the 876 Mets who aren’t in our (yes, our) Hall. Take that momentum, sir, and run with it. Just as I was this year, I will be among the first to buy tickets next year for Mets Hall of Fame Day. And I’ll bet more will join me as it becomes an established event.
One other thing I particularly enjoyed about Hall of Fame Day and presumably will for a very long time is that the speakers invoked the name “Shea Stadium” repeatedly. Shea lives! Lives on in the official memory again, that is. 2009 was the year we were told Mets history began ten minutes ago and their only home ever was Citi Field. Now, in 2010, I sat in Citi Field and heard the village elders speak fondly of Shea. There’s nothing to lose in remembering it existed, that the franchise’s greatest baseball was played there and that it sure was fun at Shea.
Now, it sure is fun at Citi. Like Doc Gooden, I’m home…whatever drawbacks the current house engenders.
After the ceremonies ended, the 2010 Mets played a baseball game that was as dreadful as the ceremonies preceding it were beautiful. But I had a really good time, hanging back, no thoughts of streaks (and little of possible contention) in the air. I was with my old friend Dan for the first time since the Home Opener in 2008 (with a welcome half-inning cameo from Sharon) and we just talked non-stop Mets/life for nine innings, much as we might have in the Upper Deck or Mezzanine or Loge in Shea days of yore. In my 54th regulation game there, it was the first time feeling at home felt effortless. Just as I’d been waiting for Doc to return to the Mets for fourteen years, I’d been waiting to for my own sense of ballpark estrangement to completely evaporate for most of two seasons.
Me and Doc, we arrived together where we belong. And we are so happy to be home.
In case you missed ’em, some perspective on the Mets Hall of Fame tenures on Davey Johnson here, Dwight Gooden here and Frank Cashen and Darryl Strawberry here.
by Greg Prince on 1 August 2010 7:50 am
In the spring of 1980, the New Yorker’s Roger Angell was making his incomparable annual rounds and alighted on St. Petersburg for a morning B-squad game between Joe Torre’s Mets and their neighbors, Ken Boyer’s Cardinals. The rookie getting everybody’s attention that March was St. Louis’s big first baseman Leon Durham — “he is called Bull, of course.” Bull Durham was turning the Grapefruit League into his own personal china shop, destroying John Pacella’s pitches in particular. Would he make the big club? Probably not right away, Angell reported. The Cards had reigning co-MVP Keith Hernandez at first, so they were trying to convert Durham into an outfielder. But they had a set outfield of Bobby Bonds, George Hendrick and Tony Scott, so there might be no room for Durham at Busch Stadium.
“Joe Torre,” Roger Angell wrote, “should have such problems. The Mets have no one like Bull Durham at any level of their organization.”
In March 1980, they didn’t. Three months later, they would — no bull. And when he surfaced, he would change everything about how the Mets would perform and be perceived for a very long time.
It would be disingenuous to say they were the two definitive decisions of his tenure as general manager of the New York Mets, for there were other momentous choices made in between, but you can almost chart the trajectory of the franchise by two moves Frank Cashen made ten years apart.
June 3, 1980: He drafted Darryl Strawberry as the first pick in the amateur draft.
November 8, 1990: He didn’t re-sign Darryl Strawberry when he became a free agent.
As we watch the two of them enter the Mets Hall of Fame in the company of Dwight Gooden and Davey Johnson today, we can comfortably declare the first decision represented the cornerstone of the ensuing decade of Mets baseball. To a great extent, the same could be said of the second decision.
• By taking the best athlete available in his first draft as Met GM, Cashen guaranteed himself (as much as any guarantees can be made regarding 18-year-old phenoms) a potential superstar around which he could build a contender, a champion and perhaps a dynasty.
• By eschewing a continued association with the same man after he had proven himself the best everyday player ever developed by the Mets, all Cashen guaranteed was a gaping void for the Mets and Mets fans that wasn’t really filled until one of Cashen’s successors traded for Mike Piazza. That was in 1998, eight years later.
Eight long years later.
The Mets of the ’80s, when they were at their best, were never Strawberry’s alone, which may explain why it wasn’t considered essential to keep him at any price as he approached free agency in 1990. Darryl was one of four pillars upon whom the club that competed year in and year out at the top of its division was built. Selecting Dwight Gooden in the first round of the 1982 draft would prove transformative. Trading for Keith Hernandez in the middle of 1983 would be most callers’ guess if there was a Foxwoods Resort and Casino Turning Point of the Decade contest. Dealing for Gary Carter in December 1984 communicated a seriousness of purpose, that the surprising Mets of the previous season were as for real and real could get. And there were probably at least a dozen other transactions worth mentioning as crucial to Cashen’s construction of a winner.
