This’ll be one of
those rambling, all-over-the-place pieces about nothing, a real George
Costanza-type nothing piece, if not for content, then for structure, as
I really have a lot of impressions, mostly good ones, of baseball and
the Mets, and Joba’s fine effort, and in pro basketball, that crazy
last-second shot by the Big Baby. Even local pro football seems to be
looking good, what with Hakeem Nicks and Mark Sanchez and the
proverbial host of others.
Of course, that’s usually when everything starts going to hell, just
when you think thing’s are looking good, the classical overemphasis on
recent form rather than the hard facts of the overall past record. And
the things I’m happy about now could turn in a day. In fact they
probably will.
So let’s examine that thought for a moment. The Mets have won seven in
a row, mostly with good starting pitching, something everybody in
Mets-land was really worried about just two short weeks ago. So, the
question then becomes “will the starters continue to perform well?”
Johan Santana, that ace of aces, might be the least likely to continue
his incredibly good string this year. He’s given up 6 runs in 39 2/3
innings. The most runs he’s surrendered in one single game is 2. He
lost that one and struck out 13. Otherwise, he’s been lights-out all
the time and he’s just 4-1 overall with a 0.91 ERA.
But it’s just the law of averages that rears its ugly head. Santana did
win 7 in a row last year, though, even with all those saves lost by the
relief corps. So who knows? His current performance isn’t really that
removed from what he’s done his entire career.
John Maine started this whole thing on May 4th against the Braves at
Atlanta, giving up 3 runs in 6 innings. Then he pitched an even better
one vs. Pittsburgh on May 9th, allowing just 1 run. Maine has won 3
starts in a row but he’s not averse to winning streaks, having won 4 in
a row early last year and an amazing 7 in a row to open up 2007. So Mr.
Maine could conceivably just keep going strong.
The other starter to win two during the streak is good ol’ Livan
Hernandez. He beat Atlanta on the 5th of May and Pittsburgh yesterday,
surrendering 3 totals runs in 12 1/3 innings overall. The other
starters, Pelfrey and Niese, won just one during the streak but Pelfrey
did impressively win against the World Champion Phillies while Niese’s
win came against the lowly Pirates. (Sorry, Pittsburgh fans).
Nay-sayers will point to the quality of the opposition and the fact
that the relief hasn’t really been that good over the same period. My
quick analysis shows they gave up 8 runs in 18 2/3 innings. That’s not
terrible, I guess, but it’s not that good either.
In another sense though, it’s great, as the victims of the scoring have
been the more experienced pitchers, Putz and K-Rod, Feliciano and
Green. The rookie Parnell gave us 4 scoreless innings while the very
old rookie, Takahashi, gave us 3 scoreless.
Once again, nay-sayers will point to the fact that the above stats mean
the “ace” relievers gave up the 8 runs in about 12 innings, an ERA of
about 6. But I’m not into nay-saying today, and none of them lost the
game, which is what this is all about after all.
The schedule is interesting as our heroes have to face the Braves again
for three so soon after having had success against them in Atlanta. So
the Braves will be looking for payback. Then it’s off to San Francisco
for four and Los Angeles for 3, a key road trip against two teams with
really good pitching and one that has batters to match.
And, if the Mets batters haven’t been discouraged after that trip, they
then continue on to Boston for three. As it would be futile to
determine the Boston starters that far in advance, let’s just say that
the Red Sox have the best pitching in both leagues.
So it’s imperative that the Mets beat the teams they’re supposed to
beat, the Braves and the Giants, so they can be as upbeat as possible
against the cream, the Dodgers and the Red Sox. Of course, that’s why
they play the games and it should be a lot of good baseball.
Joba’s given up 7 runs in the first innings of his last two games and
Yankee fans will have to hope it’s an aberration. Time will tell but I
think it’s the latter, his record doesn’t really indicate any big
troubles in his first inning of work.
Obviously, if he could come in as a reliever and blow everybody away,
every relief appearance basically a first inning stint, he’s quite
capable of pitching well in the first inning of a start. He just needs
to make himself feel the heat. A good pitching coach might point out
the significance of getting off to a good start.
In other baseball news, Evan Longoria has 44 rbi’s already, an insane
number in 32 games, basically a fifth of a season, and that projects
out to five times 44 or 220 ribbies for the season. As the Scooter
would’ve commented, “Holy Cow.”
Pro basketball continues to leave me cold. Despite the wondrous
Bulls-Celtics series and the Celts’ continuing intrigue against a very
tough Orlando, I find the games impossible to watch. The commercials
kill the game, no continuity whatsoever is allowed for the game itself.
It’s just a platform for commercials.
It would help if I thought the games were on the level. But I’m just
convinced these playoffs are just foreplay for the big Lebron-Kobe
matchup. Fouls continue to be called totally arbitrarily, and in at
least one instance, the absence of an obvious call cost the Mavericks
what could have been a big, big game.
The NBA admitted the error. Thanks, really!
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