 |
|
| Jason
Bay's been the picture of frustration..............................
while the Rangers and Josh Hamilton are in the zone Photo by Andy Lyons-Getty
Photo
by Jed Jacobsohn - Getty |
|
It’s been a passing strange baseball
season so far and
strangest of all might be in Citi Field where starters surprise and big
hitters
utterly collapse at just the wrong moments. But
if you like baseball, you’re getting your
money’s worth from teams
like Texas and San Francisco.
One has to wonder if our totally
clueless cleanup hitter,
Jason Bay, will ever get his act together. In
fact, his at-bats are so horrible, one has to
wonder if he ever takes
batting practice. Although I
fully expected streakiness when the Mets
acquired him, I don’t think I fully appreciated how bad those plate
appearances
would look. And they feel worse than
they look, being that there are always men on base when he comes to the
plate.
The Mets could’ve swept the Reds if
Bay were only
mediocre. They’ve gotten good pitching,
the rest of the lineup has been doing
more than its share, and then Bay just totally kills them.
It’s very frustrating, to say the least. The only interesting thing about a Bay at-bat
is whether or not he’ll get the bat on the ball at all.
He misses most pitches by such a wide margin
that a foul tip becomes some wondrous event.
Jerry Manuel keeps talking about his
history. He’s right, of course, but that
doesn’t mean
he should keep that number four spot in the order when he hasn’t a
prayer of
doing anything even remotely good. I
mean….he’s been making Gary Matthews look good.
Maybe it’s the four spot that’s the
problem. Looking back at his Boston and
Pittsburgh
years, he batted mostly in the fifth spot. But
even then he had long streaks of futility to go
with long streaks of
wonderful productivity. We haven’t seen
one of those streaks yet. I wonder
if
we ever will.
I had hoped Omar would have gone after
Holliday in free
agency. The Mets preferred Bay,
supposedly based on his defense and speed. And
it’s true, he does play a nice left field, and
he does manage to not
get doubled up on many of his DP grounders. Most
of his paltry RBI total has
come from fly balls or weak grounders.
Maybe Bay needs glasses or contact
lenses. He’s late on just about everything. Okay, that’s enough. I
can’t even stand my own whining. If he
doesn’t ever hit….fine. That’ll at least
spell the end of Omar for
good. We’ll see less of the Matthews’s
and Tatis’s of the world year after year… all the retreads .
Meanwhile, this baseball season might
turn out pretty
special. The Rays look great in the AL
East and Evan Longoria looks like an MVP. Then
Texas is really starting to come on with Josh
Hamilton starting to
look like an MVP candidate. Seattle’s
got a lot of pitching but pitching hasn’t helped the White Sox much.
The NL East has been pretty amazing so
far with Washington
looking much better, Florida hanging in there and of course, our
Metsies and
their surprising pitching. The NL Central has the Cards up top, but it looks pretty
even below them. The Giants in the West
are making the Dodgers look bad.
Biggest story to me is that of the
Texas Rangers. It’s an exciting team, with
young
up-and-comers like Josh Hamilton and Ian Kinsler. Texas
has a good old fella too in Vlad
Guerrero, and there was nothing better than watching KC’s usually
lockdown
closer Joachim Soria get nicked for the tying home run from Hamilton
and the
game-winner from Vlad. Hamilton’s was a
real moonshot too, high in the upper deck in right.
Tampa Bay is great too, if just
because they’re scaring the
hell out of the Yankees, that self-proclaimed juggernaut of the
American League
East. The Yanks are great…. just ask
them.
But what are we talking about really? Arod is batting .253 with just a pair of
homers. Teixeira’s batting .178 with just
a pair of
dingers of his own. If it weren’t for
some surprises in their rotation, like Hughes and Pettite, added to the
two you
knew would be good, Sabathia and Burnett, the Yanks just might be in
trouble. Cano can’t carry them forever
and neither can Swisher, although I’d love to see it.
If anybody’s going to take them to the World
Series again, it should be one or both of those two.
Meanwhile, Tampa Bay’s got it all. Four of their five starters have ERA’s under
3 and the fifth is at 3.15. And in addition to guys you’ve certainly
heard of,
Upton and Crawford, Longoria and Pena, the Rays can boast of their
relatively
new rightfielder, Ben Zobrist, who gives them a little bit of
everything,
including speed and defense.
But, like many baseball fans, there
has been no more
exciting team than the San Francisco Giants, another team getting good
performances
from just about everybody. Top of the
list goes to Tim Lincecum, of course, but they’ve also got Matt Cain,
Barry
Zito and Jonathan Sanchez performing like aces. Relief? How about Brian
Wilson,
whose fastball is almost as amazing as his hairdo.
They’ve been getting some timely
hitting too, although their
lineup can’t compare with some of those other teams I’ve mentioned. Chief among their batsmen is the redoubtable
Pablo Sandoval, a roly-poly type whose fielding at third belies his
waistline. He’s
like Prince Fielder with more athleticism.
The bad news is that those same Giants
are coming to Citi Field
this weekend to faceoff against our lovable Metsies.
They’ll roll out Jonathan Sanchez tonight
against Pelfrey, a matchup that could be a great one.
Then on Saturday afternoon, the Mets get a
break in a matchup of Santana vs. Todd Wellemeyer, their one starter
who doesn’t
have great numbers.
The hammer comes down on Sunday though
as Lincecum will face
Ollie Perez and things could get really ugly. It’s
to be hoped that Jason Bay wakes up. Stranger
things have already been happening
in Major League Baseball.

Website
Hit Counter
