Mets Birthdays: The Francos

Happy Birthday John Franco!

Today is the 51st birthday of one of the most beloved Mets, Brooklyn-born John Franco. He wore the Mets uniform for a staggering 14 years. 14 years! During his tenure in Queens, he tallied 48 wins, 56 losses, a nice 3.10 ERA to go along with an impressive 276 saves and All-Star appearances. What made for an impressive career as a closer, was that he lacked the typical closer repertoire. Not a flamethrower, Franco was one of those crafty lefties you hear so much about. Being one of the few screwball pitchers around, hitters were not be able to figure him out. His saves were of the cardiac variety, but Franco got the job done.

However, John Franco provided much more then stats over the years. He eventually became the leader of not only the bullpen but of the entire team. Franco was named team captain in 2001, and served as such thru 2004. As one of the rare players to be embraced by teammates, the media, and fans John Franco will always remain a favorite in Flushing.

As it is a busy day for celebrations today, We should also send a birthday shout out to another Franco, the immortal Julio Franco. Who, shockingly is not on anyone’s roster. Perhaps at 52 he can still contribute? No? As a Met, he pinch ran for Carlos Delgado, becoming the oldest player to do so. He still plays a part in helping out the Mets these days as well, Julio Franco is the manager of the Mets’ Gulf Coast League rookie squad. A fine role model for young Brandon Nimmo to learn from.

Also celebrating birthdays today: Ed Hearn (51), Pat Strange (31), and Prentice Redman (32)

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Pedro Beato as a Starter

Last week, Terry Collins expressed his opinion of Pedro Beato moving to a starting role — something he says he hadn’t yet discussed with Sandy Alderson but was planning to bring up at the end of the season.

Does Beato profile as a starter? Does he have the makeup and stuff to handle starting at the MLB level?
Continue reading

Posted in Opinion and Analysis | Tagged | 3 Comments

Mets Game 127: Loss to Phillies

Phillies 10 Mets 0

And I thought Sunday’s defeat was difficult to stomach. Continue reading

Posted in Mets 2011 Games | 4 Comments

Blog Roundup: Monday Edition

The Mets were swept by a superior Brewers team over the weekend, including a heartbreaking loss on Saturday.  In other news, there’s this rumor about trying Mike Pelfrey as the closer.

To the blogs:

  • Daily Stache looks at the frustrating seasons of Pelfrey and Angel Pagan, and the possibility the Mets could non-tender them.
  • Amazin’ Avenue says there may be an argument for making Pelfrey a closer. 
  • Midwestropolitan takes a deeper look at the closer situation in 2012.
  • Mets360 will be using the hashtag #BlameCollins from now on.
  • Loge13 has footage of a young speedster the Mets are scouting.  Hint: This prospect escaped a Queens butcher and was last spotted sprinting down Liberty Ave.
  • Kranepool Society has one for us: audio of a special bloggers interview with R.A. Dickey.

There’s the roundup.  Keep checking out Mets Today to help you get through the dog days.

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Phillies Put Season in Perspective

With a three-game series in Philadelphia beginning today, I found it mildly surprising that the Phillies already have 81 wins — and there’s still over a week left in the month of August.

Think about that: they have 81 wins and still have 36 games to play in the regular season. So if they play just two games over .500 the rest of the way — they’re currently 37 games over that mark — they’ll finish with Continue reading

Posted in Opinion and Analysis | 5 Comments

Taking a Look at Who the Mets Should Add to their 40-Man Roster on September 1st

After being swept in rather embarrassing fashion at the hands of the playoff-bound Milwaukee Brewers this weekend at Citi Field, it became clear to Mets players, fans, and management that this incarnation of the New York Mets has no shot at reaching the 2011 MLB playoffs. So the prudent move right now for the organization to do is to utilize the last month and a half of this season to deeply evaluate the organization’s talent levels especially in the upper tiers (Double-A on up to the Majors). The best possible way to do this is to get some of these young players actual MLB game experience, which is exactly why the MLB created the whole “expanding rosters to 40 players on September 1st” rule. Here are some top candidates for the Mets to call up from he minors to fill out the up-to-40 man roster: Continue reading

Posted in Mets Minors, Pitching Staff | Tagged , , , , | 5 Comments

What To Do With Angel Pagan?

It’s Angel Pagan Day at MetsToday; this is a post by Dave Gogel, so please direct your feedback to him. — Joe

2010 was a banner year for Angel Pagan. He was finally healthy and getting an opportunity to play, and Pagan took full advantage. He produced a sexy slash line of .290/.340/.425 to go with 11 bombs, 69 RBI, and 37 stolen bases. Pagan also played a golden quality center field, making the cavern seem a bit smaller. His production had many a Met fan giddy and gave the anti-Beltran clan more ammo. Not only was he finally healthy, but his penchant for terrible baseball decisions in the field on the base paths were no longer apparent. So did the Mets have a late bloomer on their hands, and someone to hold the fort in center while some of the kids developed? Continue reading

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Angel Pagan in the Leadoff Spot

On August 1, Angel Pagan had a .239 batting average, .308 OBP, and .651 OPS. In short, he was in the midst of a dreadful season. After Jose Reyes went on the DL, Pagan took over the leadoff spot in the order. For the month of August, Pagan is hitting .377 with a .403 OBP and .977 OPS — quite a hot streak. It made me wonder if entering the leadoff spot in the order had anything to do with the drastic change in Pagan’s offensive performance. Continue reading

Posted in Opinion and Analysis | Tagged | 1 Comment