Showing posts with label tom seaver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tom seaver. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

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New York Mets Starting Pitchers Koosman, Lolich, Matlack and Seaver - 09.13.76 - SI Vault

Johan Santana feels their pain. 25 years ago Ron Darling felt it...(is 1985 really 25 years now? Wow.)

While the Mets' team ERA is lower than Steve Carlton's or John Candelaria's, the team batting average is only .244. On 28 occasions this season. Met starters have allowed three runs or less, and lost or got no decision.


Tom Seaver (2.41), Jon Matlack (2.86), Jerry Koosman (2.91) and Mickey Lolich (2.95) rank first, seventh, eighth and 10th among National League starters in ERA, but their stomachs churn with the same pitch-by-pitch anxiety as that of the humblest reliever. When you pitch for the Mets, one mistake can be disastrous.


"It's like a damned broken record," says Seaver, who leads the league in strikeouts and heartbreaks and who suffered through a nightmarish seven-week period this summer in which he did not win a game despite some typically Seaverian statistics: seven starts, 55 innings pitched, 13 earned runs, 2.13 ERA and three home runs allowed. For his efforts he was rewarded with four defeats and three no-decisions. Harking back to the days of Marv Throneberry, the Mets managed to score only nine runs in his behalf. Last Friday night they were just as niggardly, scoring only one run. But Seaver pitched up his 11th win (he has lost 10) by shutting out the Phillies. By whiffing eight batters he extended his own record for consecutive 200-strike-out seasons to nine.

More here:

MET STARTING PITCHERS KOOSMAN, LOLICH, MATLACK AND SEAVER - 09.13.76 - SI Vault

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Tuesday, March 16, 2010

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TOM SEAVER - 12.22.69 - SI Vault

Tom Seaver:  Sportsman of the Year 1969.

In his three years with the Mets, Seaver has won 59 games, but it must be remembered that in his first two seasons he played on teams that were a symphony of incompetence. He went to New York's spring training camp in St. Petersburg, Fla. in February of 1967 with only one year of professional work behind him. "I had no time limit set for making it to the major leagues," he says, "but I believed that eventually I would get there because I felt I was good enough. There were no self-declarations that if I did not make it in two or three years I would quit and try something else. None of that. At training camp I was ready to be sent back to the minors if the Mets felt I needed the extra work. I was perfectly willing to accept that, because I believed in the absolute integrity of major league baseball. To be honest about it, I had not been overly impressed by myself during my first year in pro ball at Jacksonville. A record which shows you win only as many games as you lose [12-12] is not one you can accept or be happy with."

More here:

TOM SEAVER
- 12.22.69 - SI Vault


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Friday, February 05, 2010

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Old English D: The Lost Wednesday

Here's a random Tom Seaver vs. Jack Morris game recap that I stumbled across.
Old English D: The Lost Wednesday



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Friday, February 05, 2010

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The Mets and big gun Tom Seaver could not make peace with - 06.27.77 - SI Vault

Still makes me sad.

For 10 years and two months as a New York Met he had created dramatic moments that others could savor with him, but this one Tom Seaver decided to reserve for himself. The significance of his first start for the Cincinnati Reds did not elude him. "I was beginning the second part of my career," he would say a couple of hours later. "I wanted to look around and remember what I saw." And so he stood on the mound at Montreal's Olympic Stadium for an extra minute, taking it all in, all the sights and sounds that told him he was now a Red. Only then did he get ready to throw his first pitch.


And how he threw. Seaver pitched a complete game, a shutout, a three-hitter, a 6-0 victory. He struck out eight and did not walk a Montreal batter. And at the plate, he had two hits, including a bases-loaded single that drove in two Cincinnati runs.

...

"The money was always secondary to my loyalty to the Mets," Seaver told SPORTS ILLUSTRATED'S Kent Hannon last week. "The people who think I was bitter about not making more money or who think I was trying to force a trade by asking that my contract be renegotiated won't believe me. But for the record, my loyalty to the Mets and my desire to make them competitive always came first. I don't think I've shown myself to be a greedy person."


