Chi-Chi Says Mets are Doomed Unless….

Fun…Chi-Chi Rodriguez says the Mets should sign Pudge:

I hope Ivan has a big game because I would like to see the New York Mets sign him. I don’t think the New York Mets can win without him.

Chi-Chi is part of the Delgado-led campaign to get Ivan “Don’t Call Me Chi-Chi” Rodriguez on the team.

I forget who made this point (newspaper/blog) and I admit it’s not my own but it sure is interesting that when Delgado campaigns for a player to take the spot of teammates that it’s cool, but if A-Rod says something nice about Reyes then A-Rod is dissing half the Yankees.  Poor A-Rod….

….and speaking of A-Rod, if the Mets do get Pudge can we get cousin Yuri’s phone number?   You know…look at the stats.

Thanks Newsday!

www.metspolice.com

Mike Schmidt Thinks David Wright Is HOF

I’m a little sleepy, but I thought this was neat.  Mike Schmidt, the best baseball player I ever saw (note I didn’t qualify position) thinks David Wright is a Hall of Famer.

The Daily News has the whole thing here.

Schmidt says:

“I think you’ve got yourself a future Hall of Famer there on the Mets.”

“From a baseball standpoint, he seems way beyond his years,” Schmidt said. “Hitting-wise, he’s your prototypical good modern generation hitter in that he stays inside the ball. In my day, we hit around the ball – pulled the ball more. It’s impressive to me he creates the production he does as a righthanded hitter, seeing a lot of righthanded pitchers, the tough relievers, the matchups he gets.
“Back in our day, you’d compare him to a (Steve) Garvey or heck, even a Roberto Clemente-type hitter where he uses the whole field, hits around .300, can hit you some home runs, break up a game. He’s a good solid RBI guy – what did he have last year, 128 (actually 124). I think my best year was in the low 120s (121 in 1980), so even last year he had more than I ever had.”

www.metspolice.com

Batting Third For The Mets, Rob Mackowiak

A cool column… on ESPN by Jayson Stark, observing that Spring Training sucks this year.

Jayson writes:

So I made a list of some of the hitters who have been spotted occupying the middle of the order just this week:


CLEANUP HITTERS — Jake Fox (Cubs), Jesus Guzman (Giants), Geoff Blum (Astros),Ramon Castro (Mets), Mike Hessman (Tigers) and Nick Evans (Mets).


NO. 3 HITTERS — Rob Mackowiak (Mets), Micah Hoffpauir (Cubs), Jose Valentin (Mets),Shane Costa (Royals) and Wes Helms (Marlins).


No disrespect to any of those fellows, obviously. But they’re not going to be confused with David Wright or Miguel Cabrera, either.






www.metspolice.com

7 Train To "Mets/Willets Point"

The formerly Shea Stadium stop on the 7 train is going to be re-christened “Mets/Willets Point.”

The Mets didn’t want to give the MTA any cash, so the MTA gave the Mets the big MOSFU (trust me the mos-f-u is a bad thing).

I think the MTA should go whole-hog and call the station “Baseball Stadium” and charge the Mets for the right to emblazon their corporate name on a subway station.  I understand you can get big bucks for corporate sponsorship these days.

Meanwhile in the Bronx, the subway stations keep their “Yankee Stadium” names, but the new Metro-North stop will be called “Yankees/153rd.”

For those who want to read more I must admit I was inspired by this.  Watch the closing doors.

www.metspolice.com

Bobby V debate continues

There’s been some back and forth about Bobby Valentine.  I started it by observing that his teams had horrible starts.   This latest observation came into the mailbox from Dr. Jay:
 

To respond to osh41: I liked Valentine too, until his last season when he clearly lost control of the club. But you can hardly say that he managed “very average clubs.” In 1999, with Piazza, Ventura, Olerud, and Alfonzo all in their prime? (Though as it turned out, all just a couple of years away from falling off a cliff.) And Ordonez solidifying the best defensive infield ever? And Payton looking like an up-and-coming star, and even Rickey still contributing?

 

If the 1998 – 2001 teams, especially ’99 and ’00, had a significant weakness (or rather “averageness”), and an area where obviously the “Braves had far superior talent,” it was starting pitching. On most successful clubs in most years, Al Leiter and even Mike Hampton are nobody’s idea of an ace. And the likes of Rick Reed and Bobby J. Jones (let alone Bobby M.) were “average” at best. But the bullpen was a definite strength, and far better than we’ve had any year since except for ’06. Turk Wendell, Dennis Cook, and yes, the much-maligned Johnny Franco and Armando Benitez. Sure, Benitez infamously blew some “big” games, and he and Franco (and sometimes Cook) gave us heart attacks even when they were ultimately successful. But all the games are equal in the standings, and Armando consistently saved over 90% of his opportunities, and club-record total numbers. If he hadn’t, there wouldn’t have *been* any “big” games for him to blow.

 

And recall that the Braves during this period went through three or four closers without finding a consistent one who stayed injury-free. And their offense was Furcal, the Jones boys, and who, Javy Lopez? Ryan Klesko? The Mets certainly had those two beat head-to-head, at least on paper. Which leads us to a major reason we couldn’t catch the Braves in those years — we couldn’t beat them head-to-head, on the field. And I’m afraid a major reason for that is in-game management. I remember more than one game where Cox had a move to counter every one of Valentine’s, with the end result being that the Braves had the situation they wanted and we didn’t. And it took Bobby V the better part of four years in the non-DH league to get the first clue about how to make a double switch, and he never quite figured out when *not* to. Willie Randolph was far from perfect, including in this regard, but he had a better idea of that kind of thing in his first year managing anywhere, after a lifetime with the Yankees.