Friday, August 14, 2009

3 Up And 3 Down August 7-14

3 Up

  • Bobby Parnell
  • Billy Wagner
  • Anderson Hernandez
Today Bobby Parnell went 6 shutout innings, notching his first major league win as a ,
walking none, and striking out seven on 80 pitches, which is quite effecient, throwing 61 of them for strikes. In the sixth inning h
e looked tired, but was able to get through it without any runs allowed, and at one point had stricken out four consecutive batters, and was as poised and intimidating as Johan Santana or Roy Halladay, which for the young converted reliever Bobby Parnell is a good sign, he did a good job of scattering the only three hits he allowed, all of them came in different innings, so the Giants never got started, so they could not get on a roll, which is another young Mets starter's issue (cough Mike Pelfrey cough). He is developing his secondary pitches that are not fastballs because he is starting, so even if he ends up back in the bullpen it will be good for his development.


Billy Wagner has thrown 4 innings at St Lucie, allowing one baserunner, and striking out 6, and walking none, he has allowed one hit, dominating the hitters and looking good the whole way, and he is projected to be with the team and availible for Jerry Manual for Sunday's game, which has to be a record for speediest recovery from Tommy John surgery, as it will be about 11 months frmo the surgery, and he will be availible to pitch, Jerry has said he will use him as a lefty specialist at first, and then stretch him out. We should try to get him to Type-A free agent status so we can get two picks for him, which would end up giving us in effect, 3 first rounders, and considering the last time we had a first rounder was 2008, and we did not have one in 07, or 05, it would be a great thing for our farm system if we could add 3 first rounders to it.

He played just three games for us this week, after being acquired from Washington for Greg Veloz, but he was our hottest hitter. He had eleven PAs, reached base 6 times, on two walks and four hits, including two multi hit games, and has been another one of those small bright spots us Mets fans need to keep us from watching Jets preseason games, he played good defense, not giving up anything, and had a .444/.545/.556 line for the week. His BABIP was .800, and the reason his batting average was so low was because of his four strike outs for the week, but that is only a minor problem. He was acquired from Washingon for a lesser version of himself, almost Anderson Hernandez 0.0, because Veloz has less plate discipline...

3 Down

  • David Wright
  • Jeff Francoeur
  • Mike Pelfrey
David Wright had a bad week, and truly is having the oddest .320 season ever, as he will have a career high in Ks by a long shot.

The honeymoon is over.

Send him down?

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Could Parnell Start?

With Niese going down today, the Mets need to get creative with the starting pitching, as they do not have anyone left to call up, and are running out of healthy starters.

Minor League History

Untill last year Bobby Parnell was a starter, starting with Brooklyn in 2005, making it to Double-A in 2007 with a WHIP .1 higher than his career average of 1.3, so he struggled at first, and was sent down, his second time up he was .2 higher than his career average, and started 2008 at Binghampton, where he would get back down to his career average, and then in 2008 with a horrible bullpen and Parnell on the 40-man they called him up in September and used him in some critical spots out of the bullpen which slowed his growth as a starter, and when he started this year in the bullpen he added something that we did not have last year, a hard thrower at the back end of the bullpen.

One problem presented is that he would have to stretch out his inning so he could not start, but then again he pitched 3 today, and he could throw an 80 pitch bullpen session sometime between now and when Niese's next start would have been, and then limit him to just 80 pitches, or hopefully about 4-5 innings of work, or just shift the rotation so we give him an extra day or two.

If he were to do this it would be pretty impressive, as other pitchers have tried and failed, like Jonathon Papelbon.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Should We Go After Kazmir?

News is that the Rays are shopping Scott Kazmir to try and cut payroll so they can make a big move, and they called the Mets.

Kazmir owns hte Rays/Devil Rays record books in about every major pitching stat, and was as we know, was infamously traded to the Devil Rays in 2004 for Victor Zambrano, when the Mets front office had the false idea that they had a shot at the playoffs. Now we can undo that past mistake, and might be able to do it cheaply. When a team is attpempting to dump salary they will trade players for a lot less value than they could get, and maybe we could get him for Jonathon Niese or Ruben Tejeda?

