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ABOUT US

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

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

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

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Mets Yearbook: 1971

Reminder: The much-anticipated SNY program Mets Yearbook debuts tonight, Thursday, at 7:30, with the 1971 highlight film in the leadoff slot. Can’t wait to revisit the propaganda I’m pretty sure I haven’t seen since some rain delay in 1972. It has been listed on SNY’s online schedule as reairing a couple more times, but one of those is after Jets postgame coverage Sunday and one is after college basketball Wednesday, which indicates it might get bumped or be joined in progress. Do your best to watch or record tonight.

Photo courtesy of kcmets.com

The Days After

Welcome to a special Tuesday edition of Flashback Friday: I Saw The Decade End, a milestone-anniversary salute to the New York Mets of 1969, 1979, 1989 and 1999. Each week, we immerse ourselves in or at least touch upon something that transpired within the Metsian realm 40, 30, 20 or 10 years ago. Amazin’ or not, here it comes.

For life’s a mystery
I shall remember
For thirty days
Thirty days
—The Rainmakers

It was in 2004, I think, that I was doing a little research on the 1999 Mets. I was trying to find something in Newsday‘s archives and was led to a page that promised helpful information. Indeed, it had a list titled something along the lines of “1999 Baseball Highlights”. It mentioned who won the World Series, who got their 3,000th hit, who threw a no-hitter, who set a record here or there, who did particularly well…stuff like that.

There was nothing — nothing — to indicate that the Mets had gone to the playoffs that year on one of the wildest rides imaginable or that they ramped up that ride exponentially right to the moment it was over. No more than five years had passed, yet their collective achievements had disappeared down the memory hole. Somebody at Newsday compiled a list of big deals in baseball from 1999 managing to leave out one of the most extraordinary campaigns in the history of one of the teams it covered every day.

If you’re wondering why I have spent so much time and generated so many words in service to memorializing 1999 here, it’s because I disdain the memory hole, the one down which events that mesmerized us for weeks on end can fall without making a sound if nobody lays out a tarp to catch them; the one down which episodes that don’t fit easily under mundane headings like “world championships” tend to fall. Like you, I lived the smashing crescendo of those 1999 Mets and I know it was, no pun intended, amazing. The final month of that season was the most gripping baseball drama I’ve ever encountered. I knew it when it happened and I’ve never stopped knowing it. Before this blog existed, I compiled a purely subjective and personal list of what I considered the hundred Greatest Baseball Experiences of my first 35 years as a fan, covering 1969 through 2003. The thirty days that spanned September 21 to October 20, 1999 ranked as No. 1. For context, the adventures of Mookie Wilson and Bill Buckner ranked as No. 2.

And it wasn’t even a particularly close call.

Nothing touches those thirty days in 1999. Nothing. I’ve now lived through 41 seasons as a Mets fan. I’ve been fortunate enough to have absorbed a cornucopia of incredible experiences since creating that list in 2004. And still nothing touches those thirty days from the end of 1999. Together they constitute the singular episode of my baseball life: the joy, the sadness, the angst, the investment of emotion, the uncertainty of what might happen next and the utmost concern over its outcome…the desire that it just keep going.

Of course it didn’t keep going. Kenny Rogers walking Andruw Jones saw to that. The ride of my baseball life was over just before 12:30, the morning of October 20, 1999: 23 games, 13 losses, 10 wins, hundreds of waking hours, thousands of beads of sweat. I don’t know how to count it. It was too enormous to herd onto a spreadsheet.

I had been consumed by the Mets’ wobbly march toward the playoffs and their determined if flawed quest to remain alive inside them. Once you’re consumed, you don’t necessarily re-emerge easily from that which swallowed you up. The ride was over just before 12:30 that morning, October 20, but I wasn’t about to get off of it willingly.

I doubt I could have even had I wanted.

October 20, 1999, Around 12:30 AM

Three logos appear on my television screen, courtesy of the National Broadcasting Company: that of the Braves, who have just defeated us after the most searing set of games and weeks imaginable; that of the Yankees, whose fans have made the past several years miserable for us; and that of the 1999 World Series, in which, until moments ago, we dreamed of participating.

UCH!

That’s what I said. I didn’t have to think about it. It was a guttural reaction. After all we put into 1999, we wind up with this: the Braves and the Yankees in the World Series.

Processing that the postseason was going on but the Mets weren’t curled me into as much of a ball as my six-foot frame would allow. Without meaning to, I instinctively went fetal. I was on the floor, I was writhing wordlessly and, for a moment or two, I was crying.

What am I doing here? I thought. I’m 36 years old, yet baseball is doing this to me as if it’s more than a game, as if it’s my life, not just some pleasant diversion from it. I’m allowing it to do this to me. I’m allowing the Mets to do this to me. Why?

One really gets down to fundamentals when in the fetal position.

I rose from my teary heap relatively quickly, and I stopped asking myself unanswerable questions. At that point, I was some thirty years deep into my Mets fandom. I had spent thirty days on the trail of these particular Mets. This was the thirtieth day, the day it ended. Their last game started on Day 29: My Life Held Hostage. I could go now. I was free.

Or was I? Not really. I wouldn’t be free of the 1999 Mets so fast. It would take a while. Their hold on me was too tight. We were tied to each other, even if they didn’t know me from a hole in the head or, in my case, a heap on the floor.

The Braves…the Yankees…the World Series…seriously, UCH!

I wearily picked up the phone and left a voice mail with my editor: I won’t be coming in today, I’m sick, see you Thursday.

October 20, 1999, Noonish

I get up and watch the Channel 2 News. The Mets are the lead story. Their season is over, but what a try, says the afternoon anchor. There’s a report from Shea. The players have flown back from Atlanta and the buses are depositing them by the main offices. There are about five fans there to greet them. I guess we don’t do that meet the plane jazz anymore.

October 20, 1999, Late Afternoon Into Evening

Stephanie (who also called in sick — she stayed up clear through the eleventh inning last night and refuses to function without proper sleep) notes we could use something from the supermarket. I volunteer. I haven’t been out all day. I need to crawl out from under my rock. I also need to get the papers.

I stop in to our local deli. It’s where I’d stop in to get the papers on a Saturday afternoon on my way to the train station if there was a day game. Then it was to bone up on quotes and stats and calibrate my hopes. Now, essentially, it was to read the obits.

The deli, like so much else, was connected in my mind to the 1999 Mets. The 1999 Mets were my most intense baseball romance — were. We were over. Going into that deli for those papers was a bad idea. My love was gone and the deli reminded me of all the fun we had together. It makes me quite sad. As would everything for a while.

I had my own shopping list for the supermarket: two items. One was a magazine I had seen recently but for which I hesitated to shell out $6.95. It was one of those quickie jobs with an unwieldy title: The 1999 Amazin’ Mets Magical Season, a Gold Collectors Series Baseball Magazine (as if that was some sort of seal of approval). The cover lines:

OLERUD, PIAZZA, LEITER GETTIN’ IT DONE!

1999 NEW YORK METS A YEAR TO REMEMBER

In case they weren’t gettin’ it done by the time a prospective purchaser considered the $6.95 investment, a banner across the top of the cover made it clear that WIN OR LOSE — WE LOVE THE METS.

So of course I splurged. It was surprisingly current, or as current as one would want it to be, right up to the home run that beat the Diamondbacks (“Take Pratt, Arizona”). Quite a bit inside on how the Mets had been “Amazin’ Again” in ’99 and how the front office made “All the Right Moves”. A few more articles like that plus a generous dollop of team history. It certainly deserved its Gold Collectors designation.

My other shopping list item: multiple boxes of Amazin’ Mets Frosted Flakes Cereal. Our playoffs might be over, but with Amazin’ Mets Frosted Flakes Cereal, I figured I could maintain the illusion that we were still in the midst of crunch time.

