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

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

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

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Endangered Species: The Dual Complete Game

Friday night was an extraordinary pitchers’ duel. The only thing that would have made it perfect would have been a better result, both in terms of reversing the identities of the winning and losing teams and if Johan Santana had, like Yovani Gallardo, pitched all nine innings in the process.

This is not a rant about Jerry Manuel using rusty Ryota in a game-determining spot (though I question bringing him in when he did). This is a lamentation that we just don’t see sublime duels come to their logical conclusion anymore — we don’t see dual complete games anymore.

1969 has been referenced a good deal of late thanks to the precedent it provided for the already iconic Goose Egg Sweep. Well, there were no dual complete games as the Mets took it to the Phillies thrice late that September, but ’69 was a very good year for dual complete games between a Met starter and his opposite number. Like Brooke Shields and her Calvins circa 1981, nothing got between those pitchers and their decisions on eight separate occasions. No relievers, certainly.

In April alone, the Mets played three games in which our guy went the distance and their guy went the distance. Not surprisingly, our guy was Tom Seaver in two of those dual complete games. Tom Terrific outpitched (if not outlasted) Bob Gibson of the Cardinals on April 19 and Mike Wegener of the Expos on April 30, winning both times by 2-1 scores. Tom would beat Woodie Fryman of the Phils by the same score under the same mutually complete circumstances on June 24.

Gil Hodges wasn’t shy about trusting his starters in 1969, even as he cultivated a clutch bullpen led by Ron Taylor from the right side and Tug McGraw from the left. The Mets posted 51 complete games. Sometimes they were complete game losses. On three occasions, they were countered by complete game wins.

• Dave Giusti, later a Pirate closer but then a Cardinal starter, outdueled former Pirate Don Cardwell, 1-0, at Shea on April 12.

• As Neil Armstrong prepared to take one small step on the moon on July 20, Gary Waslewski and Gary Gentry weren’t going anywhere in Montreal. They each pitched complete games in the first game of a twinbill at Jarry Park, their Gary besting our Gary, 3-2.

• Reds manager Dave Bristol did not see the merit in removing Jim Merritt on August 6 at Crosley Field, and his faith was rewarded as Merritt bested Jim McAndrew in a complete game battle, 3-2.

Two of the most famous games of 1969 — two of the most famous Mets games in franchise history, really — were dual CGs that were put in the books as truly glorious triumphs of the human spirit. On July 8, Leo Durocher stuck with Ferguson Jenkins even as Don Young’s inability to track two fly balls in center extended Fergie’s ninth inning. Eventually, Ed Kranepool made Jenkins pay with what we would now call a walkoff RBI single. By capping that three-run ninth, Kranepool transformed Jerry Koosman (9 IP) from hard-luck loser to most deserving winner.

It would be Kooz at the center of the action two months hence, September 8, when he and Bill Hands exchanged knockdown pitches early — Hands trying to intimidate Tommie Agee, Koosman retaliating against Ron Santo — but with neither ever knocked out of the game. The decisive and instantly legendary play was at the plate, Agee (who had gone deep in the third) sliding home under Randy Hundley’s too-late tag on a Wayne Garrett single, putting the Mets up 3-2 in the sixth. From there, it was all starting pitching, particularly New York’s. Jerry Koosman struck out 13 en route to preserving that 3-2 lead and cutting the Cubs’ incredible shrinking first-place margin to a game-and-a-half.

Relief pitchers existed in 1969 in form if not quite in the substance and numbers we are used to nowadays. But they were an important part of the game already — closers may have been called firemen but the saves rule was officially instituted that year. Relievers were becoming widely accepted as assets and bullpens weren’t regarded as simply a repository for failed starters. In a bit of foreshadowing as to how the sport would evolve, Cincinnati reliever Wayne Granger led the National League with 90 appearances, two more than allegedly perpetual Pedro Feliciano posted forty years later in leading the Senior Circuit. Of course there was a difference in usage. Pedro’s 88 games encompassed 59.1 specialized innings; Granger’s 90 games encompassed 144.2 innings — and 27 saves, tied for second in the N.L. behind Fred Gladding of the Astros, who registered 29.

In 2009, ex-Met Heath Bell led the National League with 42 saves, accumulated across 69.2 innings. For comparison’s sake, the only member of the ten-man Met pitching staff that Gil Hodges took to the postseason who threw fewer innings than the Padres’ Bell was Jack DiLauro, clearly the tenth man on that staff. DiLauro pitched 63.2 innings in 1969, starting four times and relieving nineteen.

In 1969, National League starters averaged 6.5 innings per game, meaning you were unlikely to see a relief pitcher until the seventh on any given night. The Mets’ starters averaged 6.8 innings. Tom Seaver averaged 7.8, Jerry Koosman 7.5. Forty years later, the league average per start was 5.8 innings, the Mets’ (in, granted, a lousy Met year) was 5.7.

The bullpens are deeper these days. Jerry Manuel generally has seven relievers at his disposal (some would say overdisposal) to go with his five-man rotation. Hodges took ten pitchers to the postseason and never found cause to use three of them: DiLauro, McAndrew or Cal Koonce. Davey Johnson dressed only nine pitchers in October of ’86 when 24-man rosters were the fashion. Current bullpen coach Randy Niemann was just along for the ride, while Doug Sisk made only a pair of ninth-inning cameos in relatively hopeless situations.

These days — and by these days, I mean for a very long time now — bullpens are deployed and depleted on a regular basis. In the last postseason series the Mets won, their sweep of the Dodgers in the 2006 NLDS, only one starter, T#m Gl@v!ne, qualified for a win. Gl@v!ne lasted six solid innings in Game Two before Willie Randolph opted for a pinch-hitter amid a Met rally. John Maine didn’t make it out of the fifth in Game One; Steve Trachsel didn’t get out of the fourth in Game Three. Feliciano, Aaron Heilman and Billy Wagner were used in all three games, while Chad Bradford and Guillermo Mota were used in two and Darren Oliver pitched once. It worked, so nobody complained.

That’s the thing. Today’s reliance on relievers works. Or it seems to. Almost nobody gives the alternative, letting starters go as long as they can when they’re going well, much of a chance. Over in the DH league, Texas Rangers president Nolan Ryan — who came through as Hodges’ long man in the deciding game of the ’69 NLCS and recorded a 2.1-inning save in Game Three of the World Series — has been recognized recently for attempting to shatter the pitch count glass ceiling and put an end to “robot baseball”. His pitchers are going longer and the Rangers are clinging to first place in the A.L. West. Maybe what he and his pitching coach, ex-Met Mike Maddux, are doing in Texas will work, and we’ll see more pitches from starters and fewer pitchers coming to their rescue.

