Obviously Rick Down was the problem
The
Mets' latest trip the the west coast began inauspiciously with losses in two of three games in San Diego. But the offense finished up strong to help them win three of four from the Dodgers and come out ahead for the week. They're still not quite running roughshod over the National League, but taking four of seven on the road from a couple of playoff contenders is a step in the right direction.
For once, the offense had to bail out the starting pitchers, who did not have a particularly good week. Among starters, only Orlando Hernandez and Oliver Perez had an ERA under six for the week. Tom
Glavine's attempt at win number 299 was especially disastrous as he gave up six runs and didn't make it out of the third inning. I'm not too worried about the starting pitching as I think with Perez, Hernandez and John Maine, the
Mets have the personnel to forge a formidable playoff rotation. I am a little worried that
Glavine could be the fourth or fifth best starter on the team and get the first or second slot in that playoff rotation.
Of course, if the bats come through like they did this week, that might not be a problem. After all, the
Mets did win that game
Glavine started. They scored forty runs in these seven games with the heart of their lineup leading the way. Carlos Beltran, David Wright and Carlos Delgado hit a collective .329/.391/.634 with seven home runs this week. None of the other regulars did much with the bat this week, though Ramon Castro did get two starts and go three for nine with a home run. Paul Lo
Duca had four hits in the other five games and all of them were singles. Ruben
Gotay, who will be the starting second baseman for the
foreseeable future thanks to Jose Valentin's broken tibia, did have six singles in eighteen at bats.
The offense may also get a boost when the
Mets return to play on Tuesday as Moises
Alou will likely make his long-awaited return from the disabled list.
Alou went one for four for the Brooklyn Cyclones on Sunday and apparently made it through the entire game without injuring himself. As long as
Alou is healthy, he should hit and the
Mets can certainly use some offense out of an outfield corner. Neither Shawn Green nor
Lastings Milledge has hit consistently well, though
Milledge has come through in some important situations, driving in eight runs with just eight hits so far this season. Given that Green has been awful (.195/.263/.264) against lefties this year and
Alou will need regular days off, finding
Milledge playing time shouldn't be a problem.
The
Mets (55-43) stretched their division lead to 3.5 games on Sunday with a win and a Braves loss. They will have a chance to extend it further this week as they play two of the worst teams in the league in the Pittsburgh Pirates (41-56) and the Washington Nationals (42-56). The Pirates will send Ian Snell (7-7, 3.31), Tom
Gorzelanny (9-5, 3.20) and Paul
Maholm (6-12, 4.57) to the mound to try to tame the resurgent
Mets offense. The
Mets will counter with Maine (10-5, 3.07),
Glavine (8-6, 4.51) and Perez (9-6, 3.00).