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Beltran was just great despite knee
Photo
by Chris McGrath-Getty
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and Ayala
was tough AGAIN
Photo
by Tom Mihalek - AP |
Every
time I looked up, it was a Mets arm making a big play. Carlos
Beltran
cutting down a runner at the plate, Endy Chavez doing the same but to
second
baseman Damion Easley, David Wright diving to his right to snare a hard
ground
ball, springing to his feet and gunning to Delgado. And
relievers....there were relievers everywhere, and all doing their job.
Yes,
the Mets cemented their hold on first place in the NL East by edging
the tough
Brewers in Milwaukee
last night by a score of 6-5 in ten innings. But it wasn't
easy.
And they didn't do it with starting pitching either, although rookie
Jonathan
Niese did just enough to keep his team in the game.
But
Jonathan, who looked so very good in the first three innings, came
apart in the
fourth. Five straight hits sent him to the dugout without
retiring a
single batter. But no worries, out came Nelson Figueroa to put
out the
fire in the fourth. Just to show it wasn't a fluke, Nelson
pitched a
scoreless fifth as well.
Figueroa
would be the first of a veritable parade of Mets relievers, six of them
to be
exact. Duaner Sanchez followed with a scoreless sixth, Brian
Stokes gave
up only one hit in the seventh and eighth. Then on came the
specialists
to pitch the ninth, Feliciano to handle the big guy, Prince Fielder and
another
lefty, and Smith to handle the right side.
Of
course, the Mets weren't doing anything either against the Brewers
relievers
either. In fact, after the third inning, the Mets bats were
virtually
silenced by Manny Parra, the starter, and then Guillermo Mota, the
slowest
relief pitcher in the world, not his velocity, but the duration between
one
pitch and another. Then fireballing Eric Gagne retired the Mets in the
eighth
before Salomon Torres survived the ninth but not the tenth.
In
the tenth, David Murphy came through once again with a pinch hit
single
to center, and he moved to third base on a very strange play.
Jose
Reyes's bunt was fielded nicely by catcher Jason Kendall but his
hurried throw
to first was to the inside of the bag and arrived at exactly the same
time as
Jose did, thus enabling Reyes to dislodge the ball from Fielder's mitt.
Endy
Chavez then hit a sacrifice fly ball to right field that scored Murphy
with
what would become the deciding run. But not before some more
cardiac
arrest for Mets fans in the bottom of the tenth. Ayala looked
brilliant
in striking out former Met Mike Cameron and was somewhat less imposing
when
Bill Hall just got under one for a long fly ball out to Tatis in right.
Then
the real fun started. The Brewers had still one more gigantic guy
on
their bench, a fellow named Nelson who creamed an Ayala delivery to
right field
for a 2-out double. The very scary Gabe Kapler then walked, making
this
reporter very happy indeed.
This
brought up Rickie Weeks, who had homered
in the first, had hit 3 more singles throughout the course of the game
and who
had scored two of the Brewers runs.
Rickie
appeared to have done it one more time when he stroked a hard liner to
Wright's
right that was foul by about an inch. Big sigh for Mets fans. Rickie couldn’t come through one more time as
Ayala struck him out on a ball that just dropped a foot into the dirt. The Mets had escaped once again.
Although
the Mets made all the plays they had to last night, I have to say the
Mets were
lucky last night too. Lucky because of
the baserunning blunders of the Brewers. Both
runners thrown out didn’t use their feet to
slide, opting for the
ridiculous arm slide to the side of the bag. It
may work sometimes but it didn’t last night, and,
as Keith Hernandez
pointed out, it should be put on the shelf.
So
there were the arms the Mets threw at them all night long, the feet the
Brewers
could have used, and the inches by which the possible game-winning hit
was
foul. Taken together, it seems as if
that’s quite a lot of good fortune to befall our locals on one night.
But
the Mets keep rolling. They don’t hit
half the night and come up roses. In the
first game against the Brewers, Reyes made a silly attempt to steal
third and
was thrown out. That was the kind of
play that signaled the end for the Mets under Willie Randolph.
Not
so for Jerry Manuel. Not so far
anyway. He keeps making all the right
moves. It’s bordering on eerie already. He has nurtured and cajoled and made
seemingly countless trips to the mound these past few weeks and somehow
keeps
coming up roses. But I’ll take it.
I’ll
take the trips to the mound along with the miraculous fielding
turnaround, and
the hot hitting from Delgado and now Beltran. I’ll
take the platoon in left of the kids Murphy and
Evans too. And the defensive replacement
of Chavez in
left field. And the better pitching from
Oliver Perez, and the same for Pelfrey and even Santana.
I’ll
take it all because we Mets fans had to experience the excruciating
losses
under Willie. You’ll never convince me
that this improved play in all aspects of the game by this Mets team is
just
good fortune finally finding its way into the Mets dugout. No, these
successful
moves are all too calculated. The will
to win is right out there for everybody to see. Manuel
will make the moves he has to.
Tomorrow,
this passion play resumes with Perez going against a Brewer pitcher who
has
been “lights out” for the last month, a fellow named Dave Bush. It should be very interesting, but if there’s
a rabbit waiting to be pulled out of a hat, I’ve got to think the
hat’ll be
blue.
