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The Enigma That is Jared Ross

Posted by Matt on February 4, 2009

I was flipping through the channels the other week and found myself watching the American Hockey League (AHL) All-Star game. Unfortunately, I did not see any of the action as the game was over. However, I was able to see the presentation of the MVP Award (sponsered by some fast-food chain, I believe). The recipient of the 2009 AHL All-Star game MVP was a man named Jared Ross, a forward who plays for the Philadelphia Phantoms.  Jared had seven points in that game (an AHL all-star game record), six assists (another AHL all-star game record) and one goal (not so much a record). That’s a pretty good night. I thought to myself, “Alright! Jared Ross, sounds like a Jewish name. It’s nice to see a Jewish hockey player!” Now, I am strictly going by his name, I do not know for sure that Jared Ross is Jewish. I tried to google this, but could not come out with a definitive answer. If you are not Jewish, then I sincerely apologize, Jared.

Now, being a Jewish professional hockey player, Jared is in the minority. However, while watching the game I discovered another fact about Jared that puts him in another minority. He was born and raised in Huntsville, Alabama! Seriously! So not only is Jared Ross a Jewish hockey, he is a Jewish hockey player from Alabama! According to an article on ahl.com, Jared played college hockey at the University of Alabama-Huntsville…who knew that the University of Alabama had a hockey team!? The article on ahl.com also stated that Jared ranks in the top three in school history in goals, assists and points. He led the team in scoring in each of his final three seasons, was a three-time College Hockey Association First-Team All-Star, and was the conference player of the year in 2003-04.

In the beginning of this season, Jared made his debut for the Philadelphia Flyers at their home opener against the Rangers of all teams (shows how observant I am). Jared became the first player born and trained in Alabama to play in the NHL. Congratulations, Jared! It’s about time someone broke that barrier. Was this the game where Sarah Palin was boo’ed when dropping the ceremonial puck?

I find this story quite interesting. Who knew Alabama was able to produce a NHL player? Who knew that there are Jews in Alabama (that is a GROSS generalization on my part…clearly there has to be a proud Jewish community in the state…just my attempt of being humorous…sorry if that offends any Alabama Jews). As Jack @ http://notaplumber.blogspot.com put it, what is more rare: a Jewish hockey player or a Jew in Alabama? I just wanted to share this to my readers as I think this is a random story and fun fact to learn. Maybe someone, one day, can win a bunch of money in a trivia game by knowing who the first Alabama-Native was in the NHL.

Ironically enough, according to the article on ahl.com, Jared was traded to Philadelphia for Niko Dimitrakos, A Greek-American hockey player. For those who know me, I am half-Jewish/half-Greek, so this intrigued me quite a bit. I bet this was the first time in professional sports history that a Jew was traded for a Greek.

Learn More About Jared Ross:

http://www.theahl.com/news/league/index.html?article_id=8957

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jared_Ross

Posted in Sports | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments »

We Want Manny!

Posted by Matt on February 4, 2009

Mets fans want Manny Ramirez…it’s no secret. Mannymania is all over WFAN, SNY and the blogs. Mets fans are not worried about his personality or “Manny being Manny” because he is one of the greatest hitters of this generation that comes through when it matters. As I have stated in a previous post, I too want Manny. His personality did not stop the Red Sox from winning two championships or the Dodgers from winning the division (two things the Mets have failed to do in the past two seasons). There was a rally last week at the SNY studios of about 40 or so people for the Mets to sign Manny and apparently there will be another rally at CitiField on Saturday (or whatever it will called by then). I hope this rally will have a bigger turnout, not that 40 people is a bad turnout, but the more people to get the message out the better.

If so many Mets fans are calling for Manny, the Mets should listen. Mets management owes something big, like Manny Ramirez, to Mets fans after the way the past two seasons ended. It is unacceptable for the Mets to be raising tickets prices at such an astronomical rate just to keep their team salary the same from 2008 to 2009 (Metsblog reported that this season’s team salary is around $145 million, the same as in 2008). Where is this money going? The new stadium is finished…they will not need anymore money to finance it. Citigroup is apparently not backing out of their deal, so the team is keeping around $400 million dollars. I understand that Bernie Madoff screwed the Wilpons out millions of dollars, but the Mets claim that that money had nothing to do with the Mets’ budget. And do not think to say that it’s a recession and Wilpons cannot afford another big name player, they have not adjusted ticket prices for their new stadium, they do not seem to care how the recession is affecting their fans. What’s wrong with another $25 million dollar investment for the 2009 and beyond? That money will be chump change compared to the money the team will make off Manny (merchandising, national television deals, etc.). Just look at how Woody Johnson milked every single dollar out of Brett Farve. What will bring more money to the Mets than a World Series Victory? Nobody will argue that Manny will make the Mets the favorite in the National League. The team fixed their bad bullpen and now needs to fix their poor clutch hitting from last season. Manny is the clutch hitter, hands down. I have no problem with giving him two years and an option for a third ($25 for the first two and $30 for the option). Honestly, although I am hesitant to guarantee a third year, I will do it at this point. Manny is a hitting machine, and has been a hitting machine for the past five years. There have been no signs of a dramatic drop off. How much worse will Manny be in three years? I do not think it will be a huge regression. Nobody else seems to be close to signing Manny; the Dodgers do not want to give him what he wants and the Giants are just claiming to be interested so the Dodgers will outbid themselves. The time is perfect for the Mets to jump in. Let’s do this, Omar, Jeff and Fred. It’s time to give to the fans a big thank you.

