The blog for Mets fans
who like to read
ABOUT US
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.)
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by Jason Fry on 24 April 2024 7:31 am
Well, at least this time Mets pitchers didn’t walk anybody.
Luis Severino wasn’t giving out free passes Tuesday night in San Francisco, and for four innings he wasn’t let any Giant earn his way onto the bases either. But the well ran dry in the fifth as lousy sequencing and buzzards’ luck combined to turn a […]
by Jason Fry on 21 April 2024 10:15 pm
Baseball: So Betts, Ohtani and Freeman reached base 12 times in Saturday’s Mets-Dodgers game.
Me: OMG, did we lose by like two touchdowns? What poor position player threw the last two innings?
Baseball: Oh, the Mets won, 6-4.
Me: Huh?
Baseball: [shrugs]
— Jason Fry (@jasoncfry.bsky.social) Apr 20, 2024 at 11:46 PM
Like I said, that was Saturday.
On Sunday, the […]
by Jason Fry on 20 April 2024 2:08 am
Ah, baseball. It’s a game of redemption, they say. The question sometimes is who gets redeemed last.
Chris Taylor, normally reliable as a Dodger, has endured a nightmarish 2024 so far, one that left him hitting .029 going into Friday night’s game against the Mets. Things didn’t get much better for Taylor in his first AB: […]
by Jason Fry on 17 April 2024 1:22 am
How do you know things are going well? Here’s a sign: You take the lead off an opposing pitcher before he even throws a pitch.
The Mets somehow did that Tuesday night, the culmination of several unlikely events. They were down 1-0 to the Pirates in the seventh after being smothered by Pittsburgh’s Jared Jones and […]
by Jason Fry on 15 April 2024 11:40 pm
The Mets are suddenly good.
Well, not good exactly. Statistically speaking, they’re average. But in the vibes column — which you won’t find in your paper, on MLB.com or Baseball Reference, so don’t look for it — the Mets are killing it.
They rose to average statistically and red hot vibe-istically by beating the Pirates in an […]
by Jason Fry on 13 April 2024 8:47 am
When your team’s bad you spend a lot of time fuming about how it should be made good. This guy who’s failed too often needs to lose his job to this guy who hasn’t failed yet, any fool can see the lineup should be revamped so it works like this, etc.
I’m not generally one for […]
by Jason Fry on 10 April 2024 12:18 am
It’s a tenet of our blog that there are no moral victories in baseball — the loss column comes without asterisks, parentheses or stuff in superscript. Moral victories are losses.
Well, except when one of us declares that moral victories do too exist.
Maybe I was just in a good mood: Monday night’s game found me and […]
by Jason Fry on 6 April 2024 12:51 am
Baseball — perhaps you’ve heard — is a game of contrasts.
Take Hunter Greene vs. Jose Quintana, the starters for Friday night’s game in chilly Cincinnati. Greene is young, enormous and all but dripping talent, in possession of a high-90s fastball he can throw past big-league hitters as well as an evil slider tailor-made for embarrassing […]
by Jason Fry on 2 April 2024 12:09 am
We could talk about Sean Manaea looking superb in a way that no Met starter looked against the Brewers, pitching aggressively and keeping the Tigers bothered and bewildered for six innings, with the lone blemish a sharp Andy Ibanez single to left with two out in the fifth — though that situation happily healed itself […]
by Jason Fry on 31 March 2024 12:12 am
Years ago, after too many not-yet-spring days spent at Shea watching it rain, waiting in horrible lines for bad coffee or both, my wife instituted a rule: No ballpark visits before May. In recent years, as I’ve become older and grumpier and more fragile, I’ve made her rule my own. I hope Opening Day is […]
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