Showing posts with label lee mazzilli. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lee mazzilli. Show all posts

Thursday, January 21, 2010

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Blue Cap Army Update

To catch everyone up, I have this idea of a Blue Cap Army.  In a nutshell, I think we should encourage a sea of blue at Citi Field...read the original post to learn more.

I floated the idea that the first meeting of the Army should be at Opening Day, and that we should meet in front (we can pretend there's a Seaver statue) and then all visit the new museum together.

I got good traction on it, so I think I'm going to go ahead and organize something.  I'll wait until the site migrates to the new hosting because that will make it easier for me to start a sign-up list...so this is the announcement that I'm going to announce something.  I'm ego-less so if it's me and two guys, that's cool.  If it's 45,000 that would be awesome but I'm not delusional.

Speaking of Blue Caps, I don't know how much this means in the scheme of things, but Corey shared with me that the top selling Mets cap (non-discounted) on Lids is.....the traditional blue cap!


If you don't already own a blue Mets cap please buy one and plan to join us for opening day.  More to come.    10 bucks cash if someone can get Lee Mazzilli to meet us.  Lee, if you're reading this...ten bucks if you show!

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Thursday, January 07, 2010

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Mets Scorecard Flashback - July 26, 1980

I've been keeping score at ballgames since the mid to late 70's, and I started saving all my scorecards in 1980. I thought it would be fun as we go through the off-season to pull out some of them and take a look back.

Today it's July 1980

Steve Henderson graces the cover - remember Hendu Can Do? OK, many of you have no idea who he is but back then he was a big deal in Flushing - or at least the Mets tried to make him one. He was one of the main players the Mets got back when they traded Tom Seaver to the Reds. Henderson wasn't a bad player - he actually finished 2nd for Rookie of the Year in 1977 (Andre Dawson just beat him out). Following the 1980 season Hendu was traded to the Cubs for Dave Kingman

So let's see what we have inside. Hey look, it's an article about the new owners, Nelson Doubleday and some other guy from Brooklyn.

Seriously I liked Doubleday - and he always seemed to be dedicated to the Mets. Meanwhile this other guy from Brooklyn - well, they are already mentioning his Dodger connections in this article. Cue the foreboding music.




Moving along we find an article on the Mets pitching staff for 1980. Let's see, the rotation that year was Ray Burris, Pat Zachary, Pete Falcone, Mark Bomback, and Craig Swan, all pictured. Only Bomback, at 10-8, had a winning record. Also pictured here is a young Mike Scott - you know that guy in 1986 that almost single-handedly kept the Mets out of the World Series.






And what would a scorecard from 1980 be without our old friend and Mets Police favorite, Brooklyn's own Lee Mazzilli. Here we learn that after 44 games at first base, Joe Torre has finally put Mazz back where he belongs - patrolling CF at Shea.








Ah, finally we come to why we have a scorecard - to keep score. Back then (I was 13 at the time), I was still experimenting with score keeping. Sure there is an "official" method of keeping score, but everyone has their own methodology. I was still trying to find mine.

What I do see here on the first page - hm, this guy Foster had 2 doubles and a single. Griffey (now known as Griffey Sr.) had a good eye with 2 walks. Fun to see that the Reds third baseman was Ray Knight.

Just a few years removed from the Big Red Machine and no Morgan, Rose, Perez, or Bench in this line-up. At least I got to see Concepcion.


OK, now on to the home town Mets. Mazz leading off had a bad day (0-4). Frank Taveras did well - 2-4 with 2 SB. Other guys I used to love - Doug Flynn, Mike Jorgenson, Joel Youngblood - all appeared in the game.

But the real story about this game isn't in the scorecard. The game was played a week after John Stearns had made his 3rd All-Star Game. Stearns was having his best season ever - .285, on pace for over 40 doubles. And then in the first inning of this sunny Saturday afternoon, Stearns' finger was broken on a foul tip, ending his season. He never was a full-time player after that.

My brother and I were sitting with my Dad along the first base line, field level (I think). I still remember clearly seeing Stearns crumple in pain.

Oh for the record, the Mets lost the game 5-1

Our next flashback will be from 1981.

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Saturday, December 26, 2009

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Lee Mazzilli 1980 New York Mets Topps Baseball Card


One final visit to the 1980 Topps Baseball Card website - this one for my favorite player ever, Lee Mazzilli.   Look how thin he is!  No steroids for Lee.   Baseball players sure, um, work out more these days.