PS: The additions of Orlando Hudson (who is waiting for either NY team to call him) and Joe Beimel…as well as the subtraction of Luis Castillo will also be welcomed by me.

Posted in Sports | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments »

Is the Curse Finally Over?

Posted by Matt on December 30, 2008

I’ve been cursed since 2007. Being a big Mets, Jets and Rangers fan, I attend a lot of games over the course of a year. Since the 2007 Mets season, it appears that the games that I attend do not seem to go well for the team I am rooting for. Now, my teams didn’t loose every game I went to, but they lost a significant majority of them. For example, I believe the Mets went on a eight or nine game loosing streak at Shea Stadium during the games I attended for a while. Also, after a hot start, where the Rangers were undefeated in the beginning of the season, I of course was in attendance for their first loss against Buffalo. It was bizarre, my teams would loose seemingly easy games they were expecting to win (i.e., Mets versus Nationals). But now that 2008 is coming a close, can the curse be coming to an end?

Let me explain. It is well-known that the Jets had a horrific end to their season, it was pretty much a debacle. The head coach, Eric “Mangenius” Mangini, ended up being fired and Brett Farve played so bad, it looked like he was throwing games. Overall, the Jets went 1-4 in their last five games. That’s a pretty bad way to end the season. HOWEVER, the one game they won (against the Buffalo Bills) was a game that I attended! If the curse was still real, then the Jets would have totally lost that game. Instead, they won in my presence! Sure, it wasn’t the prettiest win, but they still won while my tukos was in the seat. OH REDEMPTION, IT FEELS SO GOOD TO KISS YOUR BITTER LIPS!

Yes, it is strange that I am happy that my favorite football team collapsed and lost their playoff position, but it means that the Jets, Mets and Rangers are no longer at risk for a disappointing loss for the games I attend! This is great news, considering that I bought a 15-game pack at CitiField this season. Maybe the Mets will will win all 15 games. Oh 2009, I love you already!

Posted in Sports | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Initial Reactions to the New York Jets’ Last Game

Posted by Matt on December 29, 2008

- Fire Mangini. Too conservative and unprepared. He gets outcoached way too often. Does not have a good handle on the lockeroom and is horrible with media. Tries to emulate Belicheck and has no identity. Dry as a cracker.

-New coaching staff.

-Don’t bring back Farve. I have no idea who can be quarterback next season that isn’t a quick fix. I would like a long-term solution. It looks like Cassell is going back to the Pats since Brady’s rehab is behind and Belicheck doesn’t want to see Cassell go to the Jets. McNabb is over the hill, so is Kerry Collins and others that were listed. I also don’t follow college football enough to know who the good quarterbacks in the draft are. Is Drew Hensen still around?

-I’m happy to see Pennington win. I still think the Jets made the right move getting rid of him. We all knew he was going to be a winner wherever he goes, but he wasn’t working for the Jets. He will always have a fan on this blog. I hope he wins MVP and a superbowl. Good luck to you in the playoffs Chad!!!

-SOMEONE TELL ME WHAT TO DO ABOUT THE JETS?!?!

Posted in Sports | Tagged: , , | 3 Comments »

My Plan For the Mets 12/24

Posted by Matt on December 24, 2008

Mark Texeria is now a Yankee. What does this mean for the Mets? Well, if I were Omar Minaya, this is what I would do (assuming they get Derek Lowe).

(1) Trade Carlos Delgado to the Angels – The Angels now need a first baseman. They traded Casey Kotchman to get Texeria and are now stuck with guys like Kendry Morales (who batted .213 last season) and Mark Trumbo (who has no major league experience). They obvioulsy need a bat at first base and Delgado is that man. There were rumors before the season ended that the Angels expressed interested in Delgado. Some may ask, well who is going to play first base? Well, there are pleanty of internal options. Daniel Murphy played first based in winter ball this season. Nick Evans was a first baseman in AA last season. Fernando Tatis is not a natural first baseman by any means, but knows how to handle a glove. Michael Abreu had a solid season in AAA after winning a batting title in the minors two years ago. For those interested, Abreu’s stats in 2008 were:

Games: 120     Avg: 285     Hits: 121     2B: 24     HR: 15     RBI: 66     SLG: .447     OBP: .343     OPS: .790

Not bad, eh?

(2) Sign Manny Ramirez for 2 years, $50 million: Controversial, I know. But he can hit and I would rather have Manny for two years than Delgado for one. Yes, his defense is suspect, but so is Tatis’, Murphy’s and Evan’s in left field (as well as Delgado at first). You won’t be loosing anything there. Additionally, Manny is a natural left fielder unlike those  other guys. Manny is clutch in big spots (what the Mets missed) and loves it in New York. Loosing Delgado’s contact will clear up about half of Manny’s salary this season. More to come on the Mets offseason.

(3) Sign Joe Beimel – He’s the man to replace Schoenweiss and Feliciano (who they should also trade)

(4) Package Feliciano and Luis Castillo for anything…anything. Look at free agents Iguchi or trade options such as Eckstein or Roberts to replace Castillo. Orlando Hudson will cost too much.

