Tag: Jason Bay

Jason Bay Hot in New York Mets’ Three Spot

Back on Sunday, May 16, New York Mets manager Jerry Manuel once again moved around his lineup a little bit.

This time, Manuel slotted his left fielder, Jason Bay, into the No. 3 spot.

This move has turned out to be a good one so far.

Bay had been hitting fourth or fifth for most of the year, and his power numbers remained much lower than expected. Since being moved to the three spot, Bay has begun to heat up.

Bay has now played in seven games since the move to the three spot in the Mets lineup. In those seven games, the left fielder is batting exactly .500. He has 13 hits in 26 at-bats from his new lineup position.

This past weekend was a big reason for the successful numbers. The Yankees always seem to bring out the best in Jason Bay, and he continued to hurt them. This past weekend, Bay went 7-for-10 against the Yankees in three games.

Continue this article at Double G Sports .

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Jason Bay Powers New York Mets to Subway Series Victory Against Yankees

NEW YORK—The Mets put themselves in a tough position with their loss in the first game of the series on Friday night, but bounced back well the last two days.

After winning behind a strong effort from Mike Pelfrey last night, they took the series tonight, led by the red-hot Jason Bay.

It was supposed to be a pitcher’s duel on paper, but one starter didn’t live up to the hype. CC Sabathia got rocked hard, as the Mets tagged him for six runs on 10 hits, in only five innings of work.

In the first inning, the Mets loaded the bases against Sabathia but couldn’t come through as David Wright struck out and Angel Pagan blooped a ball to second to end the inning.

They did come through in the second though. Rod Barajas led off with a double, which was followed by two strikeouts. After Jose Reyes singled Barajas to third, Alex Cora drove in two with a single. Jason Bay then hit a two-run home run over the high fence in left to give the Mets a 4-0 lead. 

Meanwhile, Johan Santana was brilliant through the first 6 and two-thirds innings. At one point he retired 13 in a row.

In the fifth inning, the Mets tacked on a couple of runs. Jason Bay led off with his second home run of the game (he had one the entire season entering tonight), and after Ike Davis’ second hit of the night, David Wright brought him in with a double, his 33rd RBI of the season.

In the sixth, Jason Bay, looking to become the first Met to ever homer three times in a home game, got hit on the back by Sergio Mitre. Both benches were warned to the dismay of both managers.

After quickly retiring the first two batters in the seventh, having thrown only 68 pitches, Santana inexplicably lost the strike zone. With a potential opportunity to throw a complete game, and give the bullpen a two-day rest with tomorrow off, he walked Nick Swisher on four pitches and allowed a long RBI single to Francisco Cervelli.

In the eighth, Santana continued to struggle. He allowed a leadoff walk to pinch-hitter Marcus Thames and came out of the game after 7 and two-thirds. It was an inexcusable way to finish a game, in which he should’ve at least went eight innings.

That meant the Mets had to tax their bullpen. In the ninth, they brought in Ryota Igarashi, making his first appearance since April 20, having suffered a hamstring injury. He struggled, giving up a walk, single and RBI single to start the inning.

With a 6-2 lead, Jerry Manuel brought in closer Francisco Rodriguez for the final two outs. He also had a rough inning, allowing a double to Derek Jeter, making it 6-3. After allowing an RBI groundout by Brett Gardner, and an infield hit to Mark Teixeira, K-Rod struck out A-Rod to end the game, as the Mets held on to win 6-4.

The positives are that the Mets won the series after losing game one. The negative, in my opinion, is the sudden hiccup of Johan Santana.

It can’t be overlooked that Santana couldn’t go deeper in the game and rest the bullpen. Was he hurt or was it a lack of stepping up when it counts the most? Which ever it is, it’s something that shouldn’t be overlooked.

Now the Mets will take a day off after playing 17 consecutive days, before welcoming in the Phillies, who lost their interleague series to the Red Sox.

The Mets will enter the series five games behind and with a lot of pitching concerns.

Next Series Probable Starters

May 25
New York: R.A. Dickey (0-0, 3.00 ERA) vs. Philadelphia: Jamie Moyer (5-3, 4.30 ERA)

May 26
New York: Hisanori Takahashi (3-2, 2.53 ERA) vs. Philadelphia: Joe Blanton (1-2, 5.06 ERA)

May 27
New York: Mike Pelfrey (6-1, 2.86 ERA) vs. Philadelphia: Cole Hamels (5-2, 3.92 ERA)

 

New York Mets Upcoming Schedule

May 25-27 vs. Philadelphia Phillies

May 28-30 @ Milwaukee Brewers


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Yankees-Mets: Santana Out Duels Sabathia

Originally posted on Midwestropolitan

Admit it pessimists, this was an encouraging weekend for the Mets.

