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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 3 June 2008 4:00 pm
[H]ere, coming through the same tunnel as so many champions have walked before, the great man, Frank Sinatra, who has the phrasing, who has the control, who understands the composers, who knows what losing means as so many have, who made the great comeback, who stands still, enduringly, on top of the entertainment world.
—Howard Cosell, Madison Square Garden, October 13, 1974
Frank Sinatra retired from show business to great fanfare. He returned to it not long after and loomed larger than life, bigger than ever, for the rest of his career. His fans, naturally, were thrilled to have him onstage and in studios again, even if the name Sinatra became jokily synonymous in some circles with short-lived retirement.
When it comes to comebacks, Pedro Martinez puts Ol’ Blue Eyes to shame.
Pedro has never said anything about retiring. Well, maybe he has, but that was just talk. Pedro likes to talk. I like it when Pedro talks. I like it more when Pedro pitches.
The chairman of our board hasn’t thrown in front of an audience of discernible size since April Fool’s Day when the joke was on us that a rotation headed by the firm of Santana & Martinez could be counted on for regular starts of the every-fifth-day variety. Johan, rainouts notwithstanding, has kept up his part of the bargain. Pedro’s 2008, however, has been one outing and out: an uncomfortable three and one-third innings cut off at the legs…or at least one of their hamstrings.
I didn’t expect Pedro back any time soon once he left his April 1 start against the Marlins early and injured. I figured he’d tool up I-95 to St. Lucie, rehab in that nebulous way he does, emitting hope and frustration in every murky dispatch that wafted north. By now, Pedro Martinez must hold all the pitching records for extended spring training.
Tonight, two months and two days after he hobbled off the Joe Robbie Pro Player Dolphin Stadium mound and into the mists of the presumably zillion-day disabled list, he will reappear from out of the San Francisco fog. He will no longer be Pedro Martinez the question mark — Any word on Pedro? How is Pedro progressing? When might we see Pedro? — but Pedro Martinez the pitcher.
Pedro Martinez lights up a room as no pitcher does, as no pitcher can. Pedro Martinez’s sudden re-emergence in the Mets clubhouse is considered a balm even when he’s just passing through town for a checkup. That’s usually all he has time for. He has to get back to St. Lucie. He has to get back to the Dominican. He has to disappear for a while longer. But he’ll be back, they say. When? They’ll let us know.
Tonight’s the night. Just as it was in late July of ’06, just as it was that September, just as it was on Labor Day 2007. Pedro knows how to come back. Pedro knows how to pitch. Pedro Martinez is one of the indisputable greats. He looks so good out there when he’s out there. But he and us, we need to be more than strangers in the night exchanging glances.
by Jason Fry on 3 June 2008 5:09 am
From: Jason Fry
To: Greg Prince
Date: Mon, Jun 2, 2008 at 10:44 PM
Subject: Re: Resting Easy With Randy Tate At Last *
you should tell retrosheet. seriously, they'd be thrilled.
meanwhile, tonight's game already really sucks.
From: Jason Fry
To: Greg Prince
Date: Mon, Jun 2, 2008 at 11:28 PM
Subject: Re: Resting Easy With Randy Tate At Last
we're gonna win this damn thing.
From: Jason Fry
To: Greg Prince
Date: Tue, Jun 3, 2008 at 12:09 AM
Subject: Re: Resting Easy With Randy Tate At Last
or maybe not
* I'm sure this will be explained by Greg at some point.
by Greg Prince on 2 June 2008 9:00 pm
5: Wednesday, September 24 vs. Cubs
If this week is about anything, ladies and gentlemen, it is about this: closure. We say goodbye to Shea Stadium and we aim to do it definitively. We wish to put a bow on a yearlong celebration and tie it tight. We don't want our home of 45 years to be cast off without the most complete and satisfying ending possible.
We hope we can say the same about Shea's final season. That we can't do anything about at this point. If we could, we'd do it every year…and we'd present for your consideration directly a far larger procession than we are about to.
Instead, we give you two men who will team to take down number 5 in the Countdown Like It Oughta Be. They are well suited to provide closure to Shea Stadium because these two men provided the greatest closure there is at Shea Stadium.
They caught the final outs of the two World Series won by the New York Mets.
Ironically, their stories are as much about beginnings as they are about closure. Each man became a Met and elicited a great deal of anticipation for what he might one day bring to the team. In both cases, their output was suspected to be pretty good. Nobody could have rightly dreamed that each would grasp a baseball that would clinch spots at the top of the baseball world in their respective dream seasons.
Start with our first man. He commenced his Met career in the veritable dark ages, 1963, in a far-away land known as the Polo Grounds. While his big league debut predated Shea Stadium, it was just a taste of things to come. He didn't arrive as a full-time, full-fledged Met until 1966. It would take a little while for it to become apparent that everything fans were hearing about “the Youth of America” wasn't hype. It was the real thing. Come 1968, there could be no doubt Mets fans were watching not just a good prospect, but a leftfielder who was the finest everyday player the Mets had signed and developed to date. He'd hold that distinction for years to come and remains, even now, one of the crown jewels ever polished by the Met system.