Posted in Sports | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments »

My Two Cents On Plaxico Burress

Posted by Matt on December 3, 2008

Instead of just repeating everything already said about the stupidity demonstrated by this man, I am simply going to raise a single point: why is Plaxico Burress wearing sweatpants to a club? He stated that he bought his gun in order to protect his expensive jewerly…why are you wearing sweatpants with expensive jewerly? Do you only care about the upper half of you appearance? It makes no sense to me…

Posted in Humor, Sports | Tagged: , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Aaron Heilman: “Start Me Or Trade Me”

Posted by Matt on November 20, 2008

Bravo, Aaron. I am genuinely happy that you finally decided to speak up. However, you are about two and a half years too late. Since 2006 you have been stuck in the bullpen full-time and you have been miserable. To this day, I still do not know why the Mets placed you in the bullpen. You were never a reliever in any stage of professional baseball and you were drafted in the first round as a star starter from Notre Dame. Sure, you showed some signs of being a good reliever, but you could never sustain a consistent groove. As a starter, you developed a little slower than expected but you were finally showing some signs of brilliance (e.g., the one hitter against the Marlins in 2005…ironically enough it was Luis Castillo, who currently can’t hit a lick for the Mets, who broke that up) before you were put in the bullpen. Maybe you did something to Omar that he didn’t like, or maybe Willie Randolph just hated Notre Dame. You should have been a starter all along.

It was no secret that you wanted to start, but you decided to put your brave face on and say, “I’ll do what is best for the team.” Great, grand, wonderful…but what wasn’t best for the team was the tension this created. Writers, bloggers, radio hosts and fans alike discussed Aaron Heilman: he should be in the bullpen: he should start, he should relieve, he should be traded…I heard it all. All this resulted in was that microscope was placed on you. Every time you had a bad performance people questioned whether you were happy in the bullpen. Perhaps this affected your performance; we all saw you pout whenever you walked off the mound to a chorus of boo’s. Maybe you were not performing up to your best abilities because you were disatisfied with your situation, but you decided to stay quiet and pitch poorly in the bullpen.

I never blamed you for what happened in game 7 in 2006…you pitched a great 9th inning and you were unfairly pushed out to pitch the 10th because Billy Wagner wasn’t effective in the series. You should have been on the bench icing your arm in the 10th. You had a so-so year in 2007 and a miserable year in 2008. I never boo’ed you though, I always thought you were going to bust out of your shell….if you were put into the starting rotation. I have complained endlessly to my friends about how the Mets should either put you in the starting rotation or trade you. Whenever a starter went down with an injury or started to struggle, I got on my soapbox and spoke how Aaron Heilman would come through for us if we only gave him a chance to start. But three seasons later your no longer “a young arm” and your stats are poor…your trade value has plummeted. Who knows what the Mets could get for you if they traded you.

I am extremely confident that if you get traded and start you will become an all-star. Unfortunately, I do think you need to be traded. Being boo’ed for two straight years can take its toll on someone…you need a fresh start. So, Mr. Heilman, be prepared to become the next Jason Isringhausen (except in reverse). He was a starter who was traded and became an all-star reliever. You are going to be a reliever who will be traded and go on to become an all-star starter. It could have been different Aaron, if only you decided to speak up sooner.

Posted in Sports | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Farewell My Friend

Posted by Matt on October 3, 2008

Shea Stadium wasn’t just the home to the New York Mets, it was my home. It was known to many outsiders as a “Dump.” But, like many Mets fans, I would say, “Sure…but it’s my dump.”  Some people may have difficulty understanding how the closing of a sports stadium can be so emotional. Well it wasn’t just a Stadium for me. Let me explain…

Shea was the home to many magical moments: The black cat incident of 1969 and the black bat incident of 2008. The Beatles concert in 1966 and Billy Joel’s “Last Play at Shea” this year. The historic year of 1986: Parachute man flying into Shea, the ball through Buckner’s legs finally culminating with the franchise’s second World Series victory. Great present day memories like Todd Pratt’s walk-off homerun against the Diamondbacks in 1999, to Robin Ventura’s Grand Single to Mike Piazza’s game winning home run in the first game back after 9/11.

I’ve been going to Mets games at Shea Stadium for well over 20 years…for longer than I could remember. I grew up at Shea. I had my own seats…well they weren’t really mine. They were my dad’s friend’s seats. He would give us ticket to go to so many games a year. They were the best seats in the house in my opinion Loge Box Section 5 Row 329 Box A. You weren’t too close that you didn’t get a wide enough view of the field. But you were high enough and close enough that you got a great view, you heard all the sounds on the field, were in prime range for foul balls and you didn’t feel isolated from the game. Ironically enough, my dad’s friend left the company who seats he held just last week, when Shea closed. Shea was the place where I grew up learning my favorite sport…and got to know the players that have sketched my mind with so many memories. The Mets have only won one championship in my lifetime (I was 2 years old at the time). They have fielded some really bad teams and teams that have really broke my heart (e.g., last three years). But no matter how bad the team was, I was always excited to go to Shea. I’ve seen the Mets from most areas of the stadium, from the last seat in the upper deck in left field at a Subway Series game to sitting front row behind home plate (close enough so my colleague at work could yell at Tony LaRussa to put Tino Martinez in the game…Tino told the guy to be quiet). The only two places I regret never going was the picnic area, and on the field itself. That’s never going to happen now.

