The blog for Mets fans
who like to read

ABOUT US

Greg Prince and Jason Fry
Faith and Fear in Flushing made its debut on Feb. 16, 2005, the brainchild of two longtime friends and lifelong Met fans.

Greg Prince discovered the Mets when he was 6, during the magical summer of 1969. He is a Long Island-based writer, editor and communications consultant. Contact him here.

Jason Fry is a Brooklyn writer whose first memories include his mom leaping up and down cheering for Rusty Staub. Check out his other writing here.

Got something to say? Leave a comment, or email us at faithandfear@gmail.com. (Sorry, but we have no interest in ads, sponsored content or guest posts.)

Need our RSS feed? It's here.

Visit our Facebook page, or drop by the personal pages for Greg and Jason.

Or follow us on Twitter: Here's Greg, and here's Jason.

A Kaleidoscope of Connections

Saturday’s game against the Rockies, the last tilt of May, was observed by your chronicler via a kaleidoscope of information sources from way out here in Tacoma, Wash.: looking down at MLB.tv on my phone during one of the Pacific Northwest’s never-quite-remitting rainstorms, via MLB Audio when the bandwidth pipe was a little too narrow for video, or via the marionettes of GameDay when neither medium was available.

The game was never particularly in doubt after the first inning, when a 1-0 Colorado lead popped like a soap bubble thanks to a three-run triple off the top of the wall struck by Brett Baty, with a Tyrone Taylor single to follow. As Antonio Senzatela trudged around behind the mound you could see the Rockies sag, a collective oh no not this again. The Mets extended the lead on back-to-back homers from Brandon Nimmo and Juan Soto and then a late, cherry-on-top round-tripper from Jeff McNeil. Meanwhile Kodai Senga was untouchable until tiring in the seventh, with Jose Butto putting down a last little flurry of Rockie resistance.

With the Rockies mustering little resistance for most of the game, it was the kind of day that lent itself to miscellaneous reflections:

So much purple: The purple in the Mets’ City Connects is a nod to the 7 line and has nothing to do with the Rockies, but the combination was still an odd one, and left me thinking that at least for a day it was better that the Mets had hedged their bets a bit on how much purple to highlight. (But seriously, the City Connects would pop a lot more if the NYC, player numbers and names were purple outlined in white instead of black.)

My mom and the mouth breather: I have a long tradition of taking an irrational dislike to certain Mets, declaring them Jonahs whose presence casts a pall over the entire team. This is apparently genetic, as my mom is on at least year two of a jihad against Brett Baty. She watches every game and texts me out of joy or frustration, and those texts have become a record of her (perhaps slowly evolving) opinion about Baty. “Chew that bubble gum, Brett,” she’d scoff last year, when Baty had once again failed to come through or misplayed a ball in the field, and yes, Baty did have a habit of chomping on his gum in consternation after failures.

This year my mom’s favored dart has been to scorn Baty as a mouth-breather … and yet there’s been a slow warming as he’s finally shown signs of emerging. “OK Brett, but you’re still a mouth-breather,” my mom texted me after Baty homered off Jameson Taillon a few weeks back. Days later, Baty was the key to the Mets edging the Pirates, and my mom offered the texted admission that “I’m eating crow.” (With an accompanying corvid emoji.) Baty helping beat the Dodgers earned him an “yes to Mouthbreather,” a mixed verdict but no longer a completely negative one. Today, after Baty gave the Mets all the runs they’d need against Colorado, I texted mom to point out that Baty was determined to win her over. Her response? “Let him keep trying!”

Little by little, Brett.

We’re all Jetsons: So I was walking in a drizzle outside the Tacoma Mall when I did the time-zone math and realized the game had started in New York. I reached for my phone and a moment later I was watching SNY in HD, and over a cellular signal no less. I wish I could have told my younger self — the one who spent endless money and time on fanciful antennae and tin-foil origami extenders to make a faint radio signal a little clearer — what was coming. These really are the days of miracle and wonder, and we all get to be Jetsons.

A messy month: Saturday’s win meant the Mets posted a 15-12 record in May, which really sums that month up perfectly: Not as bad as you thought, perhaps, but still not all that great. Here’s to the calendar turning.

Little things: One of my favorite oft-repeated sequences in baseball is the little dance between the runner at first and the first baseman on a pickoff. The throw arrives from the pitcher, the runner dives back in safely, and then the runner scoots himself clockwise around the bag 180 degrees before putting a foot on it and popping up, making sure never to break contact between his fingers and the base … because the first baseman is looking for a little daylight and a chance to pounce. It’s the product of a perfect little arms race, and it always makes me smile.

Pity: The Rockies may or may not surpass the ’62 Mets and ’24 White Sox in terms of futility, but they certainly have the look of a team stalked by disaster. They lose in ways big and small, expected and not. They’re the antimatter version of a good team you figure will win whether the formula demands a bit of small ball or big inning or a well-executed relay — you expect the Rockies to fail in whatever way necessary on a given day, and you can see they expect that too.

I’ve endured Mets teams like that, and it’s dreadful — a near-daily lesson in defeat that corrodes your fandom. What’s truly disheartening is the Rockies’ core problem isn’t fixable: Dick Monfort is the worst owner in baseball, a head-in-the-sand relic who fantasizes that the coming labor war will serve as his own personal time machine. He’s tops on the MLB Bad Owner leaderboard, edging out Pirates cheapskate Bob Nutting and loathsome nepo baby John Fisher. As those of us who survived the post-Madoff Wilpons can attest, there’s nothing a fan can do in this situation: No one’s firing the owner, he never shows his face so you can boo him, and the other owners aren’t going to lift a finger against one of their fellow lords. All you can do is wait for the world to change.

Old friends: We’re in Washington because my kid is a student at the University of Puget Sound; with the Mets having concluded their business, we went to Cheney Stadium to watch the Tacoma Rainiers take on the Salt Lake City Bees, a battle between the Triple-A squads of the Mariners and Angels.

Cheney Stadium is charming, in a little dip surrounded by pines, and it’s rich in history: Its Hall of Heroes includes nods to Jesus Alou and Ron Herbel, as well as Wayne Garrett‘s brother Adrian. And the light stands turn out to be from Seals Stadium, the San Francisco park that was home to the Giants before Candlestick.

Starting at third base for the Bees was old friend J.D. Davis; late in the game he wound up facing Adonis Medina, his 2022 teammate. If Medina struck out J.D. we’d all get a free Chick-Fil-A sandwich. (Medina retired him on a hard grounder.) With the Rainiers clinging to a 5-4 lead, J.D. hit into a double play against Zach Pop that ended the game.

Two other former Mets were in uniform: Yolmer Sanchez for Salt Lake City and Trevor Gott for Tacoma. (Deploy an asterisk and you could also count Tacoma’s Rhylan Thomas and Shintaro Fujinami, never Mets but teammates at Syracuse last year.) Neither Sanchez nor Gott got into the game, which was fortunate because I told my family that I was booing the shit out of Gott if he made an appearance, regardless of what the hometown fans thought of that. (Remember the discussion of Jonahs? Boy was Gott ever one.)

