OWNER GREED VS. FAN INTERESTS - Tom Brennan
So the Yanks beat the
Mets.
Again.
44-60, in fact, since interleague play began in
1997, if I have the facts correct.
As a Mets fan, I do not like it. But I am
far more upset with Mets ownership GREED that, in my view, has put the almighty
buck ahead of a Met fan's goal 1: winning pennants.
As an avid Mets fan since
1962, my concern, once they won the World Series in 1969, has been for them to
WIN MORE OF THEM. Playoffs at least, and hopefully, win several World Series
too.
And while the Yanks have been in the playoffs and
won World Series numerous times since then, it has been bleak for the Mets
since 1969: a single World Series win, two Series losses and just a few more
early playoff departures in the 46 years since 1969.
So it would seem to me
that playing a team (the Yankees) that ever since interleague play began has
been arguably baseball's dominant team has the potential of thwarting Mets'
runs at multiple playoffs.
It has certainly put the Mets’ playoff hopes in
jeopardy in 2015.
When the Mets first played the Yankees this year,
they had just tied a franchise high of 11 straight wins and were 13-3. The Mets
lost of 2 of 3 and spiraled downward from that point until late July.
The Mets just concluded another 3 game series as
they attempted to bury the unexpectedly bad for 2015 Nationals, a dangerous
team that had drastically underperformed expectations, while at the same time the
Mets have been trying to manage pitchers’ innings limits.
We all know this weekend’s result. The Mets lost 2
of 3 and saw their lead cut to 6, with 3 games left with that very same Nats
team that, like a shark, smells blood in the water, Mets blood, and is riled
up, and Mets fans are left wondering if we can make it to shore before the
shark catches up to us. And the Nats get to play the weaker Orioles, a clear competitive
advantage for them over the Mets.
What if those 6 games were against, say, the 64-86 Athletics? Would the Mets have instead won 4 of 6 & have the playoffs
essentially wrapped up?
Why play 6 interleague games a year vs a team in the Yanks that is strong and in contention every....single....year? When all a team has to do to miss the playoffs is....miss the playoffs by one game.
Let's say the Mets do still make the 2015 playoffs.
Losing 4 of 6 to a strong Yankee team could cost them playoff home field advantage. Which could be a deciding factor in whether one wins in the
playoffs or not.
I hate the Mets playing the Yanks in interleague
play for two reasons:
1) impact on playoff
contention, and
2) sand being kicked in the
Mets' faces in years when the Yanks were great and the Mets were not.
The Yankees are an astounding 1811-1249 since
interleague play started in 1997. Why
would you want to play 104 games during that time against a team that is 512
games over .500 during that period?
The answer is two-fold: Mets owners love the money
from those games, and at the same time they hope and pray that it does not keep
them out of the playoffs. Fingers
crossed. Tightly.
While it would be in the true fans’ best interests
to not be playing the best team in baseball over that time span at all in
interleague play, much less 104 times.
How about a little history:
· In 1997, Major League
Baseball scheduled interleague games between the AL and NL for the first time.
The Yankees won 2 of the 3 games.
· Mike Piazza joined the Mets in 1998; they were eliminated
from playoff contention in the last regular game series of the season by
Atlanta. The 1998 Champ Yankees
won the interleague series 2 games to 1, the first of 3 straight World Series titles
for them. So had the Mets played a lousy AL team instead of the world champs,
maybe the Mets sweep and make the playoffs that year.
· 1999
resulted in expanded interleague play, and the Mets and Yanks went 3 and 3 in
their face-to-face. Mets made the
playoffs but lost.
· In
2000, the Mets lost the interleague 4-2, and with that backdrop of losing to
the Yanks, also lost to them in the World Series.
· In
2001, the Mets finished 6 behind the Braves. The Yanks won 99, so they remained
a formidable opponent. While the teams
split the 6 games, had the Mets faced a weak opponent instead, maybe they win
the pennant – they were close enough where perhaps 2 more wins would have swung
momentum.
· In
2002, the Mets finished 26.5 games out. The Yanks won 103. In 2003, the Yanks
swept the Mets 6 games to none. But the Mets were terrible, finishing 34.5
games out, so it did not matter, other than giving the Mets' fans a very huge
inferiority complex.