At Shea, I felt like I was apart of a community…a community where everyone had a common cause. Being a Mets fan was the only thing you needed to be accepted at Shea. I felt like I was timed warped back into the 60’s…everyone around me would greet me and offer a tidbit about how the Mets could win. “They should really start Chavez today,” to “Whatever they do…just please don’t bring in Rojas!.” Mets fans are unlike other fans…we’re real, authentic and passionate. We’re fun to watch a baseball game with, you never felt like just a spectator at Shea. Its one of the first things an outsider may realize about Shea. I’ll always remember the interesting people I encountered at Shea…whether it be Cow Bell Man (who I had to track down one day to get his autograph), the guys would walk around in orange suits, sign guy, the drunk guy who yelled at Rafael Furcal for his drinking problem (accusing him of being 46) or  the guy who loved his seats because he was near the bathroom. Shea wasn’t Yankee Stadium…and that was a good thing. Shea was like the teams that played in it…gritty, imperfect and full of flaws. We didn’t get a bunch of wide-eyed tourists from Montana and Nebraska like Yankee Stadium. Shea Stadium was where the true New York fans were. It pains me to think that CitiField will be full of a bunch of corporate slacks. They are the only ones that can afford the hiked-up ticket prices.

Everything at Shea seemed so vibrant. Once you walked in your attention was immediately grabbed by the full gamut of colors: the green grass, the brown dirt, the orange, blue, green and red seats and the giant scoreboard (nobody in the country had a bigger scoreboard than Shea!). It was stimulating enough to wake up anybody who felt a little sluggish. As a kid, I couldn’t believe how green the grass was. I grew up in the suburbs and the greenest grass I saw in my life was in the middle of Queens! And grounds crew, led by Pete Flynn, would always have those cool patterns in the outfield. The best one was the one of the New York skyline, that must have taken forever. Speaking of skylines, at each game, whenever I sat down in my seat and in an attempt to be humorous I would point out beyond the outfield wall and say to whoever was with me…”will you just look at that beautiful Flushing skyline???” I mostly got a chuckle out of it. It was never funny. I said that bad joke until CitiField was built and blocked my view. I’m sure that most people were glad they started building that stadium for that reason. And I’ll always remember the smell of Shea…it honestly smelled like old beer. To this day, whenever I walk into a grocery store’s recycling section, I always comment how the old beer bottles remind me of Shea. It’s a dump, remember!

I loved tailgaiting in the parking lot before it game (until the parking lot was replaced by CitiField). I would have a catch (with whoever I could convince to put on a glove) and pretend that I was one of the players. Later in my life I would draw a crowd around my car because I would blast “Lazy Mary,” and my fellow Mets fans loved it! I hope they continue playing “Lazy Mary” in the 7th inning stretch at CitiField, that’s a Mets tradition that must never go. They got away from it a little this season. Anyway, I’ve skipped high school early…and even skipped out on a college class or two to be at Shea. I didn’t care if I got a bad grade or got in trouble…there was no where I would rather be than watching the Mets in my ballpark…my dump.

Going way back, I remember the first time I realized they had giant neon baseball players on the side of the stadium. It was one of my earliest memories…I was with my family on my way to my grandmother’s house in Jackson Heights. Those neon players looked so cool to me, but in reality they were cheezy in every way possible, it was quintessential “Shea.” Whenever my family visited my grandparents in Jackson Heights or Woodside on a Saturday or Sunday afternoon I would try to peek in the Stadium from the car and to get a glimpse of the game. Or during the offseason I would take a peek to see if they made any changes to the stadium. They never did…the only change they made annually was the always corny but hilarious slogan (for example, “CATCH THE ENERGRY!”and “SHOW UP AT SHEA!”) on the left field side of the stadium.

I’ll always remember going to Mets game with my dad as a kid. He grew up in Jackson Heights queens, a short five minute to drive to Shea. He would show me around the neighborhood and all point out the houses the Mets used to live in. My favorite was always Willie Mayes’ house right by the Grand Central Parkway. I used to love to drive down with my dad to Corona after the games and stop at the Lemon Ice King. Delicious. And speaking of food, Shea had the best Chicken Tenders…ever. They better have those at CitiField, Chicken Tenders with BBQ sauce and Nathan’s french fries…not that’s the “good stuff.”

Shea was a place of refuge for me. Whenever I walked through the turnstiles and the ticket-taker welcomed me to Shea, my worries were gone. I knew for the next three hours or so the only thing on my mind would be baseball…and that was enough to make me happy. I would always get a warm feeling when I walked in the Stadium.I For some reason I’ll never be able to explain I felt safe in Shea. While friends came and friends gone, Shea Stadium was always there for me. It was my rock. No matter how bad things were going for me, no matter how boring adolescence was, I could always look forward to going to Shea. Those feelings will be missed..

In a way, Shea was like my “Cheers” or “Central Perk.” It was a place I could go with my friends…a place where we could all agree upon. No one ever had a problem going to Shea, we all wanted to be there. Baseball was awesome and going to game was awesome. Going to games never got old because every game gave us new memories, new jokes and new stories. We went there to have a good time…and a good time we had. So many classic inside-jokes started at Shea…from turning my back whenever I hear “Sweet Caroline,” or the debate of whether the giant Dunkin Donuts Cup in the visitor’s bullpen is a Coolata or Iced Coffee (I still think it’s a Coolata) or “IT’S ALL ABOUT THE KIDS.” It was a place where I could talk to someone who I had nothing in common with. It was a place where I could met up with an old friend I haven’t seen in years and just shoot the shit for a couple of hours.

