Posts Tagged ‘Dwight Gooden’

CC Sabathia and the Black Aces

August 13th, 2010

Via Wikipedia:

The Black Aces is a book written by former Major League pitcher James “Mudcat” Grant about the only African American pitchers who have won at least 20 Major League Baseball games in a single season.

For some reason, I have always found the idea of the Black Aces to be very cool, and ever since the day the Yankees signed CC Sabathia, I have hoped that he would eventually become one.

After last night’s win, it looks like it might actually happen. Sabathia has 15 wins through 25 games, which means he’ll have about nine more starts to pick up five more wins to do it.

He would become the 14th pitcher on the list joining Vida Blue, Al Downing, Bob Gibson, Dwight Gooden, Mudcat Grant, Ferguson Jenkins, Sam Jones, Don Newcombe, Mike Norris, J.R. Richard, Dave Stewart, Earl Wilson, and Dontrelle Willis.

Interestingly enough, David Price of the Tampa Bay Rays also has 15 wins, so it is possible that the Black Aces may get two new members in 2010.

 

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2010 Mets Disintegrating Like It’s 1993

August 12th, 2010

The year was 1993. Bill Clinton took office and the Buffalo Bills lost their third straight Super Bowl. The World Trade Center was bombed, and two days later a fifty-one day standoff began in Waco, Texas between Federal law enforcement and a religious cult. On top of all of that, the New York Mets were about to have one of the worst seasons any baseball team or its fans ever experienced.

The team lost a pathetic 103 games in 1993, coming in dead last in the National League East (then comprised of seven teams), thirty-eight games behind the East Champion Philadelphia Phillies. But the incredibly poor play on the field simply set the tone for the derailing of the entire organization by several disastrous off the field incidents.

In April, outfielder Vince Coleman, who would play a pivotal role in the sinking of the franchise, accidentally injured pitcher Dwight Gooden's arm while carelessly swinging a golf club in the Mets clubhouse before a game. Gooden, the one time ace and one of only three remaining players still with the club from the 1986 World Championship team, would go on to lose 15 games and be featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated, which published a story about him titled "From Phenom to Phantom." Gooden would be suspended from baseball the following year for testing positive for cocaine.

Coleman made headlines again in July when he tossed a lit firecracker into a crowd of fans waiting for autographs at Dodger Stadium, injuring three children, including a two year old. Coleman was arrested and the Mets suspended him for the remainder of the season and traded him to Kansas City that winter.

That same month, pitcher Bret Saberhagen admitted to spraying bleach on a group of reporters and was forced to apologize and donate a day's pay to charity.

As if July 1993 wasn't bad enough for the Mets and their pitching staff, pitcher Anthony Young set a Major League record on July 24 for consecutive losses in games in which he had the decision, with an unbelievable twenty-seven straight.

In keeping with the Vince Coleman-inspired firecracker theme, Saberhagen threw a lit firecracker under a table full of reporters in the clubhouse, which he explained was a "joke."

Then there was Bobby Bonilla. The Mets outfielder threatened writer Bob Klapisch, who wrote the book "The Worst Team Money Could Buy: The Collapse of the New York Mets" (ironically, the book is based on the 1992 version of the team) telling him he would "show him (Klapisch) the Bronx." One has to wonder if Klapisch wished he would have waited a year to write the book. The 1993 team certainly would have given him extensive new material.

What does this have to do with the 2010 version of the team? Well, we all know that the 2010 Mets are self-destructing on the field, and it appears that they are following the '93 club's blueprint for off the field antics as well.

Ace pitcher Johan Santana was accused of sexually assaulting a Florida woman on a golf course in October 2009, and reportedly offered her $1 million in "hush money" after the mysteriously delayed police report was made public by TMZ in June. The unidentified woman also alleged that Santana impregnated her during the encounter and is suing him for sexual battery, sexual assault, and false imprisonment. The Lee County Sheriff declined to press charges against Santana.

Reliever Francisco "KRod" Rodriguez was arrested on August 11 on charges of assaulting his father-in-law outside the family room of the Mets clubhouse at Citi Field. The Mets suspended the closer for two games, adding that he will not be "on the roster, with the team, or be paid" during the suspension before referring the media to the NYPD because it was a "police matter now."