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Tuesday, December 01, 2009

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Vintage Lee Mazzilli Poster


Spotted on Craigslist - the cool Lee Mazzilli poster from my youth.

Today I will be uncool and NOT share the link because I want it.  Very cool.  Osh41 - would make a nice Xmas present for your favorite blogger.  Hint.

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Wednesday, July 15, 2009

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Lee Mazzilli has become a Met star - 07.23.79 - SI Vault

Awesome...vintage Lee Mazzilli article from 1979!   I've been trying to convey to you kids what a big deal Lee was...


One afternoon last week, about an hour after his 10th-inning run had given the New York Mets a 4-3 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers, Lee Mazzilli left Shea Stadium by a back entrance. From behind the 10-foot chain link fence that encloses the players' parking lot, a cry—no, a shriek—came forth: "Lee! It's Lee! Oh, Lee!" Mazzilli seemed flustered and walked shyly past his Cadillac Coupe de Ville toward a throng of girls. They thrust pens through the fence and twittered. Mazzilli is olive-skinned, dark-eyed, high-cheekboned—very Kiss-Me-I'm-Italian.


And surely they would have, but for the fence. Mazzilli has inaccurately been described as a John Travolta look-alike, though both have a vulnerability—perhaps in the eyes—that women seem to find agreeable. He really looks more like Bucky Dent, the reigning poster boy of the Yankees, except that Mazzilli has the advantages of being a bachelor and being able to hit. He signed some autographs, stopped a few hearts with a quiet "How you doin' today?" (sounding rather like Rocky Balboa), then returned to his car. An 18-year-old girl, wiping tears—of what? ecstasy? fantasy?—from her eyes, snapped at her father as he tried to reclaim his pen, "No! He touched it! He touched it!"


"Believe me," Mazzilli said, driving away, "that was nothing."

Much more here:  Lee Mazzilli, Brooklyn's very own, has become a Met star - 07.23.79 - SI Vault

I also enjoyed this nugget, I guess even back then the Mets liked to honor greats from other teams.

None of this is lost on the Mets, who held a Lee Mazzilli Poster Day last week. The only other Poster Day the team held was for Hank Aaron.




Tuesday, July 14, 2009

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Lee Mazzilli In The All Star Game

A cool article from MLB.com remembering when Lee Mazzilli was in the All Star Game.


When Mazzilli was selected to the Midsummer Classic at age 24, many figured he would make a return trip to the game at some point in his career. But in 10 more seasons with five different teams, the outfielder and eventual first baseman never again was selected to play among baseball's best.
Luckily for him, his one memory is a good one.
"You want to get back as much as you can," Mazzilli said. "But I was just fortunate to get in one and hit a home run. Just being picked for one was overwhelming getting a chance to play with the greats of the greats. I played with players on that team that I watched when I was younger.


More here.

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Monday, July 06, 2009

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I Hate the Mets: Who Are These 2009 Mets?

No I don't hate the Mets, it's the name of a blog.    They compared this year's team to Mets of the past - and Lee Mazzilli's name came up.  Which 2009 Lee Mazzilli?  Not who you might think - click the link:

I Hate the Mets: Who Are These 2009 Mets?


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Monday, June 22, 2009

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Link To Random Craig Swan Mention

I stumbled across a random article about a Mets fans thinking back to meeting his favorite players in the late 70s.  I think the years have muddled some memories, I don't see how the three players mentioned below would have been in the locker together...but it's still neat.

Imagine, if you will, the ultimate fan experience: sitting in the dugout of his team and meeting some of his heroes, a big thrill for a young fan or for that matter, any age fan. Lee Mazzilli, Lenny Randle and Ron Darling drifted in and out of the dugout while the team took batting practice. Craig Swan continued the tour through the locker room and the trainer's room with its training tables, individual hot tubs and exercise equipment, and in this rarefied air was the pungent odor of liniment. Those players, whose playing careers are now but memories, were just great, peppering my son with questions about his hitting, what position he played and laughing and joking — for, after all, they were just grown-up boys themselves.

Read the entire piece here.