I had so many classic Shea memories. From yelling at Austin Kearns from right field, to seeing the sprinklers go off during a Pedro Martinez start, to seeing Glendon Rusch pitch a one-hitter (because of a crap bunt single in the first inning) to being at Shea the day the Mets traded Piazza. Mets fans were so excited that day in 1998…because the Mets mattered again. However, like anything else, I had my top 5. So without further ado, here they are, my top five Shea Stadium moments:

(5) Opening Day 1999: I’ve been to a lot of opening days, but this was my favorite. I was in 9th grade and was able to skip out of school early and catch this 8-1 win. I remember I left school after English class and classmates (who were Mets fans) were incredibly jealous. It wasn’t very often they were jealous of me. Anyway, I remember it was freezing and thinking “baseball shouldn’t be played this early.” But it didn’t matter, I would rather be cold at Shea than be warm in school. Me and my dad sat in the Loge section in right field and watched a great pitching performance from Bobby Jones…who even hit a home run! I was so happy to see all the players again (the 1999 Mets are my second favorite Mets team): Piazza, Olerud, Ordonez, Alfonzo, Ventura, Leiter…Shea was buzzing that day. We all knew that we had a contending team that year, and although it was only one win, it solidified everyone’s feelings on that team. Everyone was on a baseball high that day.

(4) My First Bruce Springsteen Concert: Bruce Springsteen is my God. But, I was not always a Springsteen fan. That all began on October 3rd, 2003. I drove down from Albany on a Friday to catch the concert because a bunch of colleagues I used to work with at the Brooklyn Cyclones got tickets through the Mets ticket system. When invited I said…”Yeah, what the hell I’ll go. I never been to a concert at Shea.” Well I knew that the night was going to be good before the show started because I saw Mick Foley (aka: Mankind, Cactus Jack, Dude Love) in the parking lot before the show! The show was amazing and Bruce was incredible! I couldn’t believe the energy this guy had. He is five days older than my dad and my dad sure as well would be exhausted after 3 minutes out there. He was running back and forth across the stage that was the size of the outfield. He was sliding around and doing knee dives! And the Shea crowd was really into it…all night I was hearing chants of “BRUUUUUUCE!” It was awesome to hear over 65,000 chant along to “Waiting on a Sunny Day.” This was Bruce’s first tour since 9/11 and people in the crowd were in tears when Bruce played his 9/11-themed “The Rising” and “My City of Ruins.” And to this day…I’ll never forget how every single person at Shea was dancing with a partner in their arm Bruce played “Rosalita (it instantly became of my favorite songs).” I even got to see Al Leiter on stage banging a tambourine during “Dancing in the Dark.” Needless to say, I’ve been hooked on Bruce since that day.

(3) The Catch: No…not Endy Chavez’s catch, but my own. April 3rd, 2002. Game two of what would be an extremely disappointing season. However that day hopes were still high. The highly anticipated Mo Vaughn his a mammoth home run and even got a curtain call from the crowd. In the 9th inning the Mets were down 4-3 and David Weathers was pitching to catcher Jason Kendall. I was sitting in my usual seats, Loge Box Section 5 Row 329 Box A. For those who don’t know, those seats are in the second row…about at the outer edge of the net behind home plate on the first base side. Me and my friends moved up to the first row because it started to rain and the people in front of us left. Now, to give you a play-by-play recount of what happened next: Weathers delivers the pitch…Kendall fouls it back to stay alive…holy crap its coming my way! Wait, not exactly my way, it’s below me. So what I later described as “reflex and moxy,” I took off my hat and leaned over the railing…my friend, also acting on some sort of reflex and holds my foot so I don’t fall over the rail. I feel the ball in my hat…HOLY CRAP I JUST CAUGHT THE BALL IN MY HAT! I get a standing ovation from the Shea faithful! Everyone around me wanted a high five. I remember the people behind me wanted to see the ball…but I was afraid they would run away with it (They promised to give it back, and they did). I was on a high for the rest of the day, boy was I proud of myself. When I got back home, I set my VCR to tape the game’s replay at 7 on Fox Sports (it was a day game). When the play came on TV, this is I heard/saw. Dead silence, Howie Rose talking about something irrelevant. There is foul ball off the bat by Kendall…and all of the sudden, A HUGE OVATION! Then the camera cuts to a different angle (not to me)…you see a man in his 40’s behind the dug gout clearly say to his friend, “Wow, what a great catch!” Although they didn’t show the catch on TV or mention it…I was still pumped. I still have the tape to this day. The ball is sitting on my trophy case…I always wanted to get it signed by David Weathers and Jason Kendall. I should get on that.