· In 2004, the Mets won 4 of 6, shockingly,
against a Yankee team that won 30 more games than they did. No playoff
impact, but a head to head reminder for the 3rd straight season of Mets’
marked inferiority, no matter how the 6 Yank-Met games came out.
· In 2005, the much improved Mets finished 7
games out at 83-79. The Yanks won 95 games. The Mets split the 6 games. Perhaps,
again, had they played a team that was 14 under .500 instead of 14 over, they
win 5 of 6 and are close enough to the Braves to result in a different season
outcome. What if, what if.
·
The
Mets went into a talent tailspin after a few collapses, and in 2009, finished
23.5 games out – but were only a half game out of first place when they played
the mighty Yanks in late June. The start
of free fall.
·
In
2011, when Reyes was electrifying the baseball world and one got the sense they
might be able to be put on his shoulders for a run, they lost 4 of 6 to the Yanks,
and Reyes got hurt in – what else – the 2nd Yankee series in
June. Jinx? Whatever, that killed that season’s chances.
I’ll
stop there. Except to say three things:
1) The
Mets play 4 games against the Yanks in 2016.
Let’s hope that is not 4 too many. Zero to me is a much better number.
2) I liked the Mayor’s Trophy
game better – one game a year, no effect on the standings.
3) To put fans, and not
owners’ pocketbooks, first, baseball should figure its interleague schedule by
calculating in such a manner that the collective records of a team’s opponents for
the upcoming year is based on those teams’ prior year combined records being as
close to .500 as possible – so if the Mets did play 4 against the mighty Yanks,
they get several games against teams that had finished under .500 to balance things
out.
Let’s hope we make it this year. Or the Mets' owners will be a lot poorer.
Tom -
ReplyDeleteI am still a 'half-filled' person as of now.
Yes, it looks like the Mets have run out of a little steam, but all they have to do is be 4 up going into the Nats series.
I think this is still easily obtainable based on the lack of strength of the schedule leading up to that series.
It's essentially a 3-game lead with 10 games to go. Mets just lost 4 out of 5. It ain't over yet.
ReplyDeleteI don't want to face the Nats with a 3-game lead. That said, maybe that's exactly what the Mets need. To win it at home against those guys.
Let's Go Mets!
Mack and James,
ReplyDeleteI still am optimistic, as long as the lead does not shrink again tonight. I will be at the game. No Tomahawk Chops are allowed.
All I can say is for the owners' sakes, thank goodness the Mets were not up or down by 2 games going into this series.
Of course, anyone would be crazy not to be "optimistic" when up by 6 games this late in the season. The odds are overwhelmingly in the Mets favor.
ReplyDeleteBut.
It ain't over till it's over.
In Atlanta, we're going with Niese, Verrett, and Colon. That does not make me the most confident man on the planet. Unless I was standing on Mars, which I'm not.
Good chance we're going to sweat before this job is done.
James hopefully we jump all over the Braves and can get several games to smile about the Mets winning the pennant. I'd love to see it clinched before the nats come in for that final weekend. That way it won't be stressful for the Nats players and they can go get their pictures taken in Times Square in a relaxed way while planning an early off season
ReplyDeleteEnjoy the show. Its going to be Amazing, no matter what. Either the Mets will reach the post-season promised land (experts have the odds of that around 98%) or you are going to see a collapse of historic proportions that'll make everybody forget the '64 Phillies. Either way, its going to be entertaining as hell.
ReplyDeleteAs for Inter-League play, I've never liked it. I think it unbalances the schedule and makes the World Series far less special. But don't blame the Mets. They didn't create Inter-League play and they weren't the ones who decided that supposed "natural rivals" like the Yankees vs. Mets, should play every year. Those are league decisions; the Mets aren't at the table begging for more games against the Yankees. Would you feel differently if the Yankees were crap this year (as they were supposed to be) and the Orioles were world beaters? I wouldn't. I hate Inter-League play and I'd like to toss that AND the Designated Hitter out of baseball once and for all.
Good points Stubby. I just hate it because we play interleague teams who combined are always well over. 500. Logic tells you that over time that probably costs you a few wins per year. Just one more obstacle. But let's win tonight. Maybe the Orioles will win a few vs Nats this week
ReplyDelete