10/17/24

MACK - Thursday Morning Observations – 3 Mets To Re-sign


 MACK – Thursday Morning Observations – 3 Mets To Re-sign

 

Morning.

Yeah, I know… I’m the “Blow It Up” guy. Well, recent developments have altered my thoughts on some players I didn’t have on my original “save” list.

Like these three…

IF         Jose Iglesias

He might be the most pleasant surprise this season. He definitely has been the lead cheerleader of this team.

The leading hitter in the season was Bobby Witt Jr.

Iglesias hit higher... .332. In 270 at-bat, he produced a 3.1-WAR and hit. 337.

I don’t care how old he is. He’s been a spark plug (remember them?) as he is becoming a music star with his OMG song. How does he take that to another non-OMG team?

I used to be totally in love with prospects. I thought their potential was enough to paint them as a star. This have been proven wrong so many times (Jon Heyman  - @JonHeyman - Justin Dunn, a former Mets 1st rounder from Long Island, will be throwing a mound session for scouts on Tuesday in the Phoenix area. ). “Candelita” isn’t going to want to leave this. His teammates and fans all love him. And, he was paid less then a mil this year.

Something has to be worked out here.

 

1B       Pete Alonso

Yeah… that guy.

Don’t get me wrong… I still don’t believe Pete should be offered a 5+ year deal at mega-bucks. No…

Alonso’s 2024 salary was $20.5mil

The 2025 QO amount is $21.05mil

I would not embarrass Pete with a one mil salary increase here… but I would offer him $30mil to come back and join this team and city he loves, while working on his batting average with a goal to rehit the market in 2026.

 

OF/DH           Jesse Winker

 

Utility players and designated hitters mean specific things to me. They either have to play great defense, have a cannon for an arm, can produce power when needs, or run like a rabbit.

But they also have to have clubhouse and dugout glitter and it helps if they are a fan favorite.

Jesse’s stats don’t jump off the table, but on my team, Brandon Nimmo, Jeff McNeil, and Starlin Marte are going to be my starting outfielders (until one or two kiddies ever mature) and I wouldn’t bring back JDM in any role.

I’m going to DH him against righties and pinch hit him when needed.

Paul Articulates – The case for Francisco Lindor


Francisco Lindor has been outstanding for the Mets all year (well, except for the first 5-6 weeks).  There is no doubt that he carried this team deep into the playoffs with his clutch play, his leadership, and his ability to overcome any obstacle including a back problem.  Every broadcast you hear, either local or national credits Lindor with being a top two MVP candidate.

So why is he consistently snubbed in awards recognition?  He was left off the NL all-star team, and now he is not even a finalist for a gold glove in the NL.  Instead the 30 MLB managers and up to six coaches from each team voted for Dansby Swanson(Cubs), Ezequiel Tovar (Rockies), and rookie Masyn Winn (Cardinals).

Dansby Swanson has won the last two gold gloves and truly deserves to be among the finalists.  He once again dazzled in the field with +18 OAA which was tops in the National League.

I find it hard to imagine that Lindor does not favorably compare to either Tovar or Winn.  Lindor had 16 OAA, Tovar had 15 OAA, and Winn had only 3 OAA. Lindor was once again steady in the field as he has been throughout his tenure with the Mets.  He recorded 12 errors in 151 games, compiling a fielding percentage of .979.  Meanwhile, Swanson muffed only 5 chances on his way to a .990 fielding percentage.  Tovar had 8 errors for a fielding percentage of .988 in 157 games and Winn had 18 errors for a relatively low fielding percentage of .971 in 148 games at short with the Cards.

Here is a compilation of relevant stats thanks to Baseball Savant and FanGraphs:


As you can see, Lindor deserves a finalist spot from the statistics.  I still don’t understand why Maysn Winn gets a shot, as he has inferior stats to the other three in all categories except Defensive Runs Saved, which has been a very questionable stat recently as it does not correlate to other defensive metrics. 

