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The blame game

June 16, 2008 in MLB, NY Mets

Copyright Getty Images

Willie Randolph was still managing the Mets tonight in Los Angeles against the Angels. But for how long? 

The Mets have become the biggest story here in NYC. They finally have all the back pages as many of their diehards have craved for so long. Only thing is it’s not for how well their team is playing on the field and certainly not for the unnecessary distractions off it.

Just call it the circus in Flushing. For years, it’s always been the Yankees who perfected the art not knowing how to handle situations. Joe Torre had to deal with so much garbage. Well, now it’s former bench coach Willie Randolph who’s on the hot seat never really knowing day to day whether he’s staying or going.

Truthfully, it’s not all the former Yankee second baseman’s fault that his team has underachieved headed into a three-game set at the Angels two under .500 at 33 up and 35 down. Does the manager have a responsibility in this mess which has the Amazin’s trailing the Phillies by six and a half entering tonight? Of course. Ultimately, his ballclub hasn’t played the brand of baseball needed to make fans forget last year’s dreadful September collapse.

There’s just been zero consistency for a team many expected to not only win the NL East but had going to the World Series. That’s why they play the games. If talent and highest payrolls always won, then the Yankees wouldn’t be first round failures since that colossal choke job against the rival Red Sox. You can spend all the cash you want on a few of the best players the league has to offer but it doesn’t always account for chemistry.

Last winter, Omar Minaya patiently waited playing a perfect game of chess before cornering the Twins for lefty ace Johan Santana. This was the big deal that would put the Mets over the top. The same way once the Yanks acquired Alex Rodriguez, it was over for the rest of baseball. Despite two MVPs to his collection and a record-breaking new contract, how has that worked out? It’s been eight years since the Bronx Bombers won a 26th World Series.

There’s no such thing as a guarantee in sports unless it’s Rafael Nadal on clay or the Knicks continuing to suck no matter who Jim Dolan brings in.

Are the Mets a colossal disappointment through the first 68 games this season? Undoubtedly. So too are their crosstown rivals who finally got to four over by sweeping the Astros over the weekend. Despite that, they still got bad news when ace Chien-Ming Wang sprained his right foot tearing a tendon while scoring a run in yesterday’s 13-0 win. He’ll likely be lost till September. What that means for New York’s postseason aspirations is a giant sized question mark.

It’s never too late for the Mets to turn around their season. Five in the loss column can be made up quickly. Especially with this much time left. All they have to do is put together a hot streak and the Phils could comeback to the pack. It would be nice for the Queens club to at least demonstrate to their fans that they’re actually capable of that. A couple of weeks ago, it looked like they were coming around but then came that awful four-game series in San Diego and three vicious losses during a mediocre .500 homestand against Arizona and Texas.

Pedro Martinez did his part tossing six solid innings to help the Mets win the second game yesterday.

After splitting a doubleheader with the Rangers thanks to a solid six from Pedro Martinez and the right move by the much maligned manager pulling his starter for pinch hitter Robinson Cancel who delivered the clutch two-run hit, the Mets headed West for six games against the Angels and the Rockies beginning tonight.

Despite taking two of three over the weekend, there was still a lingering question as to whether Randolph would still be managing them. Such is the chaotic nature of Met management letting the classy former player who grew up in Brooklyn hang in the wind. A published NY Post report indicated that Fred and Jeff Wilpon had given Minaya the authority to axe Randolph and his coaches if he felt it was warranted.

How nice. The owners have no backbone or common decency. Instead, they let their GM who hasn’t exactly done a good job this year bolstering a shaky pen or making the bench younger do all their dirty work cause they want nothing to do with it. It can’t possibly be that the $140 million they shelled out could produce such a mediocre club. Never occurred to them. At least Hank Steinbrenner is hands on even though he’s extremely irritating.

Where’s the accountability? If Minaya fires Randolph or say Howard Johnson, guru Rick Peterson or Sandy Alomar for that dreadful decision sending Brian Schneider which cost them a chance at a great comeback in the first game yesterday, who’s to say it’s going to change a team which can’t rely on Carlos Delgado or Moises “DL” Alou. Luis Castillo isn’t much better due to his knees yet was signed to a four-year extension.

