Good Morning. Happy Birthday Phil Regan. Jacob deGrom is great but not the Mets Bullpen as Phillies beat the Mets 5-3.
Section Links: Mets Links, MLB Links, and This Day in Mets History.
Phillies
5 Mets 3 (Box
Score); Kevin
Pillar CF 1 for 5; Francisco
Lindor SS 1 for 4 with a walk and a K; Michael
Conforto RF 1 for 4 with a K; Pete Alonso 1B 1 for 4, with a run scored, walk and 2 Ks; J.D. Davis 3B 1 for 3, with a run scored, walk and 2 Ks;; Jeff McNeil 2B 0 for 4; James
McCann C 1 for 4 RBI; Brandon
Nimmo LF 1 for 3, 1 walk, 2
Ks; Jacob
deGrom 2 for 3 with an RBI, 1 K; 6
innings, no runs, 3 hits, 7 Ks, 2 walks; Miguel
Castro 1
inning, no runs, one hit, no walks; Trevor May: 1/3 inning, 2 hits, 3 runs - 2 earned, 1 walk, 1 K;
Brian Joura Mets360.com: “Opening Day
happened four days later than it should have. The Mets should have scored more
runs early in the game. They should have had Jacob deGrom pitch deeper in the
game. James McCann should have caught the less-than-great throw from Luis
Guillorme. All of those should haves added up to a 5-3 loss to the Phillies Monday
night.” (Subscription required).
Anthony DiComo Mets.com: All the pieces were in place as Luis Rojas had drawn them up. The Mets had the best pitcher on the planet on the mound, cruising, at an extremely low pitch count. They had two runs on the board and few worries in the world. Then Rojas removed Jacob deGrom and the good vibes evaporated.
Mike
Puma NY Post: “The Mets went from May to Mayday to mayhem in a torturous
five-run inning…Entrusted a two-run lead in his Mets debut, Trevor May loaded
the bases with one out in the eighth. Another new arrival, lefty Aaron Loup,
entered and plunked Bryce Harper to force in a run. J.T. Realmuto’s ensuing RBI
single tied it, and Luis Guillorme’s throw home that ticked off James McCann’s
glove on Alex Bohm’s grounder (the error was charged to Guillorme) allowed two
additional runs. The Phillies scored a final run on Didi Gregorius’ sacrifice
fly.”
Metstradamus:
“I tabbed Trevor May as someone who
would be a key to the season. Unlocking the door to the gates of hell with that
key wasn’t what I had in mind here.”
.@KPILLAR4 ➡️ @JeffMcNeil805 ➡️ @JDDavis26 for the out. 🙌 #LGM pic.twitter.com/yBYHgpfxid
— New York Mets (@Mets) April 5, 2021
1️⃣0️⃣1️⃣ MPH by you! #LGM pic.twitter.com/Vd5yAYRCnN
— GENY Mets Report (@genymets) April 5, 2021
The Mets have a shortstop.
— Anthony DiComo (@AnthonyDiComo) April 5, 2021
This play is not routine. Francisco Lindor made it look easy: pic.twitter.com/WA287Goaxw
.@McCannon33 drives in our first run of the season to give us the lead. 💪 pic.twitter.com/tm6vjxztPW
— New York Mets (@Mets) April 6, 2021
Jacob deGrom has made 184 starts.
— MLB Stats (@MLBStats) April 6, 2021
He has allowed 0 R in 40 of them! pic.twitter.com/QpYOiMZwxg
TIE GAME 💪 pic.twitter.com/rTtMwkKvvK
— Philadelphia Phillies (@Phillies) April 6, 2021
Just put it in play!!!!! pic.twitter.com/nDbeGjqz19
— Philadelphia Phillies (@Phillies) April 6, 2021
FINAL: Phillies 5, Mets 3
— Anthony DiComo (@AnthonyDiComo) April 6, 2021
WP: Connor Brogdon
LP: Trevor May
SV: José Alvarado
👀 The Mets removed Jacob deGrom after six shutout innings and 77 pitches, and all hell broke loose.
📊 Record: 0-1
📉 Streak: L1
🏃♂️ Pace: 0-162
If you pull DeGrom after 77 dominating how quick will he be on their other starters? 4 innings 50 pitches? Seriously unbelievable.