Awards competitions lend themselves to comparisons and rightly so.  But this is not about diminishing the accomplishments of a Maysn Winn or Ezequiel Tovar as it is about questioning why Francisco Lindor does not more recognition from those in the game.  Lindor displays more class on the baseball field than just about any other player.  He has hit some home runs this year that were monumental season-changing blows but he never showed up the other team.  There was no five second pause at the plate to admire the arc or slow trots or helmet bashing conclusions.  He put his head down, ran around the bases, and celebrated with his team in the dugout.  He has made spectacular fielding plays look easy but other than flashing a smile and touching gloves with an infielder there is no showmanship.  Opposing managers, coaches, and players should have the utmost respect for the fact that his competitive spirit is displayed by all-out effort, not all-out celebrations after the fact.
Francisco Lindor’s play at short is not just defined by metrics even though those metrics are great.  He is the center of communication for the infield and is always part of the huddle on the mound providing his wisdom and encouragement.  

One can argue all day about the MVP race, and if Lindor comes in second it will only be due to the unparalleled record-setting season by Shohei Ohtani.  But when it comes to the Gold Glove at shortstop, I think they got it wrong by not even including him in the final discussion. I don’t think that is driven by my bias as a Mets fan – it seems from the numbers and from the intangibles to be justified. 

Tom Brennan: My Take on Mark Vientos in July 2022; and Last Night and Tonight NLCS

In Mark Vientos, I Saw a Budding Star in 2022

Back when most pundits felt Mark Vientos was a flawed and probably marginal prospect, here’s what I wrote to the contrary about Mark on July 5, 2022, 28 months ago:

“…the short answer to "Is Mark Vientos Ready?" is: 

Almost Yes...

With the Bat, Anyway.

It is a big bat, a beautiful bat, a strong bat.

He has, as I see it, 4 tasks in his remaining days in the minors:

1) Stay healthy, play more. Make your at-bat and offensive numbers huge. Only 138 games in the last season and a half. Far too many games missed. (More on the numbers, below).

2) Hit a lot better in the first month. Exclude the first month of 2021 and 2022 and the power #’s are prodigious - but all regular season months matter.

3) Continue to work on the fielding. Just 1B (16 games, 3 errors) and 3B (37 games, 9 errors) in 2022. He had 13 errorless games in the outfield last year, but none this year. Mark is clearly not a speedster, with just two career steals in close to 1,500 PAs, so that could explain the infield-only approach for Mark defensively in 2022. (He does, by the way, have a 60 rated arm, according to the Mets' prospect page).

4) Perhaps the biggest task, reducing the Ks. 70 in his first 55 games this year, 100 in 83 AA/AAA games last year.  That's too high.


In Mark‘s last 200 official bats of 2021, he crushed 21 home runs; this year in 194 at bats through Friday, July 1, he crushed 14 more home runs. If you do the math, you’ll see that over that span, in just under 400 of bats, Mark has hit a remarkable 35 home runs. 

That is a stunning number. 

A number that just cannot be overlooked for someone who is just 22 years old. To me, that’s the kind of guy I don’t trade, but rather keep.  

How many home runs Mark will launch in his major league career, only time will tell. 

My early guess is 400 is possible.  

He hits home runs with authority and has home runs to all fields. 

Just look up his MILB page and watch his highlight videos.  Go ahead - I dare ya.  What you'll see, you'll like.

I think that Vientos is a future lethal long ball threat, possibly on the level of Pete Alonso, if he cuts the Ks. Keep in mind that Pete, at Vientos' current age, was far behind Mark in climbing the ranks, still in A ball.

Part of the problem with Mr. Vientos is he has just been missing too many games for various reasons. He needs to be on the field for virtually every game, just like Pete did in the minors (once Pete got past his 2 broken hand injuries early on, anyway) in order for Mark to make an irrefutable case that he is in fact a Mets keeper.

Since the start of May, 36 games, 13 HRs, 27 RBIs, .292…multiple that by 4 and you get 144 games, 52 HRs, 108 RBIs...Dag nab, bro.

But 49 Ks in 36 games. Too many Ks. 

And too few games…just 55 of Syracuse’s 75 games this year.

But even including his bad-hitting first month of both 2021 and 2022, he has in 138 games had 508 at bats, 25 doubles, a triple, 39 HRs, 100 RBIs, and (yes) 170 Ks vs. 61 walks. As a 21-22 year old in the high minors, he has those power numbers.