Then there’s Ryan Church who was on his way to the All-Star Game in the Bronx before the Mets rushed him back from a concussion. You don’t ever do that under any consequence.

Will a new skipper automatically change Jose Reyes’ approach? What about the streakiness of stars Carlos Beltran and David Wright? Is it just Randolph’s fault that John Maine throws too many pitches to go more than six most nights? What about Oliver Perez’ continued Jekyll and Hyde act?

They also don’t have a complete game from Santana who makes too much money not to at least go nine once or twice and save the bullpen from wrecking a probable win as what transpired last week. Remarkably, Mike Pelfrey came the closest pitching into the ninth before Billy Wagner blew it serving up a tying three-run dinger. At least the Mets still won thanks to a Beltran extra inning blast.

The options to setup Wagner aren’t great with Pedro Feliciano and Scott Schoeneweis proving to be the best thus far. But both are lefties who can be taken yard. Aaron Heilman has struggled and Duaner Sanchez hasn’t done much better. Joe Smith’s been alright but is never a lock due to comman.

How can it all be on the skipper when this mess of a pen has repeatedly blown games? Isn’t that the GM’s responsibility?

How come a vast majority of the late inning options off the bench are all aging vets such as Damion Easley, Fernando Tatis or Marlon Anderson?

It sure seems like one person is being given a lot more leeway than the other. Why?

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More HB

May 22, 2008 in More HB

-The Yanks finally got back on the winning track with an 8-0 shutout of the Orioles last night at home. Alex Rodriguez homered for the second straight game since returning and also drove in another on a drive which cleared the right field fence but was improperly ruled a double. It was the second blown home run call in the past few days. In Sunday’s blowout loss to the Mets, the umpires missed Carlos Delgado’s shot off the left field foul pole. No matter as the Bronx Bombers will take any win at this point snapping a four-game skid and remaining seven and a half behind Boston. Darrell Rasner continued to pitch exceptional working seven scoreless while fanning six for win No.3.

-The bigger news from last night was revealed by Joe Girardi afterwards when he told reporters that the Yanks have begun extending Joba Chamberlain in preparation to move him to the rotation. The 22 year-old Lincoln, Nebraska native got the final six outs walking a pair and striking out three. Is it the right move? We’re still not certain considering what the Yankee pen would look like. This has Hank Steinbrenner written all over it. Proof that the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree. Does he really care what’s best for the team? I have my doubts.

-Meanwhile, the bigger news is being made across town where the Mets continue to make news on and off the field. Willie Randolph apologized for his comments pertaining to an Ian O’Connor piece in The Record in which he made race an issue in how he’s been unfairly portrayed. It’s obvious that the former Yankee second baseman is under the gun and feeling it. In an interview with WFAN’s Mike and The Mad Dog, he acknowledged that he didn’t realize it was on the record what he said to O’Connor. Obviously, saying what he said was a mistake. This isn’t racial. It’s about how his team performs on the field. However, I do agree with Willie on how SNY unfairly depicts the skipper when they shoot him in the dugout. He’s on to something there. Maybe that’s the orders coming down.

-If the Mets were consistently winning, none of this would’ve come up. That they followed a two-game sweep over the Yanks with three consecutive blowout losses to the rival Braves the last two days only has intensified the scrutiny that Randolph will be replaced. They shouldn’t just be a .500 ballclub through 44 games sitting fourth in the division. The good news is they’re only three and a half out with plenty of time left. Still, you wonder if Johan Santana doesn’t get it done tonight whether that will be the final straw for Randolph. If so, who do they replace him with? Jerry Manuel? Or do the Wilpons give Bobby Valentine a call over in Japan? Who knows? Unless their team starts playing better, there will be a change.

-Somebody finally figured out a way to beat Brandon Webb. The Marlins scored three runs in a 3-1 home win over Webb hanging the Arizona ace his first defeat in 10 starts. A suicide squeeze and a Cody Ross solo shot in the fifth put the Marlins ahead. Luis Gonzalez added an RBI hit in the home seventh for insurance. Webb went seven allowing three earned on six hits while striking out seven falling to 9-1. The Marlins improved to 26-19, a game and a half worse than the Diamondbacks.

-Can anyone get Josh Hamilton out?