Maybe we’ll see more games like Friday night’s in Milwaukee that was, for 8½ innings a true throwback to the days of Seaver vs. Gibson, Koosman vs. Jenkins, even Waslewski vs. Gentry. If it wasn’t a standard sight to see complete games exchanged in 1969, it wasn’t all that uncommon. It happened to the Mets roughly every twenty contests.

You know how often it’s happened to the Mets in the past fifteen years? As far as I can divine (with the help of Baseball-Reference and a hopefully keen eye on my part), four times.

Four times in fifteen years has a Met starter and the opponents’ starter gone to the mound and stayed there for the duration, not counting rain-shortened affairs. Just four times have the Mets’ manager and the other team’s manager resisted the temptation to pick up that phone and make that call to the bullpen. Just four times have the managers maintained confidence in their starters to go all the way. Just four times has the adage “dance with them what brung you” been adhered to in both dugouts.

Twice we as Mets fans were rewarded with wins. All four times we were enriched by drama. I guess I’d prefer wins by any means necessary, but I do love complete games. I even love the other team’s starter getting a complete game…as long as it’s a complete game loss.

Here are capsule recollections of the last four confirmed sightings of what is a sadly vanishing breed in the Met nature preserve, the dual complete game.

May 3, 1996. Paul Wilson carried a two-hitter into the bottom of the ninth at Wrigley Field, leading Jaime Navarro and the Cubs 2-1. Wilson had been hailed as the second coming of Tom Seaver from the instant he was drafted No. 1 in the nation in 1994 and now we were seeing why. Scott Bullett, pinch-hitting for Navarro (9 K’s, 1 ER in 9 IP), led off the home ninth with a single. As Brian McRae went down for Wilson’s ninth strikeout, a speeding Bullett took off for second…safely. Paul stayed focused on the next batter, Ryne Sandberg, getting him to swing past a 3-2 pitch for his tenth strikeout of the afternoon. Dallas Green ordered Mark Grace, who had driven in the only Chicago run, intentionally walked. It was Wilson, not John Franco, who would face Sammy Sosa in an attempt to close it out. Alas, it was Sosa who ended things on the first pitch, which was last seen flying somewhere over Waveland Avenue. Final: Cubs 4 Mets 2. I wanted to throw a fit but I was at work and had just thrown an unrelated fit literally minutes earlier, so I, like Paul Wilson, simply had to suck up the complete game loss and go about the rest of my career not fulfilling lofty expectations.

June 23, 1997. The story of this game has its roots in the game of the day before. Bobby Valentine was shy a starter on June 22 (Armando Reynoso couldn’t go after absorbing a liner off his kneecap from some obscure cretin named Luis Sojo during the first Subway Series), so he gambled on his bullpen stringing together all the outs he would need at home against Pittsburgh. His first arm belonged to righty Cory Lidle, who had been a mild revelation as a reliever, but didn’t have it that Sunday as a starter. Lidle gave up six runs (four earned) in four-plus innings and gave way to two relievers (Juan Acevedo and Ricardo Jordan) who did not distinguish themselves and one who did (Greg McMichael). Meanwhile, the Mets bats were pounding the Pirates all day, so it looked as if Valentine’s plan was a no harm, no foul proposition. But believe it or not, Franco — replacing McMichael even though McMichael was fine in the eighth — couldn’t hold a 9-7 lead in the ninth, which meant a tenth inning, and the use of yet another Met reliever, Japanese trailblazer Takashi Kashiwada. All was well that ended well when Kash held the Buccos scoreless in the top of the tenth and Carl Everett jacked a three-run homer to left to send us home very happy. So anyway, the parade of six relievers (in the rapidly disappearing days of the six-man bullpen) each pitching at least one inning meant Bobby V. required length out of his starter the next night against the Braves, also at Shea. And he got it. Rick Reed took the ball and went to work, beating John Smoltz, 3-2, in an inspiring dual complete game duel. Neither man was brilliant, but both were enduring. The Mets, in particular, needed endurance above all, and Reed gave it to them.

April 26, 2002. Shawn Estes was a Met for less than one season and is remembered by Mets fans for only one thing, and it’s for the one thing he didn’t do — or hit. But forget about his not having very good aim when it came to Roger Clemens’ enormous ass. Even put aside, in case you remember all the details of his Saturday in the uncomfortable spotlight, that Estes beat the Yankees and homered off Clemens on June 15. That may stand as Estes’s most memorable outing as a Met, but this one, from the end of April, was Estes’s best. Going up against ex-Met Glendon Rusch and the Brewers at Shea, Shawn wasn’t just brilliant for six innings. He was perfect. Your bloggers were at this game and they were sensing history in the making. Jay Payton had homered off Rusch for a 1-0 lead in the third, and Estes was making it stand tall. We got to the seventh, smelling that first no-hitter — and it was going to be a perfect game! Was going to be. Eric Young (who grew up a Mets fan in New Jersey) singled to lead off the seventh. Oh well, so much for history. But Shawn Estes kept bringing it nonetheless. Young was erased stealing and, save for a Jose Hernandez walk, no other Brewer reached base. Rusch was good in completing his loss (1 run, 3 hits, 6 strikeouts), but Estes pitched the game of his Met life: a one-hit shutout with 8 K’s and nobody mad that he didn’t hit anybody.

