Monday Applesauce
In the Dominican Republic:
- Argenis Reyes went 0-for-4 with a walk.
- Fernando Martinez went 1-for-4 with a walk and an RBI.
- Fernando Tatis went 2-for-7 with an RBI.
In Puerto Rico:
- After picking up his first two hits of the fall on Saturday, Nick Evans went 0-for-2 with a walk on Sunday.
- Brahiam Maldonado went 1-for-2.
At MetsGeek, Chris McCown lays out his offseason manifesto.
In Newsday, Ken Davidoff talks about how the Mets are concerned with Francisco Rodriguez's drop in velocity, but maybe aren't so concerned about Bobby Jenks's precipitous drop in strikeouts. I'd be concerned about both, frankly, and if the White Sox are really looking for a "high-level prospect" for Jenks (say, Fernando Martinez), the Mets had better be doing their shopping elsewhere.
The Yankees have sold the rights to Darrell Rasner to a team in Japan, which perhaps gives Rasner a chance to make a better living for himself than he would have as a farmhand with the Yanks. Tyler Kepner has more.
Speaking of the Yankees, are they overbidding for C.C. Sabathia? Possibly. Some Red Sox fans are hoping the Yankees do sign him (scroll down to reason #947, via Ken Davidoff's baseball insider).
The Hardball Times Annual sounds awesome. Go pre-order it from ACTA Sports.
Seven of ESPN's "experts" picked Ryan Howard for NL MVP. One of them picked Manny Ramirez, and another picked C.C. Sabathia. Rob Neyer picked Lance Berkman which, while hardly a bad pick, is just Neyer trying to be different, I think. Bob Klapisch was one of the seven to pick Howard, so he is officially dead to me.
Rich Lederer has the first part of his twelve-part review of the Bill James Handbook. I should have part one of my one-part review up sometime this week.
The Pirates' Nate McLouth won a Gold Glove, but John Dewan's +/- system rated him at -40, the worst of any centerfielder in baseball. How do we reconcile the two? John Dewan himself takes a crack at it (via WHYGAVS?).
17 comments | 0 recs
Stupid Braves: Mets 9, Cardinals 1
Johan Santana finally gets the complete game he should have had a week ago, and drops his ERA to 2.93, good for sixth in the NL. He thoroughly dominated the Cardinals, a solo homerun by Albert Pujols the only real blemish. I'm told that Duaner Sanchez wasn't even allowed out of the clubhouse until the game was over just to be on the safe side.
The same Mets' offense that was stymied by Kyle Lohse a few weeks ago battered him relentlessly through five-plus innings, cranking out seven runs on eleven hits including three homeruns. The Mets tallied 17 hits overall including seven for extra-bases. Santana went 2-for-2 with a run batted in, everyone in the lineup had at least one hit and either scored or drove in a run.
Carlos Beltran made an in-friggin-credible catch at the wall, but let's see him come up big when it's *not* a blowout, eh? Ramon Castro continues to support my theory that Brian Schneider has incriminating photos of Jerry Manuel or Omar Minaya or perhaps both at the same time. What does this guy have to do to get into more than one game a week?
Big winners: Johan Santana, +33.0% WPA, Endy Chavez, +9.4 % WPA
Big losers: Carlos Delgado, -8.8% WPA, Damion Easley, -4.4% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Beltran RBI-single in 3rd, +9.1% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Delgado double-play in 1st, -8.5% WPA
Total pitcher WPA: +33.0%
Total batter WPA: +17.0%
Game Thread Roll Call
Nice job by BobbyV_Incognito; his effort in the game thread embiggens us all.
| Name | # of Posts |
|---|---|
| BobbyV_Incognito | 55 |
| Catsmeat Potter-Pirbright | 45 |
| LOUtheMETfan | 44 |
| DoctorK16 | 26 |
| Endys Game | 11 |
| Prince | 7 |
| pingel | 5 |
| Simons | 5 |
| itsmetsforme | 4 |
| Rod Gaspar Fan Club | 3 |
| anonymous | 3 |
3 comments | 0 recs
A Reyes Affair
Another awesome start by Mike Pelfrey. Five strikeouts (two of Albert Pujols) and no walks. His 6-to-9 groundball-to-flyball ratio is a little perplexing, but everything else was primo. Carlos Delgado continues his tear, and Argenis Reyes showing Jose how it's done.
