At the Daily News, Wayne Coffey writes a heartbreaking feature about Mike Gitelson, a Mets fan who recently died of myeloid leukemia, and his relationship with and appreciation for R.A. Dickey. Our man Alex Belth, who helped Gitelson get in touch with Dickey, adds some similarly heartbreaking context.
Category Archives: Baseball
Yes
Look at this f@#$ing moonshot:
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Serious lookers
We’re serious lookers right now.
Seriously, look: The Mets are six games over .500 at the All-Star Break and in the thick of the playoff hunt. The small-sample fever broke but the fever dream persists. “Hey, maybe they won’t suck” segued to “hey, maybe they won’t finish dead last,” then to “hey, maybe they’ll hang in contention for a while,” and now to “hey, maybe they can actually do this.”
The Mets look serious. Their performance to date has been bolstered by unexpected (and in one case unprecedented) levels of excellence from their three biggest stars, David Wright, Johan Santana and R.A. Dickey. You know that. They’ve benefited from some timely hitting and, outside of the injury to Mike Pelfrey, health in their starting rotation.
Some complementary players have overperformed, and plenty of regulars have underperformed. It’s a half season of baseball, and that’s how half seasons of baseball go. Probably Jordany Valdespin won’t maintain an .826 OPS and Ike Davis won’t hit .201 all year.
The bullpen stinks and the lineup is extremely susceptible to good left-handed pitching. Since a massive overhaul is unlikely, the Mets will remain in contention or fall out of it on the performances of guys already on the club. But since — as we know — pennant and Wild Card races often come down to one game, Sandy Alderson and the SABRos should be seriously looking for some relief help and an offensive upgrade against lefties.
The next three weeks will bring the typical tsunami of trade-deadline nonsense, with sources spewing substance and silliness, and trades proposed, executed, celebrated and lamented on Twitter without ever actually happening in real life. It’s how it is, and, when your team is in contention and its GM appears competent, it’s pretty damn fun. Hell yeah the Mets should get Ramon Hernandez if all it takes is money. And bring on K-Rod, while they’re at it.
Here’s the thing, though: The Mets’ biggest additions might be guys they already have. As Alderson points out in the interview above, Jason Bay’s return gives the team a right-handed bat that can hit lefties. Bay shouldn’t be playing every day at this point because he can’t hit righties, but lord knows they’ve got lefty-hitting outfielders to play against righties. Bay’s return gives Terry Collins more flexibility with his outfield rotation, and, if and when an opponent calls on a LOOGY for a stretch of lefty hitters in the lineup, a righty bat to counteract.
And in the bullpen, the Mets’ best help might be the mean. Neither Ramon Ramirez nor Frank Francisco has ever been nearly as bad as they have been in the first half of this season, and both have suffered from atypically high batting averages on balls in play. It’s understandable to want a shakeup for the sake of it, just to not watch the usual suspects pitch out of the bullpen anymore. But given the amount of fluctuation inherent in small-sample relief performances, it seems about as likely that Ramirez and Francisco will pitch like they did last year as someone brought in from outside will continue pitching like he is this year. There’s room for seven in the bullpen, though, and the Mets could certainly use a second lefty and some improvement around the fringes. I’m just not sure it’s worth giving up prospects for, especially when some of those prospects might make the difference themselves.
I’ve lost the point. Here it is: If the Mets’ best players keep producing like they have, their rotation stays healthy and some of their struggling regulars start playing like they have in the past, the team should be competitive no matter how it manages its margins. If David Wright slumps for the whole second half, Ike Davis doesn’t improve and a starting pitcher or two fall to injury, it won’t really matter if they’ve added a better-hitting righty backup catcher or not.
But they have way too many middle infielders on the roster and a couple of areas where they could improve, so it does seem like there should be some action.
To the extreme
There’s something about Mountain Dew that gets me amped up. I feel like if I drink Mountain Dew, everything in my body gets ready to go. It helps me steal bases. Even the coaches will bring it to me.
– Billy Hamilton, who stole 104 bases in 82 games in High A this season.
Outstanding. Via Scott.
Cool
I really want to see what I can do. I have an idea. I think it would maybe take some creativity for a team to accept it. But if it worked, it might create an entirely new position in baseball … a position that would give a team an extra player.
– Micah Owings.
Owings, who has been out since April with a strained forearm and is unlikely to pitch again this season, is heading to the Padres’ Triple-A team in Tuscon to focus on becoming a first baseman and left fielder.
If you gave me reasonable odds, I’d bet on Owings re-emerging as a valuable platoon bat at the very least. As a pitcher and pinch-hitter, he owns a career .283/.310/.503 line in 219 Major League plate appearances. The guy has an .813 OPS and he’s never had 70 plate appearances in a season at any level. With more reps and more emphasis on hitting, who knows what he can do?
Oddly, the righty-hitting Owings has done almost all his damage in the Majors against right-handed pitchers. Still, if he can prove a useful bat and a vaguely capable defender at first and left with the ability to mop up some innings in the bullpen, he’s a massively efficient use of a roster spot.
And the possibilities are thrilling. Owings has been effective against right-handed hitters as a pitcher. Maybe an enterprising team can regularly pull the Davey Johnson move, going lefty-righty in late innings with some LOOGY that could handle left field? Is that too outrageous?
Thanks to Stevie for the link. And thanks to all y’all who provided feedback on Friday and over the weekend. I appreciate it. I’ve got a doctor’s appointment this morning, but I hope to have something a little longer about the Mets this afternoon.
I am videobomb
At a Bisons game in Buffalo, reader Meredith realized the team’s “Call Me Maybe” scoreboard video merited recording. She’s right. Not only is it hilarious (and catchy!), but there’s a pretty solid and vaguely inadvertent videobomb around the 23-second mark here:
Call Me Maybe from Meredith Lee on Vimeo.
This picture
Certainly this has been posted elsewhere, but it bears reiterating. This photo comes from Miguel Batista’s author page at Trafford Publishing, which also contains some of his poetry:

Hat tip to Toby Hyde for the link and to Patrick Flood for being on the same email but not posting it before I did.
Know Your Enemies
The Cubs:
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And the Sox:
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Well there’s that
Carlos Beltran has not gone full weird on us after all. During last night’s win over the Rockies in St. Louis, Beltran tossed some of the dugout gum supply into the crowd. Presumably Beltran did this to draw attention to himself and get people talking about how great he is to fans, because it’s always all about him.
Mets Minor League Report: Matt Harvey
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