Showing posts with label Juan Lagares. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Juan Lagares. Show all posts

Thursday, May 23, 2019

Wake Up

The bats had been asleep all night, other than the occasional hit here and there. Jacob deGrom, fed up with the way he had been pitching, gave up an Adam Eaton 1st inning home run, and nothing thereafter. The look in his eye said all you needed to know. Enough was enough. And could we get a little strike-calling consistency from the home plate umpire, please?

Michael Owens/Getty Images
Photo via federalbaseball.com
The story, however, is not how the ump would sometimes call a strike just off the plate and sometimes call it a ball. The Mets looked listless for the majority of the game, albeit against one of the best pitchers in baseball, Max Scherzer, who I normally rib for being to0 home run prone. He kept the Mets in the ballpark all game, with their best opportunity coming in the 1st inning when they were gifted 2nd and 3rd and 1 out on a booted Robinson Cano-hit ball. The Nationals bullpen is so horrendous you know if you can just wait it out, you may have a chance. I don't think I'm alone, however, when I say that I thought the Mets were going to lose 1-0. No matter how much I believe and how optimistic I can be, it just felt like one of those games where the team was going to come up short.

The beautiful part of it all was that even though the Nats bullpen did their usual in the 8th, it was particularly sweet when the best chance they got, Sean Doolittle, came undone when brought in to get the 4-out save. First hitting Carlos Gomez, he faced Juan Lagares, who had not been too successful lately. None of that matters now, though, as Juan crushed a double that cleared the bases, giving us Mets fans a moment we all hope for from this team on a nightly basis. Some sort of life, some sort of spark, when our backs are against the wall, we overcome it all.

They weren't done, however, and a player I wanted almost a decade ago provided a grand Mets memory for his first AB as a New York Met. Called up to replace the injured Brandon Nimmo, Rajai Davis crushed almost over the Great Wall of Flushing but far enough to more or less seal the comeback deal. Just like that, the Mets are going for a 4-game sweep of the Washington Nationals today at 12:10.

It's the kind of early summer early start I so wish I could go to, but alas, I must deal with prior engagements. I'm not one to boycott, though my finances and schedule basically render that I cannot give the Wilpons my money right now anyway. I love this team, however, and I cannot be in the camp that want to see the Mets do badly just so the Wilpons are forced to sell. It's just unfortunately not the way it works, as sports teams toe that weird line between public interest and private venture. I would always rather see the team play the way they have the last 3 games, and I hope it continues all the way through the last Major League Baseball game of the 2019 season. I have my issues, I have my qualms, but what I also will always have is a love for the New York Mets.

Ya Gotta Believe indeed.

KEEP. ON. PUSHIN'.
LET'S. GO. METS.

Friday, May 23, 2014

The Stopper


Last year, late in the season when we had lost 5 in a row, Jon Niese started against the Phillies and shut them down for 9 innings, completing the game for a 5-0 win.

Though Niese did not have the same dominant game he had on that August day, he was once more called upon to shut the losing streak down, and he did more than his part last night with 7 innings of 3-run ball, off 4 hits and 5 walks, striking out 5. He would have been even better had it not been for his former teammate Justin Turner tattooing him in the 7th for an original dimension game-tying 2-run homer, erasing the lead Niese helped grab with a double in the 5th inning, the only pitcher other than Jacob deGrom with a hit on this team. Turner had also helped the Mets by bobbling Daniel Murphy's grounder to let the 3rd run score in that same 5th. 

Back to Niese in the 7th, however, as he battled through and picked up the win when Wilmer Flores and Juan Lagares combined in the bottom half to get the lead right back; Wilmer singling to lead off the inning and Lagares driving him in with 2 out on a single as well.

The offense was really the star of the show last night. No, we did not have an explosion, but the productive outs that were missing in our features for so long were had by the likes of Eric "Soup" Campbell, who has done nothing but play like a serious pro since he arrived from AAA.

