Tonight’s Mets Lineup vs. Marlins

Here is the lineup the Mets will send to bat against Marlins pitcher Clay Hensley:

Angel Pagan – CF
Willie Harris – 2B
Dan Murphy – 3B
Scott Hairston – RF
Lucas Duda – 1B
Jason Bay – LF
Josh Thole – C
Ruben Tejada – SS
Chris Capuano – P

It appears that Jason Bay will not be benched after all — or at least, not yet. Interesting to see Scott Hairston in the lineup against the righthanded Hensley. Yes, Hairston is on fire, but his hot streak has at least something to do with facing pitchers against whom he has excellent history. Whatever. Maybe he’ll stay hot and hit enough to become a legitimate trading chip.

Here is the lineup of Fish that will swim to the plate:

Emilio Bonifacio – 3B
Omar Infante – 2B
Logan Morrison – LF
Hanley Ramirez – SS
Gaby Sanchez – 1B
Mike Stanton – RF
Mike Cameron – CF
John Buck – C
Clay Hensley – P

If you missed it, former Met Mike Cameron was acquired a few weeks back from the Red Sox to solidify centerfield and help create a new clubhouse culture. Of course, that “intangibles” stuff is pure malarkey. I’m sure the Marlins would be 12-4 over their last 16 even if Milton Bradley was added to the clubhouse instead of Cameron. And Jack McKeon‘s guidance has nothing to do with it, either. Riiiiiiiiiight.

Hensley is typically a middle reliever, and this will be his first start since July 24, 2008. It is also his first appearance since going on the DL with a shoulder sprain in early June. He has been conditioned to throw about 65-85 pitches, so expect him to be out of the game early — perhaps by the fourth frame, if the Mets use their typical patient approach.

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Bay May Be Benched

According to Metsblog’s Matthew Cerrone, Terry Collins suggested that Jason Bay could lose playing time to Scott Hairston — who has 4 hits in his last 6 at-bats while Bay in his last 35 at-bats is hitting .100 with 0 RBIs dipping his average to .234.

Bay commented to MLB.com on his recent struggles.

“If I’m in the lineup, I’m in the lineup. If I’m not, that’s not my decision to make. I kind of felt like before the break started, things started going well. Obviously I haven’t carried that momentum, but I’m still going out there trying to get that momentum that I had. … Imagine how frustrated the fans are – you think that I enjoy it? You think I enjoy what I’m doing out there? I’m more frustrated than anybody. But I’ve got to come back and do it every single day, and I can’t get too caught up in the frustration because I gotta come back and do it everyday. You gotta keep battling”

Collins is expected to speak with Bay prior to Monday’s game.

Is benching Bay the right move or should he be allowed to play through his struggles at the plate?

Posted in Latest Mets News | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Blog Roundup: Monday Edition

Looks like somebody has a case of the Mondays.  The Mets lost 2 of 3 to the Phillies over the weekend, which isn’t bad considering the Mets fielded a AAA lineup plus Jason Bay.  Tonight, the Mets play a makeup game with the Marlins at Citi Field, and Jose Reyes will play a rehab game in Brooklyn.

Time to take a spin around the blogosphere:

  • MetsBlog takes a look at Jason Bay’s struggles, and notes that the fans have been relatively easy on him.
  • Amazin’ Avenue has a Minor League wrapup that includes David Wright’s continuing rehab and Val Pasucci’s Hobbs-esque exploits with the bat.
  • Real Dirty Mets says the Mets are a roller coaster, and there’s nothing to do but sit back and enjoy the ride.
  • Mets Lifer is just happy that the injury-devastated “worst lineup in baseball” won a game. 
  • Midwestropolitan invents a new baseball cliche with the help of Jason Bay.
  • Rising Apple is losing patience with the increasingly frustrating Mike Pelfrey.
  • Metstradamus thinks Mets fans should be realistic about the trade deadline.

And for all the latest Mets news, keep checking out Mets Today.