He'd hold something else as well. He'd hold a fly ball hit in the bottom of the ninth inning of the fifth game of the 1969 World Series. There were two outs when Baltimore Orioles second baseman Davey Johnson hit it toward him. When he caught it, there were three — and the Mets had reached their sport's pinnacle.
Ladies and gentlemen, the man who caught the ball that made the Mets world champions in 1969, Cleon Jones.
Our second man took a different route to Shea. His started on another club, in a different country. His reputation as one of the best at his position preceded him. It's what made him so attractive to the Mets and their fans. When he was acquired in exchange for a hefty bounty of young talent, it was agreed that he was truly worth it, that he could be the honest-to-goodness difference between the Mets being fine and the Mets being, as they were when Cleon Jones played left field, Amazin'.
This man, a catcher, indeed constituted that kind of difference. He played hard, he played hurt, he played brilliantly. He was a rock behind the plate, a fearsome threat when he stood at it. His mere presence transformed the Met lineup in 1985 and established it as the one that would dominate throughout 1986. And when he went into his final crouch of the 1986 postseason and caught a pitch that Jesse Orosco threw and Marty Barrett swung through, he, like Cleon Jones, found in his mitt not just a baseball, but a switch. When he grasped that ball, it was akin to pulling the switch that electrified an entire city.
Ladies and gentlemen, the man who caught the ball that made the Mets world champions in 1986, Gary Carter.
Cleon, Gary, you honor us by peeling No. 5 together, by reminding us for one more moment apiece what it was like at Shea Stadium when the Mets ascended to the top of the baseball world. To honor you back, the New York Mets and the New York City Department of Parks & Recreation are thrilled to announce the creation of two installations that will greet visitors to the Queens Museum, adjacent to the Unisphere in Flushing Meadows Corona Park.
One is of a leftfielder cradling a fly ball.
One is of a catcher snapping shut his mitt on strike three.
You'll find their faces and forms very familiar.
Cleon Jones' and Gary Carter's defining Met actions will then, for all time, be represented on the site of Shea Stadium's spiritual sibling, the 1964 World's Fair, symbolizing for generations to come the moments when they and their Met teammates made Flushing the undisputed capital of the baseball world.
Number 6 was revealed here.
Number 4 will be counted down next Monday, June 9.
by Greg Prince on 2 June 2008 3:00 pm
Bill Parcells (or maybe it's John Madden) likes to glorify football players who so come to play that you can toss the coin in the parking lot and they'll line up at midnight and knock the other guy on his ass. Wherever, whenever…they're ready.
I can dig that. I can dig the Mets winning wherever, whenever. As one who has meticulously inscribed the result of every single Mets game he has ever attended and as one who cherishes every single Mets win for which he has had the pleasure of inking a big ol' W, I'll take 'em where I can find 'em, wherever they put 'em, whenever I have to come and get 'em.
That said, even with the 201st win of my Log career easily secured and safely ensconced between 8:07 PM and 11:02 PM last night, even having benefited from whatever charge Johan Santana got out of an additional six hours and fifty-seven minutes' rest, I hereby introduce a measure to abolish Sunday Night Baseball.
Get it out of our lives. We don't like it, we don't need it, we don't want it.
We don't want to be on Sunday Night Baseball. We don't want to sit and stew for seven perfectly good hours on a beautiful Sunday afternoon. We don't derive any bonus from the exposure on Sunday Night Baseball. My apologies to any Mets fans outside the immediate New York area who are grateful for a few dozen innings a year they wouldn't otherwise see, but it's not helping the greater good at all.
Find me the Mets fan who is relieved that Gary Cohen won't be doing play-by-play, who is enriched by Jon Miller. Find me the Mets fan who is so sick of Keith Hernandez and Ron Darling that he welcomes the insights of Joe Morgan. Find me the Mets fan who enjoys eschewing familiarity with his team for obnoxious relatives who barge in three or four times a year to get your story completely wrong, the kind of people who make you swear you will never, ever invite these people over for Thanksgiving again. Are you out there, mythical Mets fan who actually appreciates SNY getting Sunday off in favor of ESPN interpreting your team as some kind of poor relation? As some kind of auxiliary club activity for bored Gothamites?
I used to think being on national television was some kind of reward or recognition for a team, that it meant you'd made it, that you had earned extra attention, that everybody getting a look at you confirmed your progress or your status. Instead, it's punishment for us, the hardcore fans. We get nothing from it, not a damn thing. We're not privy to fantastic announcing we'd otherwise miss. We're not receiving a brilliant perspective from fresh eyes that will help us understand the big picture. We get Jon Miller's tired blowhard act and Joe Morgan's pompous nonsense.
