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Pedro Feliciano couldn't hold them
Photo
by Ed Betz - AP
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and Oliver Perez was just good
Photo
by Ed Betz - AP |
It was fitting, I thought, that the
Olympics should end with
400 Chinese shakin' their butts in the air. That's just the way I
was
feeling about the Olympics as they finally wound down, except my pants
would
have been at half-mast. While the beginning of these Olympic
Games were
practically earth-shaking, and the middle was excellent, by the end, I
was
ready for baseball again, oh, and football too. It was the two
concurrent
fantasy football drafts though that really did me in.
As
I had feared for some time now, the Mets were not able to put away a
team with
good pitching. Although they hung around for ten innings, it was
the
middling Astros who took the third game of the series yesterday.
And, as
expected, the starting pitching was pretty good. That the relief
pitching
was less good, if not downright awful, had to be expected too, I
guess.
It had to catch up with my Metsies sometime.
The Giants-Jets game was a real yawner
too, I thought,
though we did see some pretty good defense, I suppose. That Osi
Umenyiora
was lost for the season is a real heart-breaker though. We can
only hope
it's not a forbidding omen, and that albatross I thought I saw flying
over the
stadium was just a gigantic pigeon, gone crazy from too many hot dogs
and beer.
Oh well, at least I won't have to spell his name again this season.
The
most startling football news though, for fans not interested only in
the local
teams, was that Kurt Warner may have kept his starting job in Arizona over
the bonus-baby heart throb from
USC, one Matt Leinart. Kurt has been pretty darned good this
exhibition
season, but the word was that Leinart would surely be the
starter. I'm
sure salary negotiations may have played a part, too, in Warner's
sudden
ascension. When handing out millions to anyone, it's kinda nice
to see
them on the field, especially in Arizona,
a place that has never happily given away anything, just ask Anquan
Boldin.
In fact, if salary negotiations thrill
you, this is your
season. (Turn, turn, turn). Plaxico Burress may get some kind of
extension and Antonio Pierce has had his hands out too, we are led to
believe. At least the Jets seem a lot more settled right now,
having
already doled out multi-million dollar contracts to quite a few
newcomers, such
as Faneca and Pace. They may even be able to protect
what's-his-name
althoughthat wasn;t much in evidence on Friday night.
That
the football season starts on a Thursday night thrills me not.
What a
stupid way to start a season. I know. I have to learn to
adapt to
change, Olympics in China,
Jamaicans winning all the sprints, and making a big deal about the
Redeem-Team
beating friggin' Spain
in basketball. Ho-friggin-hum. Kobe-Kobe-Kobe, WOOHOO.
But this piece is supposed to be about
fitting endings,
right? Well, based on this beginning, I'd have to say it would be
entirely fitting if the Jets made the playoffs, what with about five
rather
extreme additions to both offense and defense. But for the
Giants, alas,
it doesn't look good. To lose Osi after losing Strahan is taking
two big
hits right off the bat. The rest of the league wasn't standing
still, you
know. I expect both the Eagles and the Skins to be more formidable this
year. You can be sure Donovan McNabb will be singing no sad songs
for the
G-Men.
But now I must turn to the most fitting ending of all,
the
end of yesterday’s Mets game.
I guess
Mr. Manuel can’t spin a miracle every time out after all.
Finding the right combination of mediocre
relief had been a Manuel specialty as of late, but yesterday wasn’t one
of
those days.
Well, actually, it did look
as if he’d pull it off one more time, but he ran out of options at the
end.
Pedro Feliciano gave up two, two, two
big home runs in the
top of the tenth to pretty much seal the Mets fate Sunday afternoon. And I say it was fitting only because the
Mets have not been able to secure a top reliever after losing Billy
Wagner. They did secure a pretty fair
holder, if you
will, but he had been used up in the
ninth.
I suppose the real story of the game was that Oliver
Perez
could only put in 6 1/3 yesterday.
Heilman
relieved Perez in he seventh but couldn’t
hold the lead for the
southpaw starter, giving up two hits while retiring only one batter.
Schoeneweis and Smith finished out the
seventh and eighth very nicely too
Luis Ayala, the reliever they did
acquire, has been very
good, and he continued to be, pitching the ninth inning to a very good
effect. But in the 10th, Manuel
was
running out of options; there were only two relievers left.
Manuel opted for the lefty Feliciano.
It
was not his day.
And
it was very quickly not his day; no
infuriating walks or seeing-eye base hits yesterday that in the past
had
brought Jerry out to the mound for a magic pitching change. No,
yesterday, it
was all over very quickly.
Boom.
Boom.
Down two.
Duaner Sanchez, the last reliever, did
finish out the tenth
with no further damage but the Mets didn’t show much in their half of
that 10th
inning and it was all over. The Astros
closer, Jose Valverde, handled the top of the Mets lineup pretty
handily
yesterday.
But all is not lost.
The Mets still retain
their first place position in
the NL East. They
can tie the Astros series 2-2 with a win tomorrow and, as Mike Pelfrey
takes
the mound, things look pretty good, especially if he can give them
seven or
eight good innings.
Then it’s the
Phillies for two and
Florida
for three.
I sure hope the starters can keep
on keeping on. Otherwise, there may be
more fitting endings
to come.