Yet drafting Darryl Strawberry came first. From the moment he was chosen, we knew he was coming. If it didn’t cause a mania on the plane of a Stephen Strasburg, it was instantly the most famous amateur draft pick the Mets had ever made. And though it would take Strawberry three years to land at Shea, Darryl was instantly the most talented player in the Mets organization, major leaguers included. The Mets may have been making a spirited run toward the .500 barrier in the summer of 1980, but anyone who wasn’t 17 and mesmerized by the exploits of Steve Henderson would have agreed with Roger Angell’s assessment from that same spring, a couple of months before Darryl Strawberry became our future.
The Mets had nobody. And they were nobody.
You know the best part about Darryl Strawberry’s Met tenure? For all the majestic home runs he’d dispatch to the nether regions of National League stadia, I don’t believe it was anything he did in a New York Mets uniform. It was that we knew he was going to put on a New York Mets uniform — that his summers in Kingsport, Lynchburg and Jackson, along with his holding room month in Tidewater, were leading to the grand entrance. Someday, we’re going to have Darryl Strawberry on the Mets. And when we do, watch out world, we’re gonna get real good.
When the big moment came and we learned Darryl would be at Shea and in right field on May 6, 1983, batting third between Tucker Ashford (!) and Dave Kingman, I have to confess I was 90% excited and 10% let down. So much of being a Mets fan from the day Darryl Strawberry was drafted was waiting for Darryl Strawberry to be called up. Then it happened and I felt a bit at a loss.
Now what was I going to look forward to?
Darryl Strawberry’s at-bats took care of that pretty quickly. I looked forward to those every game. I looked forward to the long swing and the long trips those balls took when he connected. I looked forward to his loping stride toward first when he couldn’t trot; to his 6’ 6” frame sliding safely into second on a stolen base attempt; to how he made up for his refusal to reposition himself from of his worn Strawberry patch of grass by turning as needed toward the wall and grabbing the would-be opposition home run (Endy without the obvious effort); to the gun of a right arm that left the other team a little shy of going first to third on the basepaths. The phrase “five-tool player” was gaining resonance around 1983. I don’t think it was a coincidence that it came up around the same time as Darryl Strawberry.
Still, there was no escaping the sense that the five tools weren’t always necessarily put to optimal use. Shouldn’t have the “black Ted Williams” (a phrase his high school coach made famous in Sports Illustrated) hit .300 at least once? Walked 100 times? Launched 40 homers? Won an MVP? Straw never did hit much for average, with .284 the best he ever managed as Met, in 1987, the same year he collected a career-high 97 walks and established a career-best .398 on-base percentage. He set the Met record for homers then, with 39, and matched it a year later when he came closest to attaining his only Most Valuable Player award. Darryl finished second in 1988 for MVP, behind the gritty, gutty Dodger Kirk Gibson (who, ironically, can watch Darryl’s induction today from the Diamondback dugout).
Ted Williams was elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame as soon as he was eligible. Darryl Strawberry was on the Cooperstown ballot once, received the support of 6 of that year’s 516 voters and dropped off the ballot for good immediately. If you go by Bill James’ Similarity Scores, he wasn’t Ted Williams for the next generation. He was a template for Jeromy Burnitz.
So what? Darryl basically asked at a Citi Field press session Saturday. “Everybody has their opinions of where we should be,” Straw said of himself and Gooden and the massive expectations they didn’t live up to. “Should we be in the Cooperstown Hall of Fame? Well, guess what — we’re going into the Mets Hall of Fame, and that’s what’s most important. That’s all I really care about.”
It’s the right sentiment for 2010. It’s a good enough explanation for 1983-1990, even if it papers over that Darryl Strawberry in real time was as perplexing a Met who ever was. It’s not just that he didn’t ascend to immortality beyond the village limits of Flushing. Nor is that he never quite had a season for the ages on offense that was comparable to Dwight Gooden’s 1985 on the mound (though you’d pretty much have to be Ted Williams in 1941 to claim one of those). You couldn’t watch him, love him, root for him without deep-down knowing he could be doing more. He could be running a little harder to first. He could be paying attention to Bill Robinson or the scouting reports when it came to moving over a few steps for a hitter who might not hit it directly to where he was standing. He could not seem intermittently sullen or surly or less than fascinated by the niceties of baseball.
As one of his predecessors among local pop culture icons might have observed had she been around deep into the 1980s, With Darryl Strawberry, it’s always something. If it’s not one thing, it’s another. With apologies to the incisive commentary of Gilda Radner’s Roseanne Roseannadanna, we sure do ask a lot of our greatest position player for fans from a team without any other players anybody ever compared to Ted Williams.
But honestly, it was always something: a police report; an alcohol rehab stint; a rap recording session the day of a game he’d call in sick for; clubhouse feuds gone public; an interview with an L.A. Times reporter in which he said it sure would be nice to play for his hometown Dodgers while he was still very much a Met.
Perhaps because his 1985 was so transcendent and he seemed so ideal a person in the process and he did it before turning 21, we get reflexively wistful over what Doc Gooden could have been. I don’t know if the coulda-been quotient attached to Darryl Strawberry is quite as romantic or, more precisely, as graspable. The best we saw out of him — 37 to 39 home runs three times, 101 to 108 RBIs those same three times (’87, ’88 and ’90), 30-30 once — was phenomenal Metwise, yet just very good in any given season of its era. They were the batting and running equivalents of Doc’s post-’85 Met years, which were perfectly fine 18-9 type campaigns, but not the stuff that layers our memories of him with regret for what he didn’t do.