October 20, 1999, First Night Without Mets Baseball

Oh god, these newspapers. If the Amazin’ Mets Frosted Flakes Cereal doesn’t kill me, these will. Except for Long Island’s own Newsday, they’re all earlyish editions. Each has a few pages on the actual game the night before, but the rest of it was sent to press in advance of the final score to meet print deadlines. Thus, there’s both the bad news and lots of conditional “if necessary” stuff, including information on Mets World Series tickets being put on sale Thursday. The Post has a picture of Jerry Seinfeld visiting with Al Leiter and Orel Hershiser on the field before Game Six — why was Leiter chatting up Seinfeld with the biggest game of his life ahead? And why was Seinfeld, allegedly our most famous fan, bothering Al? Is Al wondering “what’s the deal with these Brave hitters?” before giving up those five runs?

The front pages, however, can’t equivocate.

The Post, with Piazza staring into space:

WAIT ’TIL NEXT YEAR
Fans still believe as
Braves end Mets
Amazin’ season

The News, with Leiter rubbing his face:

IT’S OVER
Mets’ miracle playoff
run ends in heartbreak

Newsday, with Alfonzo hugging Hamilton:

Heartbreak
Winning Run Walks Home as Mets Fall, 10-9,
In 11 Innings; Yanks vs. Braves, Game 1 Saturday

The Times, with Andruw Jones sliding home in the first:

Subway Series Dies Hard:
Mets Lose It All on a Walk

Braves Win in 11th, 10-9, Yankees Are Up Next

UCH!

October 21, 1999

Back at work. I’m told nobody was surprised I called in sick the day before. Nobody expected me in. Absolved of any charges that my priorities were less than straight, I spread out the day after the day after’s papers at my desk and commence to ignore my work some more.

With no more deadline pressure, the ladies and gentlemen of the Met press are more definitive in their appraisals, many of which read as sympathy cards. In the Times, George Vecsey pays homage to “the dysfunctional Mets, a collection of disparate types who became something akin to a team [that] thrilled the entire baseball diaspora with their highs, their lows, their ups, their downs, as Lerner and Loewe put it.” In Newsday, Shaun Powell suggests baseball skip the Yankees altogether and “just let the Braves and Mets keep playing. Let them keep stretching games into extra innings, keep turning Melvin Mora and Eddie Perez into MVPs, keep the battle between the Bobbys, and keep the pitchers throwing until they drag their aching arms off the mound.

“Let them keep us trapped inside a trance, the way we stayed during the most riveting two games of the season.”

In the News, Lisa Olson immortalizes Shawon Dunston’s farewell address to his teammates:

“I am so proud to be a Met,” said Dunston, voice cracking. Darryl Hamilton looked up, and felt the tears on his cheeks. Someone else sobbed. Al Leiter wiped the water from his eyes. The passion play that was the Mets season had just completed its last, heart-wrenching act, the Mojo dissipating with a 10-9, 11th-inning loss to the Braves Tuesday night.

“Grown men,” Olson continues, “aren’t supposed to cry but Dunston’s words put a quick end to whatever cool machismo the players were clutching. The clubhouse doors opened and it was like a giant flash had gone off, resulting in eyes that were red and oh-so-stunned.”

Best wishes will continue to pour in. From the Washington Post, via my new e-mail buddy Dan, comes Tom Boswell attempting to place this NLCS in historical context:

[T]his four-hour-plus combination of blood feud and chess match was more a testament to the sport itself than to the determination of a champion. Some research, at a future date, when the blood is not pounding in everyone’s ears, will no doubt be required to decide whether this playoff series between the Mets and Braves was the all-time best of its breed. The scores were 4-2, 4-3, 1-0, 3-2, 4-3 (in 15) and 10-9 (in 11). Every one a spellbinder. But, whatever the result of that analysis, one thing’s for sure: This dog can hunt with any.

It’s almost impossible, Boswell decides, to choose one particular contest as “the best game ever to conclude a postseason series. Such categories are a kind of eternal 10-way tie. Everyone gets to pick their favorite. Let me sleep on it. This might be mine.”

I find an ad in a couple of the papers:

To the greatest baseball fans in the world.

You make the Magic!

A special thanks to the more than
3,000,000 fans who came out to
Shea Stadium to cheer us on and
thanks to everyone who believed
in the Mets all season long.

It’s signed with a script Mets logo and the honorific 1999 N.L. WILD CARD WINNER.

October 22, 1999

Word spreads that as the Mets fought their way into extra innings the other night, Rickey Henderson — in a snit over being pulled for Melvin Mora — and Bobby Bonilla — used as a pinch-hitter already and embroiled in a permanent snit — huddled in the visitors’ clubhouse in Turner Field deeply concerned over the game in progress. Except their game was cards. It didn’t go over big with the Mets who went down fighting or the Mets who stayed on the bench to urge them forward.

“Guys who saw it wanted to take a bat to their heads after the game,” it’s reported. “There were players crying and screaming in the dugout. Then they walk in the clubhouse and see that?”

I should be more offended by this than I am. I’m not. I walked out on Game Six when it was 5-0 to pick up Chinese food and didn’t bring a radio. We all indulge our snits in our own way.

Meanwhile, I dwell on my chart of streakiness I’ve been keeping all season and distill it so I can better digest it. This is how the Mets won the Wild Card instead of the division and lost the pennant instead of winning a trip to the World Series. But mostly it’s about how the Mets made the playoffs instead of missing them altogether and how they got to Game Six of the NLCS instead of exiting after Game Four.

LWWLWWWWW 7-2

LLWLWLWWLLL 4-7

WWWWWW 6-0

LLLWLLLWWWLLL 4-9

WWWLWLWW 6-2

LLLLLLLL 0-8

WWWWLWWLWWWWLWWWWW 15-3

LLWWLWLLLWWWLL 6-7

WWLWWLWWLWWWWWWLWWLWWWWW 19-5

LLL 0-3

WWWLWWWLWWWLWLWW 12-4

LLWLWL 2-4

WWWLWWLWWWLWLWW 11-4

LLLLLLL 0-7

WLWWWWWLWW 8-2

LLL 0-3

WWL 2-1

October 23-27, 1999

The World Series occurs. I follow perhaps a half-hour of it live.

• As Stephanie and I roll a shopping cart through Pathmark during Game One, I hear on a stockboy’s radio the Braves are leading. Oh, that’s nice, I say. By the time we check out, so have the Braves.

• I put on Game Two to watch the introduction of the absurdly constructed All-Century team — no Seaver, thus all absurdity. Jim Gray acts like a snot toward Pete Rose, who both deserves it and deserves better. Then I turn the whole thing off.

• The night of Game Three, I approve of a rare Tuesday night visit to Blockbuster. The late, lamented Jammin’ 105 has unwanted updates from “the Stadium,” which bring bad news in the car between Spinners and Four Tops records.

• I look in on the ninth inning of Game Four so as not to be a total sorehead about it.

The Yankees sweep the Braves. This is terrible. Had the Braves beaten the Yankees, it would have been tolerable. Tolerable vs. Terrible. I’ll take tolerable every time.

And don’t for a second think I don’t despise these Braves. They had just ended the most wonderful run of my baseball life. They had won the best baseball game I ever saw at the expense of my baseball team. They are the big bang of revolting: Jones, Rocker, Cox, Mazzone, Gl@v!ne. I hate the Braves in 1999 and 1998 as much as if not more than any Met division rival in my life, before or after.

But I wanted them to not lose that World Series. Their losing only meant one thing.

That the Yankees would win. And that is an intolerable outcome anytime.