That’s the wonder of baseball — you go to a minor-league game on the other side of the continent and find players bound up with your own rooting interests. The connections aren’t always as obvious as they were at Cheney Stadium, with a beloved ex-Met facing down a one-day hero with a sandwich on the line, but dig through any roster on any night and you’ll find them — and all the delights they bring.

The Greatest Win of All

A staple of postgame postmortems, specifically in the games where leads got away within sports whose rigidly timed action flows back and forth, is that the team that lost played not to lose rather than to win. Their defense wasn’t aggressive enough. Their offense wasn’t opportunistic enough. Winning wasn’t the priority. Not losing was, and therefore ya lost. Such a balance of ying and yang is what has lit up the switchboards of call-in shows for generations.

I’m not sure the “they played not to lose” dynamic applies much to baseball, where the players don’t run east to west in an effort to score, then west to east as they attempt to prevent scoring. Managerial tactics can be questioned — why not a pinch-hitter in a go-for-the-throat situation; why not a better reliever even if it’s not a save situation — but there isn’t really that sense of intentionally sitting on a lead or laying back oblivious to a change of the competitive tides. The one clock that’s come into baseball isn’t one that can be run out in the strategic sense. Scoring another run for yourself isn’t something you’ll pass up if readily attainable. You might trade a run for an out, but you’re always gonna seek outs when you’re the ones in the field.

Baseball is a game designed to be won rather than not lost — except, perhaps, when you’re watching your team play the 2025 Colorado Rockies. Then all you can think on behalf of your team is, “Don’t lose.” Faced with this very challenge on Friday night at Citi Field, the Mets didn’t lose. They won, 4-2, though not losing loomed as the greatest win of all.

Individually, the Mets committed the acts of winners. Francisco Lindor socked two home runs (one righty, one lefty) and leapt to grab a line drive. Starling Marte showed his bat still has pop. Juan Soto stuck the ball well twice to outstanding effect and patrolled his position with élan. David Peterson bent without breaking. Reed Garrett was dominant. Edwin Diaz was untouchable. As a unit, there was no doubt the Mets played winning baseball.

But mostly they didn’t lose. The Rockies entered Friday’s series-opener at 9-47. Nobody who isn’t competing in an NBA tankathon enters anything at 9-47. Not last year’s White Sox. Not the Original Mets. But these Rockies have cracked the code on historic proportions of losing. Whether or not it was their goal, they’ve achieved it thus far. From 9-47, they’ve dropped to 9-48. The fact there’s a “9” before the “-“ indicates they are not a sure thing to lose every game they play. Nor did observing them hint that they are wholly incapable of intermittent victory. I recognized a bunch of Rockies. Some of them were on Colorado last year when the Rockies didn’t lose two of the six games they played against the playoff-bound Mets. Everybody who makes the majors maintains an ability to throw, catch, connect, prevail. The Rockies on Friday night made some good plays and some effective pitches and some hard contact. Garrett and Diaz shut them down in the eighth and ninth, but there was no reason to think producing one more run than the Mets totaled was beyond their skill set.

Usually, there would be no reason to think that would be a big deal. You might have heard in your life that you can’t win them all, especially when “all” encompasses 162 games. Lesser teams rise up with regularity to defeat those who have no conceivable business losing to them, because baseball allows anything to be conceived. Any game in the long march from 1 to 162 is just one game. Everybody loses now and then. If it happens to you, you get ’em tomorrow. It’s all so comforting and all so true.

Except if you’re playing a 9-47, now 9-48 team. In that case, just don’t lose to them. Friday, the Mets didn’t, which they couldn’t. I mean they could have, but that would have invited more shudders than rationalizations. However they approached it, taking their assignment of not losing to the Rockies to heart was the way to go.

And they won, which was also nice.

Dodging Raindrops and Glamour

Big league ballplayers aren’t usually told to keep their day jobs, because they tend to work nights. Wednesday, the Mets were told to forget about their night jobs — fellas, you’re working the day shift.

The change in their schedule, necessitated by a rainy forecast, didn’t appear to sit well with them. The White Sox, adhering to the same alteration of routine, responded better, outplaying the Mets in all facets of the game and salvaging the series finale at Citi Field, 9-4. The Sox featured one of our former pitching prospects, Mike Vasil, mowing down his erstwhile acquaintances and would-be teammates for three scoreless middle innings. Mike was a Rule 5 escapee over the winter. He passed through the Phillies, then the Rays, finally landing with Chicago ahead of Opening Day. Vasil has to stick with the Sox all year or be offered back to the Mets for a pittance. I don’t know what roster machinations are pending on the South Side, but based on his accumulation of zeroes, I wouldn’t think Mike will be let go again so soon.

Other than a Mark Vientos three-run homer that briefly created the illusion of a close ballgame, the only thing the Mets had going for them on Wednesday afternoon — besides successfully dodging raindrops — was the presence of another pitcher on the periphery, Brandon Waddell. We met Waddell, up from Triple-A, during the Mets’ home series versus Arizona at April’s end. He was the bulk guy in a bullpen game that night, pitching four-and-a-third shutout frames. The lefty’s reward was an immediate return trip to Syracuse. It was a one-day assignment then, just as his stay in Queens amounted to a drop-by this time.

Waddell has dropped by lots of towns in lots of leagues since turning pro in 2015. A two-year detour in Asia seemed to do him a world of good. After brief stints between 2020 and 2021 with the Pirates, Twins, Orioles, and Cardinals, he tried his hand in the KBO and Chinese Professional Baseball League, doing well enough in both circuits to attract the attention of the contending Mets. The contending Mets have consumed their relievers for the past week, chewing them up and trying like the dickens not to spit them out. All those innings this one or that one can’t quite get out of represents a disturbing workload for that one and this one who succeed them on the mound. Waddell was recalled as a hedge against overburdening the guys who know they’ll be here the next time the Mets are on the field.

Each reliever who is secure in the Mets’ bullpen plans please take a step forward. Not so fast there, Brandon…

Wednesday became Waddell Day once the White Sox essentially tossed Griffin Canning into the recycling bin. Brandon entered in the fourth and stayed through the eighth. His outing didn’t match what he did versus the Diamondbacks. There were lots of hits and multiple runs allowed. The Mets as a whole looked sleepy and shapeless. They just needed somebody to get them to Thursday’s off day. Waddell achieved that. When Friday arrives, it seems unlikely he’ll still be here. Syracuse is the home of fresher arms. Brandon’s arm was fresh when it reappeared in the Mets’ midst. It was used for 94 pitches Wednesday, making him unimaginable as a long man for the weekend ahead. Syracuse is also the home of arms that have ceased to be fresh and therefore aren’t immediately useful downstate.

Soaking up innings is nothing to squawk at.