And we get 8 o'clock starts. On a Sunday. On a Sunday! Who on earth wants to wait around until 8 o'clock to watch a baseball game that could easily be played at 1 o'clock? And who on earth wants to wait around until 8 o'clock to attend a baseball game that not only could easily be played at 1 o'clock, but was supposed to be played at 1 o'clock, that was scheduled to be played at 1 o'clock?
Some weeks ago, my friend Joe asked if I wanted to go to one of the Dodgers games. Sure, I said, how about Sunday? Fine, he said, I'll get tickets. And he did. And very quietly, the damn thing was rescheduled. It's not a particular hardship for me as I keep pretty malleable hours. But Joe, like most adults, has to get up very early Monday morning. Joe would rather shred his scorebook than leave a game before it's over. Rubbing his eyes red, we stayed.
We were not in the majority. It's unfortunate enough when the Mets go in the tank as they have so often this season and the seats empty well ahead of the ninth. But on a pleasant night with a lovely win in progress, thousands and thousands headed to the exits ahead of the conclusion, especially families. By the ninth, it was mostly drunken 17-year-olds holding sway in the mezzanine.
Why the abandonment of ship by so many? It's not because they don't like baseball, it's not because they don't like the Mets winning, it's not because they choose to flaunt their prosperity by not watching all the game they paid for. It's because it's frigging late for people. It's a school night, for goodness sake. If you live in Flushing or Corona, it's convenient. If you live anywhere else, it's not.
Now if the ticket said “8:05 PM,” then caveat emptor and so forth. But it didn't. ESPN makes this call. ESPN could have made this call months ago. ESPN could have figured out media market 1 was playing media market 2, that by the first of June neither team's marquee value or competitive prospects would be spent, that its phoney-baloney Joe Torre story line would be in effect and it could have issued an edict unto the Mets that Uncle ESPN Wants You. Instead, tens of thousands of seats were sold to an afternoon game — a Sunday afternoon game whose conclusion generally averts bedtimes of all ages — and thousands of seats no doubt went wasted because, hey, people have lives, even baseball fans. Many of those who didn't waste their tickets had to issue themselves a curfew.
Seven hours later than planned for. An hour later than a normal night game. Font for confusion among uninformed ticketholders. Fodder for Phil Mushnick. Three excruciating hours of Miller and Morgan. An excuse to cancel the Mr. Met Dash.
I'm not asking ESPN to get out of the baseball business. They do several things well. They produce wonderful research. They have that handheld camera that records homers going official when the batter steps on the plate. They have on their side many able minds, even if none of them belong to Steve Phillips. They can do a doubleheader some other night of the week. I'll complain far less if they can start on Sunday nights at 7:00, which is prime time for the rest of television. If they wanted to show only West Coast games on Sunday nights, when at least those would be 4:00 local games there, that would seem mildly fair to somebody. Instead, it's the same thing year in, year out. They take our Sunday afternoons and rob them from us. They stick our team on Sunday night and they shove their atrocious announcers down our throats. They keep us out past midnight or they chase us from our seats by ten. They get me griping after a 6-1 win, for gosh sakes.
I like the Mets winning. I like Johan finding his groove. I like Carlos Beltran blasting a “390-foot home run” to the base of the scoreboard (somebody get Shea a tape measure). I like Ryan Church standing and remaining in one piece and hitting, too. I like going to a Mets game wherever they put it, whenever they put it. But Sunday Night Baseball's unique charms are completely lost on me.
by Jason Fry on 2 June 2008 4:16 am
Hey, Mets! You've just put up a 5-2 homestand, playing the kind of baseball that makes even veteran fans and conspicuous doubters like us double-check that, yes, this was the same homestand that began with everyone wondering if Willie Randolph would emerge from his long-awaited meeting with the Wilpons and Omar still employed. So what's your reward? You get to fly all night and play in San Francisco tomorrow, of course! Thanks ESPN!
Willie Randolph, typically, said next to nothing after keeping his job. His actions were different, though: He played the rusty bench guys, sat down Carlos Delgado, gave His Boredness a rich southpaw compliment in cheering him for getting his uniform dirty, and saw Beltran and Wright and Reyes stop creaking and start humming. Suddenly the Mets look like the team they were before last Memorial Day — and as it always is in baseball, we've gone (or are rapidly going) from wondering if we'll ever win another game to being mildly surprised when we lose one.
Emily, Joshua and I overnighted in Philadelphia Saturday, exiting the car just after Easley made the second out of the seventh, which is to say we skipped out before the turning point of the game. Last night we were talking with friends of ours (Phillies fans but, I assure you, good people) about Willie, about what had happened to the Mets for a year and about how good they really are or aren't. The conversation came around to how what we do as baseball watchers can often be reduced to telling stories that fit the already-established facts, and how we forget that it doesn't take much to turn one story into a very different one. If Ray Knight had ended Game 6 with a drive caught at the wall by Dave Henderson, nobody would talk about the indomitable swagger of the '86 Mets — they'd be a bunch of irresponsible substance abusers who squandered their potential. If the '07 Mets had gotten something respectable from Tom Glavine in the final regular-seasong game and made a respectable showing in the playoffs, we might well have waxed rhapsodic about how they'd held off the valiant Phillies and everything they'd learned pulling themselves out of free-fall.
