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Friday, 08 June 2018 22:09

Subway Series Could Permanently Derail Mets Season

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I have seen when a deer gets struck by a vehicle, and is suffering, a police officer will take out his service revolver and put the poor thing out of its misery. Given the way the Yankees have been a virtual juggernaut, and the Mets have been like a wounded animal, it could just be that the Yankees put the final blow on the Mets season and put them out of their misery.

Nothing is looking good for the Mets right now…except for the starting pitching. In reality, the last two turns through the rotation, every starter has done a magnificent job. Zack Wheeler, Steven Matz, even Jason Vargas has rebounded from his putrid performances to turn in two terrific performances. Noah Syndergaard has been good, but not great, but Seth Lugo stepped in and put up four shutout innings. And, of course, Jacob deGrom has been doing the best impression of Tom Seaver in years, and is suffering the same fate that Seaver and Jerry Koosman became accustomed to – pitching your heart out and coming away with nothing to show for it. The thing is that the Mets starters can stave off the Yankees hitters. But, unlike Seaver and Koosman, these starters can’t go nine innings, it is a shock if they go seven…or even MAKE IT INTO the seventh inning. And we all know what happens once a team gets into the Mets bullpen…BOOM!!!

 

It would be different if the Mets had some kind of an offense going. But there is nothing…absolutely nothing. Even the two players that were enjoying all-star caliber seasons – Asdrubal Cabrera and Brandon Nimmo - have tailed off significantly and have caught the same virus that has hit the rest of the team. And, truthfully, the Mets had their opening day lineup against the – I can’t even mention the name…but I guess I have to – Baltimore Orioles with the exception of Yoenis Cespedes. And although Cespedes is a huge presence, his absence from the lineup should not have caused such lack of offensive firepower that would lead to such an embarrassment against the most inept team in the game today.

But there is more to it. Jay Bruce was being heavily counted on when he was brought back. He has three home runs…and has botched a number of plays defensively. Todd Frazier is brought in and starts his Mets tenure by catching the injury bug and going on the DL for the very first time in his career. And even when he has been healthy, he really has not been the spark he was expected to be. As for expectations, what SHOULD the expectations BE for Michael Conforto? Is he the player of 2016 when he ran into the Madison Baumgartner buzz saw or is he the player of 2017 when he was on his way to a great breakout year? If the three of them were performing as expected, then Cespedes’ absence wouldn’t be so glaring. And would his presence really make THAT much of a difference?

They say that you are never as good as when you are at your best, and never as bad as when you are at your worst. The 11-1 start was a mirage, the Mets were NOT that good. But they are 16-31 since. Are they really that bad? And will the Yankees bats bludgeon them into oblivion? Or will the usual unlikely scenario happen that tends to happen during the Subway Series and shock everyone? Stay tuned.

Read 2080 times Last modified on Thursday, 19 May 2022 23:57
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