(2) The 2006 playoffs: Okay, this is more than one particular moment. But these playoffs were just incredible. The Mets were “Amazin’ Again,” as the advertisements told us. They had won the division by a wide margin and were front-runners in the National League. I was lucky enough to attend four playoff games that season. I was at Game 1 of the NLDS against the Dodgers when the mets won…and Paul LoDuca made that bizarre double play at home. I was shocked…I was in disbelief when I saw it. I was at Game 2 two days later where Tom Glavine pitched a gem in a 2-0 win. I remember the subway ride to the game that day. I was coming from school and taking the 7 train from Grand Central Station. Everyone of the train was dressed in Mets gear. The train was buzzing, people were believing it was the Mets year. I remember the conductor getting on the microphone and saying “This is the Express Number 7 train to Willets Point/Shea Stadium…where our New York Mets will pummel the Los Angeles Dodgers all the way back to LA…Lets go Mets!” Pure New York. I was at Game 6 of the NLCS against the Cardinals. The Mets were one game away from elimination but NO ONE in the ballpark thought they were going to loose…and they didn’t. John Maine pitched the game of his life. I sat all way in the upper deck in left field, behind the foul pole. I never heard Shea Stadium so loud as it wasy after that game. I was so proud to be a Mets game at that moment. Everyone was screaming “ONLY ONE MORE WIN TIL THE SERIES!” “BRING ON THE TIGERS!” Shea tends to shake a lot during big games (its one of the unique parts of the Stadium). It was always a little disconcerting when the ground you were sitting on (100 feet or so above the ground) started to shake. Shea never shook more than I felt that day but I didn’t even care because I thought we were on our way to the World Series. It was quite the sight walking down the ramp after the game. People were walking down the ramps just giving strangers…complete strangers high fives. It was great. People’s hands were just hanging off the side of the ramps because as you walked down, the people on the other ramp were slapping it. I wished I had my camera on me at that moment to get a picture of it. I couldn’t resist getting in on the action. Then came Game 7. My dad was lucky enough to score tickets in Loge Box 329…our seats. Even though the Mets broke my heart and lost in devastating fashion (I couldn’t bring myself to watch the replay of Beltran’s strikout until the next April), it was still a great game. I was so excited that I even waved a rally towel (I hate rally towels). Oliver Perez pitched a great game (and I got to see the OPP scoreboard sign for the first and only time). But the real moment came in the 6th inning. Scott Rolen crushed a ball to left field, I knew it was a homerun. I couldn’t watch…but out of the corner of my eye I saw Endy Chavez moving back to the wall with a confidence that is unmistakable. He jumped….HE CAUGHT IT!!!!!!! ENDY CHAVEZ JUST MADE THE GREATEST CATCH I, AND EVERYONE IN THE BALLPARK HAS EVER SEEN! The only catch thatarguably may be better and in a bigger spot was Willie Mayes in the World Series. The crowd went nuts! And he turned the double play to boot. I’ll always remember the train ride home from that game. Most people weren’t angry, or screaming or crying…they were disappointed, contemplative and realistic. I heard “It was a great year” “We got this far in the playoffs on no pitching.” Total class by Mets fans all the way. No doubt other cities would be starting riots.

(1) The 16 Inning Game: May 23rd, 2006. Me and my friends decided last minute to go to the Mets/Phillies game. That’s what I’m really going to miss about Shea, being able to go to a game last minute. With CitiField being a new and novel ballpark…along with the subtraction of 13,000 seats, those days are over. Anyway, we bought cheap tickets in the upper deck and I had no idea what was in store for me. It ended up being the best Shea experience of my life. The game was not sold out by a long shot…it wasn’t even crowded in the upper deck. But it didn’t matter, we had a blast. We learned a new a danced for Carlos Delgado’s song, “Rompe” (thanks to the people next to us), we danced to Lazy Mary, we and chanted for Jose Reyes. The Mets were down 6-2 in the 5th, but they started to slowly climb back. Then the Phillies scored a few more runs to make it 8-5 in the 8th and it looked like time was running out for the Amazins. They got the score to 8-6  when JOSE REYES HIT A GAME TYING HOMERUN! The great part about that was…there was an older man sitting about five rows behind us in the Upper Deck keeping score while listening to the game on his pocket radio. My friend David said to my friend other friend Matt: if the Mets tie the game, you need to give this guy a high five. So, when Jose Reyes tied up the game, Matt kept his word. He stumbled and fumbled, climbing over 5 rows of seats (I still don’t know why he didn’t take the stairs) and gave the guy the most enthusiastic high-five I have ever seen. I couldn’t stop laughing at the sight. The man, who was ecstatic that the game was tied, happily returned the request for a high five. That was the great part about games at Shea, solidarity between Mets fans. The game lasted another eight innings after that. Kaz Matsui kept getting out in clutch siuations to which my friend David would turn and complain about how much he hated Kaz. At one point, I think it was the 12th inning, Matt turned to us and said, “OK guys, you ready to go home?” Obviously he was kidding, but I thought he was serious for a second…I yelled “ARE YOU FUCKING SERIOUS??!?!” I didn’t want to leave…NOBODY wanted to leave. If you left and missed a dramatic Mets walk-off win…then you would loose your blue stripes. Surprinsgly enough a lot of people stayed. More people stayed than I expected for this late of a game (on a school night). We even got to have a 14th inning stretch…two Lazy Mary’s in one game! After the 14th inning we moved down to a lower level because there were some open seats. Then in the 16th inning it happen…Carlos Beltran launched a pitch from Ryan Madson into the Flushing night. THE GAME WAS OVER!! THE METS WIN 9-8 IN 16 INNINGS!! We were all jumping for joy…we were dripping with sweat from yelling and jumping around for 5 and a half hours (it was cold night too)! We were hugging random strangers. In reality, the game really meant nothing, it was a meaningless regular season game in May, but to everyone that witnessed it, it was the biggest Mets win of the season. It was a crucial win..why? Because we were there and if we had to spend 5 and a half hours at Shea, Mets better win! But what made this game number one on my list is what it symbolized for me. It was my first game I went to after I graduated college. I had just come home two days earlier and was looking forward to moving back home. I was excited to see all my friends and start up with them again. I missed being back in good old downstate New York and going to Shea. Going to Shea made me happy. I was looking forward to the summer…and I was especially looking foward to going to Mets games with my friends and family and this was a great start to that summer.

