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There were lots and lots of new subscribers this week.  Thank you.  The newsletter re-uses some material from during the week, but as the season starts there will be more “original content” as the Mets get more active with giveaways and ticket deals.

I have published an eBook from which I excerpted below.  If you don’t have a Kindle or haven’t bought an ebook before it’s very easy – just grab a Kindle app for iPhone/iPad/Windows/Mac.  More about that in the post in the newsletter about the book.

The social media icons below are great ways to follow the Mets Police especially Twitter and Facebook.  If we aren’t already please be sure to connect with me, and my email is [email protected]

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Are<br />
these what the 2013 All Star Game BP jerseys look like?

Are these what the 2013 All Star Game BP jerseys look like?

The biggest post by far this week (and of all time) was about the appearance of All Star Game BP jerseys in the video game MLB 13: The Show.

@metfanvin took some screenshots which you can see in the original post.

Read online to see more screenshots

Not<br />
@mediagoon’s Mets Bobbleheads #29: Lady Met

Not @mediagoon’s Mets Bobbleheads #29: Lady Met

One of the on-going series atMetsPolice.com is this Bobblehead series.  I particularly like this one from Dan Twohig’s collection.  Here’s Dan:

Mr. Met seemed to have 2 love interests over the years.  There was Mrs. Met, who also had a baseball head and no hair.  She was apparently last seen in a SportsCenter commercial from around 2008.  Then there was Lady Met who had a large baseball like head, but had red hair.  From what I can tell I don’t think she ever appeared in public, though her image was used on pennants, letterhead, books, and dolls in the 60’s and 70’s.  Are they the same person?

 

This bobblehead – one of my favorite – was given out by the St. Lucie Mets.

Read online.

Buy a David Wright WBC<br />
jersey for $119

The Data Proves It – I Need To Attend More Mets Games

Dan Twohig was on fire this week.  Here’s another of his articles from MetsPolice.com

I’ve been a Mets fan all my life.  I’m not just saying that – I have home movies of myself at 2 years old wearing a plastic batting helmet (during the 69 World Series).  I don’t know or remember the first game I attended, though I know it was sometime between 71 and 73.  My earliest memories of attending Mets games are during the 73 season.  I distinctly remembering cheering for Willie Mays to hit a grand slam – only to be told by my uncle that he couldn’t hit a grand slam as the bases weren’t loaded (hey I was 6).  I also remember at another game getting a ceramic coffee mug as a giveaway (which according to The Ultimate Mets Database was Sept. 22, 1973 – Fan Appreciation Day).

I know I went to games with my Dad and brother during the 70’s, though game dates and specifics are blurred and lost to time.  During these games my Dad taught me to keep score, and so I started to track games.  At first I would only keep score at random games, but over the years it became something I’d do more and more.  Now I keep score at every game I attend.  I also save all the scorecards and tickets from these games – not just Mets games, but every game I go to.  Through 2012 that added up to 320 games (major and minor league) at 80 different venues.

So what does this have to do with me needing to attend more games?  Over the last few weeks I have been cataloguing all of these games, recording both opponents and scores (yeah, I am a geek).  The result?  Since 1980 (the earliest Mets scorecards I still have), the Mets have a .684 winning percentage in games I have attended and scored.  Over the course of a full season that translates to a 110 wins.

The best season the Mets ever had was in 1986 when they won 108 games (I was 2-1 that year).

Against teams from the current NL East the Mets have a .696 winning percentage – including a 5-1 record against Atlanta.

Best month?  September at .833 (followed by May at .750)

Worst month? August at .400 (the only sub .500 month I have).

So what does all this mean?  I clearly need to attend games against the NL East in May and September.

(For the record, in Yankee games I have attended they have a .407 winning percentage)

So what’s your record?

Read online.

send<br />
the beer guy

Buy a David Wright WBC jersey for $119

When this arrived on Friday night Mrs. Mets Police totally gave me the Marge Simpson Face.  But on Sunday (the morning after David’s WBS slam) I was looking mighty stylish.

Pick one up for yourself while they are common.  You’ll just wind up hunting for one on ebay down the road.  Believe me I know.

Check Out The New and Improved Site at Shop.MLB.com!

