I'm back home again in Ipoh and it's time to refresh from the "living in Malaysia" outlook and return to matters at hand in all things Mets. I will, however, offer one concluding set of thoughts about transportation. After acquiring a minivan (don't laugh -- it was the best bargain in automotive transportation -- passage for seven people or lots of bargains bought at various inexpensive shopping locations -- for $17K including auto insurance. Did I mention that it was brand new and top of the line?)
Anyway, piloting the Proton Exora (yes, that is the brand and model name) out of downtown Georgetown in Penang made me remember how much I despise sitting in traffic and dodging people who apparently think that little blinking light that could foretell passersby your intention to shift lanes or make a turn.
When we got onto what passes for a major road those lack of directionals became a higher risk issue as people are traveling at much faster speeds. We somehow meandered our way out of downtown, across the freeway, over the 17 KM bridge and into the waiting Ikea parking lot.
Anyway, getting home reinforced our feeling of satisfaction with the location we selected. Not only was it refreshingly familiar already, but there were no long lines of cars clogging the roads, no jammed parking lots no matter where you turned and I discovered my tropical fish thriving on the long term feeding tablet deposited in my absence. Three packages arrived in our absence and I will no longer be laundering the same few socks, underwear and shirts over and over again.
Getting back to the game we all love, it turned out on your Saturday night while I was getting repacked Sunday morning that Edwin Diaz looked human after all. Yes, he came out to great fanfare with his new incoming theme song playing on the Citifield speakers, but after a couple of baserunners got on board and put themselves into go-ahead position with a double steal it seemed as if a meltdown over the day-long 1-0 lead was about to take place. However, Sugar Diaz dove deep inside himself to render the final batter helpless with yet another strikeout and the Mets carried off that rare thing -- a 1-0 victory which was cause for pent up celebration.
Now to be fair to Phillies' starting pitcher Aaron Nola, he was going virtually pitch-for-pitch in quality with Jacob deGrom. The Mets seemed pretty feeble against a quality arm and didn't muster up much of a threat to score again after the first inning.
The Mets managed just four hits all day which were nearly matched by the Phillies' three against the four pitchers Buck Showalter sent to the mound.
I know I'm a day behind commenting on a Saturday night game and here it is Monday morning, but such are the vagaries of time zones and publishing deadlines. It was good to see people throwing and fielding the ball, though not much hitting was done.
Still, tip your cap to two-time Cy Young Award pitcher Jacob deGrom for his double digit strikeout performance and graciously salute the 8 innings pitched by Nola that should have been enough for a victory with just 4 hits and 1 walk allowed to go along with his own 8 strikeouts.
I certainly hope the Philadelphia front office watched what the man did and exercises his 2023 option or works out an extension for the man who has only know the city of brotherly love for his entire professional career. He's just 30 years old and should be able to provide his team with 5-6 more years of top notch quality.
For the week ahead for the Mets, let's see how they do when the opponents change from the Phillies to a return of the Atlanta Braves for 4 games in their own ballpark, 4 more against the Phillies at Citizens Bank Park and then two more against the crosstown rival New York Yankees at a rocking Yankee Stadium. They'll need that day off to rest up before facing the Rockies and Dodgers.
7 comments:
Love the car, love the food, love the Mets.
There's no place like home, Reese. U unless it is near the Whitestone Expressway in Queens.
Loved the tales from the Orient.
We still can say orient right?
The lucky Mets now get to play the whining Braves.
We still can call them the Braves, right?
Then on to the Phillies.
We still can say the word Philadelphia, right?
So I'm reading the news headlines today and it turns out that in Shanghai they battened down the hatches to enforce a quarantine at Ikea (thankfully not over tainted Swedish meatballs) but rather due to a COVID suspicion brought on by a child who had been visiting the mountains in nearby Tibet. I'm not making light over a very serious situation, but it seemed highly coincidental to me that upon reaching the blue and yellow decor of the Swedish chain immediately brought headlines out about a lockdown at another of their stores.
I guess we can still call the Braves the Braves and the Phillies the Phillies. We all have other names for both of them, but it's a family-friendly site (most of the time).
COVID is a hard sucker to keep from spreading. For sure.
And I still call that team in Cleveland "The Indians '.
If Nola opts out do we through big bucks at him instead of Jake?
Reese, why do you want the Phillies to get stronger? As a Mets fan, I am hoping they DON'T keep Nola.
Post a Comment