Seaver's disagreement on these points with Met Chairman of the Board M. Donald Grant and General Manager Joe McDonald was so intense that it spilled like hot lava into the New York press. Seaver even charged that constant criticism directed at him by Daily News Sports Editor and Columnist Dick Young was one of the reasons he wanted to leave the team. Nevertheless, Young's support of Grant and McDonald—the Met executives perceive Young as their man in the press—was not much different in degree from the boosting of Seaver that appeared in the other two New York papers. On the day Seaver was traded, Young—whose detractors have claimed his views are colored by the fact that his son-in-law works in the Mets' front office—wrote that the pitcher was "very deceptive" and "very greedy." The next afternoon Maury Allen of the New York Post responded, "It is Young who forced the deal, who urged Grant on, who participated strongly in the unmaking of Tom Seaver as a Met."


Whoever was responsible for Seaver's departure, Met fans were furious. Even before the negotiations were completed, they flooded the Shea Stadium switchboard with complaints. The night after the trade, they welcomed the team home from a road trip with signs reading BURY GRANT—BRING BACK OUR TOM and with leaflets suggesting a boycott of home games until Seaver returned on Aug. 19 with Cincinnati. "On that occasion," the flyer read, "we urge all true Met fans to attend that game to show Tom our appreciation for the many magnificent performances he has given us."

If we'd only had blogs then! More below..



The Mets' big gun Tom Seaver could not make peace with - 06.27.77 - SI Vault


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Sunday, December 27, 2009

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Another Cool Tom Seaver Card


OOOh I forgot about this one.  One of my favorite baseball cards ever!  Check out this card site for more.

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Saturday, December 12, 2009

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Unflattering Tom Seaver Baseball Card


What's with G.T. Seaver in this picture?  Is he wearing an Izod shirt underneath his pins?   Was it 1973 when the hats started to look less cool (the blue looks less cool than Stengel blue)?   Not the prettiest card but check out more cards here.

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Sunday, December 06, 2009

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DVR Alert - Seaver's 300th on MLB Network Tonight

Set those DVRs for the MLB Network at 6pm tonight as they replay Tom Seaver's 300th victory on August 4, 1985 at Yankee Stadium as part of their All-Time Games series.

I was there, in the upper reaches of the upper deck. I went up to the stadium that morning and was able to get a ticket.

Things I remember about that day:
  • Perfect summer day - you couldn't ask for better weather.
  • It was Phil Rizzuto Day and the Yankees gave Scooter a cow - which proceeded to knock him over
  • At one point during the Rizzuto ceremony the crowd started going wild. Phil thought it was for him but it was actually Seaver walking across the field.
  • I thought it was amazing that number 41 beat a guy wearing 41 (Joe Cowley) by a score of 4-1. AND the Mets won that day also by a score of 4-1
  • Hearing all of Yankee Stadium chanting "Let's Go Mets" - you will never hear that again
  • It was the last really good game that Seaver would pitch. He's win just 11 more over the next 1 1/2 years. But that afternoon, he was Tom Terrific one last time.

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Tuesday, November 17, 2009

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Happy 65th Birthday Tom Seaver!

My buddy who runs Centerfield Maz is kind enough to let me borrow full articles from him.   Since he did a great job with this I will just grab his rather than do my own lame version.   Happy Birthday George!

Centerfield Maz should definitely be one of the sits you regularly visit.  Thanks to Maz for the loaner.....and clearly those 60's era uniforms look better than anything they have worn since..well, the 60's.


MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2009

Tom Seaver in the Sixties

On Tom Seaver's 65th birthday let us look back at his Amazing early days in the nineteen sixties.

George Thomas Seaver was born November 17, 1944 in Fresno, California. He was a star All City basketball player in high school but wanted to play baseball in college. He joined the United States Marine Corps Reserves in June 28, 1962, serving for one year in California and six months active duty. He went to Fresno City College and already had great control on the mound. As he grew he got stronger and threw harder. The next year, he was recruited to pitch for the University of Southern California. As a sophomore, Seaver went 10-2 record and got drafted by the Dodgers. He asked for $70,000, and the Dodgers passed.