But what's the alternative? I'm not a stat guy, which has nothing to do with any distaste for sabermetrics. To the contrary, in fact: I love that stuff, but I struggle to internalize valuable metrics such as VORP and RCAA and BABIP to the point that I can assess their values the way I can dissect the traditional measures, limited though they are. And then there's the larger problem for me, which is that I can't fit a stats-minded understanding of a baseball season's ebb and flow into the narratives we naturally want to impose on it. If the Mets rebound and go to the playoffs, the truest explanation of what happened could be that key players like Reyes, Beltran and Heilman regressed to the mean. But that's not a satisfying narrative. No, if that scenario comes to pass, we'll say something along the lines of how singling out Delgado was the wake-up call for an underachieving clubhouse, shaking the players out of their lethargy and restoring the team's focus. Will that be true? Quite possibly not. But it'll feel true.
Anyway. The story of a season may be shaped in retrospect, but the story of tonight's game seems fairly clear. One day we'll stop feeling mildly disappointed that Johan Santana didn't pitch a complete game, strike out 15 and heal the sick in the field boxes and the front half of the loge with his aura. One day, we'll watch him coolly dig his way out of an early hole and hold a team at bay the way he did tonight and be very happy with that. Did you see that called third strike on poor Blake Dewitt to end the seventh? Mercy. Oh, and kudos to Johan for doing something pitchers rarely do these days — exiting to a warm hand from the crowd, he actually tipped his cap.
Johan's supporting cast? Jose Reyes's electricity/stupidity ratio has been good enough to make me tempted to discard that unhappy measure, David Wright's bat could melt lead right now, Carlos Beltran looks awake and alive, Luis Castillo is moving well around second, and how about Ryan Church? Though somebody tell Brian Schneider to lay off the congratulatory helmet slap. It's a long way to San Francisco, even if you don't feel nauseous.
With a week of West Coast games on tap, you're going to be sitting around at 7:10 fidgeting. Fill up some of that empty time by ordering the famous Faith and Fear Numbers shirt, available right here.
by Greg Prince on 1 June 2008 2:33 pm
The cork shot out of the right field mezzanine in the early evening Saturday, burst out of every section of Shea Stadium, exploded from the souls of Mets fans wherever they were watching or listening. Our bottle had been plugged up tight, but Fernando Tatis pushed from its upper neck the last vestiges of the stubborn stoppage that had kept our sanity, our happiness, our self-esteem from flowing freely for far too long.
All Tatis did was single home Nick Evans. All Tatis did was put the Mets up by a run in the bottom of the eighth. All Tatis did was finalize a three-run rally to overcome a two-run deficit. Tatis didn't win the game right then and there, the Mets didn't win the game right then and there, the Mets didn't clinch anything right then and there.
Yet we popped our corks as if he had. It was high fives all around. My bloggingly brilliant companion, who grew up almost down the block; who came, by his calculation, to 51 games in one season of his adolescence; acted as if he had never seen the Mets score a run before. High Five! The loopy woman behind me, with vocal cords obviously fused together with the Queens DNA of Edith Bunker and Estelle Costanza (WILLLLIIIE! USE CAAAASSSTRO!), spoke to me the language of palms. High Five! Man to my right, alternating hopeful exhortation and groaning acceptance all afternoon, had just hit the jackpot. It paid off for both of us in a High Five!
High Fives…I was giving as good as I got.
It had been a while, a very long while, since I had exchanged high fives of any length, of any force, in any multiples to everybody in sight at Shea Stadium. A fiver here, a fiver there, but no velocity, no urgency, no sense that every hand within lunging reach in my row, in the row in front, in the row in back had to get slapped. Fivery had grown cold at Shea in 2008 — until the eighth. First Beltran's hang glider of a homer warmed us up, now Tatis' single brought us to a sizzle.
High Fives all around. High Fives for the Carlos homer. High Fives for the Fernando single. High Fives for the closer firing 15 pitches, 11 for strikes, 3 for swinging strike threes. High Fives for the successful reopening of Sanchez Bridge, the span that guarantees safe passage from the seventh to the ninth. High Fives for the put-upon starter who sucked up breaking bad and hung in like a mad man. A funny thing happened on the way to New Orleans for Mike Pelfrey: his trip was cancelled.
