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Mike
Pelfrey was a stopper last night for the Mets..............but Jerry
Manuel may be a victim of invention Photo by Jim McIsaac-
Getty
File Photo by Jim McIsaac - Getty |
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I’m so glad I waited until after last
night’s Atlanta game
before making any idiotic commentary on the state of the Mets. I had been so disheartened after watching
them lose four in a row. A wild pitch, a ridiculous Perez start,
a Maine walking marathon, and
then still
another loss after a promising starter, Jonathon Niese, hurt himself. Things were looking decidedly down for our
intrepid heroes.
But then
there was
Monday night, a new day and a new pitcher, one Mike Pelfrey, who
couldn’t take
his turn last time out for a shoulder twinge, or something equally
ominous-sounding. But the big guy was
back for last night’s game and the whole team played better. Especially nice was seeing some slick
fielding to accompany some timely hitting by Barajas and some
opportunistic
base-running from Jose Reyes, once again a leadoff man.
The lineup issues may continue, it’s
anybody’s guess, but
this lineup had newbie Carter hitting in the cleanup spot and he was
pretty
damned impressive (1-2, run, rbi). Bay
moved to the 3-hole and of course, the worst hitter in the free world,
Gary
Matthews, batted eighth after Barajas, who continued his torrid and
timely
hitting by driving in two with a hard double in the left center gap.
But the Mets finally finished on top,
and Pelfrey was the
biggest reason for it.
But the great game followed an
organizational meeting
attended by none other than owner Jeff Wilpon and GM Omar Minaya. So things were tense before the game and will
probably continue that way for quite some time. It’s
quite amusing to me that that brain-trust came
up with a lineup
that put a rookie in the cleanup spot and removed Angel Pagan from the
lineup
altogether.
But I love it. First
they
bring up Ike Davis, who outperformed Mike Jacobs and Fernando Tatis by
a long
shot. Now they strike gold again with
Chris Carter, who supposedly can’t play right field but can hit that
ball a
good lick. So the brain-trust came up
roses.
That a 35-year-old knuckleballer is
going to start Wednesday
is also pretty interesting. It says to
me that they’re getting really imaginative, thinking out of the box,
something
this organization needs. The same old
thinking, fielding an experienced lineup of journeymen retreads,
clearly wasn’t
working. The last of those might be Matthews, who must have something
on
somebody to stay on the roster at all.
It’s easy to have mixed feelings right
now. You’re happy to not only beat Atlanta
in the
opener, but to do it the way they did, by playing good baseball all
around. At the same time though, you
worry about Wednesday and hope Santana can win later today.
You worry about Wednesday because
it’ll still be one more
starter coming up from the minors, and this time a really veteran
knuckler.
R.A. Dickey. And truthfully, you worry
going
forward to Thursday when John Maine takes the mound again after his 13
straight
balls in his last putrid start fresh in your mind and nasal cavities.
Then it’ll be Hisanori Takahashi going
on Friday against the
Yankees. Holy cow! as Phil would have
exclaimed. Takahashi replaces Ollie Perez
in the
rotation, of course, and Perez will take his place as a long reliever. You can’t say it’s not interesting.
And can they be shopping Pagan? Is that why he wasn’t in the lineup? Pagan is a very serviceable commodity in
their outfield, and with Beltran coming back and Fernando Martinez
still
another significant minor league presence, it would make sense to trade
for a
pitcher, and I’m sure Pagan may even get one.
The Mets are certainly showing some
resourcefulness
lately. Plato wasn’t a Mets fan but he
did call it when he talked about necessity being the mother of
invention. The Mets have been really needy
lately too.
Even the Yankees are showing some
neediness lately
though. They got a walkoff dinger from
Marcus Thames last night off Boston’s Papelbon,
and that came exactly one night
after pulling Joba for loading the bases and inserting a none too
healthy
Mariano Rivera for a 5-out save, a move that really puzzled me at the
time,
another one of those inexplicable Girardi brain farts.
I’m just happy Girardi’s in the Bronx. The Mets have enough problems.
But it’s hard for Girardi to fall on his butt
what with Gardner spelling Granderson with flash and even power and a
guy like
Thames on the bench. We have Tatis and
Matthews.
The Mets future depends a lot on
whether Maine can show some
toughness for once and come back strong in his next start, and,
hopefully for a
few starts after that. To have to drop
one of your starters from the rotation (Perez) is bad enough; to have
to drop
two would be disastrous, especially if Niese’s hamstring injury, which
appears
relatively minor as this is written, winds up being serious.
If Maine should continue to falter,
and if Niese can’t
return, the Mets almost have to make a deal for a pitcher.
I can imagine any number of inventive deals
down the line, involving just about any serviceable, and thus
trade-able,
player, either Pagan or possibly even a Carlos Beltran, certainly a
more than
serviceable commodity, one who has been and probably will be, an
enormous
distraction.
If things get really crazy, and if the
Mets can’t turn it
around, I suppose there will be nothing sacrosanct about the manager’s
position. I’ve always got a big kick out
of Jerry Manuel, but I have to wonder whether some of the problems,
especially
the weak performances from Wright, Reyes and Bay, aren’t due, at least
in part,
to Manuel’s own inventiveness, some of which may not have been out of
necessity.
The inventiveness could even extend
all the way to Omar Minaya,
who has to take the hit for Ollie Perez, his most conspicuous error but
certainly not the only one.
Last place tends to accentuate all the
necessities.

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