Mets over-under

Context: The Mets’ 2011 bullpen posted a 4.33 ERA, but the team overhauled its relief corps in the offseason, adding Frank Francisco, Ramon Ramirez and Jon Rauch. Manny Acosta and Tim Byrdak appear set for two of the remaining jobs, with a slew of guys including Bobby Parnell, Pedro Beato, Miguel Batista, D.J. Carrasco, Danny Herrera, Chuck James, Garrett Olson and Josh Stinson competing for the others. The average big-league bullpen posted a 3.69 ERA in 2011.

[poll id=”76″]

Say it ain’t so

The Friday night post-game Concert Series presented by Duane Reade will feature REO Speedwagon (June 15)…

Mets press release.

Oof. I don’t want to get carried away here because I know longtime reader and commenter Chris is a huge Speedwagon guy, but this seems like another misstep by the Mets, callously disregarding fans with functioning human ears.

I saw Cheap Trick, who’ll also be playing at Citi, at a festival once. They put on a pretty good show. Guy has an eight-neck guitar or whatever and throws a ton of picks into the crowd. Turns out it’s not just a clever name.

Valley Fever: A timeline

Here’s a section of a MetsBlog post from Feb. 23, 2012:

9:19 am:Ike Davis is back in Mets camp, according to SNY’s Matt Dunn.

The team told Dunn that Ike’s physical showed an infection in his lung, but after being checked out in New York, he’s been cleared to resume workouts.

He feels no effects of it and he’s been told it will go away, though he will continue to be monitored.

Here’s a section of a Mets.com report from March 3, 2012:

Davis is not the picture of health. He has, in fact, contracted Valley or Desert Fever, a malady that can interfere with a season and even end a career….

Davis, who lives in Arizona in the offseason, says he has experienced no symptoms. “I feel normal. I don’t feel anything,” he said.

Here’s the Mets’ statement on Davis’ condition, also from March 3, 2012:

Ike Davis underwent a routine physical exam after his arrival in PSL.  The exam included an abnormal chest X-ray.  Following additional tests here and in NYC, pulmonary and infectious disease specialists have concluded that Ike likely has Valley Fever, which is expected to resolve itself over time.  Ike is not contagious, is not taking any medication for his condition and does not currently exhibit any of the outward symptoms associated with Valley Fever.  However, Ike has been instructed to avoid extreme fatigue.  No additional tests or examinations are pending, but Ike will have a follow up exam when the team returns to NYC in early April.

Here’s some sections of the National Institute of Health’s page for Valley Fever:

Most people with Valley fever never have symptoms….

The disease almost always goes away without treatment.

So we’ve got: In February, a test in Port St. Lucie shows something on Davis’ lung that requires him to fly back to New York for more tests. The tests reveal an infection, but Davis has no symptoms and is cleared to resume playing, though he will be monitored.

In March, it comes out that the name of the infection is Valley Fever, Davis still has no symptoms and is still playing and still being monitored. Both the NIH and Mayo Clinic‘s websites confirm that most people with Valley Fever never show symptoms. The Internet freaks the f@#$ out.

I’m leaving out the facts that seem to be terrifying most Mets fans — that in some cases Valley Fever can be serious, and that Conor Jackson’s career was derailed by the same disease in 2009, though Jackson’s case wasn’t diagnosed until after he already had symptoms and it led to pneumonia. That is presumably why the Mets are monitoring Davis’ condition.

It’s not good business to defend the Mets’ medical staff these days, but it’s hard to see what the major issue is here. We knew Davis had a lung infection, that he had no symptoms, that he was being monitored and that he was cleared to play. Today we learned that the asymptomatic lung infection for which he is being monitored is called Valley Fever. Hard to see how it merits the type of woe-is-me LOLMets stuff spilling out in all corners.

