Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts from 2010

A Fool For Trying

Posts are probably gonna be limited for awhile (no foolin') but couldn't resist this... With the birth of a new season upon us, I feel compelled to reinvent this blog to fit the needs of the community. Walk-offs have run (or walked) their course and it's time to focus on something new. You may recall that I dabbled in such a thought at this time in each of the last four years, but my foolish pursuit to chronicle the history of Mets walks lasted merely one day, my intent to break down every Mets chalk-off turned into a brief endeavor, my desire to extract the finest details from every collision between ball (or person) and wall ran its (collision) course quite quickly, and the idea of charting every stupid Met-made comment became too huge an undertaking (especially in 2009). I don't profess to be an expert in this blogging thing by any means, but I think it has been a worthwhile experience. About 58 months ago, I came across a blog that was very unique- PlunkBiggio - wh

Didja Ever Notice: The Other Guy in the Picture

Pause your DVD player at the point just after the ground ball goes through Bill Buckner's legs (or find a photo of the moment and take a glance at it). Within the frame are the key figures, but also two others. There's Mets first base coach Bill Robinson, along with an older, anonymous gentleman, both gesturing vociferously in different manners. Robinson's is one of celebration. The other guy is in the midst of making a ruling. There was no doubt that Mookie Wilson's ground ball was a fair one, but first base umpire John Kibler is the one who ruled it so. Kibler was background dressing for the two most picturesque moments of the series, the ground ball through Buckner's legs on that Saturday night. And then, he's there again as the home plate ump when Jesse Orosco struck out Marty Barrett to end the 1986 World Series. We mention this because John Kibler died last week and his role in the most famous of Mets moments was briefly acknowledged in his obituary. Not m

They Don't Make Em Like The Mook Any More

"There are certain things that stay with you, your whole life in sports. Mookie flying is one of those things." -- Blogger's father, 1:10pm on Feb 9. During the 1987 season, Mookie Wilson was on first base in seven instances in which the batter at the plate hit a double. How many times do you think Mookie scored? I'll give you a hint: Every time. According to some recent reading I've done, The average runner scores from first base on a double around 40-45 percent of the time. Mookie's career percentage: 65 percent (45 of 69) The average runner goes first to third on about 27 percent of singles hit. Mookie's percentage: 50 percent (120 of 240) The average runner scores from second base on about 58 percent of singles hit. Mookie's percentage: 75 percent (162 of 215) How good was Mookie Wilson? Let me put it to you this way. The guy turns 54 years old today (and got an early present by being re-hired by the Mets as a minor league instructor). I'd take

A Lot To Look Forward To

News and notes on the newest Mets * New signee Josh Fogg has allowed 1.28 HR per 9 innings in his MLB career. The Mets have employed 3 pitchers who have logged more than 1,000 innings and have a HR per 9 rate of 1.28 or worse: Jose Lima, James Baldwin, and Oliver Perez . * Mike Hessmann, billed by the Daily News as the real life Crash Davis, has averaged a HR per 12.9 at-bats in his major league career. That's the same home run rate that Barry Bonds had in his career. We'll leave out that Hessmann strikes out every 3 at-bats. * Frank Catalanotto, if he plays, would become the 60th Met from New York state to play for the Mets. That's a group that includes Joe Torre, Ken Singleton, John Franco, Warren Spahn, and Shawon Dunston . It also includes Bobby Bonilla.

Darryl

This is for all those who wonder what could have been. Let's play a game of make believe, just for a moment. Let's pretend Darryl Strawberry had, instead of signing with the Dodgers, re-signed with the Mets. Let's pretend that all the issues he dealt with- marital, financial, drug and alcohol related, didn't exist. Let's say he played six more seasons with the Mets at a Darryl Strawberry level. We can say they went something like this. .253 BA, 36 HR, 104 RBI .277 BA, 27 HR, 91 RBI .286 BA, 32 HR, 110 RBI .274 BA, 27 HR, 97 RBI .297 BA, 29 HR, 89 RBI .300 BA, 41 HR, 111 RBI You might recognize those numbers. They're the stats from the seasons in which Reggie Jackson was from the ages of 29 to 34. Let's now build in a fade to Strawberry's career, because producing at his level for 14 years definitely takes its toll. But let's make the presumption that he stayed a Met for life, and didn't have the luxury of the DH to fall back upon. We'll give

