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Beltran,
Randolph and Reyes last night
Photo
by Mark Avery - AP
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Heilman
was great -too late
Photo
by Mark Avery - AP |
Well,
the timing was horrible, but then it would have been bad whenever the
final
decision on Willie finally came in. That the decision followed a
great
team performance is ironic at the very least. That it came at
about 3 AM
in the morning smells funny, like those stories of the Colts and Irsay
leaving Baltimore
in the middle
of the night.
But
they finally ANNOUNCED a decision. That they made the decision a
week ago
is perhaps indicative of what really ails these Mets, unprofessional
management. To keep a good man hanging that long is
despicable.
While I'm sure there were reasons for the delay, they would seem to
pale
compared with the indignity they inflicted on a guy who did his best
for them
for three years.
Incredibly
enough, some of the very players most responsible for Willie's demise
were
great last night. Aaron Heilman was especially good, getting two
outs
while leaving two Angels on the bases. Reyes was mercurial,
scoring the
first run virtually unassisted. Beltran, although he has been
fine in
other ways all year, smacked two home runs last night, helping cement
his place
in the Mets batting order. Sanchez and
Wagner showed how to close things out.
This
is a group that apparently needs constant pressure to bring the best
out of
them. Of course, that’s at odds with the
reality of their fall from grace last year. The
pressure of having a seemingly insurmountable
lead in a pennant race
didn’t prevent their 2007 disintegration. Maybe
they just wanted to do something nice for
their longtime mentor. I prefer to think
of it that way.
And
if they were feeling guilty, it was late in coming.
Without singling out any individuals, their
team performance was always just short of a win. And
just unremarkable enough to send their
fans off to the bar for a stiff one.
Some
of you may recall Sparky Anderson’s style in leading one of those Reds
teams to
the pennant many years ago. Sparky was
infamous for his pitching changes; he’d flash the hook with just the
slightest
provocation, sometimes just on a whim. But
the quick hook worked for that team.
That’s
what Willie could have used – a quick hook. And
not just with the pitching staff. I really
feel the Mets could have won ten games more
this year if Willie
just moved a little faster, faster to get a non-performer out of the
lineup,
faster to pull his relievers when it was obviously not their day.
Willie’s
style would work only with a team that was solid, top to bottom. Willie constantly challenged each of his
players to be champions. These Mets just
weren’t. These Mets needed a riverboat
gambler, someone who could maneuver a way to finish ahead, even with a
bad
hand.
Early
reports seem to point to Bobby Valentine. While
that would be nice, I don’t expect that to
happen. But he’d be just the guy to revive
this
moribund group. This is a group that
sits on its laurels, they win one or two games and think they’re
world-beaters,
then they revert to their old ways, the full swings when just a hit
would do
nicely, the stupid base-running when nothing fancy was required, the
lack of
focus in the field.
I
hope the players don’t start thinking the pressure is off now. They need to start winning two out of three,
and three out of four, to have a chance of making the playoffs at this
juncture
of the season. They have to climb over some good teams, Philly and Florida and Atlanta
all present their special challenges.
Judging
by management’s incredible bungling of the Randolph affair, I’d hope the new
manager,
eventually, is a strong personality, someone who can roll over
obstacles coming
from the front office. For now, we have
a temporary fill-in, Jerry Manuel. It’s
doubtful he can materially change anything unless the players buy in
and start
performing as they never did for Willie.
For
now, it’s Omar’s show. Omar Minaya
brought this group together and will be judged at the end of this
season. We won’t see a permanent manager
until a
decision is made on whether a new general manager is needed. The new GM can then hire a permanent
manager. The only thing this Wilpon
Group has done right so far has been their decision to defer the naming
of a
new permanent manager.
Omar’s
another one of those “good guys” whose force of personality alone
brought the
Mets players they otherwise would not have gotten, Carlos Delgado and
Pedro
Martinez for sure, and maybe a host of others.
This
was a Mets team built to win a World Series, one that eliminated the
risk of
having any unproven players in the lineup or in the field.
The only risk not eliminated was age.
And age reared its ugly head. Just
look around the clubhouse and see who’s
missing, or who’s hurt again, or who’s too old to get motivated by a
young
upstart manager.
For
this Mets fan, this firing is the beginning of payback, not for Willie
really
at all, but for all those players who wouldn’t perform for him. You can count on one hand the players who
really did try their hardest all the time, or at least gave the
appearance of
doing so.
And,
just maybe, these players were indeed trying their hardest and
performing near
the top of their capabilities. And, if
so, then look to October and a new GM, a GM who’ll need a very large
broom
indeed.
Sometimes
things just don’t work out. Look at the
recent firing of Bavasi in Seattle. He had a team that won 88 games, so he brought
in Richie Sexson and Carlos Silva. Any
fantasy player could have told him those two wouldn’t have a positive
effect. The good GM’s manage risk more
evenly and don’t take huge risks unnecessarily.
The
Mets risks know who they are. Hope they’re
tuned in.
