I am going to double up 1979 and 1980 here for two reasons. First, there were only 12 trades in the two years combined, and second, they were terrible years to be a Mets fan and there weren't many interesting trades made during this time. (Except for perhaps trade 3 in December 1978)
November 1978 through October 1979
1979's trades:
(1) New York Mets traded Paul Siebert to the St. Louis Cardinals for Bob Coluccio (Oct 02, 1978)
(2) New York Mets traded Tom Grieve and Kim Seaman to the St. Louis Cardinals for Pete Falcone (Dec 05, 1978)
(3) New York Mets traded Jerry Koosman to the Minnesota Twins for Jesse Orosco and Greg Field (Dec 08, 1978)
(4) New York Mets traded Mardie Cornejo to the Detroit Tigers for Ed Glynn (Mar 13, 1979)
(5) New York Mets traded Nino Espinosa to the Philadelphia Phillies for Richie Hebner and Jose Moreno (Mar 27, 1979)
(6) New York Mets traded Tim Foli and Greg Field to the Pittsburgh Pirates for Frank Taveras (Apr 19, 1979)
(7) New York Mets traded Bob Myrick and Mike Bruhert to the Texas Rangers for Dock Ellis (Jun 15, 1979)
(8) New York Mets traded Willie Montanez to the Texas Rangers for Mike Jorgensen and Ed Lynch (Aug 12, 1979)
November 1979
through October 1980
(1) New York Mets traded Dwight Bernard to the Milwaukee Brewers for Mark Bomback (Oct 26, 1979)
(2) New York Mets traded Richie Hebner to the Detroit Tigers for Jerry Morales and Phil Mankowski (Oct 31, 1979)
(3) New York Mets traded Jesse Anderson to the Chicago White Sox for Claudell Washington (Jun 07, 1980)
(4) New York Mets traded Kevin Kobel to the Kansas City Royals for Randy McGilberry (Jun 17, 1980)
I guess Bob Coluccio's claim to fame was that he was born the day before Bobby Thomson's "Shot heard round the world in 1951" (and the day before Dave Winfield was born)
There are two guys on this list that died of heart attacks at much too young an age. Nino Espinosa died at age 34 and Bob Myrick was 59.
I did not remember that Mike Jorgensen went on to become a major league manager, managing the Cardinals during the shortened 1995 season.
I think Phil Mankowski could be a good definition of 'replacement player'.
Amazing that the 2 guys in that trade - Koosman and Orosco - were in the majors something like a combined 45 years.
ReplyDeleteReese this AM wrote about Sid Finch - we instead had Ed Lynch, who fanned just 396 in 940 innings - but was EFFECTIVE as a Met. Lynch, post-Mets, had his worst MLB season at age 31. At 32, he pitched 3 2/3 innings in AAA, 15 runs, 14 hits, 3 walks, 2 HBP.
Yet another guy who completely plunged in his early 30s.
Puzzler to me why they let Claudell Washington go after his brief, effective Mets stint.
I liked Willie Montanez, but he was a classic warning track power guy for the Mets. 96 RBIs in 1978 I think had him # 2 all time on the Mets RBI list at the time, behind Le Grande Orange. After he left them in 1979 mid-season, he hit much better with his new team in 1979 and also in 1980, before age caught up to him.
Pete Falcone - better than his Mets 26-37 record, because they stunk, left them to win at Atlanta. Finished at age 30.
ReplyDeleteThey didn't let Claudell go, he left as a free agent. He signed almost immediately with the Braves (like within a day).
ReplyDeleteA lot of the names on here remind me of my high school days, and sitting in the general admission seats at Shea. I'm sure John would say the same. Lousy baseball but good times.
Bob W.
Thanks, Bob.
ReplyDeleteYep, cheap tickets made for repeat customers.
I do remember one game about 5 years ago where I went online and bought a day game ticket for a Jake outing - the ticket cost less than the bag of peanuts I got at the park. They were out of the race, and it had been a while since I went to a game. The weather was nice, and I figured, what the heck?
If this team is highly successful in 2022, no such bargains will be had. It the team draws over 3 million, it will be a very good year.