Showing posts with label Boston Red Sox. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boston Red Sox. Show all posts

10/21/13

Models for Success

072913_PlayoffsMLB

 

The St. Louis Cardinals and the Boston Red Sox are set to face each other in the World Series tomorrow. It should be a fantastic series that pits two of the best teams in baseball. Why is this series of interest to Mets fans? Well, maybe we can get a glimpse of how our organization should be run. Both teams got to the World Series with different methods and I think a lot can be learned from how these two teams were put together.

St. Louis has the closest blueprint for what the Mets have now. This team built its  foundation from within. Their drafts and farm systems have yielded countless contributors to this team every year. The cornerstones of this franchise have never played anywhere other than for the Cardinals. Jon Jay, Yadier Molina, David Freese; the list goes on and on with homegrown talent. The only two places that have been filled from outside the organization have been the corner outfields with Matt Holliday and Carlos Beltran. Does this sound like the lineup blueprint for what the Mets will be trying to accomplish this offseason?

The starting rotation produces more of the same. Young arms that have been given the chance to contribute to this club in important situations. Shelby Miller and Michael Wacha are the new studs that, along with Adam Wainwright, form a very effective troika of starting pitchers. The bullpen has had more plug and play than the rest of the organization, but still has organizational depth. Trevor Rosenthal has blended with new faces like Randy Choate and a reborn Edward Mujica to complete their team. St. Louis sits at a team payroll closing in on $102 million dollars so this isn't to say that a team like this doesn't come with some cost, but their greatest asset is knowing when not to make the big salary move. Their refusal to pay Albert Pujols was considered heresy by some who worship Pujols as a baseball god, however, his play has done nothing to make the Cardinals regret moving on with Allen Craig, who is only the best hitter with RISP on the planet.

The St. Louis Cardinals just seem to do everything right and to some extent as a Mets fan, I hate their guts. But you have to respect the innate ability to always be right. The Boston Red Sox aren't always right, but they sure didn't do a whole lot of wrong this year.

Few people seem to remember just how terrible this team was a year ago. The team was written off, doomed to a wasted year of irrelevance with beer and chicken jokes being thrown in their faces. Boston of course went on to shock the baseball world and is now competing for a championship. The question of how can be attributed to the correct distribution of funds for players that fit in with the team and what they were trying to do. They got rid of cap salary destroyers like Adrian Gonzalez and Carl Crawford and found players like Shane Victorino and Stephen Drew who were able to produce in the situations where the former players could not. The team became more balanced and even got a shot to the arm with the acquisition of Jake Peavy to the starting rotation.

Boston never had a terrible team design. There were obviously star players on the roster and they just needed complimentary players. Now, Mike Napoli definitely plays better than anything you would consider complimentary, but  his addition is the type of calculated add that moves a team into contention. They needed a power bat to help David Ortiz. They identified that need and filled it without mortgaging their future. When 2014 comes, this team may look nothing like the one playing in the World Series. They are set to move on with the future of players like Xander Bogaerts and could surely lose out on Jacoby Ellsbury to free agency, but the new regime in Boston has gambled and won. I'm inclined to believe that the winning won't stop there.

When you watch this series, think about how these teams got there. The process for both teams was successful and the Mets could go a long way by implementing a little from both organizations.

Oh and just a prediction: Cardinals in 7. Pitching is just too good right now.

9/27/13

The LTJ Editorial: “The best memory Mike Piazza gave me”

“The LTJ Editorial”
Author: Luis Tirado Jr.
Date: 9-27-13
Twitter: @LTJ81
Website: http://www.TheNYExpress.com


“The best memory Mike Piazza gave me”


I will have the privilege of attending the final NY Mets game this coming Sunday, September 29th, 2013 at Citi Field and it won't just be another baseball game for me. This will be the day the Mets will induct Mike Piazza into their own Hall of Fame and will honor him in a pre-game ceremony tribute. I have plenty of memories about Pizza especially a huge one that I'll never forget to this very day. More on that later in this article but for now, let us take a look at some of the accolades Piazza earned wearing a Mets uniform.

