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ABOUT US
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 31 December 2009 2:10 pm
How appropriate for a person who sees almost everything through Mets-tinted lenses that on the final day of this decade I turn 47. When I see 47, of course, I see not so much a chronological measurement but a uniform number. And when I see that uniform number at the end of this decade, I think of the man and the game that wound up defining this decade for me.
Some nice people have wished me a happy Jesse Orosco birthday, and I appreciate the sentiment. Of course Jesse’s the 47 of record in the Mets uniform pantheon, the only 47 caught on film doing something extraordinarily worthwhile. Why, I think I see his glove hovering over Queens right now. Less mentioned but worthy of some kind of smallish celebration was the 47 for whom Orosco II would be traded in 2000, Super Joe McEwing. Perhaps Super was intended ironically, but until he was utilized far too much to be effective, he was the ultimate Mets utility player, and every team needs one of those.
Lingering in my subconscious from the spring of 1978 is Mardie “The Chief” Cornejo, 47 the first year I ever entered with no hopes of the Mets contending for anything beyond fourth place, which proved a plateau well beyond their reach. Nevertheless, early on they didn’t look so bad, and early on two guys I’d never heard of, Mike Bruhert and Mardie “The Chief” Cornejo, helped set the pace. “The Chief” bit struck me as absurd (the chief of what, exactly?), but no more so than the concept of the 1978 Mets competing for fourth place. Even with Orosco’s glove in orbit and McEwing’s Superness in full flight, sometimes somebody says “47” and I think “The Chief”.
There’ve been a handful of other 47s over 48 seasons, as Mets By The Numbers could tell you. There was the original 47, Jay Hook, one of the many geniuses who staffed Casey Stengel’s pitching corps. I’m not kidding about that. As Bill Ryczek notes in The Amazin’ Mets, 1962-69, “In terms of education and intellect, no staff in any league (save perhaps the Ivy League) could match the 1962 New York Hurlers.” At the head of the class was Hook and his Master’s Degree in Mechanical Engineering from Northwestern. Famously, Hook could explain in precise detail why a curve ball curved…he just couldn’t get his own to move proficiently.
Even at my advanced age, I have no memory of the 47s who followed Hook — Tom Sturdivant and Darrell Sutherland — or why, according to MBTN, the number went unworn between 1964 and 1978 when “The Chief” commandeered it. Post-Cornejo, Orosco proceeded to wear the heck out of it, clear through the end of 1987. Then it was picked up by one of those for whom our only successful Game Seven closer was traded, Wally Whitehurst. Whitehurst threw softly and kept quiet, making no big deal of 47 even after taking a temporary grip on the fifth-starter role, an assignment that essentially forced the trade of Ron Darling to Montreal; in case you were wondering why the Mets stopped winning in 1991, that’s a clue. Mike Draper wore 47 with not much distinction in 1993, a year when distinction, let alone dignity, was hard to come by in any Mets uniform. Jason Jacome raised a touch of hope when he donned 47 in ’94 but extinguished it just as quickly by putting it on again in ’95. Reid Cornelius and Derek Wallace were the next two 47s; they cut out the middle man by raising as little hope as possible.
The last Met who wore 47 was Casey Fossum, who couldn’t get out of it fast enough. Fossum slipped into 47 on April 21, 2009 and slipped out of it on April 26, 2009 before slipping out of our lives altogether. 47 did not fit Casey Fossum, but I don’t hold it against him.
47 may never fit any Met again, and for that you can thank T#m Gl@v!ne.
What, you haven’t thanked T#m Gl@v!ne lately? What are you, a Mets fan?
I’ve mostly kept Gl@v!ne out of my mind since June when the Braves bastardly bounced him after he went to the trouble of rehabbing for them. Talk about two parties and nobody to root for. T#m worked hard to come back and pitch for Atlanta at age 43. The team, for whom he excelled (in and out of their uniform, for as we know he was long stationed here undercover as The Manchurian Brave) turned its Tomahawked back on him, avoided paying him a million bucks and elevated Tommy Hanson in his place. Hanson was the right choice, but it was an awfully cold front office maneuver, even for them. In the abstract, I scolded the Braves. In my darker precincts, I chuckled that they ruined Gl@v!ne’s last stand.
Much as he ruined ours in 2007 and, in a way, this decade.
Once in a while (though not very often), some Mets fan will nominally take T#m’s side and huff that it’s not like he was trying to lose on September 30, 2007. I don’t argue that he was. T#m Gl@v!ne might have earned a win for himself had he pitched better, and wins for T#m Gl@v!ne always seemed of paramount importance to T#m Gl@v!ne. If the Mets advanced via his left arm, so be it. But he didn’t have it on September 30 vs. the Marlins (0.1 IP, 7 ER), the same way he didn’t have it on September 25 vs. the Nationals (5 IP, 6 ER), same as he didn’t have it on September 20 vs. the Marlins (5 IP, 4 ER). He came up small, smaller and smallest down the stretch as the Mets diminished, dwindled and disappeared completely.
The consensus future Hall of Fame pitcher may have been trying, but he wasn’t coming close to succeeding. You wouldn’t hold that against Brian Lawrence or Philip Humber, the two improbable starters on whom Willie Randolph found himself sadly dependent during the 17 games when the Mets stopped leading the Phillies by 7 games. You wouldn’t hold that against Mike Pelfrey, clearly not yet ready for prime time, even though it was clearly prime time. You’d take issue with John Maine and Ollie Perez if they were dreadful when it mattered — and each was — but you also remember them each pitching a gem during that period, so you cut them slack for their missteps. The only Met who didn’t give you a bad start over those 17 games was Pedro Martinez, but he could only give you so much after his injury and never on anything but extended rest.
Gl@v!ne I hold it against. I hold the 14.81 ERA over three crucial starts versus the division’s bottom-dwellers against him. I hold September 20 against him. I hold September 25 against him. And I forever hold September 30 against him. I hold that one against him — and every one his teammates — when I think about it. I think about sitting in the Upper Deck of Shea Stadium down 4-0 after five Marlin batters batted; down 4-0, with the bases loaded, after eight Marlin batters batted: down 5-0, with the bases loaded, after all nine Marlin batters batted around. The last of the Swingin’ Fish, Florida pitcher Dontrelle Willis, technically trotted to first after he was hit by the last pitch T#m Gl@v!ne would ever throw as a New York Met.
Then Gl@v!ne leaves, two of his baserunners score and there goes 2007’s last stand, dead on arrival. In the middle of the first inning, it’s Marlins 7, the Mets coming to bat.
From there, the following occurred:
• The Mets lose 8-1 while the Phillies beat Washington and there goes 2007, the year when we were supposed to avenge the quirk ending of 2006. The Phillies are division champs and I’m sitting in the Upper Deck for an eternity trying to figure out how we and I wound up here.
• T#m Gl@v!ne, in the postgame clubhouse, treats his fatal implosion like a bad day on the yacht, as if the shrimp wasn’t chilled quite to perfection. Otherwise, he can go home and count his mansions, completely undevastated by the events of the first inning.
• The aura of The Worst Collapse in Baseball History hangs in the air well into 2008, as the Mets get off to a crummy start, Willie Randolph stays far too long at the fair and I find myself in a continual state of being pissed at my team
• The Mets end 2008 just about exactly as they end 2007, which means 2007 never actually ends, it just keeps going.
• The 2009 Mets codify the decade’s disappointment factor by clearly ending the era we decided, circa 2006, was going to yield an extended mix of joy and championships. We finish with 92 losses and an overwhelming sense of despair that haunts us to this very last day of a decade when we were granted multiple chances and made optimal use of none of them.