Many have questioned his make-up this year, but I do not think that there is any significant problem there, and it is just a reason for the Rays to tell their fans they are trading the best pitcher in franchise history.

He is 5-6 this year with a 6.22 ERA, which is not very good, and his BABIP is right around his career norm at .315 (his career average is .318), so it means he is not getting unlucky, but he is not getting lucky, which troubles me, but I looked deeper and found hope. He has a BB/9 ratio of 4.31, which is only a little above his career average of 4.18, and his K/9 is 7.99, which is down from his career average, and is why he has struggled, so if Kazmir can get more balls his softly in play, or less balls in play he will improve.


Wednesday, July 22, 2009

One Thing To Say

Hearing about the whole Bernazzard debacle, fire everyone, hire Paul Depodesta as GM, Keith Law as assistant GM, and farm director should be some guy from Baseball America...

Thursday, July 16, 2009

What To Expect From Pedro

The Phillies signed Pedro, and in a few weeks he will be at the big league level, what can we expect from him?

Last season for the first time in his career he finished with a record under .500, at 5-6, and had an ERA of 5.61, the worst for him ever. He has said he was pitching hurt all of last year, but in 2007 was he? Well he has similar stats. In 2007 he was 3-1, and in 2006 he was 9-8, both years he spent time injured, so when he started to get hurt he started to decline.

The following graphs I am about to show you are from http://fangraphs.com/ .


As you can see, it shows his line drive, groundball, and fly ball percentage from every year in his career, and it shows that his fly ball percentage actually went down the last two seasons. and that his groundball percentage has gone up, which for an old pitcher who is trying to figure out how to pitch more precisely and play to contact, and not for the strike out is a good thing no? So why did Pedro get hammered? There was a slight raise in his line drive percentage, and those tend to be base hits, but it is not a substantial raise, and it definitely is not the answer to why he was so ineffective last year.

(Note: the blue line in the graph is league average)Next I want to look at his ratio statistics, his K/BB ratio in 2005, his last completed effective season was 4.43, which led the league, and is

great, but in 2006 it fell to 3.51, and in 07 which was a small sample size it was 4.57, so because of the small sample size it does not mean much, and in 08 it was 1.98, which is bad for a pitcher who allows 21% of his balls put in play to be line drives, which unless are right at a fielder, are not likely to be caught. As you can see it was great, at times, it was literally off the charts, but in
2008 it came crashing down to league average, which
means more balls in play, so more line drives...

So with more balls in play being line drive, one very important pitching stat is bound to go up, BABIP, his career BABIP was .282, in 2007 it was .384 and in 08 it was .327, which is a benefit of the increased amount of line drives. This means that the high BABIP is not because of him getting unlucky because of a bad defense, it is because of the fact more balls were being put in play, and more line drives. He will be pitching in Citizens Bank Park, with a Ballpark Factor of .999 for runs, for HR it has a 1.064, and his fly ball percentage is 35 percent, so with those 35 percent that are on the warning track at Shea, or Citifield, are gone at Citizens Bank.

So expect Pedro to be ineffective, more so than in 08 and 07.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Live Chat 7-14

Live Chat Tommrow At Noon ET

Come by at noon tommorow to chat with me about anything Mets or baseball.

Monday, July 13, 2009

Should We Give Livan The Boot?

Many are calling for Jon Niese to take the spot of Livan Hernandez in the Mets rotation, but I say the reason he has been so effective is because of bad luck.

Livan Hernandez in his last 2 starts has allowed 7 ER and 8 ER which is always with any pitcher a cause of concern, but when it is a guy who had been doing well all season, it started to trouble me, why did Livan stop being effective, so I looked into it. The last 2 seasons his BABIP was higher tan his career, which means that he had been getting unlucky, meaning either slow, or bad defense behind was contributing to his high ERA, and more runs allowed. His career BABIP is .311, the last two seasons, it was .347 and this year it was .333, which means that the Mets defense is catching up to balls that Washington, Florida, and San Francisco did, causing him to allow more earned runs, not to mention he faced Philadelphia and Los Angeles, two of the best offenses in baseball.

So why his BABIP higher is lets look. The Mets according to Baseball Prospectus allow the runner to be safe in 30.8% of the time there is a batted ball, which is not good. Furthermore, Wright has struggled, we have had people playing positions they should not be (ex= Fernando Tatis at SS, or Jeremy Reed at 1B).