Darryl did plenty. We just wish he’d done it longer and with us.
If you wanted to frame Darryl as something more than not quite as great as advertised, you had to look for an angle as Allen Barra did in the Voice in 1989 when he made much of Straw outhomering and outstealing Willie, Mickey and the Duke when you lined up all four New York outfield legends’ first six full seasons…and if you took the pitcher’s park nature of Shea into account, Barra added, Darryl might have been better than Mays or Mantle or Snider.
It may have been true, and it may have told an underreported story — Barra insisted we weren’t fully appreciative of what we had in our midst — but even as I cheered the evidence, because I very much wanted Darryl Strawberry to be my Willie Mays, I didn’t quite buy it. I read that Sports Illustrated sidebar in the 1980 baseball preview issue with the black Ted Williams quote. I thrilled to our drafting him, especially when I read the Mets gave serious thought to drafting Billy Beane with that first-in-the-nation pick (the future Moneyball hero was still available later in the first round and we grabbed him at No. 23). I salivated at the coverage Newsday gave his professional debut in Kingsport, how they were immediately scheduling strawberry-themed promotions. I teetered between accepting and rejecting the organization’s assessment that he wasn’t ready coming out of Spring Training in 1983 despite totaling 34 homers in Double-A in 1982. Yeah, he hadn’t yet faced Triple-A pitching, but how much International League did the black/young/next Ted Williams need anyway?
I didn’t think Darryl Strawberry was going to be another Ted Williams or Willie Mays. I took it on faith that he’d be Darryl Strawberry and that the top prospects who came after him would be touted as another version of him.
It didn’t really work out that way — but it wasn’t exactly a misfire, either. Darryl did win the Rookie of the Year award on merit, did make the N.L. All-Stars seven consecutive years as a Met (often on merit), did pair 30+ homers with 30+ thefts in 1987, did lead the league in long balls in 1988 and, when he wasn’t physically, mentally or spiritually AWOL, made for an unmatched presence in Met reality and Met lore.
You watched Doc every fifth day. You watched Mex batting with (or holding) runners on base. You watched the Kid when he saw the cameras. But you could not take your eyes off Darryl Strawberry when he came up to bat because you never stopped imagining what he might do and how far he would do it. In legend, his long balls are still traveling.
• There goes the one he hit just foul in the bottom of the ninth the night he came up to the majors to stay. George Foster would hit one fair in extras to win it for us, but Darryl had suddenly and emphatically served notice that more and straighter clouts were coming.
• There goes the one off the clock in St. Louis in the last valiant week of 1985, where he added an extra hour to our pennant savings time.
• There goes Al Nipper’s self-esteem in the last half-inning we would need before making a formality of clinching the last World Series we won.
• There goes one on Opening Day 1987, with Doc Gooden at Smithers and Doc Gooden’s pants worn by his power-stroking buddy who managed to stay out of official trouble to that point. Who the hell wears a teammate’s pants as a tribute? I wondered, but maybe it was just a different way of walking a mile in someone else’s shoes.
• There go two on the next Opening Day, at Olympic Stadium. The second clanks off the top of the Big O. We all learn the phrase “tension ring” on April 4, 1988 because that what it hits. Without a roof, it would have rung the North Pole.
• There goes the Shea scoreboard, bruised halfway up in the middle of the hottest of hot streaks, in 1990. As Joe Durso reported it in the Times, it “carried 450 feet from home plate and struck halfway up…against the lighted word ‘Ball,’ where the count on the batter is recorded but where baseballs rarely carry.”
That’s where Darryl Strawberry sent baseballs: into uncharted territory and off toward eternity. He did it 252 times as a Met, most ever by one of ours. He was doing it and everything like crazy in what turned out to be his final Met year. Strawberry was in yet another of his phases of carrying the ballclub on his back (he had a knack for imbuing clichés with doses of accuracy). The Mets were on a 27-5 roll in June and July of 1990. Darryl was doing about as well, with 15 home runs and 36 runs batted in over a 29-game span. He batted .389 from June 8 through July 13. Keith Hernandez was gone. Gary Carter was gone. Dwight Gooden was finding himself after a wretched (for anybody, not just him) start. By 1990, the Mets were Darryl Strawberry’s team.
By 1991, they were not.
That’s the flip side of Frank Cashen’s Hall of Fame general managership. Darryl wanted to be paid like the best player on the Mets, one of the best players in the sport. Frank Cashen chose not to concur with that desire. For all the letting go of Ray Knight and Kevin Mitchell and Wally Backman and Lenny Dykstra, this may have been the worst decision Frank Cashen made as Met GM.
