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Here's
a double play throw Reyes bothered to
make.................................................
and Fred Wilpon needs to do something drastic
File
Photo by NY Daily News
Photo
- Simmons-NY Daily News |
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The Mets are scary bad.
And the worst of it is that the guys who need to
perform the best when it
counts wind up doing the worst. I’m
talking about Jose Reyes and David Wright especially but even Mike
Pelfrey
could qualify, depending upon your point of view.
Reyes was dreadful at shortstop. Wright was horrendous at third.
(I know, I’m struggling for adjectives for
bloody awful or, in Italian, “disgraziada”. Pelfrey
hasn’t shown much for quite some time now
but I was sure hoping
it was a temporary thing, his lack of any stuff that can get outs.
So I’ve finally come down to earth. The Mets have some talent but they spit the
bit when it counts, when the game is on the line. And
you could say it was just one of those
things, it was Atlanta where bad things always seem to haunt the Mets. But there is a pattern of failure among these
“core” Mets. I miss Delgado….the Mets
miss Delgado.
Delgado used to perform in the clutch, Delgado and his silly little notebook,
recording the details of every single at-bat, scowling at his failures
and
lighting up the stadium with that wide smile of his….yeah, I think the
Mets
miss him too.
The most prestigious batter is now
Beltran, Beltran, who hit
all those homers for Houston way back before the Mets signed him,
Beltran who
could play center in his sleep, always gliding, moving fast but not
really
seeming to, and bangin’ the ball around the yard with pretty good
regularity.
But there is that at-bat against
Wainwright in his history
too. And
he was part of the collapses that mark
this franchise. And let’s not forget his
penchant for trying to steal third all the time, at the worst times,
and almost
always failing to do so.
Beltran went hitless yesterday. He’s
now batting .215. You can’t really lead
with numbers like
that. He’ll come on eventually, it is to
be hoped, but it’ll be too late. And I’m
not even trying to pick on Beltran. But
the Mets needed something last night.
The best player for the Mets yesterday
was Luis
Castillo. He managed 2 of the 6 hits
they got and didn’t make any critical errors, as did Wright and Reyes
twice. Josh Thole, the new catcher, got
a big hit in a big situation. That’s
just two of the eight positions in the lineup though.
Everybody picks on Castillo. I even belittled him mercilessly when he
dropped
that third out popup by
Arod last year. And maybe he doesn’t
have the range that you’d like to see. But
he’s a pretty nifty second baseman more often
than not. He’s usually doing the right
thing at the
right time, something you can’t really say about Reyes, most notably,
but also
Wright and Beltran.
The future of this franchise looks
good though. Ike Davis, for example, has
been remarkably
clutch this year despite his miscue last night. Josh
Thole looks very promising at the all-important
catcher
position. And they look to be guys who’ll
lift their game when it counts.
But, for now, it’s just Reyes and
Wright and Beltran. Jason Bay is hiding
out somewhere and I don’t
think any of the Mets are sorry about that. He
almost never delivered of his promise either. He
wasn’t the spectacular failure of an Ollie
Perez but he was more of a quietly
consistent one. And his DL stint makes
it easier to field 3 pretty good outfielders. That’s
assuming Francoeur is good, of course, but
he’s dangerous only if
he gets a fastball over the plate. Great
arm though.
As a team, these guys just don’t
measure up. When the chips are down, when
they find
themselves in Atlanta or Philadelphia or Florida, or when they’re
playing
another determined team, they come out second best.
When your stars fold up their tents,
when they keep swinging
over any pitch that breaks, when they fail to make the big double play
because
they don’t feel like making that tough throw to first with a guy in
their face,
when they make side-arm throws that go astray or make throws without
setting
themselves because it looks so good when it works, that’s when the game
is
over.
Much as the game was over last night. Maybe they just don’t like Takahashi. God knows that Japanese fellow was trying his
best. But his teammates let him down,
time after time after time. It became difficult to watch.
It was that ugly.
I’d sit Reyes for a while. He looks like a guy who’s tired, who’s not
having
fun, who’s a little
tired of playing the game. Wright was
never a slick third baseman but it seems to me that he’s getting worse. I’d sit him more often. But
there isn’t even a backup for third base
on the roster, as unbelievable as that might seem.
I’ll be looking to the future now. I’m guessing Omar Minaya will be gone and I
suppose
the broom, when it comes on by, will take Jerry Manuel right along with
him. That move seems inevitable,
although the GM Minaya has a couple of years left on his contract. If the 16 mill Ollie Perez situation doesn’t
take him out, it’ll be the 16 mill Jason Bay mistake.
I think some trades of any of these
“core” guys are
warranted. There have just been too many
failures. I would trade Reyes in a
minute. He doesn’t even steal bases
anymore. Then I’d look to unload Bay and
then Beltran. They’d have to be more
successful somewhere else. I’d trade
them while their residual value is still pretty high.
Bay’s fortunes especially could reasonably be
expected to soar in another city. Boston
comes immediately to mind.
The Mets are beyond the crossroads. There have been several of them
actually. The Mets missed the right path
every time. It’ll be no different in
Philadelphia.
The Mets need a drastic change.