Read online.

Meanwhile<br />
in the Citi Field parking lot.....

Send The Beer Guy: Mets Opening Day 1987: Peanuts!

Here is an excerpt from my eBook Send The Beer Guy.  It’s just $3.99 (Kindle edition) via Amazon.com.  If you don’t have a Kindle or have never bought an eBook it’s very easy.  Just download the Kindle App for your iPhone or iTunes  or just google Kindle for Windows or Kindle for Mac.  If you are reading this then you already have the technology to get an eBook.

This is an excerpt from the book covering my first day as a Shea Stadium vendor.  Enjoy!

 

Opening Day, 1987: Peanuts!

April 7, 1987

It was time to get a job, and a few friends of mine had finished 1986 working at Shea Stadium.  The way you got a job there in those days was that you called the “secret” number and the voice asked who referred you.  You gave the number of someone who already worked there.  Then you were invited out to Shea to fill out some paperwork, do some vending practice, and then off you go see you at the games.

 

The referrals made a lot of sense.  As vendors we were carrying around a lot of cash on good faith.  In theory someone could have sold some product and then walked out the door with several hundred dollars.  The referral system meant that if I did that then the guy who referred me was on the hook for the money I stole.  It policed itself, and I am no thief.

 

Vending worked on a seniority system.  You’d ask for what items you wanted to sell and where you would like to sell it.  The top guys all took beer on the field.  By the time it got to me it was usually soda.

 

Man how I hated selling soda.

 

This was back in the day of the cellophane cup tops.  Cellophane cup tops barely worked.

 

You would come in to get a tray, and depending on the quality of the machine and how much the tray-assembler-dude gave a shit on any particular day you would have some pretty shaky cellophane tops.

 

20 or so cups in a metal tray which you’d have to keep perfectly balanced so you didn’t spill the soda and get soaked.  Guess what – the soda would spill and you’d get soaked.

The trick was to ditch the shakiest lids first.  If you had a solid cellophane top you held on to it.  Pass out the loose-tops first.

 

As we walked around some cups would lose a little volume here, a little volume there.  Backbreaking work carrying these metal trays up and down all those stairs, and don’t forget the annoying railings I mentioned in the first chapter.

 

Eventually you would have a cup that you couldn’t possibly hand a customer no matter how much you might not give a hoot.  Those would come back to the vending station where they would be filled with some combination of syrup, seltzer and or ice, again depending on who was working and how crappy the machines were.

 

There was a glorious system in place that oppressed the vendors.  It had the nickname Subway.

 

The nice man who made your soda trays for you?  You had to tip him “Subway.”  I think it was a quarter a tray, maybe even fifty cents.  I was only making three bucks a tray myself, so to have to hand over a few dollars at the end of a night for a guy hanging out in a room occasionally pressing some cellophane lids to some cups was really annoying.   Here’s your Subway.  Fat Tony from the Simpsons would be proud.  Fat Tony from The Sopranos would be proud.

 

These days I look at the vendors and their bottled sodas and how easy and clean they must be to pass around.

 

Not me, I came home every night covered in soda and yuck.

 

At least we weren’t wearing our own clothes.  The shirts were ours – you had to buy those – but we wore community pants.  Yep, community pants.  The thought of it now makes me wonder.

 

We would go in the vendors room and grab some white painters pants.  If you were lucky they even had your size.  I wore 34’s then but sometimes had to deal with a 36 or 38 using my vending apron as a belt, and sometimes a 32 with a few buttons open and the apron holding them up.  Rarely was it comfortable and never was it stylish.

 

 

 

There I was on Opening Day 1987 with Bob Ojeda on the mound.  You would think Dwight Gooden would be starting but that was the spring that we found out Gooden had a drug problem.  The Dynastywas over before we even realized it.

 

While I would spend much of 1987 selling that horrible soda, I was assigned peanuts on the field level, a pretty good assignment for a newbie.

 

I had peanuts on the left side of the field and remember stopping to watch the pennant go up the flag-pole.  Wow, the Mets were the World Champions.  Five bins of peanuts sold and it was time to go home.

 

Pick up a copy of Send The Beer Guy now.

