Entries tagged as ‘Carlos Beltran’
I couldn’t post after the Mets final defeat in Pittsburgh. I was simply too frustrated. 11 – 6. The Pirates ruthlessly jumped on Mike Pelfrey. Pelfrey couldn’t even make it through the fourth Thursday. In his three and two thirds innings, he was charged with nine runs (eight earned). He gave up nine hits, four walks, and he hit a batter.
Ken Takahashi, Sean Green, and Pedro Feliciano pitched nicely out of the bullpen, but even the bullpen was marred by another bad performance from J.J. Putz. Putz pitched an inning Thursday, giving up two earned runs on three hits. Now, Putz is in line to get elbow surgey, and will be out for the next couple months.
Just about the only good news for the Mets on Thursday was the reappearance of Carlos Beltran, who got two hits, including a solo home run in the fourth inning, and a two-hit day for David Wright, who had been slumping recently.
But baseball is a strange and unpredictable game. On Friday, the Mets sent Tim Redding out to the mound. Redding has been awful all season. But he pitched like an ace against the Washington Nationals, going six innings and giving up just one run. Yet, the Mets had their own troubles against Nationals pitcher Shairon Martis, and going into the later innings, the Mets found themselves tied 1 – 1 with the worst team in the major leagues.
Thankfully for the Mets, the bullpen was strong Friday, holding the Nationals scoreless until the Mets were finally able to get some runs in the tenth. Brandon Stokes pitched a 1-2-3 seventh, Parnell worked his way out of trouble in the eighth, and Sean Green continued his recent string of successful outings with a 1-2-3 ninth inning.
That’s when the Mets finally rallied. Luis Castillo hit a soft single through the infield to lead off the inning. Carlos Beltran followed with a walk. And then David Wright hit them both in with a double into the right-field gap. Those two runs would prove to be more than enough for Francisco Rodriguez who pitched a 1-2-3 ninth to secure the 3 – 1 victory. Rodriguez now has 15 saves on the season.
Of the Mets eight hits Friday, four were from David Wright. Friday night’s performance combined with Wright’s two hit performance on Thursday seems to indicate that Wright is finally out of his slump, which is good news for a Mets team that badly needs his bat.
With the Phillies loss to the Dodgers, the Mets are now just three back in the NL East. The Cardinals lost as well, so the Mets are now just one back in the Wild Card chase. The Mets hope for more success Saturday night when they send John Maine to the hill.
Categories: Mets Preview/Postgame
Tagged: Bobby Parnell, Brandon Stokes, Carlos Beltran, David Wright, Francisco Rodriguez, J.J. Putz, John Maine, K-Rod, Ken Takahashi, Luis Castillo, Mets Baseball, Mike Pelfrey, Nationals Baseball, New York Mets, NL East, NL East standings, NL Wild Card, NL Wild Card chase, Pedro Feliciano, Pittsburgh Pirates, Sean Green, Shairon Martis, St. Louis Cardinals, Tim Redding, Washington Nationals, Wright four hit game
They have an old saying in baseball. Throw strikes. Let them hit the ball. That’s what the eight guys behind you are for. That advice certainly worked for the Pittsburgh Pirates Tuesday night. The combination of Zach Duke, John Grabow, and Matt Capps failed to record a single strikeout. Yet, they found other ways to get 27 outs, giving up just one run in a big 3 – 1 victory over the visiting New York Mets.
The game began as a pitcher’s duel between two aces: Zach Duke of the Pirates and Johan Santana of the Mets, and remained scoreless until the fifth. In the top of the fifth, Ramon Martinez and Jeremy Reed singled. Johan Santana sacraficed, moving Martinez to third and Reed to second. Luis Castillo followed with a sacrafice fly, giving the Mets a 1 – 0 lead.
The Pirates responded with one out in the bottom of the fifth when Jason Jamarillo hit a solo home run to tie the game at one. Then, in the bottom of the sixth, Freddy Sanchez singled and moved to second on a wild pitch. This was followed by conseutive RBI doubles from Nate McLouth and Adam LaRoche giving the Pirates a 3 – 1 lead.
Giving the lead, Zach Duke managed to go one more scoreless inning for the Pirates. He was followed by John Grabow, who pitched a 1-2-3 eighth, and Matt Capps, who pitched a 1-2-3 ninth to record his 12th save in 14 chances.