— Dallas DeVries - SportSpyder (@dallasrpi) April 6, 2021
-Jake was great
— MetsFanMania (@MetsFanMania) April 6, 2021
-Bullpen was not
-McNeil hit the ball hard every AB
-Defense was mostly solid
-The team showed fight and nearly came back
161 games left. Let’s win tomorrow
Mets reliever Trevor May keeping it real:
— Anthony DiComo (@AnthonyDiComo) April 6, 2021
“Jake shouldn’t have to do everything himself. That’s not what teams are. And frankly, Jake did almost everything today."
On one hand, the bullpen blowing the lead was exasperating.
— Greg Prince (@greg_prince) April 6, 2021
On the other hand, the ninth-inning rally falling short was heartbreaking.
Tomorrow’s gonna be another day, hopefully not of this. #LGM
Good stat about bad luck https://t.co/ZU9JodQ7uw
— Jon Heyman (@JonHeyman) April 6, 2021
"10 days without facing hitters...didn't want to throw too many pitches with the hope of pitching Saturday"
— SNY (@SNYtv) April 6, 2021
Jacob deGrom talks about what factored into the decision for him to only throw 77 pitches tonight pic.twitter.com/cwBRTgctkY
Luis Rojas said there was no pushback from Jacob deGrom prior to taking him out before the 7th inning pic.twitter.com/987xaYo9zZ
— SNY (@SNYtv) April 6, 2021
"I think the game is 2-0 because Pillar is playing center"
— SNY (@SNYtv) April 6, 2021
Luis Rojas said he considered pinch-hitting Dom Smith for Kevin Pillar with the bases loaded in the 4th inning pic.twitter.com/G8YpXuddzw
NY Post:
- Jacob deGrom didn’t second guess his early Mets exit
- Yankees sign Mets castoff Mike Montgomery
- It was a rough night for Mets’ Luis Rojas
- Painfully familiar Mets collapse isn’t end of the world
- Steve Cohen’s lifelong Mets dream is finally underway
- Mets trying to educate hesitant players on COVID-19 vaccine benefits
- Listen to Episode 40 of ‘Amazin’ But True’: Opening Day Part 2, Lindor Extension feat. Ron Swoboda
SportSpyder Mets Links:
MLB
and SportSpyder NL East and MLB Links:
Some of yesterday's MLB Game Highlights:
Giancarlo Stanton - New York Yankees (1) Grand Slam. pic.twitter.com/ZINjY50LqP
— MLB HR Tracker (@hr_mlb) April 6, 2021
Randy Arozarena could've thrown on a cape to take flight for this catch in the Rays outfield. pic.twitter.com/FKZwe6zeFg
— MLB Pipeline (@MLBPipeline) April 6, 2021
Ball didn't leave the park but Xander still found a way to touch 'em all. pic.twitter.com/wUAEOMXgcK
— Red Sox (@RedSox) April 6, 2021
Steven Matz was on point in his Blue Jays debut:
— Anthony DiComo (@AnthonyDiComo) April 5, 2021
6.1 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 1 BB, 9 K.
He departs with a 1.42 ERA and a 6-1 lead over the Rangers.
Here is yesterday's MLB Scoreboard.
Source confirms: All-Star Game expected to be at Coors Field. Rockies already were in line to host a future game, and thus had begun the planning process. First: @Buster_ESPN.
— Ken Rosenthal (@Ken_Rosenthal) April 6, 2021
MLB.com:
- Tatis injures shoulder while striking out
- 'He’s a unicorn': Stanton hits 471-foot slam
- Ng, colleagues inspire women: 'Work to do'
- Mets blow a deGrom win for the 31st time
- May backs up ambitions with dazzling debut
- Trout's first '21 HR 'shifted the momentum'
- Injuries: Bellinger, Tatis, Kiermaier, TA
- The story behind Orel's odd Topps card
- These are the wildest pitches ever tracked
MLB Trade Rumors:
Yahoo Sports:
- Padres star Tatis injures shoulder during at-bat
- Detroit Tigers game vs. Minnesota Twins: How to watch Casey Mize's first start of season
- White Sox can dream big after Carlos Rodón's great 2021 debut
- 'Keep it Yermín': How White Sox rookie Mercedes started so hot
- White Sox vs. Mariners Highlights
- Giants continue power display in gritty series-opening win over Padres
- Giants vs. Padres Highlights
- CG: CWS@SEA - 4/5/21
- Dodgers vs. Athletics Highlights
- Shohei Ohtani provides boost in a pinch as Angels beat Astros, go to 4-1
ESPN:
FOX Sports:
CBS Sports:
SportsSpyder:
Today
in Mets History Per
Ultimatemets.com:
Born Today:
- Wayne Graham (1936)
- Phil Regan (1937)
- Tom Slater (1968)
- Andy Phillips (1977)
Transactions:
New York Mets traded Tim Foli, Mike Jorgensen and Ken Singleton to the Montreal Expos for Rusty Staub on April 6, 1972.
