Mercury Poisoning

Seen here is a video still from yet another regrettable moment in Mets uniform history as captured by the remarkable Paul C. Yes that’s mercifully deposed announcer Fran Healy, along with Howie Rose, showing off their custom Mercury Mets jerseys during the schlocky promotion on July 27, 1999.

Paul sent this beaut along after reading in our interview published recently that Howie prefers No. 14 (reader Steve R. in the meantime recalled Howie telling the story of wearing No. 36 at a Met fantasy camp). So why 21? Just guessing here, but you may recall the whole turn-ahead-the-clock jersey fiasco was a marketing trainwreck hatched by the geniuses at realty company Century 21. The game, they wanted us to imagine, took place in the Year 2021 (wow! That far ahead?)

Until now the best photo we’d had of Mercury Mets attire came from Dave Murray, aka Mets Guy in Michigan, who this week declared Mets by the Numbers to be “the best book ever written.” Aw… Thanks!

And speaking of the greatest blogger of all-time, joining Dave on the links column to the left is No No-Hitters, a site devoted to the New York Mets’ dubious streak of having never pitched a no hitter in franchise history. Personally I find no-hitters just random enough events to not-so-secretly hope this streak continues for another 46 years. I was relieved when Glavine choked one away in 2004. Glavine? In 2004? Go, Kit Pellow!

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Johnny Benchwarmer

We should know for sure how things shake out soon, but thought I’d forward a few ideas on the bench in case they’d like to check with me first.

Raul Casanova, wearing No. 30, looks like he’s going to start the year as the backup catcher to Brian Schneider. I don’t mind this. Casanova’s not as bad hitter and he switch hits. Ramon Castro has missed large parts of the last two seasons with back injuries and will miss the start of this year. I like my scrubeenos more reliable than Castro’s been, and hope for the sake of competition, and for the sake of having a lousy hitter as our No. 1 catcher, that Casanova makes his case.

I thought when Olmedo Seanz was canned the righthanded-hitting reserve job would go to Jose Valentin, but he’s hurt and may retire. Instead the Mets appear to be wavering between veterans Brady Clark 93 and – surprise! – Fernando Tatis. With Angel Pagan likely to be the starter in left while Moises Alou heals, and Endy Chavez the all-around defensive replacement, it may very well be Tatis, whose outfield experience is weak but who could also serve as a 3rd base and 1st base reserve. Tatis seems to be have been given a better chance than I’d anticipated given a dignified uni number (17) and fact he’s from early-90s Texas Ranger stock — USDA Prime as Omar is concerned.

Marlon Anderson (2B, 1B, corner OF) and Damion Easley (the only emergency shortstop) are the collective veteran lefty-righty pinch hitting tamdem. Let’s hope they survive the season unscathed.

Also:
* Pat Jordan fulfills the fantasy of every journalist who ever dealt with a difficult subject byblasting Jose Canseco out of the park. What a shot!

* I’ll be appearing with co-author Matthew Silverman at a book signing Saturday April 5, 3 p.m., at the Barnes & Noble in Bayside Queens.

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Unregistered

I was about to pontificate upon the chances of Steven Register retaining No. 61 or switching to something more dignified when word came he’d been waived by the Mets. Hopefully, the opportunity exists to work out a deal with Colorado that would allow the Mets to keep Register in the organization free of the onerous (for the Mets, at least) provisions of Rule 5.

This is good news, I believe, if you’re a fan of Joe Smith, who like Register, seems groomed for a role I’ll call GUPPY (GroUndball Pitcher, Perplexing deliverY — alright, needs work). Smith however can be safely stashed at AAA so it’s no lock he surfaces, at least not right away.

Similarly, looks as if suspicion over Duaner Sanchez‘ durability gives a shot to his hard-throwing nonroster counterpart, Brian Stokes, at least, to start the year. As for the No. 5 starter, I’m as disappointed as the next guy in Mike Pelfrey, maybe more, but I’d give him all the rope he needs. It’s not like an injured Orlando Hernandez has a whole lot of upside any longer.

* In case you didn’t see it, MLB.com’s Marty Noble today ran his annual Port St. Lucie christening story, a sure sign Spring Training is coming to an end.

