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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.

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Turning Lucky Into Good

“If you believe you’re playing well because you’re getting laid, or because you’re not getting laid, or because you wear women’s underwear, then you are! And you should know that!” — Crash Davis

I hate to say it, but the Mets aren’t this good.

All too soon, they will provide evidence of that. They will lose. Maybe they will even lose two, three or four in a row. Mickey Callaway‘s tactical decisions will backfire. His apportionment of playing time will rankle. The strike zone will cause our stalwarts to seethe, remonstrate and take an early seat or two instead of shrugging a bit sheepishly while opponents rant and rave. (Marty Foster’s been in a mood this first week, and we’ve twice been the beneficiaries.)

Streaks happen, good and bad, and as fans we’d be wise to accept their flukiness without insisting on reading too much into it. Remember the 2017 Dodgers? They spent the end of the summer losing 16 out of 17, yet wound up winning 104 games and playing Game 7 of the World Series. It was a pinch-me season … if you subtract the three weeks in which you would have sworn the Dodgers forgot how to play baseball.

A couple of things, though.

For one thing, bunched up and attended by luck as they were, those wins all count. The Mets really are five games over .500, a moderately lofty goal never achieved in 2017’s lost season. What they’ll do in 2018 is largely unwritten, but that part’s recorded in ink.

For another thing, while streaks are statistical noise in a long season, I’d argue the timing of those streaks can have a real effect. The Mets are sorting through the following things, in no particular order: a new manager; relievers being asked to work in subtly different ways; starters being asked to work in subtly different ways; key players coming back from injuries; young players at career crossroads; and a different philosophy underpinning lineup construction.

Nip and tuck a few runs and rearrange offensive output a bit and the Mets could be 1-6 going into tonight’s game in Washington, without being a drastically different team than the 6-1 outfit they are. But we all know the conversation would be night and day. The use of the bullpen would be under a microscope. There’d be carping from the jock alumni about starters and toughness and finishing what you start. Everyone with a microphone or blog software would be a newly minted expert on lineup construction. That most talkative of clubhouse sources — One Met — would be making his feelings clear. And Callaway would be under tremendous pressure to retreat and retrench. Heck, we’d probably be choking down our first dose of stentorian wisdom about How Baseball Will Humble a New Manager and Teach Him to Respect the Game’s Bedrock Truths, or some such bullshit.

Instead, because of a quirk of timing, Callaway’s got a five-game cushion, a fanbase in pinch-me mode, and buy-in from the 25 guys who have to play the game. Is that quantifiable? Probably not, but that’s not the same as saying it’s unimportant. Steven Matz and Matt Harvey, Robert Gsellman and Seth Lugo, Hansel Robles and A.J. Ramos, Michael Conforto and Seth Lugo, Kevin Plawecki and Travis d’Arnaud, Jose Reyes and Amed Rosario, Zack Wheeler and Dom Smith … they’ve all started the season watching a winning team and manager. That affects how they think about this team and their roles on it. And that kind of first week may sustain them when the pixie dust runs out and the Mets have to make an emergency reorder.

While it’s still being tossed around, though, just enjoy it. Matz still has some work to do — he threw way too many first-pitch balls and had to keep fighting his way back into counts — but he was finishing his pitches and they had life they seemed to be lacking against St. Louis. (Meanwhile all the Mets’ starters seem to be exploiting launch angles successfully with tempting high fastballs.) The bullpen wasn’t flawless, with Robles giving up a homer to Bryce Harper (and yes he pointed, at least according to Twitter) and Jerry Blevins walking Harper come crunch time. But Harper gonna Harper. Robles limited the damage, Ramos was flawless, and Jeurys Familia racked up five outs.

The Mets aren’t exactly speedy, but early in the season they’re making good use of what speed they do have, and their aggression on the basepaths is being rewarded. The seventh inning was a showcase: Rosario scored from first on a double by Cabrera to tie the game at 2-2, simply outrunning a well-executed pickup and relay by Harper and Howie Kendrick. Cabrera crossed to third on a groundout by Yoenis Cespedes. Conforto was walked, and took off for second with Todd Frazier at the plate. Frazier grounded to second, but Kendrick found Conforto up in his business instead of at a safe remove between first and second. Discombobulated, he had to settle for the out at first as Cabrera scampered home with the go-ahead run Familia would make stand up.