It wasn’t mopup duty, per se, but the job that required filling was soaking up innings before Citi Field absorbed rainfall. Brandon Waddell got that job done. He’s now made two relief outings in 2025, with nine-and-a-third innings delivered and absolutely no glory involved. The Mets lost that Diamondbacks game and they lost this White Sox game. In the meantime, Waddell collected a couple of slivers of service time and enjoyed the amenities of a major league clubhouse. Maybe he’ll be back with the Mets. Maybe somebody will take a closer look at him and figure a way to grab him, giving him a chance to make a deeper impression à la Vasil for Chicago. Pitchers on the periphery bounce around. Thinking about the journeyman aspect of a glamour profession puts me in mind of what the talking birds on The Flintstones who served as prehistoric car horns and intercoms would say about their lot: it’s a living.

Ain’t No Indignity Low Enough

Amid the sensory assault the Citi Field A/V squad aims at its patrons in the course of a ballgame, lest we not be properly stimulated to MAKE SOME NOISE and fill every potential silence, is a clip that used to be shown at Shea. I don’t need the sensory assault. I certainly don’t need it between every goddamn pitch. But I appreciate the creativity behind this particular clip’s use as well as its longevity as an electronic cheerleading staple. It was played in the days of Matt Franco pinch-hitting for Al Leiter, and, despite some periods of hiatus, it’s still in rotation.

Cue Peter Finch as UBS anchorman Howard Beale:

“I want you to get up right now, sit up, go to your windows, open them and stick your head out and yell…”

…at which point a drumbeat throbs and a graphic imploring Let’s Go Mets! takes over the big screen. That’s something a crowd in Queens doesn’t mind being nudged to articulate en masse. It loses a little of its impact when it’s embedded amidst umpteen-dozen other admonitions, but I’ll never not appreciate that somebody more than a quarter-century ago thought to incorporate the crescendo portion of the legendary “Mad as Hell” rant from Network into a baseball game.

What I don’t appreciate is the people running the same stadium where this oral tradition lives making me mad as hell in the moments before I step inside it. I am speaking of the smiling, polite security goons who insisted that I could not bring into said facility one sealed twenty-ounce soft-sided bottle of carbonated beverage. I’ve been bringing one with me for about as long as Finch/Beale has been riling up rallies on local video boards. The bottle is in general accordance with the announcement that is played in a loop as security prepares to have its way with you and your things. It is not open. It is not glass. It is not alcoholic. It is admittedly not juice or water, but that had never presented a problem for me before the night of Tuesday, May 27, 2025.

On Tuesday night, my first in-person game of the current baseball season, it was a problem. Smiling, polite security goon ‘A’ searches my bag. I have nothing to hide. He finds the carbonated soft drink or CSD, as it’s known in the industry. This represents a red enough flag to call over smiling, polite security goon ‘B’ for a discussion of whether this non-water, non-juice product is admissible. Their conclave cannot reach a conclusion, so they call over their supervisor for a ruling.

Oh no, that’s not allowed in. The bottle is ostentatiously placed under the rectangular card table that serves as the Jackie Robinson Rotunda’s version of Checkpoint Charlie. In a blink, my beverage has been disappeared.

Though it’s not blaring over any loudspeaker, I can hear in my head the other legendary rant from Network, this one delivered by Ned Beatty as corporate titan Arthur Jensen:

“You have meddled with the primal forces of nature, Mr. Beale, and I won’t have it!! Is that clear?!”

That’s not what I said to the smiling, polite security goon supervisor. Instead, I requested clarification. The 20-ounce CSD bottle, adhering to all relevant specifications, is always with me when I enter Citi Field. It was always with me when I entered Shea Stadium during its emeritus years. I’ve stopped bringing in open water bottles. I’ve stopped bringing my zippered schlep bag. I’ve been a solid citizen as a paying customer. I haven’t activated a magnifying glass app to read the fine print on my virtual ticket, but I’m willing to adhere to the standard “their yard, their rules” ethos of public sporting events without much fuss. All I want is to have and hold my store-bought CSD bottle. I like knowing it’s in my tote bag. I like a sip now and then when the screen and the loudspeaker isn’t yelling at me. I like that it costs me less to buy it in advance than it does at the ballpark. These are the primal forces of my nature, and they had been meddled with.

“What, is this new this year?” is what I asked the goon supervisor.

“Actually,” he said smiling and politely, “it is.”

If I’d been willing to sit and shiver as April’s winds blew, I would have known about this alteration of policy for nearly two months. Silly me, staying warm at home and entertained by the Mets as I sat glued to my couch, except to get up and go to the refrigerator and partake of any damn store-bought beverage I pleased. You miss a few things by not being at the ballpark. You miss your bottle being taken away from you.

Not quite knowing how to litigate the case, I requested a final reconciliation with my beverage before we parted ways. “I can drink from it out here, right?”

“Oh yeah!” The security goon supervisor reached down underneath the table and returned it to my temporary custody. I opened it and swigged, mostly for effect.

“Hey,” the supervisor goonishly advised, “don’t drink too much of it or you’ll get a bellyache.”

I had a bellyful already. I considered emptying the remaining contents into the nearby trash receptacle so I could keep the empty bottle for the five-cent deposit, but that seemed a bit too theatrical, even in the face of security theater. I drank however many ounces and turned in my contraband. I was polite if not smiling.

“Have a great night!” I was told. What a goonish thing to say.

And with that as the overture, my wife and I were off to finally make our Citi Field debut for 2025. Somehow, despite the indignity inflicted upon my bag and my bottle (not to mention the silliness of making both Stephanie and me walk through the metal detector twice), we considered it a worthwhile outing. It took me a while to reach that conclusion. The CSD incident cast a pall over the evening’s earliest minutes. It kept me from buying a program in the Rotunda because I wasn’t in the mood to give these people any more of my money right away, which meant when I looked for a program later, upstairs, I was told they were sold out (because there’s suddenly an epidemic of keeping score?), so that also dinged the overall experience, but going to a game is so much more than the accumulation of its annoyances.

Ever an inviting tableau, security goonishness notwithstanding.

There will be goons. There will be inflated volume in your ears and inflated prices when you purchase a replacement beverage. There will be obvious inventory management issues when you wish to pay for a program on this level rather than that level. There will be confusion when you and your lovely spouse in your lovely seats on the third base side of Excelsior can’t tell any better than Brandon Nimmo from his vantage point of the basepath between first and second whether the drive Juan Soto just lined into center was caught or trapped. Nimmo didn’t know. Soto didn’t know. We didn’t know. Suddenly a rally in progress was stifled by indecision and interpretation. Or so we figured without the helpful voices we rely on from television to narrate multiple replays.

Fortunately, this was a rally that could be stifled but not stymied, as basically everybody who batted after Soto (called out on the trap because he and Nimmo passed each other, presumably looking for a scorecard) kept hitting the ball hard. Security apparently checked neither Pete Alonso nor Jared Young for explosives. Each Met detonated an absolute bomb with a runner on base, and in the bottom of the very first inning, the Mets had four runs, dwarfing the two the Chicago White Sox nicked Tylor Megill for in the top of the frame. The Nimmo-Soto bewilderment left me thinking we should have had another run. Then again, I was thinking I should have had my carbonated beverage.

