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Here it is a holiday weekend, a
fun 3-day weekend, Memorial
Day weekend. If there’s a better 3-day
weekend, I don’t know about it. The
opening of the NJ Shore season, better weather ahead, memories of fun
times,
games and barbecues…what could be better than that?
And there’s baseball of course,
even if you’re a Mets
fan. I’m now watching the Mets-Phillies
Sunday game and the Mets are helping me feel even better about the
weekend. They have jumped off to a 4-run
lead in this one, Niese seems to be cruising along, and, at least right
now, it
seems the Mets are all making pretty good contact with the ball.
Beltran just crushed a 380 foot
double to left center and,
despite all the troubles with the rest of the lineup, Beltran has been
like a
rock all season, him and Reyes, and it’s sadly ironic that those are
two guys
who won’t be Mets next year.
Now Bay and Murphy have followed
with hits and it looks as
if the Phillies Worley will be finished soon. Wow! Amazing! Now
Pagan has stroked a liner to right,
scoring Beltran and Bay and it looks as if a rout is on.
It’s 6-0 and even these Mets will have
trouble giving this game back.
Now it’s 8-zip, even Josh Thole
having contributed to
another 4-run inning, and the Mets cup runneth over.
It’s about time. Since
their opening win against the Yanks, it’s
been lose 3, win 1, and lately even the relief staff has faltered. Since Wright and Davis have both been on the
DL, it’s been the bizarro world in Metsland.
As the prospects for Wright’s
and Davis’s return soon aren’t
that good, it looks as if we’ll be seeing a lot more of these rookies,
and so
far, at the very least, it’s certainly been instructive, if nothing
else. Justin Turner has been an eye-opener. If it hadn’t been for Turner, the Mets could
have lost all their games. He was an RBI
machine there for a while.
Turner had become the second
baseman after the failure of
Brad Emaus but, when Davis and Wright went down, he had to spell Wright
at
third base. That opened up the second
base spot for Reuben Tejada, who’s a real magician with the glove. Murphy has been spelling Davis at first base
and, while he’ll never be confused with Keith Hernandez, he’s been
almost
passable, although Jose Reyes may disagree after having been charged
with at
least two errors on throws that most first basemen would have made.
At this point though, any
expectations I might have had for
this season have been pretty much dashed. A
team can’t possibly absorb all these
injuries without a negative
effect. So any win will be a welcome
win, and somewhat of a surprise. But
this team, despite everything, continues to be entertaining, although
I’m
probably more easily amused than are most people.
Jonathan Niese has now gone 5
full innings and he’s just
rolling along. With Dickey down with a
fascia tear, and Chris Young down with a shoulder for the season, and
Pelfrey
being up and down, maybe it’ll be Niese we’ll soon be calling the ace
of this
staff. Now that’s a scary proposition.
But newbie Dillon Gee has been
pretty impressive in a
starting role, sporting a 3.83 ERA at present and most teams would take
that
kind of performance in a heartbeat, especially for a number 5 starter. As long as Capuano can keep his end up, the
staff really isn’t that bad.
The relievers should bounce back
after their recent
letdown. And
that might be the most important ingredient of all.
When that part of their game was holding up,
the Mets were tough down the stretch, making all the plays they needed. But, of course, the reverse was true as well.
There should be some very
entertaining baseball coming
starting today with Pittsburgh coming to town for four games. But the Pirates aren’t the patsies they used
to be. They may indeed have more proven
major-league players than our Mets.
What is the true nature of this
Mets team? Are they a AAA level team with
a few ringers
or are they a playoff-contender level major league team with more AAA
fill-ins
than would be optimal? Are they the team
that lost 3 for every one victory or was that the result of great
pitching
opponents in Philadelphia and Chicago?
A family barbecue had
interrupted these inane musings and
now it’s Tuesday. The Mets won their
finale against the Phillies and they beat the Pirates in their opening
game. They did it without Jose Reyes and
without Jason Bay. They banged out a
zillion singles and just one double while Dillon Gee, Isringhausen and
K-Rod
limited the Pirates to 3 runs.
What does that mean though? The opposing pitcher was one Charlie Morton. The Pirates have been the perennial National
League doormat. Their current 24-28
record is better than they’ve been in a dog’s age.
Willie Harris batted leadoff and
played third base. Daniel Murphy batted
cleanup. Pridie played left field and
Tejada was at
shortstop for Reyes. The amazing Justin
Turner moved back to second base. It
would be easier to laugh outloud at that lineup if they hadn’t promptly
gone
out and won with it.
It’s all been pretty mystifying. I don’t know what to root for anymore. Reyes will be out for a week now because of a
death in his family in the Dominican Republic. Things
can’t get much worse.
Even after the win last night
though, I asked myself if I
really enjoyed watching it. The word
that best describes their success is “ephemeral”. Fans
shouted for the Mets to keep Reyes the
other night. Will they be able to do
it?
It’s all very temporary. What you see today may not be here next week,
never mind next year. Mets fans would be
well-advised to roll with
the punches.
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