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The kindest thing to say is that
it just wasn’t meant to
be. The Mets only had a puncher’s chance
anyway. To take 2 of 3 from the Yankees
would have been highly unlikely under the best of circumstances. And as just about every circumstance went
against the Mets in Game 3, the result somehow became more palatable.
Taking the first game of the
Series from the Yanks took all
the pressure off the Mets, immediately ensuring that they wouldn’t be
swept. So when Game 2 was lost, it wasn’t
really very painful. It wasn’t that hard
to figure that Chris Capuano, always vulnerable to the long ball, would
be
victimized somewhat while AJ Burnett would roll.
I’d say Game 3 was a typical
Mike Pelfrey loss if it weren’t
for the fact that he did so well for so long, pitching lights out for 6
innings. Usually he falls apart much
sooner than the 7th inning. All
he really did wrong in that 7th
was give up a single and
a walk. And, oh yeah, he hit Cervelli
with a pitch to load the bases. By then, every Mets fan knew it was curtains
for Mikey. The more cogent ones though
knew he was done after he walked Dickerson.
Unfortunately, manager Terry
Collins isn’t as smart as most
Mets fans. He let Pelfrey pitch to Jeter,
who promptly singled in two runs. Only
then did Collins call for a reliever, after Jeter’s single tied the
score at
3-3. Collins likes to give his players
an opportunity to show their character. Pelfrey
showed his when he nailed Cervelli. He’s
really not that good with adversity.
It was interesting for a very
short while thereafter. When Girardi sent
the Yanks leader in home
runs up to bunt the runners over to second and third, I figured the
Yanks
wasted an out and, if the Mets could walk Teixeira and get a ground
ball from
Arod, all would be right with the world. Reliever
Beato had always been tough with
runners in scoring position.
The ironic thing was that Beato
did get his ground ball from
Arod. But it was too soft, unplayably
soft, and the winning run came trotting home. Even
then, things might have been salvageable
if Beato could have eked
out a ground ball from Cano. But he
couldn’t. Cano rifled a single to center
and two more runs came scurrying home. Only
then was it time to switch to the French
Open.
What happened after all the
above isn’t really
important. Things got worse. Willie Harris booted a chance at third base
but by then everybody had lost interest. Mets
fans were left to wonder what could have
been if Collins hadn’t
been such an optimist with respect to Pelfrey.
But sometimes things just catch
up to you. How long could the Mets keep
going as if
losing David Wright and Ike Davis didn’t really mean that much? How long could Justin Turner, the Mets RBI
machine for the past week, keep practicing his magic?
How long could the relief staff keep throwing
up zeroes?
Our local heroes have a day off
before traveling out to
Chicago for three against the Cubbies before hosting the Phillies and
then Pittsburgh. One hopes they just
forget all about
yesterday’s foibles. Instead, they could
think about all the good things they have, because they can still win a
lot of
games with Justin Turner and Pridie and yes, even Willie Harris.
They just have to keep pitching
well. There does seem to be enough talent
there. By some miracle, R.A. Dickey’s
knuckler has returned and the other starters, Gee and Niese and Capuano
have
been good enough so far to keep them in games. And
the hitting isn’t really as bad as all the
local media would have
you believe, even without Davis and Wright.
You shouldn’t judge the Mets
hitting off a series with the
Yankees. Those relievers in the Bronx
were and are pretty darned good. While
the Cubbies have a couple of good ones in Marmol and Marshall, if the
Mets can
take and hold a lead against their starters, they may not have to face
the
really tough ones.
If this all sounds a little too
optimistic, it shouldn’t. While these
upstarts from Buffalo don’t have
any reputations, they do seem to play defense and do all the other
things
needed to win. They’re not the Yankees
but then even the Yankees aren’t really knockin’ ‘em dead.
The Yankees lineup just doesn’t
seem that intimidating
anymore. Arod seems to be coming on and
Granderson hits the more than occasional dinger but otherwise they’ve
been
pretty mundane. Besides, the lineup is
crazy. Having Granderson in the two spot
is ridiculous. Although he did lay down
a nice bunt yesterday and he does have speed, he’s really not making
enough
contact to be a two.
Teixeira’ not a three, Jeter’s
not a one, and just about no
Yankees seem to really fit in the lineup spot they find themselves in. Gardner should be the leadoff hitter with his
speed and ability to take pitches. If
anybody’s a three, it’s Arod and well, it’s not really my business but
they are
looking old to me, especially Posada but Jeter’s looking a little too
creaky to
me at shortstop. His error in taking a
beautiful throw from Cervelli yesterday looked suspiciously to me like
an old
guy trying to do things only a younger guy could pull off.
And Cano looks as if his mind’s
on something else more often
than not. He’s not so far the wunderkind
he was last year, especially in the field. Even
at the plate more often than not, it
looks as if he’s just not that
into it.
The Mets never look complacent. The
Mets are all trying their brains out. And
as Beltran and Reyes are in their
contract years, they’re playing for their very livelihoods. It’s a peculiar mix that just might work.
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