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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 22 August 2007 7:35 am
That old feeling. It was there Tuesday.
No, I don't mean thrilling come-from-behind wins against Hall of Fame (c)losers in which everybody has a hand in triumph, after which you look up and realize your team is in pretty darn good shape.
OK — that, too. But something almost better because it's been missing more than I realized.
With Carlos Beltran locked in more securely than anybody east of Garret Anderson, Howie Rose noted how when Beltran's hot, he's unstoppable, but when he's cold, he essentially gets himself out. So true, I thought.
Well, Carlos is locked in and he is unstoppable and it is a big help, to say the least. When he came to bat in the eighth with the Mets down by one and runners at the corners, I thought this first:
“Oh boy! We have exactly who we want up right now!”
I thought this second:
“If what Howie said earlier is accurate, that means at some point Carlos will cool off and a situation like this that comes down to his hitting with runners on won't be desirable. That will be very sad.”
I thought this third:
“Shut up, stupid.”
And this matters…how? I'm not sure. I just know that most of this season I've worried about thinking the wrong optimistic thought and having it karmically backfire. Last night I instinctively went the other way, looking ahead to when something on some date to be determined will go wrong, as if whatever's going on at this moment is going undoubtedly right.
It was, in my occasionally overwrought way of rooting, the most reassuring sign that 2007 might turn out well after all. The five-game lead and such is a decent enough indicator, I suppose, but sometimes you can just feel something turn to the good and familiar. I remember after Piazza hit the homer that capped off the magical ten-run inning in 2000 that Rob Emproto mentioned to me the camera angle on one of the replays: Mike would swing and everybody on the first base side would turn en masse to watch his ball wave bon voyage. Rob said he grew used to that angle in 1999 when that sequence and reaction were regular occurrences, but to that point in the next season he hadn't seen it at all. Seeing it again was a relief to him.
That's how I felt worrying that the Beltran we got Tuesday night wouldn't always be that very Beltran, the one who tore up the league last week and is threatening to do the same this week. It felt good to think in those “this is so pleasant I don't want the sensation to end” terms that were a dependable part of my thought process in 2006.
Oh, right…Beltran's at-bat. He singled in the tying run. You probably knew that, but it seemed worth mentioning.
The Mets fell behind again, but when Lastings Milledge returned the favor by singling off Trevor Hoffman to start the ninth, you just kind of knew, didn't you? We didn't fall to Hoffman. We didn't fall to Heath Bell who was probably salivating at the chance to make us regret his departure. We gave back leads but we kept the game. It was a very first-place thing to do.
Bell was hardly the goat and Luis Castillo — game-winning hitter after Milledge, Mike DiFelice, Marlon Anderson and Jose Reyes did their ninth-inning parts — wasn't the only clutch performer, but I found their roles in this passion play of a baseball game instructive. These are two guys who seem to represent something to a good-sized segment of Mets fans.
• Heath Bell was the Overlooked Reliever who never got a chance from management who didn't understand what they had.
• Luis Castillo is the dreaded veteran who gets too much of the benefit of the doubt when in fact there is little in his current portfolio to merit it.
Nonsense I say to both dogmatic characterizations.
Castillo has vindicated my relative faith in him, though I imagine there will be nights when he pops up four times and I ask what the hell Omar saw in him. Likewise, Bell may very well come in the next two nights and yield nothing to Beltran and make me wonder why we wasted him and Royce Ring on Jon Adkins and Ben Johnson.
But those are the actual ballplayers Heath Bell and Luis Castillo. They'll have their ups and downs. There will be nights when I'll be proven dead right about both — I didn't ever want to look at Heath Bell in a Mets uniform ever again after his multiple callups between 2004 and 2006 yielded little in the way of substantial performance and I was reasonably happy to have obtained Luis Castillo because I'm not at all convinced of the specialness that many have assigned to Ruben Gotay — and there will be nights when I will be proven dead wrong. That's baseball and that's fine.
What I don't get is the need by some fans (and I'm not necessarily referring to anybody in particular, just a lot of what I've read online in my 2-1/2 years of blogging) to slot guys such as Bell or Castillo into their preconceived notions of player value judgments, for lack of a better phrase.