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Welcome to the circus

May 20, 2008 in MLB, NY Yankees

No. This isn’t about Team Dumb and Dumber Clown Management 101 who predictably didn’t win the NBA lottery earlier tonight. 

At last check, the last place Yankees were getting trounced 10-0 by the Orioles at The Stadium. This on the heels of being humiliated by the Mets in which they were swept over an abbreviated weekend set by an aggregate total of 18-6 dropping them to four under .500 and six behind the first place Red Sox. It became six and a half last night when Jon Lester no-hit the Royals.

It only gets worse these days around the Pinstripes. Where the chaos of Hank Steinbrewhiner isn’t helping much. He can make all the vows he wants but just maybe this team isn’t good enough to see October. Yankee brass (Randy Levine) believed it would be good to make a change away from Joe Torre’s laid back style to the edgy persona of Joe Girardi, who looks in over his head. He doesn’t know how to handle the New York press and apparently isn’t putting out the right lineup these days.

Once again, Jason Giambi was hitting before Robinson Cano, who inexplicably continues to bat at the bottom third of the order. So what if Alex Rodriguez is back and apparently went yard to break up Daniel Cabrera’s shutout cause it’s really the only positive any Yankee fan could take with this disassembled bunch. Oh. The rating AL MVP’s big righty bat is a welcome sight to an offense which can’t score. If only that would resolve all the team problems.

It still isn’t known when switch-hitting All-Star backstop Jorge Posada will return. The Yanks need every bat these days cause this pitching staff isn’t scaring anyone. For once, Mike Mussina didn’t have it tonight lasting only 10 batters while retiring a couple and allowing seven runs of only one which was earned thanks to teammate Derek Jeter’s throwing error that opened the floodgates. Making matters worse, the Yankee captain left the game after getting plunked on the left hand.

Out of the O’s 10 runs, only two were earned with Johnny Damon misplaying a Luke Scott fly ball in the second leading to three more runs. When it all goes wrong, sloppy team D is common and even umpire’s errant calls such as the other night which negated a Carlos Delgado three-run home run don’t even matter. At least the Met first baseman wound up with an RBI hit in the 11-2 blowout of Chien-Ming Wang Sunday. That’s how brutal Girardi’s Yanks have been. What happened to playing a crisper brand of ball? What happened to executing and winning close games? And what happened to just having solid pitching which could shutdown an offense?

Oh wait. That never got addressed. It didn’t help that Phil Hughes was pitching hurt getting off to a miserable start before finally being DLed. Even that was a three-ring circus with Girardi not even able to properly communicate what was wrong. This guy is just way too sensitive and is proving the Florida reporters right. If he thought that was tough, he really shouldn’t have taken this job.

Ian Kennedy has struggled and remains winless with the Yanks hoping one of these days, the former first round pick out of USC will put it all together like he did when he came up. If he could just locate, it’s bound to turn around. Andy Pettite’s been a bust in his second season meaning that only Wang and Mussina were performing up to expectations. Toss in surprise recall Darrell Rasner who will get another big start tomorrow trying to put a halt to a four-game skid.

There’s also the bullpen which soon could be renamed the pigpen. Kyle Farnsworth had shown improvement until his implosion a few days ago in which he served up two homers to Met duo Jose Reyes and David Wright putting Saturday’s game out of reach. The problem is that even with Girardi using the hard thrower more, he’s already allowed six gopher balls. Or one more than Aaron Heilman. So how reliable is he?

Russ Ohlendorf is still a work in progress and LaTroy Hawkins is proving to be the latest Brian Cashman mi$take. Unless Edwar Ramirez becomes a solution, the Yanks only have the same 1-2 punch of Joba Chamblerlain and Mo Rivera to finish games which is why Steinwhiner’s idea of moving the Nebraska setup man to the rotation would be a colossal mistake making even more a mess of their pen.

I still want to know how Morgan Ensberg was signed while a younger and more versatile Andy Phillips was let go. How Ensberg is even still on a major league roster begs questioning. This is what the Yankees have become. Where misfits somehow wind up with jobs. What? Like Eric Duncan couldn’t be given a shot to sink or swim? The organization needs to get their heads out of their collective asses.