October 29, 1999, Early Afternoon

Jace, who works downtown, sends me an e-mail:

Man, what a morning. Do you know how difficult it is to inject a vanload of monkeys with the Ebola virus and then get close enough to the damn Yankee parade to release them? I’m wiped out between the broken syringes, the cages banging together and talking to the damn cops. And then a bunch of the fuckers just climbed lampposts instead of biting people. But I’m willing to do my part.

October 29, 1999, Later That Same Afternoon

Stephanie, who works downtown, calls me. Because of renovations to her building, she can wander into the offices across the hall. She got a great view of the parade and took some really good pictures.

It’s the only time I have ever scowled at her over the phone.

November 2, 1999

A nor’easter is blowing through Long Island. It’s knocked the power out, so I’m walking home in total darkness, in the rain, in the wind. Crossing the street has become a death sport because nobody’s regulating traffic. The lights are still out when I walk in the door. But a package that came in the day’s mail has me fumbling for the flashlight. It’s large and it’s from the Mets.

Inside are two miniature baseball bats. These are the bats we were supposed to be handed on the last scheduled day of the regular season, October 3, exactly thirty days earlier. It was Fan Appreciation Day. Most of our appreciation stemmed from the Mets still being alive for a playoff spot despite having recently compiled seven consecutive L’s. But this was the Mets appreciating us.

Their appreciation was trumped by their disorganization. Instead of handing out the bats on the way in as goodies had always been distributed, they saved them for later. Everybody was in such a good mood after Melvin Mora scored on that wild pitch, that I figured the bats would be forgotten by most as they approached the exits. I’d almost forgotten about them.

But you can’t sneak a freebie by a Mets fan. Thus, every exit was a mob scene. Never mind Mora, we want our bats! Overwhelmed Met employees were positively besieged. It was clear Stephanie and I weren’t going to elbow our way to lumber. The best I could do was pick up a pair of rainchecks from the ground. Mail these in, it said, and ye shall receive thine premium.

I was a little annoyed but didn’t want to let it bother me, not with the Mets having just edged a half-game ahead of the Reds pending what happened that night in rainy Milwaukee. I was too happy to be too annoyed. Nevertheless, as we pulled out of the Marina parking lot and saw some dick hauling an armful of wood — nine bats was my estimate — I wanted what was coming to me.

It’s a month later, and they’ve arrived. Two bats with Mets logos are in the package along with a letter (dated October 12) from James Plummer, Director of Promotions.

Dear New York Mets Fan,

Thank you for coming out to Shea Stadium to see the Mets play. I am sorry you were unable to get the Fan Appreciation Day mini-bat on game day.

Citing concerns over fan safety if our game went poorly, the NYPD directed us not to hand out the mini-bats as fans entered the stadium. We questioned the decision to give bats away after the game, and warned the police of the difficulties involved in organizing a giveaway at the exit gates when 45,000+ fans are trying to exit the stadium within a short period of time.

However, the police safety concerns about thrown bats or the potential for fan violence were valid, and the NYPD had the authority to make this decision. As such, we did the best we could to distribute the bats post game.

I apologize for the situation at the exit gates after the game. When the crowds began pushing, grabbing hands full of bats and shoving the promotional staff out of the way, the police insisted that we halt all distribution of mini-bats and that the remaining mini-bats be locked away.

We are enclosing with this letter the Fan Appreciation Day mini-bats that you unfortunately did not receive on game day.

Please contact this office should you have any questions.

I had only one: Didn’t you guys just take out an ad telling us we’re “the greatest baseball fans in the world”?

November 8, 1999

The Major League Baseball Players Alumni Association is holding an awards dinner at the New York Sheraton, one of those events Charlie Brown would pay a pretty penny for just so he could see his hero Joe Shlabotnik. Me, I pay nothing. I’m here as a favor to one of the sponsors who found himself with a table that needed filling.

Yes, that’s a favor I can do.

The guests of honor are Henry Aaron, Frank Robinson, Yogi Berra and Vera Clemente, widow of Roberto Clemente. Each of them will be recognized by the MLBPAA. They’re there and quite a few other baseball alumni are on hand. We who are guests check in out front and are handed baseballs for the cocktail hour. It’s not so much that we are permitted to approach baseball players for autographs. We are supposed to. That’s why so many ballplayers are here.

And this goes down as me doing somebody a favor.

First former player I see is Brooks Robinson, like five feet from me. My first thought is, Hey, that looks like Brooks Robinson. My second thought is, Ohmigod, that’s Brooks Robinson! My prevailing thought is stupid Oriole.

It’s 1999, but it never quite stops being 1969. I don’t want Brooks Robinson’s autograph. I don’t want Frank Robinson’s autograph. But when I see him regaling other partygoers with his delight over his son being named People magazine’s sexiest country star, I sure as shootin’ want Tug McGraw’s name on my baseball. I ease into his group and hand him my ball. Tug is 55. I am, for the length of the cocktail hour, no more than 12. While he’s signing, I tell him that his autobiography, Screwball, formed the basis of three different book reports for me in elementary school, junior high school and high school.

Tug McGraw hands me back my baseball, stares at me and bursts into laughter.

“You’re scarin’ me, man!”

Keith Hernandez is the anti-Tug for the occasion. I bump into him after he’s skulked into the room He looks uncomfortable. He looks like a man who’d rather be anywhere else than a place that reminds him he used to be a ballplayer. But I have a baseball with a great Met lefty’s signature on it. Keith batted lefty. He’s a great Met. I hand him my ball. I have to hold his glass of wine. It’s an awkward transaction. I tell him he was my mother’s favorite player. It’s quite clear Keith has heard it before, but he’s gracious enough. He gets his wine back, I get my ball.

Two Mets, two autographs (and I’ve never been one for autographs). One more Met lefty is immediately accessible on the premises: Rusty Staub, our host for the evening. Rusty’s being pulled in several directions. One of them is mine. He doesn’t pay me a lot of attention, but I get Le Grand inscription.

I have a ball signed by Tug McGraw, Keith Hernandez and Rusty Staub. I’ve just met all three in the space of about ten minutes. I can kind of die now.

The rest of the evening is almost as good. I recognize more players. There’s ex-Met Mike Torrez, but he’s a righty, so he can stay off the ball; besides, as a Met, he never had much on the ball. Yogi (batted left, threw right) is too much of a draw to get to sign — which is to say it’s too crowded around him, so I don’t go there. Yogi surprises me in accepting his award. I figured he gets an award every other week. He’d drop a few malapropisms on us, we’d applaud and it would be over before it was over. But no, he’s quite sincere in appreciation of whatever this honor is exactly. He had been named to the All-Century Team in October and confesses to us he felt ridiculous that he had been selected but Frank Robinson and Roberto Clemente weren’t. He actually broke down and cried.

Who’da thunk it?

Rusty’s a great host. He comes over to our table to see how we’re enjoying ourselves as if were a table full of Bar Mitzvah guests. From the podium he compliments this gathering on exhibiting such “joie de vivre,” becoming, I’m guessing, the first ballplayer, retired or otherwise, to throw that phrase around. Being from New Orleans and playing in Montreal must have helped.

Tug is there to introduce Yogi but can’t resist telling a story about Rusty from when they were on opposing sides. Rusty was watching Tug a little too closely from the on-deck circle, so Tug threw at him right there. The room laughed. Tug then kidded that all the money Rusty made hitting off him went to his belly, while all the money Tug made getting Rusty out went right to his liver.

The room went uncomfortably silent.

There was, on the other hand, polite applause when the association’s awards to current players were announced. None of the active men showed up, but they all sent video acceptance speeches. Mike Hampton was named National League Pitcher of the Year for going 22-4. Chipper Jones was honored as N.L. Player of the Year for torturing the Mets. If one other person booed or chanted LAAAA-reeee! I was primed to join in, but nobody did.

