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Carlos Delgado dumped one in ...
Photo
by Chris McGrath - Getty
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And Fernando Tatis was awesome
Photo
by Chris McGrath - Getty
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How'd
you like to come back to the dugout after a big hit and get high-fived
by
Carlos Beltran and David Wright? And finish the night in first
place. Well, that's what Fernando Tatis got to experience last
night. He was one of 8 different Mets producers in a game marked
by some
shaky pitching, some nice hitting from both sides, and comebacks, lots
of
comebacks.
Ten
is good. Ten beats 9 and 11 would be heaven. (No, I didn't
really
say that). I thought the streak would end at 9. It
certainly could
have. They were up 2, then down 3 in a flash, then down just 1,
then up
by 1, then down by 2 before finally ending it up by 2.
Wright,
Beltran, Easley and Delgado were strong at the core of the lineup while
Delgado
and Tatis did their best to extend that middle. They even got
something
out of Nick Evans and Marlon Anderson.
So
last night it was hitting. Carlos Delgado was especially
impressive, I
thought, not so much for his power but for his nice little dump-job
single over
the shortstop into short left field. If Carlos the Elder doesn't
watch
out, he may find himself in the National League RBI race. In the last
month,
he's driven in 23 runs, second only to Jermaine Dye. While he
still has a
long way to go, with just 55 ribbies on the season, it's conceivable
that he
could catch a lot of folks.
So
there was a lot to be happy about....again. But there were some
rough
spots on the pitching side of things. Johan Santana wasn't Johan
Santana
last night. But Aaron Heilman reverted into, well, Aaron
Heilman.
Johan gave up a 5-spot in the fourth inning, including a couple of
dingers, but
what the heck, Jake Peavy gave up 4 home runs in his game so it was a
strange
night all around.
Heilman
just allows too many baserunners, base hits and walks too. Last
night he
managed just 2/3 of an inning, and his three baserunners were inherited
by
Scott Schoenweis, who tried like the dickens but still wound up
allowing them
all to score before recording the final out.
It was interesting that Manuel
replaced Heilman as soon as
he did. And, even though Schoenweis wasn't able to avert the
damage, it
was the right move. Jerry managed his head off last night,
replacing
pitchers all night long. And they were the right moves. That they
all
didn't pan out is secondary.
<>Those pitching moves do a couple of things.
First, they check the momentum.
Second, they give the opposing batters
something different to look at.
But they
also keep your team in the game mentally, and that showed last night
too.
Who woulda thunk it?
The Mets from April and May wouldn’t have come back
even once. These Mets came back again and
again,
continuing a predilection not only for increasing leads but for coming
back
too. It’s something on which Manuel
focused, and it’s working out for them.
<>Yes, the Mets are finally in first place, tied with the
Phils at long last. But the Phils picked up a pretty fancy
pitcher
yesterday, and the Marlins aren't far back. The Mets need to keep
it
going, and it'll be up to John Maine tonight, who hasn't been quite as
overwhelming as have battery-mates Mike Pelfrey and Oliver Perez, at
least not
lately.
Tonight will be a good test for him
and the Mets as they
face the Reds Bronson Arroyo, who can be very good or very bad. We’ll see whether our local boys can get
another
win to extend that streak, against a team that had had a fairly nice
run
themselves as of late, before they ran into the juggernaut. The Reds are a very respectable 10-6 since
June 28th.
<>Those Reds sure can hit a little bit.
They
were calling Adam Dunn Dave Kingman last
night but he looked like more to me, as a batter anyway.
He does have a little trouble keeping his
feet while rounding the bases.
And Ken
Griffey Jr. is pretty much as advertised.
Then
there’s Brandon Phillips and Joey Votto, not a
lineup that can be
taken lightly for sure.
And baseball is a strange game. A pitcher can, all of a sudden, pitch lights
out. Batters can get cold.
For no reason whatsoever. And
then there’s the law of averages. How many
teams win more than ten in a row?
<>But the Mets played last night as if they really, really
wanted that tenth win.
They certainly
didn’t play like a team resting on its laurels.
From
the manager to the pinch-hitter, they were
definitely paying
attention, as if they knew the slender thread that separates winning
from
losing is a very thin one, and as if they were determined to fend off
that
first loss, for, once losing, who knows what will be on the other side?
The Mets had every reason to lose last
night. Not only was there the streak, but
there was
the break too. Surely they couldn’t be
expected to put one more win up on the board. But
they did it, in a pretty spectacular fashion
too, a fact that I’m
sure was not lost on the Phillies, or the Marlins, for that matter.
<>The Phils have already picked up Joe Blanton from the
seemingly inexhaustible inventory of pitching in the
Oakland A’s
organization.
All in all, a smart pickup
for them, given
that the guy eats up a lot of innings, has pitched really well in the
not too
far recent past, and will probably pitch better in a pennant race.
Omar Minaya may be burning up the
phone lines, but somehow I
don’t think so. We haven’t heard one
good rumor. I suspect he’ll make a move
when he feels that he has to do so. Chemistry
after all is a delicate thing.
And the Mets
have
some right now.
