via Hat Club.
What Mets fans talk about when not talking about the actual games.
via Hat Club.
Technically not a Mets jersey, but it is still one of my favorites. I wore this one last weekend to the suburban parades. Certain “jersey enthusiasts” who work on this blog don’t have this one.
Shannon and I see eye to eye on most things, but every so often something comes up that we diverge on (for example, I actually like some of Sting’s work after The Police)
The WBC is one thing we disagree on. Shannon thinks the WBC is a money grab by MLB – clearly designed to sell him more jerseys. I on the other hand see the long-term potential in the WBC for turning baseball into a more global sport on par with soccer, and even to a lesser extent basketball.
With the news out this week that Captain America injured himself while playing for Team USA and may miss Opening Day, many in Mets fandom have started complaining about the tournament (again), specifically stating that there is nothing left for them to watch and they won’t bother, especially if the US doesn’t advance into the Championship Round. (Note, as I write this on Friday night the US is losing 4-0 to Puerto Rico).
This type of attitude will do nothing to halt the progress of the WBC, but sadly it will mean many fans will miss out on some very well-played and exciting baseball.
What it comes down to is simple: are you only a Mets fan, or are you a baseball fan? It is possible to be both.
Sports passion in the US – regardless of the sport – is often focused more around teams and individual players. There are exceptions, but usually at lower, more localized levels – high school basketball in Indiana, hockey in Minnesota, or football in Texas. When we start looking at the professional level, the passion for the games has been replaced by enthusiasm for teams.
The tournament on the other hand isn’t about any individual player, or about any specific professional team. It’s about the spirit of the game and how it transcends national and cultural boundaries. Just go to one of these games where the US isn’t involved – the fans are intense. They are caught up in every pitch, in every swing. I attended the first WBC in San Diego and I have never experienced fans like the Japanese fans. The ballpark the night they won was electric.
Are the best players playing right now? Some are and some aren’t – that’s a debate for another time. But is this exciting baseball? Absolutely! So look beyond the blue & orange, and beyond the stars and stripes and see this as a celebration of the game.
Man, to have to pay $63 bucks for Opening Day to possibly see no outfield, no Santana, no Frank Francisco, and possibly no Wright is really going to suck. At this point the Mets should make a new ticket pack for Opening Day. The Buy Opening Day at $63 bucks a ticket and get three free games ticket pack.
This is from Adam Rubin’s Twitter feed.
Sandy Alderson says David Wright has moderate intercostal strain on side. Just on general timelines for rib cages, Terry Collins figured David Wright may begin season on DL.Justin Turner about to get a lot of reps at third base, according to Terry Collins.
Been stated elsewhere, but entirely possible Mets’ 3 highest-paid remaining players open on DL: Johan, Wright, Francisco. 2 are near-locks.If all 3 opened the season on the DL, John Buck would be the Mets’ highest-paid active player at $6 million.Zach Lutz, who would have to be a third-base candidate, even though he’s playing 1B today, is 2-for-3.
David Wright officially has withdrawn from the World Baseball Classic,
Mets confirm.
Since Shannon, Goon, and I have pretty much cleaned out our closets of Mets jerseys (at least for now, we all know there will be more later), I was thinking where can we go from here. Easy answer – who doesn’t love bobbleheads?
Who doesn’t love Mookie. Even as a sub-par manager in Brooklyn we loved him (and yeah, I’m sorry to say he was not a good manager at all). But you gotta love his Cyclones bobblehead!