Also from the Lee Mazzilli google alert....Lee suggested the Orioles be in the NL East.   Interesting.   Not worth debating mid-season but a nice January topic.
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Friday, April 03, 2009

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All Time "Homegrown" Team

After yesterday's look at homegrown players on Opening Day, I started to think about what the Mets All Time Homegrown Team might look like. To recap, I am defining a homegrown player as someone who had their first major league appearance in a Mets uniform.

(Yes I know that a "true" homegrown would be someone who came all the way up through the Mets farm system - but honestly, I don't have the time or patience to do that level of research.)

So here's my full 25 man roster:

STARTING LINEUP
SS - Jose Reyes (755 Games)
2B - Edgardo Alfonzo (1,086)
3B - David Wright (703)
RF - Darryl Strawberry (1,109)
C - Todd Hundley (829)
1B - Ed Kranepool (1,853)
LF - Cleon Jones (1,201)
CF - Mookie Wilson (1,116)

BENCH
Bud Harrelson (1,322)
Lee Mazzilli (979)
Wally Backman (765)
John Milner (741)
Hubie Brooks (654)
Ron Hodges (666)

ROTATION
Tom Seaver (401 Games, 198 Wins)
Dwight Gooden (305, 157)
Jerry Koosman (376, 140)
Ron Darling (257, 99)
Jon Matlack (203, 82)

BULLPEN
Jesse Orosco (368 Relief Appearances, 107 Saves)
Tug McGraw (325, 86)
Jeff Innis (287, 5)
Aaron Heilman (280, 9)
Roger McDowell (278, 84)
Craig Swan (184 Starts, 45 Relief)

Feel free to debate - I know there are some guys I left off (Wayne Garret, Bobby Jones for example)

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Monday, March 30, 2009

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Centerfield Maz: Lee Mazzilli

My buddy Centerfield Maz wrote this great piece of Lee Mazzilli.  I love that third pic down, what a riot.  Ah, the 70s.

With CFMaz's permission here's what he wrote last week:




TUESDAY, MARCH 24, 2009


Former Met of the Day : Lee Mazzilli

Lee was born in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, March 25, 1955. Mazzilli's grandfather was from Bari, Italy, came to NY and worked in the piano business. His father Libero was a former welterweight boxer & lived in the same 3 1/2 -room apartment until his passing in 2007. Mazzili won eight national speed-skating championships, but chose baseball when the Mets drafted him first round in 1973.


At Visalia in the California League, he stole seven bases in a seven-inning game in 1975. He was brought up to the Mets, in 1976 and was promoted as a star prospect. The hometown boy with matinee idol looks drove the ladies crazy, and became a sex symbol. He broke into the majors with a bang in September 1976, pinch hitting a three-run homer off the Cubs' Darold Knowles, then two weeks later a two run game winner off Kent Tekulve with two out in the ninth. Overall in 24 games he only hit .195.

Quotes: Lee on his debut “I remember walking into that tiny locker room. I was in total awe of the players. Seaver, Koosman, Matlack, Harrelson. Joe Torre took me under his wing “You sit by me today at the end of the dugout.”

With speed and a good batting eye, Mazzilli was thrown right into the everyday lineup in 1977. He would have been a better leadoff man but the ’77 Mets had no offense and he was needed as an RBI guy. The front office promoted him as the next Willie Mays because of his talent and the basket style catches he made, ala Mays. In 159 games he hit .250 with 6 HRs, 24 doubles, 24 stolen bases and 46 RBIs. Certainly no Mays, but the best player on a poor team.
In 1978 he had a better year hitting .273, with 16 HRs, 28 doubles, 66 RBIs, 5 triples, and 20 steals. He became the first Met to hit home runs from both sides of the plate. His best season came in 1979, when he had a 19-game hitting streak and hit .303 with 15 HRs, 34 doubles, 79 RBIs and stole 34 bases. He was named to the All Star Game and became the NL hero. Lee tied the score in the eighth inning with a two-run homer off Cleveland’s Jim Kern. Then in the ninth, he walked & was credited with the game winning RBI off none other than Ron Guidry.

Mazzilli played a lot of first base in 1980, and lead the team with 162 hits, 31 doubles, 16 HRs, 76 RBI, 82 runs, and 41 stolen bases. In 1981 injuries held him back to a .228 average, 6 HRs, and 36 RBIs. That winter he was traded to Texas for Ron Darling & Walt Terrell. At the time it was a very unpopular trade with Met fans but proved to be a good one.