* Don’t forget you’re invited to the MBTN Launch Party at Stout NYC, April 6, 1pm.

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SABR Rattling

Over the weekend at the NYC SABR meeting, spoke very briefly about the book, and even signed and sold a few.

The Casey Stengel chapter meeting retained its usual time-machine vibe: not so much retro as reminiscent. It’s full of guys who remember when the Dodgers and Giants were the local teams, speak with thick New York accents, and dress in sweats. As opposed to the scene at the national meeting, the presentations are decidedly low-tech and tend to focus more sharply on history than on cutting-edge analysis, although many members seem conversant in that language too. It would be great to see more young people get involved in this group, I’d be happy to tell you how.

A highlight for me was hearing some great authors speak. Michael Shapiro, whose THE LAST GOOD SEASON not only tells a suspenseful story of a great pennant race but dares to set the record straight on the Dodgers’ fateful move to California, was especially engaging and afterward signed a beaten-up copy of his book I’d remembered to take along. My brief talk was as part of a panel that included Tony Morante and Al Santasiere, who put together a handsome coffee table book on the history of Yankee Stadium; and Greg Spira, who co-edited MEET THE METS with my co-writer, Matthew Silverman, who was also there selling books. Morante, who has led tours through Yankee Stadium for nearly 30 years, wore a Yankees World Series ring the size of my wristwatch.
I also enjoyed schmoozing with attendees including Steve and Pedro from On the Sportlines; Michael Cesarano, who knows a few things about Mets uniforms; Andrew Schiff, author of a new biography of Henry Chadwick I brought home with me; and Dana Brand, who traded me his book,METS FAN, even-up for mine. I opened up Dana’s book on a bus ride to the in-laws immediately after the meeting, and almost felt like a thief.

More hobnobbing to come when Matt Silverman and I host a “launch party” for Mets by the Numbers Sunday April 6 at Stout NYC in Manhattan. The party is an informal get-together timed to coincide with the Mets-Braves game from Atlanta that afternoon. We’ll have copies on the book on-hand and available to sign. I’d love to meet some of the regular reader/contributors to the web site, hope you can come by.

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Pick a Number, Win a Prize

If you’re in New York this Saturday, don’t forget to check out the SABR meeting, where I’ll be doing a short presentation and then signing books with co-author Matt Silverman. There’s a small admission fee, but its more than worth it to be involved. There’s usually some stuff for collectors, plenty of baseball books (and writers) on hand, there’s an impossible trivia contest and interesting presentations. And fewer pocket-protectors than you would think. 10 a.m. at the Mid-Mahattan Library at 5th Ave. & 40th.

Thanks to readers Kevin and John who informed me of some minor errors in the player profiles they’d come across (Benny AgbayaniRon TaylorVince Coleman and a few others). The new format fortunately makes these things very easy to fix, so don’t hesitate to inform me if something looks goofy. The majority of these “player views” by the way are nothing much to look at yet, but I’ll be adding to them gradually. Some include photos and/or brief bios already.

Meanwhile in Metland, how about a round of applause for handsome young Fernando Martinez, who was reassigned to minor league camp but had little to be ashamed of, leaving behind a mark of .340/.373/.426, with four doubles and just seven whiffs in 47 spring training at-bats wearing No. 67. MBTN reader Kevin, yes, the same one looking up Vince Coleman, suggests turning speculation over what number F-Mart wears when/if he returns in the regular season into a game. This of course is a great idea.

In the comments section below, please submit your guess as towhat number will be issued to Fernando Martinez upon his regular-season debut with the Mets. Keep in mind this exercise may require you to further speculate as to the time (or year, even) at which he arrives so as far as I’m concerned all number guesses are valid. I’ll try to keep track and offer a prize (how about a signed book?) to the winner.

Currently, you needn’t be logged in to comment, but it may aid in tracking you down in the event you win. Politic all you want, but be a sportsman and enter just once.

Word also today that along with a few of the longer shots (Joselo Diaz, Nate Field, etc.) chubby veteran pinch-hitting hopeful Olmedo Seanz was assigned to minor league camp. Could a guy who wears No. 93 (Brady Clark) make the team? Just might. A trade could very well be in the works as well.

