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Ike Davis
erergized the whole team with bat and glove.........
And Niese even looks a little like Davis
Photo by Jim McIsaac -
Getty
Photo
by Jim McIsaac- Getty |
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I couldn’t be happier. The Mets are playing good baseball. They came back from oblivion to achieve a
better
than .500 record in the
space of about 10 days. And they’re
doing it with pitching, not just good relief pitching either. The starters have come on like
gangbusters. Santana, Pelfrey and Niese
have ben magnificent. Perez and Maine
have held their own.
But it hasn’t been just pitching. It’s been the fortuitous return of Ike Davis
from Buffalo. It’s been Jose Reyes
flashing his speed from the third spot in the order.
It’s been Jason Bay starting to hit.
It’s been good baserunning, good fielding, and
opportunistic hitting, even taking into account a low figure for aveage
with
runners in scoring position.
It must be pointed out that Mets
fans had not been feeling
optimistic. There was nothing to feel
that good about just about 10 days ago. The
angst begins with the starter of the day. With
Santana, they worry he’ll relapse, with
Pelfrey, they worry he’ll go to pieces with men on base, with Niese,
that he’ll
realize he’s young, with Maine and Perez, that they won’t totally
implode.
None of those maladies befell the
Mets starters in this
streak of good fortune. The closest
thing to a bad start was Maine’s injuring his off-arm and coming out in
the
fourth inning on Friday, the opener against the Braves, those same
Braves that
just seem to thrash the Mets at every opportunity.
But Hisanori Takahashi, one of their two
Japanese imports this season, struck out seven Braves in three innings.
What a game that Friday night
affair was! For a long stretch there in
the middle of the
game, it was two Japanese pitchers facing each other, and they were
both
looking very effective. But, in the
Mets half of the sixth, Ike Davis hit the Shea Bridge in deep right
centerfield
to put the Mets ahead. It
was a truly majestic shot, one that seemed
to pee on the Citi Field dimensions.
Then, in the seventh, as if to
show that Ike wasn’t the only
Met player with power, Reyes and Bay hit two triples in a row. Bay’s shot was quite a shot, just hitting the
base of that long wall. Then Wright
drove in Bay with still another long shot to right center to put the
game away.
I say “put the game away” but
when the Mets play the Braves,
that never seems to be the case. But
after Takahashi left the game in the 7th, Raul Valdez got
the third
out, Feliciano mowed the Braves down in the 8th, and K-Rod,
after
giving the Braves life with a walk and a single, finally closed it out
after
striking out two very dangerous hitters, McLouth and Prado.
That game put the Mets at 8-9. After taking 3 of 4 from the Cubs and smoking
the Braves in the opener, they just had to somehow get by Braves
pitcher Jair
Jurrjens to get to .500. Once again,
Jonathon Niese got the call, and once again, he came through. He threw lots of pitches and walked more than
his share, but in the end, the Braves had scored just one, thanks to
some
pretty fair (to put it mildly) relief from the likes of Manny Acosta
and then
the usual suspects, Nieve, Feliciano and K-Rod.
The Mets were .500.
It was a wonder that Sunday’s
game got off at all. It had rained all day. But the Mets got a run in the first that
Reyes virtually stole and Pelfrey blanked the Braves for five innings
before
the rains came down for real in the sixth, thus fortunately ending
still
another game in the Mets favor, and voila, the Mets were a winning team.
It’s easy to like this team too. They still can’t hit very much, especially
early in the game, but they have come through in the stretch more often
than
not. Ike Davis really energized this team while the new lineup, with
Reyes
batting third, seems to be working too.
Jason Bay seems to have found his
swing finally after three
weeks of mostly frustration. Wright’s struggles continue though, and it
seems
he’s lost that swing from the legs that was supposed to bring his power
back
this season. Hopefully, he can find that
swing again.
This Mets team seems complete
just as it is. This team has won 7 of its
last 10 and its
last four in a row. If the Mets had any
thoughts about trading Carlos Beltran, who seems to not want to return,
this
would be the time to pull the trigger, before he comes back, before
encountering the risk of a bad start after a long period of injury.
Angel Pagan is no Beltran, but he
is a good player and seems
to hold his own. And, with Fernando
Martinez in the wings up in Buffalo too, I’d think centerfield was not
a worry,
especially given that Gary Matthews, that second ill-advised pickup
(the first
being Mike Jacobs), is still with the team.
Beltran could easily bring
another pitcher to Citi Field, an
established pitcher who could lend some savvy and experience to that
rotation,
especially if it begins to show signs of faltering.
With Maine and Perez, it seems almost
inevitable that, somewhere down the road, another starter will be
needed,
especially if the Mets are still in contention in July.
In the meantime, I’ll enjoy
watching these Mets as presently
constructed. It’s a fiery team, a
resilient team, one that’s becoming successful with great pitching, a
much
better defense with Ike at first base, and just enough hitting to get
by, even
with some potentially big bats still struggling.
Tonight it’ll be the Dodgers
coming to town, with Kuroda
facing up against Ollie Perez, who is winless thus far despite his 3.71
ERA. If the Mets can continue to get by
his turn in the rotation, anything’s possible in the NL East, even a
pennant.

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