In 1966, he signed a contract with the Atlanta Braves, who had drafted him number one. Baseball Commissioner William Eckert voided the contract due to the fact that his college team had played two exhibition games. Seaver wanted to finish the college season, but because he had signed a pro-contract, the NCAA ruled him ineligble. Seaver's father complained to Eckert about the unfairness of the situation, and threatened with a lawsuit. The Commissioner ruled that other teams could match the Braves' offer. The Phillies, Indians & Mets were willing to match it. A lottery was held and the winner won Seavers rights, the Mets were the winners.

He spent one season in the International League with the Jacksonville Suns where he won a championship with Nolan Ryan on the sam staff. The next year he was brought up to the Mets staff in 1967. He made his MLB debut on April 13, 1967 getting no decision in the 3-2 Mets win. He got his first win, in his next outing beating the Cubs. Tom went into the 8th inning allowing only one run, eight hits while striking o
ut five. In his next outing he beat the Cubs again in Chicago, this time allowing one run in ten innings pitched. By the All Star break he was 8-5 with a 2.65 amongst the best in the league. He was picked to represent the Mets at the midsummer classic.

In the 1967 ALL star Game Seaver came into the game in the bottom of the 15th inning just as the NL took a 2-1 lead. Seaver got Tony Conigliaro to fly out and after walking Carl Yastrzemski he retired Bill Freehan & Ken Berry earning the save for the National League. Tom finished off the year winning the NL Rookie of the Year Award having the best season of any Met in their short six year history. Seaver was 16- 13 with 18 complete games, 170 strikeouts, and a 2.76 E.R.A., all Mets records, he pitched 251 innings with two shut outs.

In 1968 he struggled out of the gate going 2-5 with three no decisions into May although he pitched well. In his second start he thew ten innings allowing only two hits but not getting a decision in Houston. He went 14-7 the rest of the way, having a great June where he went 5-0. He finished the year winning 16 games again, and recorded over 200 strikeouts for the first of what would be nine consecutive seasons. He posted the leagues 7th best ERA at 2.20, throwing five shut outs & 14 complete games.

In 1969, Seaver was out right spectacular. He became the Mets first true superstar and the best pitcher in baseball. Seaver won a league-high 25 games and his first National League Cy Young Award. He posted a 2.20 ERA (4th best in the league) pitched 273 innings, with five shutouts & 18 complete games. He had another great June going 5-0 on s streak where he won eight straight de
cisions and 13 out of 14 from mid May.
On July 9, before a crowd of over 59,000 at Shea Stadium, Seaver threw 8 1/3 perfect innings against the division-leading Chicago Cubs. Then, rookie backup outfielder Jimmy Qualls lined a clean single to left field, breaking up Seaver's perfect game. He retired the next two batters to complete the 4-0 one-hit shutout.
From August 8th until the end of the season he won every decision going 10-0. He threw eight complete games which was every outing from August 26th through September. When the year ended he was named Sports Illustrated "Sportsman of the Year" award.
Post Season: In the 1969 NLCS Seaver opened the Series in Atlanta. He pitched seven innings and earned the win. It was not his best performance as he did allow 5 runs and seven hits, walking four & striking out only four. But the Mets bats supported him with nine runs. In the 1969 World Series he took the loss in the Series opener in Baltimore, getting out dueled by Mike Culleur. He gave up a leadoff HR to Don Buford and lost 4-1.

He came back to pitch Game #4 at Shea Stadium and Tom Terrific was brilliant in a ten inning outing. He allowed only one run on five hits, striking out six and only walking two. He began to tire in the ninth inning, putting runners on first & third with Brooks Robinson at bat. Brooks hit a screaming liner to right and Ron Swobodas made his famous spectacular game saving catch. J.C. Martins contraversial bunt RBI single sealed the win for Seaver.

Seaver closed out the 1960’s on top of the baseball world, earning the name Tom Terrific & The Franchise. His stats over the three year period in which he pitched was incredible. 57 wins 32 losses with 583 strikeouts with a 2.35 ERA 12 shutouts & 50 complete games.