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From Day 1: The Howie Rose Interview

When Howie Rose was asked to write the foreword for Mets by the Numbers, he had little help from us since the book, by that point, had barely been written. So when he hit it out of the park on the first swing – I don’t think we had to change a single word and it was a perfect fit stylistically – it was at once a relief and then again, not all that surprising. That’s because Howie knows his stuff. We knew that, and if you listen to his broadcasts, you know that too. Howie approaches his assignment as the Mets’ primary radio voice armed with knowledge of the tiny details gleaned, as he explains in the interview below, over a lifetime of fandom aligning nearly perfectly with the history of the team he covers. That he eventually read the book, and hasn’t disavowed his association with it yet, is as gratifying a recommendation as it has received yet.

Can you discuss how you became a Met fan?
I go back to the very beginning. I became a baseball fan in 1961. I was seven years old. My father was a rabid Yankee fan. And my earliest memories of baseball were with my father at Yankee Stadium. When 1962 rolls around, and there’s a new team called the Mets, I really feel that they were created just for me. I’m 8 years old, a brand new baseball fan. My family had moved from the Bronx to Queens, just a quick bus ride away from Shea Stadium. I thought the whole thing had been set up just for me. I literally remember day one. I was too young to stay up and watch the game – they were in St. Louis and an hour behind us and I remember going to sleep knowing that the Mets were playing, but not knowing the score until I got up the next day. I went into my parents’ room, and asked my Dad how’d they do? He said they lost. I remember being disappointed and I was on my way from there.

No problems going against the rooting interests of your dad?
Not really. He got a kick out of it more than anything. My grandparents, and my Dad’s sister, and my cousins, lived very close to Yankee Stadium, literally walking distance, right across the street. So it was not at all uncommon for us to combine a visit there with a trip to Yankee Stadium. I remember visiting in 1964. The Yankees and Orioles were in pennant race that summer, and we went to a double-header there that if not sold out, was close to it. As we’re walking up the ramp with my cousin and my Dad I said, “It looks like a capacity crowd today.” My father looks at me and says, “Capacity crowd?! You must be watching too much of those Mets games.”

That was the truth then. Shea Stadium would sell out a whole lot more than Yankee Stadium would.

What was the point at which you became more conversant with the minutia and the details and the trivia of Met fandom?
You got to remember, being the age I was when the Mets were born, I lived through the trivia. It was more a case of remembering things from first-hand experience or watching it on television, or just a product of having been a fan and remembering what happened in any given game. It’s always come naturally. Most of my friends were also Mets fans.

I just emailed an old friend of mine. I thought of him and his brother the day the Mets made the Santana trade. I said, “We never dreamed up a trade this good except in Windsor Oaks,” which was the garden apartment complex in Bayside, Queens where we grew up. We literally used to sit around and dream up Mets trades.

There is one game in particular I recall. It was 1966, they were playing the Giants and Juan Marichal was pitching. They were losing 5-0 in the seventh inning and Marichal is working on a perfect game. In the bottom of the 6th inning, two out, Wes Westrum is going to letDennis Ribant, the starting pitcher, hit! What are you doing that for? And wouldn’t you know it, Ribant hits a 38-hopper through the middle for a base hit. And the Mets end up winning the game when Ron Swoboda hits a pinch-hit home run in the bottom of the 9th inning. We were so excited, on my way back from the ballpark that day, I said this is the greatest ballgame I’ve ever seen. The greatest I ever will see. And I’m always going to remember this date: August 4, 1966. As a 12-year-old, it was momentous to me. I would always do things like that, and it helped my recall.

That recall obviously helps you as a broadcaster, in what I imagine is your dream job.
It is a dream job in every respect. There got to be a point during my teenage years where I realized I wasn’t going to achieve the dream of being a professional ballplayer. And I had a natural passion and affinity for broadcasting. It came to pass where, when I was at the game and big things were happening, where it was probably natural for most kids to be thinking, “I wish I was on the field,” I would think, “I wonder what Bob, Lindsey and Ralph are saying.” My eyes were on the booth every bit as much as on the field. To have had the chance to work with Bob and with Ralph – I never got the chance to work with Lindsey – is very, very humbling and a source of enormous pride for me. Those guys were every bit the role models to me as Seaver, Koosman and Harelson and the rest of them were.

