Monday, March 31, 2008

Mets 7, Marlins 2


On the Mound: Johan Santana was as good as you could have hoped for. Perfect through the first three, he gave up a two-run home run in the fourth inning, escaped a jam in the fifth and then fell back into a good rhythm.
As Ron Darling noted during the SNY broadcast, the sixth inning was probably his best. He struck out Dan Uggla and Mike Jacobs back-to-back before forcing Josh Willingham, who earlier hit the home run, into a routine groundout.
His final line: 7 IP, 3 H, 2 ER, 8 Ks. Midseason form in March.
Matt Wise, Scott Schoeneweis, Jorge Sosa and Aaron Heilman secured the final six outs without allowing a run.

At the Plate: If this team is going to produce offensively, they need to get maximum production out of Jose Reyes, David Wright and Carlos Beltran. That's exactly what they received Monday when the trio combined for 11 total bases, four runs batted in and two runs scored.
Mix in clutch RBI hits from Angel Pagan and Ryan Church and the Mets can't ask for much more at the dish.
All told the Mets strung together 10 hits, including five doubles. they were just 1 of on stolen base attempts.
The Mets will not lose many games in which they score 5 or more runs, especially when No. 57 is on the mound. Putting up a seven spot almost guarantees victory.

Key Player: Santana. It's very important for the Mets' big transaction to get off to a good start. He has a reputation for being a second half pitcher, so you worry about a slow start and how that would affect his relationship with the media.
Those concerns took a back seat Monday.
One thing to condsider, though, is that the start came in Miami. Will he be as good on a cold night at Shea? But that's a question for another time.

The Big Plus: Without question, the best positive sign for the Mets was Pagan and Church delivering clutch hits. One of the most important elements for National league success is production from the six and seven spots. And with Delgado being pitched around in the fourth, it was vital for Pagan and Church to show their worth.

The Big Minus: Willie Randolph scared us a little in this game. We definitely thought the eighth inning was mishandled a bit. Matt Wise was the right choice to start the inning, despite the results, but shouldn't Aaron Heilman and Pedro Feliciano been the backup options that inning and not Scott Schoeneweis and Jorge Sosa?
While the moves worked Monday, we're still not certain these pitchers were throwing in the proper roles.
Nobody ever settled into a defined role in the bullpen in 2007. That was a problem. Let's hope it's not an ongoing concern again in 2008.
We also weren't pleased seeing Wright trying to steal third base with one out in the seventh inning. Beltran had two doubles at that point in the game. Give him a shot at an RBI. The play looks even worse when considering Marlins catcher Matt Treanor had previously thrown out Reyes trying to steal.

Statement from Willie Randolph


The following was e-mailed to Mets fans on opening day:
Our team is ready to go. That's the message I want to send to you Mets fans as we prepare for today's opener in South Florida. The goal this year is to make our final season at Shea something special and I think we can.
We've had a great spring. Our batting order certainly can produce runs. Jose Reyes has been spectacular in the field and on the bases. Carlos Beltran has recovered from his off-season knee surgeries and has been diving for balls in the outfield, while Luis Castillo is back to normal after his knee operation. I look for David Wright to once again play at his All-Star pace and we expect Carlos Delgado to have a bounce-back year. Brian Schneider adds a good defensive presence for us behind the plate, while I look for Ryan Church to play a solid rightfield.
Our line-up is intact except for Moses Alou, who should be back in late April or early May. Guys like Endy Chavez, Damion Easley and Angel Pagan can fill in for Moises until he returns. You need to have a solid bench to win and we certainly do.
Our pitching has been great all spring. The addition of Johan Santana makes our staff better from top to bottom. Pedro Martinez is healthy and hasn't missed a beat, while John Maine and Oliver Perez, who each won 15 games for us a year ago, are perhaps two of the young star pitchers in the major leagues.
The bullpen will once again be anchored by Billy Wagner, one of the best closers in the game. Aaron Heilman, Pedro Feliciano, Scott Schoeneweis, Matt Wise and Jorge Sosa all can perform in a variety of roles for us.
Orlando Hernandez, Duaner Sanchez and Ramon Castro will start the season on the Disabled List, but should be ready to go not too far into the season.
With Orlando Hernandez on the Disabled List, Mike Pelfrey will pitch this Saturday against Atlanta. He deserves the chance.
In closing I want to say one more thing. We all hated the way last year ended for us. For 98 percent of the season we were the best team in our division, but we let it slip away. When I spoke to the team this spring I didn't look backwards that much, I tried to look forward so we can all learn from what happened. The lesson is simple: don't take anything for granted and don't expect things to happen just because you think they will.
The season is here. It's time to make it happen.
Hope to see you back at Shea in April.