“The failure to give an unsung pitcher like Heath Bell a longer look is symptomatic of…”
“The reliance on aging infielders like Luis Castillo shows…”
Statements that begin with clauses like those are some of the most unfun sentiments in this great game of ours. They're right down there with “This week's Power Rankings say…” and “Hi, this is Jon Miller with Joe Morgan…” Unless you're vying for a general manager's job somewhere, I'm not sure what the big kick is in aching to be right rather than happy.
My blogging partner came up with a great line ten years ago, one he's probably forgotten. He had predicted the Mets would lose a hundred games in 1997. They were doing nothing of the sort that summer, as I like to point out once a month. In baseball, Jason said, sometimes there's nothing as satisfying as being proven wrong.
I sense there are Mets fans who would rather see Luis Castillo (or other vets who don't meet with their seal of approval) fail so it validates some abstract theory on player procurement. I hope whoever they are have been watching him field his position and handle his bat these last few weeks because he's been doing exactly what Omar Minaya acquired him to do and the Mets and, by extension, we are the beneficiaries. Rooting isn't a Henry Clay proposition. It's way more fun to be wrong and happy than it is to be right and miserable.
As for Bell, my feeling that he wasn't going to make it as a Met (based on 81 mostly ineffectual appearances across three seasons) doesn't look terribly valid because he's sure done well as a Padre. Maybe we could have gotten that out of him here. Or maybe he needed that ever popular change of scenery and a different pitching coach. I do know that if he were still a Met and was succeeding as he has for San Diego, I'd happily post three times a week, “My goodness, I was SO wrong about this guy and ain't I glad?”
Esoteric topic to chew over in the face of a rousing walkoff victory? I suppose. But the mind tends to wander when the Mets are winning. That, too, is a very good sign.
by Greg Prince on 21 August 2007 10:00 pm

If everything goes right for the next two months and change, Jeff Conine will have the opportunity to take part in a New York City event that he took so much pride in helping put the kibosh on four Octobers ago.
Tell me boy, now wouldn’t that be sweet?
Ya gotta love this guy! Look how happy he is holding that wretched yet ultimately hilarious sign! If you can’t read it clearly, it says the Yankees will be honored in a parade on the Tuesday after the 2003 World Series. In case you’ve forgotten, Conine’s Marlins won the 2003 World Series in six thrilling games, rendering all mass transit routes to the parade moot since even our marvelous downtown trains don’t extend all the way to South Florida.
(Delicious image courtesy of the back cover of Miracle Over Miami by Dan Schlossberg with Kevin Baxter…and preface by Mr. Marlin himself.)
by Greg Prince on 21 August 2007 9:43 pm
In Albert Brooks' Defending Your Life, Judgment City serves as a celestial yet brilliantly pedestrian way station for the recently departed. If the individuals who arrive fresh from death are not judged up to snuff, they are sent back to Earth for another lifetime reincarnated as somebody else until they get it right. If they pass judgment, they “move on” to the next magnificent level of universal existence.
I'd like to think we represent that next level for Florida Marlins. We've done it before and we can do it again.
Perhaps there is no greater test case than that of converting Mr. Marlin to Metdom. Jeff Conine, as every schoolchild knows by now, was part of both the '97 and '03 champions, albeit never one of the more flamboyant pieces of the Fish pie. I'm actually quite surprised that he is overwhelmingly considered the ultimate Marlin since I have to admit virtually his entire career has occurred with my being only dimly aware of it despite how much we play them. I remember him losing first base time to Darren Daulton in '97. I remember his return to Tru Playa Pimp Park Stadium in '03 being a South Floridian cause célèbre, lighting up faces along I-95 South from Hollywood to Hallandale (which isn't very many exits, but there aren't very many Marlins fans). I don't remember much else.
Did you know Jeff Conine was the 1995 All-Star Game MVP? I might have the night he won it since I actually watch All-Star Games, but I'd forgotten all about it. Everything else about Jeff Conine's achievements as a player have escaped me, too, if I ever knew about them in the first place. I don't mean to be disrespectful to Mr. Marlin, but he's just made zero impression on me as a player. I don't doubt he's beaten us a game or two over time, but with all the Kotsay and Dunwoodie bogeymen with whom Florida has tortured us across the years, who can keep track of the more likely suspects?