So I say give Livan a break, and leave him in the rotation.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Top 25 Mets Prospects (1)

I will rate the Mets prospects based on how well I think they will do in the Majors. Niese and F-Mart DO count, I will do one a day for the next 25 days, and this will not be my only post of each day.

Number 1

I believe the Mets prospect that will have the most major league success in his career will be Wilmer Flores. He can hit, and proves it all the time, at the tender age of 17, the Mets have to be careful with him, as we do not want to rush him, or hurt him. In 302 PAs this season in Savannah, he has 2 home runs and 23 RBIs, with a .280/.319/.353 line, which is underwhelming, but it shows a lot that he can hold his own at the age of 17 at Single-A.

His Best Tool

He can hit, flat out hit, like no prospect of the Mets I can remember seeing since Murphy, or maybe even better, he knows what he is doing at the plate, and can develop into a good MLB hitter.

His grade? A



Other Reactions

You already know what I think of the trade, but here are some other reactions, which seem to be quite contrary. (Note: he will bat 5th tonight and play right field, while wearing the number 12.)

Matthew Cerronne says it "doesn't matter", but also adds that he thinks it plays into an overall plan.

Mets Merized (I do not agree) says this means F-Mart and others could be on the way out.

Mets Minor League Blog hates the trade.

Metstradamus rants about it as promised, although he hated the original Church trade, and the Delgado trade.

Andrew Vazzano over at TheRopolitans (who will be on Mets Weekly today), says that the Mets " got a 5 years younger Church".

Eddie D'Anna says that he will give Francoeur a chance.

Braves Blast has there take on it.

Friday, July 10, 2009

Analyzing Francoeur

So when we traded Church for Francoeur, many people saw it as two indetical players, I say Francoeur is better.

Many people say Church has an even arm to Francoeur, but I say Francoeur has a better arm. A stat Baseball Reference uses is called kills, and holds, which says if you throw a runner out its a kill, if he holds its a hold. Francoeur has 4 kills, while Church has 1, evermore, Francoeur scares runners, with 28 holds, to Church's 28, so it is even.

Offensively Church has a better line. Francoeur has more upside, that is all I can say on that. Also Francoeur is more durable.

Breaking News: Mets Trade Church For Franceour

Update 6:47

New line-up Pagan, Cora, Murphy, Wright, Reed, Tatis, Schneider, A. Reyes, Nieve

Update: 6:44

Cash was also sent to ATL

Man am I gonna have trouble spelling Francoeur, or however you spell it.

He is hitting .250/.282/.352 Church: .282/.332/.275

Why Pagan Will Be Huge

Today the Mets sent down Nick Evans to make room for Angel Pagan, who has been very good for the Mets over the last two seasons when healthy.

He has hit .275 in 08, and .333 in 09, driving in a combined 16 runs, and compiling OBPs of .346, and .429, he has stolen 4 bases both years, and still has not been caught as a Met, which makes him a great leadoff hitter, which is something the Mets have not had since Reyes went down. He has a line this year of .333/.429/.405 and the rest of the league would have compiled a .264/.338/.417, which means that even though his Slugging Percentage is down, being a leadoff batter he does not have to have a high slugging percentage.

This year he has drawn a walk in 13.7 % of his ABs, when Reyes had a 10.8 % before getting injured, which means that Pagan gets on base about as much as Reyes would, meaning that maybe he can spark the Mets, and with Murphy moving up to 3, and getting hot we might have a shot at this division yet!

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Sheff, and Ollie

I am riding high after a Met win, and I have caught up on my sleep and am ready to sit down and post.

Gary Sheffield has been the most underrated player on the Mets this year, and without him we would have been out of it a long time ago, as he has been the fourth best player this year based on Baseball Prospectus's VORP (Value Over Replacement Player). He leads the team in home runs, and has been the closest thing to a cleanup hitter the Mets have had, and without him, Wright would have no protection in the line-up what-so-ever.