I read were you’ve said you are partial to what you call the traditional look of the uniform. But what of those who came up in a later generation and to whom the racing stripes are the traditional look, or even the black is a traditional look?
I’m sensitive to that. And there marketing realities of all sports today where there are so many revenue streams available to teams they never realized they’d had before back in the days. So I understand why uniforms change now and then. But I deeply, deeply believe in continuity and tradition and the continuum that is following the traditional franchises in baseball along with uniforms that barely change at all. The Red Sox have tweaked theirs over the years, the Yankees and Dodgers and the Giants are back to traditional roots and I personally find them the best to look at because they connect all the memories.

That’s the thing. Because I go back top day one, the closer they look, stylistically, today to 1962, the more everything ties together across the generations. I know it’s kind of corny, and a small thing in the grand scheme of things, but I think teams in all sports should harp on their history and the fan base and the continuum that following a team from youth to adulthood represents.

You might not have become the ballplayer you aspired to be but if you had, what number would you have liked to have worn?
I wore 8 in Little League because that what they gave me, and I kind of liked the look of it. But if somebody gave me a Mets jersey today and asked me what number I wanted on it I’d tell them 14. Absolutely for Gil Hodges. I’d wear 14 sometimes but if I put my name on the back people would think I was rooting for Pete Rose, No. 14. We’re obviously not related. I remember Gil at the end of his playing career and I’ll always have the utmost respect and admiration for how was able to turn the team around and win the World Series in ‘69 and I think still, even among the players, he’s probably one of the five most influential people in the team’s history. He should be revered and canonized by all Met fans.

What are your thoughts on Citi Field?
Looking at it from the perspective of someone who travels to all the ballparks, virtually every park we go to is modern, state-of-the-art and offers all the amenities you would want in a 21st century ballpark. So, as much as I love Shea, and realize it’s been home for all these years, when we come home after being where we’ve been, it’s kind of a letdown. I have been very envious over the years with these new facilities, so I’m excited that we’re going to have one of our own. I don’t mind that it looks somewhat like Ebbets Field at all. I wish I’d gotten to Ebbets Field in my life, but I was a little too young. Fred Wilpon has a relationship with the Brooklyn Dodgers. He threw batting practice there. That was his passion. And I understand his wanting to incorporate some of that into Citi Field and the Mets themselves.

Most fans know you from your work as a broadcaster with the Mets, but some recall you as well as a terrific talk show host. Do you have some thoughts on why it’s so difficult for listeners to find a host that will engage fans, talk intelligently and understands New York?
Things have become so contentious and filled with attitude that I wonder if there’s a place for something a little more highbrow. I don’t mean that in a condescending way; it just seems like there is so much today that revolved around negativity and attitude.

I’ve been criticized at times for being contentious and argumentative with callers and that’s part of it. But now there’s an inherent anger that they feel the need to transmit. I’m not sure how we get away from that, quite frankly. I think things might get more pronounced before they start to improve. But I think it’s possible to do a show without that. Joe and Evan can do that. They don’t bring that lowest common denominator to it. And Mike and the Mad Dog are great, they’re the Gold standard.

You can have a little Don Rickles in you without being overtly personal toward the one you’re talking with. But some guys have reached far too low in terms of attitude.

I know your schedule probably precludes this, but would you be interested in doing another call-in show?
Knowing what I know now and having been through it, I don’t think I’d be comfortable doing a show while I have an affiliation with a team. I think the best way to do a show is to be unencumbered, unattached, and feel free to criticize and opine with no fear of being accused of having an agenda or having to pull your punch. I went though that. It cost me dearly. And I’m too old for that kind of aggravation. I would much prefer one or the other.

You’re working with a new partner this year. Do you know Wayne Hagin?
I know him through the community of broadcasters. We all tend to chat with one another. Usually before the first game of a series we’ll get together and share some insights and get each other up to snuff. So I’ve known Wayne in that context for a number of years.

