Mets Fire Tom Nieto

tom_nieto.jpgIt was a long time coming, but the Mets finally came to their senses and fired the man who has been the biggest roadblock to their success: Tom Nieto.

The fact Nieto wasn’t let go after last season was unconscionable. Everyone and his brother knew that Nieto was the sole reason for the Mets’ “collapse” at the end of the 2007 campaign. His atrocious management of the bullpen catchers made it very difficult for relief pitchers to play cards in the bullpen, and there were times he outwardly refused to purchase hot dogs for Aaron Sele (I got this from a very reliable source “close to the team’s thinking”). In fact, his attitude was so deplorable that one time, while Nieto was sitting on the railing adjacent to the Shea scoreboard, Carlos Beltran purposely hit a homerun off his head. To get Beltran fired up, you really have to be despicable.

Remarkably, rather than eliminate the problem, Mets management chose to hide it, PROMOTING Nieto to first-base coach. Anyone with a tiny bit of baseball knowledge immediately saw Nieto’s grave flaws standing in the coach’s box. His inability to get batters to reach the first-base bag during the San Diego series glaringly exposed his weakness in his new role, and his helmet was at least one size too small. Apparently, that was the last straw for the Mets’ front office. Many inside the organization feel that Willie Randolph’s refusal to assign someone else as the first base coach was the main reason for his own dismissal.

Good luck and good riddance, Mr. Nieto. May you poison some other baseball organization with your disconsolate coaching skills.

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Mets Fire Willie Randolph

Scoundrels!

The Mets fired Willie Randolph in the middle of the night, only hours after winning a ballgame on the Left Coast that ended around 1:20 am EST. The timing and gutlessness was reminiscent of the Baltimore Colts’ move to Indianapolis in the wee hours of the morning back in 1984.

There are so many things wrong with this move I’m not sure where to start. First and foremost, Willie Randolph might be part of, but is the least of, the problem with the Mets this year. He was given a fragile roster of hasbeens and asked to make it into a championship club. The people — both inside the organization and the pundits — who believe the Mets “have the talent to go to the postseason” either haven’t seen any teams outside New York or are lost in a time warp. Yes, if this were 2003 or 2004, then a roster headed by Pedro Martinez, Orlando Hernandez, Carlos Delgado, Luis Castillo, and Moises Alou would certainly be expected to go places. But all of those players are well past their prime — yet somehow people expect them to play like they’re 29 again (and healthy).

Beyond the ill decision is the timing. I’ll play “master of the obvious” and point out that it was unprofessional, illogical, and downright stupid to fly Randolph and his coaching staff cross-country, knowing full well they were going to be let go within 24 hours. The fact it was done in the middle of the night, while most of the Right Coast was dead asleep, speaks volumes about the front office’s lack of media savvy — which is a problem when you are headquartered in the media capital of the world. MetsToday reader “Walnutz” said it best:

the only thing missing surrounding the NY Mets lately is the Ringling Brothers theme music.

If you knew you were going to fire Willie Randolph, why make him make the trip to California? You didn’t want to spoil Father’s Day? Because your team is so gosh-darn “family friendly”? Newsflash: Father’s Day is a made-up holiday invented by Hallmark to sell greeting cards — so you don’t have to plan your personnel decisions around it. Firing Willie on Sunday meant nothing to the fathers — particularly the ones who had to feel like schmucks when they had to tell their kids, “sorry, you can’t run around the field like I promised”.

Also, how do you fire a manager after he’s just won three out of the last four games? Another MetsToday reader, Isuzudude, shares my thoughts exactly:

Sometimes I get the feeling that the Mets like to make it difficult to be a fan of their teams’. Willie finally starts showing a little personality, the team finally starts showing some spunk, and now is the time they decide they’ve seen enough?

And then some.

Finally, Mike Pelfrey begins turning a corner, and appears to be grabbing the bull by the horns and taking a rotation spot. Finally, Pedro Martinez returns from the DL and looks like he might be a valid #3 starter. Finally, Carlos Delgado starts hitting — and hustling. Finally, Luis Castillo is approaching his career average of .295. Finally, Carlos Beltran is hitting like a $119M man. Finally, Aaron Heilman puts together three consecutive strong relief performances. Finally, the Mets are hustling, keeping up the “fight”, and coming from behind to win games late. Finally, the Mets add a long-needed “gamer” in Trot Nixon.

Finally, Willie has most of the tools to win ballgames, has a team that cares again, and NOW you let him go? Absolutely despicable.