But I welcome Jeff Conine to the fold for several reasons.
1) Righthanded bat, et al.
2) Marlin Mania has always served us well. Their first wave of franchise demolition gave us our Leiter, our Cook, our Piazza somehow. The next wave gave us our Lo Duca and our Delgado. Those Marlins helped give us our last three playoff teams. Viva la fire sale!
3) Though the 1997 Marlins were an affront to our higher aspirations for my beloved 1997 Mets, the presence of Moises Alou on their World Series roster likely negates his later Cubbiness, which as any decent superstitious weirdo can tell you is essential to negate if you have certain goals for your team.
4) We don't appreciate the 2003 Marlins nearly enough, both for their simply amazing run from nowhere to the top and for who they ran through in the home stretch of their sprint to glory. If the 2001 Diamondbacks killed a most unappetizing dynasty and the 2002 Angels buried it, the 2003 Marlins of Jeff Conine and Luis Castillo and assorted non-Mets/not-yet-Mets drove a stake through its heart. (I shudder, from a strictly clinical standpoint, to think what the 2004 Red Sox did to it, charging it as they did full-force from behind.)
I don't exactly remember what Jeff Conine did in support of The Greater Good in the 2003 World Series, but he did do this afterwards: He posed on the back cover of a book called Miracle Over Miami: How the 2003 Marlins Shocked the World holding a genuine and genuinely presumptuous New York City Subway poster. It was a notice about additional service, decorated with an oversized vertical swastika, urging one and all to
Celebrate our Yankees' World Series victory at a New York ticker-tape parade!
The parade date is listed as Tuesday, October 28, 2003…three days after Josh Beckett and a school of friendly Fish made sure no such celebration would ever take place. I suppose any World Champion Marlin could have posed with that poster, but Jeff Conine was the one who did. And he looks pretty pleased about it.
Mr. Marlin was Señor Schadenfreude, too? Mr. Marlin rubbed the collective pinstriped nose in their inability to attend their own parade? Mr. Marlin practically stuck out his tongue at aura and mystique?
Mr. Marlin is my kinda guy.
by Jason Fry on 21 August 2007 12:37 am
Sometime in the not-so-distant future Jeff Conine will become the 819th Met, welcomed by me with great enthusiasm. My natural sympathies lie with youth and potential over age and a diminishing track record (Milledge over Green, Gotay over Castillo), but they're put aside when it comes to constructing a bench. There, you want evidence of a good eye, the ability to deliver results in part-time play, a proven track record, and intangibles. Conine, all 41 years of him, would seem to have all of those things, and be an excellent replacement for the felled, mourned Damion Easley as the right-handed bat off the bench.
Comments on the then-rumored trade over at MetsBlog got me curious: Just how many ex-Marlins do we currently employ, anyway?
(Warning: Jace Math ahead. Adjust your expectations accordingly.)
Taking our likely roster should we play ball in October — which I figure will be Pedro, Glavine, El Duque, Maine, Perez, Sosa, Heilman, Schoeneweis, Mota, Feliciano, Smith, Wagner, Lo Duca, Delgado, Castillo, Reyes, Wright, Alou, Beltran, Milledge, Castro, Conine, Anderson, Chavez, Green — here's a look at what teams have served as homes for that collection of Mets:
FLA — 7 (Mota, Lo Duca, Delgado, Castillo, Alou, Conine, Castro)
HOMEGROWN — 6 (Heilman, Feliciano, Smith, Reyes, Wright, Milledge. Hush up about Feliciano's stopoff in Japan.)
