Tag: Jerry Manuel

Hot and Cold: Five Reasons Why Jerry Manuel May Be Off the Hot Seat

The New York Mets have been perhaps the most volatile team so far this season.

They have shown flashes of World Series quality baseball, by winning eight games in a row in April, and have struggled miserably at other times, losing nine of 11 games in mid-may.

As much as the Mets season has been a roller coaster ride, the hype surrounding Jerry Manuel has been just as crazy.

When the team has been playing badly, Manuel has received a lot of criticism and a lot of Mets fans have been calling for his firing.

This week, Jerry Manuel made a strong case for why he should continue to be manager—the team is starting to come into shape and has momentum leading into their series with the Philadelphia Phillies.

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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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The New York Mets’ Mishandling of Jenrry Mejia

Plain and simple, the Mets need starting pitching.

With the injury to Jon Niese and Oliver Perez’s demotion to the bullpen, the Mets’ starting rotation is beginning to resemble that of a college team. While the offense has been present this year, the Mets’ problems fall with their pitching.

Last year, as a 19 year old, Jenrry Mejia dominated the Florida State League. Once Mejia moved up to AA, he began to struggle. In Double A, he posted and 0-5 record with a 4.47 ERA.

Looking at his stats, no one would have expected Mejia to start this season in the majors.

Then, in spring training, Mejia wowed the Mets’ front office (I do not know how difficult this is as Gary Matthews Jr. also “wowed” the Mets’ front office enough to be acquired). Surprisingly, Mejia was placed on the opening day roster as a reliever.

Mejia has definitely had success in the majors so far posting a 2.60 ERA through 19 appearances. He could become a solid reliever, but that should not be his future. Mejia has the skill set to be a top of the rotation starter. With the Mets’ starting pitching woes, Mejia should be groomed to take a spot in the rotation within the next two years.

The way Mejia has been handled so far reminds me of two previous mishandlings of top New York prospects.

Many fans will remember how the Mets mishandled Aaron Heilman.

Yes Mets fans, Aaron Heilman was once a top prospect. Heilman was given a chance to start in the majors and struggled. He was then converted to a reliever and was never given another opportunity to start with the Mets. Heilman had the skills to be a talented starter. This is evident from his one hitter in 2005.

Like Mejia, Heilman had early success as a reliever. Eventually, the league figured him out and he became and average pitcher. This could be a potential path for Mejia. He certainly has more talent than Heilman, but due to the incompetence of the Mets’ organization, he could be destined for the same fate.

Across town, Joba Chamberlain was tearing through the minor leagues.

At age 21, Chamberlain was called up to the majors as a reliever. His performance can only be described with one word: dominant—he posted a 0.38 ERA in 24 innings.

Then, the dreaded Joba Rules were established.

In 2008, Chamberlain started part time and saw success. Then, in 2009 Chamberlain was made a full time starter. He struggled at times and he looked like an average pitcher. This year, Chamberlain was sent back to the ‘pen. It is unknown when or if he will be returned to the starting rotation this year. He has struggled in relief this year posting a 4.91 ERA.

Chamberlain was a higher rated prospect than Mejia. He has struggled due to misuse, and the same can and will happen to Mejia.

These should be cautionary tales for the Mets.

It would be in the team’s best interest to send Mejia down to the minors and allow him to continue to develop as a starter. Mejia has the potential to be a top-flight ace and the Mets need to take advantage of this talent.

Right now, his potential is being wasted as a reliever.

It is fairly obvious that Mejia was brought to the majors to save Jerry Manuel’s job. At this point in the year, it appears that nothing Jerry does will get him fired. The team has struggled, the lineup continues to be switched, and Mejia has been misused.

It will be a sad day if Jenrry Mejia goes down in the annals of Mets history in vein—much like Aaron Heilman, Alex Ochoa, Alex Escobar, Billy Traber, Bill Pulsipher, and Paul Wilson.

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Five Moves the New York Mets Must Make To Become Contenders

Former Mets first baseman and current television analyst, Keith Hernandez has said a few times during the course of the season that a team is never as good as they look during a hot streak, and is never as bad as they seem to be during a cold streak.

Well, the Mets have seen both sides of the coin early in this young season, which leads me to believe that they’ll end up, eventually, some place in the middle.

Right now, that middle seems to be the .500 mark, where the Mets are now hovering close to at 18-20, following a dismal four-game sweep at the hands of the Marlins down in Miami.

It’s not exactly the way the Mets envisioned the first four games of an eight-game road trip against division foes happening. Plus, things won’t be much better when they come home next weekend to host the Yankees and Phillies at Citi Field.

It seems like ages ago now that the Mets finished April on an eight-game tear, including a 9-1 homestand that saw them reach first place in an ultra-competitive NL East in which all five teams look like they’re for real this year.

Yet, since that eight-game win streak in April, the calender has not been kind to the Mets, who are now 4-11 in the month of May. In fact, had the Mets not rallied for six runs in the eight inning against the Nationals last Tuesday, they could be staring at an eight-game losing streak right now.