How is it getting any better? Unless the team snaps out of it, they’re in for a tough go because the AL East is no longer a joke. Not with the Rays much improved and the O’s showing signs of life. Even the Jays are coming around.

So, is it over? Hardly. After tonight, the Yanks will have completed 45 games meaning that there’s still 117 to go. They have been in this unenviable position before and comeback to make the postseason. Still, falling into the same early habits isn’t a good trend. One of these days, it’s going to comeback to haunt them.

Is this finally that year? Only time will tell. For now, this team is a mess headed on the road to nowhere.

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More HB

May 7, 2008 in More HB

-Make it two straight losses for the Yankees, who were blanked by resurgent southpaw Cliff Lee 3-0 in the Bronx tonight. A year removed from an injury sidetracking him back to Buffalo to get fixed in Triple-A, the 29 year-old Lee has returned better than ever dominating opponents. He’s now won all six starts walking only two in 44-plus. The Yanks managed six hits in seven innings but couldn’t come up with the big one to bail out tough luck loser Chien-Ming Wang, who permitted a run in the first, fourth and fifth. He went seven falling to 6-1. The best chance Joe Girardi’s club had was a two out rally but Lee buckled down getting Hideki Matsui swinging on a wicked curve to end the sixth. The lefty fanned seven before giving way to 1-2 punch Rafael Perez and Rafael Betancourt with the latter getting the Yanks in order to save his second straight.

-While the Mets dominate the airwaves in this city for their inconsistencies in the wake of a forgettable September, it’s the Yanks up and down play which has gotten lost in the shuffle. What exactly is this team which wins a few, then loses a few and never seems to be able to come up with the big hit when behind after seven innings? At 17 up and 18 down, the Bronx Bombers are an enigma which continues to lose ground to a much stronger Red Sox club. Only due to the Tigers scratching out two against stingy closer Jonathan Papelbon did Boston not increase their lead which remained at four and a half over the Yanks. Sure. They’re still without Alex Rodriguez and Jorge Posada which impacts the lineup. However, the good teams find a way to overcome obstacles. Right now, they’re very mediocre with the April excuse behind them. It’s time to step up.

-The final day of a six-game Western swing was a very good one for the Mets, who hammered Brad Penny for 10 earned in four and two thirds en route a 12-1 rout of the Dodgers, salvaging the final game of the series to even their record to 3-3. The Amazin bats awakened with four in the second including a two-run single from third string catcher Raul Casanova. Up five, they batted around for six more in the fifth. Even starter John Maine got into the act with a two-run single. Luis Castillo’s walk forced in a run. Following a David Wright two-run double, Castillo came into score on a wild pitch for an 11-0 lead. Right fielder Ryan Church continued to swing a hot bat taking ex-Yankee Scott Proctor deep into the Dodger bullpen tying Wright for the club lead with six dingers. He paced the Amazin’s with three hits and three runs scored. 

It all came in support of a sharp Maine, who came within two outs of a too rare complete game shutout. Matt Kemp broke up the shutout with an RBI single. After 117 pitches, Maine was done giving way to ex-Dodger Duaner Sanchez, who recorded the last two outs getting James Loney swinging to end it. Maine went eight and a third allowing one earned on four hits with two walks and four K’s improving to 4-2 on the season.

-Now, the Mets return home to Shea for a seven-game homestand beginning Friday with three against the Reds and four versus Lastings Milledge and the Nats before a fun three-game series at Yankee Stadium next weekend.

-Speaking of Milledge, he’s gotten out of the gate slowly. After taking the collar in three plate appearances in a 4-3 walkoff loss to the Astros, the former Mets’ 2003 first round selection is hitting .256 with one home run, 11 RBI’s, 15 runs and three stolen bases in six attempts. Not the kind of start the 23 year-old Bradenton, Florida native wanted in his first full season manning center field in D.C. There’s still plenty of time for him to get going but you’d have to be foolish not to notice the early returns on that trade so far for Omar Minaya. With Church becoming the Mets’ most consistent performer in their lineup and catcher Brian Schneider (.308-0-8, .395 OBP) playing well in 19 starts despite injuries, it couldn’t be going much better for the Mets.

