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Well, it’s a rainy Tuesday, too
damp to even try continue
spackling, so what a terrific opportunity to let go with all this
built-up
invective inside. Right at the top of my
list is Dan Warthen, the Mets pitching coach with the big mouth.
How can a pitching coach trash
his former player for
pitching his heart out for you? I know
he was responding to another idiot’s (Cashman’s) claim that Pedro
Feliciano had
been trashed and abused by the Mets, and no doubt Warthen was just
expressing
what would come naturally to just about anyone when he asked why the
Yankees
signed him in the first place, but to then go further by saying that
the number
of innings Pedro threw was the reason the Mets didn’t re-sign him,
that’s just
stupid.
What is Feliciano supposed to
think now? What are the other Mets
pitchers
thinking? What is any Mets player to
think whenever the choice to play a little dinged up presents itself? Especially a team that has been beset by
injuries to key players, especially a team that has seen one outfielder
(Jason
Bay) stay home for two months with a concussion and then another two
weeks with
some mysterious oblique injury, especially a team that has seen its
star player
(Carlos Beltran) sit out for the better part of two years with knee
troubles,
that team should express nothing but heartfelt gratitude when a guy
like Feliciano
puts his arm on the line.
Maybe Warthen was trying to be
funny but he went much too
far. Surely Cashman said a stupid thing
and he deserved to get jumped on. For a
GM to basically trash the player he just signed is almost too
ridiculous to
fathom.
The
only possible
answer is that Cashman was expressing frustration at having been
overruled on
still another player he didn’t want in the first place, the other being
Rafael
Soriano, the expensive new setup man from Atlanta.
In doing so though, he’s distancing himself
from decisions on players that show every indication of being very
successful
as Yankees.
Cashman had already been on
record as feeling that Jeter,
the esteemed Yankees captain, was asking for way too much money. If Cashman’s trolling for his next job, this
is not the way to go about it. Airing
dirty laundry is the no-no of all time in most personnel circles.
If Warthen’s attitude is
representative of Mets management,
I can understand their players not putting themselves out.
Why should they wear themselves out for a
team that doesn’t even appreciate their efforts?
The other stupid thing about
Warthen’s comments is that they
aren’t even true. The Mets never pushed
Feliciano into action against his will. Feliciano
wanted to pitch at every opportunity. It
became his Mets persona. He became a
respected
if not beloved ”Perpetual Pedro.”
Warthen should take a walk. It wouldn’t bother me. There
are
plenty of pitching coaches out there. And
yes, the Mets pitching staff has been very
good under his tutelage
but whether their success can be attributed to him is very doubtful. It would set a terrific example to fire his
sorry butt.
Warthen should at least be
forced to apologize. I can’t think of a
more insipid thing for a
Mets manager to say. “Yes, we abused his
arm and since we realized we abused his arm, we didn’t re-sign him”. What an idiot.
Except for Warthen though, Mets
fans have a lot to be
thankful for this morning. Having taken
two out of three from Florida on the road, having received two
exceptional
pitching performances and contributions at the plate from virtually
every spot
in the lineup, all this bodes well for the future.
For me, the fact that they lost
the opener was a good
omen. After all, the end results were
awful when they won the opener. Why
shouldn’t the reverse be true?
But, as bad as the Mets looked
in the opener, they were
almost as bad for about 8 innings of Game 2. Except
for Wright, Davis and Beltran, things
were pretty quiet.
But the Mets were tough in the
ninth and tenth innings. Ike Davis and
Josh Thole produced a run in
the top of the ninth to give the Mets the lead. But K-Rod gave it back
in the bottom
half. The Mets came right back though
with singles by Reyes and Pagan followed by ribbie hits from Wright and
the
surprising Willie Harris.
The Mets were up by a seemingly
insurmountable three runs,
but, given K-Rod’s failure in the 9th and only an unproven
bullpen
standing between them and defeat, no lead seemed safe.
But Blaine Boyer held the Marlins to just one
run to preserve the victory.
The story of Game 3 was pretty
much R.A. Dickey. His knuckler was working
just fine as he gave
up just one earned run over the first 6 innings, proving his mind
wasn’t
totally focused on Mount Kilamanjaro, which he has vowed to climb after
the
season.
The
relievers gave up
just one more run over the last three. Meanwhile,
the Mets jumped all over former
Yankee Javier Vasquez for 7
runs and the final wound up being 9-2. All
in all for the series, the Marlins looked like the Marlins have always
looked,
Josh Johnson and pray for rain.
Reality may rear its ugly head
tonight though as the
Phillies come to town. Newcomer Chris
Young will have to face Cole Hamels in the opener, and, although the
Mets have,
believe it or not, roughed up Hamels in the past, this game could wind
up
getting ugly.
Even without their All-Star
second baseman Chase Utley, the
Phils still look pretty formidable offensively, with a seemingly
rejuvenated
Jimmy Rollins and the same cast of characters that have terrorized NL
pitching
for the last couple of years, the only notable exception being Jayson
Werth,
whose absence has so far gone unnoticed.
The Mets will need some luck. And a closed mouth from Warthen.
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