Tag: Johan Santana

Move Over Johan: Mike Pelfrey Is the New Ace of the Staff

When the New York Mets traded for Johan Santana, he was supposed to be the staff ace. He was for his first two years on the team.

Santana is still one of the better pitchers in the league, but he has had some struggles recently. Many are hesitant to continue to call him an ace.

Since Santana joined the team, Mike Pelfrey’s pitching has significantly improved. Surely, some of it has to do with Santana’s mentoring. More of it has to do with Pelfrey coming into his own.

Santana has posed a 3-2 record with a 3.72 ERA through nine starts this year. Pelfrey meanwhile has a 6-1 record with a 2.86 ERA through nine starts. However these are some of the most debated stats when it comes to a pitchers level of success.

If we go and look at some advanced stats we can see that Pelfrey is the true ace of the staff. Since 2008, Santana’s strikeout rate has declined from 7.91 K/9 to 7.11 K/9. Pelfrey’s strikeout rate has increased from 4.93 K/9 to 6.19 K/9 during that same time period.

Pelfrey has been able to prevent hitters from hitting long balls. Mike allows only .48 HR/9. Compare this to Santana who allows nearly one home run per nine innings (.98 HR/9). This low home run rate is part of what allows Pelfrey to keep the number of runs allowed down.

Batters are hitting .249 with a .289 batting average on balls in play. While Pelfrey has allowed hitters to bat .253, he has been slightly more unlucky has hitters have a .297 batting average on balls in play.

Pelfrey has been able to buckle down better than Santana with runners on base. Pelfrey has left 80.5 percent of men on base while Santana has only left 72.9 percent on base. This is integral to Pelfrey’s success. He is able to limit the damage done by other teams by performing under this pressure.

Since ERA is one of the most questioned metrics in baseball, we can take a look at the pitchers xFIP. This is their expected fielding independent ERA. Pelfrey posts a 4.01 xFIP while Santana’s xFIP is 4.13.

Another stat we can look at instead of ERA is ERA+. In this case, the higher the better. Pelfrey has an ERA+ of 142 and Santana has an ERA+ of 112.

Pelfrey is clearly a pitcher who is improving. Santana appears to be on a slight decline. By the end of the year it should be obvious: Pelfrey will be the ace of the staff.

This will most likely be debated due to Santana’s past, but when you look at all the facts, Mike Pelfrey is the best pitcher the Mets have.

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Ace vs. Ace: Johan Santana Faces CC Sabathia in Subway Series Finale

If you thought last night’s pitching matchup was something, get a load of this one.

Tonight, in the rubber game of the Subway Series, it’ll be a battle of left-handed aces. Two guys that have been paid over $150 million to lead their respective starting rotations.

For the Mets, that man is Johan Santana. Coming off of a game in which the Mets lost, to no fault of Santana, he’ll be trying to pitch the Mets to a series win. That would be a feat in itself, considering the Mets lost against Javier Vazquez and had the hard task of beating the top two Yankees pitchers.

They beat one of them last night, as Phil Hughes faltered for the second time in a row. Tonight, they’ll have to beat CC Sabathia. Just like Santana, on the same day—May 18—Sabathia’s Yankees lost to no fault of himself.

While both frontline starters will be going at it, both offenses may be in for long nights. The Yankees haven’t been clutch in the first two games. They had chances to break the first game open and last night, they couldn’t get the big hit to cause damage.

The Mets offense got a big boost for a rare time in last night’s win. Jason Bay got four hits (he’s five for his last five), and David Wright drove in a couple of runs on base hits against Phil Hughes. Angel Pagan, who’s been a pleasant surprise, got three hits, including two doubles, and played a part in the victory.

The last time Johan Santana was called upon in a big Sunday night game, he didn’t fair well at all. In fact, it was the worst start of his career against the Phillies.

The Mets right now trail both the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres in the NL Wild Card race by 4 1/2 games. They have a huge opportunity to gain ground and at the same time, calm things down a little bit as we inch closer to Memorial Day.

Santana will have to step it up and hope that his offense and defense doesn’t let him down like in Atlanta last Tuesday. That was the game the Mets lost on David Wright’s throwing error.

If the Mets do get a late lead, it will be interesting to see how Francisco Rodriguez does. He had to come on last night for a five out save, but the Mets will have an off-day on Monday.

Last season, Santana got roughed up against the Yankees, and at that point, pitched the worst game of his career. In only three innings, he gave up nine runs on nine hits, as the Mets lost 15-0. They’ll certainly hope for a better result this time around.