And I echo Isuzudude’s comment — the Mets DO make it tough for me to root for their team. Had they fired Willie Randolph last week, after losing four games in a row in San Diego, I’d have been more accepting. Not happy, but at least I’d be able to understand. To ax him now, right when the Mets look like they’ve found some passion and starting to “run on all cylinders”, is a major letdown. I’ll continue to watch every game, but I’m going to have a hard time caring one way or the other for a while.

Best of luck to Willie and Tom Nieto (and just what did Nieto do wrong coaching first base? ah, forget it).

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Mets Game 69: Win Over Angels

Mets 9 Angels 6

It would appear that Willie Randolph has his job for another day. Perhaps his coaching staff will remain intact for at least another 24 hours as well.

However, the game was not won without dramatics.

For most of the game, it appeared it would be an easy win, for once. The Mets exploded for eight runs against the mighty Angels, with the appropriately titled “designated hitter” Carlos Beltran leading the way with two solo homeruns.

And by golly, Mike Pelfrey might have — dare I suggest it? — finally turned a corner. Ever since I criticized him here and on MetsBlog, “Big Pelf” has pitched back-to-back-to-back outstanding games. He still doesn’t have an offspeed pitch, but he’s spotted his four-seamer and sinker well enough to mow down hitters. If he ever does develop a change-up or overhand curve, the Mets will have a legitimate ace.

Pelfrey pitched into the seventh inning before running out of gas, allowing six earned runs on 7 hits and two walks. He struck out none in a 113-pitch effort. Though he allowed five runs, it was only because Willie Randolph chose to push him through that seventh frame. Unfortunately, Pelfrey lost his command and left the game with runners on first and second and none out, yielding to Pedro Feliciano. It was Feliciano’s third game in two days, and he couldn’t stop the bleeding — by the time he exited, the score was 8-6 and there were runners on the corners, one out, and Vladimir Guerrero at the plate.

And then, it appeared that Willie Randolph was ready to give up his job, because out came Aaron Heilman from the bullpen.

The Angels fans probably weren’t aware, but every Mets fan still awake at 12:40 am EST knew the lead would be blown before midnight.

But a funny thing happened — Aaron Heilman struck out Guerrero on three pitches. Then, Aaron struck out Torii Hunter to end the threat. Wow.

Duaner Sanchez came on in the eighth and set the Angels down 1-2-3 on six pitches. Billy Wagner was called on to finish the game, and he decided to make things interesting, putting runners on first and second to bring the tying run to the plate with one out. Garrett Anderson drilled a Wagner slider to Jose Reyes’ glove, and Jose stepped on second base to double off Chone Figgins and end the game. Whew!

Notes

I love watching Trot Nixon bust it down the line on a routine grounder to second base. Love it.

Also loving Willie Randolph scoffing at the 100-pitch count.

David Wright drove in a run with a booming double that nearly left the park, his 19th of the year. Luis Castillo collected another two hits, and his average is slowly creeping back up to his .290-.295 standard. Marlon Anderson also had two hits, both doubles; he started in left field and Endy Chavez patrolled center with Beltran designated to hit.

Pelfrey faced 27 batters, and 13 of them hit ground balls.

In the top of the ninth, Jose Reyes hit a bloop single into right-center, took a wide turn that induced a throw behind him to first base, and he took off for second — making it easily. I’m not sure I ever saw that before. Interestingly enough, it was scored a double, his second of the night. He was bunted to third by Castillo and came home on a David Wright sac fly — something which has become fairly routine this year.

The emergency broadcast system decided to run a test at 1:02 am EST, makng a caustic, staticky, nasty noise erupt from my TV and waking everyone else in the house. Nice timing. By the way, has the ebs ever been used? Does it actually have a purpose? The only time it might have been used in my lifetime was 9/11, and I’m 99.9% sure it wasn’t employed then. If not then, when? I digress …

The home plate ump was really tight on Billy Wagner. There were at least four pitches that could have gone either way, which were called balls. Wagner, by the way, did not have his good velocity, hitting only 92-93 on the gun. That bothers me.

Luis Castillo gave a postgame interview for the first time since … ever. And he DOES speak English!

Also in the postgame, Willie Randolph relayed that he remarked to Jose Reyes, “you pulled the okey-doke on Mathews”, referring to the above-mentioned single-turned-double. He said Reyes nodded and smiled, to which Willie replied, “you know what that means?” “No.” “So why’d you say you did? … but that’s just Jose ….” Great stuff, Willie … stay loose, baby!

Next Game

Another 10:05 pm EST start (yawn!). Johan Santana goes against a Lackey named John.