Doc

I want to look at where Dwight Gooden ranks among pitchers in Mets history, and I want to show just how much better he is than anyone who has followed him. Here's one way that we do that. Since the 1984 season began... * Dwight Gooden is your leader in Mets victories with 157. No one else has even reached 100. Most Wins for Mets Since 1984 157-Dwight Gooden 98- Sid Fernandez 98-Ron Darling >>Leader among current Mets: John Maine, 38 * Dwight Gooden is your Mets leader in complete games with 67, nearly doubling the next-closest person. Most CG For Mets Since 1984 67-Dwight Gooden 34- David Cone 24- Ron Darling 23- Sid Fernandez >> Leader among current Mets: Johan Santana, 3 * Dwight Gooden is your Mets leader in strikeouts with 1,875. No one else is within 400 of that. Most K For Mets Since 1984 1,875- Dwight Gooden 1,449- Sid Fernandez 1,172- David Cone >> Leader among current Mets: Oliver Perez, 457 * Dwight Gooden is your Mets leader in ERA, by a hair...(among t

One Good (or Bad) Turn Deserves Another

On Opening Day 2002, Gary Matthews Jr. pinch-hit for Al Leiter and flied to left field against Pirates reliever Mike Lincoln. That was the only at-bat of Matthews' Mets career...at least probably until Opening Day 2010. Matthews will soon depart from what is a prestigious Mets club- the one at-batters. There are currently 43 players whose Mets vanity plate could read ONEAB. * Most of them are pitchers. That position numbers 35, headed by current Met middle-man Sean Green. * Green is one of 18 players whose only Mets at-bat was a strikeout. Class of '62 Met Dave Hillman is at the front of that line, alongside teammate Bob G. Miller. . For him, bat silence was Golden, as in Jim Golden, who struck Hillman out and also holds the distinction of having a multi-triple game against the Mets. * Imperfection is the mark of many a one at-batter. Their collective account reads just five hits in 43 tries, which explains why most of them only got one turn at the plate. There was no Met fo

A Jolbert to the Solar Plexus

When I was at the Hall of Fame a few months back, I got taken by surprise by one piece of memorabilia in Cooperstown's collection. A shattered shard from Jolbert Cabrera's bat was donated as a remnant from the greatest walk-off comeback win ever, the 15-14 Indians win over the Mariners on August 5, 2001. Cabrera, the newest Met, had the game-winning hit in the rally from a 14-2 seventh-inning deficit, an 11th-inning single against Jose Paniagua. Should Cabrera play for the Met, he'd join this roster of former/future Mets, who were a part of history. John Olerud, who was 2 for 3 with an RBI, before being pinch-hit for with his Mariners team up 12-2 in the fifth inning. Mike Cameron, who played the entire game for Seattle in center, and went 3-for-6 with 3 RBI. Mariners starter Aaron Sele, who was charged with 5 runs in 6 2/3 innings, and who can blame this game for his failure to reach 150 victories (he's at 148). Roberto Alomar, who went 0-for-2 as the Indians starting

Mark It Down

5 trivia questions about Mark McGwire and the Mets, that have nothing to do with Steve Trachsel. 1- Mark McGwire's first career home run came in 1986 against a former Met, whose first name starts with W. Name him. 2- Mark McGwire's 50th home run in 1998 came against the Mets, and the pitcher who allowed it had a first name that starts with W. Name him. 3- Mark McGwire's 400th career home run came in 1998, also against the Mets. The pitcher who allowed it had 16 Ws that season. Name him. 4- Mark McGwire's 50th home run in 1999 came against the Mets. The pitcher who allowed it had a 3-letter last name, and had 1 career W with the Mets. Name him. 5- The pitcher who allowed the most home runs to McGwire is a former Met lefty. He pitched one miserable season for the Mets, in which he had 7 Ws. He did not allow a homer to McGwire while with the Mets. Name him.

