This was a comment on an article about the Rusty Staub/Mickey Lolich trade in 1975 that I posted earlier today on ohmurph.com.
When they traded Staub for Lolich, my other friends in high school who were Mets fans and I had a collective groan. We had seen if before when they traded Ryan, Otis and others for the likes of Joe Foy and Jig Fregosi. What we did not know was how we would keep seeing it again. Mike Vail blowing out his ankle was just an example of how the Mets would make a poor decision and have it followed by bad luck. Planning on him being the big bat was much like planning on Daniel Murphy as your opening day left fielder last year. That bad decision was followed by the rest of the team being injured around him as the left field experiment failed. Of course you could say he was the big bat, his 12 homers led the Mets!
Saturday, February 13, 2010
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Belting Out Hits
I became a Mets fan at age 5 in 1964. It was the same year that Jane Jarvis and the Mets opened a couple of miles from my house in Flushing. Listening to her “belt out hits on the Thomas organ” was an integral part of the Shea experience from my earliest memories until my college days. Whether it was an Irish jig she played for Tug McGraw’s warm-ups, or her beloved Jazz, we did not realize then how lucky we were to have her.
Wednesday, January 6, 2010
Hold Comments at Bay
Now I would have addressed the pitching first, but the Mets never seem to ask me what I think. Let's hold the negative and look at the positive. There are some promising signs with Jason Bay agreeing to tend the fallow leftfield in Flushing. This is basically a good signing of a solid ballplayer. It also means that the Wilpons actually may not have been cleaned out by Bernie Madoff.
Maybe we can get a real number 2 starter after all. However, the thought of Joel Pinero does not warm my heart. That is unless Dave Duncan comes along with him.
Maybe we can get a real number 2 starter after all. However, the thought of Joel Pinero does not warm my heart. That is unless Dave Duncan comes along with him.
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Hot Stove, No Buns in the Oven
As the hot stove has heated up, the Mets are still in the woodshed looking in to the kitchen. They have not made a meaningful deal or signing. I get the impression that some of the offers out there are to appease season ticket holders. Many season ticket holders are at this point holding out themselves. The Mets have pushed back the renewal date for season plans from December 4 to December 31.
This seems to confirm the word on the street that the fans are intending to "stay away in droves." Many fans share season ticket packages to defray costs. Two years of heartbreaking losses and one of pure disaster have taken their toll. Fan partnerships are short of partners. Longtime season ticket owners are faced with the prospect of either giving up their seats, or paying the 4 or 5 figure cost themselves. It seems that everyone I talk to is looking to add a partner or two. Everyone is window shopping, but no one is buying - like the rest of the economy the savings rate is up. As a result the Mets were forced to the extraordinary extension of the renewal deadline.
When the Mets announced ticket price reductions I was underwhelmed. It was reported in the media as an average reduction of 10-20 percent. The tickets I know about were down only 6.5%. This added insult to fan misery. The Mets could not even reduce prices without a swing and miss. I thought that a credit for renewals as a reward for fan loyalty was the way to go. The Mets dumped tickets last year by selling them at discounts on stubhub. This was at the expense of the season ticket holders who could not sell their extra tickets without taking huge losses.
There is a lot of anger out there. However, front office can get away with the tin ear that listens to the fans. All they need to do is build an organization that is dedicated to winning and execute a plan to make it so. I know, I am a dreamer, it comes with the territory.
This seems to confirm the word on the street that the fans are intending to "stay away in droves." Many fans share season ticket packages to defray costs. Two years of heartbreaking losses and one of pure disaster have taken their toll. Fan partnerships are short of partners. Longtime season ticket owners are faced with the prospect of either giving up their seats, or paying the 4 or 5 figure cost themselves. It seems that everyone I talk to is looking to add a partner or two. Everyone is window shopping, but no one is buying - like the rest of the economy the savings rate is up. As a result the Mets were forced to the extraordinary extension of the renewal deadline.
When the Mets announced ticket price reductions I was underwhelmed. It was reported in the media as an average reduction of 10-20 percent. The tickets I know about were down only 6.5%. This added insult to fan misery. The Mets could not even reduce prices without a swing and miss. I thought that a credit for renewals as a reward for fan loyalty was the way to go. The Mets dumped tickets last year by selling them at discounts on stubhub. This was at the expense of the season ticket holders who could not sell their extra tickets without taking huge losses.
There is a lot of anger out there. However, front office can get away with the tin ear that listens to the fans. All they need to do is build an organization that is dedicated to winning and execute a plan to make it so. I know, I am a dreamer, it comes with the territory.
Monday, October 26, 2009
The Good, the Bad and the Smugly
The Yankees are going to the world series. I must admit that the Yankees and their millions have done a much better job than the Mets in putting together a good team. Yes the Yankees are a good team, the Mets not so much. Admitting that, for me, is a bad thing. It makes my skin crawl, but not so much as watching the smugness of the Yankee fans on TV, in the Subway and in general walking around what is otherwise my hometown.
The Yankee fan has come to expect, as if by divine right, that the post season is actually an extension of their regular season. The extended regular season will end in a devastating failure should the Yankees somehow, someway, end up not winning their 27th championship. It is a fate too horrible to contemplate for the Yankee fan. Fortunately, for them, such contemplation is not a part of their psyche. Why should the Phillies even try? The stars are aligned for the precious Yankees, it is preordained, right?
I have reached a new low. I am looking for the Phillies cap that is leftover from one of my kids little league teams.
The Yankee fan has come to expect, as if by divine right, that the post season is actually an extension of their regular season. The extended regular season will end in a devastating failure should the Yankees somehow, someway, end up not winning their 27th championship. It is a fate too horrible to contemplate for the Yankee fan. Fortunately, for them, such contemplation is not a part of their psyche. Why should the Phillies even try? The stars are aligned for the precious Yankees, it is preordained, right?
I have reached a new low. I am looking for the Phillies cap that is leftover from one of my kids little league teams.
Monday, October 19, 2009
So, not.
Just received this from Stubhub:
Earlier today, an email promoting New York Mets postseason tickets was sent to you. This, unfortunately, was a mistake. We regret the error and apologize for any inconvenience or confusion this may have caused.
Sincerely,
The StubHub Team
Finally a team that screws-up more than the Mets. I am not sure what confusion it could have caused. A few hundred fans showing up at Citifield for the game seems unlikely even for someone brain dead enough to send out e-mails about Met playoff tickets.
Earlier today, an email promoting New York Mets postseason tickets was sent to you. This, unfortunately, was a mistake. We regret the error and apologize for any inconvenience or confusion this may have caused.
Sincerely,
The StubHub Team
Finally a team that screws-up more than the Mets. I am not sure what confusion it could have caused. A few hundred fans showing up at Citifield for the game seems unlikely even for someone brain dead enough to send out e-mails about Met playoff tickets.
Mets are in the Playoffs!
It is to good to be true! It was all a bad dream! This e-mail arrived in my inbox today:
Where do you want to sit?
Be there alongside your New York Mets as they chase baseball immortality. Go to StubHub, where you’ll find a fantastic selection of tickets to every playoff game – so you experience the championship chase live and in person. Check it out. Go to StubHub and get the seats you want today.
I can't seem to find the event on stubhub anywhere. It is not a mistake, right?
Where do you want to sit?
Be there alongside your New York Mets as they chase baseball immortality. Go to StubHub, where you’ll find a fantastic selection of tickets to every playoff game – so you experience the championship chase live and in person. Check it out. Go to StubHub and get the seats you want today.
I can't seem to find the event on stubhub anywhere. It is not a mistake, right?
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