Posted in Mets 2008 Games | 5 Comments

Inherited Runners

A comment by loyal reader Micalpalyn motivated me to post the following stats. This is a list of the main Mets relievers, the number of games they’ve appeared in, the number of runners they’ve inherited (IR), the number of those runners who scored (IRS), and the percentage of runners that remain stranded (%).

[TABLE=30]

Generally speaking, “acceptable” levels are around 75%, and anything above 80% is considered excellent. I can’t find a source that lists team totals for this stat, but I think the Mets are about average in the area. If anyone can point me to these numbers, please post a link below.

For comparison, Chad Bradford in 2006 inherited 58 runners and allowed only 10 to score — a rate of 83%.

Interestingly, Heilman’s current numbers — 7 out of 14 — are IDENTICAL to his entire 2006 campaign. Aaron appeared in 58 games in ’06, but inherited just 14 runners. In ’05, he appeared in 53 games, inherited 28 runners, and allowed 8 of them to score (71%). Last year, in 81 games, Heilman had similar numbers to ’05 — allowing 8 of 29 inherited runners to score (72% stranded).

In comparison, Feliciano inherited 60 runners last year, and stranded 12 (80% stranded). Contrast that to Smith, who last year inherited 51 but allowed 25 to score (51% stranded).

In his brilliant but brief 2006, Duaner Sanchez appeared in 49 games, inherited just 10 runners, and allowed 2 of them to score (80% stranded).

It doesn’t take a genius to figure out what’s going on here:

1. Sanchez has historically been given the opportunity to start innings, and/or is brought in with the bases empty.

2. Looking at Smith’s extreme contrast from this year to last, there’s no way to guess whether a pitcher will do well stranding runners from year to year.

3. If anyone is “reliable” in this area from year to year (though far from spectacular), it would be Feliciano.

4. Looking at Heilman’s history, it would seem that a manager should consider bringing him in to start innings (career: 30 of 85 inherited runners score, for a strand rate of 65%). Better yet, convert him to a starting pitcher. It’s pretty clear he doesn’t pitch well with other people’s runners on base, so stop putting him into those situations!.

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Mets Game 68: Win Over Rangers

Mets 4 Rangers 2

After nearly coming from behind to beat the Rangers in the first game of the day, the Mets rode their momentum to take the “rubber match” and win the series.

Pedro Martinez pitched very well, going six innings and allowing two runs — one earned — on six hits and one walk. He was removed for pinch-hitter Robinson Cancel in the bottom of the sixth with the score tied, two outs and the bases loaded. Cancel became the unlikely hero, hitting a 75-bouncer through the middle to score two runners and put the Mets ahead 4-2.

In stark contrast to their awful performance in the first game of the day, the Mets bullpen shut down the Rangers the rest of the way. Perfect innngs were thrown by Pedro Feliciano, Duaner Sanchez, and Billy Wagner to preserve the victory.

Notes

David Wright was 3-for-4 with a walk and an RBI, and has boosted his average to .276.

Luis Castillo, Damion Easley, and Carlos Beltran each had two hits apiece.

I think (hope) it’s safe to say that Willie Randolph has a job for at least another week.

Next Game

The Mets fly back to the Left Coast to face the Angels for a 10:05 pm EST ballgame. Mike Pelfrey goes to the mound against Jered Weaver.

Posted in Mets 2008 Games | 8 Comments

Mets Game 67: Loss to Rangers

Rangers 8 Mets 7

It was a tough loss, but a good loss. Unlike the Mets of April and May, these Mets did not give up after they were down by six, but continued fighting and very nearly came out with a dramatic, come-from-behind win.

In fact, had Sandy Alomar waved Brian Schneider around on a base hit in the eighth, the game might have been tied and the outcome a different story. Instead, Alomar tried to make up for his mistake by sending Schneider on a fly ball a few moments later — another terrible move, considering Schneider’s speed, Milton Bradley’s arm, and the fact that the Mets’ best hitter with men in scoring position (Luis Castillo) hitting next.

As it was, the inning ended with the Mets down 8-5 instead of 8-2, and they continued to fight in the ninth, coming very close to pulling out a win.

In all honesty, I’d be fine with the Mets losing 100 games this year, if they lost them this way. Give me a 100% effort over nine innings, every night — that’s all I ask to see as a fan.

Notes

The two Carloses hit homeruns — for Delgado his 9th, for Beltran his 8th. Delgado went 2-for-5 and is nearing the .250 mark. Isuzudude’s job is to let me know when that figure is reached, so keep an eye peeled.

John Maine pitched better than his line suggested. He had given up three runs in six innings, then ran into trouble with one out in the seventh. Willie Randolph removed him with runners on the corners, but you could see that Maine wanted to stay in and work his way out of the jam. But having thrown 105 pitches, Willie chose to bring in Pedro Feliciano, who proceeded to let both inherited runners score. The bullpen was awful, with only Aaron Heilman pitching a shutout inning.