It was a continuation of woes for the Mets offense, who after scoring five runs in the first three innings of Monday’s game have scored just one run in their last fifteen innings at the plate. David Wright is one for his last sixteen. His average is now down to .328 down from a high of .362 on May 22. Fernando Martinez went 0 for 4 Tuesday after a couple of big games. Omir Santos also went 0 for 4.
Of course, it’s hard to get too mad at the Mets offense, seeing as they were without Carlos Beltran, Carlos Delgado, Ryan Church, Alex Cora, and Jose Reyes on Tuesday.
Meanwhile, Santana went six innings, giving up three earned runs on seven hits and a walk. After a nearly perfect beginning to the season, Santana has “struggled” of late. He gave up four runs in seven innings to the Giants. He then had a beautiful start against Boston, but followed that with a subpar start against Washington when he gave up three runs in six innings. And now, in this game against the Pirates, he again gave up three runs in six innings of work, which was particularly surprising giving his record of domination of the Pirates. On the bright side, Sean Green, Ken Takahashi, and Brandon Stokes combined to pitch two scoreless innings out of the bullpen.
Meanwhile, the Phillies gained yet another game on the Mets Tuesday night. They dispatched of the Padres to move two and a half games ahead of the Mets in the NL East. Thankfully, for the Mets, the Brewers also lost, so the Mets remain just one and half games back in the NL Wild Card race.
The Mets will aim to end their two-game losing skid Wednesday night as they send Mike Pelfrey (4 – 1, 3.88 ERA) against Ross Ohlendorf (5 – 5, 4.45 ERA) of the Pirates.
Categories: Mets Preview/Postgame
Tagged: Adam LaRoche, Alex Cora, Boston Red Sox, Brandon Stokes, Carlos Beltran, Carlos Delgado, David Wright, Fernando Martinez, Freddy Sanchez, Jason Jamarillo, Jeremy Reed, Johan Santana, John Grabow, Jose Reyes, Ken Takahashi, Luis Castillo, Matt Capps, Mets Baseball, Mike Pelfrey, Milwaukee Brewers, Nate McLouth, New York Mets, NL East, NL East standings, NL Wild Card, NL Wild Card chase, Omir Santos, Philadelphia Phillies, Pirates Baseball, Pittsburgh Pirates, Ramon Martinez, Ross Ohlendorf, Ryan Church, San Diego Padres, San Francisco Giants, Sean Green, Washington Nationals, Zach Duke
An Eye on the Braves
After getting swept in San Francisco, the Atlanta Braves began their four-game series in Arizona tonight with yet another loss. This time, the Braves were stifled by Diamondbacks ace Dan Haren, and ended up losing 5 – 1. They are now three and a half games behind the first-place New York Mets.
The NL Wild-Card Scene
The Los Angeles Dodgers defeated the Chicago Cubs 2 – 1 at Wrigley Field tonight, guided by seven beautiful innings from Randy Wolf and a 2-inning save from Ramon Transoco. The Cubs are now 23 – 22, three and a half games out of the wild card lead. The Giants and Braves are also three and half back.
None of the other wild-card contenders played tonight. Milwaukee remains in the lead, holding a half game lead over the Reds, a one game lead over the Phillies, a three game lead over the Padres, and a three and half game lead over the Cubs, Braves, and Giants. If the Mets were to fall out of first place, they would be just one half game behind the Brew Crew.
In the Mets Dugout
Carlos Beltran has hit in six consecutive games…Daniel Murphy’s three-hit, five-RBI performance Wednesday was his first multi-hit performance since an April 19 home game against the Brewers. The performance raised his batting average 16 percentage points from .246 to .262…In the bullpen, Pedro Feliciano hasn’t given up an earned run since May 2. Since that date, he has pitched eight and two-thirds innings, giving up just seven hits and one walk. His WHIP is 0.96 this year and opposing hitters are hitting just .208 off Feliciano.