It’s okay to feel good about this weekend. It doesn’t mean that you can’t go back to your grumpy ways during the next Mets slide.

The series victory over the Yankees is a potential stepping stone. Nothing more, nothing less.

Johan Is An Ace

 

Tonight’s performance for Johan Santana is exactly the type of start he was signed for.

He was called upon to go against the opposing team’s ace, C.C. Sabathia no less, and was asked to out duel him.

Johan answered the call, going deep into the eighth inning. He gave up only one run, six hits, and struck out five batters.

His counterpart, was chased after five innings, allowing six runs (five earned), and ten hits.

A scary thought for opposing hitters, Johan is traditionally a better second half pitcher.

If he and Mike Pelfrey can continue to put together starts like this, the Mets will find themselves on the other side of .500, and climbing.

Jason Bay, Streak Killer

 

Jason Bay continued his torrid hitting. This time, he flexed his muscles a bit as he hit two home runs, and drove in three runs.

His second home run was a screaming line drive that went straight into the bullpen in right center.

Bay ended an impressive streak for the Mets offense. His lead off homer in the fifth stopped the two out run scoring streak the Mets have enjoyed during their last two games-they had scored nine straight runs with two outs.

The Rest Of The Lumber

Alex Cora started everything off for the Mets with a great at bat in the second inning in which he produced a two strike hit that drove in two runs.

David Wright drove in a run on an RBI double.

Jose Reyes, and Ike Davis each collected two hits.

A-Rod vs. K-Rod

 

Francisco Rodriguez has earned his pay check this weekend. Although he didn’t have his best stuff when asked to come in with runners on in the ninth inning, he got the job done.

Derek Jeter was able to drive in a run on a double that hit off the left field wall.

Another run came in when Rodriguez was able to get the second out of the inning when Brett Gardner was thrown out by David Wright on a very close play at first base.

Mark Texiera then proceeded to bounce one a mile high off the plate,  and get an infield hit.

This brought Alex Rodriguez to the plate, representing the go ahead run.

We were then left to watch a tense eight pitch at bat, in which Franky got the best of A-Rod, and got him to swing and miss on a change-up.

The “Wussification” Of Baseball Continues

 

I miss the old school way in which teams protected their hitters. Hit our guy, expect your guy to get one in the ribs the next inning.

Now, the minute a pitch sniffs someone’s jersey, the umpire’s warn both teams, and the next pitcher that hits someone is ejected along with the manager.

In the bottom of the seventh Jason Bay was hit by a pitch in the back by an obvious breaking ball that got away from Sergio Mitre.

Home plate umpire, Marvin Hudson felt it was necessary to warn both teams.

I understand the intent of the rule, but I don’t agree with it. It brings too much subjectivity into the game.

Let the players handle issues on the field. Not the umpires.

On Deck

 

The hated Phils come calling on Tuesday night.

R.A. Dickey will get his second start as he faces Jamie Moyer.

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Bobby Valentine: Answer for the New York Mets

When looking at the Mets this year, fans can see there is one thing they truly lack: charisma.

Jerry Manuel is known for his laid back attitude and approach to the game. So far this has been terribly unsuccessful. He has a 147-152 record since taking over as Mets manager midway through the 2008 season. Mediocrity is not acceptable in New York.

The Mets need a charismatic manager who brings fire and passion to the game. The team needs to be energized. The perfect manager for the job is Bobby Valentine.

If you watch Baseball Tonight, you can see Valentine’s love of the game. It is fairly obvious that Valentine would love to manage in the majors again.

A lasting image from his stint as manager of the Mets occurred when he was ejected from a game and came back an inning later in sunglasses and a fake mustache. This shows dedication to the team. Valentine wanted to be out there to help the team regardless of the consequences. When asked about the incident, Valentine said he did it to lighten up the team.

Anyone who has seen the documentary The Zen of Bobby V, cannot question Valentine’s passion. He understands the game of baseball. Fans of the Chiba Lotte Marines, the Japanese he managed, practically worshiped Valentine. Valentine brings a positive aura to the teams he coaches.

While Bobby Valentine is a character, he is also able to bring managerial skills with him. No other manager would have been able to lead the 2000 Mets to the National League pennant.

The 2000 roster had a starting outfield of Benny Agbayani, Jay Payton and Derek Bell. Mike Bordick, Todd Zeile and the immortal Bubba Trammel were also on the roster.

The starting rotation featured Glendon Rusch, Rick Reed, and Bobby Jones, all of whom had an ERA over 4.00 during the regular season.

In spite of all of this, Bobby Valentine was able to lead the Mets to a World Series appearance. Imagine what he could do with a roster featuring David Wright, Jose Reyes, Carlos Beltran, Jason Bay, Ike Davis, and Johan Santana.

Jerry Manuel with his laid back attitude is not the right choice for the Mets. However, the right choice is out there in Bobby V.