A High Five, too, for Endy Chavez. Endy Chavez battled the hell out of Chad Billingsley to close the seventh inning. Endy Chavez brought Mookie and Dunston to the plate. Endy Chavez, with catchers at the corners (everyone but CAAAASSSTRO!), took a ball, a strike and another strike. One-and-two, two down, two on, two out…and would have you bet a third of those wouldn't follow in a sec? That the Mets would waste this opportunity as they had wasted all others Saturday and for that matter Friday? That Billingsley would put away Endy and the Mets? That a second loss in a row, a second dismal loss in a row, was a sure thing? That the same old same old was in full effect as if Fernandomania had never broken out as recently as Wednesday?
But Endy Chavez battled the hell out of Chad Billingsley. Billingsley was supposed to be striding triumphantly to the dugout seconds after he went one-and-two on Chavez. But Endy fouled off the fourth pitch of the at-bat. And the fifth. He took a ball. Then fouled another pitch. And another. And another. And still another. Then he took a ball to make it three-and-two.
Then he fouled off another.
Endy Chavez wasn't giving up. Endy Chavez is on the Mets. Pythagorean Theorem demands we infer that the Mets weren't giving up, therefore how could we the Mets fans give up? Endy Squared + Mets Squared = LET'S GO METS! Squared. First and third, three-and-two, Endy up, Billingsley's pitch count crashing through triple-digits, the Mets still in this thing…
OK, so Endy popped to short. So the Mets didn't score. So it was still two-nothing Dodgers as it had been for what seemed like hours, seemed like days. But the Mets were somehow less dead than they had been since Thursday, less dead than we had grown used to them being during 2008, certainly less dead than they'd been at any juncture of any of my four previous trips to Shea (Opponents 27 Mets 12).
We could believe. We could sing along to “I'm A Believer” in the middle of the eighth. We're supposed to sing along to “I'm A Believer” every middle of the eighth but I've noticed that when the tenor of the times go awry, such as when the Mets are trailing 13-1 or 10-4 or 9-5 after seven-and-a-half, nobody is expected to believe anything but the worst, thus the singalong is shelved. Sing about believing when the Mets trail depressingly and probably insurmountably? What's the use in tryin'? All you get is pain. When we needed sunshine, we got…
Wait a sec. It didn't rain Saturday, not during the game. The forecast insisted there was an 80% chance of rain, floods, locusts, darkness, rivers turning to blood, all your popular plagues. There was a tornado warning in five New Jersey counties. Thunder was rocking Long Island as I prepared to take up Metstradamus on his sudden and gracious invitation to Cap Day. I was going to need more than a cap Saturday. I was going to need an ark.
Or so I thought. I stepped out of the house and there was not a drop of rain falling from the sky. I was outfitted in my trench coat and hauling a golf umbrella, but both were extraneous as the Mets' bats the nights before. It was warm and it was dry. And now, as late Saturday afternoon turned to early Saturday evening, it was bright as all get-out at Shea Stadium. I adjusted my cap to keep the sun from blinding me. Endy adjusted my mood to keep precedent from drowning me.
The Monkees did their thing. Duaner did his. David doubled. Carlos homered. The other one singled, too, setting off a chain of events that climaxed in the firelight, Fernando. There was something in the air this night, all right. Billy shut the Dodger door. Slammed it, actually. The fourth-place Mets had gotten back to .500 at the end of May. But nobody was combing for details after Wagner's final furious fastball. By then the cork was out, all hands were red and our crowd could not stifle itself. If ever tens of thousands of kindred spirits needed lifting, Saturday evening was then.
by Greg Prince on 1 June 2008 12:39 am

Thanks to Mike Pelfrey’s gutty seven innings, Duaner Sanchez’s perfect eighth, Carlos Beltran’s unleashed power, Fernando Tatis’ clutch timing and Billy Wagner’s one-two-three ninth, I was able to record in The Log its 200th regular-season home win. After four consecutive losses, I was beginning to think it would never happen. But I always think that. I probably thought that prior to July 29, 2000, date of The Log’s 100th win.
Eerie if happy coincidences:
The Log’s first hundred wins came after 184 games.
The Log’s second hundred wins came after an additional 186 games.
The Log’s 100th win required an eighth-inning rally.
The Log’s 200th win required an eighth-inning rally.
The Log’s 100th win came on a Saturday afternoon.
The Log’s 200th win came on a Saturday afternoon.
I noticed Todd Zeile signing autographs almost to first pitch prior to The Log’s 100th win.
I sat next to a guy wearing a Todd Zeile jersey during The Log’s 200th win.
I would go to the Sunday game that followed The Log’s 100th win…with the guy with whom I co-author this blog.
I am going to the Sunday game that follows The Log’s 200th win…with the guy with whom I went to The Log’s 100th win — but I’m mentioning it in this blog.
Lincoln Logs were once popular.
Kennedy Airport less so.
by Greg Prince on 31 May 2008 1:38 pm
The Mets hadn't risen so high this week that they were in danger of contracting vertigo, but I was feeling a little less than steady Friday among the upper boxes.