The AB of the night, though, and the AB of his year so far was Curtis Granderson in the 2nd inning. This is where I came in, turning on WOR probably 7 pitches into the 12-pitch AB that ended with a double over Matt Kemp's head, taking 3rd base on the outfielder's bobble. Watching some of the early parts of the game later, it was clear in the 1st inning that Zack Greinke, who had been on fire this year (and really for his last 100 starts), did not have his command when David Wright had an 8-pitch AB that unfortunately finished the inning with a strikeout looking. Curtis fouled them off and fouled them off until driving it to center, scoring on Mr. Campbell's sac fly to tie the game at 1.

As I walked Queens Boulevard towards the bridge getting ready to call Gary Mack for Mets Musings, Howie Rose had a call to match the amazing moment he was witnessing, as Yasiel Puig made one of the greatest catches you will see, almost doubling up The Duda at 1st (Howie's call is around the 2:10 mark.)



Yasiel Puig is quite the amazing talent, but the infamy of the Cuban player not having his head in the game or being unaware of the rules was evident throughout the series. He looked silly gunning the ball towards the plate with 3 out the other day. Lucky for him and the Dodgers, that didn't affect those actual outcomes, whereas last night, he burned his team on an infield fly that tailed to the outfield in the top of the 6th, where the rule clearly states, "run at your own risk."

Oh, and of course, the man got doubled off on this, in Eric "Soup" Campbell's 1st Major League outfield start.



And I'd be remiss if I didn't mention Mr. Jenrry "Back-to-Back" Mejia, who took a page out of Jose "Papa Grande" Valverde's antics book to lock down his 2nd Major League save.



And some other items of note:

  • Though he did get caught stealing in the bottom of the 3rd, David Wright should attempt to steal more bases if he's going to be a singles hitter. I think, however, we haven't seen more steal attempts because he's still rather timid following his hamstring issue last year.
  • SNY needs to change the defensive alignment graphic that is still the original Citi dimensions. It's been like 3 years, you guys...
  • Speaking of SNY, whether or not the Mets are struggling, Gary, Keith and Ron are ALWAYS on their game.
  • The Dodgers were in an alternate road uniform that was a grey version of their home unis, with the classic "Dodgers" across the chest as opposed to "Los Angeles." I'm a stickler for having your nickname on your uni at home and your city on your uni on the road. Unless it's the Phillies, where there's really no difference from saying "Phillies" as opposed to "Philadelphia."

So, we salvage the final game, getting the timely hits we had not been getting. Curtis has been impressing me with his approach lately, Flores is hitting when getting the chance, and Eric Campbell should probably be playing wherever we can get him in the lineup. Clearly, one game is not going to turn my opinion around on Sandy and Terry, but a win is a win, and I'll take it. No matter how much a massive losing streak could possibly help purge this team, seeing and hearing a solid, well put-together win always trumps any vitriol that had been building up. That's all you want to see: The New York Mets win, not keep botching winnable games, and look like there is some actual growth with this franchise.

As I stated before, Mr. Gary Mack was my eyes and ears during last night's contest as I walked over the Queensboro Bridge discussing the Mets with him on Mets Musings. Make sure to take a listen on this Friday in May.

Have a great holiday weekend, folks...and as always...

LET'S. GO. METS.


Thanks for reading! Follow me on Twitter @convertedmetfan. For more from myself and others on the Mets, head over to Rising Apple. And for the latest on a Brooklyn Baseball TV Series I am developing, Like the Bedford & Sullivan Facebook page, follow on Twitter hereand listen to the research process here.

Monday, May 19, 2014

It's Over

I believe we are beginning to see the end of the Terry Collins era.

I almost didn't even WANT to write about the Mets 'cause I contain so much vitriol.

