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Feliciano - not a closer #3
Photo
by Seth Wenig - AP
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Jimmy Rollins showed a bit of MVP
Photo
by Seth Wenig - AP
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How
many times have we seen it before, with other teams, with other
middle-relief
guys who try on the closer's hat? They don't have a prayer.
So it
was with the Mets last night as they wasted a fine performance by Johan
Santana
and a 3-run lead to lose the opener of their three-game set with the
Phils,
8-6.
What I don't understand is why Santana
came out of the game
at all. He was doing quite well, thank you. I can understand
saving your
starter when you have your closer in the bullpen, but when you don't,
bite the
bullet and have your starter try to finish the game, especially if it's
one of
the biggest games of the year.
But
Jerry Manuel didn't do that. He decided to see what he had in his
pen. He found out. He thought Duaner Sanchez could be a
closer.
Wrong! After three straight hits off Duaner, he went to Joe
Smith, who
did manage to induce a harmless ground ball that Reyes flubbed.
Why
he took Smith out is another mystery because his replacement, Pedro
Feliciano,
did worse. In fact, nothing Manuel did last night worked out in
any way,
shape or form. Except for starting Santana, it was all down hill
from
there.
The
handwriting was all over the wall, even before that sad ninth
inning.
They sent Endy Chavez home twice to get thrown out, one time with
nobody
out. It just didn't make sense. It seemed as if they were
tempting
fate, asking themselves "what can we do to turn a ridiculously easy
victory into a damaging and embarrassing loss?"
Once again I’m left to contemplate
what a strange game is
baseball. A team that seemingly had
everything going for it entering a series, a team that pretty much had
its way
with the Phils for eight full innings, loses it in the ninth in
spectacularly
horrid fashion, thus losing not only THIS game but also any momentum it
had
going in.
<>Okay, I’m done now.
Coulda shoulda
woulda.
So
Jerry
Manuel blew a game.
He’s won way more
than he’s lost, and maybe he had this one coming.
Who
knows what Santana said to him after his
eight innings on another hot, humid night at Shea?
Who knows why he took out Smith, the only guy
in that ninth inning who did anything right?
Last night Manuel lost much of the
faith I had in him. The biggest game of
the year was in the
bag. He gave it back.
Santana had thrown 105 pitches.
He felt fine. Wagner
was hurt. Sanchez
had
pitched two big innings on Sunday. I
don’t understand what he was thinking. No
thinking was required.
<>I can’t even discuss it anymore.
A
team as stupid as this one doesn’t deserve
to win anything.
Manuel thinks wins are
cheap.
He’s never heard the old saw “A
bird in the hand is worth two in the bush”.
So the game that was in hand is now
lost. Now the Mets face the Phils with
lesser
starters, less confidence and still no closer. The
Phillies now have the edge in this all-important
series. The Phillies delivered the big
hits. The Phillies made the plays in the
field. The Phillies have everything but
the
manager who snatched defeat from the jaws of victory.
<>There must have been an old Willie handbook in the
dugout,
that one entitled “How to Lose Games with the Better Team”.
How many games can a team give back
over the course of a
season and still win? This team has
given back about 20 games on the season. And
counting.
<>Can they turn it around?
Yeah,
sure they can.
With
Delgado
scorching the horsehide off the ball, and with horses like Beltran and
Wright
in the lineup, anything is possible.
They
have the best starters in the league.
But
it’s less likely for sure.
It’ll take a
little time to get over such a bad loss.
That Reyes reverted to making the big
mistake doesn’t bode
well either. His decision to reach for
the second base bag when a flip to Easley would have done nicely kept
the rally
going strong. Instead of being up two
with two men on and one man out, it became bases loaded once again with
nobody
out.
<>Although I understand the switch to Smith when Sanchez
wasn’t doing the job, I don’t comprehend at all the switch to Feliciano.
Smith had done his job.
He
got a ground ball when he needed it.
Why
switch to Feliciano?
And then Heilman once
the game was
irretrievably lost.
But it was really all over much
earlier. That would be when Santana came
out of the
game, much to the Phillies delight. The
guy who had frustrated those heavy-hitters all night long would be on
the
bench. Wagner wasn’t a possibility. The Phillies licked their lips in
anticipation. They could win this game
after all. And did.
<>Of course there is a flip-side to all this.
All Manuel really did was put the game in the
hands of his relievers.
It didn’t work
out, but many would say he made the right move, all those pitch-count
people,
all those folks with fresh pitchers at the end of the season, for teams
that
will have lost way more than they will have won.
I’m already regretting all the nasty
things I’ve said. Manuel hasn’t made many
mistakes since he’s
assumed the reins from the dead team he took over from Willie, a team
with
tired veterans, with a shortstop always looking over his shoulder, and
with
cleanup hitters gone bad.
<>So we Mets fans have to be patient with a mistake, even
if
it did come at the worst possible moment, against the worst possible
opponent.
For once, Manuel overthought
the situation, and was caught counting chickens down the road, saving
his ace
for some game in October.
He just forgot that you first have to
get to October.
