|
|
Ryan Church
- exceeding expectations
Photo
by Jeff Zelevansky - Getty
|
Carlos Beltran - not there yet
Photo
by Jeff Zelevansky -
Getty |
The
Mets are full of surprises this year. Biggest surprise of them
all though
has been the consistent play of right fielder Ryan Church. In 28
games
he's played, he's had at least one hit in 22 of them. He's
batting .310
with 4 home runs and 22 rbi's this season. When he's not killing
the
competition with his bat, he's using his glove or his arm, as he
demonstrated
just this past Sunday against the Diamondbacks, cutting down a runner
trying to
take third base.
Just
for a bit of perspective, Church has a career batting average of .275
and,
before this season, he had a distinct problem hitting left-handed
pitching. Not this year. He's actually batting better vs.
lefties
than against righties. This is his fifth year in the majors and
he's
never even played a full season.
Last
year, though, he played in 144 games for Washington and hit .272 with 15
homers and
70 rbi's. His OPS (On-base pct. plus slugging pct.) last year was
.813
and, as his current OPS of .856 isn't really that much higher, I think
we can
continue to expect good things from Mr. Church. And, who knows,
maybe
another change of his place in the batting order. He started the
season
batting sixth, but his remarkable consistency and apparent bat control
has made
him a natural for the number two position in the lineup. Even
Willie has
noticed.
It's
a good thing for some pleasant surprises, especially with these Mets,
who have
had more than their share of unpleasant ones. Until just
recently, Carlos
Delgado had continued to disappoint (from last year) but Luis Castillo
hadn't
been too far behind in the anguish department. Carlos Beltran,
while he
does still play a great centerfield, hasn't been quite himself yet,
batting
.221 with 24 runs scored but just 13 ribbies and his record with
runners in
scoring position has been worse. Perhaps Carlos needs to relax.
Baseball
is a streaky game and the Mets certainly follow that pattern, maybe too
much. Reyes has demonstrated his affinity for going to sleep, at
the bat
and in the field as well. Moises Alou's only consistency has been
his
appearance on the disabled list. Much the same could be said for Brian
Schneider. Angel Pagan had started very hot but has now cooled
considerably.
Then
there is David Wright, .469 and .198, those are this year's numbers
versus
lefties and righties. Would that there were more left-handers
because his
overall batting average is just .274. Mr. Wright has always been
a little
strange at the plate though. Every at-bat seems to go to two
strikes
immediately, yet there's no one you'd rather have at the plate with two
strikes
than Mr. Wright.
Then
there is the pitching. Johan Santana has
been amazing as usual yet continues his predilection for giving up home
runs. Oliver Perez has been less than
amazing and
continues his penchant for making the big mistakes. John
Maine has been pretty consistent, but
each of his games seems like an adventure. Nelson
Figueroa has been another shining
light, not so much for his overall stats but for his relative
consistency. Pelfrey has been Pelfrey, and
his 2-2 record
has been achieved via a 5.27 ERA.
I
don’t even want to think about Pedro Martinez, the pain of his going
down so
quickly is still with me, and I can’t say I’m happy that he recuperates
somewhere in Latin America. Oh, and then
there is El Duque. Right.
Strangely
enough, I continue to have faith in the bullpen. Billie
Wagner, Duaner Sanchez, even Aaron
Heilman, I think, over the long run, they’ll be good, especially if
Aaron
becomes a long relief guy rather than that setup guy for Wagner. To me, the winner of that spot has clearly
been Sanchez, who is just tougher in that situation, has better stuff
and maybe
more command of the zone.
The
others aren’t bad either. Feliciano,
Smith, Schoenweis, and even Sosa, who has had his share of bad luck,
all have
had their moments this season, and I mean that mostly in a good way. Sosa, for example, leads the team in wins
with 4.
The
Mets have been consistent though only in their overall mediocrity. Currently at 16-14, they are only third in the
NL East, behind the Phils, of course, and the surprising Marlins. They lose 4 out of 5, then win eight in a
row, then another streak of three losses. Now
they seem to win one, lose one, which, I
must say, doesn’t make me feel any better but does prevent overall
despondency
to invade my spirit.
I
keep thinking things can only get better. Catching,
for example, has been a merry-go-round,
what with Schneider’s
mysterious hand infection and Castro’s hamstring. I
have to admit taking a liking for Raul
Casanova, who seems to do the job behind the plate and in the batter’s
box as
well. His .262 BA isn’t really too
shabby and he can hit for power, although he’s hit just one home run
thus far.
Tonight
we have Nelson Figueroa going again and I’m hopeful, both for Figgy and
the
whole team as well. I do see some good
signs. I wonder who’ll bat second. I hope Mr. Castillo rides the pine. I look forward to seeing Delgado continuing to
hit, for Wright to find his way against right-handers, for Beltran to
have some
luck at the plate, something he never seems to possess in abundance.
Perhaps
the thing I most anticipate is having the “regular” lineup in place. Schneider is back so it’ll be Reyes, Church,
Wright,
Beltran, Alou, Delgado, Schneider, Castillo and the pitcher. That, at least, was the lineup last night,
and, although they only scored one run with it, I’d like to think it
was the
Dodgers’ pitching that shut them down.
And
I’ll root for Church. As Kipling said, “If
you can keep your head when all about you are losing theirs”….