Megill with a lead was better than Megill out of the box. He lasted five-and-two-thirds. I would have preferred he’d been able to finish the sixth. Jose Butto completed the inning on his behalf, but then couldn’t conclude the seventh without assistance from Jose Castillo, or the White Sox shortening the Met edge from 5-2 to 5-4. Castillo, who unjammed Butto, was removed in favor of Reed Garrett during the eighth. i am in favor of Reed Garrett, but I’d have been more in favor of pitchers economically saving other pitchers from throwing additional pitches. It’s being economical that has me bringing my own beverage all these years.

Letting Reed Garrett know I was in favor of him was something I couldn’t do at home. I could, but he couldn’t hear me. He probably couldn’t hear me at Citi Field, either, what with the recorded din making individual cries of encouragement indiscernible to any given Met. Still, it’s a heckuva motion for a fan to go through. “C’mon, Reed!” That’s the sort of thing I’d call out all the time for Rick Reed (though it’d be “C’mon, Reeder!”) when it was dawning on me I could save a couple of bucks by bringing my own sealed twenty-ounce soft-sided bottle of carbonated beverage in my bag. Details change over time. Impulses remain.

I remain in favor of going to games, though not as many as I used to. I got to late May without getting to Citi Field, but I knew I was missing something. I was missing the noise. There could be less of the artificial kind, but it’s something to be in a crowd encouraging the entity to which I remain attached. It’s something to watch Pete Alonso urge on the fans behind first base to urge the rest of his teammates on (he raises a hand in their direction without taking his eyes off the batter; it’s really cute). It’s something to watch the kid who swings his heart out on the Wiffle Ball field for prizes and the kid running his heart out between bases for same. The latter sponsored feature has been dubbed “Run Like Rickey” this year, a classy tribute I didn’t know about until May 27. It’s a nice touch, same as one of the musical cues between pitches being a snippet of “Rock and Roll, Hoochie Koo” on the same day Rick Derringer’s passing was announced. Maybe they play it every night. I wouldn’t know in 2025. I’m not on hand that often.

But, give or take the encountering of goonish policy enforcement at the gate, or my ongoing disappointment that the Mets Museum remains shoved inside a closet (you don’t need to be Rickey Henderson to run the length of it and back in under fifteen seconds), the overall tableau continues to be inviting. We wanted to go to a game. We decided to go to this game. We wanted to applaud every Met when introduced, if not so heartily at first for the stranger Jared Young, but you go to a game, you can learn a stranger is just a slugger you haven’t yet embraced. We wanted to urge on our pitchers by first name. We wanted to witness the adding on an urgently needed insurance run in the eighth, delivered by the same man whose pair of walkup songs we got to hear in the dizzying first inning.

Francisco Lindor comes up to “My Girl,” and we sing along. Francisco Lindor comes up nine batters later to “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough,” and we sing along again. “My Girl” is already “Lazy Mary”-tier entrenched for Mets fans. Singing along has been second nature since last October. Yet I doubt anybody at Citi Field is aware that for approximately two precious weeks in late August and early September of 2001, “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough’ was that year’s version of “L.A. Woman” or “Who Let the Dogs Out?” it was the Mets’ designated victory song at what felt like an intense baseball moment. The club was surging as autumn approached, and whoever co-opted Network for Metsian purposes had pretty obviously seen 2000’s Remember the Titans, which used Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell to great effect. The Mets would win, and “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough” would play, and I’d get my hopes up that our heretofore muddling nine, gaining ground on the Phillies and Braves night by night, could pull off a miracle in the spirit of 1973. The miracle we’d settle for as September of 2001 wore on was the Mets playing baseball in New York at all. My Log tells me I saw the Mets win four games during their “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough” phase. Given circumstances that had nothing to do with nascent pennant pushes, the song disappeared from the Shea playlist by the time the Mets came off the road on September 21. It wouldn’t have fit the red, white, and blue mood. But the association has always stayed with me, even if I hadn’t heard it again where the Mets play until Lindor decided it was ideal to alternate with his other Motown hit.

It is heavy, it’s my yearbook.

I don’t get all of that out of a ballgame if I don’t go to a lot of ballgames over the years and at least one this year. I don’t get to be audible in support of my guys and harbor the illusion they can hear me. I don’t get to prove, alongside my beloved, that I still have yet to learn most of the lyrics to “Lazy Mary”. I don’t instinctively kick in my voice to “New York Groove” when it earns its place on the turntable. You don’t realize any of that when you’re watching from home. You can eat and drink on a budget better from there, and you can have bizarre plays explained to you, but you’re missing something. I was missing being with the Mets in the way I get with the Mets. After absorbing all the nuances of a 6-4 victory, and humming along in Pavlovian fashion to Ace Frehley en route to the 7 and LIRR while lugging my yearbook if not program in my bag, and eventually entering the topline details of what I just saw in my Log like I did in 2001 and 1981 and any year I’ve gone to any Mets game, I’m no longer missing that little piece of me. I’m whole again.

Including the business with my beverage. That goonishness will stay with me, too.

It’s Raining Gum, Hallelujah!

Scoring the two runs necessary to defeat the Chicago White Sox on Memorial Day was less a matter of pulling teeth than implanting them for the New York Mets. Virtually no baserunners for innings on end. Then baserunners. but none of them driven in. Ultimately, a sacrifice fly in the eighth and a sacrifice fly in the ninth, each driving home a runner from third. That’s two runs, which we said was what was needed.

For the fourth time in their history, the Mets won a 2-1 affair in which both runs scored on sacrifice flies, and it was the first time among those four that they tied the game on a sacrifice fly in the eighth and walked it off on a sacrifice fly in the ninth. Would it be blasphemous to suggest that on a holiday intended to honor sacrifice that this may have been the ideal way to win this particular baseball game?

Probably, so let’s keep this upbeat. Let’s see that newly implanted smile, and try not to wear it out by chewing a lot of bubble gum. No problem there, as the Mets seem to use all the bubble gum in their bubble gum bucket for throwing rather than chewing. It’s how they celebrate a solidly struck sacrifice fly or any connective action with a bat that allows them to walk off the field in victory. The Mets have won five games in walkoff fashion this year. If you wish to chew on that stat, go ahead. I know where some still-wrapped, never-chewed bubble gum can be picked up if you’re not picky about picking through Queens grass.

No bubble to burst after finally edging those stubborn visitors from the Midwest, though Monday definitely bordered on dour before joy swooped in. Adrian Houser, the epitome of an Old Friend™, came back to Citi Field in a road uniform and let the Mets know he isn’t who they let go last year. Last year, Houser logged an earned run average of 4.93 in 23 appearances as a Met. This year, Houser threw six shutout innings at his former team. Why was he able to demonstrate such extraordinary improvement?