• My 47th birthday puts me in mind of T#m Gl@v!ne, of whom, because of my Mets-tinted lenses, I will find myself thinking every time I am asked, “Age?”
On the other hand, it’s just a number. One year from now I can forget all about T#m Gl@v!ne.
And think, instead, of Aaron Heilman.
by Jason Fry on 31 December 2009 12:20 pm
As we prepare to ring in 2010, we’re also ringing in Greg Prince’s 47th birthday.
All the best to you, my dear friend, esteemed co-writer and Mets compatriot. Here’s wishing you a seat for a great game without obstructed views, however they may be defined. Here’s wishing you signing bonuses in line with the market and not Bud Selig’s desires. Here’s wishing you a ballpark full of Mets stuff. Here’s wishing you a big Happy New Year’s package from the Reds. Here’s wishing you phenoms who have a little phenom in them, veterans with leadership skills and numbers, and doctors who diagnose correctly. Here’s wishing you more Mets Yearbooks and more of Gary and Keith and Ron (and Kevin) and more of fellow fans who have something to cheer about.
And here’s hoping the same for all of you who are kind enough to read us and add your voices, and to all of us who root for this team we love even fearing it may be the death of us. Here’s to fresh starts and renewed hopes. Happy birthday, Happy New Year, happy new season.
by Greg Prince on 30 December 2009 10:19 pm
Matt Lawton hit 3 home runs during his brief 2001 term as a Met, each of them prior to the bottom of the eighth of the game of September 21, an inning he happened to lead off by grounding out to Braves shortstop Rey Sanchez. Edgardo Alfonzo swatted 15 from Opening Day until he was walked by Steve Karsay with one out in that same frame. The 2001 home run totals, up to that bases on balls, of other Mets who batted from the first inning through the seventh inning that Friday night:
• Robin Ventura: 20
• Tsuyoshi Shinjo: 10
• Todd Zeile: 9
• Jay Payton: 7
• Rey Ordoñez: 3
• Bruce Chen: 0
• Joe McEwing: 7
Combined, those nine Mets had hit 74 home runs in the first 147 games of that Mets season. None had hit one out in the 148th, which was near completion when Alfonzo walked and Desi Relaford was sent in to pinch-run for him. While several of those Mets seemed unlikely to hit a homer at any given moment, it wasn’t inconceivable that a few of them might take an Atlanta pitcher deep. Fonzie, Robin and Shinjo were all in double-digits. Zeile, Payton and McEwing had certainly homered enough that year so it wouldn’t be a novelty.
Yet none of them did homer on September 21, 2001. Mike Piazza, however, did. Mike Piazza hit his 34th home run of the season after Alfonzo walked. It put the Mets ahead 3-2. They’d go on to beat the Braves by that score.
By now you no doubt recognize the home run in question as the most famous home run hit by any Met in this decade or, depending on whom you ask, the most famous home run hit by a Met ever. It didn’t end a game. It didn’t ensure a playoff berth or a postseason series victory. It was an eighth-inning home run on a night whose cachet was generated less by competitive context than by the simple fact that more than 40,000 New Yorkers gathered at Shea Stadium to watch a baseball game.
It’s generally remembered as more, of course. It’s remembered for pregame somberness, for lingering unease and for a handful of electrifying performances. Among those belting our their best on September 21, 2001 were Diana Ross with “God Bless America,” Marc Anthony with “The Star Spangled Banner,” Liza Minnelli with “New York, New York” and Mike Piazza with the go-ahead homer off Karsay.
Piazza’s solo was the most memorable star turn of them all, but nothing that Friday night was about standing alone in a spotlight. It wasn’t about any one person. It was about thousands of people, too many of whom could not be at Shea Stadium. It was about the thousands they left behind and the millions who mourned for them. It remains remarkable to understand that the act of going to a Mets game — even a Mets-Braves game — could represent so much to so many.
And in the middle of it, Mike Piazza. There’s no tangible reason it had to be Piazza who hit the home run that recalibrated our municipal emotions. It could have been Ventura or Alfonzo or Shinjo. In theory, it could have been Ordoñez.
But it had to be Piazza. These types of moments always found Piazza. Or maybe Piazza and the moments always met in the middle. Anybody who would go as deep as Piazza did on a night that ran as deep as that one did would deserve to be remembered, but I can’t imagine anybody else would have done it. On some other Friday night in some other circumstance, sure, anybody could swing and connect. Not that night. That was what Mike Piazza did. We accepted it as extraordinary and perfectly normal, which is what the 40,000+ in attendance were seeking on September 21. We went on to hold it fondly and we hold it still. We hold the days and nights of Mike Piazza the same.
Had the boundaries of our imagination been stretched and had the home run come off the bat of another Met, would we have embraced it immediately and continued to grip it like it mattered beyond a 3-2 lead in the eighth?
I don’t know. But somehow I don’t think so.
Mike Piazza hasn’t been a Met since October 2, 2005, but I feel very comfortable considering him The Met of The Decade, for whatever that’s worth. His MVP-worthy season when the Mets earned a pennant, his monster breaking out of its cage that October, the still-stellar numbers for a fulltime catcher the next couple of seasons and the records he set might be enough to rate him this hypothetical honor. But with Mike Piazza, per usual, accomplishment is only part of the story. Electrifying performance is always the subtext.
The 2000s were the Age of Piazza. There was no other Met who commanded our attention for as long as he did or who was as worthy of it. I don’t believe he had a serious challenger in that regard.
Honorable mentions:
Pedro Martinez displayed sensational stage presence over a shorter period but racked up decidedly fewer results; David Wright put up the most impressive numbers yet still seems to be trying to fill a pair of shoes that don’t fit his feet any better than that experimental batting helmet fit his head; Carlos Beltran offered us more talent than anyone but did not truly capture our imagination; no one was more exciting at what he did than Jose Reyes yet Reyes’s stay at the top of his game has been intermittent; Johan Santana produced at the most clutch level, but hasn’t been here all that long; Al Leiter talked the best game in town before eventually talking his way out of town.
Fine Mets in our time, but none of them touches Piazza. Four seasons have passed since he played as a Met and he’s still, in our collective gut, bigger than any who have succeeded him. Mike Piazza was always big. He always made you stop and focus on him. Your eyes were instinctively PiazzaCams. You followed his every move. When he came to bat, your mind swarmed with the possibilities. You tensed up as he coiled. You exploded when he let loose.
And that was just the hitting. He wasn’t a polished catcher (nor a passable first baseman), but he was Piazza every moment he was on the field. He never stopped being Piazza. On what had to be a dozen occasions each year, his being Piazza mesmerized you. It could be because of a home run. It could be because of a glare or a quote or a reaction to your ovation. He came here in 1998 to be the Mets’ main man and, despite diminishing skills and statistics that couldn’t be ignored as the expiration of his contract approached in 2005, he never really ceded the role. His appearances as a Padre in 2006 and as a ceremonial receiver in 2008 confirmed his forever place in our hearts.
What made Piazza’s time in our midst all the more thrilling was that he never emitted the sense it desperately mattered to him. Being Piazza was his job. His baseball card didn’t require a position listed. Being Piazza was plenty. Somebody might throw an impertinent question or a bat shard at him, and he knew how to handle those just as he could handle Terry Mulholland or Carlos Almanzar or Steve Karsay among many, many others at the most momentous of moments. He was physically formidable and he did let his big stick to much of his talking, but he wasn’t exactly the strong, silent type of cliché. Mike Piazza never seemed shy, just as he didn’t too often come up shy. He was at ease with who he was. Now and again, it meant stepping up and playing the hero.
