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The "Real" Kings of NY

Lord help us, it's the Colorado Rockies.

I'm so happy there were fireworks again tonight, because if you liked it the last 2 nights as a Mets fan, you surely loved it tonight.

It was eerie how pretty much everything that occurred last night occurred again tonight, only in slightly greater relief.

The early lead, the subsequent inability to make pitches or field like a normal team, the failure to run out hits, the barnacle-encrusted bullpen, and worst of all the general sense that the Mets just "weren't into it" all that much.

The one big mystery tonight was whether we'd see the "good" El Duque, or the "evil" El Duque.  The one big difference from last night was that El Duque did not give the lead back immediately, but rather slow-dripped us to death as his own little good v. evil scenario played itself out.

Sometimes baseball games turn on you in an instant.  This was not one of those games.  It was a steady erosion of an already tenuous position that the Mets had established thanks to an error, a walk and a bomb by D-Dub.

Dub was really the only player on the field in a Mets uniform who, well, I don't want to say he's the only one who cared, so I'll go with maintained his focus.  He's the only one who kept his concentration and played like a man worthy of a major league uniform.  That's probably why he was only regular Willie pulled from the lineup early.  Everyone else had to stay out there and enjoy themselves.

Anyway, this good v. evil El Duque thing - I think it did play out in microcosm in a key at-bat by Todd Helton in the 4th inning.  With the bases loaded and two out and the game still tied (and by "still tied" what I mean to say is "El Duque had used up all the rope the Mets handed him"), with El Duque rolling up to 90 pitches or so this was the critical AB of the game, in my mind.  

Had ElD been able to get Helton, he could have worked the 5th, and possibly been in line to still get a win.  He did manage to get ahead of Helton, but started to lose him, and was battling him (much like Darth Vader vs. Obi Wan on the river of lava at the end of Episode III, ok, Eric, you snarky bastid?) with a 2-2 count.  

That's when ElD dropped the Eephus.  Helton waited until he could wait no longer and finally took a mighty swing, ticking just enough of the ball to drop it foul at LoDuca's feet.  

It was a nice effort by ElD.  He did have him surprised by it.  He did get a "woo" out of the crowd.  Had Helton swung and missed, it's a different ballgame, possibly.  

Instead, Helton ultimately walked, leading to a miserable overthrow by Reyes on a ball in the hole, and the game was for all intents and purposes over right there.  

If I had his number, I would have called President Bush immediately to ask him to commute the rest of this game.  Unfortunately, I don't have Preznit Pretzel's number, so I actually had to sit through the rest of the game, which was downright interminable.

From the moment that Helton walked on the missed Eephus (2nd, much lamer attempt) on the 3-2 pitch, the pitch that even Reyes would have taken last year, the pitch that said, "I have nothing on any of my other pitches, so I'm going back to this well one more time, but both of us know damn well it's not going to work," it was just a long, painful journey through one of those "Games That Would Not End".

Sure, stuff happened after that.  Willie had to use "Please Don't Make Me Watch Any Mo" -ta again, after using him yesterday, because he wouldn't let his long man eat the innings a long man is supposed to eat.  Is that the reason Mota appeared more Benitez than ever today?  I have no idea.  But he had no business being in there yesterday, that much I'm pretty sure about.

In fact, Sele came in today to mop up Mota's mess in the role that Joe Smith should have filled, but didn't, because Joe Smith already filled the role that Sele should have filled yesterday.  Go figure.

Scott Schowen- "Why Is Willie Doing This To Me" followed with yet another display of craptaculariousness, as did Pedro "I'm Too Good For This" Feliciano and Aaron "This Blows Like Rita" Heilman.

Kaz Matsui spared us another singles clinic tonight but he did giggle like a schoolgirl after stealing 2nd on us with the Rockies already leading by a touchdown.  He stopped himself as soon as he could.  Probably when he came to his senses and remembered that Alissa Milano is not actually all that into him.

Rockies fans did not turn out in droves with brooms, to their credit, but they did lose multiple levels of cool points by booing the umps lustily when they called a couple of close ones against them even though they were up by 10 runs in the 7th inning and by all rights this game should have been called for darkness of the soul.  It was a game that was crying out to just end already and they were booing because someone was called out at first base.  Bunch of Toby Keith-loving morons.

