5/15/09

Game Recap: Mets 7 – Giants 4

The Mets swiped seven bases, David Wright taking four on his own, and drove in three in the ninth to take the win.

The New York Mets (19-15) beat the San Francisco Giants (18-16) by a score of 7-4.

John Maine struggled in the first inning, allowing three hits and two runs to score on 30 pitches.  From there, Maine threw 88 pitches over the next 5 2-3 innings.  He allowed seven hits overall and only the two runs.  He walked four and struck out four.  Bobby Parnell surrendered the lead in the 8th inning, allowing two earned runs on three hits and a walk.  After the Mets took the lead in the top of the 9th, Francisco Rodriguez came in and saved the game, allowing one hit.

Wright was the star of the night, going 3-3 with two RBI.  Wright stole four bases on his own and Alex Cora, Carlos Beltran and Gary Sheffield stealing one apiece.  The seven stolen bases set a franchise record.  With the game tied in the top of the ninth, Wright punched a one-out single to right field, driving in Beltran to take the lead.  Ramon Castro followed with a two-out two-RBI single.

This game could have easily gotten away from the Mets after allowing two runs in the 8th inning.  Instead, they came right back and scored three runs and won the game.

5/14/09

Live Mets Chat: NYM @ SFG

Join in for some late night New York Mets chatter with fellow fans as they start their west coast swing against the San Francisco Giants.

(Chat removed, as usual.)

The Mets are beat up

The conference call is over and two players are out of commission but still with the team (relayed by David Lennon and Adam Rubin).

J.J. Putz has a bone spur in his right elbow, shown on an MRI on Wednesday.  Putz received an anti-inflammatory shot and will not be available for two days.

Carlos Delgado will not go on the DL, at least not yet.  The Mets will wait a few more days to see if a DL stint is needed.  Lennon quotes it as an “impingement” which may also be around a slight tear or bone spur.

The Mets will be playing with a short bench and a short bullpen going into a very tough series against the surprising San Francisco Giants.

They are essentially a 23-man team right now.  That can’t bode well.

Why wait on Delgado?

The Mets have scheduled a press conference at 4 p.m. to discuss Carlos Delgado.  Taking an educated guess, the Mets will likely be putting Delgado on the disabled list due to his hip injury and calling someone up to take his spot.

Update – 3:58 p.m.: David Lennon says “it appears the team will not make a decision about the disabled list until this weekend, and maybe even as late as Sunday.”

Delgado hasn’t played in a game since May 10 in the series finale against Pittsburgh.  He had previously four straight games from April 27 to May 1 with the same injury.

Why has it taken the Mets this long?

I understand if he’s hurting a little and the team wants to see if he’ll bounce back after a few days off.  But after it’s happened twice in two weeks, why take the chance?  Don’t the Mets have some of the best doctors in the world looking at their multi-million dollar investments?

Though it’s “just a hip injury” this could parlay into something that Ryan Church experienced last year with his concussions.  Did Delgado make the cross-country trip to be with his team on their west coast swing, just like Church was put on a plane after his run in with Yunel Escobar’s knee.

If, in fact, Delgado did sit on a plane for six hours – which can’t be good for the hip – it’s just another bobble by the Mets medical and coaching staffs.

Mets fans can only hope Delgado stayed behind in New York to get treatment and work toward recovering from the injury, sacrificing being in the dugout for a few games.

We’ll all just have to wait until that 4 p.m. conference call.

Do something, anything, to Williets Point

Have you been to Willets Point lately?  No?  Consider yourself lucky.

Part war-zone, part third world country, Willets Point has fallen into disrepair.  A menagerie of wracked buildings and cratered roads, the city has turned it’s back on this section of Queens with intention.

Rising over the roofline of automobile shops – many of which may or may not be chop shops – is the beauty of Citi Field.  The new Mets stadium stands in stark contrast to the mess surrounding it. 

On my way to Citi Field on Tuesday, I missed my turn into the parking lot.  Thinking quickly, I made a quick right down Willets Point Boulevard, hoping it would take me back to where I needed to be.

At that point in my journey, I failed to realize where I had turned or what I would witness over the next three minutes.

If I had been told I was suddenly transported to a decrepit town in a third-world WilletsPtcountry, I would have believed you.  From shanty-looking buildings, stray dogs wandering the hills and valleys that used to be a road, and the overall atmosphere of broken-down lives and businesses I no longer would have thought I was in New York.

I understand that the city has let Willets Point fall from bustling neighborhood (which may or may not have been so decrepit) to a haggard mess so they can claim eminent domain over the area.  Though the families and stores that survive there have been wronged by this doing, it is truly remarkable how far they have let the place fall around them.

On one hand, the city taking the land would clean up the area around Citi Field and nearby Arthur Ashe Stadium.  As it stands now, I was barely comfortable driving down Willets Point Blvd. in broad daylight.  I could only imagine what it would be like at night.

(Is it fear of the unknown or the base of simple mess and dirty neighborhood that strikes fear into me, I’m not sure.  Whatever it was, I’m sure many people would share the same sentiment.)

On the other hand, these people have a right to their land and property ownership.  If they legally own the buildings they inhabit and are just the victims of a mismanaged effort to claim eminent domain, then they should rightfully be angry at what has happened.

There is no right way to solve this problem.  Either way, people will be upset and people will be wronged.

