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Claudio Vargas - just great
Photo
by Kathy Willens-AP
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Darrell Rasner - a compound effect
Photo
by Greg Flume-Getty |
There I was last night knowing what to
expect; "here it
comes," I thought to myself, Feliciano can’t do his job, and now Willie
calls
in, not Joe Smith or Duaner Sanchez, but instead a fellow named Muniz,
another Carlos
yet. I picture the Mets dugout, and Willie says, “hey Carlos” and 23
guys turn
around.
The Mets are done, I think, and groan
a little because
Carlos Delgado had just made a hell of a play. I
start thinking about what else might be on the
tube, the NBA farce of
a playoffs (Celts-Lakers has been pre-ordained for some time now),
maybe the
French Open (but no Tennis Channel) or the College World Series, or
maybe I can
catch another re-run of “Monk”.
But because I’m a masochist, I leave
the Mets game on. “What
the hell,” I say, “ I don’t care about these guys anymore anyway.” After all, Willie’s still the manager, Omar’s
still the GM, and now I’ll get to watch still another Carlos blow this
game for
nice Mr. Vargas.
But, lo and behold, Muniz strikes out
the dangerous Kemp, swinging
yet, on a beautiful hard inside fastball, up at the shoulders. "Whoa!. That was nice,” I exclaim. Not only does he save Vargas, but Feliciano
and the whole Mets team with one great pitch.
Of course, the Mets went on to win,
ruining Joe Torre’s
debut as the Dodgers’ manager in New York. Joe
had
to watch last night, as his usually reliable catcher, Russ Martin, got
his mitt
caught up in the opposing pitcher’s bat, keeping an inning alive for
the top of
the order.
And that top of the order did some
real damage too; Reyes
singles, Castillo doubles, scoring Vargas, and Wright nails a second
homer,
turning an otherwise innocuous inning into a four-run nightmare. Not just for the runs, which were bad enough,
but his outfielder, Juan Pierre, threw the ball away, and his pitcher,
Brad
Penny, failed to back up third base on the play.
In fact, the best TV shot of the night
had to be the one of
Torre in the dugout, seeking some explanation from Penny (“Penny for
your
thoughts,” I thought) and grimacing as Penny gave some wild excuse for
not
doing his job.
But the Dodgers are a dangerous team
and they proved it last
night by coming back in that potential nightmare of a sixth inning. Kent and DeWitt had homered in the top of the
fifth to cut the lead from six to three runs, and here they were coming
again
in the sixth.
Ehier had doubled and Martin had
walked with just one out,
and up to the plate stepped Jeff Kent once again. And,
sure enough, Kent
smacked a hard line drive to
the right side, but, wonder of wonders, Carlos Delgado snared that ball
and
damn near doubled Martin off first base. But
Carlos’s dive came up short as Martin squirmed
out of the tag.
But the Dodgers weren’t done yet. Willie made the right move, or one that
should have worked anyway, bringing in the left-handed Feliciano to
face the
left-handed Loney. But when Loney hit a
hard single, it set up the confrontation of the night.
Matt Kemp had been the most dangerous
hitter in that potent
Dodgers lineup, batting well over .300 with 28 rbi’s.
And, while I was expecting and hoping to see
Smith or Sanchez on the Mets side of that confrontation, Muniz put out
the fire,
thus ruining a perfectly wonderful opportunity to second-guess Willie
once
again.
But, I must admit, it was nice to see
a Willie move work out
(for once?) and it was even better to watch him joking with the press
after the
game. Things don’t look so dark anymore
for these Mets, and Willie. It’s amazing
what a few wins can do.
But the story of the game, for me, was
not only the
performance of Carlos Muniz, but also that of the starting pitcher,
Claudio
Vargas. He has been remarkably
consistent over his four game starts, allowing no more than four runs
in each
of them. He now sports a very creditable 4.50 ERA.
The Mets have been strangely fortunate
in their call-ups
lately, and, since being swept by the Braves, losing two of three to
the Rockies and losing the first
versus the Marlins, there
have been several unsung heroes emerging, either from the minors or the
bench. Muniz and Vargas last night, Endy
Chavez and the long-lost Fernando Tatis the night before, and Tatis and
Ramon
Castro the night before that.
And their performances had been sorely
needed, with Delgado
needing a rest, Ryan Church nursing a concussion and Moises Alou out
once
again. The unlooked-for bench play seems
to have lifted the rest of the lineup out of their doldrums, Wright
with his
two dingers, Beltran with his hitting and fine play in the field,
Castillo
looking born-again at the bat and whose diving stop of a hard ground
ball to
his right the other day was one of the finest plays I’ve seen by any
second
baseman this year.
<>The long and grinding baseball season only underscores
the
importance of, not just the bench, but the entire organization.
Examples are everywhere, and not least in the
Bronx.
The Yanks
recently found a fellow named Darrell
Rasner in their
organization who has become their fourth starter, sporting a 3-1
record, an
incredible 1.80 ERA and a WHIP (walks and hits per inning pitched) of
just .88!
Rasner too seems to have had an effect
beyond just his
rather remarkable numbers. The Yanks
high hopes for their two rookies had seemingly been misplaced, while
the
performances of Pettite and Mussina had been uneven at best. Since Rasner’s arrival, Pettite and Mussina
have picked it up as has the entire Yankees team.
There had to be some good news over
there. Not counting Joba, of course. We can’t hear enough about him.