LAD — 5 (Pedro, Mota, Lo Duca, Anderson, Green)
WSH/MON — 5 (Pedro, Mota, Alou, Anderson, Endy)
PHI — 4 (Wagner, Conine, Anderson, Endy)
HOU — 3 (Wagner, Alou, Beltran)
TOR — 3 (Schoeneweis, Delgado, Green)
KC — 3 (Beltran, Conine, Endy)
ATL — 2 (Glavine, Sosa)
STL — 2 (Sosa, Anderson)
PIT — 2 (Perez, Alou)
CIN — 2 (Schoeneweis, Conine)
ARZ — 2 (Duque, Green)
BAL — 2 (Maine, Conine)
TB — 2 (Sosa, Anderson)
CHW — 2 (Duque, Schoeneweis)
CHC — 1 (Alou)
SD — 1 (Perez)
SF — 1 (Alou)
BOS — 1 (Pedro)
NYY — 1 (Duque)
CLE — 1 (Mota)
MIN — 1 (Castillo)
ANA — 1 (Schoeneweis)
MIL, COL, DET, SEA, OAK, TEX — 0
(If you want to consider other possibilities: Gotay was a Royal; Sele's suited up for Boston, Texas, Seattle, Anaheim and Los Angeles; Newhan's been a Padre, Phillie and Oriole; DiFelice's world tour has included stops in St. Louis, Tampa Bay, Arizona, Kansas City, Detroit and Chicago (NL); Alomar's played for San Diego, Cleveland, Chicago (AL), Colorado, Texas and Los Angeles; Burgos was a Royal; Lawrence was a Padre; Vargas was a Marlin; and Pelfrey's homegrown. Oh, and Easley was an Angel, Tiger, Devil Ray, Marlin and Diamondback.)
Raiding the Marlins is nothing new for this team, and the Natspos factor undoubtedly reflects Omar's resume. The Dodger connection surprised me a bit, but at least we're doing well on the Cub factor. And I trust we've forgiven El Duque his time in the service of the Vertical Swastika — refugees can't be choosers, right?
Sticking with roster minutiae on a rainy off-night, I've always been borderline obsessed with roster oddities, whether it's the Lost Mets who never got baseball cards, Mets whose cups of coffee came in the midst of lengthy stints in the minors, or guys who earned their orange and blue in life if not on the diamond. Then there are the Almost Mets, the guys who suited up but never got into a Met game, a short list whose dean is Terrell Hansen. Hansen was brought up in '92, assigned No. 21, waited around for a couple of days, got sent back down, played for another decade or so — and never made the Show. There are more-compelling reasons to hate Jeff Torborg, but make room for that one — as I once wrote, Terrell Hansen would give his eyeteeth to be Moonlight Graham.
I had always fixed the roster of the Almost Mets at five: Jerry Moses ('75), Terrell Hansen ('92), Mac Suzuki ('99), Justin Speier ('01) and Anderson Garcia ('06), with only Hansen not finding his way into the Baseball Encyclopedia at some other time with some other team. So imagine my surprise when I was goofing around on the sublime Mets By the Numbers and discovered three other Almost Mets — and another Met tragedy.
According to MBTN, the first Almost Met was Jim Bibby, who was called up but not put to work in 1969 and again in 1971. Then came Randy Bobb, in 1970. (Bobb shares a '71 Mets Rookie Stars card with Tim Foli, which makes him part of another list, but lets try and keep our obsessions separate here.) And finally there was a name I'd never heard before — Billy Cotton, recipient of a DNP for 1972.
Bibby made his debut in '72 as a Cardinal, and went on to win 111 games in a perfectly serviceable 12-year career. Bobb's big-league career was over by the time he got to Shea, but had collected 10 at-bats (and one hit) in two short tours of duty with the Cubs. But Billy Cotton never played in the big leagues. In '73 he played for Tidewater, Toledo and Memphis, in '74 he collected five RBIs for Iowa, and that was the end of his professional career. Google him, and you'll be left with the merest scraps of info — he was a No. 1 pick, a Sun Devil, and wore 22 for the Mets in September 1972. And that's it — there's no record of what Yogi Berra didn't see in him, or why he didn't at least give him a moment, as Art Howe did to get Joe Hietpas into the book. Billy Cotton was Terrell Hansen before there was a Terrell Hansen.
For me, the discovery of another phantom Met doesn't make Hansen's story any less poignant. To the contrary — I knew Hansen because I saw him on TV and he got a baseball card. Cotton gave baseball at least a decade of his life, played it at a level 99.99% of human beings couldn't imagine, and yet his near-miss came as a complete surprise to one of the most-rabid fans of the baseball team that so briefly employed him.