New York Mets released Rich Chiles on April 6, 1974.
New York Mets traded Ed Glynn to the Cleveland Indians for Dominick Bullinger on April 6, 1981.
New York Mets traded Mark Bomback to the Toronto Blue Jays for Charlie Puleo on April 6, 1981.
New York Mets sold Butch Benton to the Chicago Cubs on April 6, 1981.
1974 |
The Bronx Bombers begin their two
year stint at Shea Stadium, where the team will compile a 172-150 (.534)
record during the renovations to the Stadium, with a 6-1 victory over
Cleveland. The 'other' NY fans cheer loudly when the scoreboard posts the
Mets' 5-4 loss in Philadelphia. |
1974 |
At Veterans Stadium, Phillies third baseman Mike Schmidt hits a ninth inning two-run home run off Tug McGraw to beat the Mets on Opening Day, 5-4. The walk-off homer is the first of the league-leading 36 dingers the third baseman will hit this season. |
2015 |
The Mets start 41 year-old Bartolo
Colon on Opening Day, much to the chagrin of the fan base who hoped one of
their young guns, Matt Harvey and Jacob deGrom, would get the coveted
assignment. The oldest pitcher ever to get the nod on Opening Day in
franchise history doesn't disappoint when he gives up one run on three hits,
besting Washington's $210 million ace Max Scherzer in the team's 3-1 victory
at Nationals Park. |
1971: The Mets win their first opener ever at Shea Stadium‚ beating the Expos‚ 4 - 2‚ in 5 innings. Heavy rain and wind cuts the contest short. Tom Seaver is the winner over Carl Morton.
1974: The New York Yankees defeat the Cleveland Indians, 6 - 1, at Shea Stadium. This is the Yanks' first game of a two-year period at Shea while Yankee Stadium is being rebuilt. 12-year-old Teddy Kennedy‚ Jr.‚ flanked by his father and Mayor Abe Beame‚ tosses out the first ball. Missing from the ceremony is George Steinbrenner‚ indicted two days earlier for illegal campaign contributions. Graig Nettles' two-run homer in the 4th off the Indians' Gaylord Perry opens the scoring and the Yanks score 4 more times to win. Charlie Spikes scores the only Cleveland run in the 9th following a triple off starter and winner Mel Stottlemyre. Perry‚ who is warned once for an illegal pitch‚ is the loser today‚ but he will win his next 15 decisions.
Mike Schmidt, batting 8th in the lineup, hits a two-run homer off Tug McGraw in the 9th inning to give the Philadelphia Phillies a 5 - 4 win over the New York Mets at Veterans Stadium. It is the Mets' only Opening Day loss of the 1970s.
1992: Mets reliever Jeff Innis is credited with the win over the Cardinals in New York's 4 - 2 Opening Day victory. In 1991‚ Innis became the only pitcher in baseball history to appear in at least 60 games with neither a win nor a save.
2002: The Mets score 9 runs in the 9th inning - 8 off John Smoltz - to break a 2 - 2 tie and defeat the Braves‚ 11 - 2. Rey Ordonez's bases-loaded double is the big blow as the Mets have 15 at bats in the 9th. It is the most runs they've ever scored in the frame.
2004: The Mets open their season
with a 7 - 2 win over the Braves. SS Kazuo Matsui, making his American baseball
debut, opens the game with a home run on the first pitch from Russ Ortiz‚
becoming only the 20th player in baseball history to homer on the first major
league pitch he sees. Matsui adds a pair of doubles and two walks in his debut.