Gary Sheffield is even better then I thought, and when I looked deeper into it I realized what a steal Omar got. His MLVr, which is how many more runs than an average player he contributes to, is .234, which is .4 less than David Wright, who many say has been our best hitter. He has an AVG of .283, and in similar situations the league would bat .263. His SO/BB is 1.06 which is okay; his career average in that stat is .79. He has an RBI every 6.1 ABs, and a HR every 18.8.

Oliver Perez went 5 innings of 2 run ball, which by all means is fine with me, but other people say that the 7 walks make it not as good as it really was which means that he will be back to bad Ollie soon. If we look deeper we can see that him, and the rest of the pitching staff held the Dodgers to a 2-11 with RISP, which is huge, and they left 12 on, and the highlight of Ollie's night for me was when he got a soft liner from Ethier with the bases loaded and two outs, when the old Ollie would have walked him, or allowed a hit.

So for Ollie, the future is bright.

Friday, July 3, 2009

Alexis Rios

Alex Rios is a player that the Toronto Blue Jays have said recently, because of Roy Halladay’s contract being up after next season is expendable. I am a big fan of Rios, not for his five tools, but for the statistical value he gives to your team. He is a well built outfielder, who can hit for power, and hit, as well as run which is something we could use at the leadoff spot.

He is having a bad year, with 9 homers and 37 RBI, and his line is .260/.316/.417, which is not good, but he is capable of better as 2 out of the last 4 years he had an OPS of .850. His K/PA ratio is 1K/6.38 PAs, his career is 5.92, so he is not striking out as much, and his BABIP is .287, and his career BABIP is .324. He has walked 24 times, and has been struck out 55. His walks are way down, they should be a little higher, and the OBP would be where it should be.

He is not walking this year, but if you put him on the Mets now, he would be tied for the team lead with 9 home runs. He could play right field, or left (and even center in Beltran’s absence), and cover a lot of ground, and hit for some power

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Magglio Ordonez

Now I know he is expensive and he is struggling, but if we look deeper into the stats of him, we find he may possibly help the Mets, and if we dealt them Stokes, they would accept.

His basic stats are 2 Hr, 22 RBI, and his line is .271/.347/.339, his first two are okay, but the last one is not on line with where it should be. I am not worried about this as the Mets do not hit for much power anyway, so if he can add a bat to hit 5th, and be similar to David Wright, with no HR and a lot of RBIs.

His BABIP is right around his career average, at .310, and his career average is .316, so there is nothing wrong there, so its when the ball is not in play that hurts him, he has 33 Ks in 245 PAs, which is 7.42Ks/1 PA, and when he won the batting title in 2006, his K/1 PA ratio was 8.58Ks/1 PA, so it is actually lower, which means that he will break out of his slump, and if the Mets can buy low now, it will pay off later.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Tim Redding

Has he been good? He has certainly been up and down, and with Livan going nowhere, Nieve pitching well, and Maine and Perez coming (hopefully) back soon.

If we go with the easy stats his ERA is 6.27 which is bad, and his W-L is 0-2, so at first glance he looks bad, as those are the two stats most commonly associated with a starting pitcher, and for Tim they are not good. Another simple stat, which I actually like is quality start ( 6 IP 3 ER), and he has 3 of these in 6 starts, which is very good, so why are people calling for his head?

His 3 starts that were not quality were against Boston, Florida, and Baltimore, so they are against a team you do not expect a quality start from, but two teams that you should expect one. Also, in his non-quality starts he has pitched 16 innings, and allowed 17 runs, so he is all or nothing, remind you of anyone? (Ollie?).

If you look into some of the deeper stats, his BB/9 is 4.4, which reflects that his BABIP needs to be good, because when you are allowing runners on balls not in play, when the ball is in play it needs to be an out, and his BABIP is .298, which is okay.

I think Redding deserves to stay in the rotation, with Nieve pitching the 8th?


Friday, June 19, 2009

Line-Up Simulator Fun

Avg Runs Per Game: 4.34

Runs For 162 Games: 703

OrderNameGRBIR
1Alex Cora1623186
2Daniel Murphy16258105
3Carlos Beltran162101135
4David Wright162107117
5Gary Sheffield162145101
6Ryan Church1629968
7Brian Schneider1628542
8Luis Castillo1626326
9Fernando Nieve1621019

Hopefully I'll have a better post later, but this is alarming.

