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David
Wright's letting the good pitches go by....................
And Jason Bay is only getting one swing.
Photo by Al Bello -
Getty
Photo
by Mike Stobe- Getty |
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It’s a quarter to three, yada yada
yada yada dee dee dedee
dee. It’s a perfect time to write
sumthin’, the Yanks are outclassing the Rangers (again), the Mets are
coming
off a ridiculous win, and I even have the Cubs game going, from WGN. The Cubs are hosting the pitiful Houston
Astros but I’m not really sure the Cubs won’t be just as bad. They often are.
The Mets play tonight, of course. And, after using up their entire pitching
staff, they’re handing the ball to John Maine, with instructions to go
deep
into the game. It is with deep
trepidation that I visualize this upcoming contest, the totally
pissed-off
Cardinals against John Maine on a Sunday night.
Of course, I’ve read that Maine is
angry, angry at a number
of things…himself, his manager, and the cruel world, I’m sure. Imagine the nerve of Mets management to
question his role in the starting rotation! Sure! He had a bad
spring and a
couple of horrible starts thereafter but, gee whiz, three years ago, he
won 15
games.
Has John Maine awakened?
That’d be really nice to see. Now,
please understand, I’ve mutilated John Maine in
this column for
quite a while now but that doesn’t mean I don’t wish him well. Nobody’d be happier than I’d be if he goes
out tonight, throws bullets and violent sinkers the whole night and
shuts out
those dangerous Redbirds, Pujols and Holliday and Ludwick.
But it’s hard to imagine.
The fatal difference between Maine and Perez is that
Perez has
talent. Maine just has that slow
fastball, the dinky breaking stuff and well, that’s it.
Perez finally showed what he could do the
other night. He pitched into the seventh
inning, allowing just one run over that span. He
didn’t have his perpetual bad inning. He
was just great.
When was the last time John Maine had
a good outing? I’m looking it up right now. Omigosh! He
pitched 7 innings of 1-run ball as late as
October 2nd of
2009! But before that start, he pitched
only sparingly and, from the beginning of June to the mid-September, he
didn’t
pitch at all, a victim of shoulder problems related to off-season
surgery he
had in 2008.
I’ve watched him pretty closely since
then and haven’t seen
that pitcher, the one who baffled Houston batters back in October. And, while I have some compassion for a
player with a medical problem, I also understand that this is the major
leagues. You need some luck and grit to
withstand the rigors of a professional career.
If a player doesn’t have either, there
are a lot of jobs a
guy with a bum shoulder can do….insurance, beer sales and the like. I don’t need to see that guy take the mound
every fifth day for the team I’m rooting for to win.
If it takes anger to get this young man out
of his doldrums, so be it. If even that
doesn’t work, I’m sorry but see ya later. Maine’s
already made a fortune. He’s listed on the
roster as making 3.3
million this year. A lot of folks could
live on that.
So….welcome to a sense of urgency,
John Maine. Let’s see what you can do,
armed with that
anger and not much else to date.
Meanwhile, that 20-inning affair was
pretty scary, from the
standpoint of future prospects for the Mets. Their
hitting was just awful, as bad as their
pitching was good. Too many batters take
the beautiful meatball
pitches for strikes, then flail away at balls thrown in the dirt. I’m talking about Jason Bay, David Wright and
Jose Reyes, but the same could be said for many other Mets, all of them
really
with the exception of Jeff Francoeur.
If it’s Jerry Manuel and Howard
Johnson, the hitting coach,
who are responsible for this “take” direction, it’s totally misguided
for this
particular team. These are more
free-swingers. Turning free swingers
into disciplined batters isn’t that easy. Somebody
as smart as Manuel should realize that.
I’ve been against the tide, it seems,
with respect to Jerry
Manuel. Most Mets fans have had it with
him, just based on his record supposedly, but I suspect they really
just can’t
stand his intellectual bent. And, while
I still favor keeping him as manager, I am beginning to have my own
doubts
about his team’s demeanor in general.
If Manuel is forcing a bunch of
free-swingers to show a
whole lot of discipline in every at-bat, it is he who must shoulder the
blame
when that team doesn’t score any runs. When
your most valuable acquisition strikes out four
times, as Jason Bay
did last night, then that is also a reflection of that batter’s
direction.
Last year,from the beginning of spring
training, Manuel’s
thrust was towards his team hitting to the opposite field.
David Wright had his poorest season ever,
particularly with respect to his power numbers. Wright
had just ten homers in 2009, after successive
years of having had
27, 26, 30 and 33 homers.
I don’t think it was Citi Field, and I
don’t think it was
just an accident. I think it was an
obsessive direction towards hitting to the opposite field.
This year’s obsession seems to have turned
towards “good” at-bats, taking pitches, as many as two strikes in
certain
situations. While the other teams
batters get three swings each, our Mets only get one.
I’m pretty sure that would affect not just
their stats at the plate. That general
strangulation could carry over into the field and into the clubhouse.
There are signs of a team malaise, at
least at the
plate. The Mets are making every
opposing pitcher look like Christy Mathewson. It’s
not only because they’re not good hitters. It’s
getting obvious that even the good
hitters are turning bad.
So get off it, Jerry, or Howard, or
whoever else may be
responsible for this strangling approach to hitting.
Too often that first pitch is hittable.

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