He’s the best.
And here is the Neil Best column about sleeping at Keith Hernandez’s house and how Hernandez goes about life nowadays. He’s come a far way since the 80’s.
He’s the best.
And here is the Neil Best column about sleeping at Keith Hernandez’s house and how Hernandez goes about life nowadays. He’s come a far way since the 80’s.
Twenty-one games to go. Howie Rose is in the TV booth on FOX today. Oh, and Carlos Beltran is back in the lineup.
The Mets are keeping hope alive as they march toward 100. One hundred losses, that is.
The Mets fell to the Phillies by a score of 4-2, loss number 79 of the season. With 21 games remaining, the Mets would have to lose every game to reach 100 losses.
Though the score was close through the entire game, it never felt as though the Mets would win. Nelson Figueroa tiptoed through 5 1-3 innings, allowing nine hits and walking five, but only allowed two earned runs.
Elmer Dessens and Brian Stokes surrendered the other two runs in relief.
Jeff Francoeur stayed hot at the plate, pounding out three hits. Francoeur is now 6-for-his-last-8 with two doubles.
Luis Castillo drove in one run with a sac-fly to center field. Cory Sullivan grounded into a double play to kill a rally in the ninth inning, but it allowed a run to score.
But hey, no one got hurt.
No Carlos Beltran in the crappy weather. Mets not taking risks. Smart.
According to Neil Best, WFAN’s Howie Rose will switch to television to call Saturday’s Mets / Phillies game with Tim McCarver.
I like when the Mets broadcasters get picked for these things. It shows you how lucky we are to have such talented and passionate people both on TV and the radio calling games for us night in and night out.
I’ll be watching.
Today is a day to remember. Remember all who were lost on 9/11, their families and their friends. Never forget them.
Yesterday, a teacher asked me what my memories were of 9/11/01. I can vaguely remember the day, sitting it woodworking class and listening to an old radio play out the news of the morning.
But what I remember most about the days surrounding 9/11 is what transpired 10 days later.
On Sept. 21, 2001, baseball returned to New York.
The Atlanta Braves and the New York Mets squared off at Shea Stadium. After seven and a half innings of baseball, the Mets trailed by a score of 2-1.
Steve Karsay came on to pitch the 8th for Atlanta. After inducing a Matt Lawton groundout, Karsay walked Edgardo Alfonzo. Desi Relaford came on to pinch-run for Alfonzo as Mike Piazza stepped to the plate.
Piazza already had two hits that game, both doubles.
Behind 0-1 in the count, Piazza stepped into the batters box and hit a home run that meant more to the city of New York than any home run before or since.A towering shot to center field, New Yorkers had a reason to cheer. It didn’t matter if you were a Mets fan, Yankees fan or no fan at all. This home run was the first bright spot in the city since the attack. It was, in a word, euphoric.
I vividly remember sitting on my friends porch and watching this home run through his living room window. I will never forget Piazza’s home run or the impact it had on the people of New York City.
To relive that moment, here’s a short video on the events leading up to the home run and to see that uplifting moment one more time.
Never forget 9/11.
“Every time I have a meeting we seem to play that way so I guess we won't have anymore meetings.”
-Jerry Manuel on team meetings and losses
Florida Marlins: 13 runs on 16 hits and seven walks.
New York Mets: 4 runs on 10 hits and three walks.
Sean West (6-5, 4.61 ERA) vs. Bobby Parnell (3-7, 5.25 ERA)
(Chat removed. It was quieter than Citi Field in there.)
Carlos Beltran gets the finale off tonight, with Angel Pagan in CF. Nick Evans gets a shot in LF.