While stumbling around the Mets’ blogosphere this weekend, I came upon a poll that I, disappointingly, cannot now find for linking. It asked what users thought was the low point of the 2009 season for the Mets.
The leaders were the obvious choices: Luis Castillo’s dropped pop-up, Jose Reyes’ injury, Mike Pelfrey’s yips, Fernando Martinez’s faceplant and the like.
My answer wasn’t provided as an option.
I suspect not many people were watching the Mets on the afternoon of Aug. 5. For one, I realize not many people work in settings where they are encouraged to watch baseball games from their desks.
Plus, by early August, half the roster was on the disabled list, the other half was playing uninspiring ball and the Tony Bernazard saga was still shrinking in the rear-view mirror.
But I was excited to tune in that day because the Mets were starting Jon Niese, who seemed, at that point, the team’s lone remaining person of interest.
Fernando Martinez, the team’s other near-ready prospect, was already done for the year after hamstring surgery. So Niese, who had posted impressive peripherals in Triple-A, represented the only promising new Met, the one guy who could cull meaning out of the lost season’s final months and prove he belonged in the big leagues.
No one thinks Niese will be a Major League ace anytime soon — or anytime at all, really — but I knew then that if he pitched well for the Mets down the stretch, they could go into Spring Training 2010 with a decent and inexpensive young starter for the middle of their rotation. He was the very last glimmer of hope that something good could come out of an awful, awful year.
Then, an inning and two-thirds later, he did a full split while covering first base on a groundout and appeared to tweak something.
Then, one warmup pitch later, he was on the ground, writhing in pain.
That was it for me: rock bottom. That’s when I stopped thinking “terrible luck” and “a series of unfortunate events” and started thinking “inarguable hex” and “black magic.” The Mets weren’t even going to have a chance to assess their best young players, because their best young players couldn’t escape whatever strange, vengeful Phillies-fan deity had already wreaked havoc on their established stars.
Niese was expected, at the time, to be fully recovered from his injury by the upcoming Spring Training. So here’s hoping that happens.
But we would know so much more about Niese and what he could be expected to contribute tot he 2010 Mets if it hadn’t happened, obviously, and for me, it was the lowest point in a year full of them.
Also happens to be the most gangsta injury
Totally agree, Niese was using his new cutter and was looking like a solid pitcher. Just another kick in the balls.