Darryl did not maintain the Mets on his back the rest of that season, but nobody else’s back on that club was near broad enough to even broach the possibility of carriage. Nobody had the presence of Darryl Strawberry in the Met lineup or the Met imagination. Howard Johnson proved capable of hitting one more homer (38) and driving in nine more runs (117) in 1991 than Darryl did in 1990, but let’s be serious: Howard Johnson was no Darryl Strawberry. Nor was good old Hubie Brooks, reacquired from L.A. to play Darryl’s former position when Darryl headed west to play it for the Dodgers. Nor was the oddball Met signee of the winter of 1990-91, Vince Coleman.
Cashen built his Mets on trades and from the farm. He hated free agency. When he was hired to re-create the Mets from the ground up in 1980, he gave free agency one legitimate shot — trying for Dave Winfield and Don Sutton in his first full off-season but settling for Mike Cubbage, Dave Roberts and the second coming of Rusty Staub — before removing that distasteful arrow from the organizational quiver.
“Fans think that because of free agency, you can turn a ballclub around very quickly,” Cashen told Angell the spring before, “but that isn’t a useful way to go about what we have in mind here.” Thus, the open market went largely untapped by Cashen…and it didn’t hurt a bit in the buildup to 1986.
Mazzilli for Darling and Terrell.
Terrell for Johnson.
Allen and Ownbey for Hernandez.
Brooks, Winningham, Youmans and Fitzgerald for Carter.
Bailor and Diaz for Fernandez.
Young, Lee and Cook for Knight.
Christensen, Gardner, Schiraldi and Tarver for Ojeda.
Beane, Klink and Latham for Teufel.
Even Treviño, Kern and Harris for Foster.
Heck, even Scott for Heep.
Frank Cashen didn’t always fleece the other guy, and not every guy he got was the equal of what he gave up (Mike Scott) or the equal of what he thought was getting (George Foster), but every part contributed to a beautiful whole. Mix the fruits of those deals with Strawberry and Gooden and Dykstra and Elster and Aguilera and Mitchell and McDowell and Sisk, all drafted by the Cashen regime — along with pre-Cashen holdover youngsters Wilson, Backman and Orosco — and you have a contender that became a champion if not a dynasty. Hardly any free agency was involved in making the Mets great in the 1980s.
So why not keep Darryl Strawberry, the homegrown star you nurtured when he was tempted to test the free agent waters? And why on earth would you break with your philosophy and throw big money at a poor fit and questionable human being like free agent Vince Coleman?
1990 was different from 1980, both for Strawberry the superstar and Cashen the GM. The short answer is both were older and more recalcitrant than they were ten years earlier. Strawberry had done his blossoming. Now he wanted to do his banking. Cashen didn’t care for that attitude, certainly didn’t care for the money Straw wanted, which was in the neighborhood of what then reigning face of baseball Jose Canseco had re-signed for with Oakland — $4.7 million a year for five years. The Mets offered three years, a little over $3 million a year. The Dodgers ultimately gave him five years at approximately $4 million per year.
The numbers, as obscene as they are to the average fan twenty years later, don’t sound all that ludicrous in the context of the megastar money that would be flowing soon enough in the 1990s. Cashen, though, was standing on his version of principle when he snorted his best ballplayer wasn’t worth anywhere near $5 million a season. Maybe Darryl was standing on principle, too, when he accepted all the money he could get out of L.A.
Hindsight tells us neither one of them was right.
Vince Coleman — four years, not quite $12 million — was not a logical solution for any challenge regarding the Mets post-Darryl, not as a leadoff batter, not as a natural grass hitter, not as a positive influence on the roster, certainly not as a gate attraction. He was more Al Harazin’s idea than Cashen’s — the GM in the bowtie was moving toward stepping down, calling it quits after the 1991 season — and typified the Harazinian quick-fix thinking that would hamper the franchise as the new Met decade rapidly disintegrated. The Mets were kind of desperate once Straw signed with his hometown team, so they lunged at a guy who used to regularly beat them.
What Vince Coleman did to the Mets as a Cardinal barely compared to what Vince Coleman did to the Mets as a Met. In the context of Darryl and Frank, he represented collateral damage of a relationship gone awry. By not reaching accord with Darryl, we got Vince. And with Vince, we got tsuris.
The toxic outfielder helped wreck the Met winning ways from within in 1991 by breaking down (72 games played, on base at less than a .350 clip), acting up (unleashing a “profane outburst,” as the Times put it, at coach Cubbage) and being generally miserable. The Coleman solution to the Strawberry void shoved the Mets down a hole that made Harazin double down on desperation…in other words, 1992 and Bobby Bonilla. Bonilla was more bad news, as was all of 1992 and 1993 and so on for the Mets who extracted every wrong message possible from everything episode that went sour. It was like the opposite of teachable moments.
Players got in trouble after 1986? Get rid of potential troublemakers.
Less troublesome players not playing well? Sign whoever looks good.
Guys we spent on making the situation even worse? Stop spending — and look out for troublemakers.