If I ever get a time machine, I'll of course do some of the things I've always figured I'd do, like kill Hitler and gawk at dinosaurs and invest in Standard Oil and say certain things to certain girls and not say certain other things to certain other girls and give Jose Reyes's drive in the 9th inning of Game 7 a little boost beyond Jim Edmonds' reach. But if the machine's still working after that, I'm going to go visit Yogi and Torborg and see if things can't be put right.
by Greg Prince on 20 August 2007 8:14 am
I love being a Mets fan.
It hasn't been fully fashionable to enjoy our lot in life of late, and I've certainly done my part in leading the charge toward self-analysis of our existential meltdown. Well, I'm done. No more therapy. No more Prozac posts. I've spent enough of my summer on The Couch. Since shedding expectations of what my team is supposed to do, I find myself gathering enthusiasm for what they are actually doing.
They're winning, six of the last seven — and the single loss was a game that probably didn't happen…though if it did, I'm willing to file it away with the Kazmir trade under something that needed to happen in order for better times to start rolling. I can't prove it, but I have a gut feeling the Mets took a collective look in the mirror after blowing a 5-0 lead and asked themselves, in one way or another, “what the fudge?” They played like a first-place team in Washington, a first-place team that had no business not beating a last-place team. And lest you say, “oh, it was just the Nationals,” these are the same Nationals who have been playing above expectations all season, including in the split they earned at Shea a few weeks ago.
They're winning with the people they need to win with. Reyes is the manchild running wild. Castillo is his Florida's natural self all over again. Wright is delivering runners home like he's the Budweiser designated driver of the game. Beltran is the motherflippin' power plant. Alou won't take “no ribbies” for an answer. Hey, that's the first five guys in the lineup, all of whom are clicking. Add in a recovered Delgado and dashes of Milledge, Green (his two-RBI single Sunday showed he can, too, differentiate shit from Shawnola), Anderson and the catcher du jour, it's not bad. It's not bad at all. We're down a solid benchman in Easley but soon enough we're due to return Lo Duca, Castro and even Endy (Endy!) to action.
They're winning by getting the other guys out. El Duque hasn't made a bad start in six weeks. Glavine is still chasing history. Perez responded to a “challenge” (oh that word) from Willie Saturday and quit screwing around. Maine needs to unkink and Pedro needs to come home (though Lawrence has been fifth-starter adequate), but this pitching can get us to September. The bullpen will be pitch-as-pitch-can, maybe, but I've seen worse. Sosa has found his calling. Schoeneweis hasn't altogether sucked of late. You know Billy Wagner. The others? Ah, somebody'll come through. That's not a copout, it's a probability. Every bullpen has its saggy spots across a year. Heilman, Feliciano, the dreaded master run-allower Mota are all due for good streaks just as they were all due for bad streaks. It's the nature of the business, it's the smuggler's blues.
They're outlasting the competition. For all our collective (and individual) caterwauling over the powerhouse Braves and Phillies pounding our undermanned UnderAmazins into the ground, that's nothing more than a Metropolitan myth. Dudes and dudettes, if the Atlantas and the Philadelphias were going to do us in, don't you think they would have made a serious move by now? Gosh, Sunday was The Heights — 17 games over for the first time in 2007. We played a bland 31-35 since the last time the Mets and part of my building were on fire and we gave back to the pack nothing of value in the standings. Nothing. After Delgado blasted Benitez out of San Francisco on May 29, we led the N.L. East by five games. Our margin is exactly that again. Somebody should have taken advantage of us by now. They didn't. Whatever didn't kill us made us, if not stronger, at least not dead.
They're not the Pirates. I mean they're not a perpetually crappy franchise with no immediate hope of improvement and no remotely reliable long-term prospects. Yes, the Buccos gave us all we could handle earlier in the week and no, Gary Cohen never, ever should have pointed out over and over how pathetic they were as long as they were on the same field with us, but big picture, being a Pittsburgh Pirates fan is incredibly heavy lifting. Deprived of a satellite signal on the Extra Innings channel airing the Phillies-Pirates game, I turned on the Buc broadcast on XM. When rain delayed the action, their announcers, Greg Brown and Steve Blass, morphed into hosts of Pirate Talk, a call-in show (not to be confused with Talk Like A Pirate Day). All at once, I was reminded what life is like to root for a truly fecal team. The calls alternated between “I'm so fed up with this losing” and “I really think we're going to turn this around soon, I just know it.” Not one focused on the frustration of being in first place for more than three months but not really feeling like it was a great season.
