In last night's controversial ending, Pete Alonso dove headfirst into home plate, attempting to score on a Jeff McNeil sacrifice fly to tie the game in the bottom of the ninth inning. He was unsuccessful, in a way, and the Mets lost the game.
At the same time, he was successful in the perspective that he left the game intact. The success of the team this year depends on having their primary stars healthy, yet in the span of two days we say Francisco Lindor and then Pete Alonso dive headfirst into home plate and make full contact with a well-armored catcher.
If you are a speedy base stealer in today's MLB game, you are probably trained that the fastest way to get to a bag is to transfer your forward running momentum into a forward head-first dive, stretching your fingertips (now an elongated sliding mitt) towards the base. That probably saves milliseconds over the old tradition of a foot-first slide.
In a home plate attempt, the foot-first approach is much safer because a collision with a beefy, well-armored catcher who is rooted at the plate does not often end well if you offer your hand, arm, and shoulder as the first line of defense.
I understand that the game has changed since the days of Pete Rose barreling over Ray Fosse. Many rule changes have completely eliminated the prospects of a runner lowering a shoulder into a catcher who is braced in front of the plate. But the catcher is still a solid guy with protective pads that is leaning into a tag, so Newton's laws apply a firm penalty to those who impose a force with a fragile part of their body exposed.
In a 162-game season there are many opportunities for players to be injured, and inevitably everyone gets banged up. But the Mets' coaching staff has to firmly impose some guidance upon the players to avoid putting themselves into high probability of injury situations like a head first dive into home plate. It's just common sense.
I totally agree, Paul, and Pete clearly beat the throw but could not get his hand down due to the catcher. Feet first, he is blasting thru the catcher. Another winnable game lost, on the way to another falling-short season.
ReplyDeleteGetting tired of this BS, game after game.
ReplyDeleteRay, it is the definition of how a season drips away. The offense had seemed to come to life. Never think that as a Mets fan. It is a mirage.
ReplyDeleteRay, a big reason is no catcher over-performance: Narvaez and Nido are 10 for 56, a mere 3 walks.
ReplyDeleteNarvaez is both poor defensively and offensively. At least promote someone who can control the running game.
ReplyDeleteWe've all seen this movie before and it's getting old. No matter who we trade for or sign long term we ALWAYS go through dreadful streaks like this and solid pitching is wasted again. I hope DS and SC are paying attention because this has to stop. Only one of our 5 seasoned and well paid "Stars" are living up to their baseball card as the saying goes but because we're used to this as Met fans we hope the FO can correct this. Sterns magic is working with The Brewers. It would also help if at least one or two of our minor league teams would break out but we're still waiting. By the way anyone heard from our top prospect or has Jett the Met been grounded? LuisAngel is not his brother of course Ronnie Mo is out for the season and Gilbert is out till the end of the month right? Wow if we didn't have bad luck we'd have no luck at all. Also please tell me the reason Vientos who was our only spark a few day ago gets sent down AGAIN?
ReplyDeleteNarvaez is just another in a very long line of wasted money on the catcher position over the years and this diving headfirst into home plate is just nuts but it's exciting and remember players get paid whether their healthy or hurt. Nice win today and maybe just maybe we really breakout in Tampa. I hope so because Pete and Jeff are scaring me and really need to pick it up ASAP
ReplyDeleteGary, Jett Williams was placed on the 7-day disabled list on April 29th. I have not yet found out what the injury was.
ReplyDeleteBy the way how did our FO miss on Imanaga? A soft tossing Lefty who won't come close to hitting 100 on the radar gun but does something that's sadly missing today "just win Baby" and probably won't need TJS after his next start. Now he could of course crash and burn but for 2 yrs for 22.5 million come on David. His name was mentioned this winter on SNY a few times but the crazy Yamamoto talk got all the headlines and isn't DS supposed to fine gems like this right?
ReplyDeleteGary I have a new offensive # 1 Mets prospect, revealed in my 9 AM article.
ReplyDeleteUpper minors catching talent, Ray, is bleak.