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Jeff
Francoeur and Jason Bay were key to the Mets victory.............but
Fredi Gonzalez really won it for the Mets
File
Photo by Mike Stobe-
Getty
File Photo by Dilip Vishwanat-
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What a deal! It
helps
if your opponent’s manager is a grandstanding fool
and Florida’s Fredi Gonzalez filled that
role admirably yesterday. He conceded
the winning run to our Metsies in the bottom of the 8th by not playing
his
infield in with the winning run on third base. Florida
then got the double play but the winning run
came trotting
in. Thanks very much, Fredi!
Now I know his thinking was that he
had the heart of his
batting order coming up in the 9th and the Mets Ike Davis
was likely
to hit the ball hard, but c’mon Fredi, that heart of your batting order
would
be facing one of the top closers in the National League in the person
of K-Rod.
And that 8th inning
masterpiece of thinking was
actually the second totally inane move Fredi made
on the day. Fredi took out his best
pitcher, Ricky
Nolasco, in the 6th inning and replaced him with virtual
nobody Tim
Wood, who promptly gave up the hit the Mets needed to score two of
those
runners.
Nolasco was understandably beside
himself. He had given up nothing but cheap
singles and
a bunt. If anybody on that field was
capable of getting the Fish out of that inning, it was that guy
standing on the
mound, Ricky Nolasco.
But Fredi hadn’t seen enough of Wood
in the 6th. So he sent Wood out
in the 7th as
well. Fredi still hadn’t seen enough of
Wood after he walked Davis and gave Barajas a double.
So Jeff Francoeur was only too happy to bang
one over the fence for a 3-run homer.
Although Wood was only charged with
the 3 runs he allowed in
the 7th, to me he was responsible for the damage done in the
6th
too. Of course it wasn’t all his fault.
Fredi bears the responsibility for all of them.
This is the same Fredi Gonzalez who
made such a big deal out
of Hanley Ramirez’s failure to run hard after a Texas Leaguer popup he missed and then accidentally kicked, this
after hurting himself in the previous inning. I
know I watched the whole sequence of events and,
given the
circumstances, Hanley Ramirez deserved a break there.
Only a grandstanding manager would have
elected to take him out of the game.
Ordinarily, I would never excuse a
player who didn’t
hustle. But Ramirez had just finished
hurting himself, then not only couldn’t catch up with the Texas Leaguer
but
kicked it as well. You could have made
the argument that the whole muffed play was as a result of Ramirez
hurting his
foot in the inning before.
The brilliant Gonzalez then made
Ramirez apologize to the
team, thus furthering his embarrassment and deepening his bitterness
over the
whole affair. Mr. Ramirez doesn’t seem
to play hard anymore and I don’t blame him. He’s
close to free agency and it’s about 99-1 in my
mind that he’ll
re-sign with the Marlins. And, for those
of you who may not be aware, Hanley Ramirez is one of the five best
players in
the game today.
Fredi seems to quite enjoy
embarrassing his best
players. What a management ploy! It’s a good thing Fredi is insulated by the
relatively quiet media in the Florida market. If
Jerry Manuel or even Girardi had done what Fredi
did yesterday, there’d
be all kinds of hell to pay.
Gonzalez is a grandstanding manager,
much as Joe West was a
grandstanding umpire before his official chastisement from the league. If I were a Marlins fan, I’d be screaming for
his firing. Instead, he gets kudos for
pulling a player who didn’t hustle, no matter the killer circumstances.
Now, maybe
the Mets
would have won in extra innings anyway, especially the way they’re
playing. But Fredi Gonzalez gave them
the game. It almost takes all the fun
out of the win. Any other manager in the
game would have won that game for the Marlins, first by leaving his
best
pitcher in the game, and second, by playing his infield in.
I congratulate the fine Mets broadcast
team, Ron Darling and
Gary Cohen, for pointing out the absurdity of both errors.
They continue to call them the way they see
them.
In my last column,
I
had pointed out that the “core” Mets were not performing well and
provided some
revealing statistics to accentuate my point. I
was of course referring to Jason Bay, David Wright
and Jose
Reyes. After Sunday afternoon though,
you have to wonder whether this Mets team really has anything you could
call a
core.
And that could be a good thing. I’d much prefer an even, strong performance
from the whole team, which is closer to what we are actually seeing
from this
Mets team. It’s very often other combinations of players doing it for
the Mets
these days, either Barajas and Francoeur, or Pagan and Ike Davis, or
even
Castillo or Cora.
It helps them too, not having a fool
for a manager. Although I’ve slammed
Manuel for seeing
things “far off” while not accepting the obvious, I surely appreciated
his
presence Sunday afternoon. His call for
a “hit and run” with Bay at the plate and Pagan on first base was a
master
stroke.
Bay
sometimes totally
mis-manages his at-bats, but when forced to swing at a ball, there’s no
better
risk to at least make contact with the ball than Jason Bay. Bay did make contact, of course, and stroked
a six-hopper through the left side of the infield, moving Pagan, who
was
running with the pitch, all the way over to third base.
Pagan scored the winning run, of
course, on Davis’s double
play after Fredi’s decision to play his infielders deep and let the
winning run
score without a challenge, with just one inning to play and facing
arguably the
best reliever in the game today.
K-Rod finished the Marlins, of course,
but Fredi had
actually lost it for them a little earlier.
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