Big winners: Mike Pelfrey, +28.9% WPA, Jose Reyes, +12.4% WPA
Big losers: Carlos Beltran, -7.5% WPA, Duaner Sanchez, -3.2% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: J.Reyes two-run triple, +16.9% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Schneider GIDP in second, -7.7% WPA
Total pitcher WPA: +29.8%
Total batter WPA: +20.2%
Game Thread Roll Call
Nice job by LOUtheMETfan; his effort in the game thread embiggens us all.
| Name | # of Posts |
|---|---|
| LOUtheMETfan | 90 |
| Greenpoint Ian | 35 |
| JoshNY | 20 |
| Simons | 19 |
| Reg Dunlop | 19 |
| OSUmets | 14 |
| itsmetsforme | 13 |
| pingel | 11 |
| Catsmeat Potter-Pirbright | 10 |
| anonymous | 6 |
| kingcritical | 1 |
| ZaBlanc | 1 |
5 comments | 0 recs
Will They Ever Learn?
What the hell was that crap about? I don't know why I bother sometimes, because staying up late to watch this team give it up like that as often as they do really takes a lot out of me. This loss was such a wretched, phenomenal failure, but none of us can say that we didn't expect the game to end poorly, at least a little bit. This team seems to be a magnet for suffering, and if there's a reasonable way to lose a game they can usually find it.
Pedro was terrible, then it rained, and then he was much better. Overall, still terrible, but he showed signs of putting things together after giving up four runs in the first. I don't know if he's still tipping his pitches or disguising them well but executing them poorly, but last night's poll still stands as a big question mark for the remainder of the season.
This loss really hurts. The Mets haven't won a single game this season during which they've trailed by more than two runs at any point. Last night they were down by four runs and they charged all the way back to take a two-run lead in the seventh. They'll kick themselves because they had a couple of chances to pad that lead: first in the seventh when Jose Reyes lined out to center to end the inning with two runners on base, and again when David Wright hit a one-out triple in the eighth, only to be stranded when Carlos Beltran struck out looking and Ryan Church grounded out to second. The Beltran-haters will come back out of the woodwork to pillory him for failing to get the runner home from third with less than two outs, but the guy has come through in that situation something like 65% of the time (per the on-screen display SNY flashed right before the whiff).
An extra insurance run or two would have made a big difference, obviously, as Pedro Feliciano promptly gave up the lead in the bottom of the eighth when this fucklick hit a two-run homerun to tie the game. Chris Duncan is generally as bad at hitting southpaws as Brett Myers is good at hitting his wife, and Feliciano has been murder on lefties this season (and in general), but those two facts blatantly disregarded each other and conspired to screw the Mets and left me with no choice but to pathetically cry myself to sleep. Again.
The real hero last night was Jerry Manual, who deftly displayed the same lack of managerial ingenuity that made Willie Randolph the target of much fan ire. With the game tied at seven in the bottom of the ninth, the Cardinals were set to bring up the meat of their order: Pujols, Ankiel and Glaus. Fine, tie game, other team's best hitters coming up, rollercoaster of a game possibly hanging in the balance. What to do? If you're Jerry Manuel, you bring in the worst pitcher in your bullpen and a dude who sauntered around the field before the game wearing a Hello Kitty backpack (that, of course, has nothing to do with his crappiness). Billy Wagner is twiddling his thumbs in the bullpen, and he's the best pitcher you've got, and I don't care that it isn't a save situation or that you might have a save situation next inning or the inning after. If you don't get through their team's best hitters RIGHT NOW then there won't be a game to save later. I've basically accepted the fact that a manager will never bring in his best reliever to pitch to the heart of the order in the seventh or eighth inning, even though it may be the highest leverage inning of the game. It's the right thing to do, but it doesn't happen and it might never happen because closers like to pitch the ninth inning. But this *was* the ninth inning, AND it was the highest leverage situation of the game, and Manual still made the absolute wrong decision and the Mets lost the game because of it. There were other things the Mets screwed up, and even if Muniz (or Wagner) came in to shut down Pujols, Ankiel and Glaus, there's no guarantee that the Mets would have won the game anyway. But you've gotta give them a chance, Jerry.
Of course Carlos Muniz retired Pujols and Ankiel, and of course Glaus hit his second homerun of the game. Of course the Mets lost, and of course I'm moving on.
Big winners: David Wright, +22.5% WPA, Damion Easley, +18.5% WPA
Big losers: Carlos Muniz, -35.8% WPA, Pedro Martinez, -25.4% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Damion Easley two-run double, +14.7% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: You know what, -46.3% WPA
Total pitcher WPA: -80.9%
Total batter WPA: +30.9%
Game Thread Roll Call
Nice job by JoshNY; his effort in last night's game thread embiggens us all.
| Name | # of Posts |
|---|---|
| JoshNY | 25 |
| Prince | 19 |
| JohnPeterson | 12 |
| ZaBlanc | 11 |
| DoctorK16 | 10 |
| metsexile | 4 |
| gogomets | 4 |
| itsmetsforme | 4 |
| Reg Dunlop | 4 |
| LOUtheMETfan | 3 |
| goth brooks | 1 |
9 comments | 0 recs