Piazza is a 12-time All-Star and in the eyes of most baseball enthusiasts, easily one of the best catchers to ever play the game. When you look at professional baseball as a whole, he holds the most home runs hit by a catcher at the amazing number of 427. The last time the Mets went to the World Series back in 2000, one of the biggest reasons they were able to get there in the first place was because of the hot bat of Piazza. I remember he had a hitting streak of 15 straight games where he at least got one run batted in. During his tenure with the Mets, he honored every single game in the contract he signed back in 1998 and played for about 7 years. During that stretch, he played in 972 games, had 532 runs, 1028 hits, 193 doubles, two triples, 220 home runs, 655 runs batted in, 7 stolen bases, a batting average of .296, and a .373 on base percentage. Absolutely incredible stats and many say that the trade the Mets made to acquire Piazza was one of the best in baseball history to turn a franchise into the right direction. A winning direction at that.

When you look at his career, he has not only been quite the class act, but he's been a phenomenal superstar no matter where he ended up playing. Even though he debuted for the Los Angeles Dodgers and played for teams like the Miami Marlins, San Diego Padres, and the Oakland A's, he will almost always be remembered for his tenure with the Mets. He even said when his time comes to get into the MLB Hall of Fame, he wants to be inducted as a Met. Before his professional baseball debut, ever since he was a little boy, baseball was his world. Did you know when Piazza was just five years old, his Dad was working on his arm strength by making him throw baseballs and practice catching? Another fun fact is that when he was just twelve years old in his custom-made backyard batting cage, he had a very special instructor. One who showed him what kind of batting stance he should always use. It was Boston Red Sox legend Ted Williams! It was Williams who actually showed him how to bat and made sure to teach Piazza that no matter what any coach ever told him, to never change his batting stance.

Many baseball fans, especially Mets fans, cherish every memory he brought to this team. I remember one very big memory though because it helped distract me during a difficult time not only in my life but in the lives of millions. I will never forget the terrorist attacks that struck this nation, especially in New York with the September 11th, 2001 attacks. I remember just a huge sadness that hit me the day it happened that lasted that entire week and still bothers me to this day. Everything in New York was on lock down, every night I went to bed I would worry if in the news the next day more attacks would occur. The sports world stopped and you couldn't even watch TV or even listen to Sports Radio because everyone was focusing on the coverage of what would be another upcoming war this country would face. After the week was over, some kind of sports returned that weekend I remember. It was another NL East game featuring the Atlanta Braves coming to Shea Stadium to take on the Mets. Everyone was sad, crying, it was really emotional since all the players wore NYPD/FDNY caps to honor New York. It was the first sporting event held after the 9/11 attacks, so it meant a lot to a ton of people, regardless if you followed baseball or not. What's my all-time favorite Piazza memory? That at-bat where Piazza hit a ball for a home run that even though I wasn't physically at the game, I heard the Shea Stadium crowd from my home in Queens. It was huge and gives me goosebumps every single time I see that hit. At the time, it lifted the entire city to forget just for a little bit of what occurred earlier that week.

Mike Piazza stands for a lot of things. Integrity, loyalty, and of course, doing things the right way. I know a number of years ago he admitted to using something called Androstenedione but at the time it wasn't anything banned by MLB. Piazza used it for muscle mass and it really isn't any kind of Performance Enhancing Drug when you think about it. It's not like he was a horrible player, took Andro, and starting to hit 10 home runs a game thereafter. As far as I'm concerned, he has brought nothing but great memories and will be remembered as an incredible player. Does he belong in the MLB Hall of Fame? Absolutely! No catcher in the history of the game has made as much an impact as Piazza did and while he didn't get enough votes the last time he was eligible, he will eventually get in. This time though, in Cooperstown.