And he is annihilating lefties this year: .300, with a .783 slug %, 9 HRs and 22 RBIs in 60 ABs.  Lethal.  Oddly, in 2021, he hit much better vs. righties than lefties, so 2022 is not necessarily a pattern.  Anyway...

Time for him to step it up another notch and start totally destroying AAA.  Hit like the last two months, but even better, and with fewer Ks.  He does Alvarez in the line up with him now, which ought to help.

I'm thinking of a similar player, size and speed-wise, Wilmer Flores, who had less power but made better contact.  Wilmer was an absolute RBI machine over a long stretch of AAA games.  Of course, part of that huge output was playing in hitter-joyful Las Vegas, but Willie Flo struck out only half as much as Mark.  Less homers, tons of doubles.  Mark needs a bit more Flores in his diet, and to cut back on Vitamin K.

Well…Mark even surpassed my expectations this year. Through Monday, in 152 Mets regular and post season games and AAA games in 2024, he had 30 doubles/triples, 36 HRs, and 112 RBIs while hitting .278. Those are pretty good numbers, huh? If you asked me if he could put up 2024 numbers like that, when I wrote my July 2022 article, I would have said:

”UHH, YEAH”.


INTERESTING QUOTE IN A HEYMAN ARTICLE:

“This [bleeping] team comes back from the dead like no team I’ve ever seen,” one NL scout said.

- Sounds about right to me.


NIMMO PLANTAR FASCIATIS

Read it has been bothering him since May, and it got significantly worse in the NLDS.  Me?  I'd play Winker out there.  Brandon, why push it, when you can DH?  At least LAD has its own gimpy lefty hitter in Freddie Friggin' Freeman, so we're even on that score.

Brandon, next time, stick to Planter's Peanuts.


WEDNESDAY'S NLCS GAME 3:

Great first inning, and Lindor almost homered. A second inning fielding multi-nightmare, leading to 2 unnecessary Dodger runs.  But it could have been worse, if not for a truly great catch by Tyrone Taylor that robbed Edman of a 2 bagger.

Alvarez up in the second, bags full and 1 for 21 lifetime with the bags full. First pitch, his bat flew 100 feet. He fanned looking on a 3-2 fastball. 1 for 22.  Then fanned to end the 4th. He needs to learn to hit all over again. He has literally morphed into Tomas Nido.

JD Martinez fanned like he usually does, on that Buehler breaking ball low and outside. He has retired but hasn’t told anyone yet. Why on earth wasn’t either the HOT Jesse Winker, and/or Jeff McNeil, in the line up instead? THAT was a royal brain fart. McNeil did fly out for Taylor in the 7th.

Also, 2 times, Pete took a Buehler FB with plenty of plate for strike one, and then fanned on breaking balls. Bad habit. When a guy is pitching tough, don’t let that hittable first strike FB sail by.

Buehler, who has been awful this year, another Adrian Houser, looked quite sharp tonight. Very sharp. Figures. 4 very strong shutout innings.

Tough fifth for Sevy, but Garrett fanned Kike H to keep it 2-0.

New Dodger pitcher in the 5th. 

Top 6, Kike somehow fouled off an eye-high 98 MPH Garrett FB, then launched a 2 run shot just over Nimmo’s leap on a hanging breaking ball. 

Rusty Megill gave up a 3 run bomb to the Show Hey Kid, and it was 7-0 going into the 9th. 

Check the box scores for the final score tomorrow. It is a formality, the loss, that is. Mets down 2 games to 1. Looked fatigued.  But I think Winker and McNeil instead of Martinez and Taylor might have jolted the offense.


10/16/24

Tom Brennan: 8:08 PM, Citifield, Tonight

Tonight should be a chilly one at a packed Citi Field.

41 degrees this morning on Long Island.  

51 degrees at game time, 48 at 10 PM.

Fans will be generating thermal heat at the ballpark, though.

Tonight should be a good matchup for the Mets.  

Luis Severino sports a 7-2, 2.96 season record with just 9 HRs allowed in 97 innings.  

You WANT him pitching at home in the pitching-comfy confines.

His opponent, Walker Buehler, has been thru the surgery, and in his return, just 1-6, 5.38 in 76 regular season innings with a 1.55 WHIP, and 0-1, 10.80 in the post season with no Ks in 5 IP.

He is apparently not the same guy as the one who entered this season with a career record of 46-16.