Matt Herges got on my nerves by walking guys and generally taking a long time to get out of the 8th inning without giving up any actual runs to us.  And Carlos Delgado gave me several different opportunities to mention his Hands of Stone(tm), while the Mets' bullpen made Yorvit Torrealaba look like the second coming of Yadier Molina, but I've decided not to dwell on any of those.

I'm not even going to talk about the 13 pitch AB that Dookie opened up the 9th inning with when all anyone wanted to do was watch some fireworks.  

No, I'm going to step back from this series, and say, hey, the Rockies were amped for us, and we were not even plugged in for them.  They do have a respectable lineup, and they have posted a 12-3 record in their past 15 home games, I believe.  So I'm prepared to just turn the page, get the hell out of here (well actually I'm staying but the Mets can go ahead and get the hell out of here), and thank the powers that be for my health, my friendships and family, the fact that the Mets are still in 1st place, after all, and that life itself provides opportunities to riff on games like this at blogs like this.

It's not perfect, but it's all pretty much good.  The fireworks were great again, and the guy did hook me up with an extra level on my mixed ice cream cone that he prepared while Show was busy walking guys he had previously been 0-2 on.  So I had that much going for me tonight.

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nice work, Mr. Met
Great recap.

Sitting through these kinda games reminds one of what being a Mets fan is all about, I figure.  Gotta keep a sense of humor about this team and these games.  It's a long season.

This series reminded me of (at least) one time last year when the Mets couldn't beat the Pirates for the life of them.

What I could really use now, however, is three of four from Houston, and then a nice six- or eight-game winning streak shortly after the break.

Let's go Mets.

We've got ourselves a ball club, the Mets of New York town!

by kingcritical on Jul 5, 2007 9:38 AM EDT reply actions   0 recs

Thanks kc.
It's a little bit hard to understand how the team could be so flat for 3 days in a row, the last two in front of 50,000 fans, but they were.  The truly amazing thing, to the extent that one can actually marvel at things that in reality turn their stomachs, was the frequency with which the Rockies turned their lineup over last night.  They had multiple guys with 6 ABs over the last 7 innings.  I just kept looking up and thinking, "Holy sheet, is this guy up again?"

by Mr. Met on Jul 5, 2007 11:37 AM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

well...
when 17 of 'em cross the plate over the course of nine innings...  Yikes.
We've got ourselves a ball club, the Mets of New York town!

by kingcritical on Jul 5, 2007 11:52 AM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

nice recap
Not a happy recap, but a fun take on some not-much-fun games.  And kingcritical is exactly right that this is a reminder of what it means to be a true Mets fan.  Sometimes I wonder if the hysterical sky-is-falling reaction that some fans are showing to this slump is a consequence of fair-weather fandom, people who basically became Mets fans again when Wright and Reyes started generating excitement.  Can these people even think back to 2003?  I'm not sure that any fan who actually followed the team through that season could possibly be too upset after this month of crappy play by a team that's still almost certain of a playoff berth.

I have to take issue with one thing, though, Mr. Met:

Mota appeared more Benitez than ever

Meaningless mop-up duty in a mid-season game against the Rockies: this was the kind of game in which Benitez would've thrown three shutout innings on like 20 pitches, striking out six or seven.  Mota, sadly, didn't look like anyone but his own sorry self to me (though maybe vintage 2003, petulant Piazza-beaning edition).

by anonymous on Jul 5, 2007 11:44 AM EDT reply actions   0 recs

the worry
I think the worry stems from the fact that by no means is this team guaranteed a playoff spot.  Sure, they're probably better than Atlanta or Philadelphia, but it's sure no "men vs. the boys" situation like last year.

Also, I'm concerned about teams like Milwaukee or San Diego (or LA, or Arizona) getting the advantage in record, which could lead to a bunch of playoff series on the road.  True, St. Louis proved that home-field advantage might not make much of a difference in the end, but I don't want a game 5 or 7 to be played in Miller Park or Petco instead of Shea.