Johan Santana vs. New York Yankees (career)
4-2, 4.40 ERA, 57.1 IP, 57 hits, 22 BB, 51 SO

CC Sabathia vs. New York Mets (career)
2-0, 1.20 ERA, 15 IP, 9 hits, 1 BB, 11 SO

2010 season series (New York Mets vs. New York Yankees)
May 21: New York Yankees 2, New York Mets 1
May 22: New York Mets 5, New York Yankees 3
Series tied 1-1

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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 Two

In the second part of our look at the deeper issue facing the Mets , leadership, we will look at the potential leaders on the current roster.

As previously mentioned, neither the Carlos Delgado’s or Pedro Martinez’s of the organization in the past few years has been a true leader or have been able to get others to follow for one reason or another.

However, there are a few players on the current roster who will need to try in order to right this sinking ship that we call the New York Mets .

Those players are Johan Santana, David Wright, Francisco Rodriguez, Carlos Beltran, Jason Bay, Jeff Francoeur , Rod Barajas , Ike Davis and Jose Reyes.

None of these players are the current leader of this team. They have all led in a particular moment or game, but not for any stretch of time longer than that.

First is Johan Santana.

Let me say this before getting into Johan. Personally, I like Santana.

With that said, he was brought in to put the team over the hump and to carry them on his back. He is the supposed to be the team ace. The unwritten definition of an ace is two—fold. They’re supposed to bring a reputation and an attitude with them.

An ace is supposed to stop losing streaks and start winning streaks. They’re supposed to be relied on for consistency and dominance, whether at home or in hostile road environments.

In the few years that Santana has been here, he has seldom done any of this.

He hasn’t lived up to the reputation or the contract of an ace. Injuries have been the frequent excuse, and with good reason. But there comes a point in time when a team must recognize the contributions, or lack thereof, from its key contributors.

Santana has one of the lowest run support averages over the last few seasons. That is certainly a factor, but an ace is expected to have a handful of bad outings where his team will have to score several runs as opposed to just a few.

The problem in his case, is that too often, he has forced the offense to score more than a few.

That pressure on an inconsistent offense is suicide for a team’s success.

His boasting and selfish mentality has alienated him to a degree as of late. His lack of production and consistency has dug the hole even deeper.

Sooner or later, the impatient fan base that worships and defends his every action, will grow tired of defending stat lines like he posted up in Philadelphia.

They will turn on him if he continues at that pace. Santana needs to get himself together before he can try to get his team together.

I can only speculate that there has been an issue with him so far this season overall. Whether that issue is physical or mechanical, he did correct it in his last outing, but his overall consistency has not been there for a team that desperately needs it.

Santana has not been the pitcher that Mets GM Omar Minaya envisioned him to be when Minaya traded for him from Minnesota.

When he makes claims, such as he is the “best pitcher in the NL East”, in response to the rival Phillies trading for league ace Roy Halladay , then pitches the way he has, it makes him and the team look foolish.

If Santana were to truly be a leader, he must stop talking until his consistency can back up his boasts.

Next on my list, is David Wright.

Personally, I like him too and think he is the best candidate for the role, however, there are issues. He does not routinely show emotion or speak out enough to be the leader of this team.

There are three things that are true about him.

First, he shows up everyday and works his tail off to be successful and to maintain success. That example is more than enough to speak volumes for him. But it is not enough to speak loudly enough to gain the collective attentions of those in the locker room to respond to his direction.

Some may follow his example, but not his lead.

Second, he always confronts the media and is the face of the franchise. Through good or bad games, he is the last to leave because he is facing the media storm that is New York.

He addresses them with grace and character, but again, that example is not enough to be a leader.

Third, he shows little emotion. The other day, he argued with the home plate umpire, and it seemed out of his character due to the rarity of his outbursts.

If he showed a little more emotion and addressed members of the team that are at fault a little more, he would be the leader. As it stands, he is not.

Perhaps, this maturity that he is showing as not just the face of the franchise, but the source of its fire as well, will be enough to catapult him into that role.

Emotion can be good if not overused. It is a thin rope to balance. Should he learn to do so, he will be the Mets leader for the next decade.

The rest of the names on my list are interesting, but not probable, with one exception. Jose Reyes. I will get into him last, for now, let’s move down the list.

Next, is K-Rod, Francisco Rodriguez. K-Rod is the closer. No team has ever had a closer as its’ leader. From Trevor Hoffman and John Franco to Lee Smith and Dennis Eckersley , other players have filled that void for one good reason.

A closer’s role is too infrequent. They can be leaders in a core group of players, but not the essential figure. They just aren’t on the field enough. Rodriguez has the heart and the mouth, but not the man hours required to truly take the attention of the clubhouse.

In the final part of this article series, I will examine the rest of the list that includes such names as Carlos Beltran, Jason Bay, Ike Davis and Jose Reyes among others.

