For the “You Gotta Believe” crowd, a look back at the 1973
New York Mets might prove inspirational as they sat in dead last on August 30th. When the month ended the next day, they were
9 games under .500 and things indeed looked bleak. The big difference between then and now is
there was still only a 6.5 game deficit to make up to win the pennant, unlike
today when the uphill battle is twice as steep.
That club was somewhat similar to this one in that they had
a mix of young talents in the form of Jon Matlack, Felix Millan, John Milner
and Rusty Staub, as well as a collection of players who were there for the 1969
World Championship team, including Wayne Garrett, Jerry Grote, Bud Harrelson,
Cleon Jones, Jerry Koosman and, of course, Tom Seaver. Often forgotten in that mix was starter George
Stone who had his career year while playing for the Mets after arriving with
Millan as part of the deal that sent Danny Frisella and Gary Gentry to Atlanta.
This year’s Mets club has young talent like Pete Alonso,
Michael Conforto, JD Davis, Seth Lugo, Jeff McNeil and Amed Rosario, as well as
2017 World Series veterans like Jacob deGrom, Jeurys Familia, Steven Matz and Noah
Syndergaard. Veteran additions like Wilson
Ramos and Justin Wilson have had a positive impact as well. Unfortunately some of the other players like
Robinson Cano, Edwin Diaz, Jed Lowrie, Brandon Nimmo and Dominic Smith have not
contributed as expected, while others have chosen 2019 to forget how to play at
this level.
Another big difference was that closer Tug McGraw essentially
put the club on his back during that September pennant drive. He delivered a 0.88 ERA, 12 saves and 5 wins
over his last 19 appearances of the regular season. If the Mets today could get that type of
performance out of Edwin Diaz then a similar surge is possible, though it would
likely be towards a wildcard berth and not the eastern division flag.
Of course, it also helped having Tom Seaver deliver his
second Cy Young Award-winning season with a 19-10 record, a 2.08 ERA and
(believe it or not) 18 complete games!
When was the last time you saw a pitcher deliver ONE?
The 2019 NY Mets offense is head and shoulders better than
what the 1973 crew had. The top six
hitters today include Rosario, McNeil, Alonso, Wilson, Conforto and Davis. In 1973 John Milner led the club with just 23
HRs while hitting a paltry .239. The
normally sweet swinging Cleon Jones hit just .260 and the leading hitter with
all of 3 HRs and 37 RBIs was Felix Millan.
Of course, the starting rotation in 1973 was perhaps the
best the Mets ever fielded. In addition
to Seaver’s exploits (worth 10.8 WAR!), you had Koosman pitching to a 2.84 ERA,
Matlack to a 3.20 and Stone to a 2.80.
The only fly in the ointment was fifth starter Jim McAndrew who was
north of 5.00. Lest you think the
bullpen was an unbeatable mix, the best number was Harry Parker at 3.35. McGraw happened to get on a hot streak at the
right time but finished with just 25 saves and a 3.87 ERA.
So the 1973 club did it on a powerful starting rotation, a
formidable closer’s best work in the final month of the year and the ineptitude
of the rest of the division. There’s no
reason deGrom, Syndergaard, Matz, Wheeler and Stroman can’t put their best
efforts together. The offense theoretically
should not be a problem. The bullpen
lately has been markedly better. The
only things the Mets can’t count on is the dismal failure of the other wildcard
hunting teams and the bottom third of the order. However, it would appear the pieces are
indeed there for a run. Whether or not
they have the will, the motivation and the energy to execute to the best of
their abilities are other matters entirely.
*********************************************************************************
While at the second-to-last El Paso Chihuahuas regular season game against visiting Sacramento a few familiar faces were in the opposition's starting lineup:
And perhaps less familiar to all but the most astute Mets fans, he was the Luis Guillorme of his day:
*********************************************************************************
While at the second-to-last El Paso Chihuahuas regular season game against visiting Sacramento a few familiar faces were in the opposition's starting lineup:
And perhaps less familiar to all but the most astute Mets fans, he was the Luis Guillorme of his day:
8 comments:
I agree this Mets team is better. Now, let’s see the team go 21-7 the rest of the way like the 1973 squad did. Then MAYBE they can sneak back into this.
I rememberr that Ernest and Tom were a big fan of Tovar.
Biggest problem of course is the division is WAY better than 73' but we're Met fan and we'll hang in there with the best of them. I really didn't want Frazier to play much anymore but he did the job last night, of course against a terrible BP, but hey we'll take it and you know at this point one game at a time. Adam Guttridge was in Sarasota to meet his father y/day, who was my son-in-laws boss for 25 years, and he said he'd like to get together with me next time he's in town. I'll certainly post when that happens as I've got ALOT of question for him.
Gary, great.
Mack, Tovar is part of a big wing of the Hall of Fame called "Almost Made It"
Tom yes as I have to fill him in on 58 years of Met misery er history w/o overwheming him LOL.
Also Tom we need to talk one day like on the phone O.K.?
I agree that this team is better than the '73 yeam, but let's add some context. That team played in a time when pitchers ruled. There were 10 NL SPs with ERAs 2.85 or lower. Team HRs (all over, not just ours) were nowhere near today's levels.
That kinda makes stat-by-stat comparisons less meaningful, but the fact that we were 9 games under .500 at the end of August, yet won the Division and the pennant, is VERY meaningful.And gives hope that it can be done again.
This Mets team has the better hitting.
Post a Comment