He is the third player in Met history to homer in his first at bat‚ joining
Mike Fitzgerald and Benny Ayala.
Centerfield Maz:
Click here for the full list of Mack's MLB Draft Scouting Reports.
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Please leave a comment below.
Also at Mack's Mets:
Watch the Stanton slam...I want to order my meatballs from that guy..
ReplyDeleteJake screwed again, and yes, pulling him after 77 pitches is nauseating. That kind of crap decision making needs to stop
Yogi said it best..."If You Don't Got a Bullpen You Got Nothing"
ReplyDeleteThe key is to position yourself for your bullpen to succeed. As I said in my 8 AM article, Mets are stupid. And good teams don't give games away.
ReplyDeleteLeaving men on base, not going for the jugular and not pinch hitting Dom Smith for Pillar...the layoff in DC...not making the key play at the big moment...these are the things that try Mets Fans souls.
ReplyDeleteI get your point, John, but the reason Pillar was in there was to provide the best defense possible behind Jake. PHing for him, tempting as it was, meant going with Dom in LF and Nimmo in CF.
ReplyDeleteSure, if it were the 6th or 7th, it might make sense, though it still puts the weakest D in the game for the late innings.
If Pillar were a good glove/no bat player, it would make more sense, but we were not trailing early and Pillar is more than capable vs RHPs.
The Tatis Jr. injury reminds me of the one that Conforto suffered a few years back. I was at the Conforto game. I went to the concession stand and came back to see Conforto lying on the ground in pain.
ReplyDeleteSo many things were upsetting about last night's loss.
ReplyDeleteThe lineup was obscene and really put a bad vibe (for me) on the game. Dom Smith earned that opening day start and those ABs. He hits lefties. That stats demonstrate that.
(The guy who can't hit lefties is Conforto.)
Nimmo at 8th is, again, the stupidest thing ever AND -- in both moves -- are not borne out by analytics. His OBP vs. LHP is better than Pillar's by a long shot.
Bill Metsiac: I think you pinch-hit there because you have Almora on the team.
Are we suddenly afraid to play the team we played all Spring Training? If that was the case, then Sandy did not do nearly enough to address that concern. I had thought, given all the signs, that the Mets were good with a great lineup and subpar outfield defense, liberally using defensive substitutions. Last night they operated scared.
Trevor May has not particularly impressed me this Spring. He comes in throwing high heat at 97. After Jake throws it at 99. And Castro throws it at 98. He threw one great slider, but to me May looked so much like Montero out there -- the same pitch over and over and over again. Sometimes it will work. But he's going to need to throw the slider, too.
McCann may have called a weird game last night. Very FB heavy with Jake, too.
Loup signing just never made sense to me. Does he impress anybody? As a second LH, maybe he'd be okay? Too soon to say, I know. But he can't pitch every day. He looks like a LOOGY guy, a Lefty Paul Sewald.
Meanwhile the pitchers who scare me are Benetiz and Gsellman.
Need Vizcaino and Lugo back.
Jake pulled himself from that game; that decision was made in consultations with Rojas. However, part of the thinking was to have Jake pitch on Saturday (skip the #5 spot). But in a 2-0 game, let's try to win the game at hand. If it was going to hamper the team's ability to win last night, then using Jake on Saturday was a mistake. If he had one more rest day, he could have thrown 90 pitches.
One complaint with baseball today is that too many games are scripted beforehand, managers don't seem to manage "the game" before them. Thoughts of Saturday messed up our ability to win last night. A deGrom night.
I know there's an idea that it's best to give relievers clean innings. But at that point in the game, we should be thinking about OUTS? The Mets needed 9. Jake could have reduced that number to 7 or 6. You save Castro -- still go with May -- but you at least have him in case of trouble. Bringing in Loup to face Harper and some RH batters with the bases loaded was not going to end well. And it's obviously not a clean inning anyway.
We are looking at a mediocre bullpen.
A little concerned by JD Davis swinging through fastballs all Spring. Hopefully he'll get his timing and does not have a slow bat.
Terrible throw by Guillorme -- and very bad setup by McCann, who had his wrong foot on the plate -- just awful all around.
Kind of sucky.
Jimmy