If Church and Schneider continue to perform well, there won’t be much to complain about for Amazin fans when it comes to that deal. Come to think of it, nobody’s had much to say lately about it choosing to take our their frustrations on Oliver Perez, Carlos Beltran, Carlos Delgado, Aaron Heilman, Willie Randolph and Jose Reyes.

The Mets are 17-15 and still a weird team to get a read on which is why they get plenty of criticism after losses from fans and media alike. It’s because they expect a team which acquired one of the best pitchers in the game to play better than this after how last season ended. The talk from Randolph that his ballclub is more relaxed away from Shea doesn’t take them off the hook. This is New York. Players here must have thicker skin and be able to shake off the booing and heavy criticism. With two last place opponents coming in with a combined record of 28-40, the Amazin’s need to send a strong message by winning at least five of the next seven going into that weekend series against their crosstown rivals. Anything less would raise eyebrows.

-Where would the Braves be without Chipper Jones? With two more hits in a 5-2 home win over the Padres, the 36 year-old switch hitting third baseman is now hitting .429 (51-for-119) with 10 homers and 29 RBI’s. Just amazing stuff from one of the most consistent star players of this era. Last year with his team missing the postseason a second consecutive season, Chipper finished at .337, 29 homers and 102 knocked in despite missing 28 games. With another 42 doubles and four triples, he had 75 extra base hits. Did we mention his OBP was .425 along with a .604 slugging? The guy is just a great player. He needs four more dingers to reach 400 for his career. He’s also closing in on 2,200 hits 32 shy after tonight. By the time he concludes his career, the man they refer to as Larry in Queens will be in Cooperstown.

-Chauncey Billups going down tonight with a possible groin injury changes everything in that Pistons-Magic series. He’s the glue which keeps Detroit together. Tell ya one thing. Rashard Lewis (33 pts, 11-of-15 FG, 5-of-6 3′s) sure is shooting it well. Having Dwight Howard (20 pts, 8-of-13 FG, 12 Rebs, 6 Blk) inside definitely helps. I still think it comes down to the play of Hedo Turkoglu, who came to life in the fourth quarter scoring 10 of his 18 as the Magic outscored the Pistons 38-17 to win 111-86 getting back in the series. If the streaky shooter plays better along with Jameer Nelson, then Orlando should be pretty competitive. Who knows how Billups’ injury will affect him?

-Is there still an NHL playoffs going on? I wasn’t too sure.

-It’s not everyday that Rafa Nadal loses on clay but that happened earlier today when Juan Carlos Ferrero got the better of the Spaniard ousting him 7-5, 6-1 in Rome. It was only Nadal’s second defeat on the red surface in 105 matches. He did play with a blister but give Ferrero his due. This probably isn’t a good sign for Nadal’s future opponents in Roland Garros because it will make the rating three-time French Open champion even more focused and harder to beat.

-I just want to say it’s nice to know that Barry Zito is back in the San Fran rotation again. At least the $128 million man pitched effectively enough to keep his team in a game for a change, only giving up two earned to fall to 0-7. Will he make 20 losses? Hey. His ERA dropped below 7.00. We’re sure Scott Boras is telling Brian Sabean about that.

-Speaking of Boras, when he says Oli Perez is one of the best pitchers in baseball, does he actually believe that?

-Pirate center fielder Nate McClouth is hitting .333 with nine homers, 28 knocked in and 31 runs. Just wanted to make sure you’ve been paying attention.

-The special PBS aired on legendary singer Marvin Gaye was excellent and depicted what one of the most soulful singers went through where despite all his God given talents was never really satisfied. All due to his crazy father, who wound up killing him. It definitely told a sad tale of a man influenced by depression, sex and drugs. If you missed it, find the time to catch it.

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Delgado made right call

April 30, 2008 in MLB

Much has been made out of Carlos Delgado’s non-reaction to Met fans asking for the beleaguered first baseman to come out for a curtain call after he hit his second home run in a 6-3 win over the Braves Sunday at Shea.

Those would be the same fans who booed Delgado at every turn including earlier that day for being in the lineup. While his dreadful start warranted the classic reaction from Amazin fans, how could anyone disagree with the veteran slugger opting not to come out and show appreciation?