He was hurt most of the season in Texas, got traded to the Yankees for Bucky Dent then was passed on to the Pirates. In 1985, in Pittsburgh, he led NL pinch hitters with 72 plate and hit .286 with a .437 on-base %.

Post Season: The Mets reacquired him for their pennant drive in 1986, he hit .276 and was warmly welcomed back to Shea. In the NLCS he set a record with 5 pinch hit at bats, but only got one hit. In the 1986 World Series he appeared in four games getting two key hits and scoring two big runs. He led off the 8th inning of Game #6 with a pinch hit single off Cal Schiraldi and scored the tying run. In Game #7 with the Mets down 3-0 he again started a tying rally with a sixth-inning pinch hit single off Bruce Hurst, scoring on Keith Hernandez single.

In 1987 Mazzilli tied for the NL lead with 17 pinch hits, batting .306. By 1988 he dropped to .147, appeared in the 1988 NLCS with two plate appearances getting a hit & was hit by a pitch. He was put on waivers and retired with Toronto in 1989. After 14 years, he ranked in the top ten in most Mets offensive categories.

Retirement: A good friend, actor Dan Lauria, (the father in The Wonder Years) suggested acting, and "The Italian Stallion" got the part with actress Sharon Angela ( The Sopranos) in the off-Broadway production of Tony n' Tina's Wedding (1992-1993). After that he went into the restaurant business, as a partner in Lee Mazzillis Sports Café located in Manhattan at 70th St & Amsterdam Ave. He then managed the Orioles from 2004- 2005, and was first base & bench coach for Joe Torre from 2000 to 2003.
then was the SNY studio anatyst in 2007-2008.

Honors: Maz was honored by the Brooklyn Cyclones on “Lee Mazzilli Bobble Head Night” in 2007. He was at the closing ceremonies of Shea Stadium in 2008.

Do the right thing and give Centerfield Maz (the website, not Lee) some hits.

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Monday, March 23, 2009

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Raise Up A Rheingold



I was feeling nostalgic, so I thought I'd invite everyone to join in and raise a Rheingold to some old friends:

To Keith Hernandez for threating to punch Jesse Orosco if he threw another fastball.

To Mike Scott for scaring the bejesus out of us.

To John Stearns, seemingly always injured and seemingly coming back in June.

To Johan Santana for the greatest pitching performance in mets history last September.

To Doug Sisk who prepared me for the ways of the 2008 bullpen.

To Lee Mazzilli for walking in the all star game and making a little boy proud.

For Tom Seaver and the stroll down the right field line opening day 83.

To Rusty Staub, shuttling between left and right.

For third baseman Gary Carter one long night in Cincy.

To Buddy Harrelson who deserves better despite his fear of coming out to the mound.

To Mad Dog Russo for killing the Mets for most of the 90s.

One for the cute ballgirl that was in the commercials with Mookie Wilson circa 1983.

To Jerry Manuel for threatening to stab Jose Reyes two minutes into his managerial regime.

For Nino Espinosa for giving up opening day home runs that let me know the Mets weren't going to win that year either.

To the 81 strike for letting me fool myself into enjoying a "pennant race" in august for a change

To the Cubsbusters and all the kids who filled the deck on that Midget Mets day doubleheader in '84.

To my dad, in my mind's eye still sitting in the box seat behind me chugging a few beers.


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Sunday, March 22, 2009

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Lee Mazzilli: The Neighborhood Guys In The Outfield

Baseball Digest mentioned my beloved Lee Mazzilli:

As a center fielder, Mazzilli represented a link to the great New York baseball tradition: Italian roots (Joe DiMaggio), switch hitter (Mickey Mantle) and the basket catch (Willie Mays). In 1979, he looked like New York’s next big star by batting .303 with 15 home runs. Additionally, he represented the Mets in that year’s All-Star game, and homered. In 1980, he stole 41 bases, batted .280, hit 16 home runs and drove in 76 runs. However, his batting average fell to .228 in 1981, and was traded to the Texas Rangers for Ron Darling and Walt Terrell in the spring of 1982

Nice little piece you can check out here.




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Saturday, March 21, 2009

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Lee Mazzilli Makes Texas Rangers 10 Worst List!