On September 21, 2001, on the heels of ten days that sent a city reeling, we realized that’s exactly what a baseball player who hits a big home run is doing: playing. Piazza, we understood, wasn’t a hero. But at a Mets game — specifically that singular Mets-Braves game — nobody could have possibly played it better.
by Greg Prince on 30 December 2009 6:27 am
What did I miss? When did Jason Bay become Dave Gallagher?
We’re getting a three-time All-Star here, and not an All-Star in the sense that Gary Sheffield was stellar in Paleozoic times. We’re not getting some overblown fourth outfielder. We’re getting a guy who has played five full seasons and has driven in more than 100 runs in four of them, which appears pretty impressive considering many of his swings occurred while surrounded by Pittsburgh Pirates.
Jason Bay is a major league outfielder. We’re not converting Keith Miller from the infield or handing Daniel Murphy a treasure map and praying he’ll find a ball while he’s out there. Jason Bay survived a large left field wall in Boston. Didn’t fall down as a matter of course and was known to occasionally hit pitches off or over it.
This is an upgrade over the 2009 situation in left field. This is an upgrade over the 2008 situation in left field. He may not be as lethal with the line drives as Moises Alou when Moises Alou was healthy, but remind me of how many weeks Moises Alou was healthy. Jason Bay is capable of giving us our most consistent production at his position since Cliff Floyd was in one piece, which, sadly, wasn’t all that often. He won’t jump over fences like Endy Chavez, but the fences at Citi Field might thwart even Endy.
I’m happy to have Jason Bay coming to the Mets, assuming he passes what I hope is a rigorous physical conducted a third-party medical staff. Mind you, I’m not overwhelmed by his presence. He’s not a franchise player, but he’s performed at a high level for quite a while now and he’s not in his early forties. Thus, I ask innocently, what’s the problem, exactly? I wouldn’t give him whatever exorbitant amount they’re giving him if I were doing the Mets’ books, but since when do you attract attractive players without attractive compensation? The Mets were going to have pay somebody this offseason. The four years, $66 million and whatever scheme kicks in for a potential fifth year…insane in real life, but about par for a team that will no longer be paying Delgado and Wagner their princely sums.
And how much do you suppose ticket and taco prices were going to dip next season without Jason Bay?
I’m all for tossing suggestions into the Hot Stove. But once a deal is made, unless it is so prohibitive that it makes future upgrading impossible, I’ve got to shift into Hope For The Best territory. Somebody will inevitably produce reliable data proving Jason Bay shares more than initials with the second coming of Jeromy Burnitz, that he is sheer detriment and no asset. Yet until somebody who brandishes proof that Bay is a self-inflicting wound waiting to happen is appointed to the board of Sterling Mets, it won’t matter. I’ll be willing to complain if and when Bay is a total bust, but if he’s here, he’s here with a clean slate. Jason Bay’s my leftfielder. I don’t think he’ll turn the team around by himself, but I don’t think any one player can turn this team around.
One player can help, though. Suddenly, a lineup with Bay joining Francoeur, Wright, Beltran, Reyes — if all are healthy — is better than whatever we watched most of 2009. Suddenly, three professional outfielders who aren’t undercooked or over the hill will patrol our outfield. Suddenly, the Mets might be a wee bit better in a couple of departments.
The starting pitching’s a mess. I can’t blame that on Jason Bay. The Mets need to find some arms. They need a catcher (preferably one who won’t wear 6-4-3 on his back all season). They could use an upgrade at first and second. All that’s obvious enough to blot out illusions that this is supposed to be the free agent who delivers us to the doorstep of the Promised Land. Jason Bay’s presence will be magnified for a while because he’s the new, expensive toy, but we’ll settle in with him and accept him as a part of a hopefully long-term solution, not a singular solution himself. Here’s a multipart plan: Bay and an arm or two this year; suck less as a unit; and don’t go nuts with expectations. Improve from lousy ’09 and keep an eye on next year’s market. We’re not in this for only what lies directly ahead.
I’m conditioned to think of Mets free agents first as Tom Hausman and Elliot Maddox — scrap heap bargains that even the Dollar Tree couldn’t move — and second as Bobby Bonilla ticking time bomb disasters. Occasionally, however, the Mets make a decent signing. Like Robin Ventura. Like Carlos Beltran. Like Jason Bay? Could be.
I’ve long rued learning that the strong Rookie of the Year candidate Pittsburgh was featuring in 2004 had been a Met farmhand two years earlier. I didn’t have any better idea of Jason Bay’s pre-breakthrough existence than Steve Phillips did when he traded him for Steve Reed and Jason Middlebrook. Difference is only one of us was paid to be general manager of a big league ballclub. Yeah, Bay pinged around a bit before blossoming as a Buc. Yeah, Montreal GM Omar Minaya overlooked his talents, too. So now Minaya and the Mets make amends for Phillips dismissing Bay as nothing more than a fifth outfielder, if I recall his after-the-fact appraisal. That always makes me feel good in winter, like our getting Burnitz and Roger Cedeño back once upon a time, even if the homecoming angle won’t matter at all come summer.
In the frosty interim, Bay’s backstory is a bonus. His track record’s not bad either. However he measures up to Matt Holliday is immaterial. There was no indication Holliday wanted to be in New York, and he would have required a far larger and longer commitment. Besides, Coors Field players make me nervous outside their natural habitat. Our consolation prize is a leftfielder who can hit. Is he perfect for the manufactured quirks of Citi Field? I’d maintain all we really know about Citi Field, besides its initial resistance to photos of Mookie Wilson, is that a terrible team played in it for 81 games and looked terrible doing so. Let’s see what happens with a somewhat better and less disabled crew now that it’s less altogether mysterious.
I’ll admit I’m susceptible to the allure of brand-name players whom I don’t watch every day. I thought Francoeur was a fine idea last July based on idealized glimpses of him from his better moments in Atlanta (also, Ryan Church just depressed the living spit out of me). I recall Bay pounding the Mets silly several years ago as a Pirate and noticed the Red Sox didn’t miss too many beats when he took over for Manny Ramirez. I understand there are drawbacks. That’s gonna be the case for any leftfielder who isn’t a young, not yet corrupted Barry Bonds.
We’ve just come through one of the most grismal periods in Mets history. Hell, I’m not sure we’re still not in it. Just about everything since the ninth inning of Game Seven has ranged from grim to dismal. When the Mets take a break from saddening us and embarrassing themselves to sign a player who doesn’t out and out suck — who may actually do the opposite — I think we owe it to ourselves, within reason and the realm of our understandable caution and cynicism, to enjoy it, take a little heart from it and feel a tad better about life because of it.
This decade of Mets baseball killed us over and over again. That wasn’t Jason Bay’s fault either. We desperately need a new decade. Pending a physical, however, we won’t need a new leftfielder because we’ll have one.
Welcome to the Mets, Jason Bay. And welcome, all of us, to 2010.
by Jason Fry on 29 December 2009 5:20 pm
The Glass Is Three-Quarters Empty and the Last Quarter Is Crappy Warm Beer Version: The Mets have signed the runner-up left fielder — the one who’s not as good a defender, who will probably not age as well as a hitter, and reportedly didn’t want to play here — to a four-year deal that’s really a five-year deal. Oh, and the news was delivered by the loathsome Mike Francesa, who it seems really did have big news to announce.