Freddie Roman, Dean of the Friars Club (of which Rusty’s a member), served as entertainment. I expected Catskills shtick, and it arrived, but not until Freddie said a few words about happy he was to be here. He grew up a Dodgers fan and switched to the Mets when they came along. It was thrilling for him to see Tug tonight, he said, especially so, because that “You Gotta Believe!” spirit really came alive again this year…and weren’t those playoffs against Atlanta just so exciting?

I waited for a punchline. But there was none. No joke: those were great playoffs.

November 10, 1999

National League Gold Gloves formally announced. Robin Ventura wins one, which is appropriate. Rey Ordoñez wins one, which is automatic. Pokey Reese wins one, which is idiotic. Edgardo Alfonzo, the keystone of The Best Infield Ever, played more, made fewer errors and got to everything and then some. I’m angrier at the voters for overlooking Fonzie than I was for Rickey at playing hearts or Kenny for throwing ball four.

November 13, 1999

Driving somewhere with the wife. Not talking about anything in particular. Not thinking of anything in particular. I just blurt it out sans forethought.

“We would’ve won Game Seven.”

Stephanie doesn’t respond, which is OK. I didn’t say it for her benefit. I just said it. I say it again.

“If we had forced a Game Seven, we would have won. Rick would have beaten Gl@v!ne. I just know it.”

I say nothing else. But I get such a chill.

November 15, 1999

From the Dean of the Friars to the sage of all baseball writers. Every year around this time I start haunting newsstands on Mondays to check table of contents of the new New Yorker. Every fall Roger Angell wraps up the season and postseason as only Roger Angell can, as only Roger Angell has since taking up his singular baseball beat in the fortuitous year of 1962.

Today’s the day Angell’s analysis appears, under the headline “Home Cooking”. I haven’t looked forward to this rite of autumn this much since 1986’s “Not So, Boston”. Per custom, the ostensible focus of his article is the team that won the World Series, but Roger Angell, who’s told more good stories than any baseball writer alive or otherwise, knows one when he’s seen it. To the sport’s premier essayist, the 1999 Mets are more than a baseball story.

He calls them an opera. And he sees all of us on stage in support of their quest.

The Mets’ failure to bring about an all-New York World Series spared us a thousand TV bites and feature stories about the moms and taverns and sociological makeup and choral capabilities of the two rival fan masses, but the Mets folks outdid the Yankees this October. Away from all this since 1988, the Shea people were funny and wolfish with their curses and placards (“FAT LADY YO MAMA” someone held up), and happily devoured the prognathous Atlanta closer, John Rocker (a great baseball name, perfect for the part), and Chipper Jones, the non-quite lovable Atlanta star, who had unwisely let it be known that he had always hated his given name, Larry. “LARRY!” “LAR-RY!” “LAHH-REEE!” now fell upon him from every Shea tier and sector. By the third night at Shea, the game was in the rain, fans were hanging out placards depicting the frazzled and frantic Larry Fine of the Three Stooges. Later that night, I spotted some men and women in the stands gabbling excitedly into their cell phones. Could they be calling their babysitters at such a moment? Their brokers? No, it turned out, they were talking to other fans in other parts of the Stadium, networking bliss with friends they had come with or knew would be there: “My God, did you see that? Isn’t it great? Isn’t it something? I don’t think I can stand this, honest I don’t.”

November 17, 1999

Larry Jones is named National League MVP. All agree he clinched it when he smacked four home runs in those three wins over the Mets at Turner Field in September. Robin, Mike and Fonzie finished 6-7-8 in the voting. Three Mets in the Top Ten? Seems pretty sweet. After the Pokey Reese debacle, I’ll take what I can get.

December 7, 1999

Mike & The Mad Dog have a bulletin: John Olerud — who showed up at Shea in 1997, the same year the resident baseball team just happened to improve by seventeen wins — has signed with the Seattle Mariners. Three years, $20 million, a chance to play where he grew up. Steve Phillips lifted not nearly enough fingers to convince Oly home is wherever the best deal was. The Mets don’t go out of their way to keep their clutch-hitting, sharp-fielding first baseman and now the Best Infield Ever has been dissolved. I have no idea who will take over for Olerud in 2000. Whoever it will be, I’m sure, will not be nearly as wonderful. How the Mets ever can be either is beyond me.

December 12, 1999

Many names were bandied about as John Olerud’s replacement. None of them was Todd Zeile. Olerud is a superb first baseman. Zeile is a journeyman third baseman. But Steve Phillips, we learn in Sunday papers, has done it again, replacing state-of-the-art with run-of-the-mill. Zeile hasn’t always been a third baseman. He used to be a catcher. Can he play first? We’ll find out.

December 13, 1999

ESPN reports the Mets are trading Armando Benitez, Octavio Dotel and Roger Cedeño to John Olerud’s new team for Ken Griffey, Jr. In the time I take to gasp, I find out we traded for Junior, but Junior isn’t coming. He vetoes the deal. He says he wasn’t given enough time to decide if he wanted to be a Met. So we didn’t really trade for him. So we don’t have Griffey and we don’t have Olerud. At least we still have Benitez, Dotel and Cedeño.

They were 1999 Mets. They helped give me those thirty days in September and October. We already gave up Olerud for Zeile. I’m loathe to give up on the other, younger 1999 Mets now, even for Griffey.

Seriously.

December 14, 1999

Our former company president’s former assistant now works as a temp. Her current assignment: Some sort of clerical role with a Queens-based concern. She works for the Mets! She sends us an official season’s greeting from her temporary employer, identified within as the 1999 N.L. WILD CARD WINNER.

Wishing you a
Happy Holiday
and an Amazin’
New Millenium.

Our receptionist hangs it up by her desk with other holiday cards from less interesting corporations. After the new year, it’s still hanging, so I grab it. Nearly a decade later, I notice the Mets misspelled “millennium”.

Oh well, it’s not like it’s a word that comes up more than every thousand years.

December 22, 1999

Sports Illustrated arrives at home. Big story on John Rocker, Public Enemy No. 2 behind Larry Jones. Jeff Pearlman recounts his NLCS experiences.

At Shea, Rocker was a one-man psycho circus. He spit at Mets fans. He gave them the finger. During batting practice he would shag a ball in the outfield, fake a toss to a throng of waving spectators, then throw it back to the pitcher, smiling wickedly. Once he took a ball and chucked it as hard as he could at a net that separated fans from the field. “If there wasn’t a net there, it would have smoked ’em right in the face,” he says. “But they’re so stupid, they jumped back like the ball would hit ’em.”

Of course I now hate John Rocker more than any opponent in baseball. But he makes me nostalgic for October.

December 23, 1999

Listening to the FAN again (will I ever learn?). This time they beam a happier bulletin. Dotel and Cedeño are traded, but for somebody who’s actually going to come in return: Mike Hampton, the Major League Baseball Players Alumni Association National League Pitcher of the Year. Hampton, 27 and lefthanded, went 22-4 for the Astros. We’re getting him because he’s in his walk year and Drayton McLane knows he won’t be able to re-sign him. So we’re renting Mike Hampton, basically — him and Derek Bell, the other veteran whose expiring contract we’ve been compelled to absorb if we want one of the best pitchers in the game. Anything for an ace like Hampton, goes the thinking. Hampton…Leiter…Reed…gee. I’ll miss Cedeño and Dotel, but we kept Benitez, and Zeile maybe can hit a little and play first OK. We still have Piazza and Ventura and Alfonzo. We came so close last year. Maybe we can come closer next year. Maybe we can get it done.

This could be a pretty good Millennium after all.

Flashback Friday: I Saw The Decade End will conclude with its next installment, a final tribute to 1999, from 1999. You’ll want to have your tape recorders ready for this one.