Where Did Wright's Power Go?

His Slugging Percentage is .25 points below his career average, so why?

One reason that is popular among people who do not like the whole modern age stats thing, so they continue to go with ranting on, and basing players, and how good they are on silly stats, like RBIs and Batting Average, when stats like VORP, and OBP exist, so we can accurately judge how well a player does. One stat I am going to look at to determine if the people who say its Citifield are right is Ballpark Factor, it is a stat where anything above 1.000 is a hitters park, and below is a pitchers park.

Citifield, as we can tell without Ballpark Factor, is a pitcher's park, it has a Ballpark Factor of 0.88, which makes it an extreme pitchers park, if you dive deeper into it, it has allowed its fair share of home runs, with a home run Ballpark Factor of, yes this is true: 1.136. I like most people am perplexed by this as well, how can such a big park have such a high HR Factor? (More on that later). Back to the Ballpark Factor, last season David Wright hit a career high in home runs, and in the season before, at what was also considered a "pitchers park", it had a Ballpark HR Factor of, I am not making this up: 1.081.

What could cause David Wright to lose all his power, after his two best HR years, in 07 and 08 when he hit 30 and 33, and slugged (both of these are 1-2) .546, and .534? I looked into, and I want to show you some photos of Citifield's construction, in those years.

Both of these are in 07.

















In 2007, Citifield began to take shape and start to being a real structure out beyond left field, and people talked about a wind pattern that was caused by it that made balls go farther then they usually would at Shea, which in 2003 had a Ballpark HR Factor of .835, in 04 had a .804, in 05 had a .890, in 06, when Citi was first being contructed of .575, which I believe is an outlier in this set of data, as it is not in line with the general point of direction. In 07, when we begin to focus on it had a Ballpark HR Factor of .900, so its climbing, and then finally as you already know from earlier, it had a Ballpark HR Factor of 1.081, when Citifield was at full size.

So what I am saying is the reason David Wright's HR is down, or down according to his last two seasons, is because of the fact he never was a 30 HR guy, but a 15-25 one who had the wind caused by Citifield for two seasons, and that gave him an extra 5-10 and boosted his Slugging Percentage.


Thursday, June 18, 2009

This Is The Start Of Huff To Mets Ralk All Over NY Radio

Read the title, my shortest blgo post ever, and least statistically based, but its pretty true.

Is Feliciano A Lefty Specialist?

Pedro Feliciano is usually given the ball by Jerry Manual to pitch to a tough lefty, but lets look deeper into the stats.

The most basic stat to measure a left handed specialist by is BAA by left handers, and Feliciano's is where it should be at .149, allowing 10 hits in 67 ABs against him, which is good, and I will compare hsi number sto JC Romero's 2008 season, where he was considered one of the best left handed specialists in baseball.

Pedro Feliciano has allowed a Slugging Percentage of .299 on those hits, which I know sounds bad, but considering its over 10 hits in 67 ABs means that those ten hits have been pretty good, or for the Mets pretty bad. He out of those ten hits has allowed 3 home runs, which means that if Johan Santana has the same hits to homers ratio as him, he would have allowed 22 home runs this year, and for a comparison the league leader in home runs allowed is 17, so Pedro Feliciano allows WAY to many home runs, and this is against lefties only. The 7 other hits were a double, and 6 singles, he has allowed 7 of his batters to score, which is dispicable for a left handed specialist.

In 0-2 counts he has allowed 2 hits, and one of them is a home run, which for any relief pitcher is just bad, as 0-2 late in games needs to equal an out, or you will lose like the Mets tend to when Feliciano is in a game.

Now JC Romero in all of 2008 allowed a .102 BAA or 10-98. Of those ten hits, only one was a home run, ALL YEAR. He allowed 3 extra base hits total, for a .153 Slugging Percentage which is almost lower than Feliciano's BAA for lefties, so this shows us why Feliciano has been so ineffective.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Mets Need A 1B

The Mets need to get a first baseman, because Murphy/Tatis is not cutting it, lets go into the stats.

First lets go over the fixed number stats.