It was the one time he’d been cheered so far during what’s been a tough month where another slow start saw him hitting below the Mendoza Line until the other day. In a lineup which outside of David Wright and Ryan Church is struggling with just 15 total home runs, the Mets need Delgado’s big bat to heat up.

The Mets themselves aren’t exactly lighting it up either. Delgado and struggling reliever Aaron Heilman are the biggest targets at the moment with Willie Randolph not far behind. The pressure’s on to perform. Especially from a frantic fanbase that’s still fearful of last year’s September collapse having a hangover affect which might explain a 13-11 record, tied with the Phillies for second a game and a half behind the Marlins.

Until Jose Reyes and Carlos Beltran get untracked, the Mets will continue to have issues. Now, those are two younger stars who are in their primes. By contrast, the 35 year-old Delgado who’s slugged over 430 career dingers won’t be revisiting his best days. Just being a productive bat who could drive the ball out would be enough to help boost his ballclub and get fans off his back.

Even if he invited criticism the past 48 hours, one can certainly understand why. He hasn’t earned it yet and knows he needs to do it consistently. If he does, maybe then you’ll see a different Delgado engage the Shea supporters.

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Final Opening Day at Shea a Dud

April 8, 2008 in MLB

Copyright Getty Images

Shane Victorino singles off Met starter Oliver Perez in the final home opener at Shea with CitiField looking on in the background. 

So much is expected of this year’s Mets. Especially with the key addition of lefty ace Johan Santana. If it’s true that the two-time AL Cy winner stablizes the rotation, then it’s also true that the Amazin’s bullpen still looks mediocre at best.

The latest glaring example came in their final home opener at Shea Stadium this afternoon in a disappointing 5-2 loss to the hated Phillies. The day didn’t start off badly as a packed house of better than 55,000 were treated to a nice opening ceremony which included the Shea family for the unveiling of their name on the left field wall.

Met first baseman Carlos Delgado connects for a home run off Jamie Moyer in the second inning.

The game itself also began promising with key veteran first baseman Carlos Delgado slugging his first home run of the season off the oldest player in baseball Jamie Moyer for an early 1-0 lead in the second. A Ryan Church fourth inning RBI groundout put them up a couple of runs.

With southpaw Oliver Perez throwing well for a second consecutive start, it looked like Willie Randolph’s ballclub would finally pickup a win against the 2007 NL East champs. However, he ran out of gas in the sixth walking a couple, balking and hitting a batter which forced the much maligned Met skipper to go to his bullpen.

Though second-year reliever Joe Smith got out of the sixth unscathed, the Mets weren’t as fortunate in the seventh due to a big error by Delgado. With the bases loaded full of Phillies due to Chase Utley getting beaned a major league record third time, Scott Schoeneweis induced a sharp grounder to Delgado but the first baseman made a fatal mistake. He tried for the force at second but instead his throw hit Utley in the back allowing both Jimmy Rollins and Shane Victorino to come around and tie the game.

Following a Pat Burrell deep fly out to right, reliever Jorge Sosa couldn’t put away Jayson Werth as the gritty right fielder served an opposite field go-ahead single to the dismay of Met fans. Once the inning ended, the boo birds were out.

They apparently were just getting warmed up because the Phils sent eight more batters up to the plate in the eighth where they tacked on two more insurance runs off an ineffective Aaron Heilman. After Rollins singled home the fourth run, Utley doubled last year’s NL MVP in to make it 5-2.

Even against a shaky Philly pen, the Met bats went silent allowing ex-Yankee Tom Gordon to close it out 1-2-3 getting Jose Reyes to fly out to the warning track for his first save.

It was the Mets’ first ever Opening Day defeat in eight games against the Phillies. Their third consecutive defeat dropped them to 2-4.

Of course, the biggest second guess of Randolph was why he pulled Perez at 94 pitches with a struggling pen which blew up in the previous couple of losses in Atlanta.

Who knows? Perez did become wild towards the end and that’s always been the biggest criticism of the former Pirate who can dominate at times but leaves fans scratching their heads. He hasn’t permitted a run yet this season but didn’t go deep enough today to give his team a much needed win.

Mets fans take in the action at the old ballpark with a brand new one watching in the background.

It was their eighth straight defeat against the Phils. So, is it time for Amazin fans to push the panic button? Hardly. Their team can still rebound by taking the next two and win the series.