The 2010 Mets will not lose 103 games, and there has so far been no throwing of explosives or dousing reporters with chemicals. But the path to oblivion that this version of the team seems to be heading down is eerily similar to the 1993 squad. You have to wonder what's next for this bunch of misfits and malcontents.

 

 

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Gooden, Strawberry added to Mets’ Hall (AP)

August 1st, 2010
Dwight Gooden and Darryl Strawberry have always been linked, for their key roles in leading the New York Mets to the 1986 World Series title and their colorful exploits off the field that made them lightning rods in baseball. It figured that Doc and Straw would enter the Mets' Hall of Fame together.

Mets Try to End Home Stand on High Note Before Crucial Road Trip

July 31st, 2010

NEW YORK: After coming back to beat the Diamondbacks last night, winning their first game against them in five tries, the Mets will hope it leads to a series victory this afternoon.

The Mets finished the month of July with one of baseball's worst records, 9-17, and will now try to begin August 1-0.

Yes, that's right, it's the month of August. This is now the official start of baseball's pennant race, as teams try to position themselves this month for a September run.

The Mets aren't necessarily in the "thick" of the pennant race, but they are in it to a certain degree. A team in the pennant race is usually a team that isn't completely out of playoff contention, which the Mets aren't.

Entering today's action, the Mets are 6.5 games behind in both the NL East and NL Wild Card races. They, along with the Marlins, are the last teams standing for a shot at the playoffs in the National League.

At the same time, there are seven teams all within 6.5 games, meaning it'll take a red-hot month for the Mets to be serious contenders.

Every game now becomes more important than the previous one, and today the Mets have a great shot at winning the series and home stand. They'll have Jon Niese on the mound, who has had a pretty good rookie season.

In his last start on Tuesday, Niese opened the home stand against the Cardinals with a victory. He won his first game in nearly a month, allowing one run in six innings for his seventh win of the season.

Niese has made 18 starts this season and seems to be getting better and stronger in each one. He generally gets a lot of outs on the ground and makes quick work of hitters, as his efficiency has been spectacular.

The only odd part of Niese's last start was his lack of strikeouts. He only recorded one in six innings, the first time he's pitched more than two innings and struck out only one all season.

Niese has arguably been the Mets second-most reliable starter to Johan Santana this season, and the Mets will hope that he won't hit the proverbial rookie wall down the stretch.

On the mound for the Diamondbacks won't be who originally was supposed to pitch, Rodrigo Lopez, but rookie Daniel Hudson.

The 23-year-old Hudson came over to Arizona a couple of days ago from the White Sox in the deal that sent Edwin Jackson the other way.

Hudson appeared in six games last season for the White Sox as a September call-up, and came up to make three starts for them this July.

He made two similarly bad starts and one quality one against the Mariners on July 19. In both of his bad starts, he allowed exactly five runs and six hits, while striking out four. His problem so far has been control, walking at least three in each start.

The Mets will be without last night's hero Carlos Beltran, as Jerry Manuel will give him a day of rest. Other possible lineup adjustments could possibly be giving Luis Castillo a day off and reinserting Jeff Francoeur into the lineup, even against the right-handed pitcher.

Yesterday, the Diamondbacks traded for the Pirates' Ryan Church, a former Met. He will not join the team, though, until Monday.

Today will also be a special day in Mets history as they will induct four members of the 1986 championship team into their Hall of Fame. Those members will be Darryl Strawberry, Dwight Gooden, Davey Johnson, and Frank Cashen.

So with a lot of great aura around the stadium, the Mets will try to make the entire day special with a win, before bolting for a crucial road trip to Atlanta and Philadelphia.

Jon Niese vs. Arizona (July 21)
ND, 5 IP, 3 ER, 6 hits, 1 BB, 6 SO, 3 HR

Daniel Hudson this season (3 starts)
*1-1, 6.32 ERA, 15.2 IP, 17 hits, 11 BB, 14 SO

*-As a member of the White Sox

2010 season series (New York vs. Arizona)

July 19: Arizona 13, New York 2
July 20: Arizona 3, New York 2
July 21: Arizona 4, New York 3 (14)

July 30: Arizona 9, New York 6
July 31: New York 5, Arizona 4

Diamondbacks lead series 4-1

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New York Mets Need Another Starting Pitcher

June 28th, 2010

It's hard to be a Mets fan.  It means a lot of broken hearts and lonely Octobers.  But still we persevere. 

