A message from Sandy Alderson to Mets fans

We begin the day with a letter from Sandy (sent via Flushing Flash)

January 7, 2011

Dear Mets Fans:

Happy New Year! I hope everyone enjoyed their holiday.

With Spring Training just six weeks away, I wanted to update you on our preparation for the 2011 season.

Yesterday, we wrapped up two days of meetings in Port St. Lucie where we went over organizational philosophy and how to implement it throughout the major and minor leagues. It was also the first opportunity for Terry Collins and his staff to sit down and discuss the mechanics of Spring Training and determine how they will emphasize fundamentals, mental and physical preparation and hard work. As Terry has said, the driving force will be playing the game the right way, which will lead to more wins.

Over the past two months, we have followed our plan of filling out our roster with reasonably priced players who have significant upside potential. As I have said before, our payroll – which will be among the highest in baseball – gives us limited flexibility, but we do have money to spend. We have acquired players who we think can thrive at Citi Field and complement our existing group of players.

As you likely know, earlier this week we signed pitchers Chris Capuano and Taylor Buchholz. Chris is a former All-Star and 18-game winner who last year came back from his second Tommy John surgery. We are confident he has the ability to re-establish himself as a dependable starter who can excel in our ballpark. Taylor has fully recovered from elbow surgery and has the potential to be a solid arm out of the bullpen.

Every year players come out of nowhere to become success stories. Look no further than R.A. Dickey. He signed a minor-league deal last January, became a fixture in the starting rotation in May, and finished the season with 11 victories and a 2.84 ERA. I believe some of our offseason acquisitions can be this year’s version of R.A.

We are excited about 2011. We have a solid core group of players who we expect will make significant contributions to making the Mets a success. As we have said all along, we will put ourselves in the best position possible to succeed both in the short and long term.

There will be an exciting brand of baseball played at Citi Field this year that matches the passion and intensity that you have for the team.

Thank you for your continued support and I look forward to seeing you at the ballpark.

Sincerely,

Sandy Alderson
General Manager

I like Sandy.  A straight deal.  The payroll gives them limited flexibility.   Meetings about an organizational philosophy.   We’re in good hands.

Is the interlocking NY creeping back into the Mets ball logo?

Paul Lukas who writes the awesome Uni Watch (more on that below) and Fire Wayne Hagin Already (Mets Police doesn’t try to get people fired but does laugh at Paul’s points) was kind enough to send this one over…which came to him from reader Steven Presser.

Steven said he got an email from the Mets about group tickets which included a power point about the hospitality suites.  (I have the powerpoint).

Ok so what.  Who cares Shannon?

Well, let’s zoom in on that Mets logo, shall we?

No that’s not my best formatting job but I’m knocking this out before Real Boss shows up.  Anyway, note the NY in the ball logo.

Steve points out that it is likely that Timmy the Intern grabbed some random Mets logo off the internet and also unfortunately that later slides don’t include the NY…

..however, a boy can dream.  Once again I will remind Fred, Jeff and Dave from Flushing that the 50th anniversary in 2012 gives them the perfect excuse to hit the Bobby Ewing reset button and go back to basics, and that should include the NY.

I never understood why the NY left.  I get the black. The NY?  Because stitching is expensive?  Orange toner in the printer is expensive?  Why not use it in printed materials?

Anyway…this is a fun discussion for a quiet January day and maybe it starts a discussion out in Queens.  Hi guys.

….

As for Uni Watch. You should read it every day.  If you at all like the black uniform discussions over here, Paul is the king of the war against the black and has been railing about it for years before I came along.  I’m trying to find the one post where he destroyed the Wilpons (someone will send it to me – [email protected]) – but here’s one from 2009 you’ll like.

I hope some day Paul sits next to me in the subway car at the signing of the Treaty of Flushing.

Mets 2008 World Series Ticket

Chris who helps us out over on Sportspolice.com found this lil gem over on ebay. Nice looking ticket. Hopefully in the near future we can actually get to use the tickets for the World Series and not have to sell them on ebay as a “cool” collectors type item.

And when I say “cool” I mean makes me angry to look at it.

Remember you can always send stuff to me if you can’t get in touch with Shannon.
My email is [email protected] and you can follow me on twitter @mediagoon.

Bert Blyleven’s impact on the Mets

On twitter today (@metspolice) I joked that Bert Blyleven did more the Mets than Robbie Alomar did.   I was reminded of the below (via Baseball Reference).  Go slow, it gets confusing…

Traded as part of a 4-team trade by the Texas Rangers to the Pittsburgh Pirates. The Atlanta Braves sent Willie Montanez to the New York Mets. The Texas Rangers sent Tommy BoggsAdrian Devine and Eddie Miller to the Atlanta Braves. The Texas Rangers sent a player to be named later and Tom Grieve to the New York Mets. ThePittsburgh Pirates sent Nelson Norman and Al Oliver to the Texas Rangers. The New York Mets sent Jon Matlack to the Texas Rangers. The New York Mets sent John Milner to thePittsburgh Pirates. The Texas Rangers sent Ken Henderson (March 15, 1978) to the New York Mets to complete the trade.

Let’s go slowly.   Because the Pirates wanted to win the World Series, the Mets gave up Jon Matlack who won 17 in 1976 and would win 15 in Texas in 1978.  The Mets got Willie Montanez (most of you haven’t heard of him), Ken Henderson (only Greg from Faith & Fear and I remember him) and Tom Grieve (a nobody) and they also lost John Milner.

I take it back.  Alomar sucked in New York but he didn’t really cost the Mets anything meaningful.  I think having Jon Matlack on the 1978 Mets would have been better than having Willie Montanez hit .247 in two years as a Met.

Wow I think I lost everyone.  This post dropped a lot of names that mean little to anyone.   Greg Prince I bet you’re still here.  Got a Ken Henderson article tucked away on Faith & Fear in Flushing?

Some of you (wait I thought only Greg made it this far) may have noticed the poll in the center column which asks which generation Mets fan you are.  The results thus far…

  • 1986 (30%, 32 Votes)
  • Generation Piazza (20%, 21 Votes)
  • Ya Gotta Believe (17%, 18 Votes)
  • I Survived the late 70’s (15%, 16 Votes)
  • Original 60’s (13%, 14 Votes)
  • Wright and Reyes (5%, 5 Votes)