The New York Mets – I have been a fan since 1971. Fifty years! I was aware of them earlier, but in ‘71 baseball started to write itself onto my DNA. During a random house cleaning I came across an old VHS tape celebrating the 25th anniversary of the Mets called “An Amazing Era.” Sub-consciously I mentally started breaking down my lifetime as a Met fan into eras. I was surprised to find them rather well defined. So I wrote them all down and it looks like this: 1971 – The Beginning – This is the first year I watched the Mets day in and day out. If I missed a game it was rare. If it wasn’t televised, I listened on the radio. In the beginning I wasn’t fully aware of the roster as of yet. Veteran Bob Aspromonte, the Mets newly acquired third baseman, had a fast start in April so he was immediately my guy. I remember taking his picture out of the year book and posting it on my bedroom wall. Sadly, Bob’s fast start didn’t last. This season, ultimately, was his swan song. I
remember the highlight of his season came on September 25th. In the bottom of the 15th Aspro came through with a pinch hit walk-off single. Bob’s stat line on the year was ugly (5hr 33rbi .225.) But in 104 games he did lead the NL in fielding percentage at 3rd base. I saw him play live in August and I still remember him making an amazing play on a bunt down the third base line. As the season played out I became more and more acquainted with Cleon Jones, Eddie Kranepool, Jerry Grote, Bud Harrelson and of course Tom Terrific. Bob retired after the season at the old age of “33.” To this day I still think that Bob resembled Jack Haley (The actor who played the Tin Man in the Wizard of Oz) I wonder if that had something to do with my rooting for him? I mean the Tin Man was my favorite. 1972 to 1975 – The Franchise Years – Tom Seaver. Sadly, I wasn’t following baseball early enough to witness Seaver’s early seasons and successes. That changed fast. Tom was stellar and dependable. If he was on the mound, it was going to be a good day. He was the maestro, the surgeon, the professional. He rarely stumbled and never beat himself. Get this, 1974 was a strange year. He only went 11-11 and his era was a SHOCKING 3.20. A pesky sciatic nerve was the culprit. Looking back, even compromised, Seaver was still top tier while having the worst year of his prime. 1975 to 1977 – King Kong – Suddenly, my tastes moved to power. Dave “Kong”Kingman emerged as my favorite player. Going into 1975 the most home runs I had witnessed a Mets player hit in a single season was 23 by John Milner in 1973. Sure, Kingman struck out a lot, had an iron glove in the field and was surly with the press. But his titanic moon shots were intoxicating. In little league I wore number 26 and I even emulated his batting stance. However, I did stop short of sending a dead rodent to anyone. 1977 to 1980 – It’s Mazz! – The Mets of this era had shed most of the pitching luster and old favorites were departing or long gone. Lee Mazzilli was the Mets poster child and was really the only hook they had to bring fans into “Grant’s Tomb.” Mazz was fun to watch. He would thrill us with his speed, his basket catches in center field and of course who could forget his 1979 game tying opposite field home run in the All Star Game against Jim Kern! The Yanks had the Bronx Zoo with Reggie and Thurman. We had Lee Mazzilli and Joe Torre for Bonds menswear. 1980 to 1982 – The Dead Zone – I honestly can’t remember following any one player during this time. In 1982 the Mets made a splash signing free agent George Foster. His better days were behind him and he was naked in the line up so he was easy to pitch around and that forced him to press and struggle. This was the tail end of the era of Doug Flynn, John Stearns, Joel Youngblood, Craig Swan and Neil Allen. Allen, by the way, would be important very soon.
again in the middle of a “mini” rebuild brought him up. He hit the ground running and made a major impact, nearly instantly becoming the face of the Mets for the next 10 years. The Captain was a key component (along with Carlos’ Delgado and Beltran and the rise of Jose Reyes) of the 2006 Mets that came a game short of another World Series. For the rest of the decade Wright continued to rake and flash leather at 3rd, while in 2007 and 2008 the Mets suffered two of the greatest late season melt-downs in memory. In 2009 Citi Field opened and it’s vast dimensions cut Wright’s long ball prowess to just 10 dingers. Soon after, a rash of injuries altered Wright’s super-star trajectory and by 2014 it become clear that Wright’s injuries had won out. Still, Wright still leads the Mets in nearly every lifetime offensive category to this day.
8 comments:
Nice
Thanks Mack!
The pitching looks on track. Even with Lugo down, the bullpen should be OK. The offense is solid (particularly if Davis rebounds). However, the defense is pretty mediocre at 1B, 3B, LF and CF. That's half your position players.
Agreed....but still the INF has improved up the middle and McCann should gun down more runners.
Also...I think Pete will be fine at 1st.
Great summary, Craig - even without the rodent.
Welcome aboard Craig and nice piece. We all wear the scars but now there is light at the end of the tunnel hopefully.
Thank you Gary...Met scars are different. They don't cut as deep...but the highpoints are so darn high :)
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