Because it’s what Old Friends™ do. The only surprising aspect of Adrian’s performance was that Travis d’Arnaud wasn’t catching him.

Clay Holmes seemed prepared to take on the mantle of the hard-luck loser, a timeworn role in Mets pitching lore. Holmes was effective enough over five-and-two-thirds, giving up only one run. His misfortune was choosing to proffer a reasonably solid outing while Adrian Houser was clearly relishing revenge. That, too, is what Old Friends™ do.

Met hitters too often do little. Seven innings going scoreless versus Houser and the Sox qualified as doing next to nothing. The Sox entered the day 17-36. All due respect to our Old Friend™, but we should have found a run in those Hose. Alas, we would have to wait.

The eighth inning was a good time to stop waiting and get going. After Holmes, Jose Butto, Huascar Brazoban and Jose Castillo — backed by some sharp infield defense — kept Chicago from adding on to their lone run, Francisco Alvarez led off and cast off the dark thoughts surrounding his ability to ever get another base hit (the dark thoughts were mine) by singling. Did you ever think you’d see such a thing? (My dark thoughts were beginning to doubt it.)

Alvarez gave way to Luisangel Acuña in one of Carlos Mendoza’s characteristic smooth moves. Mendoza has not hesitated to insert speed in the late innings, embracing aggressiveness more than you might notice. Mendy’s pinch-run for strategic reasons roughly once every four games, and it’s worked quite a bit. When Acuña went first to third on Brandon Nimmo’s one-out single to right, he was the potential tying run ninety feet from home plate. I don’t have it in me to add up all the potential tying runs that have withered away ninety feet from home plate this year, but Acuña’s didn’t. Juan Soto delivered a professional fly ball to left, and Luisangel sped on in. It was the fifth run a Mets pinch-runner scored in 2025.

Hey, a tie! We weren’t necessarily going to lose to the downtrodden White Sox. Tying in the eighth is the second-best action you can take in the course of pursuing a come-from-behind victory. Going ahead in the eighth is the best. The Mets would have to wait a little longer for that.

But just a little longer. First we had to withstand a fruitless rest of the bottom of the eighth. Then we got to benefit from a typical Edwin Diaz top of the ninth — the new kind of typical for Edwin, which is to say the previous or good kind of typical. Finally, we came to the bottom of the ninth and leadoff batter Tyrone Taylor, who must have been listening to the Citi Field PA during all those Ike Davis at-bats between 2010 and 2014. Lest you’ve forgotten, Ike’s walkup music was “Start Me Up”. Sometimes Ike was started up, but it is Tyrone a decade-plus later who has apparently taken Mick Jagger’s pro-acceleration message to heart. He did it in Atlanta on the last day of last season when he doubled on the eleventh pitch of his leadoff plate appearance in the eighth inning when merely everything was on the line, and he did it in Flushing on Monday in the ninth. The circumstances may not have been as urgent, but who wants to lose to the White Sox? Or anybody?

Taylor needed only five pitches this time to blast a double to deep left and set the Mets up to win and, just as importantly, not lose. The Mets, whatever our collective frustrations at their intermittent shortfalls, can be referred to as a good team. A very good team. Very good teams are supposed to beat less good teams. The White Sox, as 17-36 indicated, represented the essence of not very good. Still, not very good teams are going to have their moments. The White Sox have topped opponents seventeen times. Had the White Sox continued to lead the Mets to Monday’s conclusion, I convinced myself it was going to be just one of those things. But when we tied, I convinced myself losing to the White Sox on this day was not an option. Or I preferred it not be.

Taylor on second.
Nobody out.
Let’s make hay.
Let’s throw gum.

The White Sox intentionally walked Jeff McNeil to bring up Luis Torrens, in because Acuña pinch-ran for Alvarez. There’s always a consequence to substitution. Did you mind this one? Even as dark thoughts regarding Alvarez’s recent slumping lightened, wouldn’t you have rather had Torrens up with the game in the balance late? He’s Tyrone Taylor shedding a chest protector in these moments. You just trust him.

Torrens attempted to bunt the runners over. Once. It failed. So he stopped. Smart man. On the second pitch he saw, Luis singled to left to load the bases. This time the potential winning run is ninety feet from home plate. Not necessarily a promising positioning with this ballclub based on recent results.

Recency’s hidden talent is its expertise at producing a new most recent result. Give Francisco Lindor a chance to change your conception of what a Met can do with a runner on third and less than two out. It’s the same chance we gave Soto in the eighth. It’s the same result in the ninth, basically. Lindor swings and drives a deep fly ball to right field, so deep that when it’s caught, it’s a guaranteed RBI. Taylor tags up and sprints home to implant the winning run on the scoreboard. The smiles are broad. The bubble gum is thrown. Lindor wears the bucket it came in, for he is crowned the king of getting it done. Many others could have stuck the pail on their head for a sec, given that it took a village to eke out this 2-1 Mets win, but that’s probably unsanitary.

The bucket stops here.

Thus ended the first third of the 2025 season, with the Mets sporting a record of 33-21. They deserve to sport it, even more than an emptied tub of Dubble Bubble. It’s a good fit. It would look better in first place, but for the time being, it makes for a jaunty second. Playoffs being what they are, just get in, and the Mets, when they’re not stranding runners, appear on their way to doing exactly that.

My overall impression after 54 of 162 games is the New York Mets, a very good team, will be a great team once they are finished becoming whoever they will be. I don’t think they’re quite complete. Contenders rarely are after 33.33% of their schedule. There’s another piece we’re not seeing in our midst yet. It could be somebody we’re not thinking about because that person is working his way back from injury (several players are candidates). It could be somebody who hasn’t yet earned his way up from the minors but will soon. It could be somebody we haven’t given a thought to because he’s currently languishing in another organization. The 2024 Mets kept subtracting and adding until they became the 2024 Mets we hold near and dear. The 2025 Mets don’t have glaring holes, but they do fall short just a little too frequently to make us fully embrace them. Their 33-21 record is one of the best in baseball. Their record of 16-15 in games decided by one or two runs indicates, at least to me, that the slightest of ‘x’ factors will elevate this team to another level. Perhaps the ‘x’ factor is three or four of their current players getting hot and staying hot for a substantial stretch. That certainly wouldn’t hurt. But there’s somebody out there lurking in the shadows of our consciousness just waiting to become the Met we need. When he arrives, this team will be a sight to see.

And if he doesn’t, we’ll continue to take our chances. They’ve worked out pretty well to date.

New Narratives

OK, so it didn’t exactly look good early.

Kodai Senga‘s second pitch of the night was redirected by Shohei Ohtani to Carbonation Ridge for a 1-0 Dodger lead.

Senga’s fourth pitch of the night skipped under Mark Vientos‘ glove, allowing Mookie Betts possession of first base.

Senga’s 13th pitch? Freddie Freeman smacked it to right-center for a double, moving Betts to third.