August 14, 2005. More than three years had passed since Shawn Estes didn’t no-hit Milwaukee. In the interim, every Met didn’t no-hit somebody, though several had come close. Trachsel came close against the Rockies in 2003 (curse you, Chin-hui Tsao!). Gl@v!ne appeared on the verge of doing it against the same club in 2004 (curse you, Kit Pellow!). And Pedro Martinez made our eyes pop out in June of 2005, toting a no-no against the Astros at Shea into the seventh. No offense to the previous pretenders, but who better to do it than Pedro, our new ace, one of the premier pitchers of his generation? As Mets fans everywhere totaled up the reasons why this was going to be the one, Chris Burke (curse him!) undid our calculations by launching his very first major league home run for Houston’s very first hit of the night. So much for that fantasy. But the fantasy had legs, and it ran clear across the continent in August, for another rendezvous with destiny. The setting this time was Dodger Stadium, where it all began for Pedro. He was once again in rare form (or rare for others, typical for him). In June, Martinez got to one out in the seventh before Burke ruined his bid for super immortality. In L.A. he entered the eighth inning without having surrendered a base hit. Pedro struck out Ricky Ledee to begin the eighth. Great! Only five outs to go! And in the time it took to realize one should never count no-hit chickens before a Met can hatch them, some person nobody would ever hear of again — Antonio Perez — tripled past Gerald Williams in center field. Gerald Williams? This was a few days after Carlos Beltran had collided with Mike Cameron in San Diego, and maybe a Gold Glove center fielder could have done something with Perez’s drive, but ultimately it was a clean triple that soiled our moment in the sun. Even dirtier was the next batter, some Dodger named Jayson Werth, homering to put Los Angeles in the lead. For you see, while Pedro was carrying the weight of the Mets on his shoulders that Sunday, the Mets were leaving the balance of their batting order on base. They touched Brad Penny for ten hits, but only one run…driven in by Williams of all people. Penny went all the way for the 2-1 win. Pedro went all the way, too, but all he got for his Herculean effort was what Nolan Ryan and Tom Seaver and every other Met who came close to a no-hitter received — nothin’ (curse everybody!).

Of course I can’t believe the Mets have yet to capture a no-hitter. But I’m stunned that they’ve gone nearly five years since participating in a dual complete game. I wonder which will appear on our horizon first — or if we’ll ever see either.

Even Blue and Orange Geese Stop Laying

Ryota Igarashi is a hell of a nice guy: It was his birthday, but he gave Corey Hart a gift — a splitter that hung in the middle of the plate, and which the equally generous Hart promptly regifted, delivering it to the Brewer relievers in the distant bullpen as a game-winner.

Ah well, 35 goose eggs ain’t bad. But 36 would have seemed a lot nicer — particularly if the Mets had managed a bit more on the other side of the ledger.

Yes, the duel between Johan Santana and Yovani Gallardo was pretty great: Both pitchers were able to thread needles, and had the hitters and Ron Darling guessing all night. As the Mets’ scoreless streak kept rolling along, 1969 was a recurring topic of conversation for Gary and Ron (probably best that Keith wasn’t present to comment on the high-kicking Brewer cheerleaders), and this game seemed borrowed from that long-ago year, with two starters zipping through the opposition and looking singularly disinclined to leave the moundwork to someone else.

In fact, 41 years ago tonight Clay Kirby put up nine scoreless innings for the Padres, only to see Jerry Koosman put up 10 in a 1-0 Mets win. Though given the final score, perhaps it’s more fitting to link to this heartbreaker from later in that Magic Summer, one that saw Gary Gentry edged by Ron Reed. I’ll grudgingly tip my cap to the fact that Gallardo got the kind of just reward stalwart starters often deserve and rarely receive: Typically the victory comes with the starter sitting in the dugout looking exhausted with an arm wrapped while some dingbat reliever stumbles into a W.

The wonderful duel at least dulled the pain of that third inning: Bases loaded, nobody out, and the resurrected Jose Reyes at the plate. Bang! One hop to second, Rod Barajas an easy out at home, then Alex Cora grounding into a double play. Or the pain of the ninth, which saw Angel Pagan justifiably furious at being called out on a pitch that crossed the plate at mid-shin. Or the pain of the eighth, with Santana nearly hitting one out (the man was everywhere) but being left on second by Reyes. Or the pain of going from figuring the Mets would find a way to win to feeling a tickle of dread that they wouldn’t. Or the pain of 58,000 more fricking Derek Jeter’s Got An EDGE! commercials. Or if you want literal pain, there was Jason Bay tracking George Kottaras’ drive to left against the backdrop of Kottaras’ own face, as if Bay were going to run into his mouth, and then smacking the plexiglass so hard that the LEDs blinked behind his back. Bay — who’s been nothing short of excellent in left field despite all our doubts — looked more than a little dazed, and who could blame him?

Then there’s the headache of fretting about the Mets’ vanishing act once they put on road grays. The old saw is if you play winning ball at home and .500 on the road you’ll go to the playoffs, but that bit of wisdom comes with a corollary that rarely needs uttering: If you somehow play .285 ball on the road, even a .679 winning percentage at home won’t get you far enough.

Chalk it up, for now, as one more mystery about a thoroughly mystifying baseball team.

Who Cares What Mike Francesa Thinks?

Apparently our favorite sports-radio hyena ripped Matthew Cerrone today for something he wrote about Mike Pelfrey. Francesa lobbed some personal attacks Cerrone’s way and then asked, “Who reads blogs anyway?”

What amuses me more than Francesa’s after-the-asteroid roaring is that is I found out about it on Metsblog. Which might surprise him, but not me. It’s been years since I listened to WFAN outside of Mets hours. Why on earth would I? I get more-timely news from blogs. I get better analysis from blogs. I get better fan comments and reactions from blogs. In fact, except when Mike Francesa says something amazingly stupid and/or reactionary, these days I barely remember he exists.

Who listens to sports radio anyway?

The Beautiful Game

It was a canyon of zeroes along the top line of the Citi Field scoreboard these past three nights. Read ’em, per sweep:

000 000 000
000 000 000
000 000 000

That’s what your defending National League champion Phillies left behind, thank you very much. More to the point, that’s what your homestanding New York Mets gave them.

Twenty-seven goose eggs — the perfect gift for the team that has everything. Or maybe used to.

The Phillies have been an outsized nightmare almost every day of our existence since late August of 2007. Prior to this week, we had actually beaten them some seemingly important games, including 11 of 18 in 2008 when we worked all year to put the year before it behind us. Those wins no doubt served their temporary purpose, yet it was the losses to Philadelphia that defined our relationship to our newest blood rivals. Obviously the four defeats at Citizens Bank Park that presaged The Collapse of ’07 and the three at Shea Stadium that kicked it off in earnest stand out most glaringly, but the single Mets-Phillies encounter that I think probably hurt us most in terms of timing and tonesetting was the Friday night in September 2008 that ended, just as Thursday night at Citi Field did, with a score of 3-0.

