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David Wright was the hero
Photo
by Frank Franklin II - AP
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or was it really Jerry Manuel?
Photo
by Jim McIsaac-Getty
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It
was beginning to look like the same old script for the Mets yesterday
afternoon. There was another great start by Johan Santana.
But in
the eighth inning, with the score 3-1 in favor of the Mets, Santana
gave up two
consecutive singles and Mets manager Jerry Manuel decided Santana had
had
enough. He had to go to the bullpen, a pen that had been
producing
more horrors than an Alfred Hitchcock flick. Surely the Mets
would lose
another.
But
it was not to be on this day. Not this day. On this day,
the Mets
would FIGHT. On this day, Jerry Manuel would manage his behind
off, Mets
fielders would sparkle, and David Wright would finish off those tough
Padres
with a two-out walk-off home run.
Manuel
was brilliant. Sometimes the things that work the best are the
simplest. What Manuel did in those eighth and ninth innings was
to simply
remove his pitcher every time that hurler failed to produce...which was
quite
often, really, about as often as you might expect from a bullpen that
had been
rapidly becoming one of the worst in Major League Baseball.
The
first pitcher Manuel called on was Duaner Sanchez, which made perfect
sense to
me at the time. After all, Sanchez, when he's on, can be
brilliant and he
probably has the best stuff of them all. He's used to pitching
with men
on base. But Duaner let Jerry down again, hitting the first
batter he
faced. Bases loaded. Jerry came out and immediately removed him
from the
game, a move not only simple but just.
Next
he called on Pedro Feliciano, the lefty who had been relatively decent
lately. Good move. Pedro induced a fielder's choice
grounder out of
the very dangerous Brian Giles; the Mets got the force at home.
(They
also got a totally unnecessary throw to second from the catcher on the
play but
why not be magnanimous today).
With
one out now and the bases still loaded, Feliciano managed to get
another ground
ball to Jose Reyes's right that just managed to get by a diving
Jose. The
hard single produced just one run though, so the Mets retained the
lead.
But a hit is a hit, and Manuel removed Feliciano for Joe Smith, a
right-hander
who can get the double play on occasion.
And
Joe did the job perfectly. What came next was the play of the
day, and
maybe a play that will live forever in my mind, the kind of play that
showed
how badly each Met wanted that win, wanted to get out of that
inning. And
get out of it they did.
Smith
got the ground ball, but it was hit hard and well to second baseman
Argenis
Reyes's right. Argenis was beautiful, diving to snare the ball,
quickly
flipping to Jose, who had to hurry his throw to first. Jose's
throw was
in the dirt and to the outfield side of first. But Nick Evans
stretched
way to his right, grabbed that hard throw on the short hop, and hung
on.
Picture-perfect double play. The Mets survived the eighth, still
holding
on to the one run lead. One inning down, one to go.
The
Mets would do nothing in their half of the eighth, a harbinger of worse
things
to come for Mets fans only too aware of what adventure this pen could
dream
up. And it was a sign of another failure of these Mets, their
inability
to add to a lead in the late innings. They would have to make
that one
run lead stand up.
Manuel
went to lefty Scott Schoeneweis for the ninth. Schoeneweis had
teamed
with Smith to successfully close out the Padres in the series
opener. In
addition, although the first batter would be a switch-hitter, the
second man up
would be left-handed batter Jody Gerut, who had homered earlier off
Santana.
Schoeneweis
got the dangerous Headley to pop out but he would leave a ball right
over the
plate for Gerut and he complied by knocking the ball over the right
field wall
for the game-tying home run. It was a shocker, although for this
sorry
bullpen, that statement is kind of difficult to defend. What it
did was
seemingly stop any momentum and erase any benefit the Mets had gained
from that
terrific double play they'd managed to eke out in the eighth.
Manuel
stuck with his game plan for the night though, immediately coming out
to take
the ball from the grumbling Schoeneweis and hand it to Aaron Heilman,
Heilman
of the hard luck, Heilman, who had given up a 3-run homer two days
earlier to
these very same Padres.
But
Heilman would not let Manuel down. Not this time. Heilman
would
calmly retire the next two batters in order, the first on a strikeout
and the
second on a harmless ground ball. Although
somewhat sullied, the pen had managed to at
least keep the game
tied and give the locals a chance to take the game in the ninth.
Which
is what they ultimately did, of course, but not without a little more
angst. Former Met Heath Bell would pitch
the ninth
for the Padres and it seemed to me that he’d done more than his share
against
his former team in the past.
But
Endy Chavez gave the Mets high hopes by singling to center, putting the
winning
run on first base with nobody out. But
then things started looking bleak again. Jose
Reyes failed in his bunt attempt, popping out
to the pitcher. Then his namesake Argenis
Reyes hit the ball
solidly but lined out to left. Two outs.
So
it was all up to David Wright, Wright who had made a critical error on
a ground
ball to help lose Tuesday’s game, Wright who had made bonehead mistakes
on the
bases, Wright who had insisted to Manuel that he wasn’t tired, that he
didn’t
need a break.
And
he didn’t. Wright hit the ball over the
left field wall.