Never mind Row V (or my forthcoming Seven-Pack stay in Row Q). At least up there there's a railing to grab hold of as you make your way down the stairway from the stars, if not an oxygen tank as you make your way up its thousand steps. I was reminded last night that the most treacherous spot in Shea Stadium — besides behind Aaron Heilman — is the steep slope you have to negotiate if your ticket tells you you're in a UR Box B or A. Maybe you're nimble and you're fine, but I'm not and I wasn't.
In the best spirit of the Met offense, nothing really happened, but I didn't like the short trip to my seat. I really didn't like the guys in seats 3 and 4 rising every five minutes for another overpriced beer (or to rid their systems of the previous one). Nice guys, bad habits. I had the aisle, which I greatly appreciate for legroom, but all the getting up unsteadied me. With nothing to hold onto as I stepped onto the steps to let their thirsty asses out, I made myself a near-nuisance to those around me as I looked to grasp and clutch anything and anybody so I would feel more secure.
Sort of like looking to Nick Evans and Fernando Tatis for salvation.
When not being rousted, I was engaged in my usual nine-inning yapathon with Jim Haines, who invited me at about the last minute he could have for me to make it. I hadn't been to Shea on a Friday night all season (I've now seen them lose every day of the week but Sunday) and I hadn't been to Shea with Jim since the third date of the Collapse Tour, so it was worth the rush.
It's always worth the rush to join Jim. Actually, we've been joined at the proverbial hip since 2001 when we met and discovered we're basically the same person, at least in terms of topline interests and drill-down instincts. If you'd like to listen in on a four-inning critique of when and why M*A*S*H went downhill, two innings on what's irredeemable about six different radio formats and a three-inning version of Kiner's Korner in which Ralph unloads on everyone who ever did him wrong (Jim's arsenal of voices includes a spectacularly grumpy Walter Matthau, I discovered to my delight last night) — laced with intermittent takes on how certain publishers ruined certain magazines — then sit next to us. But don't keep getting up to buy a Bud and use the John. I hate that.
Only problem going to a Mets game with Jim, at least this game, is Jim doesn't yet approach the Zen state I actively seek where the 2008 Mets are concerned. I know they kind of suck and am learning to accept it. Jim knows they kind of suck yet it still bothers him. It leaves him questioning why he likes baseball, why he watches baseball, why he allows the Mets to disturb his biorhythms, why do they HAVE TO SUCK SO MUCH?
I cannot answer those questions for Jim. He must discover his own inner path and I hope the steps he takes are not perilously steep. But I do know with great certainty that M*A*S*H never recovered from the horribly indulgent two-part episode that sent Radar home in 1979.
by Jason Fry on 31 May 2008 3:01 am
OK, admit it — you thought the bad dream of a year was over, that the swagger was back.
Well, perhaps it is. Even teams with swagger are going to lose 60 or so a year, some of them badly. But for fear of upsetting the new positivity, maybe we shouldn't look too closely at this one. The box score would seem to indicate the Mets showed plenty of fight, grit, guts and all those other Joe Morganesque intangibles (3-0 deficit erased, 4-3 shortfall made up), but we'd be grousing about an agonizing, punchless offense if not for the fact that the Dodgers' Blake DeWitt apparently considers throwing guys out at home unsportsmanlike. (And he doesn't know how to break up the double play. I bet Keith Hernandez is stomping around outside the visiting clubhouse waiting to heckle him.) After the scratching and clawing, well, the roof fell in, as Aaron Heilman's location was dreadful and hit after hit went between Delgado and Easley. Not so easy to extract something good from that wreck, particularly not with Chan Ho Park looking nothing like he did when Emily and I endured him in blue and orange last year. But I will say this: When the bad call came on Pierre and Heilman collapsed and even Schoeneweis got nicked up, I thought, “Ahh, every bullpen throws a rod every so often.” Which is a lot different than not being surprised because I'd been sitting there waiting to be punched in the stomach, which is how it felt until Willie started semi-platooning and calling out Delgado in the paper. (If you missed it, make sure you read my co-blogger's definitive analysis of Delgado.) The Mets lost, but that sky-has-fallen feeling wasn't there. Here's hoping it doesn't come back.
As with any baseball game, this one had its share of quirky little things. There was our first view of Clayton Kershaw, the L.A. hurler who's too young to drink and reminded me of some vaguely punk modernization of Orel Hershier, with a similar bladelike face and beady-eyed stare. There was the mystery of why poor Nick Evans is still around — Evans can work a count and understands the strike zone, which is good, but he's clearly overmatched, which only lots more at-bats will cure.
And there was the sight of Pedro Martinez in the dugout, obviously pleased as punch to be there. Gary, Ron, Keith and Kevin Burkhardt spent a fair amount of time discussing Pedro, leadership and the role he hopes to take on the team. According to them, Pedro seems determined to take some of the clubhouse weight on his shoulders — but only once he's healthy. Until then he'll keep to himself, apparently.