This post was hard to write. As I started putting ideas down, I kept thinking of more things. My mind opened its vault and memory after memory flooded to my consciousness…memories that made me smile. I would say to myself “Oh man, how could I forget about that?!” But each memory was also a little punch to my gut. It’s another reminder that Shea is going to be gone soon…

Although I am intrigued to see what CitiField will be like, it will never replace Shea. It will be very difficult for CitiField to capture the magic and aura that Shea had to so many Mets fans. I was so emotional on Sunday during the ceremonies and I am not afraid to admit that the nostalgia got to me…I teared up a bit. There were tears of happiness to see guys like Robin Ventura, Edgardo Alfonzo and Doc Gooden back again. These guys were the stars of so many happy memories growing up. Of course Keith made me laugh a little when he dug into the batters box one last time. And to watch Piazza and Seaver walk out to center field together while the lights went off one-by-one, man was that something.

But it hurt to see the old players touch home plate one last time. No Met will ever cross home plate again at Shea. The stadium is just going to be gone next year…it’s a parking lot. That’s hard to believe and accept. How could they just pave over a place that have meant so much to so many? It’s saddening to know what I will never go back there again. I’ll never be able to loose myself in a baseball game at the place I used to call home. My children will never be able to set foot in the place where I grew up. Sure, I can tell them all of the stories from my days at Shea, but they will never know what it’s like. Another piece of my childhood has been torn away from me…which seems to be happening a lot to me lately. I will miss that dump in the middle of Flushing Meadows Park. I will miss everything Shea Stadium has given me, but I will not ever forgot what it means to me. Farewell my friend, your purpose was served more than you could have ever imagine.

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DON’T MESS WITH THE JOHAN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Posted by Matt on September 27, 2008

In response to my post “I’m crushed” on Wednesday night…I’M FIRED UP!!!!

The Mets are still alive in the quest for the playoffs thanks to one man, JOHAN SANTANA! Today was the gutiest performance from a pitcher I have ever seen. Gary Cohen called it “EXTRAORDINARY”…and he was right. After a career high 125 pitches on Tuesday, Johan came back on three days rest to not only pitch well, but pitch great… no wait, he was just down right DOMINANT. A complete game shutout, 3 hitter on 117 pitches with nine strikeouts as the Mets beat the Florida Marlins 2-0. Johan is the first Met Since Doc Gooden 21 years ago to throw a shutout on three days rest. Johan has shut every critic up with his incredible second half performance. He hasn’t lost in three months! Some were getting on Johan’s case by saying that he doesn’t go deep enough in games and he hasn’t been dominate enough. Well…they are just flat out wrong. Johan leads the league in innings pitch and pitches thrown. He has saved the best for last…when it counts. I don’t care how he pitched against the Reds in June. I care how pitches against the Marlins in September. So…guys like Mike Francesa, you’re wrong. Go suck on a lemon.

This guy is worth every penny, every prospect, every carbon emission from his probably gas guzzling car, every tree they probably had to knock down to build his million dollar home. This guy is a stopper. Twice this week when the Mets were faltering and needed a win…they got one from Johan. And not just a win, but a great performance. His game has picked up dramatically in the second-half and even more in September. Johan is unbelievable, period. I don’t believe that Johan will win the Cy Young award because Tim Lincecum has just an outstanding season, but after this September Johan should receive some SERIOUS consideration (especially since he should have over 20 wins..thanks to the bullpen). Heck, he even deserves consideration for the MVP award because he is hands-down the Mets most important player. They would not be where they are without Johan.

So now, with the Brewers currently down 2-0, there is a chance the Mets can be tied for the Wild Card at the end of the day. With big game Ollie on the mound tomorrow, I’m fired up. Shea was rocking today, and I want more. The season is not going to end tomorrow! The atmosphere was electric, and I want the Mets to be able to use that corny slogan “LaGuardia [airpot] is complaining about the noise.” I want the fans to “Show Up at Shea” to remind the players that they need to win. Keep reminding the players that the fans want to win too. The fans deserve to make the playoffs as well. This isn’t Atlanta, we care about every pitch. Earlier this month, very few fans were expecting tomorrow to be the last day at Shea. A few changed there minds after this week…but with one game left tomorrow with a possible tie for the wild card I have but one thing to say…YOU GOTTA BELIEVE!!!!!

Update @ 6:30PM: When Jerry Manuel was asked about Johan’s performance today he said:

“If I had to describe that one, I’d say that was gangsta. That’s gangsta. That was gangsta right there.”

Word Jerry…word.