Funny to read about the Lee Mazzilli trade from the other side:

Sporting News has an article about how horrible it is to be a Rangers fan, and includes this gem:

There was a general manager named Eddie Robinson, who once traded for an aging outfielder named Lee Mazzilli. To get Lee Mazzilli, he traded away the organization's best two young pitchers -- Walt Terrell and Ron Darling. Robinson wanted Mazzilli to play left field. Mazzilli called left field "an idiot's position." Mazzilli played 58 games for Texas before Robinson was forced to unload him. Meanwhile, Darling and Terrell combined to win 247 major league games, none of them for the Rangers.

And is this really Lee Mazzilli's myspace page ?  Looks like he hasn't logged in in quite some time.

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Saturday, February 21, 2009

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Old Lee Mazzilli Article I Found

So on December 23rd I was hunting around the internet for random things to write about, and for some reason the "Lee Mazzilli" news-tracker went and found this piece from the Baltimore Sun.   It ran back in 2003, but some compuglitch made it show up again as "new" on 12/23/08.  I've been sitting on it since, but with games coming back there's no reason to keep it for a rainy day.  Here ya go...



  • He grew up in Brooklyn, played stickball in the street and wore tight pants during the disco era, like John Travolta's character in Saturday Night Fever.

    His father is a former professional boxer who still lives in the 3 1/2 -room apartment where Mazzilli was raised in Sheepshead Bay, a neighborhood near Coney Island.

    Once referred to as "The Italian Stallion" by tabloid headline writers, Mazzilli co-starred with an actress who now appears in The Sopranos when he performed in an off-Broadway theater production in the early 1990s.

    "Lee had that New York edge about him, and he comes by it naturally," said Joe Malone, Mazzilli's baseball coach at Lincoln High School in 1972 and 1973.

    Yet you should think twice before tagging him with the simplistic "brash New Yorker" label.

    "That's not me," Mazzilli said last week, "and anyone who knows me knows that's not me. What's that old saying: 'Don't judge a book by its cover.'"

    ..

    I've coached a lot of kids over the years, and no one was more unassuming and respectful," said Sal Cappucci, a Brooklyn teacher who managed Mazzilli for four years on a top club team representing the Gravesend Youth Center. "Lee is anything but a wise guy. His father brought him up right."

    Mazzilli's grandfather had immigrated from Bari, Italy, and worked in the piano business, a trade he passed on to his son, Libero, who was a piano tuner and a professional welterweight. Libero and his wife had three children - Lee has an older brother and sister - and encouraged them all to skate.

    "Skating was something I had always done," the elder Mazzilli said last week.

    Lee Mazzilli was a boy wonder, his strong legs and tenacity taking him far. Competing for the Prospect Park and Yonkers skating clubs, he shared the long track national championship at age 11 and then won outright titles at 13 and 15.

    In short track skating, he won or shared the national title every year from 1968 to 1971.

    When he shared the short track title in 1970, a younger division winner was 11-year-old Eric Heiden, destined to become America's greatest speed skater.

    ..

    The Mets selected him with their first-round pick in the 1973 draft, making him the 14th player taken overall. The franchise later drafted other New York-area players such as Bodie, John Pacella and Neil Allen.

    "We became a kind of 'Rat Pack,'" said Bodie, a Brooklyn native. "We hung out together in the offseason, went to the gym, went out at night. We had an affinity."

    Mazzilli became their resident celebrity. He broke in with the Mets in 1976, and the organization, desperate for attention, labeled him a future superstar.

    "He was a good-looking center fielder, a local kid, and they made him a teen-age idol," Bodie said. "We'd buy new pants and take 'em to the tailor and get 'em cut skin tight."

    Mazzilli found the attention unsettling. "That [future superstar] tag was something that was put upon me rather than my choice," he said.

    The pressure was intense. He responded well at first. In 1979, he batted .303 with 15 homers and played in the All-Star Game, where he hit a home run off Jim Kern and drew a bases-loaded walk from Ron Guidry to force in what became the winning run.

    ..

    But his production and playing time dwindled as a new generation supplanted him. Traded in 1982, he played for the Rangers, Yankees and Pirates before returning to the Mets, with whom he won a World Series ring in 1986. A career .259 hitter over 14 seasons, he finished up with the Blue Jays in 1989.

    His transition to life after baseball was jarring.

    "That was probably the hardest thing I've had to deal with," he said. "Your whole life has revolved around one thing, playing the game. Then, all of sudden, it's not there. It's 4 o'clock and you're home barbecuing when you think you should be going to the park."