This past weekend, I have never seen the level of understanding amongst the fanbase that Terry is not fit to be manager of this ballclub. I have been saying for a very long time that Terry Collins should not be manager of this ballclub. I don't believe he will ever be able to lead a team to the playoffs. So, whether or not there's other things going on when it comes to the Juan Lagares situation, or anything involving the Mets, things that the public doesn't really have to know about or have any right to know. You're starting to see, at least in the public eye, a man becoming more delusional with the managerial decisions and becoming more and more defensive about it. And you know what? You've got a GM I'm growing more and more agitated with for not doing anything about it, and SIGNING the guy back up in the first place (I guess you could go all the way back to hiring him in the first place, but I get what Terry is and Sandy seems to as well, considering a 2-year deal is NOT a ringing endorsement.)

My faith in Sandy's judgement is waning because of the Terry Collins situation. He has clearly begun a grand foundation reconstruction with the minor leagues, and for that, I'm willing to accept that is Sandy Alderson's lasting legacy with the New York Mets. But I need to begin seeing better judgement with the Major League ballclub.

Our blood was boiling Friday night, when us Metsian nerds, myself and the Brooklyn Trolley Blogger Mike Lecolant, took to the airwaves post-game and vented our frustration on the Rising Apple Report. The sound bytes are as relevant today as they were on Friday night, and we'll spew even more sound bytes later this evening on a whole new episode of the Rising Apple Report.


Thank God for the off day. I don't want to see any of those guys today.

I'll think about the Mets...but I don't have to LIKE it.

LET'S. GO. METS.


Thanks for reading! Follow me on Twitter @convertedmetfan. And for the latest on a Brooklyn Baseball TV Series I am developing, Like the Bedford & Sullivan Facebook page, follow on Twitter hereand listen to the research process here.

Friday, May 16, 2014

Typical

Remember last year's All-Star Game? At Citi Field? The NL team got shut out on 3 hits?

I said to myself, "My, how Citi Field of the All-Star Game."

This offense seems to change its approach dramatically when coming home, and that is the dimensions still haunting this team. Not to take anything away from how well the Yankees pitchers pitched in our ballpark, but we had our chances. Am I saying change the dimensions even further? No. I'm saying the damage has been done and there is no fixing it after they structurally ruined any possibility of that without a major overhaul of the ballpark.

The aggressiveness disappears because they are afraid of powering an out, when the aggressiveness should stay and they should aim for the gaps. Home runs will come...maybe. But still, something is fundamentally wrong with the psyche of anyone who plays in that place as the home team.

So, we head down to Washington, DC, for our first series against the Nationals in their ballpark. At this point, with no Lagares in the lineup, for the 4th time in 5 days, Terry seems off his rocker even more than I believed he could go, but unless they keep losing, there is really nothing that can be done no matter how much a good amount of us think this is outlandish and fireable. Terry Collins is a detriment to us winning ballgames, and it's becoming more and more a poor mark on Sandy's judgement, no matter how much a 2-year deal is anything but a true vote of confidence.

I will ALWAYS root for the Mets to win, no matter how much I might disagree with certain pieces in place. If this inconsistency continues, and even more so leans towards increasing the numbers in the right column of the record, it's only a matter of time before Terry Collins's contract is eaten.

Let's pick the Nats out of our hair and squish them as we throw them to the ground.

LET'S. GO. METS.


Thanks for reading! Follow me on Twitter @convertedmetfan. And for the latest on a Brooklyn Baseball TV Series I am developing, Like the Bedford & Sullivan Facebook page, follow on Twitter hereand listen to the research process here.

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

A Change of Pace


After Monday's loss, I decided to pull up some years that came to mind when it comes to Opening Day. There will be lots of recent years just to have the comparison.