Cashen served the Mets as a consultant but was retired from active duty. Strawberry had a good first year as a Dodger, two lousy, injury-riddled seasons and was released after substance abuse and Tommy Lasorda got the best of him in 1994. By then, the Mets were a shell of what the two men had begun to build together in 1980. Coleman was gone. Bonilla would go. The Mets would spin their tires in the mud of a few more mostly lost seasons and scrounge around for replacement parts before Bobby Valentine pounded together a scrappy competitor in 1997. The following year, Nelson Doubleday ordered Steve Phillips to trade for the suddenly available Mike Piazza, and it was only then that the Mets could be said to have replaced Darryl Strawberry as a presence and a player.
The Mets are on their fifth general manager since Cashen. Three of his successors — Joe McIlvaine, Phillips and Omar Minaya — can be said to have been successful, but none on the level of Cashen. Edgardo Alfonzo, Jose Reyes and David Wright are the only homegrown position players the Mets have signed and developed since Strawberry bolted to establish themselves as legitimate stars while wearing the Met uniform. That’s three in two decades. Alfonzo was more technically sound, Reyes has been pound-for-pound more exciting. Wright is no doubt more consistent and will likely wind up as more productive.
But you only get one Darryl Strawberry in a lifetime. No wonder Frank Cashen picked him first.
by Greg Prince on 1 August 2010 1:20 am
The perfect team needs no enhancements at the trading deadline. Enhancements are for teams with glaring imperfections, first-place outfits like the Cardinals, the Padres, the Braves, the Yankees. They admitted their imperfections by making trades. So much for them. Perfection is obviously embodied in the tied-for-third place Mets, a club that stood pat Saturday afternoon and went out Saturday night and did what a perfect team does:
Win a baseball game.
Perfection is a fifth starter, Hisanori Takahashi, striking out ten Arizona Diamondbacks in six innings.
Perfection is the lowest-ranking member of the bullpen who isn’t Oliver Perez, Manny Acosta, rolling out his second consecutive inning-and-a-third of flawless relief.
Perfection is a fourth outfielder, Jesus Feliciano, tripling to lead off the ninth and thereby imperil a 4-4 tie.
And, as if packing Hisanori Takahashi, Manny Acosta and Jesus Feliciano onto the same roster isn’t a perfect enough display of personnel, perfection is taking a piece of Kirk Gibson strategy — walking Angel Pagan and David Wright to load the bases to get to some nonentity named Carlos Beltran — and pumping a fist at it after a no-doubt sacrifice fly by Beltran renders it stupid.
Perhaps you were channeling Jack Buck, unable to believe what you just saw when Carlos flied to deep enough right and Jerry’s Mets bested Gibby’s Snakes in walkoff fashion. But I was completely credulous. I had known my team was perfect ever since the deadline came and went and Omar Minaya left his chemistry-laden clubhouse undisturbed. Many players changed hands the last couple of days but our dealer sat with a hand that was pat — as pat as Misch, you might say.
We’re still tied for third, we’re still residing in the distant exurbs of contention, but ever since I learned just how perfect we are, the Mets are 1-0.
Go argue with perfection.
by Jason Fry on 31 July 2010 2:44 am
Part 1: Friday Night Frights
Went to see the Mets play ball. Lovely evening, and great company in my pals Wayne and Amanda, the latter a visitor and, horrible to say, a Yankee fan. (She was also a model guest — I didn’t once hear the number 27, an invocation of rings or a sentence ended with a superfluous “baby.”) The only problem was the Mets diverting us from a pleasant evening with whatever it was they were doing down there on the field.
It started out well enough — both Mike Pelfrey and Ian Kennedy had to contend with a strike zone that seemed the approximate size of a postage stamp, and settled unhappily on “give up a lot of runs” as the answer to that particular riddle. David Wright hit two home runs that looked like they’d been fired out of a cannon, no-doubters to left and dead center that had even the folks in the spendy seats up and gaping before the ball cleared the second baseman’s airspace. But after Pelfrey was left in for approximately 1,316 pitches, Raul Valdes came in and got mauled for five runs on just 14 pitches in the top of the sixth. He slunk off looking bewildered and unhappy and then there was nothing much to see except Aaron Heilman come in for the ninth, shot-putting the ball plateward and looking, as usual, like a man who’d just chugged a glass of sour milk. Of course he somehow held the Mets scoreless, tagged only by jeers from the helpless fans.
Watching Luis Castillo flailing against Aaron Heilman made me simultaneously angry and tired. So, for that matter, did knowing Jeff Francoeur would swing at first pitches like a dog lunging for a cheeseburger left on the edge of the counter, and having to sit through that ghastly mall anthem of Eminem’s that someone has saddled Angel Pagan with. Oh, and I might be mistaken but during the middle innings I think I heard the Yankees acquired Lance Berkman, Austin Kearns, the Milwaukee Brewers’ team bus and the Lesser Antilles. (On the other hand, I’m glad the Mets did nothing except send Mike Jacobs away in exchange for the Blue Jays promising to stop teasing us for reacquiring him. This team isn’t going anywhere in 2010 and I’d much rather see it hold its pieces for use in the offseason and in July 2011.)
