Washington 6, New York
4
Look, I know how hard this has to be on all you
Mets fans. You have the second coming of either Tom Seaver or Dwight Gooden, depending upon your
age and the era you came out of. And, what happens? The guy is getting minimal
support.
Now, the initial reaction is why in the hell
doesn’t TC leave the guy in for at least one more inning? Let’s remember, that
he is on some kind of pitch count that is going to rear its ugly head sometime
late in the season. Secondly, whether you want to hear it or not, this isn’t
our season and his team is destined to play just outside both a payoff spot and
a great 2014 draft pick.
You don’t want to do anything to hinder the
growth of the two most important pitchers to come along in years, Harvey and Zack Wheeler. They will serve up the
future playoff victories but only when it’s time.
Sit back and enjoy this now competitive season.
Young is running all over the place. Byrd is timely hitting. And Satin is
finally getting his shot. And guess what, here comes Wheeler this weekend. I
love it.
Maturation
I mentioned a few weeks
ago how to watch these games. I turn on when Matt Harvey pitches and I turn off
the game when they take him out of the game. Frankly, by that time of the night
I’m working on material on all the minor league games so the last thing I need
is the distraction of some Mets reliever pissing the game away.
Naturally, I have added the same process when Zack
Wheeler now pitches and I will do the same once Rafael Montero and Noah Syndergaard join this rotation.
Then, and only then, will I have the rotation I will be happy with.
One of our most loyal readers, ‘Charles’, may have it
right. He says to keep all the young pitches and trade none of them until
enough of them mature to give you the rotation of your dreams. Mine comes on
opening day 2015. I have the three speed kings Harvey, Wheeler, and
Syndergaard, the lefty Niese, and Rafael Montero, who I’m not sure how to classify
right now. He’s pitching in the non-pitcher friendly PCL. Everything was peachy
in AA (11-starts, 2.43), but, after four starts in Las Vegas, he’s sitting at a
4.50 ERA. The good news is the strikeouts are still there (20K/20IP), but the
BBs are up, six in 20.0 innings. This could be nothing more than different
interpretations of strike zones by AAA umpires, but, whatever it is, there is
nothing good about having a AAA franchise in a league like this. Your hitters
look too good and pitchers looks like shit.
Trust me… stop watching the last two innings of Mets
games and add more internet time following guys like Montero and Syndergaard.
You’ll feel better about this team.
7th
Inning Specialist
Where is Pedro
Feliciano, how that we really need him?
Yeah, I know, he’s down on our farm, and he
has a combined A+/AA stat line of: 9-G, 9.0-IP, 7-K, 2-BB, 1-ER, 1.00.
Remember when he pitched in, like, 162 games in one
season for the Mets (and then we sold him and his dead arm to the Yankees)? This
team needs two things… a manager that will allow the starters to pitch at least
six innings regardless as to what the scoreboard says, and a Feliciano-type sitting in the bullpen waiting
to pitch the seventh and then hand it over to the rest of the pen. If the
starter goes seven, let him rest for another day.
There is some rehabbing going on which includes both
Feliciano and Tim Byrdak. Hopefully, there is help on the way here.
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