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Reyes - bad all-around game
Photo
by Seth Wenig-AP
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Beltran - tried an impossible catch
Photo
by Kathy Willens - AP |
How
important is it really? With Willie, without Willie, it's just a
game. This fact was driven home to me this morning as I read
about a
service held for the Bayonne,
NJ war dead,
including the
brother of a friend of mine from high school. It's easy to forget
sometimes, even on Memorial Day.
Things
would probably be a lot better at Shea, though, if the Mets would just
play the
game like a game. Yesterday, I watched helplessly as Reyes booted
a hard
bouncer and Beltran made an ill-conceived dive at a soft liner to
centerfield. Result – a few more unearned runs for the Marlins.
If
things were allowed to settle down somewhat, if the Mets had made a
managerial
change last night, the pressure would have been relieved and maybe
Reyes makes
that stop; maybe Beltran takes that liner on a hop, thus minimizing the
damage.
However,
the big news last night was that Willie Randolph would keep his job as
manager. Although I think it's probably a mistake, if just for
the
distraction it's causing this team, I've made a conscious decision not
to live
and die with the Mets anymore, at least not for the foreseeable
future.
If the Wilpons don't care what their fans think, why should I care
about them,
or their team?
Keeping
Willie at this point really makes no sense though. The Florida
Marlins
are leading the NL East with a 30-20 record, which puts them on a pace
to go
97-65 for the season. The Mets, currently at 23-26, would have to
go
74-39 for the rest of the season in order to tie the Marlins That
means
they'll have to win 2 out of 3 games for the rest of the season in
order to
take the division. Very unlikely.
Their
wildcard chances aren't that much better. The Cubs and Cards are
now at
30-21 and 30-22 respectively. The Diamondbacks are also
30-21. So
it still comes down to winning two out of every three for the rest of
the
season. For a team that can't even achieve a .500 record past the
season's quarter point, I'm afraid that's almost impossible.
It
wouldn't necessarily have been inconceivable if they had changed the
team
chemistry somewhat. But they missed their chance now. The
Wilpons,
secure in their new stadium deal and having Willie under contract for
another
year, decided just to let the season go. Why send good money
after bad?
The
Wilpons must've missed all the bad fielding, the horrible base-running,
the
players playing tight as bowstrings. Or they've already decided
the real
fault has been in the player selection, and that Omar will eventually
be
replaced anyway. And, although they might be correct in that
assessment,
I think it was premature. A managerial change would have given this
team a
chance.
After
all, a not too different team came very close in 2006 to winning it all. It had the same ingredients really, Wright,
Reyes, Beltran, Delgado. Of course,
LoDuca was the catcher and Valentin was the second baseman, and Shawn
Green
manned one of the outfield positions, and the pitching was different.
Willie
was the manager, of course, and well, I guess it really doesn’t take
that much
tweaking to screw things up.
The
tweaks haven’t worked. That’s for
sure. Castillo has been bad to
disastrous. Delgado’s a couple of years
older, but then so are Reyes and Wright, which, in their cases, should
have
been a very good thing.
The
lineup was a little different but not much. Beltran
used to bat third with Delgado at cleanup
and Wright batting
fifth. Wright’s ascendancy and Delgado’s
slide dictated a change, but that shouldn’t have made all that much
difference
either.
Interestingly
enough, though, Tom Glavine was 15-7 in 2006. Steve
Trachsel was 15-8. Those
were the two big guns and they’re not here anymore.
El Duque was 9-7, Pedro Martinez was 9-8 and
John Maine was just 6-5. Oliver Perez
had just come over from the Pirates and finished 1-3.
Although Brian Bannister never got much of a
chance, he’s a nice pitcher now for Kansas City. And
then
there was Victor Zambrano, who was traded for potential ace Scott
Kazmir.
It’s
obvious that this team could have really used Pedro and El Duque this
year,
from the start. Maine hasn’t lived up to his
potential. And,
gee whiz, imagine if we had Bannister and Kazmir. Then
it would have been Santana, Kazmir,
Bannister, Maine
and Perez, even without mentioning Pedro or El Duque.
It
should also be noted that Moises Alou had nothing to do with 2006. And, in retrospect, he has had almost nothing
to do with 2008 either. There were some
other perhaps minor ingredients to that 2006 team that the 2008 version
may be
missing, players such as Cliff Floyd and Julio Franco.
And Kaz Matsui won a pennant with the Rockies after the Mets let him go.
So,
except for Johan Santana, a lot of the moves have been pretty bad, to
say the
least. Probably the biggest difference
to team chemistry has been the Valentin injury and the hobbled Castillo
as a
replacement. Valentin, playing in just about 2/3 of a year, with 387 at
bats,
had 62 rbi’s and 56 runs scored. Castillo
thus far has just 13 rbi’s and 22 runs
scored, and he has been
a liability in the field.
They
say a team has to be strong up the middle, and the Mets have Castillo
at the
keystone and Reyes playing erratically. They say pitching and defense
wins
pennants and World Series and the Mets have only three starters
pitching
creditably, Santana,
Maine and
Perez. The bullpen has been very
bad at times, with Heilman the biggest disappointment.
The pitching is ranked 14th
overall, the defense is ranked just 18th overall.
Championship
performance? Certainly not.
Championship talent? Probably
not. We may never know.
And
the players
still don’t know if they have a manager for the season.