Florida Marlins @ New York Mets
Friday’s matchup pits Florida Marlins starter Sean West against Mets starter Mike Pelfrey. This will be West’s second appearance for the Marlins. He gave up two earned runs in five innings against the Tampa Bay Rays on May 23. Pelfrey, meanwhile, has given up three or less runs in six consecutive starts…Saturday will be a big day for Tim Redding, who will try to show the Mets that he deserves to stay n the big leagues. He has made two starts thus far for the Mets, giving up six runs to the Red Sox his last time out. His job is in serious jeopardy now that Oliver Perez is healthy again. Redding will oppose Marlins ace Josh Johnson, who is 3 – 1 with a 2.67 ERA this season…And on Sunday, Chris Volstad (4 – 3, 3.69 ERA) of the Marlins will take on John Maine (4 – 3, 4.18 ERA) of the Mets. Volsted has given up 18 earned runs in his last 5 starts. Maine gave up just one runs in his last start against the Washington Nationals.
The Marlins are coming off a big series win in Philadelphia after they spent most of May in free fall. They are 22 – 26 overall, five and half back of the Brewers in the Wild Card Chase.
Categories: Other Mets Articles
Tagged: Arizona Diamondbacks, Atlanta Braves, Carlos Beltran, Chicago Cubs, Chris Volstad, Cincinnati Reds, Dan Haren, Daniel Murphy, Daniel Murphy's three-hit, five-RBI performance, Florida Marlins, John Maine, Josh Johnson, Los Angeles Dodgers, Mets Baseball, Mike Pelfrey, Milwaukee Brewers, New York Mets, NL Wild Card, NL Wild Card chase, NL Wild Card race, Oliver Perez, Pedro Feliciano, Philadelphia Phillies, Ramon Transoco, Randy Wolf, San Diego Padres, San Francisco, San Francisco Giants, Sean West, Tampa Bay Rays, Tim Redding, Washington Nationals, WHIP, Wrigley Field
Mets Bullpen Bends But Doesn’t Break Against Nationals
Over 41,000 fans greeted the Mets at Citi Field Monday night as they returned home from a 5 – 5 road trip through San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Boston. And the Mets, in turn, treated their fans to a 5 – 2 victory over the last-place Washington Nationals.
The Nationals got on the board first Monday, when Wil Nieves hit an RBI single in the second-inning to give the Nats a 1 – 0 lead, but the Mets responded just one inning later with an RBI single by Carlos Beltran. The game remained tied at 1 until the sixth inning, when Gary Sheffield hit a 3-run homerun to give the Mets a 4 – 1 lead. Ramon Martinez added a sacrafice fly to make it 5 – 1.
The Nationals threatened in the seventh, eighth, and ninth innings. In the seventh, Bobby Parnell, coming in for John Maine, walked the first batter he faced. He struck out pinch-hitter Justin Maxwell, but then gave up a single to Carlos Guzman and walked Nieves to load the bases with just one out. Next up was Nationals third-basemen Ryan Zimmerman, who Parnell proceeded to walk. With the score 5 – 2 and the bases still loaded, Jerry Manuel brought in Pedro Feliciano to face Adam Dunn. After Dunn flied out to deep center, Manuel replaced Feliciano with J.J. Putz, who was able to record the final out of the seventh.
In the eighth, J.J. Putz walked two, but was able to keep the Nationals from scoring. Then, in the ninth, Nick Johnson singled off Francisco Rodriguez, and Zimmerman walked again, but once again, the Mets bullpen was able to avoid damage, as Rodriguez struck out Austin Kearns and got Willie Harris to pop out to preserve the 5 – 2 victory.
It was a scary but encouraging victory for the Mets. John Maine had a nice comeback outing Monday. After giving up five runs (four earned) against the Dodgers, Maine gave up just one run in six innings of work against the Nationals. It wasn’t his best performance. Yet, it was a solid performance, one that was good enough to get Maine his fourth win of the season.
Meanwhile, the bullpen was shaky yet ultimately effective. In three innings of work, the bullpen (Parnell, Feliciano, Putz, and Rodriguez) gave up two hits and six walks but only gave up one run. Parnell’s performance was discouraging, but Feliciano recorded a crucial out with the bases loaded, and Putz and Rodriguez showed mental toughness getting out of jams.
On offense, there were lots of good signs. David Wright had more than one walk for the fifth time in eight games. Meanwhile, Gary Sheffield had two hits, including the three-run home run. His average is now up to .277 with 4 home runs and 14 RBI. Angel Pagan walked twice in the leadoff spot. And Beltran got another two hits to raise his average to an astounding .367.