Driving the Oliver Perez bandwagon!

by Greenpoint Ian on Jul 5, 2007 12:28 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

playoffs
BP's postseason odds report puts the Mets at about 77% likelihood of making the playoffs as of this morning.  The old odds reports don't seem to be available, but IIRC this means that the entire horrible month has shaved off only about 10 percentage points.  I still think the Mets are a virtual shoo-in for the playoffs; it will certainly be more of a race down to the wire than last year, but if they miss the playoffs by more than a game or two then that would justify some real disappointment.

by anonymous on Jul 5, 2007 12:48 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

so missing the playoffs by just a game or two
wouldn't be a real disappointment. I doubt many would agree with you on that. Also, you disparage those you who are overly critical as being shortsighted and ask them to think back to 2003. Not sure I know what you mean by this, but when the team goes 12-18 in June then loses their first 4 gamesin July is criticism or concern unwarranted. You speak of fair weather fandom, but those who criticize are just the opposite. If anything they are foul weather fans. A fair weather fan would merely stop watching or caring or even start rooting for the Yankees.I don't view this blogsite as an "avenue" to cheerlead or wax eloquent about the team's greatness.
Save America. Impeach Bush

by elifriedman on Jul 5, 2007 1:17 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

I don't think we disagree at all.
I don't think that criticism or concern are unwarranted, and I'm (obviously) frustrated with this month too.  And cheerleading is never appropriate in baseball.  But a reasonable critic of the team's current crappy play has to keep things in perspective by remembering that this is still one of the best teams in the NL and is still very likely to make the playoffs.  I object only to the hysterical sky-is-falling tone of some of the comments over the last month (though not any from you that I can recall).  I don't see the argument that this team is fatally flawed as a compelling one, and I don't think it really needs to be enhanced midseason with a major trade -- and I think that people who are ready to panic and/or whine loudly about this season have short memories and ought to remember or learn what it feels like to root for a really bad team.

by anonymous on Jul 5, 2007 1:39 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

Oh I do disagree.
Baseball could certainly use more cheerleaders.

by Mr. Met on Jul 5, 2007 2:37 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

You have a real point here
Football has cheerleaders, basketball has dancers, boxing has the round card girl, tennis has an occasional hot woman in shorts, but baseball has Mr. Met and the Philly Phanatic. We definitely could use a little more sex in the sport.

Kudos to you for the postings from Denver. You made the best out of a bad Met series.

Save America. Impeach Bush

by elifriedman on Jul 5, 2007 3:03 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

Thanks eli.
Yeah, my only opportunity to see the Mets all year and they acted like Mutts.  Oh well.  It still wasn't as bad as watching Mike Hampton throw a shutout and hit a HR against us that first year after he signed with the Rockies.

by Mr. Met on Jul 5, 2007 3:09 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

okay, this is a real disagreement.
I strongly urge both of you to reconsider your position on cheerleaders.  The absence of distractions such as this is one of my most favorite things about baseball as opposed to other sports.  

The Wrigley Field day game is the epitome of the pure baseball experience, unadulterated by Jumbotrons or dancing girls, and every step that brings us further from that and closer to the Super Bowl halftime show has to be resisted with all our might.

by anonymous on Jul 5, 2007 3:10 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

come on
you are such a party pooper. On a serious note, how come there are no female umpires in baseball. Remember a few got up to the Triple A level, but never broke the glass ceiling. I see no reason why a woman couldn't do the job and wonder if anybody has ever sued Major League baseball for sexual discrimination.
Save America. Impeach Bush

by elifriedman on Jul 5, 2007 3:22 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

pooping
It wouldn't be the first time I've pooped a good party.

I'm willing to come on (about) cheerleaders -- and I like them as much as the next person -- but I want my cheerleaders kept separate from my baseball.  The homosocial aspects of baseball are part of the beauty of it.