    Lee Mazzilli by the numbers

  • Career batting average: .259 
  • All-Star sppearances: 1
  • Years as a player: 14
  • Winning percentage as minor league manager:.527
  • Years as a Yankees coach: 4 

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Monday, February 16, 2009

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Tom Seaver Returns (In 1983)

I was down at the Daytona 500 all weekend, so thanks to fellow Mets Policeman "Cyclones Fan" for minding the store.

Did Jerry really say he wants to bat OverReyes third?  Jerry that's the kind of thing that will get me back on the Lee Mazzilli for manager kick.

Anyways as I catch up on all thing Mets, my "Tom Seaver" google tracker caught this one.  I know links are lame but I bet most of you didn't read the Seattle Times  over the weekend.



When Tom Seaver returned to the Mets in December 1982, he was treated like returning royalty.
Yet Seaver, acquired in a trade for three players, was coming off a dismal season for the Reds in which he had gone 5-13 with a 5.50 earned-run average.
No one knew quite what the Mets were getting — the greatest player in club history, or a vague facsimile.
"I don't know what the public will remember or expect," Seaver said at a crowded news conference at Shea Stadium. "I'm not going to go out next season with a sign saying, 'It's 1983 and I'm 38 years old.' "
"When I pitch, I still have to get Pete Rose and Mike Schmidt out. ... They want me to come back here and be Tom Seaver."


Full story here.  It's an article about Griffey Junior returning home to Seattle...and brings up these not so great comebacks...remember these?


Other major stars who returned to their initial team for one last fling, albeit with less panache than the Babe, included Tony Perez and Pete Rose to the Reds (1984 for both, a dalliance that would not end well for Rose, brought in to be a player-manager with an unanticipated sidelight as a gambler); Reggie Jackson to the A's (1987); Phil Niekro to the Braves (for one ceremonial start in 1987); Don Sutton to the Dodgers (1988); Gary Carter to the Expos (1992); Eddie Murray to the Orioles (1996, for a stint that included his 500th home run); Rickey Henderson to the A's (the last time in 1998); and Tom Glavine to the Braves (2008).

Man that 1983 return was awesome.  Doesn't the SI cover just warm your heart?  If only it had lasted.   Imagine Tom on that 1984 team (my favorite Mets team of all time) - or would that have meant Gooden wouldn't have made the team....and in retrospect maybe not hitting fame and fortune at 19 might have led a more mature Dwight Gooden not to let his demons get to him?




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Thursday, February 12, 2009

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Funny "Lee Mazzilli" Google Alert

Got this from Google...

Report: Strawberry to serve up sex and drugs expose
FOXSports.com - USA
Strawberry's teammates from the 1986 championship team included big names such as Keith Hernandez, Dwight Gooden, Lee Mazzilli, Ron Darling, Lenny Dykstra, ...

Big names?  Lee Mazzilli is a big name?  Someone at Fox must read my dopey blog and believe the hype.

And don't go mixing my boy Lee in with two coke fiends and Lenny's (cough) workout program.  Them's fighting words!


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Thursday, January 29, 2009

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The Lee Mazzilli Curse

There has been some talk in Metsdom lately of the Hernandez curse. Surely it's been mostly from bloggers looking for something to write about on an otherwise cold quiet morning. Clearly there is no Hernandez curse, but I am here to tell you about the Lee Mazzilli curse.


Lee, as you all know, is the golden child of the late 70s and should have had a 15 year run in center field but no they had to give the job to that Mookie guy and trade Lee away for some 'prospects' that essentially wound up being Darling and Hojo.


Lee moved on to Texas who turned their back on him after 58 games. How many World Series has Texas won since? He went to the Yankees who also shunned him - how many World Series did the Yankees win before they realized about the Mazzilli Curse and hired Lee's old Mets manager?


Off to Pittsburgh. No championships for them since they released him in 1986.


Meanwhile the Mets had put together a good club, but they couldn't get over the hump. So they brought Mazzilli back in 1986. Bingo, championship.


When Lee returned, sure-fire future Hall of Famer Dwight Gooden was now wearing Lee's old #16. Doc offered it to Lee, but Lee being a gentleman wasn't going to take the hall of famer's number. That was Gooden's biggest mistake - and the curse of Lee Mazzilli led Doc to drugs and a ruined career.
On to Toronto in 1989. When did the Mets start to suck? That's right, right around 1989! The Jays finished first, and Lee knowing he had taught the Jays how to win knew he could retire and leave the Jays on their own to win two world series.