1968
1Wednesday, Apr 10boxscoreNYM@SFGL450-161.0LinzyFrisella2:15D35,774
1969
1Tuesday, Apr 8boxscoreNYMMONL10110-141.0ShawKoonceSembera3:35D44,541
1973
1Friday, Apr 6boxscoreNYMPHIW301-01TiedSeaverCarltonMcGraw1:56D27,326
1980
1Thursday, Apr 10boxscoreNYMCHCW521-01TiedSwanReuschelAllen2:23D12,219
1984
1Monday, Apr 2boxscoreNYM@CINL180-160.5SotoTorrez2:12D46,000
1986
1Tuesday, Apr 8boxscoreNYM@PITW421-01TiedGoodenReuschel2:24N48,962
1997
1Tuesday, Apr 1boxscoreNYM@SDPL5120-141.0HamiltonPerez3:03D43,005
1999
1Monday, Apr 5boxscoreNYM@FLAL260-141.0FernandezLeiter3:12D38,983
2000
1Monday, Apr 4boxscoreNYM@CINL670-141.0GravesLooper2:44D42,794
2006
1Monday, Apr 3boxscoreNYMWSNW321-01TiedGlavineHernandezWagner2:49D54,371
2007
1Sunday, Apr 1boxscoreNYM@STLW611-01up 0.5GlavineCarpenter2:38N45,429
2008
1Monday, Mar 31boxscoreNYM@FLAW721-020.5SantanaHendrickson2:53D38,308
2009
1Monday, Apr 6boxscoreNYM@CINW211-01TiedSantanaHarangRodriguez3:17D42,177
2010
1Monday, Apr 5boxscoreNYMFLAW711-01TiedSantanaJohnson3:10D41,245
2011
1Friday, Apr 1boxscoreNYM@FLAL260-141.0JohnsonPelfrey2:42N41,237
2012
1Thursday, Apr 5boxscoreNYMATLW101-01TiedRamirezHansonFrancisco2:39D42,080
2013
1Monday, Apr 1boxscoreNYMSDPW1121-01TiedNieseVolquez3:01D41,053
Now, first of all, (besides the fact I DON'T know why 2012 is the only one baseball reference doesn't have with a yellow background...) do you know what the difference is between 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014?

I, myself, was at 2012 and 2013....I WASN'T at 2011 and 2014. Just sayin'.

Now, secondly, before I dissect unsuccessfully ('cause the comparison is all hypothetical) the above numbers, I started writing the above (ending with Just Sayin') before Bobby Parnell went down with an incomplete tear of the MCL in his right elbow, I wanted to make the point that Jose Valverde would probably become the Mets closer at some point in the near future. It's not just his performance yesterday, which was clearly a small sample size and was easily the best thing about the Mets bullpen. He just gives off the vibe of a winning closer on a team that DESPERATELY needs players to give off a winning vibe. Whatever you think about his antics, he looked ready for primetime yesterday, and no offense to Bobby Parnell, but no matter how much talent he has and no matter how good he was last year, has never looked ready. It is unfortunate that it is an injury that was keeping him underperforming, as it would be unfortunate if Bobby Parnell got replaced because of ineffectiveness, 'cause you always root for your players to do well. Still, though, you wish everyone the best, but you WANT the best for your team, and right now, let's face it, Jose Valverde is probably the best thing in the back frame that you can get from this bullpen. Vic Black will eventually get up and be the set up, though I kinda get why the team would want him to get his control under control elsewhere before jeopardizing the team. 'Cause we ALL KNOW how detrimental loss of control can be in the Big Leagues (cough cough, Carlos Torres, cough cough, Scott Rice, cough.)

So, let's first get rid of 2014 before we compare it to past opening days. We have some good things and we have some bad things, and unfortunately in this one, the bad things outweigh the good. STILL, let's take what we can get and look forward to 161.

Aside from that fact Sandy Alderson's bullpen has yet to come together in his tenure, the power seems to be...as does the strikeouts.

Dillon Gee was solid for a while, but Terry decided he was losing it and did what he does and what many do these days: Overmanage.

The bullpen didn't do him any solid, and since he's mediocre at best, Terry lost.