Beating Cooperstown to the Punch

It's been over a year since we elected anyone to the Mets Walk-Offs Hall of Fame, and we're going to make an addition today. The choice may be deemed slightly controversial, but it's our Hall of Fame and what would a Hall be without controversy. For those unfamiliar, the following 30 people are members of the Mets Walk-Offs Hall of Fame. If you're wondering why any of them are in, do a search of their name within this blog and you should find your answers. Benny Agbayani, Tommie Agee, Bill Buckner, Gary Carter, Lenny Dykstra, Wayne Garrett, Kenny Greer, Steve Henderson, Keith Hernandez, Gil Hodges, Ron Hodges, Cleon Jones, Ross Jones, Ray Knight, Hobie Landrith, J.C. Martin, Rodney McCray, Kevin McReynolds,Kevin Mitchell, Rey Ordonez, Mike Piazza, Todd Pratt, Tom Seaver, Rusty Staub, Darryl Strawberry,, Ron Swoboda, Marv Throneberry, Robin Ventura, Al Weis, Mookie Wilson Our newest inductee is one who comes up on the Cooperstown ballot next year. He's unlikely to re

What's In A Name?

We haven't done any Mets home run breakdown analysis here since the conclusion of our Top 60 Most Metmorable Home Runs, so I thought I'd take a bit and look at a fun piece of trivia. Most Mets REGULAR SEASON home runs by opposing pitchers first name. Again, this information was compiled with the help of Baseball-Reference.com, from which I garnered a list of every Mets home run. #1 Mike (246) The total: The Mets have hit 246 home runs against pitchers named Mike. That doesn't count: The three they've hit against pitchers whose first name was Michael (close doesn't count). Name variety: Those Mikes encompass 57 different last names Who dat?: Among those Mikes who gave up one: Mike Davison, Mike DuPree, and Mike Roesler. Some of the best home runs vs a Mike : Del Unser hit a 17th-inning game-winning home run against Mike Wallace on April 19, 1976; Howard Johnson hit the Mets 3,000th home run against Mike Scott on May 5, 1990. The most victimized Mikes : Morgan 22,

Hawk Tailor

Tomorrow, they will announce the BBWAA inductees for the Hall of Fame class of 2010. One potential honoree holds a special place in Mets history, though it's probably one with which you're not familiar. Andre Dawson has batted into the final out of the game in more Mets wins than any other player. Dawson has made the walk-off out 17 times, three more than the man with the next-most, Jose Cruz Sr (14). This is a record that doesn't look like it will be broken any time soon. The leader among active players is Andruw Jones with 11, one more than Pat Burrell's 10. Yes, I actually took the time to figure that out, with great assistance from Baseball-Reference.com, because that's just the sort of thing we do here. In 10 of those 17 instances, Dawson represented either the tying or winning run, so these were some pressure-packed moments that the Mets pitchers survived. In fairness, he did get three walk-off hits against the Mets, including a pair of walk-off home runs, Th

This Interfered With My New Year's Plans

Let's celebrate 2010, and not just with my brand new "Images of Shea Stadium" 2010 calendar, whose cover features the ballpark's namesake giving a ceremonial wreath to Joe Torre on Opening Day, 1978 (they didn't have a more apt image than that?) I'm in a joyful mood, and not just because it's the New Year. I've finally found a needle in my haystack, and wouldn'tcha know who was involved, albeit indireectly. Those of you who know this blog know that there's one type of ending that I was particularly intrigued by , but had been unable to find evidence of it occurring in a major league game. It turns out that it has happened, more or less. I'm referring to the Dodgers-Reds game, the only documented one to end in this manner within the last 55 years, on August 1, 1971. Our protagonist didn't make his impact until the 11th inning of this game, or rather, the game made an impact on him. With one out and the bases loaded, Bill Buckner was hit