 |
|
After
Halladay, the Phillies are thin in their rotation.........
And with Rollins on the DL, the Phils lineup is
compromised
Photo by Jed Jacobsohn
-
Getty
Photo
byJed Jacobsohn -
Getty |
|
Global warming, a giant oil slick and
nobody seems to care
while we pick on the banks for a while. Meanwhile,
the seas go to hell. But set against all
that is the Mets winning 7 in a
row, and John Maine
striking out nine Dodgers while going into the seventh inning. The Mets are in first place after stinking it
up for the first dozen games.
The combined runs total for and
against during the win stretch
is 35-13. Averaged over 7 games, the
Mets won each game by a score of 5-2. Not too shabby.
But it’s all very curious. Their luck went from horrible to undeniably
terrific, or indescribably
delicious. The Cubs, Braves and Dodgers
looked awful. Or was that just the Mets
making those teams look so bad?
All I know is that, all things
considered, things have
turned out remarkably well. The
promotion of Ike Davis, batting Reyes third, keeping crazy Ollie and
Maine in
the rotation, the pickup of Jason Bay and Barajas, and the pickup of
Jeff
Francoeur before that, all those things
have worked out. And that’s not to mention
the relievers.
You may have read here that, from
spring training on, the
relievers looked much better than Manuel was making them out to be. Down in Florida, I thought they all looked
pretty good. Yeah, it was the spring,
but I was still very hopeful. If
anything, I was very concerned at that time about the starters.
But the targets of my biggest concern,
Maine especially but
Oliver Perez too, have managed to just hang in, like that poster with
the
little kitten hangin’ on for dear life. And
Jonathon Niese, for whom I had been optimistic,
has been even better
than I’d expected, as has Mike Pelfrey. Santana
is still Santana, if perhaps just a kinder,
gentler Santana.
I had been concerned about the lineup
too, of course, what
with the likes of Mike Jacobs batting cleanup. I
didn’t have much hope for Gary Matthews (and still
don’t) and Rod
Barajas. It was a lineup even I could
pitch around…arguably. But the call-up
of Ike Davis meant we wouldn’t be seeing Mike Jacobs around any longer. It meant, too, we’d see less of Fernando
Tatis. Both these players seemed to suck energy from the lineup, and
for that
matter, from the entire team.
It’s amazing what a little tweaking
can do. Ike Davis infused the team with as
much energy
as had formerly been drained by Jacobs and Tatis. Reyes
looks as if he enjoys playing in the
3-hole. Bay looks as if he likes batting
just behind him. One could say exactly the
same for Wright following Bay and Davis following Wright.
Francoeur may be a little farther down than I
or he would like but he’s not a complainer. He’s
been as instrumental as anyone in their team
success, even when he
hasn’t been hitting. As for Barajas, he
either hits it into the seats or flies out, it seems, but at least he’s
doing
it from the 8-hole.
But it’s mostly been about pitching,
and who’s to say
Barajas and Blanco, who spells Barajas, haven’t been keys to the
pitching
success. I don’t see many shake-offs
and, more importantly, I don’t see many stupid calls.
Opposing runners respect both catchers’ arms
too, as Barajas reminded me just yesterday by throwing behind the
runner at
first to keep him closer to the bag.
As bad as things looked a couple of
weeks ago, that’s as
good as things seem now. Even Citi
Field, which seemed to just add to Mets woes then, now seems to embrace
those
frequent line drives hit by Bay, Wright and Francoeur.
And, as exciting as those dingers can be,
there’s nothing quite like a triple in the gap, especially with runners
on, and
Citi Field has nothing but gaps, and huge ones too.
Going to Philly just at this time,
though, wouldn’t be my
choice. Homers come easy in Philly, and
the Phils have just the guys to hit them. Howard,
Utley, Werth, Rollins, Ibanez, on and on,
the Phils just scare
the hell out of me. All those fly balls
a pitcher such as Maine induces at Citi Field become homers in that
bandbox
that is Citizens Bank Park.
But it’ll be Niese against Kyle
Kendrick in the opener
Friday night, which, all things considered, should be an edge for
Niese, who,
besides being a lefty, has good control and keeps the ball down in the
zone. Pelfrey goes next against
Halladay, and it would be impossible to wax poetic about that matchup. Santana will close it out though, and,
against anyone, I like Santana.
Those pitching matchups make the
opener of the Series a
pivotal one as far as winning another series is concerned.
I’m hoping Niese can go deep into the game
too, as I’m a little concerned about the number of innings some of
these
relievers have pitched. Especially with
Igarashi’s hamstring putting him out for the next couple of weeks, it
seems as
if Nieve, Feliciano and Takahachi could get more work than could be
considered
optimal.
Balance is now what the Mets exhibit
now though, and balance
is hard to beat in baseball over the long run. The
Mets are getting output from the entire lineup,
and both starters
and relievers are pitching well. That
combination will be hard to beat on any field, in any venue, and,
theoretically,
against any team, even the Phillies.
The only starter performing well for
the Phils is
Halladay. Hamels, Kendrick and Moyer
have been decidedly mediocre. Former Met
Nelson Figueroa, listed as their fifth starter, has a better ERA at
this point
than any of the other starters, excepting Halladay of course.
Their closer is Madsen while Lidge is
out, making them
thinner in relief overall. Rollins is
out, Juan Castro is in. All in all, the
Mets on paper are better than this Phillies team, at least right now.

Website
Hit Counter
