Friday, April 29, 2005

Phil’s Not My Father

by Guichard Cadet


In contemplating a return to coaching, Phil Jackson has placed himself in the unenviable position of being seen as a weary, wayward traveler always in search of greener pastures. Jackson’s prior success with the Chicago Bulls and Los Angeles Lakers places him in the pantheon of coaching greats. Detractors are quick to point his success lies in his choosing teams where superstar players reside, bemoaning the fact that Phil may know Zen but he’s no master of the X’s and O’s.

When it comes to winning NBA championships, even Larry Brown, the great re-builder, had to go where the players were. Many label the Detroit Pistons as a team void of superstars, evidently using the label to mean “media darlings” and not players with well-rounded offensive and defensive prowess.

NBA coaches get fired quickly because hiring decisions seem to be child’s play or simply the luck of picking straws held in a closed fist. No job is deemed unworthy because there are so few available…that is unless you are Phil Jackson. Phil’s name has been linked to the openings in Cleveland, Portland, New York and Los Angeles; yes, the same Lakers team he walked away from last year.

Even if we were to suspend reality or ask for a do-over, can Phil really go home again? Some claim it is up to Lakers franchise player, Kobe Bryant. Laker VP Jeanie Buss told The New York Post recently, "Kobe is not the reason Phil is not the Laker coach."

I agree and disagree. True, Kobe does not write the checks and never said words to the effect that Phil Must Go!! Phil is not the Laker coach because Kobe’s mindset has always been Phil’s not my father.

Coaches play many roles, from manager, teacher, mentor to father figure. No matter the level of competition, a small part of a coach’s success relies on being seen as a father figure to his players. In Jackson’s case, he got to manage two superstars (Michael Jordan and Shaquille O’Neal) who were not threatened to view him as such, mainly because they had close relationships with their own fathers.

Shaq’s case is unique in that one of his more famous songs has the refrain: Phil’s my father ‘cause my biological didn’t bother… He was speaking of his real life stepfather and not of Jackson.

After consecutive seasons of being ousted in the playoffs, Shaq’s choice for coach was none other than Phil Jackson. Why was Jackson unable to build such a bond with Kobe Bryant? There maybe countless secondary reasons underlying the general mistrust and competition that caused Jackson to state – in his book and the YES network television program, Centerstage – he and Kobe seemed to have been engaged in a form of psychological warfare.

From a basketball standpoint, the one that stands out the most is Jackson’s relationship with Scottie Pippen. Pippen has been branded as the best “second bananas” in NBA history. Though other basketball greats have relied on the likes of Bill Russell, Wilt Chamberlain, and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to win their championships, none has had to wear such a label.

Kobe wanted to make sure he would not be the second Phil Jackson player to wear that mark. From day one in Los Angeles Phil took a calculated gamble, in siding with O’Neal. It was a play he had made before in Chicago, winning 6 championships, and eventually causing Jordan to retire a second time, Pippen traded…and Phil off to ponder the great mysteries of life.

At the end of last season, NBA fans were privy to watch one of the greatest spin jobs evolve, to where everyone blamed Kobe Bryant for dissolving the Lakers dynasty. Forget that Jackson never thought that Dr. Jerry Buss, father of Jeannie, would refuse to pay him double-digit millions to coach. Foget that Shaquille O’Neal had run a similar ruse in Orlando after the Lil’ Penny commercials gave Anferne Hardaway crossover appeal.

Much of Kobe’s downfall in the eyes of fans and media is his refusal to be coddled. He smiled for the camera when times were hard, and could have simply ridden Shaq’s coattails to possibly another 3 championships. Instead he opted to be an unrestricted Free Agent and test the waters.

Jerry Buss had already done the math and knew, in this game, he was the godfather. He had won championships without any of them and knew he could again. Also, he had formed a somewhat paternal bond with Kobe – to the point where Kobe’s decision to stay with the Lakers came after Buss had already parted ways with Phil and Shaq. What is this thing called trust?

Now Phil is back and the word out: he wants a summit with Kobe. Or, is it Kobe wanting a sit-down with Phil? No matter how their meeting goes, whether he returns to coach the Lakers or take another prominent role in the organization, Jackson’s decision spells doom for Kobe. Phil’s words were “psychological warfare”.

Peace with Phil is not something Bryant shunned in the past; he just did not want to be second fiddle, or Shaq’s little brother.