Carlos Delgado= 4 HR 23 RBI 15 R 28 H 12 BB 20 K 49 TB in 112 PA

Murphy/Tatis= 6 HR 33 RBI 38 R 69 H 31 BB 28 K 102 TB in 329 PA

Look at that, Delgado would have needed maybe 20 more games to ge to those numbers, and he would probably have better stats, so we could get a replacement, like Mark Derosa, who could fill in at SS, give Wright a day at 3B, or play the corner outfield, which has been better, butnot league average. There are other stats that are not fixed numbers, that make it even more clear.

http://www.stathead.com/bbeng/woolner/vorpdescnew.htm , that is a good defintion of VORP, which is a complicated stat. It is basically if you had Joe Average and replaced him with David Wright, they would get 34.2 more runs than Joe Average.

Carlos Delgado's 09 VORP= 7.3

Murphy+Tatis= 09 VORP of -3.2

They have been a black hole, and Omar needs to makle a change, that is is 10.5 extra runs we could have, imagine how we could use 10.5 runs? We could have won that game where Castillo dropped the ball, or then ones versus the Phillies when we lost in extra innings, so who is out there?

Adam Dunn

Dunn can play left, and first so when Delgado gets back he can move out to left field, he adds some serious power to the Mets line-up, as he has slugged 30 homers every year since I can remember. He has a VORP, of 17.4, a that is about 20 extra runs.

Nick Johnson

I am not a personal fan of Johnson as he is often hurt, and does not seem to be built for Citifield, but Omar seems to like him as he traded for him in Montreal, he has a VORP of 11.5, which is about 14 more runs.

Aubrey Huff

I like him and Dunn more than the other options, as they can hit for power, and play LF/1B, which both would help us substantially, his VORP is -2.5, as his D hurts him there.


There have been some other names, but these seem to be the most likely to be dealt to the Mets, last time I heard, the Nats are asking a ridiculous amount for Johnson, so maybe take him off hte list.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Remembering 69'

1969, the year the Mets won their first World Series, but it was more than that, it was a reason to come to that dump called Shea (but it was our dump), it was a reason for people to stop and listen, or watch when the Mets were on, it was a reason that we, even though we did not have Babe Ruth, or Lou Gherig, or Mickey Mantle, had secured a place as one of the greatest in the history of baseball, as did the 2008 Tampa Bay Rays. It was the year when names like Tom Seaver and Tug McGraw, and Jerry Koosman, and Tommy Agee and Cleon Jones, all became the Mets great playes, the men who led them toa championship. It was the year we coined the phrase: Amazin, and a few years later a similar group of players coined: Ya Gotta Believe (that is a Mets thing, not Phillies).

It was an amazing season where the Mets who had finished last, last, last, last, second to last, last, and second to last, had become a team that you did not want to play, led by rookie Tom Seaver, and other pitchers such as Tug McGraw, Nolan Ryan, and Jerry Koosman, and position players such as Cleon Jones, Tommy Agee, Jerry Grote, Bud Harrelson, and finally Ed Kranepool, the alltime Mets hit leader. This team went 100-62, and in the first year of division play, won the National League East. By beating out the Cubs and Pirates by a substantial amount of games, and I guess you could call them: Amazin'.

In the Championship Series they would have to surprise the World even more by beating the Braves, who although they only had 93 regular season wins, had all-time greats such as Orlando Cepeda, Hoyt Wilhelm, Phil Neikro, Hank Aaron, Dusty Baker, and Felipe Alou, elthough not all-time greats were good players. Remember back then it was only a 5 game series, so the Mets only had to get 3 without letting Atlanta get 3 first, so it could benifit them, or it could hurt them, I would say it benifited them, as they swept Atlanta, game 1 was a 9-5 Met wins, the starting pitchers were Tom Seaver, and Phil Niekro, Seaver got the win and Niekro the loss, the Mets offense was clutch, scoring 5 in the 8th, with singles and doubles and errors, so the Mets took game 1. Game 2 was a 11-6 Mets victory, with Ron Taylor getting the win, and Ron Reed getting the loss, and Tug McGraw the save, the Mets were up 2-0 going into game 3 at Shea, it seemed over, and it was. In game 3 the Mets started Nolan Ryan, against the Braves' Pat Jarvis, and Ryan got the win and Jarvis the loss, with a 7-4 Mets victory, the offense was lead by Wayne Garret's clutch go ahead home run in the fifth, and that would have been enough, but the tacked on two more to win 7-4.



