Amazin’ Speed: Intentional or Accidental?

Andy Martino of the Daily News says the Mets were built for Citi Field:

Buried underneath the Mets offensive explosion Tuesday night was a possible reason for their home dominance this season: “We didn’t hit any home runs yesterday, and we scored 14 runs,” observed Jose Reyes, a few hours before hitting a home run, the hypocrite.

In that blowout, and last night save for Reyes’ blast, the Mets wore down the Tigers with an assault of singles, doubles, triples and stolen bases, the perfect skill set for cavernous Citi Field, where the Mets are 26-10 before last night’s game. The Mets are 21-7 in their last 28 games at home, the top record in baseball during that span.

“We know what it takes to be a successful team here,” said David Wright. “Our team is built around winning in a big ballpark. We’ve got speed, and guys who know how to run the bases.” (Daily News)

It’s hard to argue with the win-loss record. The Mets are certainly running and winning at home – ALOT. And it’s a good thing.

But were the Mets really built around speed? Does Omar Minaya deserve credit for recognizing the opportunities created by Citi Field and building a team based around speed? Or did it just kind of happen that way?

Let’s break it down!

Here is last night’s lineup:

1. Jose Reyes SS
2. Angel Pagan CF
3. David Wright 3B
4. Ike Davis 1B
5. Jason Bay LF
6. Jeff Francoeur RF
7. Henry Blanco C
8. Ruben Tejada 2B

1, 2, 3 – Reyes, Pagan, Wright

Obviously, much of the team’s speed is coming from the top three spots in the order. But Reyes and Wright have been a big part of the team’s overall offensive strategy for years, so you can’t really point to the presence of either to prove the Mets built this team around speed. Pagan’s presence in the lineup is a double accident – he was initially slated to play behind Gary Matthews Jr. until Carlos Beltran came back. Even now, MetsBlog is reporting the Mets are considering dealing Pagan to the Mariners for Cliff Lee. In other words, the Mets didn’t have plans for Pagan and still don’t seem to value his presence in the lineup for the long-term.

4, 5, 6 – Davis, Bay, Francoeur

Here’s where it gets interesting. Davis started the season in AAA and may not have seen MLB action for months if Mike Jacobs had performed. Jacobs of course, is a dead pull power hitter with no speed whatsoever. Davis doesn’t have much speed either, but he’s a cleanup hitter…

Bay was the big name that Omar Minaya went after this winter. He has flashed some speed in his career and he usually can be counted on in the 10-15 SB range. To his credit, Jerry Manuel has been sending Bay often this season, as he already has 10 steals on the year. But as far as giving Omar credit for bringing in Bay for his speed, it’s not accurate.

Francoeur is not a speed threat, but he already has a career-high 7 stolen bases this season. Again, if anyone deserves credit for this, it is Jerry Manuel.

7, 8 – Blanco, Tejada

Henry Blanco was filling in for Rod Barajas. Both were brought in this offseason and neither is a threat on the basepaths, but, then again, they are catchers.

Ruben Tejada stole 19 bases in AA last season, but he has yet to steal a base this season. It should also be noted that despite his natural speed, Tejada probably would have spent the year in the minors if Luis Castillo was healthy.

Conclusion

The way I see it, Omar didn’t bring in any speed this season and should not be given credit here. The only speed in this Mets lineup is here for one of three reasons:

  1. Existing Speed (Reyes/Wright)
  2. SB Created by Jerry Manuel (Francoeur/Bay)
  3. Accidental Speed Brought on By Injury (Pagan/Tejada)
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Quote of the Day: Brandon Inge on R.A. Dickey

Photo: NY Daily News

How tough was it to hit against R.A. Dickey’s knuckleball last night? Ask Brandon Inge:

“One of (the pitches) I thought was gonna hit me and then it came in for a strike,” said Brandon Inge. (Detroit Free Press)

Pretty scary, especially considering Inge had one of the Tigers’ four hits.

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June 24: Thursday Morning Mets Links

MetsToday – A recap of last night’s victory.

MetsBlog – Matt Cerrone has a recap of Omar Minaya’s interview on the Boomer and Carton show this morning.

NY Post – The Mets are still reeling from the Madoff debacle, allegedly…

Daily Stache – Michael Ganci adds Nick Evans to the list of great prospects the Mets might deal for a starting pitcher.

NBC – Jerry Seinfeld is getting rave reviews for his stint in the broadcast booth last night.