That night was about as unspecial as it got. And it shouldn’t have been. That night should have crackled with tension. We held a three-game lead over the Phillies with 22 remaining. We had Mike Pelfrey going for us against Brett Myers. It was our first game at home after a 6-2 road trip that took us through Philly (1-1), Miami (2-1) and Milwaukee (3-0). Shea should have been crackling or roaring or something. Instead, it was flat, just like the Mets. The Phillies scratched out a first-inning run (single, steal, errant throw, groundout), allowing Myers to nurse a 1-0 lead through six. In the seventh, Pelfrey, who had stymied the Phillies after that first run, gave up a two-out, two-run fence-scraper to Greg Dobbs.

And that was the game, 3-0. The Mets stirred in the ninth — a Wright double, a Delgado single — but Brad Lidge retired Carlos Beltran and Ryan Church on fly balls that landed in gloves and the Phillies were winners. It was a tight game, and the Mets were still in first, but the ultimate outcome of that season felt predestined. Over the last 22 games of 2008, the Mets went 10-12, the Phillies 16-6.

Like I said, the Phillies were winners. In any one game and, for that matter, any one division (Wild Card considerations notwithstanding), there can only be one winner, which left the Mets to be something else that year…same as the year before…same as the year after.

Now it’s a different year. It would be a bit hasty, unconscionably premature and overwhelmingly presumptuous to declare in the giddy aftermath of what Gary Cohen instantly dubbed The Goose Egg Sweep that it is a different era altogether, that it is the Mets’ time to be winners and the Phillies’ time to be something else. We shall see what the balance of 2010 holds in store for us, for them and, within the realm of an N.L. East in which all teams are presently all right, for the rest of the division.

But I gotta tell ya: The Phillies didn’t look champs of anything in this series. By the ninth inning of its third game, their dugout was filled by haunted faces, as if each of them had just come back from the morgue to identify each other. They looked dead and they knew it. Even for a Mets-Phillies game that felt more like September than that Mets-Phillies September game from two years ago, we must remind ourselves it’s only May, and that a three-time divisional champ that holds a 1½-game lead with four-plus months to go isn’t exactly what you’d call down for the count.

Yet the Mets…they look pretty good. They may not have looked this good since another September 2008 affair, that bittersweet final win at Shea over the Marlins authored almost solely by Johan Santana. This wasn’t exactly that, but this was, for late May, incredibly special, maybe beautiful. It was also a dandy group effort.

Mike Pelfrey was obviously the instigator, a pitcher so matured that he seems to be a different person from even his alleged breakout year of 2008. On radio and TV, it was noted the change in the rule that dictates when, where and how a pitcher can go to his mouth — which sounds vaguely pornographic — might have something to do with his relaxation and the results that have followed. If that’s the case, then get Big Pelf a bucket of KFC, because he was finger-lickin’ good Thursday night. Not spotless (not with five walks), but totally poised. Like Myers two Septembers ago, Pelf was staked to a 1-0 lead in the first and wasn’t bolstered further until the seventh.

Didn’t matter to the Phillies’ starter on September 5, 2008, and it didn’t much matter to Pelfrey on May 27, 2010. He put a runner on in every inning from the second to the sixth, and it was almost of no consequence. Maybe it wasn’t predestined, but Pelf threw five ground balls to end those five innings, the middle three of them for double plays. That’s using your noggin and your fielders, something I never believed Mike Pelfrey could do on a consistent basis. That’s also the group effort at its dandiest.

5-4-3. 4-6-3. 1-6-3. Three innings. Six outs. Everybody where they were supposed to be, everybody playing a part. The pitches were made. The throws, like Henry Blanco’s to nail Raul Ibañez, were made. The catches, like Angel Pagan’s perfectly timed dive and grab off Carlos Ruiz, were made. The adjustments, like Pagan sliding feet-first at second to steal successfully two innings after his head-first slide led him to an out, were made. Little things that impressed the hell out of me happened: such as Jeff Francoeur playing Shane Victorino’s sinking liner perfectly so Wilson Valdez couldn’t score from second in the second; such as Francoeur questioning Andy Fletcher’s strike three call in the bottom of the eighth, but knowing when to quit questioning so he would be able to go out to right for the top of the ninth and be the right man in the right place to track down a deep line drive from Chase Utley; such as Fernando Tatis running every step of the way to first so that Placido Polanco’s bobble would not go for naught. One batter later, Jose Reyes was doubling him and Blanco home. Reyes himself had been doubled home in the first by Jason Bay and spent most of the evening along some segment of the basepaths.

Even the one thing that I thought was going to blow up this beautiful game, Jerry Manuel’s ritualistic removal of Pedro Feliciano in favor of the paycheck of Frankie Rodriguez in the ninth — even though the first two Phillies due up were who Feliciano lives for getting out — didn’t go against us. At the end of the evening, with Utley, then Howard, then Werth going down, it was comforting to be reminded that Frankie, his touch of Benitez notwithstanding, is actually a pretty effective closer.

It wouldn’t be fair to say the Phillies were no problem to the Mets for the last three nights. It would be more accurate to say they were a challenge the Mets accepted and handled with aplomb. The Mets were breathtaking in their efficiency, actually. The Mets just played 27 innings, scored 16 runs, allowed none and committed no errors. They didn’t exactly kick the Phillies’ ass; it’s more like they tidily swept it to the curb.

That works well, too.

After the Yankee series, I had a grand time referring to us as the Kings of New York. After the first win of this series, I was dying to declare us the Kings of the Northeast. Now that it’s five in a row over two defending league champs, I don’t think I’ll do that. That’s the stuff you do in May when you have nothing else to look forward to. I look forward to Milwaukee. I look forward to the Mets.

***

Somebody please get Gary Cohen a Met no-hitter to call. All that was at stake tonight, besides the bottom-line result, was a third consecutive shutout. Of course it’s significant and symbolic and, with the tidbit that the Mets hadn’t done it in the same series (against the Phillies, no less) since 1969, historic, but all that truly mattered was a win. Didn’t matter if it was 3-0 or 3-1 or 3-2. Yet Gary amped me up exponentially for that 27th zero, investing it with the kind of reverence Vin Scully lent Sandy Koufax’s 1965 perfect game — right up to including the time of night that the Goose Egg Sweep went final. At seven minutes to midnight, Gary tingled my spine every bit as much as K-Rod’s strikeout of Werth did.