As someone suffering from BMFS*, there’s a nasty temptation to leave it there. Jason Bay will reportedly be a Met early next week, pending the results of a physical, which Jon Heyman warns may not be just a formality in this case. According to Joel Sherman, the deal is four years for $66 million, but there’s a fifth year that vests if Bay hits some fairly easy statistical threshold. This is the same Jason Bay whom Peter Gammons said would rather play in Beirut, a soundbite he and you will be heartily sick of by the Ides of March. (I’ve already made use of it twice, so blame me too.) Wrong guy, impatient Mets, too much money, too many years, physical issues, bad karma, Mike Francesa. Sound familiar?
The This Ain’t No Flute of Champagne Place, So STFU and Drink Version: Matt Holliday is a key offensive player around whom you can build, and worth a mega-deal. OK, granted. But the signs were pointing to Omar not having a long enough financial leash to get Holliday and/or Holliday being ticketed for a return to St. Louis, with the most likely outcome of a Holliday courtship being Scott Boras using the Mets to get another few ounces of flesh out of St. Louis — possibly while some other team took Bay off the board, leaving the Mets looking at a full year of Angel Pagan and Jeff Francoeur in the corners or some desperate, misguided trade we’d all wind up moaning about. The 2010 edition of Jason Bay has drawbacks, and the 2014 edition may have decayed into little more than drawbacks, but 36 home runs and 119 RBI isn’t to be sneezed at, even with the fact that those numbers were put up with a major-league lineup around him. As drawbacks go, there’s worrying about how Jason Bay will age and there’s trying to think of a reason to watch a lineup that includes Fernando Tatis and Anderson Hernandez and Wilson Valdez. As for the Beirut stuff, whatever. Winning cures regret as effectively as money cures trepidation. When Keith Hernandez was traded to the Mets, his first move was to call his agent and ask if he had enough money socked away to retire. Fortunately for Keith and for us, he didn’t. It worked out.
The Mets still aren’t a great team, not by any means. They still have thin starting pitching, bad infield defense, not a lot of offense at first base, question marks attached to every single member of their once-vaunted core, can’t figure out how to diagnose and/or deal with injuries and must deal with the small problem that more and more of their fans reflexively distrust anything they say, whether the subject is player moves, ticket prices or commitment to the franchise, its history and its fans. But they have made some sensible moves aimed at shoring up the bullpen (even though I wanted to scream to hear that Matt Capps had been snapped up by the bargain-basement NATIONALS), and now they’ve taken care of their biggest offensive shortcoming. Looking at the remainder of the puzzle, they still have options, and a reasonable basis for thinking that patience may improve those options.
Thing to Bring Up While Hitting on the Bored Waitress: On July 31, 2002, Steve Phillips stopped chasing something around a desk long enough to trade New York Met farmhand Jason Bay to the San Diego Padres for Jason Middlebrook and Steve Reed. While not chasing something around a desk he also threw in Jason Middlebrook and The Other Bobby Jones. We don’t like Steve Phillips, so ha ha that sure was stupid.
Thing to Remember Much Later, While Boozily Depressed to Think That the Waitress Wasn’t Bored Enough Even for the Likes of You: It’s often remembered that Jason Bay was a Met farmhand, but he wasn’t a Met draftee. Bay had only been Met property for about four months when Philanderin’ Phillips sent him to San Diego. He became a Met in late March 2002, arriving in the company of future Royals cup-of-coffee sipper Jimmy Serrano for the utterly forgettable Lou Collier, which means you could argue he was part of two fleecings in one year. In March, the Mets got him from his original organization, the Montreal Expos. So who was the first chump to trade away Jason Bay in 2002? It was Omar Minaya.
We’re stuck with Omar Minaya, so let’s go back to mocking Steve Phillips.
* Battered Met Fan Syndrome. Symptoms include an irrational fear of 162nd items in a sequence, distrust of doctors, an insistence that cream is not the same color as white, and savage reactions if told not being able to see something isn’t an obstructed view, not exactly. Cures for this affliction are thusfar hypothetical. If you find one, let us know.
by Greg Prince on 29 December 2009 6:08 am
Having established that this decade was ultimately extraordinarily disappointing, it is only fair to point that a great deal of joy was collected en route to whatever wound up befalling us. No moment in these past ten years was more joyous, to my thinking, than that which marked the gaining and absorbing of our team’s high-water accomplishment of the 2000s, the National League Championship of 2000. Adapted from a pair of previously published recollections, let’s revisit October 16 into October 17, 2000.
The finale almost felt like a formality. How had the Mets gone from edge-of-the-seat to sit-back-and-relax inside a week? These weren’t the same Cardinals who whacked us in early September. Maybe they simply couldn’t equal the majesty of the Big Met Machine.
Game Five had us in the mezzanine. I’d arranged to meet Rob outside Gate E an hour ahead of the first pitch, but we missed each other from a range of 20 feet and barely made it in for the start. That was the only gaffe of what became the single most magical night I’ve ever experienced at Shea Stadium.
Mike Hampton pitched flawlessly.
Timo and Fonzie fueled a three-run first.
Todd Zeile drove in three himself.
And the National League pennant was counted down to, out after out after out.
Matters seemed so settled that I could really notice where I was. To my left was Jason, the Mets fan I met online as if through some jock-obsessed dating service. To my right was Rob, who had worked a desk over from me for a couple of years a long time ago. I met them both when New York’s bout of Mets fever was in remission. That means that no matter how I found them, they were pure of heart. Like me, they never stopped rooting for the Mets. Rob, my friend since 1992, and Jason, my friend since 1994, were the two people with whom I hunkered down most intently during the victory drought of the early and mid-’90s. Maybe I would’ve been pals with each of them if we had met when the Mets were on the upswing, but meeting them when they weren’t made my friendship with each, on this pinnacle night, that much more meaningful.
At one point, up 6-0, Rob, Jason and I sidetracked into a discussion on a recently aired VH-1 series on what were supposed to be the greatest dance songs ever. Rob, not much of a pop culture hound, was surprised to learn “Time Warp” from Rocky Horror wasn’t No. 1. I had to break it to him that actually it wasn’t even mentioned, probably because it wasn’t actually a chart hit. This conversation took place as the Mets were lopping off out after out en route to reaching the World Series for the first time since 1986, mere innings from their fourth National League championship, the first to be clinched at Shea Stadium since 1973. And we were talking about dance songs and VH-1 and The Rocky Horror Picture Show.
It wasn’t a lengthy diversion of our attention, but there it was. The Mets were winning so big a prize so easily that three hardcore fans could drift. I love that on the night I saw the Mets achieve the most immense thing I ever saw them achieve, my friends and I were permitted to let our minds wander. Let’s do that time warp again.
When Rick Wilkins (an almost-forgotten face from one of our growing pains years) lofted a fly ball to Timo Perez in center to crown the New York Mets champions of the oldest established professional baseball league, I turned left and hugged Jason. Then I turned right and hugged Rob. It was the moment I had waited 14 years for and I was between exactly the two people I would’ve wanted had I ever thought about it.
The Mets win the pennant! The Mets win the pennant!
That’s who let the dogs out.
Gosh, we’d even surpassed my beloved 1999. Long live the new century.
They gave Hampton the MVP of the NLCS. Sure, he pitched 16 shutout innings, but it could’ve gone to Alfonzo (8 hits), Perez (8 runs) or Zeile (8 RBI). But this Mike was a good choice. When they showed the presentation on DiamondVision, a cheer went up. It would be the last time Mike Hampton would be cheered when he pitched at Shea Stadium, but we couldn’t have known that then.