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Thursday, November 12, 2009

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The pitching wonders (Seaver) works did not come swiftly - 07.24.72 - SI Vault

July 1972, Seaver talks about a sore arm:

After a few days, the shock of his injury diminished and Seaver's voice lost its panic. It became curt and passionless as he forced himself to approach his injury as he did all things relating to his talent—as an experience to be understood and absorbed for future use. His questions to the doctor became less pleas and more interrogations. "Which muscle is bruised? How did it get bruised? Will it get worse if I throw?" And finally, when it had healed and he had once again taken his place on the mound to pitch batting practice, he would be able to say: "I don't know many parts of my shoulder and arm, but I know this muscle, the teres major. It was bruised because I began throwing too hard too soon. I had not taken into consideration that I am getting older. I can't proceed during the spring at the same pace I did at 23. I have to expect my body to break down a little with each year. After all, I've pitched almost 1,400 innings in five years. I can't go on forever without a sore arm. I just have to be more careful in the future."

More here:

The pitching wonders he works did not come swiftly or - 07.24.72 - SI Vault

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

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Who Is Your 2009 New York Mets MVP? Mine Is Seaver.

My weekly column for Flushing University is reprinted below.




I decided to work on my highlights list for the 2009 New York Mets. Um.... I kinda liked the Church for Francoeur trade. I like what I've seen out of Francoeur so far, not that I have watched much, nor has he really done anything....but I like him. So that's highlight #1...a trade of an ok outfielder for an ok outfielder. Um... I sort of remember Santana being really awesome back in April and May. Um, remember that awesome game he pitched? Yeah, that one. Before everyone started getting hurt. That's highlight #2. What else.... I guess Gary Sheffield's 500th home run is going to make this awful list. Gary behaved for most of the season before taking his ball and going home because the Mets wouldn't trade him. Why didn't they trade him? They could have traded him for me and it wouldn't have been a bad trade given that Sheff just rides pine every single day. I kind of enjoyed the exhibition game against the Red Sox. Until I sat down and saw that the plexiglass blocked home plate. Let's recap...a trade, some vague pitching performance from 4 months ago, a guy hit one home run, and an exhibition game. No, the MVP of the 2009 Mets is Tom Seaver. He showed up on Opening Night (thanks Padres for that) and met us feel warm and fuzzy. Then he showed up again with the 1969 Mets and made us feel warm and fuzzy again. When Tom Seaver is the team MVP 22 years after retiring, something is wrong. Unfortunately, I can't think of anything good about this season. Maybe I have forgotten something, maybe the awful September has pushed me over the edge. What's your favorite memory of the 2009 Mets?

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Monday, September 07, 2009

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How Many Things Are Wrong With This Tom Seaver New York Mets Jersey?

There are several things incorrect about this Tom Seaver jersey, and if you click over to What Makes A Throwback Authentic? you will find out what's wrong with this one, plus you'll enjoy a solid jerseys discussion.

There are some inaccuracies in these 1969 Mets jerseys for sale as well, but I still think you'd look cool at Citi wearing a Kranepool.





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Tuesday, August 25, 2009

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Ending a six-year exile from the Mets, Tom Seaver - 04.18.83 - SI Vault

One of my favorite days of all time:

Ending a six-year exile from the Mets, Tom Seaver - 04.18.83 - SI Vault



The introduction of the starting lineup was made at 1:20. After the eighth batter, Catcher Ron Hodges, was introduced, Public Address Announcer Jack Franchetti said simply, "Batting ninth and pitching, now warming up in the bullpen, Number 41." No name, just the number. The cheering began.
At 1:29 No. 41 finished his warmups. His catcher, rookie Ronn Reynolds, asked him if he kept his warmup ball or took it to the mound with him. When Seaver asked why, Reynolds explained that there was a handicapped boy near the railing in the rightfield corner who'd asked him for a ball earlier, and maybe Seaver could give the kid the ball.
"I thought it might make his day," said Reynolds. "Heck, maybe it'll make his life." The fans were already on their feet and cheering when Seaver walked over to the stands to give the ball away. "That showed me so much," said Reynolds. "I had a tear in my eye."
Seaver then began his procession to the dugout. In the crowd were his wife, children, three sisters, mother and father. He tipped his hat, placed it back on his head, tipped it again, waved it twice, put it back on, tipped it once more, this time thrusting it skyward, and disappeared into the dugout.


