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JOHAN SANTANA UNDERWENT SUCCESSFUL SURGERY
Santana had torn his meniscus prior to his final start of the season, but was able to work through the injury.
He is expected to make a full recovery and be ready for Spring Training.
What Mets fans talk about when not talking about the actual games.
>
JOHAN SANTANA UNDERWENT SUCCESSFUL SURGERY
Santana had torn his meniscus prior to his final start of the season, but was able to work through the injury.
He is expected to make a full recovery and be ready for Spring Training.
>Welcome to October, the month after Fred Wilpon likes to play meaningful games.
It occurs to me that the Red Sox have become the Yankees. They have a historic ballpark, some classic uniforms, some history and they win the World Series.
Meanwhile the Mets have become the Red Sox.
What do I mean?
When the bullpen blew the tie did you think the Mets would win? No.
If they had won what were you saying about Monday – I heard a lot of “could be tough with Pedro pitching.”
I also heard a lot of “The Cubs will beat ‘us’ anyway.”
The talk of 2008 was the collapse of 2007.
What do you suppose the talk of 2009 will be?
We are now conditioned to expect to lose. If they open up a 15 game lead in April we will spend six months wondering when the collapse will come. If they make the playoffs, the expectation will be that they will blow it.
Welcome to October. Welcome to Day 3 of the Mets not refunding my playoff tickets.
>Really was not in a mood to write a lot last night but here are my thoughts
All in all it was a great way to say goodbye. I attended last week’s finale at Yankee Stadium and the differences between the 2 couldn’t have been more striking or more appropriate to what each place was. The Yankee Stadium finale was befitting of a coliseum – awesome in it’s splendor, honoring gods of the diamond. Shea doesn’t have gods – Shea has had players. Shea’s closing really felt warmer and more like saying goodbye to an old friend – again, perfect for the place.
It may have been a dump, but it was our dump. Goodbye old friend, you will be missed.
>Cant….think……
….someone wearing 73 just came in and…….
…..auuuuuuuuuggggghhhhhhhhhhh…………
(Pedro still sucks.)
>Always a good thing when someone remembers that there was a baseball team in New York called the Giants. Fred Dodgers Wilpon likes to ignore them (unless there’s a Mel Ott statue at Citi Field I haven’t been told about, and no “green seats” doesn’t honor the Giants any more than the Orioles do).
Merkle’s Boner. You’ve heard of it, but what is it. The Times hooks it up….
On Wednesday, Sept. 23, 1908, the New York Giants and the Cubs were embroiled in a 1-1 tie before 20,000 fans at Harlem’s old Polo Grounds. It was a critical contest, the Giants clinging to a one-game lead over Chicago. With two outs in the bottom of the ninth and New York’s Moose McCormick on first, Merkle, a 19-year-old rookie first baseman making his first start, slammed a single into right field that sent McCormick to third.
“At that, I could have gone to second easily, but with one run needed to win and a man on third, I played it safe,†Merkle remembered later. It was a decision that would haunt him for the rest of his life.
A hundred years later, think Chuck Knoblauch meets Steve Bartman, and you will have some idea of the enormity of Fred Merkle’s blunder.