Monday’s victory combined with losses by Philadelphia and Atlanta, put the Mets all alone in second place and just a half game out of first. Tonight, the Mets will send Livan Hernandez against Craig Stammen. The game is scheduled to start at 7:10 EST.
Categories: Mets Preview/Postgame
Tagged: Adam Dunn, Angel Pagan, Austin Kearns, Bobby Parnell, Boston Red Sox, Carlos Beltran, Carlos Guzman, Citi Field, Craig Stammen, David Wright, Francisco Rodriguez, Frankie Rodriguez, Gary Sheffield, J.J. Putz, Jerry Manuel, John Maine, K-Rod, Livan Hernandez, Los Angeles Dodgers, Mets Baseball, Nationals Baseball, New York Mets, Nick Johnson, Pedro Feliciano, Ramon Martinez, Ryan Zimmerman, San Francisco Giants, Washington Nationals, Wil Nieves, Willie Harris
Two-Run Santos Homerun Lifts Mets to 3 - 2 Victory Over Red Sox
Despite a brilliant start from Mike Pelfrey, an errorless game by the Mets defense, and an excellent relief appearence from Pedro Feliciano, the New York Mets were down to their final out Saturday afternoon. There they were, two outs in the top of the ninth, a runner on first, and reserve catcher Omir Santos at the plate. On the mound was Jonathan Papelbon, perhaps the best closer in the major leagues. That’s when the improbable occured. That’s when Santos hit a shot to left-center field that bounced high off the Green Monster and back iunto play. At first, it was ruled in-play, but after much discussion, the umpires correctly ruled that it was a home run. 3 – 2 Mets. Suddenly, the Mets were on line for their second straight victory over the Boston Red Sox.
The Mets got off to a good start Saturday as Carlos Beltran hit a two-out single in the top of the first off Josh Beckett. After a Beckett throwing error allowed Beltran to advance to second, Gary Sheffield hit a single to put the Mets in front 1 – 0. Sheffield’s average is now up to .260, and he has 10 RBIs and 19 runs on the season.
Unfortunately for the Mets, the Red Sox stormed back with two runs in the bottom of the inning. Jacoby Ellsbury and Dustin Pedroia started the inning with consecutive singles. After a David Ortiz strikeout, Ellsbury and Pedroia managed a double steal, and were then brought home by a Kevin Youklis 2-RBI single. 2 – 1 Red Sox.
But what started out as an offensive game quickly turned into a masterful pitcher’s duel between Mike Pelfrey of the Mets and Josh Beckett of the Red Sox. Pelfrey ended up going seven innings for the Mets. In those seven innings, he gave up just six hits, one walk and struck out eight. Meanwhile, Beckett pitched eight beautiful innings, giving up just five hits and one run. The run was unearned, a result of Beckett’s own error in the first.
The Red Sox still led 2 - 1 as the game headed into the bottom of the eighth. Mike Pelfrey had already thrown 111 pitches, so Pedro Felicano was brought in to pitch the eighth. Feliciano was excellent, retiring the Red Sox 1-2-3. Saturday’s successful appearance was yet another example of a rathe r remarkable turnaround for Feliciano, who had a 4.5o ERA on May 2. Now, just weeks later, his ERA is down to 2.65.
Then, in the top of the ninth, Papelbon walked Sheffield, struck out David Wright and Jeremy Reed, before surrendering the game-winning blow to Santos. Things got a little shaky in the bottom of the ninth, when J.J. Putz walked the leadoff batter, but then he retired Jason Bay, J.D. Drew, and Mike Lowell to seal the victory.
Meanwhile, the New York Yankees scored three runs in the bottom of the ninth to defeat the Philadelphia Phillies. The Yankees entered the inning down 4 – 2, but managed to muster three hits and three runs off Phillies closer Brad Lidge to win the game. They tied the game on a two-run homerun by Alex Rodriguez. Yankees outfielder Melky Cabrera got the game-winning blow, doubling in Robinson Cano to win the game.
So, the Mets are now just a half-game behind the Phillies for first place in the NL East. The Braves are a half-game behind the Mets and one and a half behind the Phillies. Meanwhile, the Florida Marlins are fading. They’re now five and half games out of first place in the NL East.