Now that we're done with the Pirates — and as long as I was waiting around for them to go out and complete their praiseworthy work on the Phils — my heart ached for these poor saps. We've been there: ownership doesn't spend the money; the minor leaguers can't get called up soon enough; every trade has backfired; the dead wood is rotting; the divisions, like the stars, are aligned all wrong (a caller wanted Houston in the A.L. West while one of the announcers suggested too many Central time zone games were holding back the Bucs).
Blessed art thou, O God, for not making me a Pirates fan. At least from 1993 on. I suppose if I had been in born in Western Pennsylvania, I'd make the best of it. I'd have a glorious ballpark, a surfeit of seating options, a periodically proud heritage, a standing footrace among Slavic dumplings, a tendency to annoy the big, bad Mets and a surge of adrenaline every time I heard my team's announcer exult (as Greg Brown did Sunday) “Raise the Jolly Roger!”
But that's not a birthright you can imagine walking the plank for if you managed to be born outside Western Pennsylvania.
On Flashback patrol recently, my mind was exploring 1983. I remembered the night Mike Torrez walked ten Cincinnati Reds at Riverfront Stadium in less than four innings. I had my sister and her husband in the car with me. They were oblivious to the broadcast and that I was trying hard to listen to it. In addition to whatever my brother-in-law was complaining long and loud about, it was hailing. I had them both hocking me to be careful driving in the hail as if I didn't know the heavens were unleashing frozen peas on my windshield. Torrez just keeps walking batters. Bob Murphy is telling me no Met has ever walked as many batters in one game as Mike Torrez has. Nick Esasky homers. The Mets are losing 6-1. I'm being backseat-driven in stereo. It's hailing. Frank Howard removes Torrez after he has walked ten in three-and-a-third. Charlie Puleo, traded by the Mets to the Reds so we can have Tom Seaver back, walks six in six-and-a-third, but we only score the one run. We lose 6-1. The Mets' record falls to 34-59. I'm almost certainly seeking solace in Craig Swan and Scott Holman holding Cincinnati scoreless over the final 5-2/3.
When your team sucks…when your team really and truly sucks…you don't have to think about it. You know it.
by Greg Prince on 20 August 2007 8:08 am

Unless his mom Sharon keeps a green screen handy, it appears there’s no doubt that Ross Chapman has taken his well-traveled Faith and Fear t-shirt to Maryland, the eleventh state (plus D.C. and Switzerland) for which we have photographic evidence of The Numbers in action. You’ll note the Ocean City footprint just a little above Ross’ nicely capped noggin — which I can tell you, having watched two games in the kid’s company, is one of the only things that’s over this young man’s head.
by Jason Fry on 19 August 2007 7:21 pm
Dear CW11 executives,
Readers of this blog will attest, I hope, that I'm not a bluenose. My language is frequently terrible, I like my beer, and I'm not overly concerned with a certain level of bad behavior. And without getting political, I'm a firm believer that it's my job to raise my four-year-old son — not the government's, his school's or the media's.
But my running interference between my kid and the parts of the world I don't want him to know about yet shouldn't have to extend to censoring Mets-Nationals day games. First there was an ad for “Halloween,” with kids afraid of a certain house, knives brandished and people in terror. Now, a couple of innings later, “Death Sentence” — with much of the same and a thug telling Kevin Bacon he's coming to kill the rest of his family. (Hey, and now as I write this here's “War.” Thanks.)
Joshua understands there are scary movies and grown-up stories. So do I. But they have their time and place, and this isn't it. I'm trying to raise my kid as a Met fan, to appreciate things like El Duque bringing decades' worth of pitching guile, Carlos Beltran hitting a majestic home run and David Wright redeeming an error with a do-or-die barehand pickup. That shouldn't have to go hand in hand with trying to distract him from the idea that there are people who kill other people's children and then go after the rest of their family. Even in the realm of violent movies, that's a bit too close to home for a little boy.
If Joshua's up in the seventh inning of a night game and sees an ad for “Death Sentence,” that's my fault. But it's not the seventh inning of a night game. It's Sunday afternoon, folks. My worries about what's going to come through the set during an afternoon game should be limited to beanballs and umpire-manager dust-ups.
