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Jerry
Manuel's managing hasn't been working...............
but another Minaya shake-up can't be good in the short run
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Photo by Jim McIsaac -
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Photo - Jeff
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I wouldn’t change
managers at this time. Doing that would
just be one more shakeup of a team that’s been shaken enough, if not
stirred.
Okay, so the Mets stink.
It’s not as if they’re not trying.
(That makes me feel so much better).
It’s just that they have trouble with breaking balls. Okay, sometimes they don’t get around on the
hard heater either. But really, sliders,
hard curves, splitters, those nasty hideous changeups, they’re enough
to drive
a team to distraction. And that’s what
happened in San Francisco, Cincinnati, Arizona and Los Angeles.
My last column just killed Jason Bay. Shortly thereafter, Bay had the best game of
his Mets career. Go figure.
But then he reverted to form, more or
less. He just doesn’t have any effect on
most games. But he ran into the wall for
his team in that incredible spectacle that Santana pitched late last
week. And
Beltran did nothing. Oh, and Wright did nothing.
Reyes made
another
stupid play in a game the team was supposed to be intent on winning. There are events in a game that just change
the momentum. Some days teams deserve to
win. Some days they don’t.
Reyes sets the tone. Or
doesn’t.
So who’s playing well?
Obviously, Santana is. Dickey,
Niese, Pelfrey….(notice any theme here?), yes!
They’re all pitchers! Not only did the Mets lose all those games,
they managed to waste all those good pitching performances. Pitchers are fragile and inconsistent, unless
their name is Santana, and the good efforts can’t continue for too long.
The Mets have nothing going for them
other than pitching and
a couple of interesting rookies.
Jerry Manuel, the manager of course,
is befuddled. Wouldn’t you be? He’s beleaguered. Omar’s
in his corner but nobody’s in Omar’s corner. Omar’s
got to deliver this year with the hand
that he dealt for himself. That much
seems clear. Howard Johnson, the batting
coach, is under fire too, or at least could be expected to feel some
heat.
It’s a bad team situation too, exactly
the situation most
Mets fans really feared, that Carlos Beltran’s return would influence
team
chemistry, which had seemed good and settled with Bay, Francoeur and
Pagan. As inconsistent as they were, the
fielding
was great and they all seemed to contribute to that team feeling.
Then of course, Luis Castillo came
back from his injury
(which seemed to linger, he still doesn’t walk right).
Alex Cora and one of those interesting
rookies, Ruben Tejada, had been manning second base pretty adequately
before
his return.
So it wasn’t just Francoeur who was
dislodged from the
lineup. It was three of the “guys”.
To compound an already horrible
situation, Oliver Perez,
perhaps Minaya’s most storied and prominent failure in his Mets career,
returned to the club as a reliever and gave up last night’s
game-winning home
run to James Loney. Ollie’s pitch was up
and hittable.
Managing this whole situation required
a lot of
finesse. Manuel could have played
Francoeur a little more or Beltran and Castillo a little less. He could have left Perez on the bench. And there were once again those game
situations that could have been managed differently.
He obviously zigged when he should have zagged
throughout the entire road trip.
Minaya likes Manuel though.
He’ll decide whether it’ll do himself any good to
get another manager
who’ll do better with this group. He’ll
be thinking for this year only. There is
still a slim chance that his team can come back. They
are 7 ½ games out of first in the
division and just 6 games from securing a wildcard.
He may feel a shakeup is absolutely required
for his moribund bunch. There are still
63 games left to play. They are
returning home, a place they managed to win 30 out of 46 times
throughout this
year.
I wouldn’t change managers at this
time. Doing that would just be one more
shakeup of
a team that’s been shaken enough, if not stirred. I
would at least wait to see how the team
plays in the friendly confines of CitiField, even if the opponents are
the always
tough Cards and then the D-Backs, who just finished pummeling Minaya’s
team in
Arizona.
But, as tough as those teams are, the
Mets seem to have the
advantage at Citi. It’s almost impossible
to hit a homer there and that benefits the Mets. It’s
a huge place that favors speed and that’s
something the Mets have in abundance.
Results don’t lie and 30-16 speaks volumes. They can throw a lot of arms at you, Santana
and Pelfrey and Niese and Dickey….even Takahashi throws opponents a
curve once
in a while. Heh-heh.
Unfortunately, the Cards will open up
with Wainwright on
Tuesday and the pretty remarkable Jaime Garcia on Wednesday. They’ll be facing Niese and Takahashi.
Wainwright has given up a few runs to the Mets in previous games but
not Garcia,
who gave them just one hit over 7 innings.
The advantage for the first two games would seem to
be with the Cards.
But Johan Santana starts on Thursday
and he could be
pitching to bring the Mets back to .500 if they lose the first two
games. That he faces one Blake Hawksworth
can only
bode well for our Mets. Friday’s
probable starters are Ian Kennedy against Pelfrey, and that game may
turn out
to be the pivotal game of the Mets future.
Can Pelfrey and the Mets overcome Ian Kennedy at
home, given Kennedy’s
last dominant performance against the Metsies in Arizona, given that
they lost
that exact same pitching matchup 13-2?
If the Mets can split with the Cards
and just take 2 of 3
from the D-Backs, they’ll have the confidence to face the Braves and
Phils. If not, I think they’ll be done. If they can’t perform at home, how could they
possibly go on the road again to have success against the
division-leading
Braves and then the Phillies?
Keep Manuel for now.
.
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