Categories: Mets Preview/Postgame
Tagged: Alex Rodriguez, Atlanta Braves, Brad Lidge, Carlos Beltran, David Ortiz, David Wright, Dustin Pedroia, Fenway Park, Florida Marlins, Gary Sheffield, Green Monster, J.D. Drew, J.J. Putz, Jacoby Ellsbury, Jason Bay, Jeremy Reed, Jonathan Papelbon, Josh Beckett, Kevin Youklis, Melky Cabrera, Mets Baseball, Mike Lowell, Mike Pelfrey, New York Mets, New York Yankees, NL East, Omir Santos, Pedro Feliciano, Philadelphia Phillies, RBI, Runs, Yankees Baseball
Despite 5 – 3 Win, Mets Remain 1.5 Games Behind Phillies.
If there’s one combination that’s worked for the New York Mets this season, it’s Johan Santana, Bobby Parnell, and Francisco Rodriguez. All three pitchers have ERAs below two and are a major part of why the Mets are contending for a playoff berth as June approaches.
The Mets came into Friday night needing a win after four straight losses on the West Coast. With their ace pitcher on the mound against Daisuke Matsuzaka, the struggling Red Sox starter, the Mets needed to win this game. It wasn’t easy, but in the end, they were able to emerge with the win.
The Mets took a 1 – 0 lead in the top of the second on a solo shot by Gary Sheffield. The Red Sox tied it in the bottom of the second with a solo blast by catcher Jason Varitek, but the Mets would take the lead for good in the top of the fourth. Ryan Church started the inning with a fly out to center, but then Carlos Beltran doubled, Sheffield walked, and David Wright hit an RBI single to give the Mets a 2 – 1 lead. After Jeremy Reed grounded into a fielders choice, Omir Santos and Ramon Martinez each hit RBI singles to give the Mets a 4 – 1 lead.
The Red Sox trimmed the Mets lead to one in the bottom of the fourth. With one out and runners on second and third, shortstop Ramon Martinez made his 4th error of the season in just 19 chances, allowing two runs to score. Johan Santana escaped the inning without any further damage, and after four innings at Fenway, the Mets were still holding onto a 4 – 3 lead.
Santana held the Red Sox scoreless for the rest of the night. He threw a season-high 118 pitches on the night, 79 for strikes, and left after seven innings. In those seven innings, he gave up just three runs (two earned) on seven hits. He walked only one batter and struck out eight. Meanwhile, the Mets managed to give Santana a little more security in the top of the 7th, when Angel Pagan singled in Luis Castillo to give the Mets a 5 – 3 lead.
It was a heroic effort from Johan Santana who threw a ton of pitches to help the Mets end their losing streak. It was an efficent night for the Mets offense who scored five runs on just eight hits and left just five runners on base. And it was a good night for the Mets bullpen. Bobby Parnell pitched a perfect eighth, lowering his season ERA to 1.86. Then, Francisco Rodridguez pitched a perfect ninth to record his 12th save of the season.
It was a mixed day for Mets third basemen David Wright, who went 1 for 3 with a walk. He drove in his 29th run of the season, yet he also made his 7th error of the season which ties him for the league lead among third basemen.
Unfortunately for the Mets, the Phillies also won on Friday night, defeating the New York Yankees by a 7 to 3 margin. The Phillies remain one and a half games ahead of the Mets in the NL East. The St. Louis Cardinals also won Friday, shutting the Royals out 5 – 0, so the Mets also remain two and a half games behind the Cardinals in the NL Wild Card standings.
The Mets will send Mike Pelfrey (4 – 1, 4.61 ERA) to the hill Saturday evening to take on Red Sox ace Josh Beckett (4 – 2, 5.85 ERA). The game is at 7:10 EST.