The Dodgers preferred to go with Ferris Buehler, but he has the day off.

I'm picking the Mets to win Game 3.  

I expect to see Jeff McNeil in the line up, too.

How about you?


ARIZONA BLUES

Last year, I noticed that the team the Mets had its players on was the lowest scoring squad.  

Last night, the 6 teams scored 19, 15, 9, 6, 4, and 2. 

Guess whose team scored the 2?  

Gilbert homered but the 3 Mets hitters, Drew, Jett, and Reimer, were just 1 for 9 and 2 walks.  Me?  I'd prefer 3 for 9 and no walks.

Through 6 games, the Scottsdale 1000 Ply Rolls (otherwise known as Scorpions) are last in scoring and sport a 7.27 ERA.  

But watch out for Scorpions.  They can be nasty little suckers.

MACK - Wednesday Morning Observations

 

 

Rawlings Baseball             @RawlingsSports

The 2024 Rawlings Gold Glove Finalists - NL Shortstop - Masyn Winn, Dansby Swanson, Ezequiel Tovar

            Mack – No biggie. We know what we got on short.

 

https://www.smartnews.com/en-us/article/4736590792578049579?placement=article-preview-social&utm_source=share_android_other&utm_campaign=sn_lid%3A4736590792578049579%7Csn_channel%3Acr_en_us_follow&logo=logo_6&share_id=XgCnLl

Read "Baltimore Orioles Lose Top Scout to New York Mets" on SmartNews:

 

Kendall Rogers (@KendallRogers) posted at 9:22 AM on Thu, Oct 10, 2024:

Some notable elements of the NCAA Settlement Case to remember:

- 34 man roster

- 34 scholarships allowable (officially, most power league will be at 20-25, aid will stretch dollars)

- major talent windfall coming for mid-majors out of HS ranks

 

Underdog MLB       @Underdog__MLB

Justin Verlander intends to pitch next season.

            Christopher Soto (@SotoC803) posted at 8:57 AM on Fri, Oct 11, 2024:

I'm probably in the minority because of how "meh" he was.....but if the $$$ value is low enough....I would take a crack at Verlander on a 1yr deal as the #Mets #5 SP.  Something like 1 yr/$15M.  If it doesn’t work out....let him go....and call-up Sproat, Hamel, or Tidwell.

Its not like Verlander was "garbage" as a Met.....he just didn't perform equal to the money he was making. I'll gladly take a 3.90 ERA - 4.20 ERA type of guy for $15M as my #4/#5 SP. When you think about it...that's essentially what you got from Severino/Megill in 2024.

Mack – I don’t usually disagree with Soto but I do here. I want to move forward, not back.

 

Kiley McDaniel                   @kileymcd

The qualifying offer for this offseason will be $21.05 million, per sources.

The figure is calculated as the average of the top 125 salaries in MLB. The QO last offseason was $20.325 million.

Teams have 5 days days after the World Series ends to offer it to qualified players.

 

Mike Mayer            @mikemayer22

To give you an idea of just how awesome Vientos was in the NLDS, here are the division series leaders in wRC+ (weighted runs created plus):

357 Mark Vientos

350 Fernando Tatis Jr.

241 Bryce Harper

229 Pete Alonso

218 Steven Kwando

Mack – And this wasn’t even a full season for him. Ya know, I’m starting to think the Mets should leave him on third. Sure, he showed he is human twice in the Philly series, but he has done a tremendous job of upping his game. Leave him here and we’ll talk about first base on Thursday.

 

Sarah Langs             @SlangsOnSports

José Quintana now has gone 5+ IP with no earned runs in 3 straight postseason starts and only pitcher with a longer such streak since ER official in both leagues (1913): Whitey Ford (four straight, 1960-61).

            Mathew Brownstein        @MBrownstein89

Over his last 8 starts (including two postseason starts), Jose Quintana owns a 0.57 ERA

Mack – I just don’t know what to do with Q in the off season. History has proven to us how quickly old arms fade away. I need some help here. What do you think?