The Mets owe it to their fans to start taking themselves seriously and really go after a title. 

The Mets, who many believed would spend the season in the basement of the NL East, are within striking distance of the divisional lead.  And although optimism is something we Mets fans are wary of, there are undeniably good omens for this team's outlook.

First, there's the impending arrival of Carlos Beltran.  He likely won't hit the field until after the All-Star break, but his addition will boost an already formidable outfield consisting of Jeff Francoeur, Jason Bay, and Angel Pagan.  Pagan has done so well as Beltran's replacement that he'll probably end up in a platoon with Francoeur In Francoeur, the Mets will have a well above-average defensive substitute with a starting quality bat. 

Presuming he's anywhere near as talented as he was prior to his injury, Beltran is far better than any player available via trade.  This means that without spending money or losing prospects, the Mets will boost their defense and offense more than any other team who picks up a star player before the trade deadline. 

But the most crucial thing is the Mets MUST pick up a starting pitcher.  One more top-of-the-rotation pitcher would open up a whole new world of opportunities.

Let's say, for instance, that the Mets pick up someone like Roy Oswalt or Cliff Lee (or Dan Haren or Ted Lilly…you get the picture).  That would mean the Mets would have Johan Santana, Mike Pelfrey, and another ace.  There aren't many teams that can boast a one-two-three punch like that. 

But the addition of another star pitcher would have ripple effects that would hugely benefit the organization's pitching within the rotation and without.  The final two spots in the rotation would go to either R.A. Dickey, who's been a huge part of the Mets recent success, John Maine, Hisanori Takahashi, and Jon Niese.  All four of these options have the talent to occupy the four/five spot in any rotation.

Takahashi could be sent back to the bullpen, where he started the year before the disintegration of Oliver Perez and injury woes of John Maine.  Niese has recently come into his own, showing the kind of latent talent no one thought he had, and could possibly be sent back to the minors to develop further.  That is, if he hasn't earned himself a permanent spot in the rotation. 

Takahashi  would be a huge boon for the Mets bullpen.  Ryota Igarashi has been struggling in relief since returning from injury, and Fernando Nieve has cooled off after a stellar start.  The team has called up Elmer Dessens and Bobby Parnell, who have stepped in admirably.  But with Takahashi and maybe one more solid pitcher in the pen, the Mets have some much needed breathing room. 

One huge benefit of this move would be that the Mets will feel no misplaced inclination to put Jenry Mejia back in the 'pen. 

Mejia, the Mets uber-talented, young prospect, was projected as a potential front of the rotation starting pitcher.  He performed so well in preseason that he earned a roster spot in the bullpen. 

The Mets have been criticized for this move by those who believe the organization may shortsightedly be undermining their best homegrown pitching prospect since Dwight Gooden. 

As a relief pitcher, Mejia throws mostly fastballs, and hasn't developed a skill set necessary for a starter. 

The cruel irony is that Mejia's talent might have hurt his development.  Supposedly the Mets had thought about sending Mejia back to the minors to re-train as a starting pitcher, but he had become such an important part of our bullpen that the Mets couldn't afford to let him go.  The organization finally sent Mejia back to the minors, but he's experiencing shoulder problems and hurting his development (and potential trade value) even further.

The Mets have been rumored to be interested in another bat, one that almost certainly would reside at second base since the rest of the infield is pretty much solidified between Ike Davis, Jose Reyes, and David Wright. 

A quality bat at second could only help, and we could send Ruben Tejada back to the minors to develop (if he isn't traded), as he's shown definite promise in his short stint in the league. 

And I've never been a fan of Luis Castillo, perhaps because I can never quite forgive him for dropping that pop-up against the Yankees. 

But if the Mets are serious about being contenders, making the playoffs, and putting together a team that could win the title, then they have to pick up another ace.  They owe it to themselves.  They owe it to the team, which has done so well this season against all expectations.  And perhaps most importantly, they owe it to the fans, who have loved the Mets through hard times, and deserve a team that could bring the first ever World Series to Citi Field.

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