Ron and Keith seemed utterly unsurprised by that, but I found it baffling. This is one of those clubhouse rules I don't get — that if you're hurt and therefore not contributing, you keep your mouth shut even when everybody seems to think the team would be better off if you spoke up. Why is that? What would happen if this code were violated? Would Joe Smith or Carlos Muniz show Pedro the back of their youthful unlined hands if the old man spoke up in San Francisco next week? Hasn't Pedro done more than enough in a legendary career to open his mouth in the clubhouse whenever he feels like it?
Maybe solace will come from a spiffy new Mets garment — like the famous Faith and Fear Numbers shirt. You can get one (or more than one) right here.
by Greg Prince on 30 May 2008 7:54 pm
Welcome to Flashback Friday: Tales From The Log, a final-season tribute to Shea Stadium as viewed primarily through the prism of what I have seen there for myself, namely 368 regular-season and 13 postseason games to date. The Log records the numbers. The Tales tell the stories.
6/25/78 Su Pittsburgh 0-1 Espinosa 1 3-4 L 4-0
Biggest regret I have from my hundreds, maybe thousands of hours I’ve spent at Shea Stadium? Aside from not witnessing more wins? Oh, that’s easy.
My biggest regret is I didn’t grab more stuff.
I grab stuff today, but that’s scavenging. Ever since Anheuser-Busch began producing aluminum beer bottles with Met logos, I swoop in and grab a couple of those every year. If I don’t feel like spending five bucks for ice and Diet Pepsi, I help myself to the leftover souvenir cup somebody else left behind. I could open a restaurant with all the Kahn’s and Carvel napkins I mindlessly stuff in my bag in the course of a season (if a restaurant could entice customers solely with the chance to repeatedly wipe their hands). And if a pocket schedule is worth taking once, it’s worth taking a million times.
Small-time. Small freaking time. This is the kind of crap that everybody can get their hands on, that many, for some strange reason (mental soundness, perhaps) don’t want. I regret that I didn’t get my hands on the real goods.
It was right freaking there for the taking and I passed it up.
There was this closet at Shea Stadium, see? It was there thirty years ago and I assume it still exists in some form. It has to. It’s where they kept everything.
Everything.
Every shirt, every cap, every jacket, every tchotchke with a Mets logo, everything bearing the insignia of visiting teams, everything that might be sold, everything that might be handed out or might have been handed out was stored in there. And, for precious minutes, I had access to it as if I’d won Supermarket Sweep.
You know what I did with that access? Nothing. Technically, next to nothing. I froze. I choked. I looked at called strike three with the bases loaded. I didn’t even last a third of an inning in there. Told I could have my pick of anything and everything on those shelves that went for miles and miles, I took…one thing.
A t-shirt. It said CINCINNATI 41. It didn’t fit all that well either.
For that missed opportunity, as for much where Metsiana has been concerned these past 30 years, I can thank my brother-in-law. He was not yet my brother-in-law on this occasion. He was my sister’s boyfriend of a few months, someone new enough on the scene that he was still trying to impress her with magnificent gestures — like taking her and her younger brother the Mets fan to a Mets game…and behind the scenes of the Mets game to where the real action is.
To the stuff.
Extraordinarily attentive readers of Flashback Friday may recall a meeting between a Shea Stadium vendor and myself from the summer of 1977. The reason the transaction — I paid for a batting helmet and began to walk away without my change until he reluctantly deigned to remind me — stuck was because five months later, that vendor was in my living room. That was my sister’s boyfriend. I recognized him. He recognized me. How bizarre. (Imagine Cow-Bell Man wandering through your kitchen.) His name was Mark and, having learned from Suzan what a big Mets fan I was, he instantly promised to take us to a his former place of employment.
As Mark does, he made good. The Sunday in June right after school ended was our big date. Suzan and I took a train to Woodside and Mark met us there to guide us the rest of the way. I wore a blank red t-shirt and, given my interest in the boiling-over American League East race of 1978, my new mesh Red Sox cap.
Regarding the shirt, I was told “you’re overdressed for Shea Stadium.”
Not only had Mark vended at Shea for five seasons (Mets and Jets), but his father was an usher when the place opened. Somebody knew somebody and he was able to secure field boxes on the third base side. It was the first time I had used somebody’s season tickets. The nameplate said NBC Sports. The rainchecks were not the usual kind with Mr. Met and an umbrella. These were yellow and paper-thin, torn from a coupon book. This is how season-ticketholders rolled.
But I doubt any of them rolled with a former vendor who was making his triumphant return to where he used to work, to swing by where the vendors readied their trays to say, in terms much nicer than he was thinking, “I’m out of here and you’re still stuck here.”
That’s Mark. He thinks a rough game, but he’s way more of a person than he lets on. He’s an unsentimental Linus Van Pelt: loves humanity, it’s many people he can’t stand.