Categories: Mets Preview/Postgame
Tagged: Angel Pagan, Bobby Parnell, Boston Red Sox, Carlos Beltran, Daisuke Matsuzaka, David Wright, Fenway, Fenway Park, Francisco Rodriguez, Gary Sheffield, Jason Varitek, Jeremy Reed, Johan Santana, Josh Beckett, Kansas City Royals, Luis Castillo, Mets Baseball, Mike Pelfrey, New York Mets, New York Yankees, NL East, NL Wild Card, Omir Santos, Philadelphia Phillies, Ramon Martinez, Red Sox Baseball, Ryan Church, St. Louis Cardinals, West Coast
Mets Lose Fourth Straight, Fall 2 – 1 to Dodgers
Every single game at Dodger Stadium was close, but in the end the Mets were unable to win a single game. The Dodgers beat the Mets 3 – 2 in 11 innings on Monday, beat them again on Tuesday by a score of 5 to 3, and then secured the series sweep with a 2 - 1 victory Wednesday night. The Mets have now lost four straight.
The Dodgers got off to a nice start Wednesday. Dodgers starter Jeff Weaver managed to work around a Carlos Beltran double and David Wright walk in the top of the first. Then, in the bottom of the first, Juan Pierre and Rafael Furcal each singled. After Orlando Hudson grounded out, moving Pierre to third, Andre Ethier hit a sacrafice fly, putting the Dodgers up 1 – 0.
The Mets got the run back in the top of the third, when Luis Castillo hit a one-out single, and Carlos Beltran hit another double to bring Castillo in. After that, the two teams traded zeroes until the fateful bottom of the eighth. J.J Putz got the first out of the inning, but then gave up a single to Hudson, a walk to Ethier, and then an RBI single to Russell Martin. Putz was able to escape the inning without giving up any more runs, but by then, the damage had been done. The Mets got a runner to second in the top of the ninth off ,Jonathan Broxton, but were unable to score, and so the Dodgers prevailed by a score of 2 to 1.
It was another disappointing day for the Mets, who failed to capitalize on an excellent start from Livan Hernandez. Hernandez pitched seven strong innings for the Mets, giving up seven hits but just one run. Perhaps, most critically, he walked only one.
Yet, it was all for naught, as the Mets continued their struggles at the plate. Weaver pitched five solid innings for the Dodgers, and was followed by a strong crew of relief pitchers, who held the Mets to just three hits in four innings of work. There were some good individual performances once again. David Wright had yet enother good game for the Mets, walking twice and singling to center. Beltran, meanwhile, doubled twice, drove in the only run of the game, and walked. Yet, overall the Mets were horrible on offense. They managed just seven hits Wednesday and left nine runners on base.
The Phillies lost Wednesday, so the Mets remain just one game back in the NL East. Atlanta trounced the Colorado Rockies and are in third place, just a half-game behind the Mets and just one and a half behind the Phillies. The Cardinals also won so the Mets are now two games back in the NL Wild Card standings.
Categories: Mets Preview/Postgame
Tagged: Andre Ethier, Atlanta Braves, Carlos Beltran, Colorado Rockies, David Wright, Dodger Stadium, Dodgers Baseball, J.J. Putz, Jeff Weaver, Juan Pierre, Livan Hernandez, Los Angeles Dodgers, Luis Castillo, Mets Baseball, New York Mets, NL East, NL Wild Card, Orlando Hudson, Philadelphia Phillies, Phillies Baseball, Rafael Furcal, Russell Martin, Sweep
Part of the magic of baseball, or perhaps of any great sport, is that anything can happen. No two games are the same. The only thing one can expect is the unexpected. And so it was Monday night, as the Mets made mind-boggling error after mind-boggling error in their 11-inning loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Mets starter Tim Redding, just called up from triple-AAA Buffalo, got off to a bad start Monday night as he gave up two runs in the bottom of the first.
The Mets, however, would get one of those runs back in the top of the second on a Ramon Martinez RBI groundout, driving in David Wright, who had doubled to lead off the inning. Meanwhile, Redding found a groove, and ended up going six innings, giving up just the two runs on two hits and four walks.
Yet, for the first several innings of the ballgame, Dodgers starter Randy Wolf stymied what had once seemed a potent Mets offense. In fact, the Mets were still down 2 – 1 when Angel Pagan led off the top of the eighth with a double to deep left field. After Luis Castillo and Carlos Beltran failed to plate the runner, Gary Sheffield hit a little squibber that somehow managed to find the outfield grass, and even more miracously, allowed Pagan to score the game-tying run.
But this was not the Mets night out in the field. The Mets had already made one error (a Martinez fielding error) as the game headed into the later innings. Then, things really started to go sour. In the eighth, Martinez made a throwing error that nearly cost the Mets a run. In the ninth, Sean Green made a horrible throw to first on a ground ball, that put Jean Pierre on third and nearly let him score.