 

Keep your eyes on these AFL sleepers -- one from each MLB organization

https://www.mlb.com/news/sleeper-prospects-in-the-afl-2024?partnerID=web_article-share

Mets: Jonathan Pintaro, RHP

Pintaro opened the season with the Glacier Range Riders in the independent Pioneer League, struck out 23 in 14⅓ innings and signed with the Mets on June 3. He made 15 starts in the New York system between High-A, Double-A and Triple-A and finished with a 2.68 ERA and 75 strikeouts in 74 innings. 

The 26-year-old right-hander, who throws exclusively out of the stretch, features a pair of fastballs in the 93-95 mph range, an 89-91 cutter, an 82-85 mph slider with longer break and a mid-80s changeup. 

A solid Fall League could make him a legit option in the Majors next year, mirroring Zach Penrod’s journey from the Pioneer League to MLB in the Red Sox system.

Mack – Currently, I have Pintaro as a BLUE prospect, and a solid member of the 2025 Syracuse rotation. He has the potential of being the first call-up next season.

 

 Matt Eddy               @MattEddyBA

Dedniel Nuñez was a stud, but he hasn't appeared since Aug. 24 and not consistently since late July. Nuñez's 2.22 FIP ranked eighth among relievers with at least 30 IP this season. A true under-the-radar rookie performer.

            Mack – To me, Nunez is a keeper and is a member of my 2025 pen

 

Cuban star closer Raidel Martinez will remain in Japan for at least one more season, according to several sources.

Martinez, 27, is currently in negotiations with multiple teams interested in signing him.

Although the Chunichi Dragons, the team he has been with since 2017, are still pushing to retain him, Martinez is not expected to return to the Dragons and will likely explore other options.

In 2024, he became the Latin American pitcher with the most saves in a single season in Nippon Professional Baseball, with 43 saves, surpassing Venezuelan Robert Suárez’s record of 42 saves in 2021 with the Hanshin Tigers.

According to multiple sources from Japan, Martinez has offers from at least one team ranging between $8 and $10 million per season, with the Yokohama DeNa Baystars and Fukuoka Softbanks being the favorites.

https://www.beisbolfr.com/p/sources-cuban-star-closer-raidel?s=03

Mack – I haven’t heard this guy being tied to the Mets; however, those of you that love International stuff might find this informative and interesting.

 


 


 

Reese Kaplan -- Mets Capable of Causing Both Agita and Ecstasy


There was a great debate among Mets fans when they were sitting pretty having won their Division Series ahead of knowing the opponent as the Padres and Dodgers had not yet reached a conclusion.  The majority of fans were leaning towards the Dodgers and Shohei Ohtani over the Padres due to the similar strengths of lineup but San Diego’s perceived superior pitching.

Imagine the surprise the Mets fans faced when it was pitching and hitting both that dominated the Mets in Game One against the Los Angeles Dodgers.  Bear in mind that starter Jack Flaherty isn’t chopped liver when it comes to facing him.  In fact, between the Tigers and Dodgers from whom Los Angeles obtained him he made 28 starts going 13-7 with a 3.17 ERA.  Even slicker, he showed outstanding control with an over 5:1 strikeout to walk ratio and finished the year with 194 strikeouts in just 160+ innings. 

Oddly, Flaherty was actually a better pitcher in 2025 for his former employer in Detroit which is what made his so desirable as a trade candidate.  For the Dodgers he went 6-2 behind that formidable offense.  The ERA rose to 3.58 which is still quite good but the strikeout to walk ratio dipped to 3:1. 

Obviously he pitched like a star and the Mets hit like, well, ummm...nevermind.  What was more concerning in Game One was not the paltry 3 hits but the overall rough night for the pitchers.  There’s no way other than Reed Garrett to put a pretty face on a 9-0 drubbing.  What is more important is how it impacts the club in Game Two (which as I write this at 4:45 AM is now a 6-0 Mets lead thanks to Francisco Lindor, Tyrone Taylor and Mark Salami Vientos). 

Given the multitude of ineffective pitchers used in Game One the Mets need to put up a long start by Sean Manaea today and then Luis Severino at Citifield.  It was competitive starting pitching that helped fuel the Mets hot streak starting in June.  Again, how they fare here will determine whether or not they have a shot at the World Series in 2024 but also who will be around to start for them in 2025.