In his post-playing days Lee was coach for Joe Torre, who saw the magic expire after Lee left the coaching staff following the 2003 series. Joe tried to bring the Mazz magic back in 2006 but it was not meant to be.
As for the Orioles, the only curses stronger than the Mazzilli curse are those in Chicago and the curse of Peter Angelos. No force can help with those.


Mets Police fully support Jerry the Gangsta, but he would be wise to ask Lee to suit up in a #16 and sit next to him and end this 23 year drought.



Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile

Sunday, December 21, 2008

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Fun Stuff From The Week (including more Michael Kay)

This post about Michael Kay  got a lot of attention.   One of the things I brought up was my suspicion that Kay doesn't like like the regular folks.

I don't know where Kay stays or doesn't stay when on the road.  For all I know he stays on a friend's couch and walks to the stadium.    Bob Raissman wrote in today's news about some other announcers:


Does the cost-cutting at networks extend to the lavish perks enjoyed by marquee sports voices?
For example, take NBC Sports. Those who traveled here for Sunday night's Panthers-Giants tilt have to stay somewhere. Believe me, Al Michaels ain't flopping at no Motel 6 in Piscataway. A man of Al-Exigente's stature is more likely to take his wakeup calls at the Four Seasons Hotel in Manhattan.
The dude probably checked into a suite Thursday night. Four nights in a Season's suite cost $12,485.25 (including tax). That's living la-la-large - Daddy-O.

Again, maybe Kay sleeps in a tent on the street, what do I know?  I do know Kay said on his radio show that paying $10 a seat is the same as paying $25 a seat so I'm guessing he isn't as affected by the economy as you are.

By the way I actually like Kay on the radio - but he's out of touch on this one.

Raissman also mentioned Lee Mazzilli may get a job with the new MLB Network.  Cool.

Also this week, Metspolice.com got some attention about this: Alleged Racist Angels Fans who don't seem to upset that K-Rod left

We announced the Greatest Met of the 1990's and don't forget I Hate The Jets.


www.metspolice.com

Friday, November 14, 2008

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I Coulda Owned The Newark Bears

The Newark Bears have sold for $100,000.   I think I could scrape up that much cash if I had to.   The bad news is the new owner assumes $1 million in liabilities.  I can't float that, but it does make them more honorable than the Devils who refuse to pay their rent.

I hope I'm wrong but I still think Newark is a tough place to sell.   If I'm going to an Atlantic League game I'm hitting the Ducks or Patriots.

Speaking of the Bears, Mets Police send some love back to the Star-Ledger who printed us in the actual newspaper!  Here's the e-version but we were in the actual newspaper (see below)!   Also a shout out to Metsblog who linked us thus we got a ton of hits.  Thanks!  (Now walk down the hall and get Mazzilli rehired).

On a Sunday afternoon in late September, the Newark Bears took the field and got pummeled by the Somerset Patriots 14-8.
Was that season-ending game, played in a half-filled Bears and Eagles Riverfront Stadium in Newark, the team's last?
The minor league baseball team filed for bankruptcy protection last week, just a decade after bringing baseball back to New Jersey's largest city. Despite millions in public funds invested in a new stadium, public transportation and parking facilities in downtown Newark, team owner Marc Berson said the Bears never caught on with fans.
Last season the team averaged 2,746 fans a game, the second lowest in the independent Atlantic League. The team is now $4.6 million in debt, Berson said.
But a buyer may be willing to take another chance on the team. The Bases Loaded Group is offering to pay $100,000 and take on the team's debts. A bankruptcy judge is scheduled to review the offer tomorrow.
While the 2009 season remains in jeopardy, the state's bloggers have been analyzing the Bears' decline. Did the team fail because suburban crowds won't venture into Newark? Is the economy too soft to support independent minor league baseball? Was the city's 6,200-seat stadium project too ambitious?
Is it naive to think a team can ever revive the spirit that made Newark one of the nation's great minor league baseball cities in the 1930s and '40s?
From The Mets Police:
The Newark Bears are filing for bankruptcy. Why? They're in Newark.
I like the Atlantic League. Hit a Long Island Ducks game sometime, it's tons of fun. In fact you pull into a big, giant free parking lot and walk ten feet into a park that still feels brand new. The game is less important than the fun between innings. Kids have a ball.
Meanwhile, in Newark you get to drive to a crowded aging still scary city (sorry Corey). There's a tiered lot-- everyone loves those. Sure you're encouraged to take mass transit. The NJ Transit system is horrible enough at rush hour. You want to wait 59 minutes for a train if you don't time things right?
Meanwhile, a few blocks away the Devils have announced they don't want to pay the rent. That's what Newark gets for building this new unnecessary arena. You know that $2.1 million the Devils were going to pay? Psyche!
A few miles up the road an unnecessary football stadium is being built-- with no rail link. There's a giant parking lot sitting there day after day but no rail link to New York City.
The Giants get their blood money in personal seat licenses. The Devils get their fancy new building on which they don't pay rent.
As for the Bears-- sorry, nobody cared. Good try.