I was curious to know whether as part of his audition they put the two of you together and see how you worked first.
We didn’t do that. We’ve both been around long enough to be able to mesh without too much difficulty, although sometimes those things take time. You need to get a sense of the other person’s style and what they’re comfortable with. If I’m doing play by play I want to know when he’s most comfortable jumping in so I can give him the space he needs, and the same with me. I need to know where I can find an opening without stepping on his toes. Our broadcasts more than most are a product of the symbiotic relationship of the partners than a lot of others, where it’s your inning and my inning. That’s not how we do it. When I worked with Gary and Tom, it was more of a conversation. From that standpoint I was very lucky to mesh with Tom right away, and I hope I can mesh with Wayne just as quickly.

How soon will you be able to work together?
The Islanders schedule can really complicate things, but it is what it is. I’ll be able to be down in Port St. Lucie for three days and get in tune with things. I’ll be ready for opening day but I’ll wish I had more innings with Wayne this spring.

One or two games you recall fondly as a broadcaster?
The night they came back after 9/11 turned out to be a much more profound experience than I thought it would be because after the attacks, I was ready to shut down baseball for the rest of the season. I had no stomach for it and felt that where we were nationally had so much pain and hurt and anger and depression, I couldn’t see myself getting into the outskirts of a pennant race, which is where the Mets were at that time. If they canceled the season on Sept. 12 that would have been fine with me.

So when they came back to New York, I wasn’t prepared, and it turned out to be one of the most profound, emotional, nights of my life. I was doing TV that night. When Piazza hit the home run in the bottom of the 8th inning, we showed a shot on camera of a couple of uniformed firemen, and they are smiling and jumping up and down and celebrating the home run in the picnic area. And I thought to myself, I have no idea what firehouse these guys are from but in all likelihood these two men in the last 10 days lost comrades, friends and perhaps even family, and amid all that devastation, and with everything we’d been through as a nation, and everything that those two guys had been though, that we can take respite and solace in a home run in a baseball game, that however short it lasts, put that misery out of their minds for a split second and get a little pleasure. It reinforced for me the power of sports and especially baseball in this country. And that’s when I knew it was the right thing to do to come back and play. That’s at the top of the list.

When they clinched the division in ‘06, even though it was a foregone conclusion, to be behind the mic at that moment brought me right back to Sept. 24 of 1969 when they clinched the division for the first time, and I actually welled up a little bit. My mind took me back to being at Shea as a fan when they clinched in ’69 and I got a little emotional. That’s the connection, the continuum I always talk about. I was able to enjoy that moment in ‘06 in conjunction with what I’d experienced as a fan in ‘69, and to have that all tied together was a great moment for me.

I imagine it was pretty difficult then to call it last year, though probably a good test of your journalistic chops also.
It’s easy to get caught up emotionally when the team is doing well but you still have a responsibility to maintain perspective and balance between the reporting you’re supposed to do and the emotional pendulum no matter how it’s swinging. I think, and I heard from people in and out of the organization, that Tom and I had the right balance last year.

It was incredible to watch it unfold because you kept thinking they were just a game away from turning it back around. Only, it just never happened. Until the top of the first inning of the last game of the year, I never sat back and said, they might not make it. Even with all of that, the Phillies could still have lost and there would have been a playoff game. But the Phillies didn’t cooperate. Full marks to them: They earned it, they took it. It was there for them and they grabbed it. They deserve all the credit.

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MBTN World Tour 2008

The following events and appearances are scheduled around the release of the Mets by the Numbers book:

Wed., April 16, 6-8 p.m.: Bookends, Ridgewood, N.J.
Signing books with Matthew Silverman at a event that’s simultaneously hosting Hall of Famer Gary Carter and his new book, Still a Kid at Heart; Former Booklyn Dodger George Suba, author of My Memories as a Brooklyn Dodger; and Dan Reilly, author of The Original Mr. Met RemembersDetails here.

 

Thurs., April 17, 7:30 p.m.: Baseball Authors Event at Word Books, Brooklyn
Appearing with Spike Vrusho, author of BENCHCLEARING: Baseball’s Greatest Fights and Riots; and hosted by Caryn Rose of Metsgrrl, at my local indy bookstore here in Greenpoint (Franklin & Milton Streets). Beer and CrackerJacks to be served!

