http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news?slug=jp-metssoldiers090910 For writers of comedy and tragedy alike, the New York Mets’ organizational dysfunction provides a wellspring of rich material. Their owners are buffoons, their general manager incompetent, their record embarrassing and, as we learned in recent days, their players capable of selfishness that would border on inconceivable if these weren’t the Mets, who are nearing their doctorate in ludicrousness. The revelation that Carlos Beltran(notes), Oliver Perez(notes) and Luis Castillo(notes) skipped the team’s trip to Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., took a couple days to crystallize, and once it did, the players might as well have declared war on the United States. Naturally, the zealots turned this into a racial issue, with the Puerto Rican, the Mexican and the Dominican failing to pay tribute to American soldiers, which was an easy and lazy characterization. This was much more about egocentrism than ethnocentrism. Beltran, Perez and Castillo may or may not have been acting out against the Mets for injustices the club may or may not have perpetuated. The necrotic relationship between the sides, borne of mutual mistrust and betrayal, was simply given a context beyond baseball with the Walter Reed flap, and the Mets were more than happy to let the brown-skinned men catch verbal shrapnel. That is the way of owner Jeff Wilpon’s Mets: Hope that someone else’s bad decision overshadows your own. The Mets’ stupidity goes beyond the $119 million they lavished on Beltran and the $30 million they bestowed upon Perez and the $25 million they gave to Castillo. Overpaid malcontents act out. Such is the order of the world. To suddenly demonize them, though – to use an event that fosters goodwill as the hollow-point bullet in their character assassination – is low even by Wilpon’s standards. It was no accident that word of Wilpon’s anger at Beltran, Perez and Castillo filtered through the clubhouse and leaked to New York reporters. He wanted them to savage the fiends who dared not show up to an event that was voluntary, and one that hadn’t been nearly as well-attended in the past. Never then did Wilpon make a public fuss. Were it anyone else skipping out on the event, the story would’ve been a non-story. Instead, it became an opportunity. The state of the Mets’ organization demands scapegoats, and with Wilpon backing general manager Omar Minaya as he bungled his way from the NLCS in 2006 to today’s catawampus mess, other targets were necessary. Beltran was an easy one, his body unable to hold up, as were Perez and Castillo, neither of whom deserved such deals in the first place. Never mind that Wilpon approved those contracts, that he spent wildly on major league personnel while the Mets’ draft budget withered to one of the lowest in the big leagues, that he kept Minaya in power when the organization so obviously needed a top-to-bottom overhaul. Closer Francisco Rodriguez is on the disqualified list after he hurt himself in a fight with his father-in-law at the ballpark. Big-money free agent Jason Bay(notes) is on the disabled list with concussion symptoms after the Mets’ training staff let him play for two games following the head trauma. The only thing saving Wilpon is that owners can’t get fired. And here was his chance to deflect all the bad press, gifted to him via a trio of millionaires who couldn’t bother to give a couple hours to soldiers. No matter where someone is from, it is universal: Wounded veterans deserve respect, and the ability to brighten their day is a unique opportunity. The players deserve embarrassment for their pettiness. The Mets can’t skate free, though, not when they turned good into bad. Wilpon could have ignored the players’ actions and played up the stories of David Wright’s(notes) work with soldiers or R.A. Dickey’s(notes) emotional connection. Wilpon’s father, Fred, the Mets’ principal owner, co-founded Welcome Back Veterans, a charity that deserves positive press. Now, we’re talking about how Beltran said he was busy with his own foundation, and how Castillo said the sight of injured soldiers would have bothered him, and how Perez wouldn’t even address his playing hooky. Wilpon cared more about the excuses of some than the actions of others. It gives a wonderful view inside the Mets’ world, where pervasive negativity poisons everything from decision making to fan relations. There’s a reason why, despite a two-year-old stadium, attendance isn’t even at 80 percent capacity: The fans see through the bad decisions, the poor excuse for ownership, the ruin of a franchise that should be one of baseball’s standard bearers yet has a 69-72 record, mediocrity personified. As long as Wilpon continues to run the Mets with the inability to accept blame for decisions that go bad, the environment will remain as toxic as it is now. Carlos Beltran, Oliver Perez and Luis Castillo were dolts to skip the Walter Reed visit. But they’re not the biggest problem with the Mets. Not by a long shot. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Now personally I think the players should have been there but it was not required, if Beltran was busy with his "foundation" and I won't give Castillo a pass even though I think I actually would feel the same way but Perez has no excuse and no response. Yes they could and should have donated their time but again it was not required. That being said why the fuck is Wilpon throwing these guys under the bus and painting them as assholes and not giving a shit (which maybe and most likley they don't) but what kind of owner throws his players under the bus like this? It's one thing if you want to say they haven't live up to thier contract but to do this is really low. The one line about the training staff and Bay paints a perfect picture of this franchise, now Bay sucks and was ridiculously overpayed but to allow the guy to play two games with what he was dealing with is assanine. As a Met fan the embarassment never ends, at least if your an Astros or Orioles fan the team is only embarassing on the field but at least nothing like the Mets off the field. I seriously think this offseason I'm going to put all my Mets stuff in a box and take a long hard look at whether or not I want to be a fan of this disgrace of a franchise.