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Will the New York Mets Leader Please Stand Up? Part Three

In the last part of the series on leadership in the New York Mets club house, we will look at several player options.

Those options include Carlos Beltran, Jason Bay, Jeff Francoeur , Rod Barajas , Ike Davis and Jose Reyes. We have reviewed Johan Santana, David Wright and Francisco Rodriguez.

Now, moving on, let’s further examine the rest of that list, starting with Carlos Beltran.

Beltran was brought in to be the playoff-tested veteran. He was supposed to bring experience and leadership to a young core to push them over the top.

He has brought the experience, but he never has brought that leadership the team sought.

Too often, his mouth has written checks that his abilities couldn’t cash. That has gotten his reputation into poor standing in both the league and the clubhouse.

Then, his health became an overwhelming issue. It still is.

A leader, as previously stated, must be both on the field and produce.

He has not been both at the same time for a few years. The franchise is still desperately holding on to hope that he will magically heal, and become the leader they envisioned him to be. He is only getting older and slower. It most likely will not happen.

Another player recently brought in for such a role was Jason Bay. Bay is far too quiet for this role and far too new to the team and city to take on such a position. He is still relearning the National League and his own ballpark.

He has yet to truly produce in New York, and so he had his own struggles to be concerned with before he can convince anyone that he can help them with their struggles.

Even if he didn’t have these productivity issues, he is not the fiery type that is needed to be the unquestioned leader.

The next one is fiery, however.

Jeff Francoeur is the epitome of fire and passion. He is the man a teammate wants in the trenches along side of them. But he is also too emotional and too passionate to be the sole leader.

He can help be an enforcer, but not the main leader. He has the emotion and the mouth to be a leader, but he often loses his grip on that emotion. A leader must have control of himself before he can take control of a team.

Rod Barajas has been well underrated and unnoticed in the offseason hoopla that surrounded the Mets ‘ need for a catcher.

In the talk of the team signing every available player over 35 to fit the mold and the pursuit of Benjie Molina, Barajas was lost in the shuffle. He was signed as a last desperation move.

It was a stroke of luck on the part of Mets GM Omar Minaya .

Skill had nothing to do with this acquisition. Minaya was simply desperate after he was embarrassed that Molina shunned him publicly by taking a hometown discount in San Francisco.

This lucky move has paid dividends already for the Mets . Barajas has had multiple big hits and moments of productivity.

He has performed well above expectation, but while he is the present, he is not the future. That distinction goes to Josh Thole.

Thole is widely regarded as the next great hitting catcher, and is expected to take that role for many years to come.

Barajas , though productive, is just a bridge to the future. Therefore, he can not be a long-term leader. Thole will need a few years to grow into the role, if he develops the brashness and the production, he could fit the bill.

Time will tell, but for now he needs seasoning.

We continue, to Ike Davis.

Davis has been the young gun. The player that everyone adores. He is the real deal. So much in fact, that he pushed the opening day first baseman to the bench or the minors.

The first baseman I speak of is last year’s golden boy, Daniel Murphy.

Davis is so good, that Murphy conceded and admitted that Davis belongs as the starter. Davis has shown the heart and hustle as the newest face of the franchise, and has captured the collective hearts of the fans.

The problem with Davis, however, is that he lacks the experience to be the leader at this time.

He may be able to in the future, but for now, he must show that he can respond to the adjustments that the rest of the league will inevitably make against him. He is a welcomed addition to both the lineup and the clubhouse, but as of now, not a leader.

Finally, we come to Jose Reyes.

Reyes is a very important component to the Mets franchise. I have him last on this list for a purpose.

He is one of the first names that come to mind when thinking of a leader for the team; however, he is the greatest example of the biggest problem with this team—identity.

Leadership is only forged after identity is established. When a player has an identity, they have confidence and confidence brings leadership.

Reyes has had a headline filled offseason that continued into the first few weeks of the regular season as well. He has yet to truly find his role on the team.

Is he a leadoff hitter or a No. 3 hitter?

This is an important question to ask.

Essentially it is a question of whether or not he is the table setter or the meat of the lineup? Is he better to the team at starting rallies or continuing them?

We all know what Reyes is capable of doing on the field. The problem is that Mets manager Jerry Manuel knows this too, and is still undecided on how to properly utilize him after almost a year of having him as a weapon at his disposal.

That indecision has hurt Reyes and his production. Therefore, it has hurt his role on the team.

If a player is not only undecided on his role to the team, but is uncomfortable as well, it is impossible to expect him to lead.

How can he lead with so many other issues?

Reyes cannot lead until he is settled and comfortable with one role, whatever that role may be.

So, therefore, he can’t be the leader because Manuel is holding him back from being it.

