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Mike Pelfrey - showing intensity
Photo
by Keith Srakocic - AP
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Carlos Beltran - outfield assist was big
Photo
by Keith Srakocic - AP |
As
this is written, I recollect Michael Phelps touching that wall .01
seconds
ahead of the Serb and Nastia Liukin doing more things right than all
her
competitors. Of course, in Olympic competition, there are ample
opportunities to witness athletes reaching back for more, calling on
reserves
they knew they had because they'd done it before, not because it's easy
but
because they want to win.
Given
the opportunity, these types of competitors will win. In
professional
baseball, the type of effort I'm talking about is witnessed very seldom
on a
seasonal basis but you can see individual efforts that approach a true
hundred
percent once or twice each night, sometimes by great players but
sometimes by
those lesser talented guys who are just tired of losing, or tired of
seeing
their names in the papers in a negative light.
In
162 games, the duration of the baseball season, you really can't expect
to see
that kind of effort every night. You CAN expect to see it more
than once
in a while though. You DO see it practically all the time from
some of
the greats; I'm thinking of the Mariano Riveras of the world, the Ernie
Bankses, those players who really love the game itself and revel in
their
ability to play it.
More
often than not, though, in baseball, you see guys going through the
motions,
and you hope that will be enough to carry your team through July and
August and
get you into a position to win in September. The good teams
manage the
situation with finesse and just the delicate touch needed to carry 25
different
personalities to the promised land, which is the playoffs in baseball.
Just the right touch.
In 162 games, it means having that touch just a few
more times than the
opposition. It’s the touch that keeps
good players playing well, and great players playing great. And sometimes, in just the right situation,
it’s the touch that gets mediocre players to play over their heads.
<>Does Joe Girardi have it?
Joe
Torre?
Jerry Manuel?
Yeah,
I think they probably do.
Did Willie
Randolph have it?
I
don’t think he did.
At least, not in the
time he had to
demonstrate it.
That touch can sometimes be
interpreted as
heavy-handedness. When Jerry Manuel
honestly talked about having to do something to win games after Monday
night’s
excruciating loss to the Pirates, even proposing to use starters in
relief
situations, it appeared heavy-handed to his relief staff, a staff that
seemed
to be sleepwalking for quite a long time, a staff that was proving to
be one of
the worst in baseball, a staff that didn’t seem phased by their
mounting ERA’s
or even the team’s mounting numbers in the loss column.
But they DID take notice of Manuel’s
comments. They took considerable offense. They had a meeting with raised voices, the
loudest voice ironically being one of the worst offenders, one of the
veterans,
one of the guys who was successful as recently as a few years ago, but
hadn’t
done much last year in the Mets collapse, and had done perhaps less as
this
year’s team was falling into oblivion.
<>Manuel’s comments were made Monday night.
Since
then, they’ve won four in a row, and
the relief staff has never been better.
They
had every opportunity to lose Tuesday night’s
game but Pedro
Feliciano did the job.
On Wednesday,
they weren’t needed.
On Thursday, after
a shaky start by Joe Smith, Duaner Sanchez saved the day.
And last night, Sanchez and Heilman triumphed
again.
It doesn’t matter that the teams they
beat were Washington and Pittsburgh. Wasn’t it Pittsburgh who beat them Monday night? Wasn’t it Pittsburgh who rose from the dead
against a
relief staff too bored with itself to appear to be even trying?
<>Just the right touch.
Are those
relievers still peeved with Manuel?
Probably.
I don’t care.
If
it
takes a
left-handed attack on their self-esteem to get them going, that’s not
Jerry
Manuel’s fault.
The Mets as this is
written are back in first place again.
It’s very difficult to say what that
right touch is
exactly. It’s the touch that got Delgado
going, that got Reyes playing smarter, that got Perez pitching to his
ability,
that got more players to play hard, to have fun, to take pride in
itself and
start winning games.
<>The right touch; it’s ideas like roles for the pitching
staff (until the relievers seemed not to want ANY role), like rest for
some of
his core veterans, like staying with hot bats, like giving his team a
lift with
minor-leaguers showing promise.
But
that’s not all it is either.
It’s visualization too, as Manuel
speaks of another long run
of wins he feels his team can put together, or a run of good at-bats
that
Delgado can put together. It’s praise
out of nowhere for deserving guys like Beltran and Reyes.
It’s praise such as that that gets Reyes to
snag that ball in the hole last night; that gets Beltran to charge that
ground
ball through the infield and fire home to nail that Pirate at the plate.
<>The right touch.
It’s
all of the above and probably some other things too, more ethereal
qualities
such as inspiring confidence just in the thoughtful way he answers
questions,
or inspiring loyalty in the way he rewards deserving players and sits
the
rest.
It’s a commitment to winning with
guys who will get him there, not just filling out a lineup card with
guys
who’ve been there before.
Thoughtfulness, flexibility,
sincerity, commitment….and just
the right touch, usually applied at just the right time.
<>It’s a long season.
There’ll
probably be times when even this manager
may seem to be
sleeping, as I’ve thought on a few occasions this year, occasions when
he could
have walked a batter to face a pitcher, for example.
More often than not though, Manuel
will do just what’s
needed…. with just the right touch.