In the World Series the Mets had to face the even better Orioles, who had defensive whiz Brooks Robinson at third, and heavy hitting Boog Powell, and Frank Robinson, with pitchers Jim Palmer, Mike Cuellar, and Dave McNally. In game 1 the Mets played Baltimore at Memorial Stadium, and in the all important game 1 they lost 4-1, as they had trouble getting to Cuellar, as they did not score until the seventh on a sac-fly from Al weis, the Orioles got a lead0off homer from Don Baylor off of Tom Seaver, and their three runs in the fifth from signles and doubles, including Mike Cuellar. Game 2 was also at Memorial Stadium, but it had a different outcome, as the Mets won it 2-1 on the back of Koosman's brilliant, and might I add clutch pitching performance (he had a no-no in the 7th), offensively they scored the runs in the fourth on a Don Clendenon solo home run, and then in the ninth to give them a 2-1 lead from back-to back-to back singles from Ed Charles, Jerry Grote, and Al Weis. In Game 3 the Mets got to HOFer Jim Palmer quickly, as Tommy Agee hit a lead off homer to give the Mets a 1-0 lead, at home. He also made maybe the greatest catch in Mets history, up their with Endy Chavez, to save at least 5 runs. The Mets would get 4 more in the game, but did not need it as Gary Genty was Amazin' throwing a shutout. Game 4 was a turning point in the series, the Mets up 2-1 on the powerhouse Orioles, people were still counting them out, but man oh man would they come up HUGE today. Tom Seaver pitched brilliantly, allowing only one run, and the Mets would only get one run on a Don Clendenon solo homer, until the 10th that is. in the tenth inning the Mets got a lead-off double out of Jerry Grote, followed by an IBB to Al Weis. First and second no outs, and up came Jc Martin who bunted it, and in one of the most dramatic blown calls ever, up their with Don Denkinger, the throw hit him in the arm allowing Grote to score and the Mets win game 4, going up 3-1 in the series, and with one more left at Shea the Mets could get it at home. In game 5 the Mets starer was Koosman, who allowed 3 runs in the 3rd on a Dave McNally (he was the pitcher) two run homer and a Frank Robinson solo dinger. In the 6th the Mets would start the comeback, getting two runs, and the controversial call where Cleon Jones was hit in the foot with a pitch, and Gil Hodges proved it by showing the umpire the shoe polish, which was promptly followed by a Don Clendenon (who won, and rightfully so thew series MVP) a two run homer, Mets are back in it 3-2. In the 7th they would tie it up on a Al Weis would hit one of the biggest hits in the history of the Mets franchise with a game tying solo homer, and he had a career total of 7 in the regular season. Then in the 8th the Mets would take the lead, and take they would on a Ron Swoboda double, and an error by Boog Powell, and the Mets would go on from their to win the first title in the history of their franchise.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Steven Matz

The Mets as we all know drafted Steven Matz with their first pick in the draft in the second round, how much about Matz do you know?


Matz is list as 6'3 185, which appears to be generous, if you have seen a picture of him. He is from East Sautucket on LI, and has been a lifelong Met fan, and is recently dead grandma was a diehard Met fan, and she would have been proud. He throws lefty, which makes him the first Met to be chosen first overall by the Mets since (AAAAGH!!!!) Scott Kazmir.

This season Matz pitched 52 innings and allowed onyl 2 runs, I know that in High School there is npot a lot of talent, so stats do not mean much, but that is pretty impressive at any level. He throws from 88-92 on average with his fastball, which is not considered hard, but not soft, he has reached 94 at times this season, and at the age of 18 still has room for improvement.

He throws a curveball that is above average, but you still have to remember he is onlt 18, and has plenty of time to work on his curveball. He can throw it above average because of good spin and arm speed, so you can not read what pitch he is about to throw. He also throws a change-up at times that is very inconsistent, he will go straight to Rookie ball when signed.

If the Mets fail to sign him, he will play for Coastal Carolina University.

A Loss Is A Loss Is A Loss

If it was 2-0, it would have been more painful, Santana is hurt, and no matter how much he denies it, it is true.