Anyway, that was Friday night, on which the only thing wrong with the Mets game was the presence of the Mets.
Part 2: From the Basement to the Dugout
Instead of lingering on the recent unpleasantness, I’d like to go back to offer my thoughts on Wednesday evening’s blogger visit to Citi Field, as chronicled by Greg here, Shannon of Mets Police here and Matthew Artus of Always Amazin’ here. I felt weirdly self-conscious as we made our way through the bowels of the stadium and out onto the green field, populated by big-as-life, honest-to-goodness Mets in pregame motley. Part of it was the oddity of the experience, of going somewhere I’d never been before except for the occasional Kids Dash or pregame event in which actual Mets were far away, instead of 18 inches from me. But another reason for my self-consciousness was that I wasn’t sure what I was supposed to do or, frankly, what I wanted to do.
 A bunch of Mets bloggers in a familiar dugout. (Image courtesy of OnTheBlack.com's Kerel Cooper)
Like my co-blogger, I have years of experience as a professional journalist. I’ve been a beat guy and a columnist and an editor and run a section. I’ve talked to people who wanted to spin me, people who were adversarial at every turn, people who said as little as possible, and people who were infuriated with something I’d written. So I didn’t necessarily feel out of my element on the field or in the dugout, or petrified by the idea of talking to the players. And yet I did feel out of my element — because I decided years ago that I didn’t want to be a sportswriter.
To be clear, I love sportswriting. I admire the men and women who do it. I appreciate that their jobs can be exceedingly difficult, a delicate mixture of diplomacy and truth-telling, with late nights and sudden rewrites and endless travel making everything still more complicated. I didn’t turn my back on sportswriting because of any of that, but because of a more basic consideration: I knew that becoming a sportswriter would require me to stop being a Mets fan, to accept that there is no cheering in the pressbox. Given those two choices, I chose to stay a Mets fan — until blogging let me find a way to be a sportswriter after all. Or, if you don’t like my use of the term, to be someone who chronicles a team from a close distance but a certain remove, serving as a loyalist and historical-minded complement to the folks working the clubhouse with pens and tape recorders.
Anyway, long ago I chose fandom and distance — and then, on Wednesday, all of a sudden there was no distance. We bloggers were briefed on the dos and don’ts of pregame and turned loose, free to wander up and down the VIP area behind home plate and the warning track along the first-base line and even hang around in the dugout. We were allowed to interview players, with the proviso that they were going about their business and all had different routines. The Mets’ media-relations folks helped us understand that; they couldn’t have been nicer or more helpful. And they weren’t worried about us in the least.
Greg chatted with Ed Kranepool, but while I appreciated the opportunity, I didn’t talk to any players. Part of that was not knowing the routine. One rule of BP that I grasped immediately (with the help of lots of signs) is you don’t go on the grass — that’s the players’ workplace and sanctuary. If you want to grab a player, you have to do it while he’s crossing the warning track, and if he’s doing that he’s generally on his way to the clubhouse (where we weren’t permitted) at a decent rate of speed. I hung back because I didn’t want to interfere with either the players’ preparations or those of the beat writers, clustered in the dugout when we arrived.
But I also wasn’t sure I wanted to talk with the players. I’d never been across the line that divides us, and if I was going to cross it, I wanted to be better prepared than I felt on Wednesday, with a clearer idea of what I was looking for and how it would help the blog. Should we be given another opportunity like Wednesday, I’ll think about it more beforehand, since I won’t have to fret about the basics. But honestly, I’m ambivalent. I think our blog has worked pretty well without direct interaction with actual New York Mets — our point of view has never included that, chance meetings in Catskills resorts aside, and there’s a freedom in calling things as we see them from the stands or the couch, unencumbered by the need for clubhouse diplomacy. On the other hand, the reporter in me likes the challenge of finding new stories to tell, things the beat writers might see as just part of the scenery but be of interest to the rest of us. And the reporter in me has always felt queasy at the fact that I’ve said horrible things about various Mets and never had to look them in the eye. At one point Wednesday I had a brief fantasy in which Francisco Rodriguez turned out to be a Faith and Fear reader, and I was about to play the role of a much smaller Brian Bruney. It was vivid and unpleasant. It also wouldn’t have been unjustified. That’s worth thinking about.
After 10 minutes or so of pointless angst, I did what I’ve always done to settle myself down in such situations. I opened my notebook and started writing down what I saw.