Friday, April 22, 2005

NBA Playoff Picks

Triangle Offense resident columnists pick the NBA Playoffs:



Rob King


First Round
Heat over Nets in six
Wizards over Bulls in five
Pistons over Sixers in five
Celtics over Pacers in seven

Suns over Grizzilies in five
Mavericks over Rockets in six
Spurs over Nuggets in six
Kings over Sonics in six


Second Round
Heat over Wizards in six
Pistons over Celtics in five

Mavericks over Suns in six
Spurs over Kings in five


Conference Finals
Pistons over the Heat in six
Mavericks over Spurs in six


Finals
Pistons over Mavericks in six


====

Guichard Cadet


First Round
Heat over Nets in five
Wizards over Bulls in six
Pistons over Sixers in five
Pacers over Celtics in six

Grizzlies over Suns in six
Mavericks over Rockets in seven
Spurs over Nuggets in six
Sonics over Kings in six


Second Round
Heat over Wizards in five
Pistons over Pacers in seven

Mavericks over Grizzlies in six
Spurs over Sonics in six


Conference Finals
Pistons over the Heat in six

Spurs over Mavericks in six

Finals

Pistons over Spurs in six

Thursday, April 21, 2005

A Steph Closer?

…Knicks’ Year-End Grade

by Guichard Cadet


Before the NBA trade deadline, I anticipated the Atlantic Division to be a force come playoff time. Who knew 3 teams would make the playoffs, and the Knicks would not be one of them. This was a team predicted to win the “weakest” conference in the league.

What happened? Did the division get too tough?

First, the year-end grade is a C-minus. The Knicks faced the same obstacles as other NBA teams, most notably the Denver Nuggets and Los Angles Lakers. All three teams had key injuries to scoring threats, and a coaching change during the season.

Whereas Denver adjusted and made the playoffs, the Knicks and Lakers did not. Neither of these draft lottery-bound teams was expected to be powerhouses, simply to be at or slightly above .500 for the season. That would have kept the Knicks at their preseason grade of B-, and perhaps, garner the team a playoff spot.


The Front Office

At Knicks President Isiah Thomas’ first press conference, he stated the primary goal was to get the team into the playoffs – last season. He accomplished that, but with a losing record. Why make the playoffs the first year then miss it the second year? Wouldn’t it have been easier to bite the bullet the first year?

The past three Knicks coaching changes have come during the season. The first bullet should have been to keep Don Chaney until last season’s end then do a thorough search for a head coach during the off-season.

To make matters worse, the front office repeated the mistake and dealt with another mid-season coaching change.

In sports there is often a battle between the front office and the coaching staff. Though this is can lead to friction, it is the sort of creative difference that can lead to success, provided the coach really has a say in player transactions and how the team is run.


The Coach

This is a tougher decision to write than it is for Isiah Thomas to make. Every sign indicates Herb Williams will be back as head coach – it is the way of the Knicks. The Knicks have not done a thorough coaching search since Pat Riley. Since then the position has been given to an assistant coach. Whether or not they buck recent tradition, these are the questions the owners and front office must ask the coach.

· Will you quit if you see the team headed into a 50-loss season?

· Can you handle the fans yelling “Fire Herb! Fire Herb!”?

· Are you aware that failing under the bright lights of NY might disqualify you from ever getting another head coaching job?

· Are you willing to live and die at the hands of your franchise player?


The Franchise Player

Though the Knicks roster has changed dramatically since the Frank Layden era, his two riskiest moves still plague the franchise: the trading of Patrick Ewing on the final year of his contract; and the draft day trade of Macus Camby and Nene Hilario for Antonio McDyess.

Isiah Thomas’ first trade involved moving McDyess, who was in the final year of his contract. So far, this transaction has been his chanciest because he opted to rebuild within the team’s existing salary structure, instead of letting McDyess’ contract expire. The move for Stephon Marbury filled 2 major holes: a quality point guard, and a star player to be the face of the franchise.

Steph is the epitome of a player who embodies a city and the dominant (hip hop) culture of our times. His persona is best described by the words of two hip hop icons who were cut down in their prime: 2Pac Shakur’s album title (me against the world) and Notorious B.IG.’s lyrics from “Hypnotize” (you got it, flaunt it… that Brooklyn bullsh!t…we’re on it).

The numbers the music or the player puts up to lay bare his value are used as fodder for critics. Though he will never win his critics over, Marbury will do best to realize he cannot lead those who refuse to follow, until they fail at leading. This past season he often played the passive role, letting his teammates shine or fade.