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Kudos to the Yankees…and a Farewell Proposal for Shea Stadium

Posted by Matt on September 21, 2008

September 21st, 2008. DA BRONX: Today is a historic day for the City of New York and baseball. It is the day that the 85 -year-old Yankee Stadium will close its doors forever. As many of you know, I am not a Yankee fan, my allegiance lies with the team with the crappy bullpen in Queens, who will also be closing their stadium forever at the end of this season (hopefully their last game will be a World Series game).  My memories at Yankee stadium are scarce, but I did enjoy my time there. For example, I watched Cal Ripken approach Lou Gehrig’s consecutive games record in 1995 (Ruben Sierra hit a clutch game winning home run in the 7th inning); and I took a limo with my friends to a Subway Series game in 2002 (a video tape of this great night can be found at David Robbins’ house in Jericho, NY…girls gone wild Yankee Stadium!).  For the record, the Mets lost that game, boo. And who can forget George Costanza’s office overlooking the field in Yankee Stadium on Seinfeld. Or, the scene in one of my favorite baseball movies, The Scout, where Steve Nebraska came down from the roof to pitch a perfect game in Game 1 of the World Series (27 strikeouts on 81 pitches!). With that said, I would like to wish Yankee Stadium farewell and a big thank you for all the great baseball memories.

Today, the Yankees are doing something for the fans that I commend; they are opening their gates at 1:00PM (the game is at 8:00PM) to allow their fans who have tickets to tonight’s game to explore Monument Park one last time. These fans are also able to walk along the warning track from the outfield to home plate [1]. This is the least the Yankees can do for the fans that were ripped-off when they bought tickets to this game on Stub Hub and Ebay.

As I have been telling some of my fellow Mets fan for a few weeks now, I want the Mets to do something similar to this. Now, I know that Shea Stadium does not have the legacy or history of Yankee Stadium, but Shea Stadium is nonetheless a temple of nostalgia for thousands of Mets fans around the country. Together, Shea Stadium and the Mets have provided a unique baseball experience that can never be duplicated (I will dedicate an entire blog to my feelings and memories of Shea Stadium when it closes).

Although I appreciate what the Yankees have done for their ticket-holding fans today(in theory), I would like the Mets to do something a little different. Now, Shea Stadium does not have a Monument Park for the fans to explore so that is out of the question. But, after the season is over, and the Mets have hopefully won the World Series, I would like the Mets to open Shea Stadium one last time for all fans (not just those who bought a ticket to the final game) for a nominal fee (because we know that the Mets will not give fans a memorable experience without a cost)…like $25 or so. The fans should be allowed to go on the outfield (instead of only on the warning track at Yankee Stadium) and have a catch, have a picnic, recreate Endy Chavez’s catch in the 2006 NLCS or just lay out and get some sun. There are no more games to be played so who cares what happens to the grass? It’s going to be parking lot in four months anyway.

As for the infield? Well of course, fans should be allowed to run the bases as many times as they desire. How many Sundays did the Mets allow children to run the bases during the Wiz Dyna-Mets Dash? Why can’t adults be allowed to run the bases. Adults can actually make it around the bases in less than five minutes and they will better appreciate the magnitude of being able the run the bases. I know I’ve always wanted to the run the bases at Shea.

Finally, fans should be able to spend time sitting the dugout. Nothing would be cooler than to sit on the same benches that David Wright, Johan Santana, Jose Reyes, Mike Piazza, Tom Seaver and Darryl Strawberry sat on. And…if the fans want to, they can jump up on the top step and tip their caps to an imaginary crowd in their very own curtain call! Com’on, admit it, that would be awesome! And, the fans should be allowed to go into locker room (in a group with a Mets employee). Many Mets fans have seen countless post-game interview and celebrations in the locker room,  but they don’t even know what the actual room looks like.

I don’t feel this is a stretch of my imagination. Why can’t the Mets make this happen for the fans? Or at least some variation of what I just recommended. Have this take place over a weekend. It will be a great way to give back to the fans who have suffered and celebrated with this team for decades. Plus, it’s a great way to upstage the Yankees; and Mets owner, Fred Wilpon, takes pleasure when he one-ups the Steinbrenner’s. I’m aware there will be problems in making this event a reality; like having employees work on the weekend after the season is over, having Aramark handle concessions after their season contract is over and the idiot fans that try to loot and steal from the stadium, but I feel this will be a win-win situation for the Mets and their fans. The Mets will receive great PR for this. They will also make extra revenue; and this time they can keep the money instead of giving it to the Mets foundation like they did ripping off fans when they charged $869 for two broken down seats [2]. We all know that Frankie Rodriguez won’t come cheap in the offseason! Besides admission price, the team can make money from concessions, specialized merchandise for the event and selling pictures and videos of the fans enjoying Shea (i.e., video of a curtain call or a picture while running the bases). As for the fans? The fans get to bid farewell to the stadium they called home since 1964 one last time, and enjoy it in a way that they never were able to in the stands.

Readers, if I am being irrational or asking too much, let me know. Also, please feel free to leave a comment if you have any other additional ideas for my proposed “Shea Goodbye Weekend.” Thank you and vamos Mets!

References:

[1]: http://newyork.yankees.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20080919&content_id=3508454&vkey=news_nyy&fext=.jsp&c_id=nyy

[2]: http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news?slug=ap-sellingoffstadiums&prov=ap&type=lgns

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