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Everybody hits.
That’s
been the theme for this Thursday afternoon Mets game versus the Cards
in Port
St Lucie. Just to give you an idea, it’s
16-3 Mets in the eighth.
The new second baseman has gone
4 for 4 as has David
Wright. Angel Pagan has been having a
monster game. But I’ve been really
impressed by this centerfielder Dendecker who so far has made an
over-the-shoulder catch on the track and, oh yeah, he also smacked a
home run.
Jesus!
I’m out of synch again. Everybody else is worried about the 2
basketball games tonight. After all, it is
the greatest basketball
tournament in the world. Just ask TNT or
TBS or TRU. But not me. I’m watching the
Mets, listening to Keith throw the baloney with Gary, and just now
enjoying
watching Bobby Parnell strike out a Cards batter.
It’s really too bad some more of
these rookies can’t make
the team. Twenty-five man rosters are
really difficult to determine. Right
now, it looks as if there’ll be 6 outfielders and seven infielders, two
catchers and ten pitchers. I know it
sounds like a lot (25) but it isn’t. Too
many promising rooks go back down.
I’d love to see this Dandecker
guy do his thing in the
outfield, especially if Carlos Beltran has to be rested about half the
time. But I shouldn’t complain, there
will be at least a few adds to the roster, from the minors and free
agency
too. And I like them all.
What a surprise, right?
The Mets current depth chart
shows Chin Lung Hu backing up Reyes
at short, Daniel Murphy backing up Davis at first and Luis Hernandez,
the glove
guy, backing up a brand new face (and maybe bat) named Brad Emaus
(rhymes with
Remus they tell me). David Wright
appears un-backed up at the corner but Murphy could probably spell him
too. One gets the feeling that they’ll
all get a lot of playing time.
New in the outfield will be Nick
Evans backing up Beltran in
right, baseball legacy Scott Hairston spelling Angel Pagan in center
and
strongman Lucas Duda backing for Jason Bay in left.
It’s really a pretty solid outfield.
I wonder about the catching
depth behind relative newcomer
Josh Thole. Pete Nickeas hasn’t shown a
whole lot yet and Ronnie Paulino just got here after some paper issue. If there is an obvious weakness, it’s behind
the plate.
Chris Capuano didn’t do anything
to hurt his chances
today. He pitches like a really
experienced fellow, which he is. And all
his stuff was down, um, when it did stay down. Along
with the other free agent, Chris Young,
they’ve been looking more
like the two and three guys in the rotation rather than number 5
starters.
My only fear about the pitching
is that the current number
1, Mike Pelfrey, isn’t really a number one ace. R.A.
Dickey, the knuckleballer, isn’t a number
one either despite his
great showing so far. Jonathan Niese
hasn’t had a great spring either. Most
of my hopes will be for the two free agents and Dickey.
Niese and Pelfrey will have to show me
something. In terms of mental toughness,
Pelfrey and Niese don’t really cut it, as talented as they may prove to
be.
The relievers look pretty good
to me too. Missing is Perpetual Pedro but
D.J. Carrasco
could be the setup guy the Mets have needed for years.
He has experienced good success with the
White Sox and Pittsburgh. Bobby Parnell
and Manny Acosta looked pretty good last year and one Taylor Bucholz,
another experienced
pitcher, is now listed as the number 5 reliever. K-Rod
of course will continue to be the
closer….not too shabby at all.
Everybody says the lineup
depends solely on Beltran but I don’t
think so. The problem will be yanking
him in and out of the lineup. I’m
actually wishing the Mets would trade him before his perceived value
goes
totally in the hole. Any other power
hitter would do in his place, especially one with good knees. As much as I sympathize with Beltran’s
problems, and he’s always played pretty hard, he’s more of a chronic
problem
now than he is an asset.
My brother tells me the Mets
have no chance, also that the
fantasy value of even Mets stars such as Wright and Reyes will be way
down
because of the weak lineup around them. He’s
a Yankee fan though, which is to say the
only good players are ones
that have done it for years, that players such as Pagan and Jason Bay
and Ike
Davis have little worth. I disagree. And it’s even easier to disagree on a day
like today when the Mets score 16 runs.
We’ll see how his Yankee old
guys do this year, especially Arod
and Jeter and Posada. On the pitching
side, we’ll see if Mariano still has it at 42. (I
don’t think so). I
anxiously
await the demise of the Yankees, who have hung too long with all these
players.
And this will be the year the Red Sox show them just how old they
really are.
The Yanks may still make the
playoffs but whether they’ll
prevail past the first round is very questionable.
The pitching isn’t there and the lineup is
old. An old lineup usually looks older
in the dog days of August. We’ll see,
but the picture isn’t a promising one for the Yankees. One through five
as a
whole, I’d be happier with the Mets starters.
And
so far nobody’s
counting on anything from Johan Santana, who’ll return after the
All-Star break
or thereabouts. How’d that be for a shot
in the arm?
Yeah, the Mets are undervalued
and the Yanks quite the
opposite. What’s new under the sun? Surely that’s been the case lo these many
baseball seasons. I may be forced to
concede eventually that the best team in New York resides in the Bronx.
But not yet, not yet.
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