SNY offered wonderful production all night (save for not being able to show us Jose’s two-RBI double landing fair), but geez, I wish they would stop doing things just because they can. The tosses to Chris Carlin are brutal. Chris Carlin is brutal. The only upside of a Met loss is the unlikelihood that I’ll stay riveted to the postgame show that he hosts and infects with his relentlessly sour disposition. But he’s not the worst part of the SNY ephemera. The worst is when they direct our attention away from the game and to Kevin Burkhardt at the wrong time of night. Kevin is a fine reporter and a generally welcome presence in these telecasts (his early-inning tour of the realigned bullpens represented value-added substance), but I wish they’d deploy him more judiciously. I as a viewer do not need to see and hear him interviewing the departed starting pitcher while the game is still in progress — not if the game is still very much up for grabs. I can wait until the postgame show to hear Mike Pelfrey’s aw-shucksiness. The more interviews they have during the postgame show, the less Chris Carlin there is. But with Feliciano pitching to Wilson Valdez and Ben Francisco in the eighth, I want Gary and his analyst buddies commenting on the action. I don’t need gee-whiz drop-ins. I don’t need SNY to prove it can get an interview with a player during a game. The novelty of that feature is long worn-off.

Why throw it to Kevin Burkhardt at that moment? I couldn’t say for sure, but I noticed his spot is sponsored as a “Business of Baseball” segment. Yes, I guess the business of baseball is to intrude on the live action with bells and whistles so long as somebody’s paying for it.

Dear SNY: Less business, more sports, particularly when the sports you’re telecasting are this exhilarating. No need for you to step on your own storylines. Thanks.

Mets Yearbook: 1988

Set your DVRs or just get yourself glued to SNY Friday night at 7:00 for the debut of Mets Yearbook: 1988, the latest installment of the best series on television and the latest one we’ll see in chronological terms. Get ready to revisit the powerhouse Mets who were going to reign for years to come: the 1986 stalwarts plus David Cone, Gregg Jefferies, Dave Magadan, Randy Myers and Kevin McReynolds all in full bloom. I watched this highlight film on VHS about twenty years ago (rented it from a Palmer Video) and by the early ’90s it was already making me nostalgic for the dynasty that never was.

Recently, Bronx Banter ran an eerie series on how the Mets could have been a juggernaut for all time across the ’70s and then some. It was fanciful, but not totally, given that it was based on things the Mets could have done, like draft Reggie Jackson, and didn’t have to do, like not trade Amos Otis and Nolan Ryan. (Read it in three parts here, here and here.) The other night I was watching yet another airing of the 1988 division clincher, and I gotta tell ya, there was nothing fanciful about the concept of a Met dynasty. We were about to wrap up the East, the Dodgers would be easy pickings and then the foreseeable future would fall at our feet. How could it not? Strawberry, Gooden, Darling, McDowell, HoJo, Dykstra, Mookie plus all those aforementioned young fellows. Yes, it was going to be great.

Now that you’re all uplifted, make a note to watch Mets Yearbook: 1988 anyway. And don’t forget ALL TEN episodes, spanning 1963 through 1988, will run on SNY on Memorial Day, beginning at 4:30 PM. If you don’t have a DVR, buy one now.

Image courtesy of “Mario Mendoza…HOF lock” at Baseball-Fever.

Long Live Bernie

Today is five years since Bernie the Cat was last with us. Right about now, if he were still stationed on the couch, this would be the look from him. It would be easily translated as, “You got me up for this? For four consecutive wins? For Dickey and Takahashi? Wake me when we’re at least in the lead for the Wild Card. And put out some Fancy Feast for when I wake up for real. Never mind. I’ll have some now.”

Typical Bernie, never too high, never too low. But he was always as good as he looked when we were winning and looked better than anything when we weren’t. Bernie was good all over, regardless of the Mets’ performance in a given week or season. He was even good about all those naps of his I interrupted for Mike Piazza home runs, Rey Ordoñez catches and Al Leiter strikeouts. He came along when Doc Gooden was still the ace of the staff and hung in to the early days of Pedro Martinez. Bernie saw the Mets finish last and Bernie saw the Mets finish the World Series. Bernie saw plenty. He saw plenty, he ate plenty and he napped plenty.

Bernie, more than any soul I’ve ever known, had it goin’ on.

Today is five years since Bernie. This, my friends, is what a first-ballot Hall of Famer looks like.

Don't Think, It Can Only Hurt the Ballclub

So perhaps I’ve been unfair, and the Mets had a Plan B for their starting pitching all along: “If, somehow, John Maine’s chronic injuries don’t disappear and Oliver Perez doesn’t stop pitching like Oliver Perez, we’ll just substitute a knuckleballer who’s a dead ringer for the Cowardly Lion and a 35-year-old who had a good but not great career in Japan. OK, we’re done here — wait, Beltran did WHAT?”

At least for 48 hours, Plan B has gone swimmingly.

I first really appreciated Hisanori Takahashi watching him battle Javier Vazquez to a standstill: He’s a done-with-mirrors location/finesse type, which doesn’t give you enormous hope for the future — every discussion of those guys begins with Greg Maddux with a local detour to Rick Reed, but ignores how few of those guys get Greg Maddux/Rick Reed results. Still, guys in that mode are enormous fun to watch when they’re on and showing you how pitching is supposed to be done — changing speeds here, putting the ball there, and either being one step ahead of the guy with the stick or having been so consistent about being one step ahead of the guy with the stick that he guesses what’s coming but still can’t hit it solidly. I wonder how long that double hesitation in Takahashi’s delivery — the tiny pause at the top of the windup and the freeze frame with one leg high — will keep scrambling hitters’ timing, but even when it becomes familiar he’ll know what he’s doing out there. I wonder if Oliver Perez has ever been able to say that.

Unintentional bringdown note from ESPN New York’s Adam Rubin: “Takahashi became the first Mets pitcher since Grover Powell in 1963 to allow no runs in either of his first two major league starts.” Who was Grover Powell? Not someone whose career path Takahashi would be advised to emulate. Powell was a Penn econ major who got thrown off the baseball team, agreed to sign with the Mets for $8,000, saw his bonus cut to $2,500 and signed anyway. (Wonder if they covered that at Wharton.) He was called up in 1963, beat the Phillies in his first start (wearing No. 41) and had logged four scoreless innings in his second when Donn Clendenon smashed a line drive off his cheek. He retired shy of 50 innings pitched and that first win was his last. In 1985 Powell drove to the hospital after his son was in a near-fatal crash, wound up seeing a doctor himself, was diagnosed with leukemia and died the same year. His tombstone bears an image of his baseball card — the only one he ever had.