As we continue to look for a leader for this ragtag group of misfits that we root for and gladly call, the Metropolitans .

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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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Should the Mets Be Happy Losing the Series to the Phillies?

Am I the only one who watched the New York Mets drop two out of three games to the Philadelphia Phillies this weekend?  I thought most people did, but apparently Jon Miller, Joe Morgan, and Orel Hershiser did not.

Normally, I would not care if three people did not watch the weekend series between National League East rivals, but when you are broadcasting a game Sunday night in the series you should pay attention to the previous games.

At the end of the game Sunday, the Phillies were about to wrap up an 11-5 victory which would give them the first series of the season against the Mets.  Yet, the ESPN crew in the booth (the three above) said the Mets have a lot of positives to take from the series.

What I do not understand is what positives do the Mets have to take?

They took the first game on Friday night facing Kyle Kendrick and his over-seven ERA.  The Mets were red hot and David Niese made sure it stayed that way, but positives and negatives of a whole series can not be taken into consideration on the first game against a pitcher with an ERA over seven.

The wind came out of the sails of the Mets on Saturday though, when the 2010 NL Cy Young Award winner, Roy Halladay, took the hill and had an easy day playing against the Mets for all nine, while only giving up three hits.  Meanwhile, Mike Pelfrey woke up and came back down to earth giving up six runs over four innings, while the Phils cruised to a 10-0 victory.

After getting blown-out on Saturday, the rubber game on Sunday became the biggest game of the early season, not just for the Mets, but in all of baseball.  You have the hottest team in baseball trying to prove they are going to challenge the big boys all season with their ace on the hill, if the Metropolitans wanted to prove something, they win Sunday night.

The game started out as planned for the team from Queens. They hit around 47-year-old Jamie Moyer for three runs in the first and then two more in the fourth, to have a 5-2 lead going into the bottom of the fourth. 

The game should have been considered over with the remaining innings played out just to say they did.  However, Santana and the Phillies had other ideas.  The only problem: Santana is on the Mets.

That brings us to the bottom of the fourth inning.  With two outs and Chase Utley standing on second base, Raul Ibanez drives him in with a base hit, Juan Castro single’s, Carlos Ruiz walks to load the bases for the never-dangerous pitcher Moyer, with a lifetime average of .133 and 13 career RBI (or just about one for every two years he has played).

Then the unthinkable happened, Moyer worked a seven-pitch walk forcing in a run, and bringing Shane Victorino to the plate.  The Flyin’ Hawaiian then sent a 0-1 fastball to the seats in right field for a grand slam giving the Phillies the lead.

The defending NL champions then showed the Mets who was boss in the NL East, extending the lead to six runs, and not looking back from there as the Mets did after the fourth inning.

So, can someone please tell me what positives the Mets can take away from this series? 

They beat up on the sixth-starter Kendrick for their lone win of the series. Then they only helped secure Roy Halladay’s NL Cy Young on Saturday.  Finally, their ace could not make it out of the fourth inning and got out-pitched by a 47-year-old on national television.

Gee, I know if I were the Phillies I would be shaking scared of the Mets. 

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Lefty Revenge: History Tells Us Johan Santana Will Come Back Stronger Than Ever

Whatever way you want to slice and dice the Mets Sunday-night defeat in Philadelphia, there’s no getting away from the fact that Johan Santana struggled.

Struggled is probably the nicest word to describe his shortcomings in Citizens Bank Park. It’s like saying that Stalin struggled to understand the merits of democracy or that C.C. Sabathia struggled to fit into a pair or Chinos with a 36-inch waist.

Just how bad was Santana against Philly? Well, he tied his career high for most home runs allowed in a start (four) and gave up more earned runs than ever before (10).

Santana gave up four earned runs against the Phillies last June, but at least he got through seven innings. In fact, he only gave up five runs in that game despite the four long balls, and he even picked up the win.

Last night was different though. The Phillies sent 13 to the plate in the fourth inning and a dejected Santana was back in the dugout after just 71 pitches.

This ranks right up there with his all-time worst ever performances. It was worse than the 10-hit beatdowns against the Red Sox in 2000 and the White Sox in 2004 when he couldn’t make it through the fourth inning; worse than the time the White Sox pummeled him for eight earned runs and three home runs in 3.2 innings 2002; worse than the nine runs the Yankees tagged him for just last year.

But let’s not fool ourselves here. While Santana may not be the pitcher he was two or three years ago, he’s still a stud. Leslie Montiero wrote a great article today about putting the defeat in perspective, and it’s true. The loss does not make or break their season, just as a win would not have made New York favorites to win the National League.