***

Past events

Sat., March 15, 2 p.m.: WFUV 90.7 Radio
Spent 10 minutes stammering through m y first ever live interview on FUV’s legendary One-On-One radio program. You can stream the archive at their website (when available).

Wed., March 19, ~9:40 p.m.: SPORTSTALKNY Webcast 

Sat., March 22, 10 a.m.: SABR Casey Stengel Chapter annual meeting, Mid-Manhattan Library

 

Sat., April 5, 3 p.m.: Book discussion and signing, Barnes & Noble, Bayside Queens
With co-writer Matthew Silverman. Mets-Braves starts at 4 — great timing! 23-80 Bell Blvd. (at 26th Ave.) in the Bay Terrace Shopping Center

 

Sun., April 6, 1p.m.: Mets by the Numbers LAUNCH PARTY at Stout NYC
Come out for an informal, meet-and-greet with me, co-author Matthew Silverman, and other distinguished guests while we watch the Mets take on the Braves at Stout NYC, a terrific, spacious Irish sports bar on 33rd Street between 6th and 7th Aves in Manhattan. Buy a book, or get yours signed, or just have a beer!

 

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Now Available

The Mets on Thursday reassigned longshot reliever candidates Carlos Muniz and Willie Collazo to their minor league camp, and by doing so freed up numbers 32 and 36, respectively. Jason Vargas, who was assigned a different number this spring (39) than last year (43), also left to have surgery and is out for awhile, the Daily News said.

As you might not care to remember, Muniz and Collazo were among the desperate moves the Mets found themselves forced to make as a collective suck infected the bullpen last September and, along with unreliable starting pitching, too many guys getting picked off first base, lack of hustle, lack of focus, lack of brains, lack of courage, overconfidence, underconfidence, stupid decisions, and a few things that didn’t go our way, cost the Mets the division they probably should have won.

Collazo we’ll remember for the goof of spelling his name improperly on the back of his jersey. Muniz, who spent most of the year in AA, debuted in that nightmarish 10-9 loss to the Nationals mopping up for Mr. I’m-Not-Devastated, and the seemingly innocent single run Muniz loomed large when the Mets’ 6-run rally in the ninth didn’t tie the game but left them one run short. Of all the disastrous Mets games last year, and there were plenty to choose from, that one probably burned me the most.

Anyway, I found it a mild surprise but also a nice gesture that these guys were invited to camp this spring and allowed to retain the numbers they were issued despite their longshot status and the arrival of others more likely to wind up in their numbers. (What do you figure the chances are that either of them surfaces with the big club ever again?

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Shirts and T’s

When the Mets play the White Sox in the annual Civil Rights Game exhibition March 29 in Memphis, they will wear special uniforms to commemorate the event. According to a news item today on Paul Lukas’s Uniwatch blog, they will look like the jersey pictured here (which, he reminds us, looked like the jerseys last year, when the Indians and Cardinals met).

As chronicled by Paul for the founding event a year ago, MLB officials explained the jerseys were “inspired by the simplicity of the Negro Leagues uniforms,” but its tough to figure out their style decisions all the same.

Good to see the Mets participating this season at any rate. I mean, it’s not Mercury Mets.

Funnier stuff for sure is detailed on Brooklyn Met Fan, where an associate down in St. Lucie whose t-shirts proclaiming CHOOSE LIFE… um, I mean, GO BIG PELF have caused a minor sensation with some members of the Mets.

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What’s a Blog?: The Greg Prince Interview (Part 2)

Continued from Part 1.

In part 2 of my exclusive, explosive conversation with Greg Prince of Faith & Fear in Flushing, Greg discusses some of his blog’s greatest hits while I vainly try and determine how he does it.

What are your feelings on the Mets uniform?
They’ve given us a lot more to think about over the years. haven’t they? I suppose I get used to all of them after a while. When they first showed up in 1998 in all this black and orange, I thought they looked like Orioles and needed to get back to emphasizing the blue. Plus it was obviously a craven attempt to make a buck. But, y’know what? Last April, the first time they put the black unis on for the first time, I viewed them as a throwback to the ’99 and 2000 teams. Now when I see the Mets in black, it gives me a warm feeling — nostalgia, I guess, for the Bobby Valentine era when they wore them more frequently. I guess that’s the power of the baseball uniform in general.

