At least the Yankees lost again today
It is Memorial Day and I, like much of America, did not have to go to work today. So of course the best baseball team in the biggest media market in the country did not play a game.
Bangup job,
MLB.
The
Mets did have a pretty good week as far as the standings went as they won four of six and extended their division lead to four and a half games despite losing their third straight series to the Braves. Whenever this team is struggling a little bit, a series against the Marlins seems to be all they need to get back on track. (Note to many, many sportscasters and writers: yes, "
untracked" is a word, but it doesn't mean what you think it means.) This week did bring some new and exciting injuries for the team to deal with but the literal and figurative returns of a couple of key players helped ease the pain.
The
Mets' outfield is in tatters, to the point that Damion
Easley started a game in left over the weekend, as Shawn Green appears headed to the disabled list with a broken bone in his foot and Carlos Gomez is dealing with a strained hamstring. Ben Johnson (.282/.367/.436 in New Orleans) will come up to take Green's spot on the roster for a few days until Moises
Alou is ready to return. That the
Mets are dealing with injuries is hardly surprising given how old two-thirds of their opening day outfield was, but things like Green's broken bone and the injuries to Gomez and
Lastings Milledge fit better in the category of freak occurrences than predictable events. Luckily,
Endy Chavez's offensive production has been just as freakish at .337/.385/.482 so far, giving the
Mets some room for error.
While
Alou may not be ready to return from the
DL just yet, the
Mets did get one of their elder statesmen back this week. Orlando Hernandez took the mound on Friday in Florida and pitched six shutout innings on just two hits with four strikeouts and no walks. And though the Marlins may not have put up much resistance against the
Mets so far this year, they have scored the third most runs in the National League, so shutting down their offense is hardly an easy assignment.
The same could not be said of Carlos Delgado for most of this season, but this past week may have seen him finally turn things around. Prior to the Atlanta series, he was hitting .214/.294/.321 with three home runs on the year. At the time, fewer than twenty players had enough plate appearances to qualify for their league's batting title and a lower OPS than Delgado. Such offensive powerhouses as Juan Pierre and
Jacque Jones had him beat. This week he went nine for twenty-five with two home runs, raising his season averages to .234/.306/.359, passing both Pierre and Jones and nearing the lofty heights of Mark Ellis and Ryan
Freel. As odd as it sounds that the
Mets need someone to make up for Shawn Green's production, that is the case and Delgado may be just the man for the job.
The
Mets (32-17) return home this week to get some fresh duct tape to hold their outfield together and host the San Francisco Giants (24-25). While the starting lineup may feature a question mark or two, the same cannot be said of the rotation as the
Mets will send out the best they've got. A red hot Oliver Perez (6-3, 2.45) starts game one having shut out the Braves for seven frames in his last start. Perez is now in the top five in the league in wins, ERA, WHIP (1.059) and strikeout rate (8.42 per nine innings). He'll take on rookie Tim
Lincecum (2-0, 3.08), who's also had a pretty good month of May. Tom
Glavine (5-2, 3.39) and El
Duque (2-1, 2.13) will face Barry
Zito (4-5, 4.70) and Matt Cain (2-4, 3.23) in the final two games of the set.