Normally I would take the subway to Woodside or, depending on the vagaries of the LIRR, Penn Station to get home. But Rob had his car, so I parted ways with Jason, Emily and Danielle, my constant companions across two Octobers, and went with him. Rob had parked in the lot across Roosevelt Avenue and given the milling of the sellout crowd, we had to take a long walk to get there. We said almost nothing to each other. Rob was usually quiet. I was just mesmerized by what I was watching.
Did you see ever Avalon? In the opening scene, the old man through whose eyes the story is told is flashing back on arriving in America on the Fourth of July in 1914. In his mind, children are running through the streets of Baltimore waving sparklers. And it’s silent. That’s what the outside of Shea Stadium and Roosevelt Avenue reminded me of on Monday night, October 16, 2000. There was noise to be sure. There was honking and yelling, but it all felt like it was taking place in dreamy slow-motion. People waved instantly bought t-shirts and climbed up on light poles and were just happy. Neither Rob nor I had to say a word. The night said it all to us. The Mets had won the pennant.
When I woke up on Tuesday morning (called in sick…or joyful; can’t remember anymore), I was overcome with a revelation. We were the champions. We were the only champions. The A.L. still didn’t have a winner. So if we could stop baseball altogether — an earthquake, a wildcat strike, a well-placed bribe — we would remain the only champion of 2000. We would be No. 1.
That wasn’t going to happen, but it was a lovely thought. I paced around the house humming “We are the NationalLeagueChampions, my friend…” For 24 hours, that was all we had to be.
by Greg Prince on 28 December 2009 2:44 pm
Tomorrow, December 29, is technically the fifth day of Christmas. So in that remaining holiday spirit…
On the whole
in this decade,
our Mets love
yielded us
NO
GOLDEN
RINGS!
Not any rings we can use, anyway.
In terms of not winning a World Series in the 2000s, we are not alone. Ten World Series were played and their spoils were divided eight ways. Six franchises won once, two twice. Twenty-two franchises won none. Those include franchises that never contended even one little bit, franchises that never won as many games as they lost, franchises that competed only intermittently. Those are sad stories, but they’re not necessarily what you’d call frustrating.
Frustrating is coming close. Frustrating is coming close more than once. Frustrating is coming so close that we could taste it. Frustrating is tasting it without ever getting our lips around it but knowing it was right there for the devouring.
Frustrating leads to disappointing. And disappointing was the leitmotif of this decade.
Four times in the 2000s — ’02, ’03, ’04, ’09 — the Mets finished with well-deserved losing records. Crummy, but let’s put those aside. Two times in this decade — ’01, ’05 — the Mets made runs at a playoff spot that seemed improbable and ultimately were. Somewhere north of crummy, but well south of gratifying. No need to explore at this moment the two Septembers — ’07 and ’08 — when leads that appeared safe or at least adequate dwindled, shriveled and went poof! You know what those were.
What’s left are the two very good years the Mets chalked up in this decade. Make no mistake about it: 2000 and 2006 were very good years…in the sense that the grading system they used for our first grade class at West School in Long Beach treated “Very Good” as a euphemism for a B+. “Excellent” was an A. “Good” was a B. Surely the Mets of 2000 and 2006 rank somewhere in between the enthusiastically applied gold star and the perfunctorily awarded check mark.
We really could have used that gold star.
Of the twenty-two teams that didn’t win World Series in the 2000s, we were different from most. Ours, in fact, was the only team in the decade now done that can say it accomplished all of the following:
• Won a division title outright
• Won a pair of Division Series
• Won a pennant
• Never won a World Series
I guess that last part isn’t an accomplishment, but it does, at the upper echelons, define why the 2000s feel so incredibly disappointing. The string of grismality (grim + dismal) from ’02 through ’04, the not-quites of ’01 and ’05 and the blasted c-words in ’07 and ’08 all hurt in their own way, but that’s just losing. Even when losing in voluminous fashion, those eight years don’t put us in the same conversation with the Pirates, the Orioles, the Royals and the Reds, to name four teams who went nowhere at every turn. It leaves us in similar straits, maybe, to the Tigers, who overcame grismal to ascend to their own version of Amazin’ exactly once before stumbling through some genuinely horrific letdowns. Maybe we share some ground with the Padres, who made the playoffs twice, blew a playoff spot once and were otherwise mostly wretched. And let’s not forget our fraternal twins the Astros, who matched us in terms of losing an LCS and a World Series and managed to scrape together the 2001 N.L. Central title on a head-to-head tiebreaker. They were sort of like us, though I don’t think of us as very much like them.
We were not dissimilar from some other teams that had their ups and downs, but, truly, we were a case study in disappointment unto ourselves. That’s not just my innate Metsicissm talking, either. We played ten seasons and can be said to have disappointed at approximately a 90% downer rate.
From bottom to top, consider:
2003 Its mere existence was disappointing. What was Art Howe doing here? Why was T#m Gl@v!ne a Met? Mike Stanton? Who had the bright idea to hand Rey Sanchez a starting job? And the Gang of Four from the year before — Alomar, Vaughn, Burnitz, Cedeño — all got a second chance to fail. Three years removed from a World Series appearance, we lost 95 games and, in fan terms, a reason to live.
2009 Good lord, that was terrible. The injuries were terrible. The mindlessness was terrible. The ballpark…I wasn’t a fan. Expectations were inflated, followed by rapid deflation. And the GM revealed himself, via his bizarre defense of Tony Bernazard, as either venal or a boob (whereas Bernazard apparently revealed both of his boobs).
2004 First there was no hope or pulse. Then there was a pulse and some hope. It all appeared to be an illusion, but there were the Mets of Kaz Matsui; and the right field platoon of Not Vladimir Guerrero; and Howe still filling out lineup cards; and Jason Phillips forcing Mike Piazza to first base; and you get the idea — there they all were, and they were in the midst of a divisional race in July. It’s true, you could look it up. That they fell apart was disappointing, but not overly surprising. That they unraveled completely, on and off the field, was what made it Metmorable for all the wrong reasons.
2002 Basically, Steve Phillips dug up the Al Harazin playbook and reran it step for step. It didn’t work in 1992, it didn’t work ten years later, when the air grew top-heavy with unpleasantness and underperformance.
2001 Two flavors of disappointment: The three-quarters of the season when the Mets were lax and out of contention and the one quarter where they rushed valiantly into contention only to be swatted out of it by the Braves. Two scoops of bitter surrounding a dollop of sweet. Not the recommended serving size.
2005 The Mets were inconsistent and more than a little exasperating. They had that cartoon effect wherein the feet start skedaddling but they don’t take off before the boulder slams them into the ground. But they were not disappointing. If they weren’t the feelgood story of the decade, they were probably the only group of Mets who didn’t ostentatiously inspire a feelbad vibe. Nice going, 83-79 squad that squandered a clear late-August shot at the Wild Card. You were better than your predecessors and we didn’t think you were going anywhere anyway.
2007 Oh god. Oh god. Oh god.
2008 ibid.
2006 Very Good year. It was, however, supposed to be Excellent. And it wasn’t.
2000 The first year of the decade extended further than any of the others. By dint of it not going as far as it possibly could, perhaps that makes it the most disappointing. Also, losing four highly competitive World Series games to our most bitter psychic rivals didn’t help.
Or maybe most the most disappointing “honor” goes to 2006, whose regular season saw everything go more right than any other — and whose postseason went lethally wrong.
Though you’d have a hard time convincing me the way either ’00 or ’06 ended could possibly match the respective horror show and sequel produced by ’07 and ’08.
Though I could also tell myself that at least we were in it to the end those years, something we couldn’t quite pull off in modestly satisfying ’05 and briefly exalted ’01.