But it wasn’t until the 11th when the mental errors really began to kill the Mets. In the top of the 11th, it appeared that the Mets had taken the lead when Ryan Church singled to left, and Angel Pagan then hit a ball into deep right field. Church came in to score. But wait, he didn’t score because he had never touched third base. The Dodgers touched third base. Three outs. Inning over. Still a tie game.
Then, in the bottom of the 11th, Brian Stokes made his only real mistake of the ball game, walking Mark Loretta to lead off the inning. Then, the next batter, Xavier Paul, hit a ball to left-center field that should’ve been caught but wasn’t due to poor communication between left-fielder Angel Pagan and center-fielder Carlos Beltran. After an intentional walk, the Mets brought the infield and outfield in, literally bringing Carlos Beltran in to play short center field.
Stokes managed to record the first out of the inning on a short fly ball, and then got Orlando Hudson to hit a sharp grounder to first that should’ve at least led to a force out at home if not an inning-ending double play, except Jeremy Reed in trying to get the out at home, threw the ball past the catcher. Ball game over. The Dodgers win, or more accurately, the Mets lose.
It was almost laughable. Church forgetting to touch third. And then, five fielding errors, each one sillier than the last. Most were rookie mistakes. Ramon Martinez, who made two errors, is just up from the minors. Angel Pagan, in left field, also just got back to the majors, and was probably too nervous to hear Beltran calling him off. And then Jeremy Reed, not used to playing first base, got too caught up in the situation, too caught up in trying to make that spectacular double play, and ended up throwing the entire game away.
On the bright side, the bullpen was brilliant for the Mets. Bobby Parnell pitched a scoreless seventh, J.J. Putz worked around Martinez’s second error and a James Loney single to pitch a scoreless eighth. Sean Green was shaky, but managed to overcome his own error and general wildness to pitch a scoreless ninth.
And then what can you say about Brian Stokes? He was fantastic on Monday night. He pitched a 1-2-3 bottom of the tenth, and did his best to work through adversity in the eleventh. He made one mistake. The leadoff walk, but after that was perfect. Forcing a fly ball that should’ve been caught. Then, one batter later, getting Rafael Furcal to hit a short fly to left, too short to score the run, with the bases loaded and none out. Then, getting a grounder to Jeremy Reed, what should’ve been a double play ball. Should’ve, would’ve, could’ve. The Mets lost by a score of 3 to 2.
Now, the Mets and Phillies are tied for first. The Braves are two and a half back. The Marlins are three back.
Categories: Mets Preview/Postgame
Tagged: Angel Pagan, Baserunning Blunder, Bobby Parnell, Brian Stokes, Carlos Beltran, David Wright, Errors, Fielding Errors, Gary Sheffield, J.J. Putz, James Loney, Jean Pierre, Jeremy Reed, Luis Castillo, Mark Loretta, Mets Baseball, New York Mets, Orlando Hudson, Philadelphia Phillies, Rafael Furcal, Ramon Martinez, Ryan Church, Sean Green, Xavier Paul
Matt Cain was all over the place Sunday evening. In the top of the second, right after Bengie Molina singled to put the Giants ahead 1 – 0, Cain walked the first three hitters. Bases loaded. No outs. The perfect chance to hit it big. But then Jeremy Reed hits into a double play and Mike Pelfrey grounds out. In the fifth, Mike Pelfrey walked to leadoff the inning, but then the 1, 2, and 3 hitters went down in order. Inning over. In every inning except the 6th and 9th, the Mets had at least one base runner. And yet, at the end of the night, the Mets were unable to score, shut out for the first time this season.
David Wright had another good game for the Mets, singling in the third and walking twice. Carlos Beltran singled and walked. Yet overall, the Mets offense was stymied by a wild yet effective Matt Cain. Cain would end up going six innings for the win. Bob Howry, Jeremy Affeldt, and Brian Wilson each piched an inning out of the bullpen to secure the 2 – 0 win. It was a particularly important outing for Wilson, who had already lost two games in the series.
Meanwhile, Mike Pelfrey struggled for the Mets. He gave up only two runs in six innings of work, but he clearly had his struggles on the mound. He gave up six hits, two walks, balked three times, and looked visibly frustrated as the game went on.
