The Mets finally got back to their winning ways in San Francisco. After splitting the four game series in Arizona, the Mets went out and took three out of four games against the first place Giants. The Mets got their solid starting pitching back as well as their clutch hitting that we saw in the first half of the season. R.A. Dickey, Jon Niese, Matt Harvey, and Chris Young all had very impressive outings. Despite Harvey's loss in his second career start, he pitched very well only giving up two earned runs and striking out seven. The Mets like what they see in Harvey. The young phenom has the makeup to be a front end starting pitcher in the Majors.
While the Mets were silent at the trade deadline, they were so with good reason. The team did not want to trade away young pieces of their future to get a rental to help them win this season. If the team did not lose 11 of 12 games following the All Star break it most likely would have been a different story. The fact is they struggled following the break. They went from being a half game out of the NL Wild Card to 8.5 back going into today. They went from a reasonable 4.5 games back to 11 games back in the NL East. The losing streak put a huge blow in the Mets playoff hopes, but with 56 games to go, Terry Collins crew still has hope.
The Mets will finally get back their closer Frank Francisco tonight in San Diego. Their bullpen has missed Francisco dearly as Bobby Parnell struggled in the closer's role. They will welcome back Francisco with open arms after missing over a month. Parnell will now get to return to the setup role where he thrived in the first half of the season. The rest of the bullpen will have less pressure on them as they will not be put in as many tough situations as they were in with the absence of Francisco. Josh Edgin and Tim Byrdak can return to being lefty specialists out of the bullpen. Manny Acosta and Ramon Ramirez can return to being middle relievers. The bullpen as a whole will get more rest with Francisco resuming his 9th inning role.
Johan Santana is also on his way back as he threw a bullpen session yesterday. Santana will be back in the Mets rotation possibly next week when the Mets return home, but most likely the following week. Once Santana returns, Terry Collins will consider going to a four man rotation with R.A. Dickey going on three days rest. Dickey, Santana, Niese, and Harvey with Chris Young making spot starts provides the Mets with a formidable rotation down the stretch. Starting pitching is what carried this team in their successful first half. The rotation has stepped it up this last week and hope to continue their success into San Diego before they return home for six games against the Marlins and the Braves.
There is still time for this team to go on a run. The Mets still have nine games left, with six being at home, against the Atlanta Braves whom they trail in the Wild Card. The team still has six games against the Nationals whom they trail in the division. Any hope at winning a division title has taken a hit since their post All Star break struggles, but with the addition of a second Wild Card team, Terry Collins hopes that his bunch can string some wins together and make a run for that second Wild Card spot. The Braves and Pirates at the top of that race do not seem to be losing steam but its a long season and that is why they play the games. 56 games is still a lot of time for this team to make a run. Mets fans hope that Citi Field does not become a ghost town come September as it has been since it opened in 2009.
No comments:
Post a Comment