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Perez & Pelfrey in extra innings
Photo
by Julie Jacobson - AP
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Randolph
getting Pelfrey too early
Photo
by Jim McIsaac - Getty |
Today
I find myself a little sore after having spent hours on a ladder
painting my
shingles on Thursday. "Oh well", I said to myself, "at least I
got the house painted".
If
Willie Randolph had had the job, he'd have put Mike Pelfrey on the
ladder, then
with the job almost done, he'd have replaced him with Billy
Wagner. After
all, Mike has to live to paint again.
Then
when Billy dropped the brown paint can for the shingles all
over the white stucco foundation, he'd
drag out somebody else. Or two or three more somebody else’s. And
the
wall still wouldn't be finished. But everybody'd be fresh for the
next
time. Doesn't that make you feel better?
<>Nobody knows the affects of exercise on the body better
than
I. And there's no doubt that pitch counts have an affect on a
pitcher's
performance. But I believe the data is being misinterpreted. A
little
information can be a dangerous thing.
While the brainiacs in baseball are
getting a little smarter
with respect to the effects of exercise on the body, they still aren't
dealing
with the information correctly. Instead of losing a well-pitched
game by
removing your starter after a certain number of pitches, wouldn't it be
smarter
to let him go as long as he can, through nine innings if he can, and
simply
rest him another day?
You
then maximize your team's chances in the current game. You get a happy
pitcher,
one who's met the challenge of the day. The fans aren't
frustrated by
some nebulous decision resulting in a loss. And your pitcher not
only
gets rested, but maybe gets even stronger for his succeeding starts.
<>Wouldn’t that mess up the rotation?
Well,
it would certainly affect the “every
fifth day” maxim.
But how smart is
that?
When compared to the nonsense
being perpetrated on Mets and Yankees fans today, all in the name of
pitch
counts, a minor alteration to the rotation is certainly more favorable.
A change in the roster could also be
needed. There might be another long
reliever
required, another someone capable of giving five full innings. How hard would that be?
The current thinking, managing pitch
counts within each
game, does not take into account other key ingredients to the psyche of
a
pitcher, the starter’s confidence and sense of success or the
reliever’s
entirely understandable misgivings about messing up a heretofore
successful
outing.
There’s no more superstitious lot than
baseball
players. Evidence how many pitchers jump
over the baseline, or wear the same hat all year, or until they lose a
game
anyway. How difficult it must be to
relieve
in a non-relief situation!
The brainiacs are setting the
relievers up for
disaster. And hurting their starters
self-esteem. Not to mention the
manager’s psyche. It’s really very
simple. I just ask that, instead of
managing pitch counts game by game, manage them over the course of the
entire
season. It really would be easier on
everyone, the pitchers, the manager, the fans, and more importantly the
team.
There’s been no more shell-shocked
team than these
Mets. There’s been no more shell-shocked
manager than Willie Randolph. The entire
situation has swung from questionable to laughable.
The Mets are cursed.
They don’t need a new manager or general manager. They need an exorcist. And,
while I say this tongue in cheek, there
has been some kind of cloud hanging over Shea, and every other stadium
the Mets
happen to be occupying.
Something always happens to these Mets. They either don’t hit, or get good starts and
horrible relief, or they make a mistake running the bases.
Or make a critical error. What
we have here is a self-fulfilling
prophecy, the prophecy of doom.
This team expectation of doom is not
without reason. And I must put the fault
on management. Blame
whoever you want, ownership or Omar or Willie.
Willie only makes a mistake when a
decision is made. Every decision he makes
comes up zeroes. And, while part of the
reason for this lies
with the aforementioned curse and team expectations of doom, those
expectations
have only matured after long experience of failure.
Very often, they have been Willie’s failure,
Willie’s decision.
While pitching hasn’t been the only
problem, it has been the
major one. Willie saves his starters and
kills his relievers. He kills his
positional guys as well, especially the ones he relies on, “his guys”.
Carlos Delgado and Luis Castillo,
these men are old. They show it just about
every day. But Willie keeps them in the
lineup. You may say that he has not had
good
alternatives. But in most cases, any
alternative
would have been better than playing these two old-timers.
Sometimes, you have to wonder how much
control Willie really
has. The pitching coach isn’t his
choice, for example, and it’s unclear to me who makes the decisions
there. Or, even worse, does every decision
become a
committee meeting?
The hitting coach also makes me wonder. When asked about the team’s failures in
situational hitting, his reply was to the effect that he didn’t think
his
players were the kind of players that could successfully adjust to a
situation. Well, I must say, that
explains a lot. And their failures in
situational hitting have led to quite a few losses.
So let’s recap. The
players aren’t the right players, the manager has made bad decisions,
the
pitching and hitting coaches are kind of questionable, and the team
itself
seems to be cursed.
Add to this the fact that the owners
have apparently leaked
some information to reporters that they haven’t bothered to share with
anyone
else. Where else would the media get the
idea that Willie’s job is in serious jeopardy?
While some will question whether a
Billy Martin-type or
Bobby Valentine could have done any better with this team, I say they
could
have and would have. At this point,
anybody not named Willie would be better.
So let’s pull the trigger already.
