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Angel
Pagan has been a real Mets force this year
but then so has Jeff Francoeur
Photo by Al Bello -
Getty
Photo -Jim
McIsaac- Getty |
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How strange that I should feel tongue-tied. George
Steinbrenner is dead. The
National League finally won an All-Star Game. The
second half is starting in baseball, and
Carlos Beltran, heretofore my favorite Mets player, is coming back.
So many thoughts go through my mind,
some of them not even
coherent, especially with respect to Steinbrenner and Beltran.
We’ve heard, over and over, “all
George cared about was
winning, he was all about winning,” while
acknowledging that he was a sonova bitch, usually followed by a story
about
some anonymous contribution that everybody seems to know about. I’ve seen sportswriters wax poetic and get
tearry-eyed because he remembered their name.
When Steinbrenner came into baseball,
I thought he was a
jerk. Most people did.
He didn’t do anything unless it was
stupid. Later on, when he finally
stepped back a bit to let baseball people run his club, he made sure to
get his
face and name back in the papers, usually by doing something outlandish
and petty,
something brash and mean and arrogant.
I’m sorry the man died, I truly am,
and sorrier still that
he was apparently gravely ill before his heart finally gave way. But I never liked him. I
was sorry Yogi and he got back
together. And I don’t think he should be
in the Hall of Fame, not that that’s even all that important.
If I were ever a Yankee fan, I’d
probably feel much
different. But I was never a Yankee
fan. It goes against my nature. I’m one of those champions of the
underdog…always
have been. And that is why I became a
Mets fan, after having been a Dodgers fan before that.
I don’t believe in winning at all
costs. Yankee fans do.
George Steinbrenner certainly did.
His every action was self-serving, at least
his public actions. And self-serving
meant Yankee-serving by definition. So I
can understand Yankee fans liking him, even loving him.
And that may be the only thing I’ll ever
understand about Yankee fans, that, and their win at all costs
philosophy.
If George had bought the Mets, and ran
the Mets the way he
ran the Yankees, I’d have become another team’s fan, probably a team
like the
Phillies or Boston, but not the Cubs or Kansas City.
My team would have to care passionately about
winning, but not at all costs.
There are examples of the Yankee
avarice too numerous to
mention but the most recent and heinous example was their attempted
acquisition
of Cliff Lee. The Yanks have Sabathia,
Pettitte,
Burnett, Vazquez and Hughes.
That’s five very fine starters.
That should be enough.
For anyone who cares about
competitiveness, the Yankees were
already loaded. They didn’t need Cliff
Lee. But the Yankees don’t care about
the rest of baseball. They only care
about the Yankees, their storied history, their hallowed stadium, their
rings,
their monuments and on and on.
The Yankees tried to guarantee their
World Series win. It wasn’t enough to have
Arod and Jeter and
Teixeira and Cano, Posada and even Swisher, and all those pitchers. That wasn’t enough surety for the Evil
Empire. For Yankee management and fans,
what fun is there in watching a good baseball game?
All of that now brings me to Carlos
Beltran. Carlos was out of the game for
most of last
season and most of this season with a bone bruise of the knee. Not that I don’t believe he was really
hurt. I do. But
I know there are probably contract issues
that entered into the situation.
Beltran has it made in the shade, if
he can find any of that
in Flushing. The Mets are 4 games out,
have a nice pitching staff, some good young players and, as he will
still be
considered as recovering, there are no outlandish expectations of him. As he always has been a great player though,
we
can expect that he will provide some big hits, make some nice catches,
and, in
most respects, be Carlos Beltran. But he
won’t be expected to carry the club.
What annoys me most is that he’ll be
playing at someone else’s
expense. In every case, that someone else has been a key player for the
Mets
this year, whether it’s Francoeur, Pagan or Jason Bay.
Once again, that brings me to my point
about winning at any
cost. As good as Beltran has been, I’d
like to see him earn his way back into the lineup. But that won’t
happen, it
can’t really happen, it probably shouldn’t happen, as winning certainly
takes
precedence over some bruised feelings.
But it doesn’t go down easy for me as
a Mets fan. This Mets club seems well-knit
as a
team. So I worry about chemistry. But I also enjoy watching every one of those
outfielders, especially Francoeur and Pagan. From
my standpoint, I’d rather see Bay sit.
But, for the same reasons as Beltran
must play, Bay must
play. It’s that crazy but true axiom in
baseball that says players eventually find their level.
It’s very often true. As
hard as it may be for me to believe right
now, the axiom says that Jason Bay will get hot, or even torrid. And Carlos Beltran will eventually hit .300,
drive
in 100 runs and score a hundred times in a full season.
But it’s those exceptions to the rule
that grate the most on
a fan’s patience and compassion. David
Wright had his worst year by far last year. His
power just disappeared and never came back. Recall
the lean times of Carlos Delgado in
years past before he went absolutely crazy at the plate to carry the
club seemingly
all by himself for about six weeks.
Mets fans have to hope for the best,
that a club that
finishes 4 games out at the half, with Francoeur and Pagan, can finish
first at
season’s end with Carlos Beltran, all other things being equal (which
in and of
itself is saying a mouthful).
Go Carlos!!
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