If they gain a split in L.A. then it all comes down to controlling your destiny in your home ballpark.  Obviously Citifield will be rocking a packed house in orange and blue with OMG signs all over the place.  With a split a three-game sweep would mean the unlikely glorious ascension to the World Series, but as they say you only play the season one game at a time.  Even if the Mets lose Game Two it still gives them the same three game opportunity in New York, though then it becomes a necessity to sweep to make it back to Dodger Stadium for the finale.

This year has been a bevy of mighty highs, deeper lows, pleasant surprises and withstanding prolonged slumps from both the hitters and the pitchers.  Still, what a ride it’s been!

10/15/24

OPEN THREAD - NOW WHAT???


It is now a best of 5.

Mets v. LAD. 

Next 2 at home.  

What's your updated NLCS call? 

Be as detailed as you'd like. 

5,000 words or less.

Preferably a lot less.

SAVAGE VIEWS – MOVING ON UP


It’s a beautiful Sunday afternoon as I sit down to write this column in advance of the NLCS playoffs. Prior to the season I forecast that the Mets would not only make the playoffs but go deep into the playoffs.  When I made my prediction, it was done with the expectation that Senga would be our ace.  When he went down for the second time, I began to seriously doubt their ability to compete and yet here we are.

An argument can be made that we are the best of the four remaining teams. Who could have thought that a subway series would be a possibility. I’d be very surprised if the Yankees don’t prevail over the Guardians. Here’s an interesting fact. Both the Yankees’ Stanton and the Mets Vientos wear the same number 27.  Both wound up hitting 27 home runs during the regular season and both are each team’s most productive hitter during the postseason.

It would not be a surprise if the Mets beat the Dodgers especially since our starting pitching seems to be better. We will win the series if our starters go deep in games. If it becomes a bullpen game we lose. The Dodgers have probably the best offensive team in MLB. However, it should be noted that Ohtani was not a factor against the Padres ands hit only .200. On the other hand, Teoscar Hernandez was solid. Speaking of underperformers, Judge continues his poor post-season play by hitting a paltry .154 and the rest of the team with the exception of Stanton did no produce much.

Excerpt from my March 27 post

This would have been published last week had I not been on the road.

A number of pundits are down on this team even suggesting the season will be over once we hit July and that we will be massive sellers.  Obviously, I disagree.  Although I was not in favor of signing JD Martinez and wanted Vientos to be given the opportunity to shine, I understand the reasons for the move.  The Mets lineup has the potential to be formidable.

Clearly the Braves are the class of the division with the Phillies ranked second.  In fact, some suggest that Philly will challenge the Braves for the title.  In my opinion, the Mets match up well with Philly as shown below:

Position

Mets

Philly

Edge

1B

Alonso

Harper

Even

2B

McNeil

Stott

Even

SS

Lindor

Turner

Even

3B

Baty

Bohm

Philly

C

Alvarez

Realmuto

Even

LF

Nimmo

Castellanos

Mets

CF

Bader

Rojas

Even

RF

Marte

Marsh

Mets

DH

Martinez

Schwarber

Mets

SP1

Senza

Nola

Philly

SP2

Severino

Wheeler

Philly

SP3

Quintana

Suarez

Philly

SP4

Manaea

Sanchez

Even

SP5

Houser

Turnbill

Mets

SP6

MeGill

Walker

Mets

Closer

Diaz

Alvarado

Mets

RP

Even

Bench

Philly

A lot depends on our guys remaining relatively healthy since there are few position player options available at this time in our minor league system.  On the other hand, we have quite a bit of pitching depth that few teams can match.  It’s a good bet that we will see the likes of Peterson, Butto, Lucchesi, Scott and Lavender at some point this year with Hamil and Vasil in the wings.  Obviously, the top three starters for Philly are better than what the Mets have to offer.  Don’t be surprised if the Mets win the season series from Philly.

The coming week is going to be a fun ride. It’s great to be playing meaningful games in October. Sunday night I’ll be switching back and forth between the Mets and the Giants.

Ray

October 15, 2024

 

Remember 1969: Remember's Ramblings

 

Remember's Reminiscing – Volume 1, Article 1

 

October 15, 2024


October 15.  There are a lot of non-descript, non-memorable days on the calendar, but October 15 is not one of them.   Being a Mets fan, there are two October 15ths that stand out in my mind very vividly - October 15, 1969 and October 15, 1986. 