You definitely want to read the full article!
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Tuesday, August 25, 2009

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Tom Seaver: Still The Franchise

Every Monday I write a column over at Flushing University.   This is this week's column.

April 18, 1983. Tom Seaver finishes warming up in the bullpen and walks down the right field line at Shea Stadium on his way to the mound. The place erupts. The Franchise had come home. George Thomas Seaver came back to Flushing again on Saturday night, and maybe it wasn't quite home, but it was close enough. After all these years, Tom Terrific is still The Franchise. As I think about the disaster than 2009 has been, I realize two things have made me smile, and Tom was in the middle of them. Since we're idiots, we opened our new stadium with a night game. We can debate until the cows come home about the Padres travel schedule, or the desire to keep Tuesday open in case of rain - but in the end it was disappointing. Shoulda been a day game. However, Tom was there in his 41 and he threw out the first pitch. I had that warm fuzzy feeling again, and was in love with my Metsies. Five months later, a season in ruins, Tom was there to give the speech and to captain our old heroes. That feeling returned for the first time in a long time. Last year the Mets closed down Shea with the all-time worst stadium closing in memory. A blown post-season, and an oddly times after-game New Orleans funeral. My memory of that day? Seaver and Piazza walking out into the distance. We're coming up on 50 years of this franchise. There's a lot of broken promises, let-downs, and shoula-beens. Nolan Ryan is top of mind this weekend. Doc and Darryl should be lining up for the Hall of Fame any day now, with at least three Met rings to their names. '88. '06. The horrific trifecta of '07, '08 and '09 joining the wonderful history of Bobby Bonilla and Vince Coleman. 50 years and there's one star above all stars. Someone else should have come along by now. Is David Wright the Chosen One, or is he going to wind up as Edgardo Alfonzo? He's The Franchise. Tom thanks for being around Flushing more often then you had been for most of the decade. I hope we continue to see you. I hope that statue of you gets placed in front of the rotunda sometime next summer.

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Monday, August 24, 2009

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Improbable Maybe, Impossible Never: The Words Of Tom Seaver At The 1969 New York Mets Celebration

Howie thank you very much, and all you fans of course another well deserved thank you to all of you.


People call us the Miracle Mets but nothing was impossible when you played for Gil Hodges.   


Improbable maybe, but impossible never.


With the first championship we gave validity to a franchise.  It's a thread that joins us as teammates to our children and our grandchildren, everybody on this ballclub and the fans, forever.


That perfect improbable glorious season when the 1969 Mets became World Champions.


You believed in us, we believed that we could make it happen and the trophy and the memories are ours forever, and the trophy serves as a memento that we were both correct.


We all cherish these memories, each and every day, each and every one of us, forever.


And on behalf of all of us standing out here in these white glorious Met home uniforms thank you all New York.


...


I think these are some of the best words said about the franchise and I would like to see the following words posted somewhere at Citi Field....just like Yankee Stadium has DiMaggio's quote, I'd like to see this, which I think is quite fitting.

Improbable maybe, impossible never.


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Friday, July 31, 2009

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Tom Seaver At The Intrepid Saturday

Tom Seaver is making the rounds promoting the below at the Intrepid.  Please note if you were planning on attending it has been moved to Saturday.

Movie Showing: Night at the Museum- Battle of the Smithsonian
When: Rain date; Saturday, August 1st
(Open to the public for FREE)
Time: Doors Open at 7:30PM
Movie begins at sundown.
Location: Intrepid Museum Complex

See NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: BATTLE OF THE SMITHSONIANunder the stars! Enjoy free admission, popcorn and more!*

Join us and legendary Hall of Fame Pitcher, Tom Seaver, in celebrating the men and women who serve our country and their families.

While supplies last*
Weather permitting – Rain Date: Saturday, August 1, 2009**
More here.



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Friday, July 10, 2009

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Sports Illustrated 1969 New York Mets Cover This Week

Look at this cover.  Look at the uniforms.

Does anyone dare argue with me that these look better than anything the 2009 Mets wear?