Though nothing’s worse than falling out of it with a thud as we did in ’02, ’04 and ’09.
Except maybe for not being in it at all, as was the case in ’03.
Whatever poison you choose, every year in the past ten had its problems and it is their cumulative emotional baggage that we are destined to lug into the next decade.
***
Y’know, we had some good times together, the Mets of this decade and us.
We really did.
We reveled in victory (815 regular-season wins) more than we wallowed in defeat (803 regular-season losses).
We won more games than we lost most seasons (6 vs. 4).
We were once champions of our league and, on another occasion, we prevailed in our division. Those outcomes, no matter the failures that dimmed their evanescent successes, stand preferable to the alternative of not being champion of anything.
We cheered for some of the best players our franchise ever produced or acquired.
We raised our visibility in several significant ways, most notably with a fairly dedicated television operation and about a million unquestionably devoted bloggers.
We had fun…really we did. Shoot, until Friday, January 1, 2010, it’s the only decade in which we’ve blogged about the Mets. I know I’ve had fun doing that.
Yet how is it that as the 2000s end, we feel so overwhelmed by disappointment? Is it because this was the most disappointing decade in Mets history?
Yeah, probably.
***
We root for strikes when a Met is pitching and hits when a Met is batting. That’s what we watch. We watch a moment, a moment within an inning, an inning within a game, a game within a season. That’s all that matters. There are no decade standings in baseball. There is nothing necessarily relevant about what happened between the beginning of 2000 and the end of 2009. No ten seasons strung together matter as a unit any more than a hundred or a couple do. You take things one pitch and one game at a time because you’re only playing in one season.
By pointing that out, we bow to logic.
Now we turn our backs on it.
It’s the end of a decade. It’s the end of the ’00s as we popularly understand them; check your “there’s no such thing as a Year Zero” misgivings at the door. Our mathematical instinct is to round up before we move on. We have ten years behind us whose last digits ran from 0 to 9 (which is about as much as Timo Perez accelerated once upon a time). We thus have license to join the completion-crazed crowd and think in those terms and ask the following:
Was there ever a more disappointing Met decade than the 2000s?
Let us skew and review.
• The 1960s weren’t disappointing if you were a Mets fan. Was anybody expecting much beyond existence when the Mets began? That alone was a triumph. That new franchise smell was intoxicating, and had only begun to wear off when the 1969 model rolled in. In the time it took Mets fans to build expectations, the Mets fulfilled them. No disappointment per se in the 1960s.
• The 1970s were lousy with disappointment, I suppose, but they had the six or so weeks in 1973 that forgave everything up to June 15, 1977. Then disappointment was transcended by sustained transparent lousiness. But we’d always have You Gotta Believe. Neither the Oakland A’s nor the M. Donalds could take that away from us.
• The 1980s encompassed intense episodes of disappointment, particularly in the latter portion, yet 1986 was a solar eclipse that, with hindsight, blots out the bad endings wrought by talented teams — at least if you’re not too greedy. Nineteens Eight-Seven, -Eight and –Nine were plenty disappointing, but ’86…it was, shall we say, appointing. Decade-defining disappointment was pre-empted the moment one magical ground ball rolled through two wobbly legs.
• The 1990s were a frigging mess for the most part. Expectations were reasonably high enough early on to yield mass quantities of disappointment. But there was a high note right there at the end, in ’99. Not the highest of notes, not when ball four walked in the pennant-losing run, but that Met campaign, as noted in this space repeatedly, was too sublime to be considered disappointing. To borrow from Jim Lampley in Blades of Glory, everything the Mets did in 1999 was drenched in drama.
Come the 2000s, drama would devolve to disappointment, as at every turn everything the Mets touched turned to sadness.
There was no 1969 in the 2000s. There was no 1973 or 1986 or 1999. There was no saving grace to these ten years. There was not a single season that blew out of the water all the seaweed that stuck to our bathing suits. We rode no sustained wave of happiness at any point across this decade. We came close a couple of times, but we inevitably wiped out.
Oh that undertow.
To reiterate from above, we did have fun. I’m convinced we did. I was there when the decade commenced and I’m still here. I never stepped out for more than a figurative smoke. It was compelling enough to stick around throughout. It was likable enough to embrace as ever. It threatened once or twice to be wonderful. But then it would stop and never quite properly rev up again.
Which was disappointing.
It was almost always disappointing. If it wasn’t disappointing right away, it was disappointing eventually. The longer we waited, the more disappointing it became. Sometimes you’d get the disappointment out of the way early and you could cope, or try to. More memorably — and sadly — you’d hang in there with it, put your faith in it, decide it was going to work…and it would all fall apart.
Which was disappointing.
Everywhere you looked in the 2000s, there was disappointment. The Mets rained disappointment on us in buckets. It was an unscheduled promotion that never managed to coincide with Umbrella Day either. When there were flames, the Mets would go down in them. When there was disappointment, the Mets would be drenched in it.
And don’t even get me started on devastation.
***
One lousy attainable World Championship would have made a great deal of difference as to how we view this decade. We had two legitimate shots at it. We were within three victories once, five another time. Even though our first genuine opportunity was at the decade’s beginning, it would have tided us over a very long time, given the opponent and circumstances. If we had won in 2000, sure we would have complained about not winning in 2001 and 2002 and so on if, in fact, we hadn’t…but if we had won in 2000 — if we had prevailed in the Subway Series, of all things — rest your regulars, guys. We won’t need anything else of substance for a good long while.
And 2006? Big, bad 2006? The perfectly timed china anniversary of 1986? No getting our hands dirty with Wild Cards in 2006. No serious monitoring of the out-of-town scoreboard. We raced out and stayed ahead. We had it in our pocket for six months. Imagine parlaying that feeling through October. Could not have the 2007, 2008 and 2009 Mets done exactly what they did and wouldn’t you be only now getting a little antsy about it?
The Mets would no doubt continue to suffer our gripes of wrath every time one of them dropped a simple pop fly, but we wouldn’t mean it the same way. There’d have been a grace period. There’d have been a WORLD CHAMPIONS DVD to watch over and over when things got tough — not remastered from twenty years ago but practically new. There’d be WORLD CHAMPIONS apparel to sort with the laundry. There’d be WORLD CHAMPIONS satisfaction that would override imminent disappointment. The afterglow wouldn’t have flickered out until somebody noticed nobody bothered to display the 2006 trophy in Citi Field.
The 2006 World Champion Mets. That would have taken care of this decade.
The 2000 World Champion Mets. That would have done it, too.
A pair of chances to put a ring on it, yet the Mets left our and their fingers bare. They left us susceptible to the charms of September 2007 and September 2008 and the whole of 2009. They left us in a perpetual stew.
In October 2000, they lost four games to the Yankees by one run, one run, one run and two runs. Score a couple of runs here or allow a couple of fewer runs there and it is we who are showing off the rings, baby. Three would be enough for the ages because the third would dwarf however many dozens anybody else had.
In October 2006, they lost one final game to the Cardinals by two runs, though we tend to boil that deadly margin down to one unswung swing. Boil it any way you like. It was winnable. Win that night and go tame the Tigers. Think the 2006 Mets couldn’t have handled Kenny Rogers once they instantly solved Adam Wainwright or Jeff Suppan?
