It's a fine Saturday morning and nothing is new in Mets land, so let's take some time to ponder why we find baseball so fascinating and the reason the off-season captivates us sometimes more than the games themselves. Think back to what drew you into the game and refresh your enthusiasm without concentrating on the local idiosyncrasies of Steve Cohen's Mets.
Political columnist George Will may not always purport values and concepts I can always embrace, but as a baseball fan he is a first rate example and deep thinker. He pretty much summed up the sport with a very simple analogy:
Baseball, it is said, is only a game. True. And the Grand Canyon is only a hole in Arizona. Not all holes, or games, are created equal. -- George Will
Of course, the meaning here is far beyond the rudimentary words said by Will. I remember comedian George Carlin also praising the difference between football and baseball with his own creative use of the English language:
One of the things I always appreciated about the game of baseball is contained within Carlin's humorous description. It is a game without clocks, it is a game where violence is not a planned part of the contest, and it is a game where anyone can stand out as either the hero or the goat (and not in the Greatest of All Time meaning) when you least expect it.
What's particularly enervating for the soul and best relieves day-to-day stress is the first snap of a pitcher's ball echoing off his catcher's glove, the crack of a bat making an unmistakable sound when the ball is ripped from the plate into the diamond, and the bark of the umpire calling strikes and judging safe vs. out. Or remember how it feels when your team is having its narrow lead threatened with runners in scoring position to see a slickly handled double play. Even better is the triple play, but we often go full seasons without seeing a single one executed.
Also think back to how it feels when you have a Mookie Wilson, a Vince Coleman, a Roger Cedeno or a Jose Reyes unnerving the opposing pitcher and forcing infielders to cheat closer to the bags whenever they were on base. Speed is almost forgotten in today's game but it adds an element of surprise and triumph whenever free bags are successfully pilfered.
On the other side of the game, reminisce about what it's like when your team's pitcher is totally dominating the opposition. Yes, watching a Jacob deGrom plow down hitters with aplomb is wonderful, but even better are the guys who rack up the awesome strikeout totals per game who make hitters look positive ineffectual when they flail helplessly at a delivery they weren't prepared to handle. There are many memories in my mind of guys like Doc Gooden and even Edwin Diaz leaving hitters walking back to the dugout shaking their heads in disbelief.
Think also about the celebrations that take place when a winning run scores in the bottom of the 9th (or extra innings), when a championship series is won or especially when the World Series flag will be flying over your stadium forevermore. Whether it's the old pie-in-the-face antics, the glove sailing skyward in a victorious heave or simply a seemingly never ending sea of team uniforms surrounding and cheering and hugging to commemorate the moment.
Someday the Mets will find their new front office personnel, find a manager, sign free agents, make trades and prepare for the upcoming season. For now, just sit back and remember the good things that drew you to the game in the first place. And oh yeah...there's a World Series going on.
Mets fans desperately need to be where the Braves are right now, in 2022.
ReplyDeleteNice post
ReplyDeleteHard to enjoy the Mets when they make so many bad decisions.
ReplyDeleteTravis d"Arnaud has a key double and HR in a 2-0 win. Pitcher Ian Anderson says one of the keys to his success is pitching to catcher Travis d'.
Then a Post article adds this - focus on the dumbest part, and how nice the city treats him:
"d’Arnaud's Mets tenure produced too many injuries and not enough production, and then the Mets bailed on him in the dumbest manner possible, releasing him in 2019 when he was still recovering from Tommy John surgery. He revived his career shortly after leaving the Mets, and the Braves have him signed through 2023.
“Yes, I love this city,” d’Arnaud said. “They’ve treated my family and me very well. I’m so thankful that I even had an opportunity to come here with [Atlanta general manager] Alex [Anthopoulos].”"
When players LOVE where they are, they play better - especially when the fans show love to them.
I remember when I enjoyed baseball - 2019 in Brooklyn - I thought that the Mets had finally got the message that the way you win in a ball park that is tough to score runs in was through defense and speed. Then, right after the season, they fired the guy that led them to this championship, Edgardo Alfonzo.
ReplyDeleteWhat is our future when so many thrive when they leave us and is there a way out of this predicament? I realize as a long time Met fan that that the old saying "the first step is admitting you have a problem" applies to me and throw in my Jet and Giant obsession and it's been a very long last couple of years and I just hope (isn't that all we have really) that the light at the end of this tunnel is not an oncoming train.
ReplyDeleteMy memories are from Shea when the stadium was full and rocking there was no place like it. My one WS game was game 5 in 73' (the tickets were $10 dollars LOL) and it was upper deck in LF and freezing but it was heaven. I had just gotten out of the Navy in 68' and got to enjoy the Jets win the Super bowl and then followed it up with of course our Mets winning the WS and thought "wow this is great lets do it again"......ah the naivete of youth.
ReplyDeleteGary, true. No better place when times were good.
ReplyDeleteI went to one WS game…Yanks. Ken Griffey Sr was in town and gave his relative tix. My accting firm was in there, she liked us and sold us tix at face ($12?). I got game 6. Two tix each.
It was the Reggie game. 3 swings, 3 bombs. Magical.
(I'm starting to think that Brennan is a closet Yankees fan).
ReplyDeleteMack, I was pulling for Maris first, then Mantle. After that, I only pulled for pinstripe guys the Mets foolishly passed on drafting…like Reggie.
ReplyDeleteGary, that is a huge conundrum. What can make Mets players succeed more and fail less? They underperform a lot.
ReplyDelete