|
|
Carlos Delgado - streaking but bad luck
Photo
by Al Bello-Getty
|
Carlos Beltran - just streaking
Photo
by Chris McGrath - Getty |
After
having managed two wins rather handily against an erstwhile
perennial-playoffs
Yankees team, Willie Randolph will take his beginning-to-be-performing
Mets
team into Atlanta
this afternoon, no doubt hoping for a continuation of some hot hitting
from his
two Carlos's, Delgado and Beltran.
When
these two buddies from Puerto Rico
are
hitting, there isn't too much else that has to go right, or Wright
even.
In fact, the Mets fortunes closely reflect those of its two big men,
for better
and worse. And, if motivation, borne of a remarkably uneven past,
can
inspire a better performance, these two should shine from now until
October.
Any
Mets fan over the age of ten can still vividly recall the October of
two season
ago, Carlos Beltran at the plate, watching strike three bend
right-to-left over
the plate, thus ending their 2006 season. But those fans with a
longer
memory may also recall Beltran's eight home runs in the 2004 playoffs.
On
October 15, 2006, NY Times writer Lee Jenkins opined that "The
Mets....evened
the NLCS at two games apiece because Delgado made it so. Every
ball he
hits seems to be worth chasing." Upon checking how Delgado did in
Game 7 of that series, I see the Cards walked him three times.
That
Wright, following Delgado in the lineup, only went 1-4 that day is
probably
better forgotten.
But
the stories of these two goes well beyond 2006, tales of woe
mostly. For
example, Delgado began his career with the Toronto Blue Jays, who won
the World
Series in both 1992 and 1993 but in that 1993 season, Delgado only
played two
games. Talk about bad luck, the 1994 World Series was cancelled
entirely.
Delgado
didn't become a regular for Toronto
until 1996 and from 1997 to 2006, Carlos had ten consecutive seasons of
30 or
more home runs, and in the year 2000, he hit an incredible .344 with 41
home
runs while garnering enough MVP votes to finish fourth to a fellow
named
Giambi. But Toronto
wasn't in contention during those years.
In 2005, Delgado got his big break,
finally hot on the trail
of a Championship with the Florida Marlins, who won it all in 2003 over
the
Yankees. But the Marlins finished only
83-79 in 2005 despite Carlos’s .301 BA and 33 home runs.
<>The year 2006 was the Marlins
fire-sale year, or one of them
anyway, and the Mets acquired Carlos’s huge contract from the Fish and
got 7
million back in the bargain.
But, as
good as Delgado was in the 2006 NLCS, Heilman served up that costly
two-run
homer and Wainwright curled in that third strike to Beltran and, poof,
another year was wasted.
>
Beltran shares a similar baseball
heritage, aside from any
ties to Puerto Rico.
Beltran started out with the Kansas City
Royals and had consecutive 100-rbi years from 2001-2003.
Kansas City,
of course, never sniffed anything close to a
pennant in those years.
<>
In 2004,
however, Beltran
got his big break, getting traded to the Houston Astros, but wound up
losing a
tense NLCS to the Cards.
He was awesome
in that year though, banging out 15 homers and 51 ribbies for the
Royals and 23
dingers and another 53 ribbies for the Astros.
>
Beltran was also the star of that
year’s playoffs, of
course, with his 8 playoff dingers. The
Mets moved in with a truckload of money and Carlos became a Met. Carlos had a horrible (for him) 2005 Mets
inaugural though, with high expectations doing him in.
Carlos the Younger hit only 16 HR’s and 78
ribbies.
<>All of which, of course, brings us to
the heart-breaker of
2006.
And then the meltdown of
2007.
Mets fans can’t really say which
year hurts more, most would say 2007, but some of those may have missed
that
2006 called strike three.
>
In any event, Beltran wore the horns
in 2006 and Delgado
certainly at least shared a pair with his sorry 2007 of .258 with just
24 home
runs. Carlos the Elder had a lot of
company, of course, and analysts are still debating who’s more to blame
for
2007.
<>When there are so many candidates for
the horns, it’s only
natural to point towards the manager, of course.
And
Mets fans did.
And they have continued
their pointing into
2008.
And who can really blame them?
>
As this is written, the Mets continue
their foibles against
the Braves, making Tom Glavine the reincarnation of, well, Tom Glavine. They’re down 3-1 in the fifth and John Maine
is now out of the game.
<>Both Carlos’s have already had their
share of bad luck in
this game, and, one wonders, is this their fate, to be remarkably
talented but
unfulfilled millionaires?
There have
certainly been sadder tales in the history of the major leagues.
Don Mattingly, Ernie Banks, and a host of
others never won the big one.
>
Despite what my head keeps telling me,
my heart is really
with these two. They are, by all
accounts, remarkably nice people, but people prone to long streaks of
good and
bad, driving their fans and their manager to distraction, at least, and
in the
manager’s case, perhaps to another city.
<>Another common thing about these two,
though, is that there
is a
LOT of history there.
Can two old war-horses such as these really
muster up the enthusiasm and effort required to produce in each and
every
game?
Having just watched Beltran bounce
out weakly to shortstop on a ball about a foot off the plate, I have to
wonder,
not that he hasn’t done that a thousand times before.
>
Much as Jason Kidd played a
magnificent fourth quarter and
just survived the first three, so do Carlos and Carlos plod through the
season
and turn it on for the Yankees, or to keep Willie in the dugout for the
rest of
the season.
This Braves game seems to accentuate
the point. Aaah, it’s a double-header,
maybe they’re saving
it for Game Two.