At this decade’s end, it’s the Very Good years that are killing us. As wonderful as they were — and they were clearly the best of an otherwise unimpressive ten-pack (typical Mets, sticking you with eight you don’t really want just so you can get the couple you’re actually looking forward to) — they are likely why our affection for our team has so curdled in advance of 2010. I tend to trace my general Met sourness to those 2½ weeks when 2007 fell down a ditch, but that and its 2008 doppelgänger weren’t fumbled championships. They were blown entrées to tournaments in which we could have competed for championships. Same for 2001 and, to a certain extent, 2005. All were tough to take because making the playoffs is all you can legitimately ask for from a regular season. It disappoints when we don’t. It aches when we come close and don’t. But it’s a whole other burning sensation for which you should consult a specialist when you’ve cleared the regular-season hurdles only to fall on your face a few meters from the most ultimate of finish lines.
Which was what happened in 2000 and 2006.
Maybe it’s best expressed as a matter of scale, like the difference between a million and a billion. A million seconds, I looked up somewhere, is 12 days. A billion seconds, however, is 31 years. That’s a significant difference. That’s the difference between missing the playoffs and missing a championship — particularly when you don’t have too many spare championships lying around to distract you. In the 2000s, we’ve never had a championship that is any fresher than 14 years old…a lovely piece that is, nonetheless, about to turn 24 years old.
Twenty-four years represents a period way longer than the span of any decade known to humanity.
***
It’s inhumane to have to lose and lose and lose. All things being equal, you wouldn’t wish it on the Pirates or Orioles or Royals or Reds. You probably didn’t wish it on the Rays or Tigers when they were plagued by an infestation of defeats. It’s no way to live. We went through it in relatively small doses in the ’00s, though it never seemed there was a way out when the losing (unlike Timo) ran rampant. Years like ’03 and ’09 suffocate you as a fan. Years like ’02 and ’04, when you’re in it, then kind of in it, then on the fringes of it, then totally out of it with seemingly no hope of ever, ever being back in it — those leave you gasping for air as well. You wouldn’t choose that existence. You’d choose to take your chances with a 2007 or 2008. You’d settle, if you were wallowing forever below .500, for a 2001 or 2005. And you’d dream of receiving our 2000 or 2006, blissfully oblivious to their hidden consequences.
But the consequences of getting as close as we did nine and three years ago, respectively, and not making it can wreak long-term disappointment. Sure, better to have loved and lost in the NLCS or the World Series than to sit home alone in the basement with nothing to do but stare at the phone, hoping against hope you’ll be invited to a higher floor. You’ll accept the challenge of coming close every time. Sometimes, as in ’69 and ’86, everything works out magnificently. Sometimes, as in ’73 and ’99, the journey outstrips the unreached destination and you are left with a feeling closer to warmth than disappointment.
That wasn’t what happened the two times in this decade when we thought we held lucky numbers. It felt awful at the moment when we knew definitively that we couldn’t cash them in.
It feels even worse in retrospect.
Knowing it was there. Knowing the Mets could have had one, maybe two of those trophies, two of those rings, two of those parades. One would have sufficed. One would be so much better than none.
It wouldn’t have been at all disappointing.
by Greg Prince on 27 December 2009 9:11 pm
“He said he would have been happy staying in the Polo Grounds.”
—John Mara on his father Wellington’s reaction to building another new stadium, 2005
I listened to the last quarter the Giants would ever play at Giants Stadium on the radio, before, during and after a shower. The Giants were taking a bath, so there was no need to stay glued to the screen. Besides, there’s something about listening to the Giants as opposed to watching them that appeals to me.
Particularly in the shower.
When I was a kid of 7, 8, 9 years old, the Giants were regularly on the radio on autumn Sundays in our house if they were home. The perfect TV sport was blacked out in each team’s own market by league fiat. Doesn’t matter that every Giants home game was sold out and that the waiting list to buy a Giants season ticket was long and legendary. That was just the rule before 1973. Thus, it was standard operating procedure for my dad to tune into WNEW (1130 AM) for all the action from, if you’ll excuse the expression, Yankee Stadium. He always seemed to be taking a shower just before kickoff, so he and his portable radio would disappear into the bathroom sometime between 12:30 and 1:00 and they’d emerge together as things were getting underway. We’d spend much of the afternoon between 1 and 4 at the kitchen table, the Giants on in the background, him reading the papers or doing some work, me reading whatever papers weren’t spoken for and both of us keeping one ear on the Giants. Half the time the Giants were on the road, so it’s quite likely we watched those games in his and my mother’s bedroom, but the mind’s eye reveals us listening in the kitchen. The blackout rule was itself blacked out when I was 10 and we got a color television when I was 11, but I’m sure Dad would transport the radio out from the bathroom as a matter of course and we continued to listen in the kitchen.
We weren’t listening that closely. The Giants didn’t obsess either one of us. The Giants weren’t good enough to grab my attention the way the Mets (and Knicks) did when I was of impressionable rooting age, and my dad has never been an over-the-top sports fan. As a result, except for pockets of championship-driven fervor, I’ve always followed football like a “normal” person — loyal to my teams, but not life or death. Not like baseball.
Yet I’ve always liked the radio part. That’s where the Giants play, I believe. If you wake me up and ask me to name their frequency, I’ll tell you it’s WNEW-AM, never mind that WNEW-AM hasn’t broadcast anything since 1992. Never mind that Marv Albert hasn’t announced Giants games since 1976. I still semi-expect to hear him giving downs and yards to go alongside Chip Cipolla and Sam Huff. If it’s not them, it’s Jim Gordon and Dick Lynch, who held down the Giant mics from the late ’70s through the early ’90s. It’s not that I’m much of a football fan. I think mostly I like the sound of the Giants coming out of a speaker, at least if there are no Mets around to do the same.
I’ve followed the Giants less and less every year since peaking with them on January 27, 1991, the moment Scott Norwood’s kick wide right won us Super Bowl XXV. That made it two titles in five years, and deep down I probably didn’t feel I could rightly ask for any more out of a franchise that I never saw play a single playoff game until I was nearly 19. It didn’t help that after the Giants edged the Bills, Ray Handley replaced Bill Parcells, the football personnel equivalent of Art Howe supplanting Bobby Valentine (though Art Howe couldn’t have effectively succeeded a misshapen tree stump). My radio sought the Giants out less and less, too, though I noticed in recent years that I still enjoyed flicking on the bathroom radio and taking a shower with the Giants, if you will. I wasn’t hanging on every snap, but I liked hearing them if not exactly listening to them.
Today I was feeling a bit nostalgic about it being the last Giants game at Giants Stadium. I never attended a Giants game there, but I was relieved when it was announced to general shock and dismay around New York that they were moving to New Jersey. I didn’t like the idea that my favorite football team played in Yankee Stadium. Yeah, it was strange that they were putting down roots in the Garden State, but it’s not like I was on that season ticket list. If I happened to be making use of that color set in my parents’ bedroom, it was fine with me that I was looking LIVE at East Rutherford, New Jersey, per Brent Musberger.
Eventually, Phil Who? would become Phil Simms, and Lawrence Taylor would become unstoppable and the heretofore Hackensack Giants would stampede through their swamp to nail down an NFC championship in January 1987. My dad and I, for the only time ever, set up two TVs so we could attempt to watch the first part of the Giants and Redskins while taking in the conclusion of the Broncos and Browns. I think we had Gordon and Lynch on the radio, too.
It seemed unlikely the Giants would pull a Mets this afternoon, closing out a stadium by coming up painfully shy in an effort to make the playoffs against an opponent who had absolutely nothing at stake. It was such a nice day outside. “Mara weather,” the old-time football writers like to say. How could the Giants not win their last game at Giants Stadium in Mara weather? I’m not sure, but they didn’t.