Dirtdog Trot Nixon had a grand debut as a New York Met, going 2-for-3 with a double, two walks, a stolen base, and a run scored. Pedal to the metal, baby!

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Why I’m Rooting for Randolph

Underdog_metswillie.jpgThink about it — why are you a Mets fan? Is it because you demand perfection? Because you expect your team to finish in first place and go deep into the postseason every year? Of course not — there’s already a local team with that attitude.

We are Mets fans because we hate the Yankees, and hate everything the Yankees stand for. For many, it’s killing us that the Mets have the highest payroll in the NL. While we may have been happy to have obtained Pedro Martinez and Carlos Beltran in the winter following 2004, the fact that they both received extraordinary contracts was a tough pill to swallow. As Mets fans we root for the underdog, and when our team is “supposed to” finish in first, it throws the concept of being a Mets fan out of whack.

For all of 2007 and the beginning of 2008, the Mets were not underdogs. As a result, we were transformed into Mets fans with the attitude and expectations of Yankees fans. Yuck.

For those who can remember back to graveyard era of Art Howe, the Mets were in a shambles. They had brought in high-priced players who were absolute busts. They were old, tired, lazy, and playing with diminished skills (sound familiar?). The bland and lifeless Howe was a symbol of the team. The Wilpons made several moves to right the ship. They fired their GM, fired Howe, and brought in the colorful and enigmatic Omar Minaya. Minaya, in turn, hired proven winner and local hero Willie Randolph. The process began over a year before, as evidenced by this quote from an article in the New York Times on June 13th 2003:

This ship has been off course for three seasons, not because of a lack of resources, but because of a lack of judgment. The Mets began the year with a payroll of about $120 million, which is second only to the Yankees’ roughly $180 million. They have nothing to show for it but a clubhouse of aging stars with big names, big contracts and big injuries. It’s all Steve Phillips’s fault.

He sold Wilpon on the notion that you had to win with big names in New York, that the fans weren’t patient enough to wait for rebuilding, that you had to do it now. Forget the farm system.

But Wilpon apparently came to the conclusion that the Mets’ salvation was not exclusively found in high-priced stars. Yesterday, he made an intriguing observation. He said he knows now that a hefty payroll does not ensure success. ”We’ve learned that painfully.”

More than once yesterday he said, ”We’re going to get younger and more athletic.”

After Minaya hired Randolph, he had an interesting statement. This quote leads an article from November 5, 2004:

When Willie Randolph was out of earshot, and the initial excitement surrounding his introduction yesterday had died down somewhat, Omar Minaya made a telling admission.

“A lot of his success,” Minaya said, “will depend on the job I do. I’ve got to give him the right players.”

That last quote may be the most important, and could be part of the reason Willie is still manager of the Mets.

Going over these collected quotes, it sounded like the Wilpons were eager to reverse the plan of trying to fix the organization by throwing money at it. They gave the impression, in fact, that the Mets would build from within, using the Braves as a model to follow. One of the big reasons Willie Randolph was hired, in fact, was his reputation as a man who could influence and develop young players. After the 2004 season, the Mets were committed to building a team around Jose Reyes and David Wright — a team that would contend over the long haul.

Then, something went awry.

It started with the signing of Pedro Martinez to an unheard-of contract, and soon followed by the signing of Carlos Beltran to an even more obnoxious price. These were good moves in that they established that the Mets were serious about winning, and willing to put their money where their mouth was, but the spending should have stopped there. Instead, encouraged by their first winning record in four years, the Mets went for broke. That offseason, they spent more money and made more short-term moves to bring in high-priced veterans such as Paul LoDuca, Carlos Delgado, and Billy Wagner. The plans to build a strong organization for the long-term, to stock the 25-man roster with fruits from within, went out the window. It was akin to the strategy of the Florida Marlins one year prior, but the Mets failed in the execution. For one, they didn’t into the World Series, and second, they didn’t immediately swap away the aging veterans in return for young blood. Instead of following the strategy, and learning from history, the Wilpons went blindly down the same path of self-destruction.

I’ll reiterate one of the quotes from above:

But Wilpon apparently came to the conclusion that the Mets’ salvation was not exclusively found in high-priced stars. Yesterday, he made an intriguing observation. He said he knows now that a hefty payroll does not ensure success. ”We’ve learned that painfully.”

Apparently, not painfully enough. The magic of 2006 numbed that pain, made it a distant memory. Time heals all wounds, right?

