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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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Griffin Canning, Mets Flailing

Let’s see…nine innings coming to bat…six innings with runners reaching…two innings with runners scoring…no more than one run scoring in any one inning.

That’s not a lot of offense to work with, and the Mets didn’t make it work for them. Five base hits, four walks, one hit-by-pitch, three opposition errors, yet all of two runs on a sunny Southern California Sunday afternoon that turned cloudy when the Mets couldn’t do nearly enough with Griffin Canning — Griffin Canning, for all your canning needs — or anything at all versus three Angel relievers. The Mets’ best chance to score in the late innings came when Francisco Lindor hit a foul ball that was briefly and mistakenly called a home run before correction kicked in.

Two runs can win you a game if your pitching doesn’t allow quite that many in return runs in return. Met pitching wasn’t quite that effective. Jose Quintana gutted out five frames of three-run ball, and though the combined efforts of relievers Adam Ottavino, Danny Young and Phil Maton were close to spotless, the horse had already inched out of the barn and wandered onto I-5.

Angels 3 Mets 2, on the heels of Angels 5 Mets 4, made for a very deflating first stop on a very challenging road trip at a very critical juncture of the schedule amid a very competitive Wild Card race. It’s never a very good time to lose games, especially to a subpar opponent (not that you could tell one team’s aptitude from the other’s in this series), super-especially when you’re facing a pitcher who entered the day with a record of 3-10 alongside an ERA of 5.25 that indicated the record was not misleading. Well, now Griffin Canning, who fanned eight over five, is 4-10, and the Mets are a game-and-a-half off the playoff pace and, more concerning, a little pulseless. Since J.D. Martinez’s grand slam on Saturday night, they’ve gone eleven innings with only a tiny bit of clutch hitting and almost no scoring whatsoever. It’s not an extensive sample size, but it’s been kind of boring, which is something the Mets haven’t been all that much this season. Ostentatiously bad early. Extravagantly good later. Dull, though? Somebody needs to take the field dressed as Grimace or something.

It’s just two games, one hopes. On to St. Louis, Colorado, Seattle, wherever. The journey continues. Perhaps they can replenish their mojo somewhere along the way.

5 comments to Griffin Canning, Mets Flailing

  • Seth

    Well… except that they WERE boring, for most of the first two months of the season, and most of the year and a half preceding that. Sure, the “June Boon” was fun, but we’ve seen more of yesterday’s team than June’s team. Maybe we need more Grimacing – or a new theme song. I fear OMG has turned into OMFG.

  • eric1973

    Great line, Seth.
    All we need now is for Alonso to sing the actual word over the loudspeaker, like he did on purpose earlier on.

    A lot of dopes thought it was funny.

    • Seth

      Yeah, Pete’s not the brightest bulb in the chandelier…

      • Orange and blue through and through

        I’ve said before, Alonso needs to remember there are kids watching. His clown behavior and diminishing skills won’t earn him a contract anywhere near what he turned down earlier this year.

  • Eric

    These Mets have played down to the league’s bottom dwellers, but they’ve also played up and even with the contenders. There’s really no such thing as an ‘easy’ part of the schedule for this team. On the other hand, they’ve also shown to be capable of holding their own in the games against the teams they’re racing with: 5-5 vs the Braves, 2-2 vs the Diamondbacks, 3-0 vs the Padres, 4-2 vs the Cardinals, 5-2 vs the Pirates. (2-4, though, vs the Giants who’ve clawed their way back to .500 and into the scrum.)