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Joba
Chamberlain looked like the Joba of
old....................................................But David Wright
was his recent self
Photo by Al Bello-
Getty
Photo by
Al Bello - Getty |
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I hate to pile on but nobody deserves
it more than John
Maine.
What can a guy expect when he walks
the world to open his last game and then
gets taken out when he
opens a game with another walk? Manuel
was absolutely right to take Maine out in that spot.
If John Maine had any sense of judgment at
all, his priority last night should have been to throw strikes,
especially to
that first batter of the game.
Manuel shouldn’t have to justify
taking Maine out with
allusions to the 85 mph speed of his fastball (for lack of a more
genteel
word), or express what might have been a legitimate concern for Maine’s
health.
Manuel’s team needed a win. They’d been swept in Florida and floundered in
Washington. Maine had been horrible in his
last start and
Manuel kept him in that game longer than he needed to, much to his
regret, I’m
sure. Manuel expected and needed
strikes. He didn’t get them.
He also got a pitcher acting as if he
were hurt, bent over,
looking defeated. So what’s a manager to
do?
Maine’s temper tantrum reflects his
sense of entitlement, a
curiously undeserved feeling for a guy who hasn’t been worth much for
quite a
while. Maine’s expectations far exceed
his talent. Why should his treatment
differ from that of Oliver Perez, who just got axed from the rotation? And he was removed partly for not finding the
plate.
Maine desperately needed a sense of
urgency last night. The most urgent need
was to throw a
strike. He didn’t. Case
closed.
That the Mets later won didn’t matter
to Maine. He continued to pout. All those Mets runs could’ve been his to work
with. Bummer! That
this guy has been a Met for so long
might partially explain what has been wrong with the team, lo these
many years.
Maine’s removal energized the whole
team. How often have the Mets had 3-run
innings,
and then a 5-run inning? It was as if
they said, “okay, everybody hits” and that was just what they did. Everybody hit, and the core guys, Wright and
Bay and Reyes, seemed to lead the charge.
The Mets also got a terrific pitching
performance from Raul
Valdes, who went a full five innings and struck out six Washington
batters
while spacing 7 hits and just one measly walk. He
came out after allowing his first base on balls. Are
you awake yet, Mr. Maine? There are other
pitchers out there. Some of them show the
intensity required to
pitch in the major leagues. Most of them
can throw strikes.
I’ve felt all along that the success
of the Mets season
would depend not on the success of Maine and Perez but on how quickly
the Mets
would respond and manage their situations and their failures. The Mets had been patient with both and even
coaxed a few decent performances from them. But
now, as it seems both have reverted to recent
form, the Mets need to
clear the decks.
It’s not as if there are no decent
alternatives. Takahashi has been great in
long relief. There’s no reason to think he
can’t be
effective as a starter. Knuckleballer
R.A. Dickey has already tossed in one nice start. He
might be just the change of pace the Mets
rotation needs to baffle opposing bats from day to day.
Igarashi will be returning to the fold soon
to bolster the pitching in general. And
just
who wouldn’t inspire more hope than John Maine?
Even the refusal of Perez to pitch at
Buffalo for a while
may turn to the Mets favor. Perez has
already appeared in a relief role, and, although he did walk a batter,
he did
get the one out the Mets needed.
So, without Maine, it’d be Santana,
Pelfrey, Niese
(hopefully soon), Takahashi and Dickey. Without
Niese, then some more resourcefulness is
needed. Rookie Mejia, who has been
effective in
relief, may ultimately be the nice answer. In
the short run, Pat Misch and last year’s bust
Parnell could be this
year’s boom. And, even if they can just
turn in mediocre performances in the bigs, they will have been better
than John
Maine.
After this terrible road trip, 2-6,
one has to wonder how
competitive this Mets team can be over the long haul.
Before the trip I thought it would be a good
measure of how competitive they could be in their division. But if that were true, the Mets will be in
bad shape this year.
The hitting has been so bad though
lately. It’s hard to believe the bats
can’t get a lot
better than they’ve been. If the bats
pick up and the pitching can hold together, the Mets can easily pick up. I know I’m looking forward to three days of
Takahashi, Pelfrey and Santana. It’s only after that that expectations descend
somewhat.
Can Dickey repeat a nice job? Who’ll it be after that? I
guess that’s why they play the game.
Merde! The
actual
Yankee-Mets game has intervened. Takahashi
was great. The
Mets
couldn’t hit the Yankees Javier Vasquez or Joba after that. They did manage to get a couple of hits from
Bay and Davis off Mariano but it was too little, too late and the Mets
lost
2-1.
But they looked damned good in every
other way, the
pitching, the fielding, the managing…..even given Cora’s big throwing
error and
the inauspicious debut of Elmer Dessens, that anybody but the
far-seeing Manuel
could have foreseen.
Vasquez got all the Mets out except
Alex Cora for one of
those mysterious reasons that only occur in baseball.
But he got all the “big” guys out.
Joba Chamberlain was like the old Joba,
except he looks 20 pounds heavier to me. Maybe
it’s just my imagination. When Girardi doesn’t
totally kill his
spirit, Joba rules.
So now it’s just Pelfrey and Santana
to face Hughes and Sabathia. And no Maine
appearance in sight for 15 days.

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