Who's picking who to win it all?

Who some of the magazines are picking to win it all:

Red Sox:
The Sporting News
Athlon

Tigers:
Sports Illustrated
Lindy's
Beckett
MLB.com

Indians:
ESPN:The Magazine

Links of the Day: March 31

On the eve of the final season at Shea, the Hartford Courant gave fans a list of Mets dates they might not want to miss.

Bloomberg has a story on how expensive things will get for Mets and Yankees fans in 2008. The Mets have already sold more than two million tickets and they're estimating tickets for certain games will get a little pricey on Stubhub.

Time magazine felt it necessary to give readers a non-New York, non-Boston baseball preview. That's fine. We in the Empire State look forward to another non-Kansas City, non-Pittsburgh postseason.

According to the Palm Beach Post, the Marlins are coming out swinging in 2008. Hopefully with Santana on the mound today, they will be swinging and missing.

Nobody goes to Marlins games



Just went on MLB.com to see if tickets were still on sale for today's opening day in Miami, something I knew would be the case. Clicked that I wanted to buy 19 tickets together. Of course I would have been able to secure all 19 tickets behind home plate in the upper deck.
What a sad, sad franchise. It's amazing they have just as many World Series rings as the Mets.

Sunday, March 30, 2008

Blastings Thrilledge



Anyone upset with how little the Mets got in return for Lastings Milledge need only watch the ninth inning of Sunday's Nats opener against the Braves. There was Milledge sliding in head first to first base. Just one of the many stupid plays he will make this season.
For as much as I have always liked Milledge, he drives you nuts with bonehead plays.

No love for the Mets

ESPN has a poll on its home page to see who fans think will win this year's World Series. For some reason the Mets, Phillies, Red Sox, Tigers and Yankees are the only options, even though the Rockies reached the Fall Classic last year and the Diamondbacks and Indians played in their respective league championship series'.
Anyway, nobody's picking the Mets. The Yankees are dominating New York and New Jersey, and the Red Sox are the favorite in most of the country.

Opening Day Lineup

According to David Lennon and Newsday:

1. Jose Reyes SS
2. Luis Castillo 2B
3. David Wright 3B
4. Carlos Beltran CF
5. Carlos Delgado 1B
6. Angel Pagan LF
7. Ryan Church RF
8. Brian Schneider C
9. Johan Santana P


Also, Brady Clark and Joe Smith made the team, and Mike Pelfrey will be the fifth starter. Duaner Sanchez, Ramon Castro and Orlando Hernandez will start the season on the disabled list. Raul Casanova replaces Castro on the 25-man roster.

2008 Mets Preview


Last year we entered the Mets' regular season with the utmost confidence. The orange and blue had exceeded our preseason expectations in 2006, winning the National League East and the Division Series.
Then the Mets got off to a decent start the first half of last season, and although they never had a real dominant stretch, we knew they'd turn it on in the postseason.
Then they just flat out collapsed. No words can really explain what happened in 2007, but many have been wasted trying.
So now, thanks largely to the addition of Johan Santana, we enter a new season with a bit of confidence again. But we won't get too crazy this year.
Instead we'll watch all 162 games with caution. You just never know what may be waiting around the corner.
You have to like the Mets chances of winning the division, though. Sure, the Phillies are owed the respect of a defending champion, but they didn't do much to help themselves this offseason.
The Braves are also a contender in 2008, but we're not sold on their bullpen and their outfield production is somewhat limited (although they're not much worse off than an Alouless Mets).
The Nationals and Marlins are simply a non-factor, although Lastings Milledge is likely to turn into Pat Burrell against the Mets this year.
So you have to again like the Mets' chances of reaching the playoffs. And there is really no one team in the National League that makes you say 'uh-oh.' The Rockies and Diamondbcaks are certainly World Series contenders, but they play in a division where the Dodgers and Padres will also have something to say. It's going to be a long, draining regular season for two teams that now truly have something to prove.
For this preview we thought rather than spend our time breaking the Mets down position by position against the other teams, we thought it more important to compare the Mets to their 2007 selves.
Sure, not many positions have changed hands, but the expectations of the players manning those positions has. And how those players live up to expectation will be the most important theme of the final season at Shea Stadium:

Catcher
2007 — Paul LoDuca
2008— Brian Schneider/Ramon Castro
This is so very clearly the biggest downgrade in 2008. Last year you felt good entering the season with LoDuca as your backstop. He was coming off a season in which he hit .318. He was a fiery guy on an otherwise laid back team. And he certainly inspired attractive 19-year-old girls to come out to Shea.
We will miss all of that this year.
Sure, LoDuca didn't have quite the same season last campaign, but he still drove in more runs than the year before, despite playing in five less games and attracting more controversy than Michael Jackson on a balcony.
Schneider will not produce offensively. He has never hit above .268 during a season in which he had at least 300 at bats and, not being a strong hitter, he makes the bottom of the lineup too lefthanded. Does his defensive presence really make up for these facts?
We love Castro, but we're not sure he can give the Mets the sort of regular production they need. He will need to stay healthy and get at least 250 at bats, a number he's never reached in nine big league seasons.
The Verdict: The 2007 Mets and Paul LoDuca certainly had the edge behind the dish.

First Base
2007—Carlos Delgado
2008— Carlos Delgado
This is the trickiest one. Obviously, a lot of people think Delgado is done. "He's too old," they say.
But we actually like 2008 Delgado more than 2007 Delgado. Here's why: We know now he's probably not gonna do what he did in 2006 ever again.
The expectations are much lower. For example, last week on the WFAN midday show they were saying how they'd sign up for 25 and 80 out of Delgado this year, after last year's debacle. Well, guess what? Twenty-five and 80 is pretty much what you got from him last year. In fact, he even drove in 89 runs. That's not too bad.
The way people talk about Delgado now, you'd think he had 17 home runs and drove in 65 in 2007.
If he can just come through a little more in the clutch and add 15 points to his average, Delgado will silence his critics this year. Wouldn't you be happy with .275, 25 home runs, 90 RBIs out of the 5 or 6 spot?
The Verdict: We think 2008 Delgado will surprise.

Second Base
2007—Jose Valentin/Luis Castillo
2008—Luis Castillo
Call us crazy but we liked what Jose Valentin did for this ball club. It was a short run, but he was the perfect guy to lengthen the Mets lineup.
Castillo obviously provides something different. He's a two-hitter and a defensive presence. And he's good at that. But when you look at the bottom of this year's Mets' lineup, you wish you had someone like Valentin to fill it out.
Also, Castillo's ability to bunt and slap is lost a little in this lineup. Reyes is always going to be looking to steal first and foremost. And once he's in scoring position, a ground ball isn't going to do much good unless there are no outs.
Example: Reyes singles and steals second with one out, Castillo's ground ball out only gets Reyes to third and now we still need Wright to get a base hit with two outs. Because Reyes is always in instant scoring position the Mets could use more of a run producer in the No. 2 spot. Think an early Edgardo Alfonzo. That kind of player, however, is not on this Mets team. Certainly not without shortenin the lineup even more.
The Verdict: We think Valentin did more for the Mets lineup than Castillo does. However, Castillo is still a better player.

Third Base
2007—David Wright
2008—David Wright
The Verdict: It doesn't matter. Either way you have yourself a stellar young hitter who's going to give you somewhere in the ballpark of .300/30/100 and 30 steals. Well on his way to being the finest player in Mets history.

Shortstop
2007—Jose Reyes
2008—Jose Reyes
Heading into last season, all we heard is how Jose Reyes had added a little power to his game. "He looks so much stronger," everyone wrote.
It was the worst thing that could have happened. Reyes became a modern day Lenny Dykstra, swinging for the fences instead of setting the table. How many times during that September swoon did he fly out?
Well it seems this year he's cut down on his uppercut and that should be better for the team.
We'll get very nervous if Reyes has a slow April, and we'll be absolutely petrified if it carries into May.
But we think Reyes has his priorities in order and 2008 will be another great year for him.
The Verdict: We like the Reyes who we think will hit the ball more on the line in 2008 better than the Jose "Canseco" Reyes of 2007.

Left Field
2007—Moises Alou
2008—Moises Alou
At least last year, Alou waited a month to have injuries. When he's in the lineup, he's a beast. Key words: When he's in the lineup.
We just hope he's healthy in October and the Mets are still playing.
The Verdict: How can you pick a guy on the DL. We'll take the 2007 Alou, who skinned the ball every time he made contact.

Center Field
2007—Carlos Beltran
2008—Carlos Beltran
The Verdict: Either way Beltran's driving in 110 runs without getting more than three or four really clutch hits all year. He makes everything look effortless, and that's not always a good thing.