October 15, 1969 was the date of “The Perfect Game”, TomSeaver’s first and only World Series win.   Despite his long and great career, Seaver only pitched in four World Series games, finishing with a 1-2 record with one no-decision.

Game 4 of the 1969 World Series turned out to be the subject of the book “The Perfect Game” that Seaver wrote with Dick Schaap, published in 1970 while still fresh in his mind.   

Tom Seaver pitched a complete game 2-1 10-inning victory that day giving up 6 hits, striking out 6 and walking 2.   Donn Clendenon hit a solo home run for the first run with the winning run scoring from 2nd base on a J.C.Martin pinch sacrifice bunt and a throwing error by the pitcher while fielding the bunt.   

The October 15, 1969 game was the game of Ron Swoboda’s tremendous catch on a Brooks Robinson line drive to save at least a run (although it was Boog Powell, not the fleetest man on earth, on first base).    A piece of trivia about the catch is that it was the second out of the inning and was actually a sacrifice fly which allowed the tying run to score in the top of the 9th inning,     More trivia:   Swoboda did not have any chances in right field the entire game prior to the 9th inning and he recorded all three outs in that inning (and another in the 10th). 

Baseball has changed some since in the 55 years since the 1969 World Series.    That game was a day game.   The game was played in 2 hours in 33 minutes (with an extra inning!)     Seaver pitched a complete game throwing 146 pitches in 10 innings.   Can you imagine the starting pitcher even pitching to a hitter (Brooks Robinson) in the ninth inning with the tying run on third base in today’s game?    Or even staying in the game after that tying run scored and pitching another inning after that?    In addition, he was spiked in the back of the ankle on a put-out at first base in the 4th inning in which he was cut and wore a gauze bandage under his sock and shoe for the last six innings.    

Al Weis and Ron Swoboda were a combined 5 for 7 with a walk in the game, which put the Mets up 3 games to 1 in the series to set up JerryKoosman’s 5 hitter (and Al Weis’s first ever Shea Stadium home run) the next day to wrap up the series 4-1.  

As my writing name is Remember 1969, I do remember 1969, but certainly do not pretend to remember all the gory details of the games without refreshing my memory by occasionally reading Seaver’s book.  It was one of the first books of my own that I ever received, and I have used it as a reference many times.  It had the game scoresheets in the front and back covers – I learned how to score a baseball game from that book about October 15, 1969. 

I will not dive deeply into October 15, 1986, although it was also a famous game in Mets lore – game 6 of the NLCS against the Astros which sent the Mets to the World Series against the Red Sox, who won later that night to complete a comeback after being down 3 games to 1 to the California Angels.    Had they not won that day, they would have had to face Mike Scott in game 7 the next day. 

I only truly remember a couple things about the Mets game that day.   First it started about a half hour before my daughter was born and ended 16 innings later,  with Jesse Orosco hanging on for the win.    In researching the game and looking at the box score, it was quite a game – tying it with 3 runs in the top of the ninth, going ahead 4-3 in the top of the 14th, only to give up the tying run in the bottom of the inning, then scoring 3 runs in the 16th to go up 7-4, only to give up 2 in the bottom of the inning to finish it off.     I watched the start of the game on the TV in the hospital, listened to the ninth thru the eleventh on the car radio on the way home, and watched the end of it on the couch at home.   Happy Birthday Ellen!

Mets Birthdays to Celebrate

As far as Mets birthdays, there are only two Mets that have birthdays today:    Lou Klimchock (who?) turns 85 today, making him the 28th oldest living Met, and Huascar Brazoban celebrates his 35th  birthday.

Klimchock, a light hitting utility infielder, had a cup of coffee with the Mets in early 1966, going 0 for 5 with 3 strikeouts.    With a 60% strikeout rate, they sent him to AAA Jacksonville where he played in 120 games with almost 500 plate appearances.   Lou Klimchock was one of a very few players that was traded to and from a team with the same other player - in this case he came to the Mets in September 1965 with Ernie Bowman and was traded to Cleveland in October 1966, with Bowman heading out of town with him.  (Bowman was a AAA player at the time and never played a major league game with the Mets).  

And finally, although he never played with the Mets, but did pitch against them in the 1969 World Series, Jim Palmer celebrates his 79th birthday today.