Andrew Brown wasn't supposed to play today. And Andrew Brown made his case for staying on the team with a 3-run shot in the 1st. I wonder if anybody else already said this...but can HE play first?

Ike got a walk, but didn't get much else. First game, but what a MAGNIFYING GLASS on that entire situation right now. Almost too much. And I'm buying into it.

David Wright does what he does best: Carry this team. Sooner or later, since Curtis Granderson did not play much last year, he too will round into form. Not so much yesterday. A couple called 3rd strikes. Slightly timid with his plate appearances.

Here's the kicker: what was Terry Collins doing bringing John Lannan in then (the 10th inning)? 'Cause he's a lefty? It would have made much more sense for John Lannan earlier, and Gonzalez Germen in those later innings. I don't know, it just seems like the wrong time for a local kid to be making his debut, down 6-5 with runners on base in the 10th inning. If you're gonna use his as LOOGY, why not when the pressure's on, give him his first real taste of New York. Was he even facing a lefty? Or at least the at bat before? Let me check...Ah, ok, so John Lannan was brought in to face Adam LaRoche, whom he walked. And clearly that is the time to bring him in after Jeurys didn't look good at all. Yeah, maybe I'm piling on Terry, but the whole thing didn't feel right for someone transitioning from starting to bullpen.

Ruben Tejada got a couple hits. Though he looked awful later, EVERYBODY STRUCK OUT BADLY, so give the kid credit for putting a multi-hit day together when he HAS to. He probably won't be the shortstop all season, but he might as well collect some freakin' hits.

Anything else? Let's see....I'll watch condensed game again in the morning and get back to you before attempting to put everything in perspective of the games above.

Now that I'm awake (after too many snoozes) I guess the only other thing I wanted to say was how much I love that we keep owning Stephen Strasburg. And Juan Lagares. Awesome day from that kid.

There isn't too much overanalyzing I should do when it comes to comparing or contrasting the past years to this opening day. From 2006-2010, they won every opening day. Though we would kill for another 2006 right about now, we wouldn't kill for the devastation and its franchise-altering moment. Clearly, the Mets aren't at that point and are on an uphill climb, hopefully with more long-term success than they've ever put together in their history. Looking at the transitional corner-turning years, which is most likely what this is and what we hope it at least is, they lost in 1968, 1984, 1997, 2005 and 2011. Though 2011 was a worse record than the year before, it is still considered a transitional type in my eyes. 2005 could have gone better, but is still transitional. 1968 record-wise would mean we are regressing and Terry Collins gets fired, but in terms of type, we are looking for the type of impact 1968 had on the franchise in the moment. Ideally, other than having a 1969, 1973, 1986, 1999 or 2000, we are looking for a 1984 or 1997.

Lastly, I just wanted to say some quick things about those attendances. 12,000 in 1980 appears high for that era, so good job, and I don't believe that the Marlins got at least 38,000 in 1999, 2008, and 2011. But hey, it's Opening Day, right? Even Florida wants to celebrate.

Now, we march on towards the remaining 161. Yeah, there's pressure on a lot of folks regarding this organization,  but you have to think that the success and failure, no matter what your thoughts are of the job Sandy Alderson has done, rests on the shoulders of Terry Collins on a 2-year deal. It's put up or shut up time for Terry. He was given the chance to show he truly belongs, and though he's clearly not the long-term solution at manager being the oldest in the Majors now to man the helm, he needs a solid showing just to move on to 2015, I believe.

Game 1 is over. We got that out of the way. There's a myriad of ways this season could go. And maybe, just maybe, the fact they lost this Opening Day, a day they normally win before the season ends as a dud thereafter, could be a good omen if you believe in that type of stuff.

Onward and Upward.
LET'S. GO. METS.

Thanks for reading! Follow me on Twitter @convertedmetfan. And for the latest on a Brooklyn Baseball TV Series I am developing, Like the Bedford & Sullivan Facebook page, follow on Twitter hereand listen to the research process here.