And let’s not forget the heroics of Juan Lagares, who gunned down Brian Goodwin at home to short-circuit the Nationals’ second. Lagares’ positioning was impeccable and the throw was a missile, a perfect arc to d’Arnaud’s mitt. Credit the catcher as well: d’Arnaud received the throw on his knees and pivoted adroitly (and legally in the age of video nitpicking) to spin Goodwin away from the plate, which I believe he’s yet to touch. Between innings, Lagares had his cap off in the dugout, leaving his eyes peeking through the vent in his Mets-blue hood as if auditioning for superhero status.

He’s got the job. So far they all do.

12 comments to Turning Lucky Into Good

  • It’s early, and we know the adversity will come. This group through, they seem to have a lot of fight in them.

  • Tim Donner

    Wow, is it really necessary to be Debbie Downer on a 6-1 start? You act as if it’s all luck. There is going to be plenty of time to lament losses – will you then be pointing out that victory is just around the corner, as you are proclaiming defeat to be in this article? Your cynicism is showing.

  • Lenny65

    Thus far I like what I’m seeing regarding the New Regime. While I’ll always have a soft spot for ol’ Uncle Terry, the dysfunction there toward the end was too obvious to deny. It’s really early of course, but there’s a twinkle in the eye with this bunch thus far, a certain feeling you get while watching a team that’s enjoying baseball and playing it crisply.

  • Bob

    Jason-
    Another great article–I’m just watching the Mets and enjoying each W.
    My poor Padre fan pal saw his club lose on a blown infield pop-up last night VS Colts 45s. To make him feel “not alone”-I sent him a video of that never-to-be-named Met player dropping a pop fly & losing a game to the evil ones in that billion dollar sewer north of the Tri-Boro (JFK) Bridge years ago.
    OY–It still gives me agiata!

    LET’S GO METS!
    Bob

  • Matt

    I came here to be grounded. Thank you!

  • Dave

    We all know it’s a long season and that unhatched chickens are best left uncounted. But so far, so good…while I never pinned the team’s misfortunes on Terry Collins (especially last year), it felt like time for a change, and the team seems to be responding well to Callaway. I can already sense a season filled with Toni Basil chants. I think some roster tweaks will happen along the way, even aside from injuries, so as Bob Murphy used to say when painting the word picture for us, fasten your seatbelts.

  • JoeyC

    The team is 6-1 and playing baseball correctly. We haven’t seen that in a long time. We’ve had plenty to complain about and mourn since 1962. Let’s call them like we see them, and this is good baseball. Let’s enjoy it.

  • Jacobs27

    It’s much too early to conclude anything, but this brief stretch has felt more like 2015 than anything since 2015. Sweeping the Nats in Washington is no small part of it. You even have Cespedes winning it against a normally reliable Nats set-up man who ends up coughing it up in consecutive games. It feels awfully good.

  • 9th string catcher

    Tale of two games – one NY team was in extra innings with the bases loaded, none out and their two massive power hitters up. 1-2-5 DP and K to end the game. Other NY team in extra innings with runners on base and their massive power hitter bloops a single into left center.

    It’s not the team with the best players, it’s the team that plays together the best. And win or lose, (hopefully win), the manager believes in the team concept – all 25 on the roster and another 15 in reserve. It is a fun team to watch.

  • Cleon Jones

    Sweept the hated Nats in DC. Our Mets are playing good baseball. If we stay healthy we can do some damage. Lets go Mets!!! On to Miami.

  • open the gates

    It’s not the ’86 Mets, or even the ’15 Mets – at least not yet. It is a team on a roll, which is always fun to see. And sweeping Washington out of the gate ain’t half bad either. We’ll worry about the lean times when they come. Which they will, but they’re not here now. LGM!

  • I guess I’m a glass half-full kinda guy. I think they ARE this good. In fact, I think they are BETTER than this. What they are not is as bad as they looked last year. But, coming into this year, everybody seemed to think that last year’s team was the REAL Mets. Baloney! Injuries are part of the game but last year’s run of bad health was way beyond the norm. Absent the injuries, the talent was there, last year. This is a better team than ’16 or ’17–a better team, I say, than ’15. And, yes, luck plays a part. Always has. And, sir, I submit to you that the Mets used up at least two years of bad luck last year. And the Nats near exhausted their supply of the good kind. We’re due for good luck and good health and the Nats are due for some of the bad. Enjoy the ride. Ya Gotta Believe! We’re gonna win.