Since they still have one away game remaining, and because they had not yet been mathematically eliminated, the reality wasn’t exactly allegorical to what the Mets experienced in ending Shea’s life on September 28, 2008, but the sensation was close enough. Really, the Giants losing 41-9 to the Carolina Panthers was closer in spirit to the Mets losing 8-1 to the Marlins at the eternally dispiriting finish of 2007 than it was to the wan 4-2 loss that deflated the Shea Goodbye ceremonies a year later.
Either way, it wasn’t worth watching to its bitter conclusion. So I decided to take a shower and close out the Giants’ portion of Giants Stadium the way I experienced so many Giants home games for the past forty seasons…with soap, water and uncommon acoustics. I showered, I dressed, I lingered. I listened to Bob Papa and Carl Banks wax more contemporary than nostalgic. Football isn’t as concerned with looking back as baseball is. Football is all about marking forward progress. The Giants stumbling out the door of Giants Stadium before inching into their next pleasure palace was more an issue for Wild Card positioning — or the lack thereof — than for sentimentality’s sake. I suppose that was the case with the Mets and Marlins the second time, but I’m pretty sure I was sadder that the Mets closed Shea with a playoff-eliminating loss than I was that they missed the playoffs.
Different sports, different values. No way I would have been standing around the bathroom listening to the end of a big Mets game.
Now, improbably, a different team closes out Giants Stadium with something tangible on the line. The Jets, only having recently stopped being the Titans, closed out the original home of the Giants — both Giants…and the Mets — in 1963, but who thinks of the Jets when they think of the Polo Grounds? The Jets have played 26 seasons’ worth of home games at Giants Stadium, but who thinks of the Jets there, either? The Jets never should have left Shea Stadium. Then again, Shea Stadium never should have left Shea Stadium. And fans of several 8-7 and 7-8 AFC teams must be thinking Jim Caldwell never should have taken out Peyton Manning this evening.
However they managed to approach the brink of something besides despair, here’s hoping the Jets, whose weather usually involves a very dark cloud, shine on in East Rutherford next week. I assume my dad will be into it. He drifted from the Giants to the Jets a long time ago.
by Jason Fry on 26 December 2009 11:57 am
How was your Christmas? Did you enjoy the latest blue-and-orange gift? Yessir, that was Kelvim Escobar whom you unwrapped. He’s pitched all of five innings since 2007, so please handle him with care. In fact, maybe you’d better put him up on that shelf for a bit. No, that’s the end of the presents. But hey, have you tried this fruitcake? It’s … well, it’s not as bad as you might think.
That was more or less my reaction, and probably yours too. But it’s more of a reaction to the egregious context of being a Mets fan these days than it is a fair criticism of a pretty minor move. Sure, Escobar is a reclamation project. Yes, shoulder problems have trashed the last two years of his career. OK, it’s a major-league deal. But he will only be 33 on Opening Day — not young, but not superannuated like, say, El Duque. He won 18 games back in 2007, before his shoulder betrayed him. His envisioned role is as a setup guy, not a part of the rotation. It’s a low-risk, high-reward move from a team that’s offered too may high-risk, low-reward ones in recent years.
The Mets haven’t had much luck with this kind of thing of late, sure — but they’re not relying on luck to play an enormous role here. So it goes for their other recent moves. Granted, R. A. Dickey isn’t a name to warm hearts around a lukewarm stove, and the list of Mets knuckleballers isn’t exactly distinguished: There’s Dennis Springer, and primeval Amazins’ hurler Bob Moorhead, and that’s about it. (Rich Sauveur fooled around with it, but then Rich Sauveur’s singular career includes just about everything a pitcher could try and just about everywhere he could try it. As well as a very elusive baseball card.) But as Greg has also advised, let R. A. Dickey alone. He’s not ticketed for the rotation either, and he doesn’t have … let’s say “much” to do with Springer or Moorhead.
The Mets’ record with Japanese players isn’t exactly great, from Takashi Kashiwada (coached by Alberto Castillo with the advice “throw that teriyaki ball”) to Ken Takahashi (coached to throw to Raul Ibanez, with tragic results). I know I will be confusing and combining those two’s names forever, while mostly trying to forget the other Japanese imports — I’ll see your Kaz Ishii and raise you Kaz Matsui, with what fond feelings I can muster reserved for Masato Yoshii. (Who was more determined than good anyway.) But we all know it’s only fair to ask Ryota Igarashi to answer for his own performance, not that of anybody else and certainly not those of his countrymen.
Jason Bay and Bengie Molina … now there’s another question. I think Matt Holliday is worth a long-term megadeal while Bay is not — he’s not as good a defender as Holliday (one horrid lowlight aside) and I don’t think he’ll age as well as a hitter. And I want no part of Molina at all — he combines the on-base ability of Jeff Francoeur with the speed of an Aldabra giant tortoise. But whatever I think of the Mets’ priorities there (and whatever I may not know about their budgetary constraints), those moves haven’t been made yet. They may be, or they may not be. And certainly other moves will come — perhaps even ones that we approve of without reservation. Recall that Johan Santana wasn’t confirmed as a 2008 Met until February, and before his arrival, the offseason hadn’t exactly been scintillating: The Mets had made one big move (the still-controversial swap of Lastings Milledge for Brian Schneider and Ryan Church) but otherwise added backup catchers (Gustavo Molina, Raul Casanova) and spaghetti-at-the-wall middle relievers (Brian Stokes, Matt Wise, Ricardo Rincon). Sound familiar?
This isn’t to say that I trust Omar Minaya. I don’t. I think he should have been fired last year, I’m not sure he has a coherent plan now, and I fear he will make desperate moves in an effort to save his job if the Mets get off to a lackluster start, which will only make things worse for whomever succeeds him. But nothing he’s done in the last couple of weeks has made me trust him less. He hasn’t given in to impatience, adding years and/or money in an effort to put the Bay in Beirut or let us watch Molina become even more like molasses. (And do you know how long Aldabran tortoises live?)
These are tough times, and they may get a lot worse. But Decembers and Januarys aren’t like Junes or Julys. There aren’t winning streaks or games to be made up in the standings. You have to wait and let the entire offseason (including spring training) play out to have a sense of what was accomplished. And even then you’re just guessing, waiting for the real show to begin.
by Greg Prince on 24 December 2009 6:29 pm
You Gotta Believe we’ll be talking this up more as we move into the new year, but I wanted to alert our little slice of Metsopotamia that one of our most stalwart citizens is in the midst of doing something very special. Sharon Chapman — Inside Pitcher on the BlogHarbor version of us and the lady who takes all those great pictures of her son Ross in the FAFIF t-shirt — will be running in the New York City Marathon next fall, hopefully with confetti still dotting the streets from the Mets’ World Series celebration (one can always dream). That’s admirable in itself, but what makes it a special event is that Sharon will be running as a member of Team McGraw to support the great work of the Tug McGraw Foundation. We lost Tug to a brain tumor almost six years ago, and the Foundation carries on in his name, raising funds for pioneering brain tumor research and increasing public awareness of the disease.
Sharon’s initial fundraising goal is $3,000 and she’s just about halfway there, meaning she’s already passed the magical 45% mark for Tug. Anything FAFIF readers can do to help Sharon sprint past 50% and toward the first of her finish lines will go to help a cause every bit as wonderful as every Mets fan’s favorite Screwball reliever.
Thanks to Sharon for lacing up her running shoes this way and thanks to you all for your consideration.
To learn more and donate about Sharon Chapman’s New York City Marathon mission on behalf of Team McGraw, please visit her fundraising page.
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