That said, if they had to do only one uniform I guess I would hope they’d accurately recreate the 1969 jersey, perhaps without the 100th anniversary patch. But I’ve gotten used to the idea they wear different ones. It bothers other people way more than it bothers me.

Have you got a favorite uniform number?
I always wanted to wear 41 on my back – no matter what an insult it may have been to Tom Seaver – because he was my first hero. I’ve always been fond of 24, since it never fails to amaze me that Willie Mays was a Met. Today I like for Jose Reyes and I continue to hold a candle for26 on account of Rico Brogna. It seems like if I like the player, I like the number.

44Now and again when I need to fall asleep, instead of counting sheep I count uniform numbers: 1 for Mookie, 2 for Valentine, 3 for Harrelson. I always like to see who jumps to mind first. What’s funny is that whenever I get to 44, Bob Myrickcomes up. I’ve never been able to think of anyone else. And this was when Jason Isringhausen was hot stuff, when Jay Payton was here, right up to Lastings Milledge. 44 is Bob Myrick, and I barely remember Bob Myrick as a ballplayer. Just as 44 on the Mets.

Tell me about The Greg Commandments.
It’s just a bunch of things that had been stewing around in my mind as Mets fan. I’m not big on telling people they have to do this or do that, or to use one of those phrases I hate, “you gotta respect that,” but when it comes to the Mets I found a code of conduct, a way to comport yourself in the world as a Met fan and get the most of the Met experience. Things like not going too nuts when you lose or overboard when you win, and don’t be one of those people who likes both New York teams. Some of it was to help the reader enjoy their experience and some was just picky stuff on my part.

Was it something that came quickly or did you work on it a long time?
I’d actually been working on a list of things like that years earlier. And I found it one day after we started the blog, I stewed it in my head. It was the beginning of the second half of ’05, it just seemed like a good time to put it out there. That post helped put us on the map a little. We weren’t all that well-known before then. It was some thing I got emails about for a long time.

What other events helped put you on the map?
One of the things that drew people to us is we were able to do a lot on Mike Piazza’s last year. Jason wrote a great post about the 10 greatest home runs Piazza had hit as a Met and I had written something that got good response.

I had been to the ballet, of all things, a few weeks before, and it so happened there was a ballet dancer, the male primary dancer, named Jock Soto. And two women sitting behind me were going on and on about how it was Jock Soto’s last year in the ballet and how awful it was going to be to have to replace him. Can you imagine the New York City Ballet without Jock Soto? That kind of thing. And I’m sitting there just riveted to this conversation, thinking, this is exactly what I’m thinking about Mike Piazza. He’s our Jock Soto; and Jock Soto is their Mike Piazza. I wrote something about that and it turned out Jock Soto’s mother read it. She was very excited, saying they compared my son to a big baseball player.

Also at the time, we got a celebrity email from one of the team’s announcers, who’d actually read us, in response my saying I’d turned down the TV and listened to the radio when Gary and Howie were working together. He basically wanted to know what was wrong with them. That was one of several things we had going on in about a two-week period in July of ’05 when it just seemed like we achieved critical mass. We went from being a voice in the wilderness to something people knew about. If there was some way of calculating the percentage of all Met fans who know any bloggers beyond Metsblog, it’s probably infinitesimal. But among people who know computers can lead them to information and insight on your favorite team we established a foothold.

What particular things have you enjoyed accomplishing?
There are times where you think you’ve written something amazing and you get only two comments. I wrote about the 20th anniversary of the Terry Pendeleton game and everything that went wrong in the 1987 pennant race and I braced for a great reaction, but there was one comment. It felt lonely. It’s tough to write flashbacks in the middle of pennant race.

The definitive post for me was the day they announced the new ballpark. I didn’t know they were even doing it that day but I flipped on SNY and there they were in the Diamond Club showing off the drawings and the model for the first time and how great it’s going to be, and it struck me – isn’t this so odd they’re doing this inside Shea Stadium? They’re going to obliterate Shea Stadium. And it crossed my mind it must be a bad day to be Shea Stadium. It was one of those things that just took off. Fortunately I work at home and had the flexibility to put everything else aside and write it right then.

