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Duaner Sanchez was TOUGH
Photo
by Jim McIsaac - Getty
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And Ramon Castro was good again
Photo
by David Kohl-AP
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The Mets did it again last night, they
impressed the heck
outta me. Everybody's doin' sumthin' - Reyes, Beltran, Wright,
Delgado,
but also guys like Duaner Sanchez, Ramon Castro and still another Reyes
named
Argenis. They came back and then held on to beat the Reds 7-5 and
everybody played a part. What a nice way to come to
Shea....against the
team sharing the top spot with them in the NL East!
Even though Mike Pelfrey, after about a month of superior
pitching, finally came back to earth, the Mets just did what needed
being done
to keep themselves in the game and then put some pressure on their
opponents.
Duaner Sanchez was my
favorite last night, although Jose Reyes and Carlos Delgado made good
cases for
MVP’s of the game.
Big Series at Shea !
When was the last time we felt that?
I mean, actually feeling GOOD
about it? Johan Santana is just 8-7 this
year, but you have to feel pretty confident with his matchup against
the Phils
newly-acquired Joe Blanton.
Then it’s John Maine against Brett Myers, and neither of
them are lighting it up statistically, but I’d rather have
Maine.
On Thursday, it’ll be brain against brawn as
the
surprising old Jamie
Moyer matches pitches with the brilliant but erratic Oliver Perez.
So, the Mets starting pitching will be
good, the relievers
have been pretty steady, all things considered, and, for once, the
lineup seems
pretty formidable too. For power, we
have Wright, Delgado and Beltran. And a
bunch of pains in the neck, led by the biggest pain of them all, Jose
Reyes.
Reyes has now scored 71 runs, is batting .300 and even
has
10 homers and 43 rbi’s.
If triples mean
anything to you, he is the all-time Met master of the triple.
He’s stolen 33 bases.
Yeah,
Jose can be a HUGE thorn in any
opponent’s side, and did I mention he’s a pretty flashy shortstop too?
Yes, the Phils have a big job ahead of
them. Not that they don’t have some
formidable
weapons themselves, guys like Utley and Howard and Rollins, Werth and
Jenkins. But are they jelling like the
Mets are right now? That would be a
decided NO.
I almost hate to say it.
The managerial
change energized these Mets.
Big-time.
Even though they would seem to be missing a
couple
of pieces.
Like a couple of outfielders.
But the fill-ins have been pretty amazing.
Damian Easley at second base has been
steady Eddie, Fernando
Tatis provides another pretty serious power threat when he’s swinging
the bat
well, and Marlon Anderson seems to finally be coming back to the land
of the
living. This new Reyes is another guy they
plug in at second, in the field and in the lineup too, and he just
keeps
delivering.
Jerry Manuel has been a lifesaver, seemingly providing
EXACTLY what these guys needed to perform as a team.
You can feel the confidence boost as a
palpable thing.
Same guys, different
level.
When the game is on the line,
they get tough.
One surprising statistic from Sunday’s
game is the 32 men
the Mets left on base. The Reds left 5
men on, yet the Mets were able to pull it out. This
is a game the Mets could surely have lost in
the old days. The old Mets wouldn’t have
been able to
overcome that much adversity.
Of course, you have to play the games.
It’s
great to count chickens but you have to
keep performing.
But you get the feeling
that this team will keep it up.
They’re
having fun.
They’re winning.
Even when they aren’t at their best.
Against the Reds, it was like a game of who’ll blink first. And
yesterday, after a couple of big
strikeouts and Met plays in the field, it was the Reds who would bat
their
eyes. It was an error in the field that
propelled the Mets to the victory, Edwin Encarnacion’s bad throw to
second
short-circuiting a potential double-play while scoring a run for the
Mets.
Baseball is a funny game, a game of fine nuances that
most
people miss, if it weren’t for some fine analysis by guys like Keith
Hernandez.
There’re quite a few
decisions being made on every pitch.
It’s
the combination of all the variables that
produce the result.
In the case of the
Mets, those results have
been very good, so they’re combining those variables really well.
It’s not just Jerry Manuel either. It’s that new pitching coach Warthen, who
seems to be helping Oliver Perez especially, and it’s Omar Minaya,
who’s
juggling these guys in and out, Argenis Reyes and Nick Evans especially
as of
late.
What are some things to worry about?
(I
wouldn’t be a Mets fan if I didn’t worry
about SOMETHING).
I worry that Santana will serve up
some home run balls to
those Phillies bangers, not just Howard and Utley, but Rollins and
Jenkins and
Werth too. And then there’s Met-killer
Pat Burrell.
I worry about the Mets coming home to Shea, despite the
fact
that they’re 28-18 at home.
I’m hoping
the fans can keep their cool through any rough spots.
This team doesn’t need to have any
reservations about themselves.
This is a
team that rolls when it’s feeling it, and a bunch of booing never helps
anybody
“feel it”.
I worry about the Marlins too. They’re 7-3 in their last ten games and
they’ve got some fearsome hitters, all young and feisty.
And they just beat the Phils 2 outta 3.
They have their own pains in the neck, no one
bigger than a guy who has scored even more runs than Reyes, a guy named
Hanley
Ramirez.
And I worry that, should the Mets NOT
win the NL East, they’ll
have a little trouble making the playoffs. Both
the Cards and Brewers in the NL Central have
better records than
the Mets. They may not catch the Cubs
but they’ll be serious contenders for the wildcard.