But it’s not as if the season is over. The season is not even one quarter of the way over yet. There is still time to try to fix this team and lift them back towards respectability.

One thing that shouldn’t be overlooked is that, despite the 4-11 record in May, the Mets have played games decided by 2 runs or less in 12 of their last 13 games, which tells me a few things.

Primarily, it tells me that the offense doesn’t quit, and they try to rally until the 27th out is recorded. We’ve seen them rally back from five, six, even seven runs down (with mixed results) and I love to see the fight and the never-say-die attitude. It’s a refreshing change from last year when often they’d look dead after falling behind in the game.

In addition, it tells me that at some point, the breaks have got to start going the Mets way. With so many close games decided by a few plays that go either way, at some point those breaks have to go the other way. It’s not as if the opposing team is going to continue to make every diving catch and get every slow roller to bang off the third base bag for a base hit.

I still believe that the core talent on this team has so much potential that it hasn’t fully realized yet, so today I’ll look at five moves that the Mets should make to try to salvage this season, with the hopes of contending both now in 2010, and in the future.

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Trey Hillman Fired: Who’s the Next Manager on the Chopping Block?

The struggling Kansas City Royals have dumped Trey Hillman and replaced him with former Brewers skipper Ned Yost. But don’t expect Hillman to be the only MLB manager to be sent packing. There are plenty of other managers who also find themselves standing on thin ice. And so without adieu, here are the managers who I think will be gone before season’s end.

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Rubber Bawl: Why Can’t the New York Mets Win Series-Deciding Games?

The New York Mets were defeated by the Washington Nationals at Citi Field on Wednesday afternoon by the score of 6-4, thus losing two of their last three and ending their six game home-stand at an even 3-3.

Sure, it was just one series loss. Heck, it was just one game.

But it was the continuation of a rather unsettling trend for the Mets—they have now lost all six of the rubber games they have played in 2010.

If you throw out those six games, the Mets are 18-10. They know how to play winning baseball, so why do they have such problems when three game series are on the line?

Successful teams win series (thank you, Captain Obvious). The Yankees are 6-1 in rubber games; the Phillies are 3-2; the Cardinals are 4-0.

The only other teams with winning records who are under .500 in series deciding games besides the Mets are the Padres (1-4) and the Rangers (1-3). Only the lousy Orioles (0-1) and the underachieving Cubs (0-3) join the Mets as win-less in such contests.

But no team in baseball comes close to the Mets rubberized mark of 0-6.

Perhaps it is just a statistical anomaly—but recent history would tell us otherwise.

Last season the Mets went 7-11 in rubber games, including an 0-4 start. This is a disturbing trend. Although 2009 was marred by injuries, the club was 18-14 exactly one year ago, so parallels can be drawn to the current team.

One would think Oliver Perez, their least reliable starting pitcher, would have to somehow be a part of this growing problem. However, he hasn’t pitched in any of these games.

Believe it or not, Johan Santana has lost two of them—one to Livan Hernandez and another to Jamie Moyer, two pitchers whose ages are barely lower than the average speeds of their fastballs.

The majority of the six losses are stuck in the minds of Mets fans alike.

There was the 5-3 loss at St. Louis, the day after the Mets won a 20 inning game, where Jerry Manuel clearly out-managed Tony LaRussa. The Mets staked John Maine to an early 3-0 lead, only to lose on a Ryan Ludwick two-run homer in the bottom of the eighth inning.

Then there was the Sunday night massacre at Philadelphia where the Mets gave Johan Santana two separate three run leads, only to see him completely melt down in the fourth inning by giving up eight runs.

On the last game of their most recent road trip, they lost at Cincinnati on a walk-off home run by Orlando Cabrera. It’s worth noting that both losses in that series came via a walk-off blast.

And finally, in Wednesday afternoon’s galosh-like loss at a misty Citi Field, Nationals reserve outfielder Roger Bernadina hit a two-run home run off Francisco Rodriguez to break a 4-4 tie in the top of the ninth inning. It was Bernadina’s second career home run. The first one just happened to come earlier in the very same game.

In actuality the baseball season is 162 distinctly unique games. But for fans, players, and managers it’s impossible not to look at it as a series of…well, series.

You always hear players and managers say how important it is to win series. It can build morale and momentum. It can be the difference between a joyous flight to the next city and perhaps a somber one.

Of course the Mets have won their share of series this season. They do have a winning record, after all.

But when it comes to rubber games, the Mets are in the basement. They score less runs in those games (3.1 compared to 4.6 in all others) and their normally reliable pitchers have not gotten it done. Combine that with last year’s struggles and there may be reasons for concern at this point.

Perhaps this whole issue can be considered a coincidence. Over the course of a long season baseball has been known to provide some off the wall stats and records that don’t correlate with how a team or player is performing overall.

Coincidence or not, the Mets just lost their sixth straight rubber game. Hopefully, for New York fans, they’ll bounce back.

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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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