But for now, let’s not worry about what might befall Hisanori Takahashi in 2032. In fact, let’s not worry at all. I’ve done plenty of that about the 2010 Mets, just as I’ve done a bit of pinching myself and thinking they’ll turn out just fine despite their various flaws. Either way, every time I find that I’m a lagging indicator: The Mets have either looked unbeatable or hapless, which is one way to be average but puts a lot more mileage on stressed-out fans than repeatedly winning one and losing one. Is the current run of good starting pitching a fluke, or guys who figured out how to pitch getting a chance to prove it? Are the statistical cylinders lining up favorably at the moment, or has Jason Bay relaxed and Jose Reyes returned and Angel Pagan matured — which might give David Wright the peace of mind to ease up on himself? Have the Mets caught the Phils and Yanks in a lull, or found a formula that should work for a while? Who knows. Tell me when to tune in and I’ll hope for the best.

And maybe I’ll even see some of it. Last night I put Joshua to bed with my eyelids already trying to stay above half-mast and trudged upstairs to the couch. I fell in and out of dozing, but sat bolt upright when I saw it was the sixth and the Phils had runners on first and third with one out and Ryan Howard at the plate. Takahashi sliced away at the strike zone and erased Howard on an evil low-and-away changeup. I sank back into the couch, but struggled up to one elbow as Jayson Werth and his ridiculous facial hair arrived. Werth promptly hit Takahashi’s first pitch to the moon, but he was too early, so more accurate to say his drive went harmlessly left of the moon. Takahashi, chastened, went back to work, got Werth to hit a harmless fly to Jeff Francoeur, and I let my eyes close. It was only 2-0, but something told me it would be OK, and it was.

When I Find Myself in Times of Trouble, R.A. Dickey Comes to Me

When the Mets score eight to win by eight and give me my personal-record eighth victory in a row, you know what that means?

I don’t know. But it sure feels good. I’ll take serene eights over the crazy kind any day.

When last we saw the Phillies in New York, they were no help whatsoever, ich bin eining us against each other en route to shoving us into yet another November of discontent. And the last time we saw them in our neck of the woods, we were subject to those saddest of possible words: Bruntlett to Bruntlett to Bruntlett.

Feh on 2009. Everything sucked then. Everything’s great now. Great may sound like an overstatement for a team that just reached .500 for the first time in ten games, but I’m going with the feel, and there’s a feel in the air that it’s fun to be a Mets fan until it isn’t. That moment could come any second, so let’s just let it be.

Hey, has it really been only ten games since we owned as many wins as losses? Is that all? Seems like we were buried about a hundred below and a thousand out as recently as the last road trip, but you inject an R.A. Dickey into your life, everything looks better. The whole year looks better. Goodness knows the rotation has a certain spin only an effective knuckleballer can put on it.

This is no average knuckleballer, this R.A. Dickey. This guy is fearless. We know he’s ligamentless. We know he doesn’t mind sacrificing a non-pitching elbow as necessary, per Ryan Howard’s hot liner that never saw the outfield. That may be the best sacrifice executed under the auspices of Jerry Manuel since Spring Training.

Do we have problems? No, not tonight, not after a rousing 8-0 win when the weather was perfect, the Blue Point Toasted Lager was sublime and my wife made another unlikely Tuesday appearance at Citi Field (we were there along with dozens of her colleagues…best workplace outing ever). There were Phillies fans in attendance, but the Fightin’ was sapped out of them early and nobody sitting anywhere near us in red could even work up a good vomit.

And how about that Raul Valdes? Not to jump around, but that guy is to relieving what R.A. Dickey is to starting, which is to say excellent. Wayne Hagin mentioned something about 16 starts between John Maine and Oliver Perez and one win registered by the two of them. Well, nine innings Tuesday night between R.A. Dickey and Raul Valdes and the Phillies still haven’t scored. And I still haven’t lost, as a spectator, since the grim late afternoon reaping of Willie Harris. That seems longer than 6½ weeks ago.

Eight in a row. I’ve never been in on eight wins in a row in my life, a life which now spans 461 games and two home ballparks. I’ve gotten comfy at Citi Field. Maybe it’s the Blue Point Toasted Lager, available only from the Catch of the Day stand (all Met dingers, not that we seem to generate them all that often, need henceforth be known as Blue Point Blasts). Maybe it’s that Stephanie, who likes a good walk the way Oliver Perez can create a bad one, has room to roam. “You want me to get you that Blue Point?” she asked as she and one of her social worker friends got up to amble a middle inning away.

Why yes, I would like that very much.

Sure enough, my wife came back with the beer (a phrase I’ve never written, said or thought in my generally temperate life), I flagged down a pretzel vendor and the rest was a Met run here, a Met run there, the Phillies and their unwelcome battalion of would-be vomiters left scoreless and silent. Let ’em choke on our eight runs, our thirteen hits, our delicious Long Island microbrew and our pitchers nobody was counting on when the season began. Let the Mets continue to peck away in Build-A-Run Workshop fashion at opposing pitchers whose careers began when Reagan was president, the first Cuomo was governor, Koch was mayor and our first baseman wasn’t quite yet an embryo. Let Darryl Strawberry, who always hustled and never dogged it (ahem), preach the Strawberry Way anytime, anywhere, to any current Met he likes. Let Frankie Rodriguez remind Randy Niemann which ’86 Met did the least and celebrated the most. Let John Maine deny his pitching arm is a problem except when he tries to pitch.

The Mets have just taken three straight from last year’s World Series. The Mets have just given me eight consecutive in-person wins. The Mets have Blue Point Toasted Lager. The Mets have R.A. Dickey. The Mets have Raul Valdes. The Mets have it goin’ on at least until the next torrent of sniping, aching and whatever usually goes wrong with them.

Let it be.

Faith and Fear on NPR

NPR’s Mike Pesca brought me into the studio to discuss my post about my neighbor and his brother’s baseball cards, and did a nice job crafting it into a story for “All Things Considered.” Have a listen here, and feel free to make fun of my (subconscious) attempt at the NPR voice.