I often wonder what a Marbury-led team would be like, if he were given offensive carte blanche in the manner Philadelphia gives Allen Iverson…then let the coach do the job of making teammates accept it.

Two seasons have ended since the trade and I am bemused whether the Knicks are a step closer to continued years of mediocrity, or back to being a force in the Atlantic Division, and league in general.

At face value, since they have missed the playoffs and are still in salary cap hell, it is easy to say perpetual mediocrity. The saving grace has been the other moves that Isiah Thomas has made, anticipation of the draft, and what he does with two expiring contracts.

Though Thomas does not get credit for drafting Michael Sweetney, when was the last time the Knicks developed a young player? Jamal Crawford, Trevor Ariza and Sweetney are the core of what the Knicks can be in 2 years, provided none of them are included in upcoming trades. Each has different strengths and an eagerness to learn and succeed in the NBA.


The Projected Roster

Point Guard: Stephon Marbury / Jamal Crawford

Shooting Guard: Allan Houston / Trevor Ariza

Small Forward: Maurice Taylor / Jerome Williams

Power Forward: Kurt Thomas or Malik Rose / Michael Sweetney

Center: 2 players To Be Determined

Injured Reserve: 2 players To Be Determined

Expiring Contracts: Anferne Hardaway / Tim Thomas

Draft Picks: 2 first Rounders


Coming into next year, once again, the Knicks’ success depends on the health of Allan Houston. That does not mean he has to start if unhealthy; it means the team should prepare either via the draft or trades to address the situation. Houston’s strengths as a pure shooter was sorely missed during a season in which Marbury often broke down defenses, and where the team faced many zones.

If Houston is not able to start, Trevor Ariza should start at the SG. This will make up for the poor perimeter defense that plagued the backcourt throughout the year.

Starting Maurice Taylor at SF will create a mismatch on the post and he also has good range on his jump shot.

Whichever of the two – Kurt Thomas or Malik Rose – survive the off-season makeover will start at PF, helping to anchor the defense and balance the frontcourt scoring.

For the second unit, the offensive load will rest on the shoulders of Sweetney and Crawford, who will see major minutes at both guard positions. Jerome Williams and the backup Center will provide energy and strong defense.


The team’s pressing need: acquire two Centers. They do not have to be offensive machines, only athletic players that provide a defensive presence, as far as shot blocking, intimidation and rebounds. These players can come via trades of an expiring contract and/or draft picks.

Coupled with drafting players whose style of play matches the current or envisioned roster, Isiah Thomas’ toughest decision will be what to do with the 2 expiring contracts. Since there is a need for a starting Center, it would be hard to hold both contracts for the full year, to get the salaries off the books.

At the same time, Isiah has to continue to keep a realistic vision on how to clear cap space, to match the day Allan Houston’s contract expires.

Thursday, April 14, 2005

Ishii as 1, 2, 3…

by Guichard Cadet


It really was not easy for the Mets to win these past 3 games. They could have easily stumbled and be 0-8. Instead fans have been treated to a multi-faceted team, anchored by starting pitching, solid defense and speed.

The wins have a few things in common, mainly great starting pitching, from the Mets and their opponents.

Kaz Ishii joined the team late in spring training after Steve Trachsel's season-ending injury. The knock on Ishii has been his high walk-to-strikeout ratio. Though he walked 3 batters yesterday, Ishii mixed his pitches well and only allowed 2 hits in 7 shutout innings.

Ishii followed the path set by Pedro Martinez and Tom Glavine. Both had to battle formidable pitching foes, John Smoltz and Andy Pettitte, respectively.

Of the three, only Pedro garnered a win for his efforts, by pitching a complete game. Pedro held the Braves batters at bay until the Mets found their power, hitting 3 homeruns in the 8th and 9th innings. The win helped the team avoid a sweep at the hands of division rival, the Atlanta Braves.

In Glavine’s hometown season-opener against the Houston Astros, the Mets squandered a lead and had to scrap their way back with a myriad of hits and base-running highlights. This version of “small ball” has been dubbed “WillieBall”, part homage to manager Willie Randolph, and his first big league manager, Billy Martin.

Last night, there were no leads to lose as Roger Clemens stymied Mets batters. The lone run came off Astros reliever, Dan Wheeler, in the bottom of the 11th inning. Jose Reyes’ bloop single scored Victor Diaz from second base, giving the Mets a 1-0 victory.

