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Mets by the Numbers
Since 1999, the Mets website that counts
6
Sons of Jim Marshall
Thu, 04/24/2008 - 7:59pm — mbtn01
Another injury to Brian Schneider this afternoon required the Mets to reach down to AAA and recall catcher Gustavo Molina, dressing him, appropriately enough, in No. 6. Brady Clark, who passed through undistinguishedly wearing No. 15 in 2004, may see his run in No. 44 this year similarly brief and forgettable: He was designated for assignment to make room for Molina (pictured at left thanks to MBTN reader Gordon).
As readers of this site know well, no number in Mets history has been issued as often as No. 6. Molina, if and when he makes his official Mets debut, would be the number's 34th occupant and the first since Ruben Gotay, who was designated for assignment and claimed by the Braves shortly before the season began. No. 6's colorful and scrubbily insignificant history includes three issues in the team's maiden season of 1962 (Jim Marshall, Cliff Cook and Rick Herrscher); three issues in 1990 (Mike Marshall, Alex Trevino, Darren Reed) and a mind-boggling four giveaways in 2004 (Ricky Gutierrez, Gerald Williams, Tom Wilson and Jeff Keppinger).
Even the number's longest-term occupants (Al Weis and Wally Backman) owned reputations as guys who overachieved their way to prominence: Weis was a light-hitting backup infielder for the 1969ers who masde a strong case to be MVP of the 1969 World Series; Backman, of course, overcame doubts early in his career and the need for a platoonmate throughout it, to carve out a nine-season run in No. 6 on pure grit.
Below is a list of the most popular issues in Met jersey history through April 25 2008, and including Molina:
No. No. of Players to wear it Notes
6 34 Issued a team-record four times in 2004.
34 30 Longest tenure: Danny Frisella (1970-72).
17 30 20 position players; 10 pitchers.
19
28 Current occupant: Ryan Church
35 28 Longest tenure: Rick Reed (5 years).
38 27 12 players in 9 years between Roger Craig (1963) and Buzz Capra (1971)
11 27 26 position players, 1 pitcher.
33 27 14 pitchers; 13 position players.
43 26 Issued twice in ’66, ’97, ’98 and ‘02
26 26 One All-Star starter: Dave Kingman (1976)
29 26 Best player to wear it gave it up too soon: Ken Singleton
1 25 Everyone wants to be No. 1; most should think twice
And That's What Happens To Guys Who Wear No. 6
Sat, 03/29/2008 - 6:05am — mbtn01Even More on Mike DiFelice
Wed, 08/15/2007 - 11:09pm — mbtn01Got a cool message this morning from Met roster genius Jason:
Mike DiFelice became the first-ever New York Met to be added to the 40-man roster five different times. No other Met has ever been added more than 4 times in Met history.
5/16/05: Purchased from Norfolk (having been signed as free agent, 3/31/05)
6/2/05: Designated for assignment
6/6/05: Outrighted to Norfolk
8/21/05: Purchased from Norfolk (having stayed at Norfolk, 6/6/05-8/21/05)
10/28/05: Announced free agency
8/4/06: Purchased from Norfolk (having been signed as free agent, 5/31/06)
11/8/06: Announced free agency
7/29/07: Purchased from New Orleans (having been signed as free agent, 1/9/07)
8/2/07: Designated for assignment
8/9/07: Outrighted to New Orleans
8/12/07: Purchased from New Orleans (having stayed at New Orleans, 8/9/07-8/12/07)
Roster Shaping Up
Thu, 03/29/2007 - 11:50am — mbtn01The Mets following a rare spring training victory today said Aaron Sele and ‘Bazooka’ Joe Smith would be added to the big-league roster, a development that threw the Metly future of Chan Ho Park 61 into question. As things shake out it’s come down to Park, Ambiorix Burgos 40 and optionless/hapless acquiree Jon Adkins 39 for the seventh and final bullpen slot; The Mets will go with four starters the first few times around before recalling Mike Pelfrey 34 to become the 5th starter. That may prove to reward precocious prospect Lastings Milledge 44 for a strong showing this spring seeing as outfielder Ben Johnson 4 was cut today (along with lesser hopefuls Mike Carp 64, Lino Urdaneta 68, Anderson Hernandez 1, Ruben Gotay 6, Mike DiFelice 30 and Sandy Alomar Jr. 90).
Spring leaders of the Ring-Bell for Adkins-Johnson trade are the Padres, who’ve gotten a 0.90 ERA out of Heath Bell thus far.