After a baker’s dozen of pitches Senga hadn’t recorded an out, the Mets were down by one, and they looked destined to be down by a few more. A long night seemed in the offing, marked by familiar frustrations. Would this one feature another late May glove toss into the stands, a gray City Connect ritually set on fire, or some other act of Met self-loathing?

Such unhappy questions loomed as Senga stood on the mound trying to figure things out. But to quote an eminent Dominican philosopher, youneverknow.

Senga’s 18th pitch was smacked out to Tyrone Taylor in center by Will Smith. Taylor — who’s quietly been extremely valuable this year — sprinted in to grab it and heaved the ball across his body to Luis Torrens at the plate as Betts came home.

Safe! said Marvin Hudson at home. Naaaah said the crowd — both in the moment and more full-throatedly once everyone got a look at the replay. Torrens had slapped a tag on the sliding Betts’ back before his foot came down on the plate, a sequence that the umps in Chelsea quickly confirmed. It was a double play — and though only the sunniest of optimists would have predicted such a thing, the high-water mark of the Dodgers’ evening had come and gone.

In the bottom of the first Landon Knack fanned the first two Mets, but Juan Soto beat out a grounder that Max Muncy bobbled and Pete Alonso pulled a hanging knuckle curve into the seats to give the Mets the lead. The Polar Bear had gone 65 ABs without a homer; between his returned power and Soto’s renewed commitment to running hard, that’s two annoying narratives slain in the same half-inning.

I didn’t watch any of these things happen — some A/V snafus sent me to the audio, which wasn’t a bad call given we were on ESPN, the third straight Mets telecast without Gary and Keith and/or Ron. (The only thing I missed was Francisco and Katia Lindor rather charmingly mic’ed up and discussing diaper changes, but day-after video provides.)

Once dinner began I turned off the audio and let GameDay take over, with its colorful snake trails of balls and strikes delivered to virtual batters standing stock still. That meant I couldn’t see that Senga was scuffling a bit, only that he was ducking trouble when necessary. Ryne Stanek took over in the sixth and on GameDay all was brisk efficiency: Stanek coaxed a double play ball from Andy Pages; Max Kranick navigated two innings and six Dodger hitters spotlessly (including the dreaded Big Three); and I returned to the audio feed as the Mets handed closing duties to Reed Garrett.

Buckle-up time, as a two-run lead against the Dodgers feels like the decimal point is a digit over to the left and everything could come crashing down in a hurry. But no — Garrett allowed a Muncy single with one out but got a fielder’s choice from Pages and fanned old friend Michael Conforto to secure both the victory and a series win.

The Dodgers remain a fearsome juggernaut, the final boss of the senior circuit. But the Mets have the same record they do. They won as Soto hustled and Pete went deep and Stanek and Kranick and Garrett were all but spotless. Not so long ago, none of those things was the case and we were all starting to mutter and fuss about it. But Sunday was different, coming without any of the old narratives we’d had enough of. Here’s to new ones.

Iron Man Peterson

All hail David Peterson, who lasted seven-and-two-thirds innings in the game that directly followed the Mets playing thirteen. On its face, that scans as a highly commendable effort, especially since the Mets won Peterson’s Saturday night start over the Dodgers, 5-2, but consider the context and ramp up your commendations. The face of contemporary baseball makes a pained expression at the suggestion that as many as thirteen innings would ever be played, what with phony-baloney ghost runners populating second base and the MLB-mandated intention of getting ties unbroken ASAP. And seven-and-two-thirds? In the mid-2020s, that rates as something out of the age of Iron Man McGinnity.

Iron Man McGinnity would likely scoff at the comparison. Joe “Iron Man” McGinnity completed 314 starts in a career that spanned 1899 to 1908 and led his league in innings pitched four separate times, tossing more than 300 innings in nine different seasons and more than 400 in two of them. His 314 complete games still rank as thirty-third all time.

David “Petey” Peterson isn’t challenging any of that, but he was iron enough for a staff whose eight relievers each saw action the night before. That’s eight relievers, which doesn’t even take into account all the starters who didn’t pitch. Iron Man McGinnity would have shaken his head in his dismay. His right arm might have fallen off while doing so, but he had his personal experience, and he seemed to have his everlasting convictions drawn from them.

The David “Petey” Peterson of his time.

Remarking on the use of mere ten-man pitching staffs in 1926, McGinnity couldn’t believe that iron men were no longer iron men the way they were when he was Iron Man: “This policy has had a psychological effect upon the pitchers. They have been influenced into the belief that they should not have to work without a long rest and that they can’t be effective without that rest.”

Balancing rest and effectiveness came into play after Friday’s 98-minute rain delay limited dependable Griffin Canning to two-and-two-thirds (McGinnity would probably scoff at that, too), when Carlos Mendoza saw fit to use every bullpen arm he had over the succeeding ten-and-two-thirds. One was left to wonder which modern-day manager between Mendy and Dave Roberts would have thrown the white flag rather than dip into his starter reserves had the game gone fourteen or, heaven forefend, fifteen.

Baseball games are designed to get extra innings the hell over with since 2020. It’s a fraud and a travesty and, for that matter, a fravesty. But that’s how it is, so when you get a thirteen-inning game for the first time since the last decade, and you are determined to use no reliever any longer than two innings (even though you don’t have to bat for any of them anymore, speaking of designated fravesties…no offense to new DH Jared Young), that’s how thirteen innings becomes an unfathomable burden on your pitching depth rather than just one of those things that add up now and then.

If we are to accept the notion that a thirteen-inning game today is the equivalent of no less than a seventeen-inning game from when the only way to have a runner on second was to have him reach base by his skills/wits/luck, then Peterson coming through to save Mendoza from plundering his bullpen two consecutive nights was an awesome achievement. David gave up only two runs early and set the stage for Edwin Diaz in his lately unhittable incarnation to do the rest. Brett Baty and Juan Soto — kindred spirits within the 22 club — provided most of the offense, and the Dodgers were summarily knocked off their defending world champions perch. We now trail an extended version of last year’s NLCS five games to three, even it’s not healthy to think of it in those grudgy terms.

In a Strange Country

Friday night’s game … goodness, where do you even start?

Let’s start with the weather. It wasn’t supposed to rain in New York, or at least not seriously enough to matter, but it’s done nothing but rain in New York all May, so if it isn’t doing that you check and see if it just did or looks like it’s about to. The skies had been pewter-colored and heavy all day, so I had my suspicions beyond the recent baseline paranoia.

When the rain did come, it was enough to drive Griffin Canning and Clayton Kershaw from the game and send a fireworks night crowd to seek cover. (And watch the Knicks on the JumboTron.) To be honest Emily and I didn’t particularly mind, as we’d just gotten off the highway in Brewster to find something to eat — from our perhaps selfish perspective the rain delay was both perfectly timed and of perfect duration.

