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Okay, so I tried something new,
using a pen and paper
instead of a PC. What I wound up with
was 1000 words or so on paper. Then I
went to sleep. Now it’s two days later
and, even if I wanted to transcribe it, if I could read it, it’s old
news now,
or, even worse, commentary on old news.
So let’s try again.
The Mets still win a couple, lose a couple. LeBron James is still damned if he does and
if he doesn’t, the Yanks are still second best, well, maybe third best
now, and
some nag will undoubtedly win the Belmont Stakes this Saturday.
That Mets game last night was
really fun to watch. It had everything,
some good pitching, some
good hitting and lots and lots of highs and lows.
Mike Pelfrey is cursed. Either he’ll lose the game all by himself or
he’ll get help. Last night he got help. The
usual suspects provided the help, Reyes and Beltran, Pagan and Paulino
to name
a few. But, after taking a nice lead,
their relievers lost it for them anyway.
I don’t like the way Collins
handles pitchers. He either inserts a new
pitcher before the
one on the mound gets in trouble or he stays with a pitcher clearly in
trouble
much too long. He thinks it’s character
building. I think it’s just stupid.
Last night Pelfrey pitched a gem
for six innings. That’s all the
opportunity he got. Collins decided it was
time for some of the
worst relievers in the game to finish it for him. And
oh, they finished it all right. The first
reliever called upon, the lefty “specialist” Byrdak
promptly walked the first batter,
Prince Fielder, and got yanked.
Then Parnell managed to pitch
his way through the seventh without
too much incident, setting the stage for the Mets big inning in the
eighth. But, rather than let Parnell
continue, Collins brought in Pedro Beato, who had pitched the day
before. And it showed.
He had nothing, no fastball, no slider, no
fight. He just quit. He
figuratively said, “You don’t pitch me two
days in a row”.
Beato promptly walked the
forty-year old Counsell. Right at that
point I would have pulled his
butt. But not Collins, he wanted to see
Beato build character. Beato did manage
to get a ground ball out of Rickie Weeks though, a ball that could have
been a
double-play with a better infield. That
minor gaffe was enough to rattle Beato, who then gave up a single to
Morgan and
a double to Braun, scoring two. Only
then did Collins go to Isringhausen, who wasted no time at all in
letting
Prince Fielder tie the game with a humongous home run to straight-away
center.
I chalk last night’s loss up to
Collins. Instead of going with the hot
hand, he goes
with the cold one. And it’s not the
first time. Instead of pulling closer to
that magic .500 mark, the Mets lost one that should have been in the
bag.
Everybody thinks the Mets
relative success this year is
solely due to Collins. What a joke! Whatever success they’ve had is due to some
good players, players who were unproven but good nevertheless. Turner, Pridie, Thole, Tejada, these young
players are tough. And the starting
pitching has been good too.
While it could be that Collins
is one of the reasons they’re
playing so well, that’s not really a lock. And
I’m willing to give Collins the benefit of
the doubt in that regard
but he’s bad with pitchers. He needs to
get better.
The Mets need some power and
some help in the relief corps,
starting with a lefty who knows how to pitch. Every time I see Byrdak,
I think “here
we go”. As the Mets won’t be spending
any money in the near future, the Mets have to use their existing
assets to get
better in the long run.
But they can get a power hitter
and a reliever or two
without getting rid of Reyes. Reyes is a
large piece of the Mets very identity. Although
his value is undoubtedly the highest
it will ever be right now,
the Mets should not make a deal until it’s proven they can’t re-sign
him and that
the return for him is significant, meaning multiple high-quality
prospects.
Wilpon’s unfortunate comments
certainly point to the Mets
not re-signing him. But just as the
Yankees overpaid by nearly double Jeter’s actual worth to re-sign him,
so the
Mets should regard Jose Reyes. He’s the
straw that stirs the drink, not Wright or Santana or Beltran. The team should be willing to pay some
premium to keep him in a Mets uniform.
Only if re-signing him is
virtually impossible should the
Mets deal him. If they must deal him,
they must get value. Beltran and K-Rod
should also draw some suitors this year from any number of contending
teams. They can fully expect to get some
power and relief pitching in return.
All of which means there is hope
for a better Mets team in
the future, one probably featuring pitching and defense rather than
power,
although some power would be nice. It
certainly appears at this juncture that power will not be forthcoming
from
either Jason Bay or David Wright.
Jason Bay is holding the bat too
tightly. He’s got to loosen up that grip
and just whip
that bat around. His stance is actually
better than it was last year when he led with his elbows.
He’s just got to relax. He
has to swing at the first hittable pitch
too rather than taking a strike. Until
he shakes this slump, he should forget about having “good” at-bats. He’s got to break out, and not necessarily
with home runs.
Meanwhile, NBA fans will see the
real LeBron tonight. Baskets? …..he’ll
make them. Rebounds?....he’ll get them. Assists?....maybe not so many but some timely
ones to his partners named Wade and Chris Bosh.
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