Map picture

If you had to ask me for my stance on this, I would begrudgingly tell you I support the city taking eminent domain, but not what they have done.  The neighborhood has fallen into such dilapidation it seems beyond saving.  Even though the city has slapped this neighborhood in the face by failing to provide the simplest needs and wants, it has worked.

The folks of Willets Point have let the city beat them, have let the city win.  Instead of standing strong in the face of adversity, they have played directly into the city’s hand as the neighborhood decayed.

They did not take things into their own hands and help keep the locale clean.  No, they let it fall apart around them.

There is no saving Willets Point.  It has fallen too far out of commission to be rescued.  The city of New York, however unjustly, should do a service to this area by taking it and tearing it down. 

The city, at it’s furthest reaches, would struggle to find a comparable scar on it's overall beauty. 

Tear down Willets Point.  Start anew.  It’s the only way now.

Citi Field is falling apart!

I was lucky enough to get to see the Mets only win in the previous series in person at Citi Field.

My seats were in Sec. 330, down the third base line.  Great seats.  Only can’t see down the left field line and in the corner.

During the 8th inning or so, my eagle eyed girlfriend spotted something  amiss out by the Mo’s Zone.  Apparently, one of the foam barriers along the railing – the one with the orange line to signify a home run – had fallen.

I whipped out my camera and snapped a few grainy photos.  See below…Mets 078The orange marker above the red to the left of the “M” had fallen to the ground, and a security guard is making a mad dash between pitches to retrieve the fallen item.

Luckily, he made it…Mets 081

Later in the inning, it was put back in it’s rightful place and everything was right with the world.

5/13/09

Niese sent back to Triple-A; Figueroa recalled

After two starts, one good and one bad, Jon Niese has been sent back to Triple-A Buffalo.  Nelson Figueroa has been called up to take his spot on the roster.

Niese lasted only 4 2-3 innings today against the Braves, allowing five earned runs on seven hits. 

The game went 12 innings as well, forcing the Mets to use every reliever.  Figueroa’s addition will add a rested arm to the bullpen.

The question here is: Where is Tim Redding?  Redding is said to be ready after rehabbing with Buffalo and will probably be activated for Niese’s spot in the rotation when it comes around again. 

Does that mean Figueroa gets sent down again?  Maybe the Mets will play with a short bench, putting Carlos Delgado on the DL and using his roster spot for Redding?

None of those questions can be answered just yet, but the Mets have done quite a questionable job with their roster shuffling in 2009, this just presents another hurdle in the road.

Figueroa has become a fan favorite around the Citi, so I know a few people that will be glad he’s back with the big club.

Game Recap: Braves 8 – Mets 7

A walk-off win wasn’t in the cards two days in a row.

The Atlanta Braves (17-17) beat the New York Mets (18-15) by a score of 8-7 in 12 innings.

Jon Niese started the game and struggled to make it through five innings.  He allowed five earned runs on seven hits and two walks.  He struck out five.  Every member of the bullpen got into the game with Brian Stokes, Francisco Rodriguez, Sean Green and Pedro Feliciano turning in shutout efforts.

Bobby Parnell was charged with one unearned run.  J.J. Putz allowed an earned run on two hits.  Ken Takahashi allowed a solo home run in the top of the 12th inning, which ended up being the game winner.

The Mets pounded out 12 hits and seven runs, but fell one run short.  Luis Castillo had an RBI triple in the first.  In the fourth with the bases loaded, Fernando Tatis crushed a grand slam to deep center field, giving the Mets the lead. 

In the 8th, with the Mets down one, Gary Sheffield blasted a solo home run, No. 501 of his career, deep to left.  In the bottom of the 12th, Jose Reyes missed a game tying home run by a few feet and landed him on second base with none out.  After Castillo sacrificed him to third, Mike Gonzalez struck out Carlos Beltran and Sheffield to end the game.

Again, nice to see some fight but the Mets came up just short.  A great battle between two good teams.  It was quite enjoyable, even if the Mets couldn’t pull it out.  The Mets have won eight of their last 10.

Live Mets Chat: ATL @ NYM (rubber game)

Join in for a matinee game chat as the Mets look to
take the series from the Braves.

The latest on Carlos Delgado and what it means for the rest of the team

Carlos Delgado is struggling to deal with an injury to his right hip.  He received a cortisone shot in the hip, causing him to miss the last two games. 

The decision to put him on the disabled list is being held off until Friday to see if he can recover without a stint on the DL.  If Delgado does hit the DL, there is an interesting move that Jerry Manuel has hinted at.

Daniel Murphy to first base.

Manuel has said he will “experiment” with Murphy at first base, freeing up left field for, presumably, Gary Sheffield.

I’ve discussed Murphy at first base in great detail, and though he doesn’t have the “power” to fit the first baseman mold, I think he could fit nicely into that position.  Granted, the Mets would have to fill in the power differential between Delgado and Murphy with a big bat in left field (or elsewhere).

It’s key to see how Murphy’s glove performs at first base before we start making any rash letter-signing and/or sign-holding rallies.  With David Wright’s sometime questionable throws from across the diamond, the Mets need someone who is able to handle their leather with some prowess.

I’d like to see this work out, both for Murphy and the Mets.  It has promise, as long as he can flash enough glove to make it worthwhile.