Well, until we entered a cellular dead zone in an unfamiliar part of western Connecticut. Lots of twists and turns in the darkness, but no Mets. (At least Google Maps kept working.) When we got reception back four runs had scored — one for us, three for the Dodgers — and Max Kranick was plying his trade.

And the game was getting weirder. We’d heard (via Howie and Keith in the car, no Apple TV for us this time) the strange play where Michael Conforto tagged up after an odd near-collision between Tyrone Taylor and Juan Soto sent a ball briefly airborne before being corralled. The Mets thought they had an out because Conforto had left too early; in fact the rule is you can tag on first touch, not final possession.

If you knew that, congratulations: I didn’t, Howie and Keith didn’t, and at least half the players on the field didn’t. (We’ll let all the umpires involved take the fifth.)

Once we got reception back, the Mets cut the deficit to 3-2 on another strange play: Teoscar Hernandez threw Starling Marte out trying to score from third, but Marte was ruled safe on obstruction. Not on Will Smith, who’d tagged Marte out, but on Max Muncy, who’d never touched him. The ruling was that Muncy had obstructed Marte by getting in his line of sight with Hernandez. Who even knew that was a rule?

The Dodgers scored two more runs after that to leave the Mets down by three again and frankly things looked fairly hopeless, as Dodger relievers dispatched our high-octane, empty-tank offense with little fuss. But then the Mets did something very un-Mets-like in the ninth, rising up against Tanner Scott. With one out and runners on first and second, Jeff McNeil tripled in two runs, then was chased home on a Taylor single into the corner.

The game was tied … alas, we didn’t know it yet but that was the high-water mark of the night. Taylor played it safe and wound up with a single — which loomed large two batters later, when Brett Baty‘s single only sent Taylor to third. Luisangel Acuna had a chance to win it, but Alex Vesia lured him into swinging at a high fastball and we were off to extra innings.

Extra innings, the other side of midnight in New York, and certifiable bonkersness ensuing. The effect of the stupid ghost runner has been to end nearly all games in a 10th inning, but Friday night’s game turned apparently unwinnable, defying all efforts at being driven to a conclusion.

First came Edwin Diaz, who loaded the bases with nobody out and had to face Teoscar Hernandez, one of many Dodgers you may remember killing us in October. Diaz got a ground ball to Pete Alonso, who this time threw to the catcher instead of above the catcher, cutting down the go-ahead run at the plate. Diaz then got Muncy — another October tormenter — to hit into a double play.

The Mets couldn’t take advantage: Francisco Lindor and Soto failed in the 10th, and Alonso made the last out of the inning on a flyball that came within a whisker of being a homer run, which doesn’t count even if it’s really late and the fans just want to see fireworks and go home.

Reed Garrett was spotless in the top of the 11th; in the bottom of the inning the Mets had the bases loaded with two out, but Acuna came up empty once again, unable to beat out a grounder to third.

By now, sprawled on the couch at my in-laws in Connecticut (no Apple TV there either) I had dispensed with all my usual rituals — no bringing on the enemy pitcher, no urging the forces of good to just get on base. There didn’t seem to be a point: The game had entered a strange country, one impervious to both logic and superstition, and we were all being dragged along in its wake.

Garrett got through the 12th, despite Shohei Ohtani and Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman (oh my); in the bottom of the 12th a Marte sacrifice put Mets on second and third with one out. Sensibly enough, the Dodgers intentionally walked Soto to face Luis Torrens (who was now playing first base, because of course). Torrens is one of the few Mets not afflicted with whatever malady has made the team allergic to getting big hits, but he grounded into a double play.

And then, in the 13th, it all came crashing down. The Dodgers scored twice; the Mets succumbed meekly, and I presume fireworks were the reward of the hardy souls who’d endured all that. Unless it rained again. Did it? You know what, I really don’t want to know.

Not Like Them

“Thank you for sharing, Baltimore O, and thank you for offering Baltimore O your empathy, Pittsburgh P. Having to replace a manager so early in the season is always difficult. Remember, at Losing Baseball Teams Anonymous, we’re here to help one another without rendering judgment. Do you have anything you wish to add, Chicago WS?”

“Hi, everybody. I’m Chicago WS, and I’m a losing baseball team.”
“Hi, Chicago WS!!”
“I’m still going through some rough times, though not as rough as the times I was going through in 2024. I’ve been winning at about the same pace as I was last year…”
“Chicago WS, in these meetings, we’re not ashamed to use the L-word.”
“Very well. I’ve been losing at about the same pace as I was last year, but it doesn’t feel as bad as it did. I think it might have something to do with learning one of my fans recently got a new job leading one of the world’s major religions.”
“Hey, that’s great to hear about ‘leading’ from you rather than being behind most of the time. Let’s give Chicago WS a round of applause for a step forward, even if it doesn’t show up in the standings.”
“Yeah, thanks. Also, I don’t feel so bad about myself because I’m clearly no longer the biggest loser in the room.”

“Was that a shot at me?
“OK, Colorado R. You have the floor.”
“Hi, I’m Colorado R, and I’m a losing baseball team.”
“Hi, Colorado R!!”
“Um, it’s been kind of a difficult period. I’m 8 and 41 at the moment. And, yes, that’s worse than Chicago WS, or anybody else here.”
“How does that make you feel, Colorado R?”
“Less than mile-high, to be honest. I thought that playing where I do, the elevation would lift me up or at least give me some kind of home-field advantage. It hasn’t really worked out that way.”
“The important thing, Colorado R, is you maintain your self-esteem. You mentioned elevation, as if there are times you feel above it all. That’s positive. Chicago WS says he has some sort of religious figure on his side. Do you have anybody like that you can point to.”
“John Denver wrote a really nice song years ago. When I stand on the mound, I can relate to seeing it raining fire in the sky.”

“That’s super. Everybody, we have someone new at our meeting tonight. Please welcome him.”
“Um, hello.”
“We all introduce ourselves to the group.”
“Oh, sorry. Hello, everybody. I’m New York M.”
“Hi, New York M!!”
“Hi. For the last week, I’ve been a losing baseball team.”
“New York M, why don’t you tell us more?”

“It all started last week when I stopped hitting. I mean cold. I pitched OK most of the time, but the hitting was basically a cold turkey situation.”
“It’s hard to try to quit all at once. One day at a time, brother.”
“Every day was a day not to hit for me. No hitting with runners on base. No home runs whatsoever. Every long fly ball I hit would have been out of every ballpark in the majors except whichever one I happened to be in, and every long fly ball I gave up would have been an out except for where I was actually pitching.”

“Don’t feel ashamed, New York M. The important thing is you keep trying.”
“I have to confess there were times I didn’t really feel like trying. I’d jog more than run. Everybody noticed that I was moving at half-speed. It was all very discouraging.”
“We’re here to help you. Sacramento A, did you have something to say?”
“It’s just ‘A,’ now.”
“Sorry, ‘A’.”
“No problem. First off, welcome New York M. Second, I’m sorry if you’re having to get used to a minor league ballpark.”
“Oh, no. That’s not a problem for me.”
“Lucky you.”