I'm sure a lot of you have kids too, so I'm confident you understand what I'm saying. Somebody at your network is making a mistake that makes you look irresponsible. Let's please not have any more of this.
Regards,
Jason
by Greg Prince on 19 August 2007 2:04 pm
Through Saturday night, according to Baseball-Reference.com, no active player had played in more games without getting to the postseason than Damion Easley. While “Win One For Easley!” hasn't exactly been my 2007 rallying cry, it's occurred to me a couple of times that this classiest of veterans making his first playoff appearance, helping us get there if in fact that's where we're headed, would be one of the nice sidebars to this year's overall story. We saw with Franco in '99 then Delgado and Lo Duca in '06 what it means to have a longtime player finally touch October as a beginning instead of an end.
Without diagnosing off a television screen, all we can do is cross our fingers that Easley gets the use of his left ankle back soon. Having watched too many Mets go down with too many miserable-looking leg injuries that heal on their own time, I'm not counting on Damion playing a part in securing a postseason berth let alone his participating in what might come after. Then again, I'm not a doctor and I don't play one in the blogosphere.
Nevertheless, damn. I'd say damn for anyone with a third-degree sprain who crumpled in nth-degree pain, but in strictly human terms, why Easley, why now? I don't particularly think he's the difference between maintaining a modest first-place cushion and plummeting through the safety net. I just feel bad for the guy. He's going to be 38 soon. He's played since 1992. He's always managed to be on the wrong team at the wrong time: the Angels when they choked; the Tigers when they tanked; the Devil Rays at all; the Marlins after they were champs, the Diamondbacks before they snaked back to life. I've heard him say that he was really looking forward to being on a winner this time around.
The Mets have a cache of guys like this. They don't spout that nauseating “I came here to get my ring” tripe, but they are vets who have played long and hard and were happy to land in a situation whose possibilities outweighed the drawbacks: Easley, Alou, Green, Anderson. None of them has had what you'd call an overly productive season, but they've each been part of the crazy quilt that's stitched together just enough quality spurts to keep this team aloft. Easley's big moments were early (the out-of-nowhere blast that tied Colorado in April, the smash sequel to put the Mets ahead of Arizona in May) and recent (regaining his power stroke at RFK). He picked up a good chunk of the second base slack between Valentin going out and Castillo coming over. He was playing first base in last night's win, for goodness sake. He's been all over the diamond. He's done whatever Willie Randolph has requested, even if Willie refers to him as “Damon Easily” in interviews.
I like guys like that. How can you not? Like the rest of his cohort, he's a shade above rank journeyman but clearly no longer star material. But they all know how to play the game. Sometimes they don't execute as we'd like but you can just feel their knowledge for the game shimmer off them as they work pitchers, take extra bases, position themselves a shade over to gain a step on the next hitter. When Reyes or Wright or Milledge comes through, it's exciting. When Damion Easley makes an impact, it's just so gratifying.
We've fluffed and folded that old chestnut about rooting for the laundry a lot of late. We've had to since so many of our more familiar laundry-wearers keep finding their way to the Disabled List. Somebody will come up and dress in a freshly pressed Mets uniform today because Damion Easley can't. We'll root for that fellow, too. And for Easley to overcome what befell him Saturday night. Whatever Damion's fate is where the Mets laundry is concerned, he's worn it well.
by Greg Prince on 18 August 2007 9:33 pm

Hozzie and Avery, the best modern-day double play combination this side of Jose Reyes and Luis Castillo, urge the Mets to fully concentrate over the final 41 games of the 2007 season. They suggest treating each game like a tiny bug and never taking their focus off it. Not that we ever get bugs, mind you.
by Greg Prince on 18 August 2007 4:00 pm
With all his running willy-nilly hither and yon of late, Jose Reyes’ stolen base total has leapt to 62. Barring some calamity out of Here Comes Mr. Jordan in which he is compelled to trade bodies with Ramon Castro, he will steal four more bases, then another before we know it. And with that, Jose — the first infielder to swipe 60 or more bags in three consecutive seasons, according to Elias — will own the Mets’ single-season stolen base record, en route, probably, to piling it way higher than the 67 currently required for the mark.