He certainly has the ego, the energy experience and the mouth to be the leader. But until he is assigned a role and is allowed to stay in it to allow himself to get comfortable, he cannot be a leader. He will just be a follower.

Here lies the essential problem with the Mets .

They have too many potential chiefs, but no one capable or willing to stand out to lead the tribe. All of them are followers that aspire to lead to an extent. That’s not leadership; that’s called aspirations.

No team has ever won based on aspirations. Teams need bonafied leaders in the trenches with them. Then the rest will follow suit and fall in line. That is what history has proven.

Going back to my very first example of leadership, George Washington.

Washington, like so many others, took control of the confused and directionless troops around him. Only when there was unity and true leadership on the field of battle, did victory emerge as a byproduct.

It was only under true leadership that this group of colonies prospered into a nation.

It will only be due to unity from true leadership that this slightly above average team of followers that we call the New York Mets will prosper into a contender and a champion.

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Looking at The Mets With The Glass Half Empty

I’m as pessimistic a Mets fan as you’ll meet, and I’m not ashamed to say so.

I was sitting in the upper deck of Shea when the Mets completed their second consecutive collapse just moments before celebrating the closing of the place.

I sat there two years prior, having my heart sink and Carlos Beltran’s knees buckled in game 7 against St. Louis.

I can reel off an endless number of moments that have relegated me to believing the baseball team I bleed orange and blue for will never give me the satisfaction of winning a championship despite the countless hours and dollars I’ve invested into it.

So you’ll have to excuse me for once again seeing the glass as half empty when looking at the Mets 25 games into the 2010 season.

After the unwatchable 4-8 start, they seemed to turn things around with a 9-1 homestand that saw them take advantage of decent teams playing really bad baseball.

The Cubs, Braves and Dodger—sthree teams with hall of fame caliber managers, seemed to roll over during their brief stays at Citi Field, and to the Mets’ credit, they capitalized.

They extended their winning streak to eight with an emphatic victory in Philadelphia to open their three game series this weekend, extending their seemingly too-good-to-be-true first place lead to 1.5 games.

Providing more hope for Mets fans, like myself, was the fact that the next two games would be started by the reinvented Mike Pelfrey and the reliable Johan Santana.

Yet here we are, two losses, 21 runs allowed later, wondering if the winning ways of the previous two weeks was something the team would build off of or simply an aberration.

While they certainly have a chance to prove themselves in Cincy this week, they were given a golden opportunity to send an early season message to their hated division rivals, and failed miserably.

Sure, Roy Halladay was, well, Roy Halladay in silencing the Mets bats on Saturday as he went on to pitch the 846th complete game shutout of his career (give or take a few) while Pelfrey you could argue was due to get lit up sooner or later.

However there isn’t an excuse in the world that gets Santana off the hook for his heartless performance Sunday night.

Given a 3-0 lead after a David Wright home run, Santana gave two right back via the long ball, and three innings later, allowed two more in the midst of an eight run meltdown, completing the worst outing of his professional career—outdoing the gem he gave us at Yankee Stadium last year where he only allowed 9 runs. 

The low point was undoubtedly the bases loaded walk he issued to Jamie Moyer, whose AARP membership was accepted sometime during the at-bat.

It was simply inexcusable for the so called ace of a pitching staff to deliver such a performance, after being given a lead and a chance to take a series, on the road, from your division rival.

Santana, despite his three wins, has looked unbelievably average this year.  Even in his good starts, he throws too many pitches, seems to 3-2 on every batter he faces, all while the velocity and command of his pitches is severely lacking.

Of course the half empty glass look at the Mets also reveals how bad Jose Reyes continues to look despite a decent looking homestand. 

Seven years after making his major league debut, he continues to lack any plate discipline and continues to show the immaturity of a rookie while lacking the poise a player with his experience should display at least once in a while.

Jason Bay has looked better, but after a month still only has one home run and eight runs batted in, hardly enough production to justify the money the Mets spent on him.

Then there’s Jerry Manuel.  I can’t say I’ve ever cared for Jerry, dating back to the story that it was his suggestion to pinch hit Cliff Floyd in game seven instead of sending up somebody to bunt the runners over down by two runs.  Floyd couldn’t walk, was never asked to bunt, and struck out leaving the runners where they were at first and second.

His success in 2008 after the firing of Willie Randolph was erased by the collapse that awaited his team by seasons end, and despite the rash of injuries in 2009, even when healthy his team lacked fundamentals and baseball instincts that are reflective of a manager and his coaching staff.

At 14-11, the team is certainly off to a far better start than anybody could have hoped for, however major problems remain and as the 9-1 homestand and eight game winning streak fades away, the problems plaguing this team will no longer hide behind success.

It was a very discouraging finish to an otherwise encouraging stretch of baseball.

Then again, I’m only looking at the glass half empty.

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