Hell is Out of Session

After the events of the past few days — the Yankees winning their 27th World Series and being feted for it; the Mets doing no such thing — perhaps you wonder, what's the point? I'd love to tell you what it is, but I have no real clue.

But I do have a correction to offer, specific to previous entries to this blog:

This was not the World Series from hell, at least not in the sense that either outcome would be equally terrible. If the Phillies had won, I can say with a great deal of certainty that their hypothetical victory, however annoying when considered on its own conceivable merits, would not have measured up to the actual victory of the Yankees.

Which isn't annoying. It's atrocious.

The Phillies won in 2008. I didn't care for it. They beat us and then made their way through the playoffs. It felt like the Cardinals winning in 2006, that it had something to do with us. In '06, however, it was a more direct process: Cardinals beat us and they were in the World Series. I hated the Cardinals for the next year or so. The other day I ran across something I wrote in 2007 in which I reflexively spewed nasty things about the Cardinals. I stand by those feelings for then, but they seem quite out of code now. At present, I don't particularly hate the Cardinals as a going concern. I'll restoke my hostility toward them April 16, per the 2010 schedule.

When April 30 rolls around, I'll hate the Phillies plenty. I'll hate them eighteen times next year. I'll hate their players, I'll hate their fans, I'll hate their Phanatic. That's a promise. But right now the Phillies mean nothing in particular to me. If they were parading around in fresh new World Champion t-shirts, they'd mean about as much.

I hate the Yankees. I always have and I always will. That wasn't going to change because the Yankees might have lost the World Series. They could have gone down in four straight and I'd hate them more than I did before for having been exposed to them four more times. I don't like them any better for having doused our division rivals in six games even if the collateral damage of the Phillies losing was fine and dandy. I surely don't like them getting to update their bios with a 27th line. I surely don't like the spate of special sections my Sunday papers have printed in their honor or how blanketed my television was by their parade on Friday or how every time I poke my head outside my house somebody's walking by in their garb or how the cemented media narrative is, as it was more than a decade ago, that all of New York just adores the Yankees.

What is New York right now? A place where Xavier Nady has a key to the city. A place where the guy who gave it to him exhibits no institutional memory. A place where the Dunkin' Donuts on Chambers St. is needlessly overrun with thirsty jugheads.

Tell me how this isn't tangibly more hellish than a Phillies victory. (Residents of New Jersey who live closer to Philadelphia than New York are excused from this exercise.)

Early in the history of Faith and Fear, there was some Yankee contretemps making headlines. It was Spring Training 2005, the beginning of Alex Rodriguez's second year in pinstripes. It probably had something to do with him. I honestly don't recall, but I do remember it was one of those Big Stories all of baseball reportage was consumed by. My initial impulse was to blog about it, but then I stopped myself. No, I thought, this is going to be a Mets blog. We exist in a universe that is Mets-oriented, a universe of our own creation. We didn't start this thing to add to the nonsense that everything about New York baseball is Yankees-this and that Yankees-that. If that was what we were going to produce, we could have just kept reading the papers.

Five seasons went by and where are we? With the Yankee cloud overshadowing everything in its midst, just as it did heading out of 1996, just as it did heading into 2005.

I thought we were past all that. We are not. We are essentially back where we started.

The late '90s/Millennial Yankees were an anvil that kept befalling us, even when it appeared we were enjoying a marvelous postseason stroll. Bop! they went on us. Mets have a nice season in 1997? Nobody noticed because the Yankees were back in the playoffs. Mets take it down to the wire in 1998? Nobody noticed (except for the gruesome ending) because the Yankees were winning 114 regular-season games. Mets do semi-miraculous things in 1999 and 2000? They weren't as tangible as what the Yankees were doing.

The anvil fell lighter starting November 4, 2001, the night when Luis Gonzalez flicked a soft line drive into short centerfield and the pain eased some. The Diamondbacks, then the Angels, then the Marlins and then, most deliciously, the Red Sox all lessened the burden of being a Mets fan. We weren't winning anything from 2001 to 2004, but neither were they, by their standards. We didn't have much, but at least we had Elimination Day.

Nevertheless, even when The Yankees had stopped automatically winning World Series after 2000, they still had the cloud. It still obscured everything, not that the Mets were difficult to obscure in those particularly dark days. Yet the moment was at hand there in the spring of '05 for change to take hold. Not right away, maybe, but we were getting back in the game. We were improving. They weren't. They were making the playoffs, but weren't a sure thing anymore. By 2006, we were a better bet. We even went further in our quest for No. 3 than they did in their quest for No. 27. The Cardinals tripped us up, but we had the momentum. This team, this town…it was all there for us.

And it never happened. The Yankees experienced a rough October of 2007, but they got an October. We pulled up short on September 30. The Yankees bowed out altogether in 2008, but so did we, in far more humiliating circumstances. They were all but eliminated when they closed their stadium but they looked sharp and stood tall on the way out. We simply went “thud!” for a second year in a row.

Then 2009, which might as well be 1996. They're World Champions and we're trying to figure out to dig our way out from 90+ losses. It's like the promise of '05 and the reasonable satisfaction of '06 and even the excruciating teases of '07 and '08 never happened. It's like the two good years of '99 and '00 and the two decent years of '97 and '98 never happened. It's like 1996 all over again. The Yankees are champions of baseball and New York and we are…who are we again? And are we going to throw four years and $20.4 million at Bernard Gilkey?

I don't know if I ever learn anything, but I'm going to try to learn not to care about them all over again. This blog was a big step in that direction. Except for the annual Subway Series sets and a little peripheral schadenfreude, we've stuck to our New York team pretty exclusively since February 2005, at least until developments warranted otherwise in October 2009. (Stupid developments.) I'd have preferred we hadn't become a sidebar to what just transpired. I'd have preferred the World Series From Hell Scenario not grown legs. Though I annually write about the World Series no matter who's in it, I'd have preferred staying out of it altogether.

We'll deal with the Phillies when the National League East demands it. We'll ignore the Yankees as best we can until May 21 at Citi Field. Our mission is the Mets. They're hell enough these days. Even so, I take comfort from what the first Mets blogger to put down roots here in the Metsosphere, Steve Keane of Eddie Kranepool Society, had to say in the wake of the inevitably unavoidable outcome of the final six baseball games of 2009.

[T]he big difference between Mets fans and Highlander fans is that we have a passion and love for our team, the Highlander fan has a love and a passion for Championships.

It's the sort of thing we told each other in other autumns of our discontent, particularly the autumn of 1996. If it sounds like the last refuge of an also-ran and an excuse for rooting for a certifiable loser when everybody else is riding high from winning, that's because it does.

Which doesn't mean what Steve wrote isn't true. Because it is — the part about us, for sure. I'm willing to go along with his diagnosis of them, but the confetti's cleaned up and the special sections are bundled for recycling, so I'm not worried about them going forward.

They're going to be how they are, just more so for a while.

We have, as Steve put it, Mackey Sasser and Mike Vail and Glendon Rusch to give us an “ah yeah” smile. We cherish our champions. We relish our reserves, too. We take it all in, no matter how distasteful, and we keep coming back. Right now we feel like roadkill from somebody else's parade route, but we're already up and marching to our own drummer. I don't know that that's a good or healthy thing, but it's what we do, and we're already doing it in ways we don't even realize.

We're done rooting against the Yankees. We're done rooting against the Phillies. We're rooting for the Mets.

God help us.

***

The New York Review of Books' November 19 issue was the first one I ever picked up, and I was not sorry once I got to page 22. Printed there was a story by Michael Kimmelman about the no longer so new ballparks in New York. What made it worth reading was the generous helpings of quotations it contained from The Last Days of Shea by our friend Dana Brand. We're very happy for Dana since he's been reading TNYROB a lot longer than we have and he says it was a thrill to find himself excerpted in there. You'll be happy (and, because of the subject matter, a little sad) if you pick up a copy of The Last Days of Shea, a book that brings you back to the old ballpark both psychically and physically one more time.