What a Time it was

I’d like to be not such a hardass toward my team. I’d like to not be so realistic about the tendencies of its individual components. I’d like to like the players I like without not being able to stand them when their performances unequivocally merit disdain.

I’d have liked to have been a more steadfast supporter of Jose Lima while he was a Met. I really liked Lima, right up to the minute he began pitching for us. I wanted him to succeed as a Met. He most surely didn’t in the conventional sense. I was relatively slow to — as was said far too often in the past decade — throw him under the bus, but eventually an ERA of almost 10 after four starts will have even the most sympathetic supporter calling the pitcher who posts it a cab out of town.

Jose Lima, No. 17 as a Met, was a Met for 17 days and pitched 17.1 innings. Yet it seems like he was around a lot longer and did a lot more. He left an impression. The impression is not instantly flattering, not with 9.87 earned runs allowed per 9 innings pitched.

Lima’s Met time was three turns through the rotation in the middle of May 2006 and one more try in early July. He wasn’t part of the plan. The ’06 Mets were, despite their yearlong pacesetting in the National League, often short of starters. Injuries impinged on their depth beginning in late April when Brian Bannister’s right hamstring gave out on the basepaths in San Francisco. Young John Maine was Bannister’s replacement, but his right middle finger (one he’s probably used a lot lately) gave him trouble after only one start, and he was disabled. Next came and went Victor Zambrano, who felt severe pain in his right elbow while pitching against the Braves. He grimaced, bore down, struck out Andruw Jones for the first out of the top of the second inning and then left the Shea mound never to return.

The Mets rose through the standings even as their starting pitchers dropped like flies. Lots of offense and lots of relief catapulted the team to a 21-9 record and a 5-game lead over the second-place Phillies in the N.L. East by the first weekend in May — this despite their rotation having become Pedro Martinez, T#m Gl@v!ne, Steve Trachsel and a pair of recurring TBAs.

Into this paradoxical breach stepped Jose Lima.

When Jose Lima appeared in Port St. Lucie that February, those who knew better rolled their eyes all over the Internet. The Mets were casting about for any and all arms available. They came up with one that threw very little that worked in 2005 when he was a Royal (Wins Above Replacement rating: -2.1). Now he was 33 and his sole appeal seemed to be that he had been around and had been successful not all that long ago. Scoffing could be heard all across cyberspace. What a retrograde signing! This is the kind of philosophy that ruins baseball! “Experience” is a crutch!

That’s what it sounded like to me, anyway. I wasn’t much counting on seeing Jose Lima as a Met, and if we did, I was confused as to why it would automatically be a bad thing. Wasn’t this guy a winner as recently as 2004? He was. He went 13-5 for the Dodgers. He threw a shutout in the NLDS against the Cardinals. It wasn’t that long ago, was it?

Unlike many shadowy longshot pitching candidates in a given Spring Training, I actually knew who Jose Lima was, or at least who Jose Lima had been. He was an unabashed cut-up in a sport generally shy of confirmed extroverts. Pedro Martinez was one of those types. Martinez was giddy when he learned Lima was coming to the Mets. “This is going to be one crazy clubhouse,” he said. Quite an endorsement.

It wasn’t the most hilarious thing in the world, nor was it intended to be, that he came to camp and casually mentioned he planned to wear No. 42, his number when he was winning 21 games for the Astros in 1999, the one Houston assigned him in 1997, just before it was otherwise removed from circulation to honor Jackie Robinson. Lima did not maintain 42 as he moved on to other teams, so he was no longer “grandfathered” in the way Mo Vaughn was when he came to the Mets in 2002. Thus, Jose Lima wasn’t going to come to the Mets and get Jackie Robinson’s number (in fact, they tried to give him 99). Lima didn’t make a huge deal of it when his request was denied, but I liked his obliviousness to the sacred. It might have seemed self-absorbed coming from another player, but it felt human from Jose Lima.

Jose the human went down to Norfolk after Spring Training, his veteran right arm hidden from harm’s way until Bannister and Maine and Zambrano all fell onto the DL. Then it was Lima Time, May 7, 2006, his first start as a Met, at Shea, against the Braves.

And he was really bad. Let’s not pretend he wasn’t. He was terrible. The Braves hit him hard. Five days later, the Brewers hit him hard. Six days after that, the Cardinals did the same thing. Designation for assignment followed shortly thereafter; nobody else signed him, so he returned to Norfolk. After another month or so in the minors, a series of unfortunate Met events — Alay Soler’s flameout, Heath Bell’s implosion, Pedro Martinez’s inflamed right hip — conspired to give him one more chance in Met colors and then as a Met starter.

The Marlins hit him hard. Dontrelle Willis reached him for a grand slam in the top of a six-run Florida fourth. Willie Randolph, probably still shocked that the opposing pitcher homered with the bases loaded, left Lima in to face one more batter, Alfredo Amezaga. Amezaga singled. Randolph then removed him. It was Jose Lima’s last batter faced as a major leaguer.

To recap, this is how Jose Lima’s 2006 with the Mets unfolded:

First Start — Pitched in 5 innings, surrendered at least 1 run in 4 of those innings.

Second Start — Pitched in 5 innings, surrendered at least 1 run in 2 of those innings.

Third Start — Pitched in 5 innings, surrendered at least 1 run in 3 of those innings.

Fourth Start —  Pitched in 4 innings, surrendered at least 1 run in 2 of those innings.

Jose Lima participated in 19 innings and gave up runs in 11 of them. Everybody who said he wouldn’t be any good was right (Wins Above Replacement rating: -1.2). I who thought he was worth taking a flyer on was wrong. As if to compensate for my lack of cynicism in advance of his Met tenure, I raced to join the chorus of voices demanding his immediate dismissal from Shea Stadium, from Flushing, from Queens, from our midst forever.

This was me on July 5, 2006, before his fourth and final start as a Met:

I would have been content to have never been party to the return of Lima Time, but I’ll admit I’m rooting for the guy to have one solid outing and not just because a guy in a Met uniform having a solid outing benefits us all. Both in spring training and during his last stay, Lima was a unifying force in the clubhouse. Everybody seemed to like him in a big way. Yeah, they said the same thing about Gerald Williams, but ya know what? This seems like a good time for a unifying force. For a team with a double-digit lead, its players have betrayed a touch of crabbiness. And who can blame them, with their record having loitered at convenience store level (7-11) since The Road Trip ended? If Lima can keep ’em loose for a few days, maybe that’s a contribution. […] Maybe Lima — who is motivated enough to keep pitching at AAA after his Major League embarrassment in May, so he must have some pride in avenging his prior performance — hangs through Sunday and we see one of the other Tides roll in after the break. After being certain the deployment of Jose Valentin was complete folly, I’m not going to kneejerk any veteran player move Omar makes, certainly not one that isn’t likely to amount to a hill of beans in the long run.