It will be a most happy moment for a most happy fella, a most speedy fella, a most deserving fella. Team records are made to be broken and set again by great players. Even in a season that pales by comparison to the season before, Jose Reyes, 24, already qualifies as a great player.
Amid the dust Reyes kicks up under whoever’s too-late tag he steals his 67th, the wayside will claim a victim as collateral damage of Jose’s feet-powered feat. Roger Cedeño’s line in the Mets record book will fall there, just as Mookie Wilson’s did in 1999 when his 58 steals succumbed to Roger’s 59th on August 30 eight years ago. Of course Mookie recorded many Mets accomplishments that continue to transcend markers as mundane as records to this day.
Roger, on the other hand, had mostly his stolen base record.
Every time you miss a Met who has been traded and think “I wish we could get him back,” consider the cautionary tale of Roger Leandro Cedeño. For one season, Cedeño was a scrappy and successful Met, sparking rallies, sprawling for catches and, most notably, stealing 66 bases, eight more than any Met prior to him ever nabbed. He may not have been a classically sound player, but for 1999, he was extremely effective. He, too, was a most happy fella. When I think of Roger Cedeño in his first Met season, I see a wide smile — remember him on his back at home plate exchanging fisticuffs with thin air after sliding home with the winning run off Curt Schilling in the ninth? — and a surfeit of spunk…the kind Mr. Grant told Mary Richards he hated, the kind every Mets fan adored.
Cedeño 1.0 was necessary payment for Mike Hampton, the lefty ace who would be the difference between losing a dramatic League Championship Series and winning a comparatively calm one. It was a reasonable exchange, him and Dotel to obtain a pitcher coming off a 22-4 season. But I missed Roger in 2000 and was predictably thrilled when the Mets reacquired him via free agentry in December 2001.
Cedeño 2.0 was a system downgrade. Roger couldn’t do anything right in 2002-03, save perhaps for inciting the ire of Roberto Alomar by taunting him over the condition of his perm on his 1988 rookie card (anybody who pissed off Robbie Alomar deserved a few Nikon Player of the Game votes in my book). He couldn’t get on base. He couldn’t get under a fly ball. He couldn’t get out of his own way. He couldn’t get thousands of grumpy fans out of his own hair. His support plummeted faster than his statistics. He played the unfortunate role of Convenient Scapegoat in The Worst Team Money Could Buy, The Long Unawaited Sequel.
But at least Roger Cedeño still had that single-season stolen base record he had set in 1999 when he was younger, when the Mets were better, when we were all a little more human.
He won’t have that for long. One week ago today, Jose Reyes woke up with 54 steals for 2007. One week later he has 62. He has two in each of the past three games, including last night’s when his deadly running and his nifty fielding helped defeat the Nationals quite soundly. I won’t “at this rate” it because that’s usually the kiss of death, but Reyes should pass 66 any day now. If he gets a good enough jump, he’ll pass it on the way home from Washington.
I’ll be elated to watch new history established by the shortstop who has enhanced the meaning of the phrase “fast track”. I love when Mets records fall because it means something good is happening for the Mets right now. But I’ll be just a touch saddened to watch the Roger Cedeño of 1999 — the good one — run out of the shard of team history he earned on grit, skill and Rickey Henderson’s tutelage, leaving him in too many minds as only the Roger Cedeño of 2002 and 2003 — the inept one — if he’s remembered at all.
Even as Reyes potentially and preferably places the record well beyond the previous standard, it would be sweet if somebody someday hears the name Roger Cedeño and the first reaction it elicits is “wasn’t he the player who held the stolen base record before Reyes?” and the second reaction is “he really helped us that year, that really great year.” No third reaction will be necessary, unless it’s “hey, look, Jose just stole another one!”
On the theme of team records, I recommend you read this year-old article from the Washington Post that I found yesterday and still find fascinating today. Do Nationals break records held by Expos? Or by Senators? Or do Rangers and Twins break Senators records? Does anybody break Expos records? What about records held by Browns — Cleveland Browns and St. Louis Browns? How amid issues never definitively addressed by recurring franchise/city shifts did Fred Wilpon not manage to have Pee Wee Reese grandfathered in as a Met? And if he ever does, can I have Mel Ott?
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