Why is this so hard for the Wilpon Regime?

Just wear these.

I'd like to know where they got these jackets.   Buying something blue and orange without black is almost as hard as buying New York Giants anything.




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Tuesday, June 16, 2009

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Tom Seaver Talks About Trade To Reds

Tip of the blue Mets hat to Neil Best in Newsday for posting this...give him some hits.   But for ease of access and since it's on Youtube anyway..here ya go.



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Monday, June 15, 2009

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Ton Seaver Talks About His Wines (Post)

Speaking of Seaver, the Post interviewed The Franchise about his winery.

"I love the hands-on, the learning part of it. It's a real thrill, and there are no airports and no airplanes," said Seaver, 64. "My commute to work is 90 seconds on foot with my two Labrador retrievers. It's a lot of work but I enjoy the work. A friend of mine told me, 'The best fertilizer is the owner walking the vineyard rows.' "

The full piece is here.

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Monday, June 15, 2009

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What If: Today's Media and The Seaver Trade

I'm going to admit right in front, the following is not an original thought.  The thought was inspired by a sentence in Jimmy Scott's blog but it's a great thought and one worth exploring.

What if we had today's media environment in June 1977.

Imagine three months of Mike and/or the Mad Dog killing Seaver for asking off the Mets, or killing the Mets every day for not paying the guy.

Imagine popping on Mets Blog and finding out the Mets had traded Seaver AND Kingman for a bunch of guys you've never heard of.   We'd all head on over to Mets Walkoffs and hope there was some cool stat about this Doug Flynn guy that we didn't see at first glance.

Time marches on and the Mets start to really suck.  Some righteous fat guy calling himself The Mets Police decides he hates Steve Henderson and starts piling on about how overrated he is.

Remember during the Art Howe years how the newspapers would put about a three paragraph Mets story in the paper once they were hopelessly eliminated?  The same would happen to the '77 Mets up against the Bronx Zoo (and did!).

Remember "Show up at Shea" and the stupid half-ass "children's park" they tried in right field for like a season and a half?  Try selling that to today's fan-base after a Seaver-trade.

Can you even imagine a fire sale in today's environment?   Break up the core?  Imagine waking up and finding out that while you slept the Mets traded Santana and Wright for some "prospects" - and they are trying to move Reyes and Beltran too.

Time marches on.  Matlack leaves.  Koosman leaves.   The Yankees win a World Series, and then make up 13 games on the Red Sox.   You're sitting in an empty ballpark in Flushing.   Blogger rage galore!   WFAN becomes all-Yankees all the time.   Fun times.

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Sunday, May 24, 2009

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Tom Seaver Wins 300th Game (Sports Illustrated)

Neil Best linked to this recently...pretty cool of Sports Illustrated to put up this article.


When Seaver finally took the mound after the festivities to honor Rizzuto, he found he had his good stuff. TheWhite Sox failed to take advantage of early opportunities and trailed 1-0 going into the sixth. But then they touched Joe Cowley and Brian Fisher for four runs and left it up to Seaver. In the eighth, a two-out single by New York's Don Mattingly put runners on first and third, but Seaver told pitching coach Dave Duncan he wanted to finish, and Duncan—subbing for ejected manager Tony La Russa—allowed him to face Dave Winfield. Seaver went to a full count and struck out Winfield on a changeup.
He ran into trouble again in the ninth. Rookie Dan Pasqua opened with a single. Seaver struck out Ron Hassey, and Harold Baines made a leaping grab of a Willie Randolph liner against the wall in right. After walking Mike Pagliaruloon four pitches, Fisk and Duncan went out to the mound to see if everything was all right. Fisk later said that to keep Duncan from taking Seaver out, "I would have picked Dune up and carried him back to the dugout." Seaver thereupon got pinch hitter Don Baylor to hit his first pitch into the air in left, and Nichols settled under it for the final out. There was something else in the air: Seaver's number is 41, as is that of losing pitcher Cowley, and the score of both this game and the Mets' victory that day was 4-1. Whatever the score, the very idea of a players' strike seemed far away on Sunday afternoon.


You know you want to read the whole thing.

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