Mets fans shouldn’t linger on Santana’s performance or the defeat, but rather to put it behind them and move forward. It’s not a quality Mets fans have displayed over the past few seasons, but a loss is a loss and there’s no point dwelling on it.

After a historic 9-1 homestand and eight-game winning streak, that was apparently the calm before the storm. We took a game against the best team in the division on the road. That’s nothing to really cry about.

Looking ahead though, how will Santana bounce back? He’s scheduled to pitch against the San Francisco Giants back at Citi Field on Saturday.

Since 2005, Santana has given up five earned runs or more nine times. In his next nine starts he is undefeated with a 2.25 ERA.

In fact, he has only given up five or more runs in back-to-back games twice in his entire career, and that was back when he was a green hurler in Minnesota in 2000 and 2003.

Simply put, Santana learns from his mistakes and puts a bad outing behind him. He has bouncebackability, a term coined by an English soccer manager to refer to a team that can recover from a defeat.

Whenever Santana struggles, he comes back stronger than ever. Look at the proof.

In 2005 he gave up a season-high seven runs to the Blue Jays but bounced back with 11 strikeouts in seven dominate innings over the Brewers the next time out. Later that year, he gave up six runs against the Angels but rallied in his next start 10 days later to pitch seven innings of one-run ball against the same team.

In 2007 he gave up six runs to Toronto while still playing for the Twins, but he struck out 12 Indians five days later.

Two years ago, Santana allowed five runs against the Reds and came back with eight solid innings against the Phillies, and just three weeks ago, the Mets ace allowed five runs in five innings against the Nationals, but shut out the Cardinals through seven innings when he was next on the mound.

Santana is not immune to the occasional meltdown, but he takes what he needs to from the beating. Past history tells us that he will be back to his dominant self this weekend. History tells us that he’s going to unleash a world of hurt on the Giants.

Pablo Sandoval may need more than kung-fu to hit the Mets when he rolls into Flushing. If I was him, I’d just close my eyes, swing the biggest stick of bamboo I could find, and hope for the best.

When Santana bounces back from an ugly defeat, hope is all you really have.

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New York Mets: Post Philles Series Thoughts

The New York Mets went into Philadelphia as the hottest team in baseball.

They were the talk of the town.

They very well might have left the most embarrassed team in baseball.

After winning the series opener Friday night, the Mets got roughed up the next two games. Not only did they get roughed up, their two best pitchers were terrible. This series loss came after the Mets had won their previous three, including sweeps of the Atlanta Braves and LA Dodgers.

New York is now a half-game behind Philadelphia in the National League East and have an overall record of 14-11. Here are some more thoughts from the Mets—Phillies Series.

 

Welcome Back

Welcome back to Earth, or reality for that matter. The Mets pitchers had been on such an incredible role, you had to know this was coming at some point. What you didn’t expect is that it would come from their two best. Jon Niese started the series off with yet another excellent game. He went seven innings giving up just four hits and one run. Niese struck out seven in the win.

Mike Pelfrey and Johan Santana were scheduled to pitch the next two games, Mets fans had to be feeling good about this.

Crash!

That’s basically what happened next. Pelfrey lasted just four innings on Saturday after giving up six runs on eight hits and a walk. It was Pelfrey’s first loss of the season.

Santana went out on Sunday and was even worse. The Mets ace could not get out of the fourth inning. He pitched 32/3 innings and gave up eight hits and ten runs. He only struck out one Philadelphia hitter. Santana was victim of the long ball, giving up four home runs.

The bullpen pitched well for the most part. It did however have to pitch 91/3 innings in the series. That could turn out to be a issue as the Mets have Oliver Perez and John Maine starting their next two games with no day off.

Read more thoughts from this series as well as whats to come at Double G Sports.

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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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Phillies 11 – Mets 5 May 2, 2010

The Mets and, more so, Johan Santana got absolutely torched by the Phillies in the final game of their three game series. Santana gave up 10 runs in 3.2 IP including four home runs, one of those a grand slam to Shane Victorino. It was really ugly tonight for the Mets.

The Mets did have some offense against Jamie Moyer. David Wright had a big 3-run homer in the first inning and things were looking good. But not for long. Rod Barajas hit another homer as well. But the five runs the Mets put up weren’t enough to overcome the disastrous start that Santana had.

Santana looked worse than I’ve ever seen him as a Mets player. He gave up a bases loaded walk to Moyer of all things. Then Victorino hit the grand slam. It was hideous.

The Mets leave town losing two of three in Philly and a half game back in the NL East.

Box score

Related posts:

  1. Phillies 10 – Mets 0 May 1, 2010
  2. Mets 7- Phillies 5 May 7, 2009
  3. Preview: Mets at Phillies May 2, 2010

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