The Mets, however, did get two nice comeback outings from their bullpen. Ken Takahashi pitched a scoreless seventh after giving up runs in his two previous outings, and Sean Green pitched a 1 – 2 – 3 eighth. Green has struggled over the past month. His ERA was 2.45 after a scoreless outing against Milwaukee on April 19. It was 8.80 going into tonight’s game, so the scoreless inning was huge for Green and the Mets.
The Phillies beat the Nationals on Sunday, to move just a half-game behind the Mets. The Braves game against Arizona was postponed Sunday and are now just two and a half behind the Mets. The Marlins lost yet again Sunday and remain three and a half games behind the Mets.
Meanwhile, the Mets, if they weren’t leading their division, would be just a half-game back in the wild card chase, which is certainly good news. The Mets will now head to Los Angeles to take on the streaking Dodgers.
Categories: Mets Preview/Postgame
Tagged: Atlanta Braves, Balk, Bengie Molina, Bob Howry, Brian Wilson, Carlos Beltran, David Wright, Florida Marlins, Giants Baseball, Jeremy Affeldt, Jeremy Reed, Ken Takahashi, Los Angleles Dodgers, Matt Cain, Mets Baseball, Mike Pelfrey, New York Mets, Philadelphia Phillies, San Francisco Giants, Sean Green, Washington Nationals
Mets One Game Away from Sweeping San Francisco
Friday’s pitching matchup looked unfavorable for the Mets, as they sent Livan Hernandez to the hill against Giants phenom Tim Lincecum. Things looked even worse when they found themselves down 5 – 1 after two innings of play. Yet, in a impressive display of resilience, the Mets offense heated up, scoring two runs in the sixth and four runs in the seventh. David Wright had the big hit. With the team down 6 – 3 in the top of the seventh and the bases loaded, David Wright hit a bases-clearing double, tying the game at 6. The Mets then put together two runs in the top of the ninth to win it 8 – 6.
After giving up five runs in the first two innings, Hernandez settled down ending with a line of: 5 IP, 8H, 5ER, 0BB. Most impressive was the lack of walks. The bullpen pitched an excellent game, giving up just one run in four combined innings. Sean Green gave up the run and looked bad once again, but Pedro Feliciano, Brian Stokes, and Francisco Rodriguez all put up scoreless innings to help the Mets win the game.
Then, on Saturday, Johan Santana had a rare bad game. He was shaky throughout giving up 11 baserunners and six runs, although only four of those runs were earned. Fortunately, Santana was backed by a potent Mets offense, who had an awful lot of success against Randy Johnson.
The Mets got off to a good start, scoring three runs in the top of the first. They were led by a 2-RBI double off the bat of Carlos Beltran. Then after Santana and the defense gave away the lead, the Mets scored four runs in top of the fifth, led by RBI doubles from Carlos Beltran and David Wright and an RBI single by Ramon Castro.
The Giants continued to chip away at the Mets lead eventually turning it into a 7 – 6 game, but that’s when the Mets did something they rarely did last season, which is put the game away. In the top of the ninth, the Mets scored two runs on a Fernando Tatis RBI sacrafice fly and a Ramon Castro single. J.J. Putz then threw 13 pitches, 11 for strikes, to close out the game, and the Mets would end with a 9 – 6 victory and an impressive 21 – 15 record.
The Mets would end the night with a slim 1.5 game lead over the Philadelphia Phillies. They have a 3-game lead over the Atlanta Braves though, and a 3.5-game lead over the Florida Marlins.
Tomorrow’s game features Mike Pelfrey (4 – 0, 4.89 ERA) versus Matt Cain (3 – 1, 3.00 ERA) of the Giants.
Categories: Mets Preview/Postgame
Tagged: Atlanta Braves, Brian Stokes, Carlos Beltran, David Wright, Fernando Tatis, Florida Marlins, Francisco Rodriguez, J.J. Putz, Johan Santana, Livan Hernandez, Matt Cain, Mets, Mets Baseball, Mike Pelfrey, New York Mets, Pedro Feliciano, Philadelphia Phillies, Ramon Castro, Randy Joihnson, San Francisco Giants, Tim Lincecum