Toby Hyde — you know Toby — and I are trying our hand at a podcast. We did one last week but ran into some tech troubles, so this is our first official go of it. It’s still a bit of a work in progress, but if podcasts are your thing, here’s this:
Ice tunnel badass
Oof
Man, that sucked.
I think I’d put that loss more on Lucas Duda and Francisco Rodriguez than I would on D.J. Carrasco, even if Carrasco’s the obvious goat for balking in the winning run. I haven’t seen it yet, but I imagine on some corner of the Internet someone’s getting all worked up about Carrasco’s lack of focus or discipline or something, but I don’t think that’s what that was. Just a weird fluky hiccup. These things happen.
“Only to the Mets,” you’ll say, but the graphic on the MLB Network this morning showed five other walk-off balks that have happened in the past few years, one of which I happened to witness in person. It’s a rough way to lose a game, especially when your team fought back from down four runs early in the game and held the lead going into the ninth with the closer on the mound.
No segue: You might have noticed things have slowed down here a bit the past couple of days. I’m taking next week off, so I’m scrambling to tie up some loose ends around the office.
I’m hoping to spend parts of today and tomorrow cuing up some posts that will roll out next week while I’m gone, but I could use your help. Have you stumbled upon anything awesome on the Internet lately? Anything thought provoking that isn’t particularly timely? Any outrageously silly video? Sent it my way, via email or the contact box above.
Someone wrote in R.A. Dickey for governor
In a related story: Someone is awesome. You may recall that I have some experience with write-in campaigns. If I knew the New York state ballot would be published on the Internet like this, I might have tried to drum up a little more support for the Dickster.
Baseball Show with Matt Cerrone
Mike Piazza + ALF = Auto-post
Via Mets Police. So much hilarious 90s stuff happening here:
Yeah, this is Omar’s team all right
A baseball roster has many authors, and while Sandy Alderson is developing a thoughtful plan for this and future seasons, it is also worth noting that nearly every player contributing right now, firing up the fan base and keeping the season interesting, is a product of the Omar Minaya regime.
Minaya’s legacy will always be defined in part by regrettable contracts, most notably the ones given to Oliver Perez and Luis Castillo (the view from here is that Carlos Beltran and Francisco Rodriguez were largely fruitful signings), and for historic divisional collapses in 2007 and 2008; still, his stamp on the organization was, like most things that acquire a conventional-wisdom narrative, more complex.
– Andy Martino, N.Y. Daily News.
There has been a lot of apologizing for Omar Minaya around the Internet lately, prompting a minor Twitter meltdown from this guy on Saturday morning. And look: The Mets are at .500 now, playing solid baseball with a bunch of players Minaya acquired in his six-season tenure with the club. That’s great, and some of it certainly looks good on Minaya.
But let us not forget that all GMs acquire a ton of players, and there’s a hell of a lot more to the job than just picking them up. Take Turner, for example. We can cite Turner as an example of Minaya’s success, but that would be ignoring the fact that last season, while Turner was mashing in Triple-A Buffalo, the Mets had Luis Hernandez started games at second base. It’s also on the GM to identify which players can help the Major League club win, and last year, Minaya apparently thought Hernandez was a better bet to do that then Turner.
And then there’s the issue of those contracts, which Martino mentions. There’s a reason we’re now celebrating that the Mets, with their $140 million payroll, have reached .500 on the season. There’s a reason so many guys that now seem like Minaya’s shrewd scrap-heap acquisitions have been forced into duty. Hell, there’s a reason people are actually talking as if the Mets will have to choose between keeping Jose Reyes or keeping David Wright — whether or not that’s true — and it’s not all thanks to ownership.
Minaya’s haphazard spending hamstrung the club, forcing Sandy Alderson and his crew to work with limited resources this offseason. People can shout all they want about how few of Alderson’s pickups have contributed to the 2011 team, but the truth is that Minaya’s myopic approach left the current front office with few options beyond what little they could afford and the players Minaya left behind.
I’m as thrilled as anyone about how good players like Turner, Dillon Gee and Ruben Tejada have looked across small samples this season. But before we cite them as examples of Omar Minaya’s aptitude, let’s remember that if he were still around, there’s a good chance all three would currently be buried in the Minors while Ramon Martinez started at second and Paul Byrd started every fifth night.
Dave Chappelle returning?
According to The Daily, Dave Chappelle is working on a new show for a paid streaming subscription service. This is interesting and exciting news for a variety of reasons, mostly because it means we may someday soon have access to more stuff Dave Chappelle does.
Wait, does ‘sandwich blogger’ count?
The Minnesota Pork Board announced it has awarded five $1,000 scholarships to individuals pursuing careers with an emphasis in pork.