Right Field
2007—Shawn Green
2008—Ryan Church
OK, so Shawn Green's terrible right. But at least last year you had Lastings Milledge and Carlos Gomez waiting in the wings. Now there's really no backup plan. That's scary. However, we do believe Church is a better player than Green at this juncture.
If we can land Xavier Nady or Marcus Thames in a deal, we'll feel better about the right field situation. Until then, we liked last year's mix and match better than banking entirely on Ryan Church, another of the guys making this Mets lineup way too left-handed.
The Verdict: Church is better, but the depth of 2007 was much more comforting.

Starting Pitching
2007—Tom Glavine, Orlando Hernandez, John Maine, Oliver Perez, Mike Pelfrey (with Pedro lurking)
2008—Johan Santana, Pedro Martinez, John Maine, Oliver Perez, Mike Pelfrey (with Hernandez lurking)
The most obvious difference is the front end of the rotation, and its a huge difference. Santana and Pedro (pictured above) are head and shoulders above their 2007 counterparts.
But the other reason the 2008 rotation trumps the 2007 version is the improvement Maine and Perez showed last year. The Mets have four guys who can and should each win 15 games. How many other teams in baseball can say that? Realistically, only about three or four.
The Verdict: This is the best Mets rotation since the late 1980s.

Relief Pitching
2007—Billy Wagner, Aaron Heilman, Guillermo Mota, Pedro Feliciano, Scott Schoeneweis, Joe Smith and Jorge Sosa
2008—Billy Wagner, Aaron Heilman, Matt Wise, Pedro Feliciano, Scott Schoeneweis, Joe Smith and Jorge Sosa (Duaner Sanchez will also factor in, provided he stays away from cabs all season).
Listen, Wise is better than a steroid-free Mota. That's the key. If Sanchez gives you somthing, you get an improved effort from Schoeneweis and Wagner doesn't implode, the 2008 Mets bullpen better.
That's not saying too much, though. The bullpen was horrid last year. It was the single biggest downfall of the team.
The Verdict: We're not sure the Mets were aggressive enough in improving the bullpen, but we do believe they're better.

Bench
2007—Endy Chavez, Marlon Anderson, Damion Easley, Ramon Castro, Ruben Gotay, Lastings Milledge, Carlos Gomez and Jeff Conine
2008—Endy Chavez, Marlon Anderson, Damion Easley, Ramon Castro and Brady Clark
We already miss Gotay, and Milledge and Gomez could have helped this bench. But we do believe Chavez, Anderson, Easley and Castro are great backups, really as good at what they do as anyone. The key for this year's bench is establishing who will be the right-handed power guy. He's not here yet, but we're sure that once he gets here, the Mets will have the one of, if not, the best benches in the National League.

Links of the day

All year we will be hearing about the closing of Shea Stadium. We'll read columns and blog posts from all sorts of people ripping or reminiscing on the "The House that Al Jackson Built."
There's already plenty of material being written, not just on the Mets, but all the sports teams with new facilities on the way.
We thought it fitting that on the eve of Shea's final season we center our links around the stadium theme:

• Ben Shpigel wrote a column in Saturday's Times that offers a sentimental look at the outdated stadium. Gary Cohen sums up the feeling of a lot of Mets fans by calling Shea a dump."But it's our dump," Cohen says. [Read further down for more on Shea's very first opener.]

• Looks like Citicorp. won't be the highest paying corporate stadium sponsor for long. The Cowboys will soon take the cake. We can't believe Exxon Mobil's in the running. Is that awful or what? Why not just call the stadium Halliburton Field?

• Shea isn't the only Mets stadium saying bye this year. Who could forget all the great Mets moments at Al Lang Field? Apparently not Glenn Miller of the News-Press.

• All-time Mets great Jeff Conine is also calling it quits. Was it really necessary for him to get the Emmitt Smith treatment from the Marlins? Maybe if they didn't have a firesale every three years, the Marlins would be able to pay tribute to a baseball figure of more substance than Jeff Conine.

• If you were planning on buying Shea Stadium seats after the finale, you may have to cough up more dough than you had planned.

• For those people who love Shea, at least it's just the stadium we're saying good night to this year. It could be worse. Some old Brooklynites can tell you all about that.

The Day Shea was Born




Here's the box score from the first ever game played at Shea Stadium. Photo above was taken at that game on April 17, 1964. Funny to see that Donn Clendenon was in the lineup for the visitors. How would you like to be hitting where he was: behind Roberto Clemente and Willie Stargell? Bet you didn't know Jack Fisher threw the first pitch in Shea history. OK, bet you didn't know I didn't know that.