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Mets by the Numbers
Since 1999, the Mets website that counts
April 2004
The Met Who Wasn't There (Updated April 10): The Scott Erickson Experiment may have ended before it ever started. The Proven Veteran Starter, listed as No. 19, didn't make it out of warmups Thursday before hitting the disabled list -- David Cone last season at least waited until May. Back in his place is Jae Seo 38, whose evil cackle we could hear all the way from Norfolk. So for the time being, we've reduced our All-Time Met list to 726 players and are left waiting. Update: Seo appeared in Saturday's game wearing No. 26. That makes three numbers for Seo in as many seasons as a Met. He made his MLB debut in 2002 in 38; switched to 40 last year and back to 38 this spring after Braden Looper took 40. See here for a list of Mets who wore multiple uniform numbers.
Ready for Opening Day (April 5): The Mets packed their bags and headed to Atlanta and Tuesday's night's opener, leaving behind a weird spring training. In the final hours it was revealed that Jose Reyes would begin the season on the disabled list, that seeming longshots Eric Valent, Scott Erickson and Orber Moreno would make the team, and that Jae Seo, Roger Cedeno and Timo Perez would be elsewhere. Valent, a minor league phase Rule 5 pick from the Phillies dressed in No. 57 for spring training; we're waiting to see whether he gets more dignified number. It's our guess that Scott Erickson ditches the 89 given him and takes his customary 19 instead.
We welcome them, along with Ricky Gutierrez 6, Karim Garcia 20, Kazuo Matsui 25, Tyler Yates 33, Braden Looper 40, Shane Spencer 43 and Mike Cameron 44 to the All-Time Mets Numerical Roster, with Todd Zeile 27 making a second appearance in a new number, and Rick Peterson 51 cracking the Coaches and Managers list.
Roger Over (April 4): Check the vector, Victor! The unhappy second chapter of the Roger Cedeno Story came to a predictable end on Saturday when the Mets "traded" the embattled right fielder to St. Louis for two guys who probably won't make the team, catcher Chris Widger and reserve infielder Wilson Delgado. The Mets also kicked in almost all of Cedeno's considerable salary. We wish No. 19 good luck in St. Louis; it wasn't entirely his fault that the Mets overestimated his abilities, and we feel bad knowing that if fans made that distiction, it still sounded a lot like "Boo!" The upshot seems to bode well regarding a potential trade for Cleveland outfielder Milton Bradley; at the very least it may give Eric Valent a shot to be the lefty pinch-hitter they'll need in Roger's absense. Stay tuned! The offseason's going out like a lion.
Yates Up, Seo Down (April 4): Barring additional last-minute gynmastics, it appears that hard-throwing righty Tyler Yates has made the squad as the 4th starter and veteran Scott Erickson is hanging on for the fifth slot. Yates, who made a one-day appearance on the Met roster in April 2002 wearing No. 32 (he didn't appear and subsequently blew out his elbow), will debut against the Expos later this week wearing No. 33. Erickson, should he last these final 48 hours, will likely get a change from the obscene 89 on his back during spring training. We can't help but point out his customary 19 is available now that Cedeno is gone. Jae Seo 38 is meanwhile scheduled to start the year at Norfolk, with bullpenners Grant Roberts 36, Orber Moreno 49 and Dan Wheeler 39 also surviving the final cut.
Free,
Timo Perez (Updated
April 3): The Mets on Saturday announced that
they'd traded reserve outfielder Timo Perez to the Chicago White
Sox for minor league reliever Matt Ginter. Perez, who over three years
provided stretches of exciting play interrupted by minor injuries and major
brainfarts, was a victim of a numbers game in the outfield. On Sunday,
the Mets replaced his reserve spot with former Cub, Astro and Indian infielder
Ricky
Gutierrez, acquired for a scrub to be named. Update:
Sure enough the Mets have issued No. 6 for the 28th time in history.
That's the most ever
for any number.
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