This was me on July 8, 2006, after his fourth and final start as a Met:

Lima Culpa. He’s worthless. Get him out of here. I don’t just mean DFA’d, which he’s been. Jose Lima can be of no help whatsoever as a pitcher in this organization. That spicy meatball he threw Dontrelle Willis with the bases loaded? I can’t believe he hit the whole thing. Nice fella, Lima, but let him loosen another team’s dugout. Good night, funny man.

With Jose Lima having just died of a heart attack at the ridiculously young age of 37, I feel bad that’s the last substantive appraisal I ever wrote about what he contributed to the Mets. I was trying to be a hardass toward my team. I was maybe the last Lima believer in 2006, had been burned for my faith and now I was going to make up for it with a little vitriol. Not that Jose Lima was likely to read what one blogger among a hundred had written — and not that Lima Time wasn’t up as a practical matter — but I kind of hate that I succumbed to the prevailing thought process of the day. Guy pitches bad? Condemn him. Shove him out the door. Forget why you had taken a liking to him in the first place, why just three days ago you were rooting for him and now you couldn’t tolerate his presence.

Yet it was his presence that drew me tentatively into Jose Lima’s corner during his brief Met stay. He didn’t have much of a right arm by that May, but he had an undeniable presence. It energized a clubhouse that was already revved for great things in 2006. “Lima Time” was already legendary as a most uncommon strain of charisma around baseball. No self-consciousness, no restraint in letting joy seep from his every step. Now it would be our Time on our team. It’s no coincidence that twice — once in February and once in May — the Times used the phrase “no laughing matter” in headlines over stories about Jose Lima. Jose Lima was synonymous with laughter. It may not have been enough to get batters out anymore, but it was a precious commodity in a sport where too many modern players put on game faces and mouth inoffensive platitudes when asked anything interesting.

Two images of Jose Lima stay with me from 2006, and neither of them involves his trudging off the mound in despair.

The first was from his first start, against the Braves, in a series finale. The Mets had won two thrillers in the first two games — a 14-inning, 8-7 triumph that twisted and turned until turning out all right after nearly five hours; and the truncated Zambrano start, which required the services of six relievers to finish successfully the last 7.2 innings of a 6-5 decision. With Atlanta reeling 9 games behind us in third place, anything we got from Lima would be gravy, but when you’re in the process of obliterating your archrivals’ dynasty, gravy can be awfully tasty.

As mentioned, we didn’t get more than a spoonful of gravy from Jose Lima that Sunday afternoon. Mostly we got screwed by Angel Hernandez and then Lima was pounded by Atlanta bats. Still, even all that took a bit of a back seat to what I witnessed before the game started.

On his way in from the Met bullpen, a fan seated along the railing on the first base side reached out to Jose Lima. The fan was wearing a Dodger jersey, No. 27. Jose saw that and reached right back out to the fan and hugged him.

The starting pitcher hugged a fan? On the day he was going to pitch? Minutes before he was about to pitch? They can do that?

Seriously, I had taken it as gospel that the starting pitcher never speaks to anyone when it’s His Day. His Day is sacred. He doesn’t talk to you and you don’t talk to Him. But that’s not how Jose Lima played it. Jose Lima was happy to be a major league pitcher again that Sunday. Why hide it?

The second image I maintain of Lima was from TV, from, as it happens, the Subway Series. It was Friday night at Shea against the Yankees, the game in which yet another transient 2006 starter, the late Geremi Gonzalez, was roughed up for four runs in the first inning, and we were presumed done from there. Yet facing Randy Johnson in the bottom of the first, the Mets roared right back, with Reyes walking, Lo Duca singling and Beltran homering. That made a game of it, a Grade A Subway Series contest, the kind of game that makes you forget Interleague play is a marketing contrivance that baseball did fine without for a century or so.

That game goes back and forth and then locks in at a 6-6 tie after five. It stays there until the bottom of the ninth when Mariano Rivera is deployed by Joe Torre to keep things tied. It does quite work out that way. A Lo Duca double, an intentional walk to Delgado and then, at last, a very long fly ball hit by David Wright over Johnny Damon’s head.

Mets 7 Yankees 6!

Exultation!

Ebullience!

And…Lima Time?

Yes, Lima Time! Leading the charge out of the Met dugout to congratulate Mr. Wright, to celebrate the Met victory, to revel in his teammates’ success was Jose Lima. Lima didn’t pitch that night. Lima hadn’t been a Met two weeks earlier. The day before, he was knocked around in St. Louis. The day after, he would be cut from the roster because St. Louis wasn’t an isolated incident. Yet Jose Lima was as much a Met as anybody that night when they came back on the Yankees. He wasn’t a mercenary. He wasn’t lost in his own drama. He was the absolute definition of a ballplayer who was just happy to be here.

You couldn’t not be happy if you noticed him that night.

Jose Lima’s immediate Met legacy coming out of his four 2006 starts was to be invoked every time we thought Omar Minaya was signing someone unnecessary, particularly starting pitchers who couldn’t go more than five innings or give up fewer than five runs. “Another Jose Lima,” we’d grumble. He’d become a brand name to us, and not the leading national brand, either. Meanwhile, as Lima’s New York teammates were marching to a division title, Jose returned to Norfolk and kept pitching. After 2006, he would pitch in Mexico, in Korea, in a pair of independent leagues in the United States. Last winter, he pitched for a team in his native Dominican Republic. He planned to do it again this winter. He showed over and over that it would be difficult for anyone to again find another Jose Lima.

Jose Lima loved baseball and was never shy about sharing the romance with the rest of us. It may not obliterate a 9.87 ERA or save you a spot in anybody’s rotation, but surely any time spent appreciating a person like Jose Lima was time well spent.

Check out what Lima’s former teammates on the current Mets told Matt Gagne in the Daily News about their old friend. And, echoing Jason’s sentiments, please read Joe Posnanski’s remembrance of Lima Time. That, too, will be time well spent.