Through whatever strings he still had active, Mark got us in the big closet. It was just the three of us, me and my sister and her boyfriend and all that stuff. I saw Astros stuff, not that I wanted it. I saw Padres stuff, not that I wanted it. Still, it was all there. This was in the days when you pretty much had to go to Shea if you wanted something from another team. I didn’t even know they’d manufactured CINCINNATI 41 t-shirts. That caught my eye, Tom Seaver of the Reds having pitched a no-hitter only a week earlier, Tom Seaver of the Reds never leaving the Mets as far as I was concerned.
“That’s IT?” Mark asked incredulously.
There was something else I wanted. It was two years out of date, but like everything else Shea had ever merchandised, it was there. The 1976 Bicentennial caps, worn to commemorate both the nation’s birthday and the National League’s hundredth anniversary. They were pillbox, 19th century-style lids, as if the Mets had been wearing them since 1876. They were pretty dopey, actually (the motif worked better for the Pirates), but every time I saw the Mets don them, which wasn’t often, I drooled after them. And there they were. I could take one if I wanted.
But I couldn’t bring myself to gorge on stuff. I was too overwhelmed by access, by circumstances, by generosity. Wasn’t it enough that Mark had brought us to the game and had brought us into the closet for a look-see?
“Yeah, the shirt is fine.”
I went back to our excellent seats. Mark and Suzan hung back in the closet, not particularly concerned with the action on the field. Suzan was no fan and Mark, well, he would have blown up Shea if he could have gotten away with it. When they did return, they came bearing a Mets totebag. Mark had filled up an old giveaway sack with as much Mets junk as a 15-year-old lifelong fan could value. There was a Mets t-shirt, a Mets beach towel, a Mets magnet, a Mets button, a Mets program…even a sharp Mets Superstripe cap. I was, with that Red Sox number, underdressed for Shea Stadium.
Mark grabbed anything he thought would capture my fancy. He didn’t read my mind on the Bicentennial cap, but as I would learn in the ensuing three decades of continual interaction with Mark, if you really want something, you need to speak up for it. Mark did that on my behalf in October 1999 when he ran headfirst into a familial buzzsaw and emerged with one ticket, for me, to the first National League Championship Series game, the first at Shea in eleven years, the first I’d ever go to. By then, Mark’s brother had become a season-ticketholder, which entitled him to purchase a bonus pair of tickets for each postseason game. Somebody among Suzan’s in-laws (not Mark’s brother) was looking forward to making a pretty penny on the extras. Mark wrestled it away, arguing long, hard and loud — as is the custom there — that “no one is more loyal to this stupid team than Greg, he deserves to go.”
It somehow worked. I thanked Mark profusely. He informed me he had sacrificed his next two birthday presents and I could pretty much forget about seeing anything for my birthday or Chanukah and I’m on my own if my stupid team should make the World Series.
That was his way of saying you’re welcome.
A bit of bark, occasionally. Very little bite. Really one of the most thoughtful people you’ll ever meet. No one, especially no one with no interest in baseball, has ever gone to the lengths Mark has gone to indulge or, as he puts it, “pander to” my interests. He does the same for everybody whatever their interests, even if he doesn’t hate those interests as he hates baseball.
Why does Mark hate baseball? Vending at Shea Stadium isn’t what it’s cracked up to be. Schlepping the beer, schlepping the less lucrative soda and official team publications (Mark’s the only person I’ve ever heard express disgust for Bob Murphy because Murph, upon seeing him carrying a stack of yearbooks, greeted him with “carrying a stack of yearbooks, huh?”) is hard, unprofitable labor and not terribly appealing when it is done among less than uniformly civil patrons (Mark’s also the only person I know who has ever cursed out Willie Mays Night). He didn’t like baseball to begin with. Five years at Shea (baseball and football, mind you; doesn’t care for the pigskin either) made it legendarily unappealing.
It didn’t help that he had a neighbor in his Flushing apartment building who knew he worked at Shea and would ask every single night, “how’d they do?” At the end of a particularly exhausting evening, probably extra innings, the question pushed Mark to the edge. He took out his building’s glass door and maybe some lobby furniture in the process of responding.
“THAT’S how they did!”
Mark’s not like that, not really. Just keep him away from baseball, I’ve learned.
Yet he sticks his hands in it for me. His own closet of unwanted cards and programs and authentic Mr. and Lady Met statues became my treasures. He bought me my first Starter jacket, which I’ll probably be clutching when I run out of extra innings. He arranged the infamous 30-pack of 1993 tickets for my 30th birthday. He saw to it that I got a brick for Citi Field. He didn’t actually handle the brick. If he had, he might have thrown it through somebody’s car window if he’d had to go back to Shea to secure it.
Today Suzan and Mark are married 26 years. My gift to them will be not taking them to a Mets game any time soon.
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