It started as a straightforward piece where I was just going to state my opinions and instead I started write it as a conversation between a ballpark that had no idea it was going to be replaced – a loyal employee but a little slow on the uptake – and Fred Wilpon giving him his notice. It takes him a while to get it and then he’s very disturbed by it. Shea finally stands up to him, and is speaking for me toward the end.

That was also a touchstone in how I view Shea and how I write about it. Because until then, I was ready to throw Shea away. I’d been to 30 ballparks and wanted our own Camden Yards in my lifetime. I recall writing something on opening day ’05 how they had all winter and couldn’t get the escalators to work. Jason was thrilled because for years he was like “Where’s the detonator?” But I’d come over to the dark side.

Then I realized, this was it. It was a stadium we’d grown up with and grown older in. I did a 180. I was like those superdelegates changing from Hilary to Obama. I went from “Let’s get the new ballpark in here!” to “How dare you?”

I worry about turning into a caricature of myself. I don’t want to be a good-old-days blogger. I don’t want to dwell on the idea of “Wasn’t it great when Jane Jarvis played the organ and Karl Erhardt held up the signs and box seats were $4.50 and Tommie Agee led off every game with a home run?” I want the 2008 season to start. But defender-of-Shea-to-the-end has become a sort of calling card for me. And Jason is laying low on the point because he knows I’m sensitive to it. I can feel him rolling his eyes.

It brought out in our readers a lot of the same feelings. They’d bought that line that it was time for Shea to go. I think they saw someone saying what they had been suppressing: Hold on a second. I like this place too. It’s all going to amount to nothing because Shea is going away but this wasn’t a movement like STOP CITI FIELD. This is not like the Tiger Stadium Fan Club grasping hands around the ballpark. Nobody is doing that Shea.

What’s distinguished about the site is your ability to bring your own personal self into it whether you’re talking about meeting your wife or your mother dying and things that, I imagine, would be difficult to write about and send to an unknown audience. Do you struggle with that at all?
Not that much. In June of ‘05 when the Mets played their first series with Oakland since the World Series of ‘73 I had this reaction to it I wasn’t expecting. I put it on the TV and it suddenly brought me back to 1973 and specifically, a suppressed memory that I’d had a fight with my mother who told me, you can’t watch the last two games of the 1973 World Series.

Yeow.
I mean, come on! How often do the Mets get into the World Series? I hadn’t thought of that much. But I think today maybe one of the reasons I indulge myself as a fan is because I didn’t indulge enough as a child. Anyway, I had just begun to write a simple expository post of how this had reminded me of the 1973 World Series, blah blah blah, and it became one of those dialogs, me talking to a psychiatrist, and I recall bringing up really intense feelings I’d had about my mother, why the hell wouldn’t you let me watch the godamn world series? I was angry writing it!

There were some from our limited audience had a good response to that, it was a hill to get over. Because up until then, I was going for a tone, thinking, this is what a blog is supposed to sound like. It took me a few months to write the way I wanted to write. I don’t know if anyone who reads that could tell but I can.

But as for writing the personal stuff, it just seemed very natural to go there. The 1990 flashbackwas an interesting one for me to write because that was the year my mother died. It was an area I’d never really explored before. In my mind, it was a stressful year. But at the moment where somebody else would have said, “Oh, I can’t follow the Mets,” I’d followed them more closely than I’d had since 1986. They deepened for me. They were my anchor.

I wrote something a few weeks ago about the one game I went to with my father, who’s not a baseball fan. My parents sort of fell into them when they were good, from 1985 to 89, but after my mother died, they just fell away from him. It was like, I don’t do that any more. And it took me some time to realize it. The point was, thank god there’s football because without it my father and I wouldn’t have much to talk about. But going to a game with him as a terrible experience. The comments you get from that tend to be incidental. If I wrote a foul ball landed near me a reader might write, “Hey, I once caught a foul ball.’ Maybe we’re intruding here. Maybe we shouldn’t be reading this on a baseball blog.

But that’s not hard for you to reveal to people?
Not really. If I can use an incongruous word here, I’m brave enough to do it since I know my father and my sister don’t read it. My father’s like, “What’s a blog?”

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