Amazin’ Avenue – Sam Page analyzes how the return of Carlos Beltran will affect the outfield situation.

NY Times – Bobby Valentine may be headed to Florida to manage the Marlins.

ESPN New York – Adam Rubin has an update on the Mets’ farm system. Jenrry Mejia started for Binghamton, allowing one run and two hits, while striking out three in 2 1/3 innings. Tim Teufel was ejected in the 7th inning. Sounds like an interesting game…

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Mets Game 71: Win Over Tigers

Mets 5 Tigers 0

The hometown advantage continues … as does the “R.A. Dickey Story” …

Game Notes

R.A. Dickey tossed 8 shutout innings, allowing only 4 hits, 2 walks, and striking out 4. This Hollywood story is showing no signs of ending anytime soon. He is the first pitcher in history to start his Mets career with 6 straight wins. Thank goodness John Maine, Oliver Perez, and Jon Niese all got injured at the same time and Dillon Gee crapped the bed in Buffalo or this guy would still be toiling in AAA.

Message to MLB: Jose Reyes is back. Jose went 3-for-4, including a leadoff triple and a solo homer, in scoring 3 runs. His defense has also stepped up the last few weeks.

Ike Davis had two singles and drove in two runs.

Ruben Tejada extended his hitting streak to 7 games, and is now hitting .255. No way you can trade away this guy for some rental like Cliff Lee.

Angel Pagan’s 10-game hitting streak came to an end, but more importantly, he left the game with an injury to his midsection / torso. Not good. The exact injury was not disclosed as of 9:45 PM after the game, but let’s hope it’s a minor tweak and not something major involving his back or oblique. In possibly related news, Cory Sullivan has been DFA’d by the Astros.

Next Mets Game

The Mets and Tigers meet for the final time at 7:10 PM on Thursday night. Hisanori Takahashi faces Armando Galarraga.

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June 23: Afternoon Mets Links and Open Thread

MetsToday – An inside look at the Detroit Tigers.

YourNabe – Stephen Brown has a profile of Brooklyn Cyclones manager Wally Backman.

ESPN New York – A look at R.A. Dickey’s great start and how it compares to the best starts of other prominent knuckleballers.

OnTheBlack – Kerel Cooper shares his All-Star picks.

FoxSports – Bob Klapisch says the Mets need to reconsider Johan Santana’s role as ace of the staff.

MetsBlog – Matt Cerrone says Johan Santana has only had two bad innings all year.

MetsBlog – The Mets have signed Ramon Ortiz. Are those crickets that I hear?

The Daily Stache – Tom Greenhalgh reports on the unintended consequence of getting screwed by Bernie Madoff (and Gary Matthews Jr.) – your ballpark starts to look like a Geocities website, circa 1999.

Long Live Shea Stadium – A scouting report on tonight’s opposing starting pitcher, Jeremy Bonderman.

TONIGHT’S GAME

The Mets (40-30) take on the Tigers (38-31) tonight at Citi Field. R.A. Dickey (5-0, 2.82) gets the start for the Mets and he will be opposed by Jeremy Bonderman (3-4, 4.06).

Discuss…

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June 23: Wednesday Morning Mets Links

Daily Stache – Michael Ganci doesn’t want the Mets to trade the farm for Cliff Lee.

MetsBlog – Matt Cerrone seems to be confirming that the Mets will not trade for Cliff Lee. It looks like they will stick with what they have or trade for a lesser SP. Meaningful games in September, here we come!

Big League Stew – David Brown agrees with Joe Janish – Jerry Manuel was foolish to let Jon Niese come back after last night’s rain delay.

ESPN New York – Jerry Manuel defended his decision to bring back Niese by saying something about a no-hitter. Seriously?

Wall Street Journal – Mike Sielski has an interesting article about how Jerry Manuel learned how to manage by playing minor league ball for Jim Leyland. I don’t see any resemblance in the way they manage, but if you do, please share it in the comments section.

OnTheBlack – An interview with the batboy tasked with picking up the bats and balls that Wally Backman threw onto the field during his epic ejection.

ESPN New York – Adam Rubin has a profile on Brooklyn Cyclones outfielder Cory Vaughn and his battle with Type 1 juvenile diabetes.

And via Hot Foot, Mets fifth draft pick Matt den Dekker (Twitter) making an amazing catch during the College World Series. Check out the profile of den Dekker over at Mack’s Mets.


