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Swisher & the Yanks were just too much........
Photo by Jim McIsaac- Getty
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but losing DeRosa to
the Cards was the big loss of the day..
Photo by Nam Y. Huh - AP
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Well, that was boring. I wonder how many Mets
fans actually watched last night’s Mets-Yanks game. The Mets matched up
nowhere, not in the starting pitching, not in the batting order
certainly, and not even in relief. Pitiful is the only word for it. But
ya know what? It only counts once.
You have to have a sense of humor, Mets fans, this year more than ever.
The only thing we can say for sure after the last two days is this: the
Mets can’t hit CC Sabathia and they can’t hit AJ Burnett either. But
you can also say we’re still just 1 ½ games behind the Phillies
in the NL East. And still one game over .500
WooHoo! Can you stand this much success? Have you just about had it
with inter-league play? Subway Series, my butt. I admit it, right now,
the Yanks are better. Of course, tomorrow though, it’ll be crafty old
Livan Hernandez against Chien Mien Wang, who’s just beginning to look
like a pitcher again, so the Mets could salvage that last game.
One of the players that talk-radio has been espousing is gone, so add
to insult and injury a little bit of opportunity loss. I speak, of
course, of the trade that sent Cleveland’s Mark DeRosa to the crafty
Cards for a very mediocre relief pitcher named Chris Perez. Geez, maybe
they would’ve taken our Parnell if anybody offered him up. DeRosa would
have immediately become the second best hitter on the Mets team. Oh
well, we’ve still got Parnell. Heh-heh.
Did I mention that DeRosa also plays a bunch of different positions?
Geez, that would’ve been nice for Jerry Manuel, being able to plug in a
very good hitter at three or four different positions. Oh well, we’ve
still got Brian Stokes.
The thinking must be that, if the Mets are going to stay in it at all,
they will do it with pitching, a theory to which I don’t even disagree.
But every opportunity has to be studied for its overall effect on the
team, and, well, I just think the Mets missed the boat on DeRosa.
Things don’t get that much easier either. After hopefully smacking Wang
around tomorrow, there’s Milwaukee and their Murderers Row of a lineup
with Fielder and Braun, Hart and Hardy ad infinitum. Strangely enough
though, there is hope in that they’re all fastball hitters who may have
trouble versus the Mets junk throwers. Of course, Santana and Pelfrey
can’t really be considered junk guys. Oh well, we’ll get by somehow,
some way.
After the Brewers, there’s the Pirates for a game, then those
division-leading Phillies and then the Dodgers but why worry about them
now? Let’s just beat Wang tomorrow and then maybe it’ll be Nieve’s turn
again soon after that. He does seem to have become our second best
starter. That says a lot for the quality of the pickups, but
unfortunately, it also says a lot about the quality of the regulars.
The latest on Jose Reyes is that he’s not quite ready, which is to say
almost nothing. If he can’t really run, he won’t be the Jose we had all
come to know and love, at least when he wasn’t being a bonehead. Being
realistic, of the three big hurts, Reyes and Delgado and Beltran,
Reyes’s absence has been the easiest to overcome. Cora has performed
pretty admirably. Things only got hairy when Cora was hurt too.
Delgado is supposed to be coming around too but I won’t be holding my
breath. Carlos Beltran may turn out to be the most seriously injured of
the three with that bone bruise that may not be just a bone bruise. So
things are not looking rosy, Mets fans, and now we can’t even fantasize
about DeRosa anymore. Oh well, we’ve still got Feliciano.
Anyway you look at it, letting DeRosa escape to the Cards was a big
mistake, a very huge missed opportunity, especially for a team that
should have been exploring all of its options. And, if I’m recalling
this correctly, it was the Cardinals that beat the Mets on their last
and best chance to get to the World Series. I can still wince just
thinking about that Wainwright curve ball totally locking up Beltran
for a called strike three.
Oh well, we’ve still got Sean Green.
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