Part 3: Up Close and Sorta Personal With the Mets
One thing I’d expected was that the Mets would seem much bigger up close than I’d imagined. But that was only true sometimes. The first Met I passed was Pedro Feliciano, and he was broader than me but built to the same scale. The same was true of plenty of other Mets — they were obviously fit and athletic and spent their days outside, but they didn’t look like members of another species. But some of the Mets were imposingly large. On TV, Josh Thole’s youth and crouched batting stance makes me think of him as somehow slight, but he’s a big, solid guy. I don’t think of Carlos Beltran as enormous — he’s only about two inches taller than me — but if he walked down the street in civilian clothes you’d immediately notice him, struck by his size and purpose. And then there’s Albert Pujols. He was on the other side of the field, but when he came out of the dugout all eyes jumped involuntarily to him, and I knew him at a split-second’s glance.
The Mets spent plenty of time playing catch, shagging flies and doing other baseball routines that look like a lot of fun, and I’m sure are. Jose Reyes and Luis Castillo were tossing the ball back and forth a couple of feet away when we arrived — except Reyes wasn’t really tossing the ball, at least not by my standards. It was coming out of his hand fast, much faster than a ball does even when I throw it with maximum purpose, and you could hear it hiss as went past, until it snapped into Castillo’s mitt with a crack.
Batting practice and infield practice are interesting to watch because they’re so intertwined. At one point Randy Niemann was throwing to the Met hitters while Chip Hale stood to the side of the cage, hitting grounders to Ike Davis and Mike Hessman at first, who’d field the ball and throw it back to Dave Racaniello. (Who was everywhere and doing everything during practice.) What struck me was that Niemann and Hale never had to look at each other, never had to exchange hand gestures, never had to indicate that one or the other should go ahead. The rhythms of their routines were perfectly synched, fitting inside each other. That was something I noted over and over again — the amazing control the players and coaches have over what they’re doing at any moment, the way so much of what they do has become muscle memory.
During their pregame routine the players are surrounded by people — not just loitering bloggers, but reporters from print and TV and radio and the Web, speaking Spanish and English, alongside Mets officials and security guards and groundskeepers and camera operators and other stadium personnel. After 4:40 the stands began to fill with fans watching BP, cajoling players for balls and autographs as they descend into the dugout. And the VIP area fenced off behind home plate is a zoo, an endless parade of kids and businessmen and young women and random folks admitted by the two teams. Pop songs chosen according to no discernable rhyme or reason blast over the PA — I found Genesis’s “Paperlate” particularly random — and the players do their work amid constant noise and chatter, with eyes following them everywhere they go. The chatter rises to a tumult when they leave the field. At one point Wright came into the VIP area and was frankly besieged, almost lost behind outthrust pens and balls and even a stack of WRIGHT jerseys people wanted signed. He handled it with grace and ease, but I felt uneasy for him at the center of all that attention and interest and naked want, and couldn’t imagine being him.
On the other hand, at one moment I found myself very much wanting to be Jeff Francoeur. Hitting in the cage, Frenchy needed a couple of pitches to find his timing and set himself. But once he had it, he started smashing home runs into the second deck in left field, one after the other. The swing was utterly fluid, a mathematically defined arc, executed with flawless timing. Each swing in that series was a ruthlessly efficient conversion of the ball’s velocity and the bat’s and Francoeur’s muscles into a majestic trajectory. Each swing was perfect, and I found myself thinking that the pitcher’s job was to interfere with perfection, to scramble the pieces of the equation to yield a decidedly imperfect outcome. I’d never thought of hitting as something that could be perfect, but there it was, in laboratory conditions, and I found myself nodding in delight that I’d been able to see it.
(Thanks to Kerel Cooper of OnTheBlack for the photo, and to all of our fellow bloggers for great company in the dugout and in the stands.)
by Greg Prince on 30 July 2010 12:26 pm
Growing up
You don’t see the writing on the wall
Passing by
Moving straight ahead, you knew it all
I heard the theme from the terrible movie St. Elmo’s Fire a little while ago. I make it sound as if it was an accident, but it’s on a playlist of what I call, with characteristic understatement, The Top 500 Songs of All-Time. It’s a big, garish, stupid song from the midpoint of a big, garish, stupid decade, so I won’t be offended if you don’t share my assessment of John Parr’s greatest hit as No. 482 for all eternity. Still, sometimes you come across something that’s so over the top, you can’t help but be taken in by the enormity of it.
Then or now.
The first time I heard “St. Elmo’s Fire (Man In Motion)” was the night of July 13, 1985, probably the early hours of July 14 to be perfectly accurate about it. I was in a hellacious Saturday night/Sunday morning backup on the southbound approach to the Whitestone Bridge, heading back from having driven my college friend Rob Costa home to Connecticut. We had hung out all day Saturday, first in the city where we converged by train at Grand Central and later on Long Island. I was 22 and, à la Parr, a man in motion, thinking nothing of giving somebody a lift to another state. Technically speaking, I would have been a man in motion had the traffic to the Whitestone been moving…which it wasn’t.
I don’t precisely remember if “St. Elmo’s” bombast hit me before or after the toll booth. It would make more sense if it was the latter, so let’s say it was. Let’s say I finally pulled away from the gate and revved my pair (two pair, actually) of wheels up to 55, 56 miles per hour and, per Parr, could suddenly see a new horizon underneath the blazing sky…or perhaps just the exit to the Cross Island. In any event, I’m pretty sure that’s the first time I heard the song that I would come to grudgingly adore because it so fit the mood of what consumed me most that very same summer.