Davis went through his scheduled Spring Training routine today: stretching, then infield, then batting practice, then four innings of the Mets’ intrasquad game. About five hours of baseball activity in the Florida heat, plus whatever cage work and weightlifting he might have done before and after. Then he talked to me about Daniel Murphy’s defense and sandwiches for a few minutes. He seemed tired, but no more than I was and not at all sick.

Here’s hoping he stays healthy. It sure seems like the panic is premature.

Ike Davis on sandwiches

I finally got a chance to speak to Ike Davis about this report today. It turns out Kevin was mistaken, though understandably: What Davis added to the grilled chicken breast was not pulled pork but pulled chicken in barbecue sauce. Ike Davis reports that it was “really good, actually.”

Asked if he considers himself a sandwich innovator, Davis hesitated then confirmed, adding that he likes to mix up his condiments to keep his sandwiches interesting.

“I’ll add chips to a sandwich, hot sauces, different kinds of mustard,” he said. “Sometimes, even if I don’t like the mustard, I’ll put it on my turkey sandwich just for something different.

“You can’t just eat the same turkey sandwich every day.”

Amen.

R.A. Dickey on the slow knuckler

During his two shutout innings in the Mets’ intrasquad game today, R.A. Dickey threw a couple of his extra-slow knuckleballs, drawing “oohs” and “ahhs” from the crowd.

After the game, Dickey cited the velocity readings on the Digital Domain Park on his fastballs and said he needed to be conscious of building up his arm strength before Opening Day. He said he’d like his fastball to sit between 80 and 85 mph, and it seemed like it was generally topping out around 80 today, though — and as Dickey noted — it’s hard to put too much stock in one stadium’s radar (it’s Spring Training for the scoreboards, too).

As for the slow ones, Dickey said he threw two of them intentionally, and that he wants the slow knuckler in the low 60s. He noted that he threw a 57 mph pitch in 2011 — the slowest pitch in baseball last year.

“But that’s too slow,” he said. “When it’s that slow, the hitter has time to see it and adjust.”

Dickey added that while he’s not a flamethrower, he generally stays conscious of the velocities on his pitches.

Mets over-under

Context: Outfielder Kirk Nieuwenhuis ranked No. 4 on Toby Hyde’s Top 41 list of Mets prospects. He crushed Triple-A pitching for the first couple of months of 2011 before falling victim to a shoulder injury that cost him the rest of his season. Terry Collins said yesterday (among other times) that if Nieuwenhuis hadn’t been hurt last year, he’d be in the mix for a starting job in the Mets’ outfield this spring and said the outfielder reminds him a little bit of a lefty-hitting Jim Edmonds. Nieuwenhuis is 24 and has played most of his Minor League games in center, though some doubt his ability to stay in center field as he grows.

[poll id=”74″]

Intrasquad!

Team Orange triumphantly defeated Team Blue today, 3-2, bringing great shame to wherever it is Team Blue hails from and likely earning an earful from manager Wally Backman.

After Blue took a one-run lead in the top of the sixth inning against Jeremy Hefner, Orange centerfielder Kirk Nieuwenhuis responded with a two-run home run off lefty Daniel Ray Herrera. Nieuwenhuis’ go-ahead blast reached the picnic tables beyond the right-field berm, which would have been really exciting for anyone sitting there if there had been anyone sitting there.

But there weren’t because it was an intrasquad game.

With his team up 3-2, fearsome Orange closer Frank Francisco came on for the save in the top of the 7th and pitched quite kroddily, walking two batters but escaping without allowing a run. Tim Byrdak came on to pitch the bottom of the frame for Blue even though Orange had already won the game, but I didn’t see it because I left, assuming they were playing by regular baseball rules.

Jeurys Familia threw two strong innings in the losing effort for Blue, walking one, striking out two, allowing no hits, and prompting lots of people to discuss how exactly it is you pronounce his name. I’m told it’s HAY-your-is, like if you knew a guy named “Youris” and you needed him for something so you were like, “Hey, Youris!”