May 2006
Thu, 06/01/2006 - 2:00am — mbtn01
At
Lastings (May 30) Sobering word that outfielder
Xavier
Nady 22 is shelved with an appendectomy is accompanied today by the
exciting news that prospect Lastings Milledge is in Flushing to
take over while he's gone (and maybe longer). Word is Milledge will dress
in the reserved-for-African-American-sluggers No. 44 (and not
6, which is what we might have rooted for to bridge the homegrown
power alley between Wright 5 and Reyes 7). We wish Nady the best for
a speedy recovery and that young Mr. Milledge (we won't ever get used to
referring to him as Lastings, we don't think) doesn't wind up overwhelmed
by the "can't miss prospect" pressures felt by previous Met inhabitants
of his uni -- Jay Payton and Ryan Thompson.
June 2005
Fri, 07/01/2005 - 2:00am — mbtn01Mientkiewicz to DL; Jose Offerman Arrives (June 26): When Doug Mientkiewicz' attempt to revive his season was interrupted Saturday by a hamstring tear, the Mets fished the Norfolk waters and reeled in fossilized utilityman Jose Offerman. Offernman, just .167 in 36 turns at bat for the Tides, suited up Sunday night in No. 35, recently cashiered by Mike DeJean. Truth be told, the elderly switch-hitting Offerman wasn't that bad as a pinch-hitter for the Twins last year.
March 2005
Fri, 04/01/2005 - 3:00am — mbtn01Castro Converts (March 26): The trade of Jason Phillips vaulted Ramon Castro into a likely role as Met backup catcher and his uni number went flying too. Castro's status seems solidified by a switch from the non-rosterly 72 to the backup catcherly 11. With a week to go until the bell rings, notable recent cuts include Jae Seo 26, Scott Strickland 28, Jeff Keppinger 6, and Scott Stewart 32.
February 2005
Tue, 03/01/2005 - 3:00am — mbtn01
Willie
and the Boz (Feb. 26): Willie Randolph,
as quoted by Bill Madden in the Daily News: "I'm gonna wear No. 12.
Why? You remember Ken Boswell? Second baseman on the '69 team? He was my
favorite player growing up. No. 12. It's a nice number."
We remember Ken Boswell too, and even if his sideburns might not fly in Willie's clubhouse, it speaks well of the new Met manager that he has a sense of his place in history. This is probably a natural result of the era we grew up, but 12 has always seemed more Boswellian to us than Kent-like or Alomarish. And as glorified ticket salesman Darryl Strawberry makes a grand reappearance at Shea this weekend, may it serve as a reminder of this team's horribly miscast former manager, who wore No. 18 but was no George Theodore either.
We found Madden's piece, by the way, from a link at the extraordinary new blog co-authored by veteran MBTN reader Greg -- highly recommended for fans of good writing and historical Metdom.
July 2004
Sun, 08/01/2004 - 2:00am — mbtn01Mets Acquire Fregosi for Ryan (July 30): OK, maybe it's not that bad. Maybe it is! The Mets tonight pulled a series of staggering moves, gutting the farm system in exchange for two pitchers who probably won't provide the pennant the Wilpons are so hungry for but at best add stability to an aging rotation. Dealing pesos on the dollar, the Mets sent AAA catcher Justin Huber to Kansas City for third base prospect Jose Bautista, then packaged Bautista, jobless infielder Ty Wigginton, and promising righty Matt Peterson to Pittsburgh for Kris Benson, the free-agent to be, and minor-league infielder Jeff Keppinger.
Moments later we learned they'd also paid through the nose for erratic, possibly injured Devil Ray righty Victor Zambrano. All they coughed up in this deal was studly prospect Scott Kazmir and, just for the hell of it, intriguing longshot pitching prospect Joselo Diaz. Along with Zambrano came a cup-of-coffee reliever called Bartolome Fortunato, who was assigned to Norfolk.
June 2004
Thu, 07/01/2004 - 2:00am — mbtn01Comings and Goings (June 26): Onto the disabled list: Karim Garcia 20. Off it: Orber Moreno 49. Designated for assignment: Ice Williams 21. Rescued from oblivion: Tom Wilson 6.
Welcome
Home (June 20): Jose Reyes finally
returned to the Mets. To make room for him the team designated catcher
Tom
Wilson for assignment, leaving the team temporarily with two catchers
and six outfielders and importantly, freeing up uniform No. 6 for
another issue. Reyes looked great in 7, hustling in one run and
tripling to set up the gamewinner.
In another move the Mets once again sent Pedro Feliciano 55 back to Norfolk before seeing any action in New York. That Feliciano's replacement, Jose Parra, saw action in his first opportunity probably didn't make the return trip any sweeter for Pedro. Parra, a veteran righthanded reliever who was closing in Norfolk, suited up in the dreaded No. 46.
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