On Sunday night, July 14, Dwight Gooden would pitch in Houston, the Mets’ last game before the All-Star break. All the Mets would give him in the way of offense would be an unearned run in the eighth, but at the midpoint of the 1985 season, two singles and a bad throw to first of a potential double play ball was about as much as the Doctor would think to order. Doc gave the Mets a nine-inning shutout as their going-away present: five hits, two walks, eleven strikeouts. Once he got a lead in the top of the eighth, he struck out the side in the bottom of the eighth. He struck out Kevin Bass to end the ninth. The Mets won for the twelfth time in thirteen games. Doc won for the thirteenth time in sixteen decisions. His last loss had been ten starts previous.
John Parr from “St. Elmo’s Fire”:
Just once in his life
A man has his time
And my time is now
I’m coming alive
Dwight Gooden from 1985:
13-3, 1.68 ERA at the All-Star break
11-1, 1.34 ERA after the All-Star break
While not technically a one-hit wonder — anybody else remember “Naughty Naughty”? — John Parr reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 only once, with “St. Elmo’s Fire,” the week of September 7, 1985. He and it stayed atop the chart for two weeks. While America’s disc jockeys were playing “St. Elmo’s Fire” to death, Dwight Gooden was burying nearly every National League hitter he encountered. In Doc’s final six starts of the season, the Mets played 59 innings; Doc pitched 53 of them.
Why only 53? Well, the first two games went thirteen and ten innings, respectively, and his manager had a rule about not letting him go more than nine. There was also a start in which Davey Johnson pulled him after eight innings with an eleven-run lead. Doc’s line that day: 3 hits, 2 runs, 0 strikeouts…
…oh sorry, that was Dwight Gooden’s hitting line. Doc did allow an unearned run to Pittsburgh on the afternoon of September 21 when he went only eight innings, but considering he socked a three-run homer and collected four RBI, I think we can pardon his not going the distance.
Which should remind us: Over his final nine starts of 1985, Dwight Gooden gave up one fewer home run than he hit.
He hit one.
He could climb the highest mountain. He could cross the wildest sea. He could confound every expectation a sane person would have for any pitcher in any season. 1985 was Doc Gooden’s Fire.
• His ERA after his first start, on Opening Day, was 4.50. After his second start it fell to 1.80. And it never rose as high as 2 again.
• On a steamy Shea afternoon in August, he simply did not have it: five earned runs in five innings against the Phillies (in a game the Mets eventually won 10-7; the other starter didn’t have it either — some 42-year-old lefty by the name of Jerry Koosman). The damage it did to his ERA? It was driven all the way up from 1.64 to 1.82.
• He went 14 weeks between losses. During that span, he won 14 consecutive decisions, a Mets record. The loss that snapped his streak came on the last day of August. And then in September, he gave up no earned runs.
• He made 35 starts overall. He was removed in the middle of an inning twice — and once was the crazy, rain-delayed July 4-5 eventually 19-inning nearly four in the morning game in Atlanta, when the craziest thing would have been to have risked Doc Gooden’s twenty-year-old right arm.
You can express it any way you like. You can add up the complete games (16), the shutouts (8), the strikeouts (268), the wins (24) and the ERA (1.53). You can gawk at his September and remember that the Mets needed every single inning he gave them as they chased, caught, passed and fell — again — behind the Cardinals. You can go straight to his last start, at St. Louis, when he was not at all sharp and still managed a complete game victory with ten strikeouts to move the Mets within one of the division lead with four to play. You can note his Cy Young Award was unanimous, his fourth-place finish in the MVP voting ludicrously low or that Wally Backman summed up the Mets’ ultimate three-game deficit in a nutshell when he wryly observed that it was all Doc’s fault — after all, he did lose four games.
I can hear the music playin’
I can see the banners fly
For four minutes and eleven seconds this morning, I was at the midpoint of a big, garish, stupid decade which also happened to the midpoint of the most remarkable baseball season I can possibly imagine one individual giving me. And I was 22. If you’re going to take a 251-second trip back in time, you can do worse than when you spent the day with a good friend from college who’s no longer around and you looked forward the next night to watching a great young pitcher who you knew was only going to get better as that season and that decade eased into their respective second halves.
I’m going to Mets Hall of Fame Day Sunday for Dwight Gooden’s induction. I figure it’s the least I can do considering how all my other tentatively set plans where he’s concerned went awry. See, I had hoped to be at Doc’s 300th win or his perfect game or when he threw that shutout that clinched our third consecutive world championship. I certainly thought I’d be there when the Mets retired his number and was sure I’d make the trip to Cooperstown after he made it in on the first ballot.
But I missed all those events, which I find surprising, considering I had more or less penciled every single one of them in while singing along with John Parr a quarter-century ago.
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