You might want to place a line before that paragraph just so future readers know where the Yahoo article ended and your commentary began. I would not blame you for giving up on the Mets. What would bother me is if you gave up on them and became a Padres or Diamondbacks fan (or whoever) and then went back to being a Mets fan some years into the future when they got good again. If you leave the Mets, then you need to leave them for good. One of my best friends used to be a Raiders fan. He gave up on them a few years ago and now considers the Vikings to be his favorite team. I've told him that is fine, but if he ever goes back to rooting for the Raiders he deserves to be mocked for it for the duration of his life.
Done... Yeah it's tough because I just don't know if I ever gave up on them if I could ever root for a team that I really don't have the attachment to. I've been a fan of this team for over 25 years and I've suffered through some really shitty seasons on the field. I've got no problem rooting for a losing team (in fact I am used to it) but if I'm done then I certainly am done. It's not the losing that bothers me it's the owner, the front office, the ineptitude and lack of accountability on anybody's part. It's all the off the field shit that shouldn't be an issue. The other thing is I have no idea who I'd root for. It can't be San Diego until I can watch their games at home. I'm assuming it would be the Giants, Dodgers or Diamondbacks. Can't do an AL team because they don't play real baseball.
You are lucky to not live in the New York area. If you have MLB Extra Innings you can cancel it after this season. That way you'd only be able to see the Mets when they are playing on national TV or against the local team(s). If I move out of New Jersey (which should happen, but is not a guarantee and likely would not happen for at least a couple years) and the Wilpons and their team are still pissing me off, then I won't be tempted to follow them. If I move to another state, I won't be buying The New York Post or The Daily News anymore and I won't be listening to WFAN.
I'm pretty lucky because with the Direct TV sports package I get every Giants, A's, Dodger, Angel and Diamondback game.
Baseball is a pretty easy sport to take a break from as in general the games are pretty boring and you can get pretty much everything you get from watching them as you do from reading a box score. When the Mets are good and the games actually mean something it can be exciting to watch but there's no reason to torture yourself watching a terrible team for 162 games. I wouldn't just pick another team to root for though(unless its temporary like whoevers playing the Yankees in the playoffs)
Being a Mets fan is a life long commitment to me. It doesn't matter who owns them or who's making trades, or who's playing right field. The current cast of characters has some real losers in it, no doubt about it. But it also some of my favorites like Jose and D.Wright... so that's the silver lining and that's why I continue to follow them as much as possible.
He sent her 56 or somethign text messages apologizing and whatnot. Once his lawyer told him to knock that shit off, he did. They're going to fight it using the basis that he thought he could still text her, but couldn't talk or see her, and blame it on language barriers.
This is a KRod blurb from this fantasy baseball site I frequent. Thought suffering Mets fans could use a chuckle. http://razzball.com/ Francisco Rodriguez – Charged with criminal contempt in addition to the assault charges. New charges stem from 56 text messages K-Rod sent his girlfriend. I skimmed through the texts and here’s a few of the better ones. First text, “If I text you, will you press charges?” Second text, “You get my first text?” 17th text, “Can you believe Omar Minaya traded away Heath Bell and signed me? Even I find that funny.” 23rd text, “I love pistachios. That is all.” 31st text, “I forget, did you sign me up for unlimited texting?” 45th text, “Where do you buy a meat dress? A fashion designer or a butcher?”
I get that 100 percent, and I'll always care. I could say tomorrow, I'm gonna stop following this team, but I can't ever look away. In the interim, I'm just going to stop going to the stadium, and in the interest of supporting the team I like, I'm going to hope that their owners, leveraged to the hilt, are forced to sell. -X-
I follow the Mets because they are an abusive girlfriend that I can't man up and just walk-out on already.
I'm such a pussy, I said I would stop buying their stuff and not go to any games. I was good on the games part but I did buy a Lenny Dykstra shirt and another dam hat.
Jeff Wilpon is just a tool. I know a lot of people who have a lot of awful things to say about him personally who work with him on a regular basis. Not so much Fred, and in that regard, the Mets are very similar to the Knicks. As long as he's in charge, I have a hard time believing they'll make the right decisions. Because he's never accomplished things on his own, he's going to want to be involved so he can have some sense of legitimacy. -X-
I am not surprised that those 3 would be the dirtbags who didn't attend the event. They have never had any class any they never will. And is there any possible jail time for K-Rod soon?....cause that would be sweet.
http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2010/09/16/busy-offseason-of-job-changes-likely-especially-in-queens/ I would love for this to be true.
It's definitely true, the problem is replacing them. If I were the Mets, I would change my focus, and switch to investing heavily in the manager and front office. A great manager who can utilize young, cheap talent properly is worth a couple of million. I really hope the Mets don't make another shortsighted move like the Jason Bay move. If the Mets had instead gone with a short term solution in left field, we could have been looking at a starting outfield of Beltran, Pagan, and Carl Crawford next season. Who knows what we've got in Bay going forward? -X-
Another reason to hate the Mets, their game in the 12th inning is overlapping Jets Postgame on SNY...