Well, there’s normal negativity and then there’s throw in the towel negativity. Do a little reading about the current state of affairs for the New York Mets and you will see that the scales most definitely tip towards the hurling of a large piece of fluffy cotton cloth.
Wins and losses are obviously very important but there’s no guarantee for either side. Remember back in 1969 the Mets made their improbable run from perennial losers for the rest of the decade into a World Series against the Baltimore Orioles. They had Tom Seaver on the mound and all was right with the world — until it wasn’t. Facing a lineup that contained folks like Frank Robinson, Boog Powell, Brooks Robinson, future Mets manager Davey Johnson and others, the Orioles made the seemingly invincible Seaver look merely mortal.
Now at that time I was a kid having just turned 9 years old the previous month and while I was not yet capable of differentiating between optimism and pessimism, I did feel like the happy ride to October had come to a crashing halt. If the Orioles could hit against our best pitcher and we couldn’t do the same against theirs, well, maybe the Mets simply were not as good as I’d come to believe.
Of course, as history shows, after that stunning Game One loss in which the Mets appeared ill equipped to take on the big boys from Baltimore, the Mets went on to deliver a four game winning streak to deliver the World Series Championship to the boys from Flushing. Somehow they were able to shake off what had happened and regrouped to play the formula of winning baseball that brought them to the national stage.
Do you want more inspiration? Think about Terry Francona, then skipper of the Boston Red Sox back in 2004 faced a seemingly insurmountable mountain. In the American League Championship Series the Red Sox lost the first three games to the Yankees and faced a quick exit from their October dream.
While no one is suggesting that Carlos Mendoza has the same magic formula in his back pocket, history has indeed shown that when it appears to be pretty grim good things can still happen.
I think the formula was playing McNeil and Winker. Offense went from floppy to ferocious.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure if Tom is writing about last night's game, so I'll start...
ReplyDeleteMy plan is to recap the Mets 2024 season on my Thursday post, but the Mets just won't lay down.
Lots of heroes last night. I'll pick one.
Ryne Stanik
He chose last night to throw the longest stint in his major league career.
Take it from here guys and goils.
Mack,
DeleteHold that recap for a future post, we still have some history to make. Yes there were a lot of heroes last night. Stanik was dominating. That trade really looked good last night. Let's keep it up.
1969 the gift that keeps on giving! Also to remember what a complete game really was and remembering they really exsisted. I think the best thing that could of happened was losing that first game because the O's really weren't taking us seriously and who could blame them and then Koos pitched the best game of his life and away we go World Series winners and by the way I love saying that and lets do it again. Last night's game was another thrilling W and to see Alvy and Marte putting some hurt on those obnoxious visitors from the West Coast was extra sweet LGM!
ReplyDeleteGary, I have to admit, when Marte flubbed the catch attempt on that first inning fly, I thought the roof was about to cave in. Like Reese's heading, it was the darkest moment before dawn last night.
ReplyDeleteI wonder how all those fans and media who know more than the mgr and insisted that Alvy MUST be benched yesterday feel now.
ReplyDeleteYGB-- in Mendy!