Posted in Around the Blogs | 3 Comments

Jose Reyes Rap Video

We can’t see Jose Reyes on the ballfield yet, but we can watch him rap:

Posted in Off Topic | Tagged | 4 Comments

Mets Game 94: Loss to Phillies

Phillies 8 Mets 5

The Mets drop back to exactly .500. The Phillies go to 24 games over .500. There are 68 games left. I’m starting to doubt that there is enough time to close the gap. But hey, ya gotta believe! Continue reading

Posted in Mets 2011 Games | Tagged , , | 7 Comments

Mets Game 93: Win Over Phillies

Mets 11 Phillies 2

Let’s hope the Mets have their way with Cole Hamels like this when they face him in the postseason as well. Continue reading

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Today’s Mets Lineup vs. Phillies

Here is the lineup being sent to the plate against Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Cole Hamels:

Angel Pagan – CF
Justin Turner – 2B
Scott Hairston – RF
Daniel Murphy – 3B
Jason Bay – LF
Ronny Paulino – C
Nick Evans – 1B
Ruben Tejada – SS
Jonathon Niese – P

Carlos Beltran is out with flu-like symptoms, so that’s why Hairston is in right field. However that doesn’t explain why Hairston is batting third. The reason he’s there is because in his career, he’s killed Hamels — to the tune of a 1.389 OPS, with 3 HR in 17 ABs. Granted, it’s a small sample size, but what does Terry Collins have to lose? If the Mets lose this game — and tomorrow’s — their “playoff push” is pretty much over.

On another note, nice to see Nick Evans getting a start. I’d really, really like to see him get a few starts a week, get into a groove, and see what happens. Who knows, that may happen after a few more players are dealt away.

I’m liking the Mets’ chances in this game. First, Hamels struggled a bit heading into the break. Second, several Mets in the lineup have good history against him. Again, small sample sizes, but Hairston, Murphy, Turner, Evans, Bay, and Paulino all are hitting .333 or above against Hamels, and Pagan has a .290 AVG against him.

Posted in Mets 2011 Games | 2 Comments

Jason Isringhausen: Circle Complete

Jason Isringhausen is not supposed to be in discussion to close for the Mets. Jason Isringhausen is not supposed to be in baseball. Yet, Jason Isringhausen is now one of the Mets closers.

He went from a feel good story to the set up man; Jason Isringhausen has been the most surprising Met this season. Right, there’s Dillon Gee, but he’s not 38 years old. Gee didn’t go through what Izzy has. Gee never had 5 major arm surgeries (even though he’s on the cusp of one). The curious season of Jason Isringhausen is a reminder of where Jason should have been his whole career.

A 44th round pick in 1991, he was traded in 1999 to the Oakland Athletics for reliever Billy Taylor, who lasted half a season with the Mets. He then went on to dominate in Oakland, saving 75 games over two and a quarter seasons. He led his team to the playoffs, solidifying Billy Beane’s theory of Moneyball.

He went to St. Louis as a free agent in 2002 and led the league in saves in 2004 with 47. He was second in the league in 2005 with a 2.14 earned run average. Jason Isringhausen was on the team that beat the Mets in Game 7 of the NLCS in 2006.

He was supposed to be closing for the Cardinals that season. He was the closer until a hip injury sidelined him for the post season. And here he is, 11 years after being traded because manager Bobby Valentine didn’t want to use him as a reliever. “You wouldn’t use an Indy car as a taxi in New York City,” said Valentine to the New York Daily News in 1999. Bobby Valentine was wrong.

The Mets announced that Pedro Beato, Bobby Parnell, and Jason Isringhausen will be splitting the duties of closer after trading Francisco Rodriguez. Isringhausen is not supposed to have a 3.14 ERA.  He was supposed to be a media stunt. He’s 7 saves from 300 in his career. He is closing in Flushing.

They say “what goes around comes around”, and in the case of Izzy, it’s true — he’s come full circle.

Did you expect Izzy to be this good, back in February when the Mets signed him? Post your thoughts in the comments.

Posted in Opinion and Analysis | Tagged , | 2 Comments