SNY Prepares to Do Right By Us

As trophies and t-shirts were being passed around Wednesday night on five different channels, I flipped to SNY out of curiosity. Would they be taking their New York sports mandate seriously and covering the grim doings at Yankee Stadium? Would they have something special on to cheer up the rest of us? Would there be racing from the Meadowlands?

They were airing a repeat of The Best of Mets Weekly which, at that moment, featured Dave Howard giving Julie Alexandria a tour of a Citi Field luxury suite. I can’t say it made me feel any better.

But this does, courtesy of Neil Best’s Watchdog blog on the now restricted newsday.com (which I can still access thanks to being spun inside Cablevision’s customer web):

Call it offseason filler if you must, but SNY’s new “Mets Yearbook,” debuting Thursday night after its “Hot Stove” show, is off-the-charts cool for sports and TV nostalgia buffs.

The series features 27 season highlight films from 1962 through ’88 that had been languishing in the Mets’ archives for years.

The ones from the early years were made for promotional purposes and shown mostly to community groups; they were not designed for television and in some cases never have been seen on TV before.

Gary Morgenstern, SNY’s VP of programming, said the hodgepodge of films followed various formats and were of varying lengths but have been turned into half-hour shows for “Mets Yearbook.”

The first five — 1971, ’84, ’75, ’68 and ’63 — will be shown on Thursdays in 2009, with about 10 more in ’10 and the rest sometime the following year.

So far I have watched ’71, ’68 and ’63.

The ’71 show includes footage of an old-timers’ game in which Satchel Paige is seen pitching, and in which Bobby Thomson pitched to Ralph Branca. (You read that right.)

In the ’68 show, Gil Hodges is seen going over scouting reports in the locker room with his young pitching staff, including Tom Seaver and Jerry Koosman.

The ’63 highlights were most interesting of all, because they included extensive, full color, rarely seen footage of the Mets playing at the Polo Grounds.

That includes the final major league game played there, after which Casey Stengel is shown walking off through centerfield in a scene similar to the one featuring Tom Seaver and Mike Piazza at Shea 45 years later.

We’ve all rolled our eyes incessantly at SNY’s lack of imagination and dismal deployment when it comes to the Mets archives. But this is a great and encouraging sign. This is what we’ve been asking for since 2006. MSG does this sort of thing relentlessly and beautifully with MSG’s Vault. Show us old Mets stuff. Show us old games (we’ve seen 42 by my count, some of them 42 times apiece, it seems) but also show us footage and clips and highlights and oddities. Show us these films…and that’s what they’re doing.

Kudos to SNY. It’s nice to receive a little good Mets news on a day like this.

Flash-Forward Friday: I Saw Everything End

“Welcome, Mr. Fry. If you’ll just follow me this way, I’ll show you your suite.”

“OK. This is kind of a weird experience. Can you tell me …”

“It’s an adjustment for everybody, sir. We’ve found that it’s best if you take things in at your own pace. Now then, here we are. After you, Mr. Fry.”

“Hmm. Not bad. Not bad at all. Fresh flowers, really? Oh, wait, um…”

“Yes sir, they’re synthetic. Cuts down on maintenance costs. Very convincing-looking, though, wouldn’t you say?”

“Except for that spot of resin that’s supposed to look like a dewdrop. It’s always a dead giveaway. Oh, sorry –”

“That’s entirely all right, sir. Let me open the curtains for you. There we are.”

“Huh, I’d kind of hoped I’d be on the water side of the building, instead of looking at … what is that, a chiller plant?”

“And our freight dock. All the rooms have this view, sir.”

“They do? That’s kind of weird. Do these windows open?”

“Only a centimeter. Safety reasons, sir.”

“Safety? What does that matter now? No, don’t tell me. It’s an adjustment.”

“Indeed it is, sir. Here is your mini-fridge, stocked just for you.”

“Dr Pepper! This really is — wait a minute, this is Diet Dr Pepper. I’m happy to say I’m done watching calories. Could I get –”

“I’m afraid this is what we have, sir. Though there is ice cream.”

“Ah, now we’re — oh, Jeez. Look, I’m sorry to be That Guy, but this is chocolate, and I really hate chocolate. I know, weird, right? Any chance you could scare up some … oh. You know, I’ve already made the adjustment to knowing what that sad little smile of yours means. Just chocolate, I get it. At least could you have maintenance take a look at the fridge? It’s barely cold.”

“That’s the temperature it’s designed for, sir. There’s an ice machine down the hall.”

“The one with the out-of-order sign?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Ugh. Just tell me the TV works.”

“Certainly sir. You’ll find it right in here, sir. We have five channels, plus access to in-room entertainment. There’s on-demand music from several specially programmed digital stations — The Best of Auto-Tune, Jingoistic Contemporary Country, Strident Folk Utopianism, Christian Rock, Summer Novelty Hits of Yesteryear and the Best of Hackeysack Jam Bands. Plus movie libraries celebrating the work of Michael Bay and Rob Schneider. And if you push that yellow button you’ll be able to access adult in-room entertainment — edited for community standards of course.”

“OK…”

“And here you’ll see we’ve created some special channels just for you. For instance, let me show you this list of Star Trek titles.”

“Wait — I’m a big fan of Star Wars. Star Wars, not Star Trek. I hate Star Trek with a passion. I can’t believe — ah, never mind. We’ll all have to make some adjustments. What else do you have?”

“I’m glad you asked, Mr. Fry — let’s look at a preview of your special welcoming gift from our staff. Let me queue it up here. You just sit back and I’ll take care of everything. Note that we have extra foam pillows for your comfort.”

“The Mets Channel! All right, highlights! Now we’re talking!”

“Yes, sir.”

“Wait a minute, what year is this? My memory’s not what it used to be … let me think. Wow, David Wright is really young in this. Jose Reyes too. But there’s Citi Field, so it must have been early in our rise to National League hegemony. Man, those were the days, right? What a turnaround — once the front office really embraced rigorous statistical analysis and stopped being hysterical about the Yankees and bad PR it seemed like it was just one title after the other. And remember Daniel Murphy’s batting title? Johan’s five consecutive Cy Young awards? The night we crushed the Phillies to clinch the division with our first-ever no-hitter? Citi was sure loud in those days, particularly after they made it into a shrine to Mets history. Ah, good times. Some of the happiest times of my life, in fact.”

“Indeed, sir.”

“Wait a minute, what’s all this ceremony? It’s not Game 1 of any World Series I can remember, not with the other team in navy and beige. What team is that? Why is an opposing player hitting a home run?”

“Mr. Fry?”

“Give me that remote a second. Where’s the friggin’ fast-forward … ahh. Oh!”

“Sir?”

“Wait a minute, what — just wait a minute. Who the hell is Valdez? Oh my. Oh my God. This is that year. The one in which everybody got hurt. It’s … it’s all coming back to me now. We lost the first game in Citi Field history with Pelfrey falling down on the mound and Pedro Feliciano balking in a run. That was the year Ryan Church missed third base. And K-Rod walked Mariano Rivera with the bases loaded and the friggin’ Mets gave him the pitching rubber. And Oliver Perez got like eleventy trillion dollars and he absolutely sucked. And our stupid manager laughed a lot about everything and played old broken-down utility guys and had a bunting fetish. And our new closer gave up not one but two walk-off grand slams. And we lost that game when Francoeur hit into an unassisted triple play. … And the Mets had that weird minor-league guy who tore off his shirt and threatened to fight minor leaguers, and they fired him but they couldn’t even do that right because our stupid GM turned it into this weird vendetta against a beat writer. And Luis Castillo … Luis Castillo … LUIS CASTILLO DROPPED A FUCKING POP-UP WITH TWO OUTS IN THE NINTH AGAINST THE YANKEES. Is that what I’m watching here?”

