Thursday, July 30, 2009

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Winning Formula

Maybe Johan Santana should ease up just a little bit on his pre-game ritual of sharing a personalized handshake with all of his teammates - bat boys, training staff, and bullpen catchers included. Don’t laugh. He might be wearing his hitters out before they even take the field, as evidenced by the grand total of four runs the Mets have managed in his three starts.

Of course, the reality is Santana doesn’t need all that much run support. He was brilliant again, as the Mets beat the Brew Crew 1-0 on a gorgeous sun-drenched Saturday, the first official day game in Citi Field history.

Santana should thank Ricky Weeks, who dropped a routine toss from Prince Fielder on a sacrifice bunt attempt by Alex Cora in the 7th inning. Weeks’ error helped the Mets push across a run off reliever Carlos Villanueva. A line drive off the bat of Jose Reyes, the next batter, literally knocked Villanueva’s glove off his hand and produced the game’s only run.

A scoreless inning each from Putz and K-Rod, the winning formula drawn up in the winter, sealed the deal.

I wonder if Mike Francesa still thinks it’s the Mets who have problems. Right now the Indians are up by 18, and they haven’t even attempted a three-point field goal.

Situational swinging

I guess Luis Castillo was the only Metropolitan who graduated from Jerry Manual’s 80-pitch, situational-hitting, come out of the cage feeling three pounds lighter spring-training bonanza.

In case you missed it, Castillo contributed a pair of two-out, run-scoring infield hits – one in the first and a walk-off version of eerily similar variety in the ninth – in last night’s 5-4 Mets win over the Brew Crew.

Now he needs to sprinkle some of that magical situational hitting dust on his teammates.

Friday, April 17, 2009

Citi Field


My two cents on the Mets new $800 million ballpark.

There
are some sight line issues. Tracking the ball in the right-field corner ain’t easy and, depending on where you’re sitting, it can be a nightmare. Deep right field is completely hidden if you’re sitting in most of the seats that aren't the first row in the Pepsi Porch, but I anticipate most people are gonna like the freedom of being able to stroll atop the Porch, and elsewhere in the park, on warm summer days.

The bottom line is there are a lot of great seats at Citi Field. Don’t let all the hand wringing about poor site lines you may have heard on certain radio stations affect your opinion of the ball park without checking it out for yourself. I guess I would feel differently if I’d plopped down a couple of G’s for season tickets and had to peer over and around people making their way to and from concessions all game. That’s the other issue. Somehow the architects built a stadium in which (on the Promenade level) the first rows offer worse vantage points, or more opportunities for human or object impediments, than the rows behind them.

The lack of “Mets” signage and regalia is noticeable inside the park, but the exterior of Citi Field is decorated with banners of past heroes, like Doc and Lenny and Gary Carter and Seaver, and current Mets, like Wright, Reyes, and Santana. Not sure why people are down on the rotunda, which is pretty freakin’ awesome in my opinion. Definitely check out the park for yourself before passing judgment.

Obviously the food is an improvement. But I'm one of these old-school people who cares only about the product on the field, not so much about what I'm being overcharged for to eat. I probably won't ever go to Citi Field to eat or to be entertained in between innings with mindless scoreboard shenanigans. I'm there instead to do baseball things, like debate who has a better overhand curveball Darling or Gooden, who should be hitting 3rd Beltran or Wright (clearly it's Beltran), and, most of all, to watch the Mets, who suck (so far) in case you haven't noticed.

A lot of the negativity about the ballpark I attribute to the overall uneasiness a lot Mets fans have about this team. Deep down, I think we think of these guys (and the organization generally) as un-clutch losers, or maybe that’s just how I see them today. But the park is gorgeous and at some point this summer I'm sure we'll be very grateful the Wilpons built Citi Field. I just wish that day would get here…soon.