“Can I chime in on this?”
“Of course, Pittsburgh P.”
“Welcome, New York M. It must be difficult to compete with such a limited budget.”
“No, my budget’s ample. More than ample, actually.”
“How much more than ample.”
“Amply more.”
“How your stadium view?”
“It’s OK.”
“Yeah, well mine’s SPECTACULAR.”

“Pittsburgh P, we’re here to be supportive, not combative. Miami M, do you have something to say?”
“New York M, are you suffering from a chronic lack of fan support or interest?”
“Not at all. I’ve got lots of fans coming out to see me. When I’m home, pretty much everything is great.”
“How about rain delays? ’Cause I haven’t had any rain delays since 2012.”
“It rains sometimes where I am.”
“Well, I’ve got a roof, and let me tell you, when my fans show up, they don’t get wet. Four-digit gates and no umbrellas needed. Put that in your pipe and smoke it!”
“Supportive, people…”

“May I ask a question?”
“Of course, Los Angeles of Anaheim A.”
“It’s just Los Angeles A.”
“Sorry about that. It’s hard to remember from one of your names to the next.”
“Not really, but anyway, New York M, if I may be blunt, what are you doing here?”
“The sign outside said all are welcome.”
“I know what the sign says. I’ve been looking at that sign for years. Everybody in this room is a losing baseball team with chronic or deep-seated difficulties. Me, I never go to the playoffs and you can see that nobody quite knows where I play.”
“Oh, I don’t have that problem. I went to the playoffs just last year. It was a lot of fun. And I think people know where I play.”
“In that case, New York M, and I don’t mean to be judgmental, but it doesn’t sound as if you have it so bad.”
“Well, I did lose three in a row, and five of six. And I wasn’t kidding about the lack of power-hitting or hitting of any kind.”
“So you fear this is the beginning of a long-term downward trend?”
“I don’t know about that. I mean I won my most recent game in pretty rousing fashion. I hit with runners on base for a change, I hit a ball over a very tall wall, and I shut down the opposition quite effectively.”

“Point of order?”
“Go ahead, Colorado R.”
“New York M, these meetings are for baseball teams that are truly down in the dumps. Do you understand in 2025 what it means for a baseball team to be truly down in the dumps?”
“I was a little off stride. It felt weird.”
“Did it feel 8 and 41 weird?”
“God, no, I’m 30 and 20.”
“New York M, with all due respect, you don’t belong in this room.”
“I don’t?”

“I have something to say to New York M.”
“Go ahead.”
“Hi, everybody, I’m Tampa Bay R. That’s Tampa BAY R. I know you guys are always calling me TAMPA R, but I identify as Tampa BAY.”
“Yes, Tampa Bay R. What do you have to say to New York M. This is a safe space.”
“New York M, I don’t even play in my own stadium anymore. It was practically destroyed in a hurricane. I play in a Spring Training stadium with the most loathsome name imaginable. Like Miami M, there never seems to be a whole lot of reason for my existence if you look at attendance figures. Like ‘A,’ I don’t know where I’ll be in a couple of years.”
“Um, I told you. I’ll be in Las Vegas. Sweet new ballpark they’re gonna build for me right on the Strip.”
“Sure. What I’m saying, New York M, is if you don’t have these identity issues, and you do have a lot of fans showing up to see you, and you’ve been in the playoffs lately, and you have your own big league ballpark, and apparently a sizable payroll…”
“Between you and me, it’s huge.”
“AND you’re — how many games above .500?”
“Ten.”
“All due respect, New York M, what in the name of Al Lang are you doing here?”
“I get what all you fellas are saying, and I don’t mean to intrude on what you’ve got going on in here. It’s just that when I do lose in small, concentrated, intense doses, I seem to inspire a lot of kvetching.”

“Qu’est-ce que c’est ‘kvetching’?”
“Huh?”
“Our legacy international member Montreal E wants to know what you mean by kvetching”
“You know — kvetching. Griping. Complaining.”
“Ah, oui.”
“The kvetching when I have a bad week makes me question who I am. But maybe that week is over. Like I said, I just won. Did I mention the score was 5 to 1?”
“You didn’t, but thanks for the detail, New York M. I will take the bold step of speaking for the group when I say your feelings are valid, and we respect the emotional turbulence you’re currently experiencing, and we truly wish you well. But I have to agree with what others have said. Maybe you’d feel more comfortable working on your self-esteem issues by simply playing your next series and seeing how that goes.”
“My next series is against Los Angeles D.”
“Good luck with that. Meeting adjourned.”

Crushed by the Karmic Wheel

Savor this.

That’s always the warning when your baseball team is playing taut, crackling ball at a pinch me level. It seems inconceivable, but the good times will end. The hits will stop falling in, balls will start just eluding gloves, relievers will enter jams and emerge scathed. Baseball’s karmic wheel will turn and somehow joy will become dismay.

We never really believe it. Surely this incarnation of the team — these hard-working, plucky, never-say-die boys, all them patriots who wear clean underwear and love their mothers — has found a formula for walking on water, and why would anyone give up a method of transportation so novel, daring and so just plain fun?

And then somehow one goes from the surface of the lake to beneath it, sputtering and thrashing.

The Mets, until recently the stuff of ready smiles and jaunty steps, are now unwatchable. The hitters have two modes: no luck and bad luck. Without an offense, the rest of the machine is either inert or breaking down. Tension has crept into the postgame pressers, with the reassurances taking on a certain Baconesque flavor. Fans like us are muttering and sighing and wondering — once again — how any people can endure such misery.

On Tuesday, the Met bats actually showed some signs of sizzle — impressive exit velos were credited to the likes of Mark Vientos, Brett Baty, Brandon Nimmo, Juan Soto and Pete Alonso. But the trajectories were almost invariably tragic — balls zipping straight into the gloves of Boston Red Sox positioned where you didn’t want them to see them. That was true against Walker Buehler before his early ejection, and true against the six relievers who followed him — four of them relievers the Mets hadn’t been able to touch on Monday night either. It added up to a grand total of zero runs scored, which made a loser out of Clay Holmes for the sin of surrendering a pair of solo shots over the Green Monster. The only moment of the game one wanted to remember — if you don’t count soft-glow Fenway nostalgia — was a seed of a throw by Nimmo to nail Nick Sogard at the plate. Those five seconds? Pretty awesome. The other two hours and change? Not so much.

I know it seems impossible to believe right now, but the Mets will be fine. Their current three-game losing streak is the first time they’ve lost three straight all season, a deal you would have signed on for in a heartbeat if offered it in March. Statistical oddities will even out and ebbs will transform into flows. Balls will find grass and postgame press conferences will come without heavy treads and thousand-mile stares. The wheel will turn again and these days will be either remembered with shrugs and shakes of the head or happily forgotten.

Just don’t ask when. It doesn’t work that way — never has and never will. All we can do is endure.