EMBED-Floridas Matt Den Dekker CWS Catch v UCLA – Watch more free videos

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Inside Look: Detroit Tigers

Generally I like to get these Q&As up before the series starts, but I was negligent in my duties as a blogger and took too much time in getting questions to fellow ESPN SweetSpot blogger Mike McClary of The Daily Fungo. Mike was kind enough to answer them pretty quickly, and you can read his perspective below.

Additionally, you may want to visit The Daily Fungo to listen to me answering questions regarding the Mets on The Detroit Tigers Podcast.

1. The Tigers currently sit in second place, a game and a half behind the Twins and four games ahead of the third-place White Sox. Is this where you expected them to be in the preseason? Why or why not? Continue reading

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Mets Game 70: Win Over Tigers

Mets 14 Tigers 6

Usually, a “laugher” like this is fun to watch. But when there is a 58-minute rain delay in the middle of it, it can kind of drag on and put a “dampener” on the evening.

Though, I’ll take it!

Game Notes

If anyone can find something to complain about in a 14-6 victory, it’s me. And I’m steamed.

Why? Because Jon Niese was sent out to pitch the fourth inning after not only a 58-minute rain delay but a lengthy offensive rally by the Mets that made the score 10-zip. As a result, Niese sat for a good hour and twenty minutes or so between pitches. Anyone who has even a rudimentary understanding about how the body works (and how it recovers), knows that going back into action after that long a time is not only difficult, it’s downright dangerous. There are some chemical reactions and other things that happen inside the body, with lactic acid, glycogen, carbohydrates, and protein when the body is at rest after intense activity (yes, pitching a baseball repetitively at 90+ MPH is an “intense activity”). I’m not an expert on the subject but I know enough to know that by the time Niese went back to the mound, his body was in “recovery mode”, not “active mode” (if there is an expert out there who can support / deny this with specific details, please comment below). Workout buffs know what I’m talking about, and know the dangers of trying to do something strenuous while the body is in a “shutdown” / recovery period. Muscles are devoid of glycogen, lactic acid is building up, tissue repair is beginning, and the body is thereby vulnerable to injury. The Mets trainers should know all about this, and shame on Jerry Manuel / Dan Warthen for not seeking or heeding their advice.

As it turned out, Niese did not pitch well at all after returning to the mound in the fourth, yet Manuel sent him back out in the fifth. Why? I guess because he wanted Niese to pitch five full innings and thereby earn a win. Sorry, but padding stats is secondary to a) health and b) winning the game. Eventually Niese was removed, but not before allowing 6 runs on 7 hits and 3 walks in 4 2/3 innings. It could’ve been worse, as he left the game with the bases loaded but Fernando Nieve struck out Danny Worth to end the fifth inning.

OK, I’m descending from the soapbox. On to the positives.

Nieve was awarded with the win for his 2 innings of shutout ball.

Angel Pagan went 4-for-6, only a homerun shy of the cycle, driving in 4 runs and scoring thrice.

David Wright was 3-for-3 with two walks, two RBI, two runs scored. His first RBI of the game gave him 615 for his career, passing Ed Kranepool for fourth on the all-time Mets list. Thank goodness … seeing Kranepool anywhere in historical offensive records is an embarrassment.

Ike Davis drove in three runs with three hits. Jose Reyes scored three runs with three hits.

The top three hitters in the lineup — Reyes, Pagan ,and Wright, — combined for 10 hits, nine runs scored and seven RBI. Add in Davis’ 3 RBI and you could say that batters 5 through 9 were slackers!

Bobby Parnell made his first appearance of 2010, needing 21 pitches to get 3 outs in holding an 8-run lead in the 8th inning. He threw a lot of high heat, 95-97 MPH.

Jay Sborz of the Tigers made his MLB debut by hitting the first batter he faced to load the bases, then hit the next batter to force in a run. By the time he left the game, he allowed 5 runs in two-thirds of an inning (67.50 ERA). He looked very sad as he walked back to the dugout — like he was on the brink of tears. But I’m sure a graham cracker sandwich of roasted marshmallow and chocolate would have lifted Sborz’ spirits.

Next Mets Game

The Mets and Tigers meet again in Flushing on Wednesday at 7:10 PM. Undefeated R.A. Dickey faces Jeremy Bonderman. The game will be televised by ESPN.

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