“Yes sir. It’s the 2009 season highlights video.”

“Did they even make one of those? No, never mind. What — why would you ever think I’d want to see that again, at any point in eternity? I mean, it might not have been the worst year in Mets history, but it was endless and embarrassing and just soul-killingly awful. And even when it was over it wasn’t really over, because the World Series that year was the Phillies and the Yankees, the worst of all possible matchups, and the Yankees won, they were absolutely unstoppable, and … WHY IS THIS HERE? DID YOU SCREW UP AGAIN? DID YOU THINK I MEANT 1969? OR 1999? OR 2019? OR EVEN 1989? THE ONLY GOOD THING ABOUT THE 2009 BASEBALL SEASON WAS THAT EVENTUALLY IT WAS OVER. WHY IS THIS HERE? WHY?”

“Sir, please don’t upset yourself.”

“DON’T TELL ME NOT TO UPSET MYSELF! I was trying to be nice, but this whole experience is … well, it’s a little underwhelming. In fact, it completely sucks so far! Fake flowers, no view, foam pillows, crappy music, warm fridge, diet soda. No, stop, don’t say anything. Just give me a moment.”

“You have all the time a person could ask for, sir.”

“I suppose so. OK, never mind. You said this is the Mets channel, right? So what else is there? Wait a minute, is this crappy remote broken? WHAT ELSE IS THERE?”

“That’s the only selection, sir.”

“The only … you’re telling me I’m going to spend eternity with no Mets to watch except a retrospective of the 2009 season? Is that what you’re telling me? You’re giving me that sad smile again. Wait … wait a minute. Oh my God. Oh. My. God.”

“Mr. Fry?”

“This isn’t … this is really … this is the other place, isn’t it?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Oh.”

“I’ll give you some time, sir.”

“I … wow. Thank you, I guess. I’m just a little confused. I pictured … lakes of fire. Forked tails. Sulfur. This … no, it fits. You’ve modernized, I suppose.”

“Thank you, sir. We like to think it’s a different aesthetic.”

“I understand now. I just … I wasn’t that bad of a person, was I?”

“I’m not allowed to comment on other guests’ arrangements, sir, but I will say these are among our nicer accommodations.”

“So … if I’d really been an awful human being …”

“Between us, sir? I checked in a Mets fan this morning whose channel shows nothing but a loop of the first inning of the final game of the 2007 season. And his adult selection is security footage of Bobby Bonilla eating a box of Yodels while on the toilet.”

“That does lend a certain perspective to things, I suppose. Let me get you something … for your troubles.”

“Your money’s no good here, sir.”

“Oh. OK. Thank you, then.”

“Entirely my pleasure, sir. Now if you’ll excuse me, there are cases of alcohol-free Stroh’s that I need to bring over to the Applebee’s. Have a good eternity, Mr. Fry.”

The terrestrial edition of Flashback Friday will pick up again next week. In the meantime, don’t miss a day with Peter Laskowich, as introduced by Greg here.

There's No Such Thing as a Gratuitous Cat Picture

Hozzie looks ahead toward 2010.

If You Still Love Baseball

Let Manhattan clear out Friday, let the authorities spray downtown full of disinfectant Saturday and then reaffirm your love of baseball Sunday by taking Peter Laskowich's Baseball Evolution Tour from 10 AM to 1 PM. Lovely weather is forecast, and I can vouch that what Peter will show you and tell you will enrich your appreciation of both baseball and New York no end. He is also leading a group in Brooklyn on Tuesday morning at 10, which I can't yet speak for from personal experience, but I would trust Peter to make it memorable.

Who among us couldn't use a little baseball boost at this moment in time? Take Peter's tour and you'll love this game more than you realize right now.

Here are some details from our historian friend himself, a lifetime Mets fan with deep Dodger roots and extraordinary Giant appreciation:

These tours link the creation of the game with the history of New York. No other bat-and-ball game has foul lines — why did baseball need them? Baseball's most valuable franchise was the Giants — how did they wind up moving to San Francisco? The early Yankees were New York's forgotten team —what sent them to greatness? How did pitching go from an underhand lob to fastballs, curveballs and brushbacks? Why was Brooklyn able to put a black man on the field when no other community dared consider it? This is the kind of thing we will address on Sunday and on Tuesday.

These are all New York stories. My tours, lectures and classes focus on New York, and my baseball-related tours, lectures and classes explain baseball through New York.

Best of all, “We are unlikely to discuss the 2009 World Series.”

Visit Peter's site for a broader look at what he does; contact him directly here for specific details regarding his upcoming outings.

FYI: Flashback Friday: I Saw The Decade End closes out its undying appreciation of the 1999 Mets next week, probably before Friday. Just keep your dial set right where it is. Until then, if you find yourself in need of the kind of fix only a Mets fan could understand, you are invited to revisit the Amazin' exploits of Mora, Pratt, Ventura and all their friends from ten years ago.

Trust me: It's better than watching the local news.

Congratulations 2009 World Champs

The team dinner should be a blast.

Elimination Day Has Been Postponed

Mike Burke was president of New York’s American League entry in 1969. When its National League counterpart clinched its first division title, he sent this telegram to M. Donald Grant:

Congratulations on being number one. Am rooting for you to hang in there and take all the marbles. As a New Yorker I am ecstatic, as a baseball person I am extremely pleased, and as a Yankee I consider suicide the easy option.

I feel no joy for anyone right now and I feel no sympathy for anyone right now. I am tempted to quote perhaps my favorite fictional character of all time, Toby Ziegler of The West Wing, at this moment:

There’s literally no one in the world that I don’t hate right now.

Except TWW creator Aaron Sorkin, a Yankees fan, made Toby a Yankees fan, too, and honestly, I’ve used up my hate for the 2009 baseball season. I feel no joy for anyone and I feel no sympathy for anyone, but I’m not filled with all that much bile for any of the participants from the World Series just completed, acolytes included. I’m tired of the hate angle. Besides, there’s something to like at last: the Yankees and Phillies are done playing.

The best team won; by the time it was over, there was barely a second-best team. Still, there’s not a single feelgood story among the winners of this World Series, not in that poor guy finally got the win he deserves sense. Those who won before could have lived off those titles for a century to come. Those who didn’t could have stuffed money down their void.

But they did win, so way to go.

The Yankees fans? Well, no, I don’t feel good for them, not a single one of them. I say that without contempt, no matter how contemptuous it sounds, no matter that like Ronan Tynan and the Jewish community, I have had and do have Yankees fan friends. One who is unfortunately in the past tense was named Harold, a big Yankees fan dating back to the days of Ruth. He died ten years ago this month. We went to his wake and saw his family had laid out his caps and pennants from 1996, 1998 and 1999. That’s nice, I honestly thought…the last baseball game he ever saw, Game Four of the ’99 World Series, ended with his team winning a championship. Then, within a few minutes of that uncharacteristically generous contemplation, his wife, his daughter, my wife and I — each of us a Mets fan — all agreed: we loved Harold but we couldn’t stand who he rooted for.

You never heard a solemn occasion ramp up into Yankees Suck territory so fast.

I could feel good for Angels fans I never met in 2002, White Sox fans I’d never meet in 2005, maybe (and, granted, it’s a stretch) a nontoxic Phillies fan I’d hope to never meet in 2008. Those people had gone without. The Yankee wait was minuscule by comparison and they whiled away their downtime by reminding themselves and everybody else how much they had already won. They don’t need my or our happiness today. They’re doing fine on their own.

