|
|
Old and new Mets at the break - 9 straight & 1/2 game out
Photo
by Ed Betz - AP
|
Delgado
& Wright come back
Photo
by Julie Jacobson - AP
|
I'm
a Mets fan and I couldn't be happier! How many times has anyone
heard
THAT this mostly sorrowful first half of the 2008 baseball season
?
As
late as the fourth of July, the Mets were showing good signs but were
still 5
1/2 out. Since then they've scored, if my counting is accurate,
54 runs
and allowed just 13. That translated into 9, count'em, 9 straight
wins,
almost a fortnight of steadily increasing fortunes as our local heroes
won game
after game after game. WOW!!
They
got it from unlikely guys. They got it from the stars. They
got it
on the mound. They got it in the field. They got it at the
plate. They got it from the pen. They got it from the
starters. Well, you get the idea. Jubilation !
Last
night it was the Mike Pelfrey show. The day before, it was seemingly
everybody
on the field, Reyes and Beltran and five stingy pitchers. For
their first
game in Colorado,
there was Ollie Perez throwing in 6 good innings behind Reyes and
Easley.
Before
that, their final game in San
Francisco, Fernando Tatis and those relievers
bailed
out a somewhat shaky John Maine. Johan Santana showed what he
could do
the day before, he and that relief staff shutting out those Giants
while Ramon
Castro went 2-4 and delivered a big home run. Mike Pelfrey
outpitched
Lincecum before that with the steady Carlos Beltran hitting the big one.
But
it all started in Philadelphia.
The Mets had lost the opener of that four game set 3-2 but had won the
next two
before that final game in Philly. That game would decide whether
the Mets
were content to just split with the division leaders. They were
not.
Although
the Mets staff was belted around for 9 runs in that one, the Mets were
one
better. The top of the lineup, Reyes and Chavez and Wright,
wouldn't be denied and Billy Wagner bailed out centerfielder Carlos
Beltran
from taking too much heat for what had been viewed as a questionable
decision
to throw a man down at third base. (It was a great throw and it
would
have been the third out and the end of the game). That was the
biggest
game of all in this unlikely streak, the one where the Mets showed some
real
grit against a determined and talented bunch.
But
another true Mets believer might point to that third game in Philly,
the one
that Wagner let get away from Oliver Perez but Fernando Tatis saved,
delivering
a huge two-run homer in the top of the 12th to bail the embattled Billy
out. John Maine pitched a good one the day before to take that
second
game in Philly, the Mets coming alive in the eighth and ninth behind
guys like
Easley and Delgado, Schneider and Chavez.
That's
just an overview though. Much more could be said. You could
point
to the Mets new-found ability to tack on runs to early leads, something
their
new skipper had pointed out to them. You could point to their
prowess in
the field as guys like Easley and Tatis, Chavez and even a rook named
Evans
made light of the absence of more established players named Church and
Alou and
Castillo.
But the most overpowering feeling of
all about these Mets is
that they are just getting it, feeling it, or whatever way you’d choose
to
characterize a team that feels comfortable with itself, and that’s
having fun,
happy with its new direction and what very probably is a lighter
feeling around
the clubhouse.
<>For Jerry Manuel can actually be funny and usually is.
At the same time though, he’s thoughtful and
comes up with new ideas, things they’d either never heard before or
just
forgot.
Here’s a guy who’s light enough
for Reyes to deal with, and yet heavy enough to yank even the great
Pedro off
that mound when required.
Whatever the actual chemistry behind
this Mets resurgence,
man, is it ever welcome! You have to
feel the Mets have turned the corner, and maybe they’ll never have to
look
back. Even with the break coming on, a
break that might and probably will spell the end of the winning streak.
<>For the Mets have been getting outstanding performances
from
some very unlikely sources, guys out of the past like Easley and Tatis
and
Chavez, and guys from the future like big Nick Evans and still another
speedy Reyes
named Argenis.
At some point, these
wunderkinds may begin to falter.
But that’s the “glass half empty” side
of things. Why shouldn’t they continue to
perform? Easley and Tatis have done this
baseball
thing for a lot of years, and who says they can’t view this as their
swan song,
a chance to finally come out of the shadows. And
isn’t it a good thing that what had once been
viewed as a tired, old
team has been re-energized with some talented and spirited youth?
<>The “glass half full” side of me says that these guys
don’t
really have to do it forever.
Second
baseman Luis Castillo returns from the disabled list after the break.
And right fielder Ryan Church, who
outperformed everybody before getting hurt, might be returning. It
turns out
that his recent headaches weren’t lingering concussion symptoms at all,
but
more related to migraines.
Manuel’s biggest challenge of all
might be his management of
these returning players into the lineup. It’s
sort of an old baseball adage that guys don’t
lose their positions
due to an injury. Will Manuel sit Easley
for Castillo? Or will he be able to spot
Easley at the other infield positions? Will
Chavez sit again when Church comes back?
As difficult as it may be to manage
the return of the
regulars, you get the feeling Manuel will handle it.
He’s been there before, for Expos and Marlins
and White Sox and you just know he’ll manage it. And
so does his team
<>