The Mets could not catch a break today, except for Castillo using two hands on a pop up. Santana was leaving his pitches over the plate, and the Yankees were ripping it. I honestly have 0 inspiration for a post right, maybe in the morning I will have something about the upcoming series

Bruney Vs K-Rod Round 3

Round 1

Brian Bruney

"Couldn't have happened to a better player, his act is tired".

-On Castillo dropping the popup

Round 2

K-Rod

"Say it to my face, I do not even know who this guy is".

-On Bruneys Comments

Round 3

Both teams end up yelling at each other in the outfielder over it.


What is up with Bruney?

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Nieve Is A Spark?

Fernando Nieve looked more like Cy Young today, either that or the Yankees looked like the Nationals, and after an embarrasing loss, under extroadinary circumstances, he really came up huge. He was locating pitches and was confident, and Ken Rosenthal told Joe Buck during the game that he talked to a scout before the game who said he did not have the stuff or confidence, and then during the game when Nieve was dominating, that same scout told Rosenthal that he looked like, and I quote "a whole new pitcher".

When I saw Nieve pitch for Houston in the Spring versus the Mets, I thought he was a guy with good stuff, who had to find a way to locate it and be confident with it. He was then DFA'd, and soon after brought in by Omar, who has a knack for bringing in guys for nothing and getting value out of them (EX= Tatis, Sheffield, Maine, Perez, Livan, Omir Santos, it really is endless).

How did Nieve do it? Lets break one at- bat down.

Nieve was throwing fastballs outside to start the count, this is Johnny Damon at-bat.


Here Nieve throws the outside first pitch
fastball to Damon, to start the count. Painting it on the outside part of the plate, and setting Damon up for the next pitch. Note how his shoulders and his entire body looks as he is approaching the ball.











He was using the fastball often, and getting up to 95 at times with it.


See how he is cheating towards the outsides this time, which throws him off balance and causes him to get into an 0-2 hole, as Nieve is locating his pitches very effectively.













In this pitch he would come with a low and away fastball for the third straight pitch.



This was another outside fastball, which as you can see Damon did nto exp
ect as he was squared to hit an inside pitch and Nieve came away and it caused him to foul it off down the left field line.













I will skip to the last pitch of the at-bat, the count was 2-2, he called an outside fastball a ball, and an inside fastball a ball. After going with an outside changeup he came back with an outside fastball shown below.



Friday, June 12, 2009

Mets Have To Do Something

This is a sloppy team, flat out sloppy, I know we signed him to an extension, but Jerry could be the problem. How dare Castillo use Little League tactics, to I don't know, win a game???!!!! It is not hard, you take your hand, and put your hand over the ball when you catch it so it does not pop out.


This team has had so many embarrasing losses, that when Castillo was under that, I expected him to drop it. He was not even close to being under that and he had camped out in right center and it ended up in dead right.

Is it Jerry? Or are we lazy? I really do not care, but FIX IT!

What's Up With Johan?

I am surprised that with the NY media spotlight, no one has noticed this glaring problem that the Mets are having, other than injuries, is Johan Santana.

In April he was on top of his game with an ERA of 1.10 and a record of 3-1, and could have been 4-0, or atleast 3-0. He was far and away the best in the NL that month and showed no signs of slowing down, as he allowed 1 ER, then 0 ER, then 0 ER, then 1 ER, then 2 ER. So he combined to allow a grand total of 4 ER all of April/March.

In May he was not nearly as good as his ERA was 2.43, so one could argue that they began to figure out what Johan was doing. His ER totals were: 0 ER, 0 ER , 4 ER , 2 ER , 3 ER. He allowed more than 2 ER for the first time this season against the Giants, but the Mets still won. Then he allowed 3 against Washington, Washington? His 2 ER performance was versus Boston.

In June, although he has only had two starts and it is all about sample size, his ERA is, and I swear to you this is no joke, 5.54. He allowed 5 ER against Philly, at Citifield, and that is the first time he has allowed that many runs in a game since in Cincinnati last year. so what is wrong with Johan? Is he pitching hurt and refusing to admit it because other people are dropping like flies? The Mets have a total of 8 players on the DL, and two from the rotation. The earliest expected return of all of them is mid-late June.