All respect to the late Mike Burke, I couldn’t care less that New York has another championship. That part of New York, psychically speaking, has nothing to do with me or my concerns. I’m immune to its appeal to the point of not understanding it at all.

At the end of June, I was on a D train bound for the Bronx. Three Mets fans who had been given four excellent tickets to that night’s Yankees game were thoughtful enough to invite me along for a first look at the new Yankee Stadium. I accepted their offer with enthusiasm because they’re great folks and a ballpark I haven’t yet seen is a ballpark I want to see at least once…and with dread because of whose ballpark it was. What I couldn’t get past as I rode the D was all my fellow passengers, all of them (save for the tourists) New Yorkers, made a different fundamental choice than I did at some point in their lives. They could have been like me, like most everybody with whom I choose to commune. They could have theoretically chosen to be Mets fans.

But they didn’t. Perhaps they couldn’t; I’m not sure fandom is chosen as much as it chooses you. Anyway, however they happened upon it, they became Yankees fans. They looked different to me as a result, and not just because of their caps and jerseys. They were intrinsically unattractive as human beings. They were craven. They were opportunists. They were indecent. I didn’t investigate each of them on a case-by-case basis to confirm or deny my biases, but I felt comfortable arriving at my blanket generalization, just as I felt uncomfortable arriving at 161st Street and wandering behind enemy lines.

We could debate the whole concept of “enemy” as it relates to sports and dredge up all the familiar statistics (we only play them six times a year) and ancient arguments (before Interleague play, there was no rivalry) and soggy chestnuts (in 1986, so-and-so the Yankees fan rooted for the Mets against the Red Sox). But there’s us and there’s them. Watching them celebrate Wednesday night was something taking place on another continent, no matter its relative geographic proximity to us.

Nevertheless, others made a different choice from mine. I chose the Mets. They chose what they chose. As the legendary columnist Herb Caen wrote in his hometown San Francisco Chronicle, “Isn’t it nice that people who prefer Los Angeles to San Francisco live there?”

As for sympathy, I’ve none whatsoever for the vanquished National League Champion Phillies. I don’t feel one iota of bad for them. If they had won, I’d withhold joy in their direction, too. I wouldn’t feel good for Manuel, for Rollins, for Victorino, so there’s no misguided pity on their account either. They’re sated. Their fans (who are generally miserable souls but at least have as an excuse for not liking us the reasonable alibi of being from somewhere else) are sated. Even Pedro Martinez seemed a distant figure to me in this Series. He was sucked right back into the Yankee narrative as if his four seasons as a Met never occurred. I had hoped he would pitch well. That he didn’t didn’t particularly bother me. Good riddance to the Phillies. Let Cole Hamels flag down the first bus that takes them to winter.

I’m not happy for the Yankees. I’m not compassionate toward the Phillies. I’m just relieved they’re both done playing and that the 2009 baseball season has been put to bed. My most fervent hope shifts to the 2010 Mets now. I hope Jeff Wilpon and Omar Minaya and whoever else has a say in anything watched the Yankee euphoria and seared the impression onto their brains. I hope they call a meeting this morning to watch the tape over and over again and make it job one for their team…our team to be in that position ASAP.

Not that I project it will be all that soon, but what does that have to do with hope?

The First Wednesday After the First Tuesday

The President returned to the White House late that night to cope with history. History…would not care at all that the Cards won the World Series that day by 4 to 3.
—Theodore White, Making of the President 1964, regarding the events of 10/15/64

On December 15, 1991, six Democratic presidential candidates met in New Hampshire for a debate in advance of that state’s first-in-the-nation primary, which was two months away. Most of them included in their closing statements some variation on “happy holidays,” which got my attention more than anything specific Bob Kerrey, Paul Tsongas, Tom Harkin, Doug Wilder, Jerry Brown or eventual nominee and president Bill Clinton promised that night.

“Happy holidays”? In a presidential primary?

This is all wrong, I thought. There are election campaigns, there’s Election Day — the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November — and then there’s your pile-up of Christmas and Chanukah and New Year’s, all blissfully politician-free. Only after all the market-sanctioned merriment is disposed of, then you can have your caucuses and primaries. They don’t belong stuffed in stockings or hovering over menorahs.

A quaint notion on my part. Campaigns have commenced earlier and every in every presidential cycle since 1992. The 2008 Iowa caucuses were held January 3. Political junkie that I am, I spent most of the 2007 holiday season riveted to C-Span. Such are the hazards of frontloading the nominating process until the year before the election becomes part of the election year itself.

I bring all this up because last night I watched Michael Bloomberg give an acceptance speech for winning re-election as mayor of New York City, and as he wrapped it up, he attempted to rouse his already jubilant crowd with a little call and response.

“And working together,” he declared, “I have no doubt that our best days are still ahead. Our best years are still ahead.

“Now, can we do it?”

His supporters cheered in the affirmative.

“Will you help me?”

Yes they would, they said.

“Will you help me — will you help make the greatest city in the world even better?”

They agreed to that, too.

“Will the Yankees win Game Six?”

Never mind that this, sadly, was an applause line (though a few dissenting hoots sounded a reassuring note). This was Election Night, November 3, and a politician was exhorting a local baseball team to victory.

This I found to be even more wrong than candidates insinuating themselves into the December holidays. Candidates go where the votes are, even if it’s a little unseemly to be doing it amid holly and mistletoe. It’s what they do. Politicians have established a cherished tradition of sticking their faces everywhere if they think it will help get them elected. Embroidered into the legend of the 1969 Mets is the way Mayor John Lindsay planted himself in the middle of every Shea clubhouse celebration that September and October, thus boosting his limited popularity among Queens residents who had just finished digging out their streets from the previous February’s snowstorm.

I find Bloomberg blameless for his reflexive sucking up to a bloc of his jurisdiction’s sports fans, no matter which fans we’re talking about. It’s what politicians do in all seasons. But Bloomberg wasn’t trolling for votes. The election was over. The dissonance here was that the World Series wasn’t. The first Tuesday after the first Monday in November was passing into its first Wednesday and they were still playing baseball.

That’s wrong. It just is.

Baseball should not still be in progress after Election Day. It’s unnatural. It’s weird.

It’s cold.

There’s an old, probably outdated adage that Americans don’t start paying attention to an election until the World Series is decided. That was when there used to be a discernible gap between the two events. The 1964 World Series, to pull Teddy White’s ancient example from the archives, ended nineteen days ahead of Lyndon Johnson’s landslide over Barry Goldwater. Mayor Lindsay was re-elected eighteen days after his final Met champagne bath. Eight years later, Ed Koch succeeded Reggie Jackson as the big news in town by a matter of twenty-one days. Even in this age of playoffs and postponements, the 2008 Phillies clinched their title a full six days before Barack Obama clinched his.

The Phillies have been defending that championship an awfully long time now. They hoisted their trophy exactly 53 weeks ago tonight. That’s more than a year. The Yankees maintained their defense from 2000 to 2001 slightly longer, but the November 4 ending to that campaign was attributable to everything being pushed back a week by 9/11 — and Election Day still came two days after the World Series.

That’s how it’s supposed to be. It’s the American way: you have your baseball season, you have your postseason, you have your Election Day and then you get on with dreading Thanksgiving. Instead, soon enough, Bud Selig will be dressed as St. Nick, touting the virtues of expanding the World Baseball Classic and insisting the World Series is, as Albert Brooks attempted to convince Garry Marshall regarding Las Vegas in Lost In America, a Christmas kind of place.

Bloomberg’s back to work this morning. His campaign is over. Everybody’s campaign is over except for the Yankees’ and the Phillies’. It’s November 4 and there’s going to be a baseball game outside tonight. It’s just wrong.

Though having another one on November 5 would be just fine by me.