From Cranford Pundit:
Here are some suggestions on what Newark can do to woo the suburbanites who are still too scared to come:
For public events, a visible police presence-- such as for Newark Bears games. People want to feel safe even if they leave in the fifth inning.
Why do you think the Somerset Patriots are the team of choice for people in our area? Essex and Union County residents have options . . . and driving 30 minutes to an area where we feel safe will often trump driving 15 minutes to somewhere we do not.
From Chuck King, blogging at Minor League Dugout:
Newark made national news early in their existence by signing the likes of Rickey Henderson and Jose Canseco. The Bears have been far less flashy of late and apparently that has not helped . . .
The good news for the Atlantic League is that their newer clubs in Lancaster, York and Southern Maryland appear to be doing well. Earlier this season Atlantic League commissioner Joe Klein optimistically talked about doubling the size of the eight-team league in the coming years. With the economy seemingly on a downturn, Klein's hopes may have been too grand.
It is unclear as of now whether the Atlantic League will try to find another owner for a Newark club, or will perhaps have to bring back the homeless Road Warriors for another season.
For the past decade the Atlantic League has served as model for other independent leagues to follow. They've lost teams (Nashua and Atlantic City) before and continued to grow.
Hopefully this simply serves as another small bump in the road, but for fans of independent baseball this certainly bears watching.
From Tom Biro, blogging at Baristanet:
Over the years, it's typically been pretty easy to walk up on game day and buy a pretty darn good seat (not that there's really a bad one in the house), but that lies at the core of what the problem is. While it is probably nice to walk up with your significant other (as I did earlier this year, getting second row tickets behind the visiting team's bench) or your kids, it doesn't push much desire for people to buy a block of ten tickets, or season tickets, even.
Obviously, some people have chosen to throw the "white people in Newark" statement into the fray, which only makes matters worse. But there's obviously a bigger issue of anyone purchasing tickets to see the Bears on a regular basis, irrelevant of race.
All that said, having the Bears in town is definitely part of making Newark a better place for everyone-- whether it be those who live there, those who work there, or those who like to dine or be entertained. Isn't it?
From Joe McDonald, blogging at New York Sports Report:
With an empty stadium comes opportunity and another league may come in to Newark. The Can-Am League-- where former Atlantic League teams, the Atlantic City Surf and Nashua Pride, found homes-- may be interested in fielding a team. A deal will have to be made with Essex County and Berson, who still owns the rights to the stadium.
As for the Atlantic League, the Bear move won't hurt the league in the long run. Over the past few seasons, it has been shedding its weaker teams in favor of expansion in stronger markets . . .
The biggest losers in this whole debacle are the full-time Bear employees who will be forced to find jobs in a very tough economic environment.
Just remember it's still very early in the off-season, so there is still time to resolve this situation and have some sort of professional baseball in Newark for the 2009 season.
From Paul, blogging at Paul's Random Stuff :
Will there be Bears baseball in Newark in 2009?
Maybe . . .
If a bankruptcy court signs off on the deal, there will be baseball in Newark next year.
However, the 2009 edition of the Bears will probably have a very different look than the fans have seen in the past few years. Former Montreal Expos star (and one-time Yankee) Tim Raines could be the team's manager next year, replacing popular and successful skipper Wayne Krenchicki -- who only won the Atlantic League title in 2007 and came close to defending the title last year.
From a marketing point of view, I understand the reasoning . . . but that doesn't mean I like it.
Still, this is good news . . . even if it is a little sad at the same time.
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