No women umps yet is a bit of a mystery to me too.  And I am a little surprised that no team has tried to cultivate any women players yet, either.  There has to be some pitching talent out there somewhere in the softball world that would help a big-league team -- though the media firestorm would not be worth it for a bullpen arm.  I would not be too shocked to hear that some of the smart teams have scouts out there looking and will take the risk when they find the talent, but are trying to keep things quiet until they do.

by anonymous on Jul 5, 2007 3:30 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

never thought of a woman player
but why not if she can do the job. Doubt it will happen in my lifetime
Save America. Impeach Bush

by elifriedman on Jul 5, 2007 3:44 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

That picture was from a game in Japan
that I went to last summer, and I can tell you that it did nothing to distract me from the game itself.  It took place between innings and was no more of a distraction than your basic sausage races or blooper reel on the video screen.

by Mr. Met on Jul 5, 2007 3:49 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

yeah
But I hate those things, too.  Or at least I regard them as deviations from the Platonic ideal of baseball, which is either Wrigley Field day game or the purer form of the experience you get in minor-league/college ball.

If you want to substitute cheerleaders for blooper reels, sausage races, or the Pepsi Party Patrol, that's okay with me.  But no more additions without removing some other form of nonsense.

by anonymous on Jul 5, 2007 4:06 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

They were playing some music pretty loudly
during the fireworks shows the last couple of nights.  I definitely objected to that, especially because many of the songs were of the "Let Freedom Rain (It's Judgment Day)" variety, which were out of line in my opinion.

I saw something else, totally off topic but what the hell, while I was standing in line for my ice cream.  They had a little series of photos behind the counter, up on the wall, of "Hot Dogs from Around the Nation" and showed different styles, you know, Chicago, New York, etc.  

The thing is, the New York dog had a photo behind it of various NY landmarks, including the World Trade Center, which made me kind of do a double-take.  I think it's just the same photo that's been there for years.  I had a little debate within my own head about whether they should have changed out that photo by now, but couldn't quite decide.  

It wasn't offensive, but neither was it a tribute.  It was just a relic from another day that seems like it ought not have just escaped everyone's attention all this time.

by Mr. Met on Jul 5, 2007 4:12 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

well said, anon
Down with the Pepsi Party Patrol.  I hate those fackers.
We've got ourselves a ball club, the Mets of New York town!

by kingcritical on Jul 5, 2007 4:14 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

I used to be a staunch traditionalist, but
sports like everything else evolves over the years. I would rather hear Jane Jarvis than Metallica, the Mets play the Cubs rather than the Twins and see the pitcher at bat in both leagues, but the time these are a changin so bring on the T and A.
Save America. Impeach Bush

by elifriedman on Jul 5, 2007 4:41 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

I'm not sure that I agree
I think that it woould pretty hard to be a Met fan if I did not embrace the team's campiness.  Mr. Met, the home run apple, a tacky stadium with multi-color seats, banner day, "Meet the Mets," and even the blaring cheesy music are all part of the team's charm.  We may not pray to dead idols in the outfield, but that's exactly what makes us different than the Yankees - we know how to goof off and have a good time.

by Shomov on Jul 5, 2007 4:39 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

No question
I would rather be rooting for a flawed, first place team than a hopelessly bad one and there is never a reason to panic when talking about sports, but I do think that some moderate adjustments have to be made.If you're right and the Mets are very likely to make the playoffs with their flaws, I'm for adjusting for the postseason and get a good starter and a good set-up man.Given the age of the team, I would be willing to give up a good young prospect or two  to do it.

Gary Cohen cited an interesting statistic that teams ahead on 4th of July have gotten into postseason 77% of the time, but those teams up by less than 5 games only have a 45% chance. AND no way would the fans accept this team missing the playoffs by a game or two.

Save America. Impeach Bush

by elifriedman on Jul 5, 2007 3:17 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

just heard
Carlos Gomez has a broken hand and the best the Mets can do is bring up Newhan. ugh. Ricky Ledee is starting until Chavez comes back or Milledge is better.
Save America. Impeach Bush

by elifriedman on Jul 5, 2007 6:09 PM EDT reply actions   0 recs

Is it broken?
He's back for an MRI on it though.
its a ground ball...trickling... its a fair ball, its by Buckner, rounding third Knight, the Mets will win the ballgame, the Mets win!!!

by DoctorK16 on Jul 5, 2007 6:18 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

yeah its now
Milledge will be back after the break, Alou too.
its a ground ball...trickling... its a fair ball, its by Buckner, rounding third Knight, the Mets will win the ballgame, the Mets win!!!

by DoctorK16 on Jul 5, 2007 6:46 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

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