After “the collapse”, the front office was duped into believing the Mets’ roster constituted something better than a .500 team. The team’s .500 record from June to October was dismissed as an aberration. The demise of Carlos Delgado was deemed overblown. The fact that the Mets had gotten older and less athletic since that June 13, 2003 statement was never considered. So instead of admitting the obvious — that this team needed major renovations — it instead opted for more short-term band-aids. With the opening of Citi Field on the horizon, the Wilpons insisted on putting a winner on the field — and damn the future. Only months before, pundits talked about the starting outfield on opening day 2009 in the new ballpark. It would consist of some combination of Fernando Martinez, Carlos Gomez, and Lastings Milledge — symbolizing the young, athletic, built-for-the-longterm Mets. That pipe dream has been shattered, replaced by the same old, overpaid Mets. Rather than stick with a solid plan, the Wilpons chose to chase the Yankees, to throw good money after bad, and continue the illusion that the team is just one player away from the World Series. It’s kind of like owning a used car with 75,000 miles — do you replace the timing chain, knowing more repairs may be on the way, or do you bite the bullet and drive it down to the new car dealership?

When Willie Randolph came in, he was supposed to be the guy who would teach the youngsters how to win. Wright, Reyes, and Beltran were supposed to be playing with a mixture of players that included Milledge, Gomez, Mike Jacobs, Phil Humber, Brian Bannister, Aaron Heilman, John Maine. The few seasoned veterans on the team would be complimentary players — winners who could help Willie teach the kids. Guys in the twilight of their careers, like Cliff Floyd, would dot the roster, not comprise it. It was a fine plan, and Willie would have done very well executing it — remember, his strength is in developing young players, not babysitting old ones.

Randolph played and coached on many veteran teams, but was spoiled in that many of those older players were professionals. They had won before, and knew what went into success. They already knew how to carry themselves, on and off the field. Other than Moises Alou and Luis Castillo, the veterans handed to Willie in the past two years never tasted winning — and you can’t teach an old dog new tricks.

Thus, the Mets are a mediocre team, with little chance of making the postseason. As a result, Willie is the undeserved scapegoat. Many feel he has little chance of surviving the weekend as the Mets’ skipper. In order for him to succeed, he has to work with players he wasn’t supposed to have, with a team that is NOT “better than this”. The odds are stacked against him. In short, Willie Randolph is an underdog.

And that’s something we haven’t had at Shea in a long time.

Posted in News Notes Rumors | 11 Comments

Mets Get a Gamer

trot_nixon_fight.jpgAfter Friday night’s game, Omar Minaya announced that the Mets acquired Trot Nixon, who had been playing for the Diamondbacks’ AAA Tucson team.

For Tucson, Nixon was batting .309 with 15 doubles, 10 homers, 31 RBI, and a .437 OBP in 58 games and 181 at-bats. Last year he hit .251 in limited duty with the Cleveland Indians.

I’ll go on record as saying I LOVE this trade.

Yes, he’s 34 years old, his bat has slowed, and he’s been hobbled by leg injuries. I don’t expect him to come in and take over an outfield spot, and he won’t be anywhere near the player who hit .306 with 28 HRs back in 2003. However, he does have a fire in his belly, plays as hard as anyone in the game, and has a World Series ring. In short, he’s a winner — or as Omar Minaya “was told”, he’s a “gamer”.

From Mets.com:

“Everything that I’ve heard about the guy is that he’s a gamer,” general manager Omar Minaya said.

That word — “gamer” — was the first out of Pedro Martinez’s mouth, too. The two played together for seven years with the Red Sox, and won a World Series title in 2004.

“I’ll tell you what,” Martinez said. “He can play for my team any day.”

In addition, the emotionless sabermetricians should be OK with the move, as Nixon has a history of being a guy who can get on base. The Mets will be helped by another guy in the lineup who will see a lot of pitches and take his walks.

It’s too bad that Brady Clark’s season is over. I would have loved to have seen a Clark / Nixon platoon in right while Ryan Church recovered. They may not have been the most productive platoon on paper, but seeing their hard-nosed, all-out play on a daily basis would have been great for fans to watch, and possibly an inspiration to their teammates.

Did I mention I’m loving this move? For those who never saw Nixon play, he plays with passion and has a nasty temper — in the same mold as Paul O’Neill and Lou Piniella. Put another way, he’d fit right into a card game with Ray Knight and Robin Ventura — if necessary, he’ll start swinging to protect himself and his teammates. I realize this is the MLB and not the NHL, but I think it’s important to have one or two guys on the team willing to drop the gloves, so to speak.

He might last only two weeks, or he might just light a fire under this bunch. I’m hoping for the latter.

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