Francisco Alvarez [1] connecting for a long home run. Ronny Mauricio [2] driving in a run and making some nifty plays afield. Mark Vientos [3] tripling. Brett Baty [4] driving in runs and ending the game with a highlight-reel play.
There was a lot to like from the anticipated future of the Mets on Tuesday night: They beat the Nats by six [5], with the margin that slim only because of some unfortunate bullpenning, and the yout’ of America went 5 for 13 with 6 RBIs in advancing the cause. They had help from more veteran Mets, too: Brandon Nimmo [6] went deep twice, Francisco Lindor [7] and Pete Alonso [8] hit big flies, and Jose Quintana [9] didn’t break much of a sweat after a first-inning bump.
Alvarez was the story to be most pleased about: The rookie catcher never let his dreadful slump at the plate carry over to his work as a backstop, with that aspect of his game remaining impressively precocious and marked by a laser-beam focus on detail. Still, the slump really was dreadful, with Alvarez looking completely lost in all the ways that can snowball on a rookie: too aggressive when he had to be selective, too selective when he should have been attacking, seemingly always looking for the opposite of what the pitcher decided to throw, and hitting in lousy luck even when contact was made. Over the last couple of weeks you saw a slow but steady sea change, though: more patience, better contact, and finally the payoff against poor Patrick Corbin [10]. Maybe Alvarez needed his workload cut back, maybe he just needed some time to make the necessary adjustment against pitchers who’d adjusted to him, or maybe it was some of both. Whatever the case, it was a welcome sight.
So too is being ahead of the Nats again in the standings, whatever one might think about draft order and continuing the Steve Cohen restocking of the farm. On the one hand it seemed karmically appropriate for the Mets’ gold-plated season to land with such a thud that they were actually a last-place team; on the other, that seemed like taking the bit a tad too far. Yes, the Mets were a pile of money thrown into a dumpster and set on fire, but the point was made without the Mets actually being worse than the Nationals. Now they aren’t, and even with my October calendar free, that makes me a little happier.
* * *
On a sad note, however the Mets finish their season they’ll do it without Carlos Carrasco [11]. Cookie’s season and Mets career came to an end when he smashed his pinkie with a 50-pound dumbbell in the weight room over the long weekend. Carrasco had a confounding time in orange and blue: He arrived as a surprisingly robust addition to the deal for Lindor, one of those “wait and they also got…” players; saw his inaugural season ruined by injury and ill luck; had a quietly excellent second go-round in which he proved to be every bit the well-liked, steady veteran Cleveland fans mourned losing; and then dove straight off a cliff.
I suspect five years from now Carrasco will be remembered with a shrug when he’s remembered at all, which will be simultaneously a shame and no particular injustice. Just one more reminder, as if the entire season hasn’t been enough, that baseball can be unpredictable and cruel.
* * *
You have to read Tim Britton’s piece in The Athletic, which finds him walking Tom Seaver [12]‘s vineyard in Calistoga, Calif., in the company of the Franchise’s daughter, Anne. It’s a deeply felt, sharply observed elegy [13] for Seaver and a tribute to how he brought his perfectionism and drive to an entirely new pursuit after his playing days. Read it and then, if you haven’t already, subscribe to the Athletic [14].
We were lucky in having our first years as Met bloggers coincide with the initial wave of ambitious baseball blogs, the high-water mark of online media, and the still vibrant autumn of traditional beat writing. Much of that trifecta is gone now, but at its best the Athletic’s smart, deep and rich Mets coverage reminds me of those days. That’s worth celebrating and supporting.