We’ll see what kind of early character they have early in the season.

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Hope you didn’t Vote for Pedro

April 2, 2008 in Articles, MLB

 Pedro Martinez is in disbelief as he leaves the mound last night at Florida after injuring left hamstring.

Hope you didn’t vote for Pedro before the Met season started. If you’ve seen Napoleon Dynamite, then you know what we’re referring to.

Good thing Omar Minaya came to his senses and acquired former Twins’ ace Johan Santana or his ballclub would be in a lot more trouble just a couple of days into the 2008 season. If you’re a frantic Met fan, last night was why. I’m a Yankee fan btw. So I consider myself lucky even if my team hasn’t won a World Series in eight years and hasn’t come close with A-Rod even making the wrong sort of history in 2004 to the hated Red Sox.

Being a Yankee fan isn’t that bad. Imagine rooting for the Mets thinking “Ya Gotta Believe” after Endy Chavez’ amazing catch in that Game Seven of the NLCS only to get beat by out of all people Yadier Molina and then rookie Adam Wainwright. Carlos Beltran still hasn’t taken that bat off his shoulders. The cardiac 83 win Cards went onto win it all making every Met fan sick.

But there was always the next year. Surely, the Team, the Time, the 2007 NL East champion Mets would be followed by “Your Season Has Come.” One of the most arrogant slogans ever thought of. Almost as if the Met Marketing Department figured it was their God given right to finally win a third World Series.

Did they thank God after the worst September collapse in major league history? You know how God’s always responsible when you win. What about when you lose? I still wonder what Joba Chamberlain was thinking when those gnats attacked him on that Cleveland mound basically finishing off the Yankees. How do you play ball in that?

If last year ended on the most sour note with delusional Met fans calling for Willie Randolph’s head (same guy who changed the losing attitude under Art Howe), then it had to get a whole lot better when Minaya hoisted the Twins for Santana. Though I do think Carlos Gomez will turn out good unlike King Lastings Milledge backer John Giagnorio. 

How could they go wrong with a two-time AL Cy winner who is now pitching in the senior circuit and won’t have to face DH loaded lineups which put a hurting on him for a career high 33 homers last season? The recently turned 29 year-old Venezuelan turned in an All-Star caliber performance in his Met debut going seven strong while allowing two earned on a Josh Willingham homer walking a pair and fanning eight on 100 pitches.

The 6-2 win which saw the Mets bat around in the fourth for all six runs including a bases clearing double by NL MVP candidate David Wright was exactly what the doctor ordered for Amazin supporters. Jose Reyes had a couple of hits showing no September hangover. Luis Castillo was on base three times and even swiped a base. Wright delivered the clutch hit which broke the game open off scrub Mark Hendrickson. How in the world was he the Marlin Opening Day starter?

The Met pen also came in and tossed two scoreless including Aaron Heilman retiring the Marlins in order with two K’s to finish off a crisp win making the NL favorites 1-0.

Just the way you would draw it up. If only that’s how baseball was. All it takes is a key player to feel a twinge like Pedro felt last night with his left hamstring in the fourth inning against the Marlins straining it before being replaced by Jorge Sosa. Though the Mets rallied from four down to tie, they eventually lost 5-4 on Robert Andino’s first career home run in the 10th off Matt Wise.

And so, they’re 1-1 trailing the Milledge and Paul Lo Duca Nats in the standings. Couldn’t resist. More on those Nationals another time.

This was supposed to be the year after where the exciting 36 year-old three-time Cy winner was healthy coming in and would team with Santana to form a deadly 1-2 punch of aces in a rotation which also includes John Maine and Oliver Perez.

If you’ve seen Maine pitch, then you know how capable he is. To think that Minaya got him as a throw in for Kris Benson (really Anna). Definitely one of his best deals. The 26 year-old former Baltimore 2002 sixth round pick has all the goods to be what many believe he can this year. No. I’m not going to say he’ll win 20 but why not 18 after winning 15 in his first full season making 32 starts? Certainly reasonable.

For some reason, Perez gets the nod tonight in the rubber match. Oh. He did win the same 15 as Maine and put up similar numbers K-ing six less batters (174 to Maine’s 180). Ask many Met fans who they’d rather have in a big spot. Maine or Perez? I don’t believe Perez would get a lot of votes.