Read online.

Time to get<br />
your St. Patrick's Day Mets gear

Mets bumper stickers: The Magic is back!

Dan Twohig wrote:

Nobody in my family had a car until I bought my first in 1991, so that explains why this bumper sticker was never used.

I never noticed before, but why is Magic capitalized, but back is not?

 

 

Read online.

Facebook

A Dave Kingman Mets credit card

No cheap jokes here…but David bought this on eBay and sent it to me.  Awesome.  What’s with the graffiti font?

 

 

Read online.

Twitter

Mike V’s Countdown to Mets Opening Day – 2008 Flashback (Last Shea Stadium Opening Day)

Mike V does a weekly flashback onMetsPolice.com on Monday.  Here is the Countdown from March 4th.

 

This week’s flashback: 2008

 

Tuesday, April 8, 2008 vs. Philadelphia Phillies.  (Home Opener – Game 6 of regular season)

Loss, by score of 5-2 to go 2-4 on the season

The last game at Shea Stadium was of course a big deal, but for us Opening Day traditionalists, the last Opening Day at Shea Stadium was a really, really, big deal.  One last time Opening Day in our home, our church, the dump that had to go.

After a bitter, bitter end to the 2007 season and a long cold winter, Tom Glavine was gone and back with the Braves, and Johan Santana was here to our rescue.  The Mets acquired him  from the Twins for four prospects including can’t-miss Carlos Gomez and Philip Humber, ensuring that no matter what happened during the course of this new season, with this durable ace we wouldn’t collapse at the end.  It took the Mets a few days to convince Johan to sign the largest contract ever for a pitcher, $137.5 Million for six years.    The 29 year old Santana’s average annual salary for the contract would be $22.9MM, including $31Million in 2013 when he would be 34 years old.  What a bargain!  However, we didn’t get to see Johan Santana pitch on this cool spring day.  Oliver Perez, who had won 15 games the year prior, was on the mound as we started a yearlong goodbye to Shea Stadium, in the shadows of Citi Field.

photos and more after the jump

 

$35 got me into the upper reserved section 18.  I was back in the Northeast permanently, now living in New Jersey after a three year tour of duty in the south, and even though i was a new dad, I thought enough of the Mets to commit to a “7 Pack” for the 2008 season.  The ticket is branded with a Shea Stadium 1964-2008 logo, which also adorned the Magnetic Schedule and some banners throughout the stadium.

Fittingly, Bill Shea Jr. threw out the ceremonial first pitchand“SHEA” was added to the retired numbers on the left field wall.  Also in Centerfield, before the game a countdown banner was revealed, which would be changed at every home game.

 

The other storyline being played out was around what song would be played during the 8th inning.  Even though Neil Diamond was a Brooklynite, and Sweet Caroline had been played at Rangers games since forever, many Mets fans felt that singing along to the song was somehow a Red Sox “tradition,” and that the Mets shouldn’t copy them.  Many of us thought “Curly Shuffle” or “Meet The Mets” would be just fine, but the Mets brass thought they should put it up for a vote.  Of course the joke was on us, again, as Fark.com started a campaign and Rick Astleys “Never Gonna Give You Up,” was the overwhelming winner.  My father was quoted in Newsday as saying “the Mets should have signed Carlos Santana.  At least then the Mets would have a solution for their 8th inning music.”

The Mets lost this game, with the bullpen blowing a decent start by Oliver Perez.  Scott Schoeneweis, Jorge Sosa and Aaron Heilman all did their parts to make sure we went home with our heads hanging, despite scoreless innings from Perez and a long homerun by Carlos Delgado.

 

 

 

Read online.

Google

Mets Release First Tee Shirt Tuesday Shirt

 

The very popular T-shirt Tuesdays promotion returns to Citi Field in 2013 on Tuesday, April 23 vs. the Dodgers.

For just $19 for non-Marquee games, you’ll score a game ticket in the Left Field Landing and a limited edition t-shirt featuring different unique designs throughout the season. 

 

Click here for the link to buy your tickets.

Read online.

Linkedin

Meanwhile in the Citi Field parking lot…..

The Circus is coming to town.  Make your own joke.

 

Read online.

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