If Pedro is out for an extended period, a Met top three of Santana, Maine and Perez is still formidable. They were able to stay afloat last year without Pedro or Johan last year. Sure. the NL East wasn’t great and they got to a quick lead which allowed them to relax maybe a little too much.

Now though, often injured Orlando Hernandez and Mike Pelfrey of an 8.14 ERA in Spring Training will be asked to fill those last two spots in the rotation. If Hernandez can’t go or Pelfrey struggles, there’s always the versatile Sosa who can go shift from the pen to starting. Nelson Figueroa could also get a look. Will Minaya bring in Claudio Vargas as mentioned on Baseball Tonight last night? Possibly.

Still, that doesn’t exactly instill much confidence. Can the Mets survive if the MRI Pedro underwent comes back positive? Sure. There’s still plenty of star power in Queens with Wright, Reyes and Carlos Beltran in the lineup and Santana anchoring the rotation. The pen is basically the same with Heilman and Pedro Feliciano setting up Billy Wagner. Plus Joe Smith a year older should help.

The Mets could use a few good swings from first baseman Carlos Delgado to jolt that middle of the order. If he can bounceback, suddenly their offense is very formidable. There’s no guarantee with the 35 year-old vet. Especially if that hip doesn’t allow him to turn fastballs.

So, does the Met season hinge on whether Pedro can comeback? Tough to say. Even the most optimistic Met fan couldn’t believe there wouldn’t be a DL stint at some point for Mr. Palm Tree.

Now though, once again some Met fans are pushing the panic button waiting for the sky to fall on their season. Can you really blame them anymore?

It’s a long season.

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Random Thoughts

March 5, 2008 in Random Thoughts

Derek Felix would love to see Jimmy Page change his mind about a full Led Zeppelin reunion tour. 

This is how my mind works. Well, only just a little bit. Goborut shto?!?!?!?!?!

Let’s get to it:

1.Henrik Lundqvist tanked the bed tonight in a 4-3 shootout home defeat to the dreaded Islanders. For a goalie who’s considered one the NHL’s best, the affable 26 year-old Swede sure has a lot of concentration lapses. Have you ever seen a worse stickhandling goalie than him? The second and third Islander goals he permitted were atrocious. Something’s definitely lacking in his performance since December. If he can’t outduel Islander backup Wade Dubielewicz who also got the better of him in a shootout last year, how’s anyone supposed to take Henrik seriously?

2.Leave it to Tom Renney to not bother using a timeout with eight seconds remaining and opting instead to send out his fourth line with an offensive zone draw. How isn’t Chris Drury on the ice in that situation?

3.If this really is IT for Brett Favre, it’s been one hell of a ride. I’ll wait a little longer until the certain Canton-bound Packer QB has a press conference and makes an official announcement. Especially give his track record.

4.I’m no expert but this bad hip isn’t exactly what Met fans had in mind for a Carlos Delgado revival.

5.It probably won’t happen but what if the revamped Mavs or Suns missed the playoffs out West? Just saying.

6.If you caught that joke of a Q and A session between reporters and Lord Isiah on the Starbury situation, it told you all you needed to know about the Dumb and Dumber Clown Management 101 philosophy.

7.Who else will the Jets overpay to save face?

8.He might not be what he once was but former Falcon back Warrick Dunn could be a nice addition for another NFL team.

9.Tracking the Calder race:

A.Nicklas Backstrom

B.Patrick Kane

C.Jonathan Toews

10.He might not make the cut but Ranger rookie pivot Brandon Dubinsky looks to be what the club has lacked for so long. A quality second line center who projects well.

11.I’ve said it before and I’ll repeat it once more. When the game’s on the line, it’s Hedo Turkoglu who usually has the ball and makes the big shots for the Magic. Not inside monster Dwight Howard.

12.Major bummer hearing that it looks like Jimmy Page isn’t crazy about doing a full Led Zeppelin tour.

13.Does anyone really believe that Chinese Democracy will finally get released? In the infamous words of Axl Rose:

It’s been 14 years of silence

It’s been 14 years of pain

It’s been 14 years that are gone forever… 

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