The bullpen has played a key role in the budding winning steak. Last night, 3 relievers combined to throw 4 shutout innings. Lastly, the team has been solid defensively, even yesterday, when playing without 2 of their starting outfielders.

The wins have demonstrated the many ways the Mets can win a game.

Tuesday, April 12, 2005

Mets Play Eight-Ball In Consecutive Victories

By Rob King

The New York Mets snatched victory from the clutches of defeat thanks to a subtle move by Mets skipper Willie Randolph. Sparked by a dazzling display of pitching by Pedro Martinez and an offense spearheaded by homeruns by Carlos Beltran, David Wright and a rejuvenated Cliff Floyd, the New York Mets took control late to capture a hard fought 6-1 win against the Atlanta Braves. The rousing come-from-behind victory against the defending National League East champs salvaged the final game of their six game road trip to start the 2005 campaign and earned Randolph his first victory as manager.

Randolph made a crucial decision in the top of the seventh inning that changed the course of the game and maybe the Mets season. He elected to allow Pedro Martinez to bat for himself, with two outs and a runner on second, while trailing 1-0. Randolph had pinch hitting options such as Kaz Matsui on the bench to face John Smoltz, who tied a career high with 15 strikeouts.

Martinez grounded out weakly to end the top of the inning and the potential threat. Randolph left himself open to criticism from fans and media had the Mets failed to rally or had Pedro faltered in the bottom of the inning. Randolph’s confidence in the ace of his staff and the Mets offense was rewarded handsomely. Martinez retired the Braves in the bottom of the inning to set the stage for the eighth inning offensive explosion.

Jose Reyes led the frame off with a single and moved to second on Miguel Cairo’s sacrifice bunt. Mets superstar centerfielder Carlos Beltran stepped in the batter’s box and cracked a Smoltz’s offering over the fence, giving the New Yorkers a 2-1 lead they never relinquished. The Beltran blast sent the former Cy Young award winner to the showers.

Cliff Floyd’s solo homer and David Wright’s two-run shot off Braves reliever Tom Martin concluded the scoring in an inning where the Mets sent nine men to the plate.

A Beltran single scored Reyes in the top of the ninth to cap a hit or miss performance by a Mets offense that pounded out thirteen hits along with eighteen strikeouts.

Randolph aced his first exam as Mets manager in their initial “must win” game of the season.



Sunday’s performance is precisely what GM Omar Minaya had in mind when he signed Pedro to a four-year, fifty-three million dollar free agent deal to be the ace of the staff last December.

Martinez’s performance trumped his Met debut last Monday, when he struck out twelve batters and allowed three runs on three hits over six innings. He ended up with a ‘no decision’ as he watched the bullpen squander a three-run lead over the final three innings to lose 7-6 to the Cincinnati Reds. On Sunday Martinez took fate into his own hands with the 101-pitch, 9-strikeout, 2-hit complete game masterpiece to break the Mets five-game losing streak.

Yesterday in front of a capacity crowd, the Mets engineered another eighth inning comeback in their 8-4 victory over the Houston Astros in their home opener at Shea Stadium. Mets starter Tom Glavine pitched six effective innings allowing one run on four hits. Glavine left the game with an opportunity to secure his first win of the 2005 campaign when the Mets scored three runs in the bottom of sixth inning to take a 3-1 lead.

The veteran southpaw was betrayed by the New York bullpen that allowed the Astros to tie and regain the lead 4-3 with one run in the seventh and two in the eighth inning. The Mets overcame the bullpen collapse with a five run rally in the bottom of the inning aided by a Houston misplay, and wrapped up their second consecutive come from behind victory.

Despite the slow start there is much to like about the 2005 Mets. The Mets have improved their fundamentals, are more aggressive on the base paths, have an improved work ethic and a legitimate ace. The Mets carry themselves with a quiet confidence and a resilient spirit that is a reflection of their field manager, a former all-star second baseman with the New York Yankees during championship seasons in the late seventies.

If the bullpen continues its early season trend of blowing leads then the Mets resiliency will be tested. However the Mets must address the bullpen problem from within because most major league pens are struggling. The Mets mounted their comeback against the Houston relief staff.

Willie Randolph’s steady leadership will allow the Mets to endure the rainy days of losing and to flourish in the sunshine of winning. No matter what the situation calls for the Mets appear to have their manager for all seasons and hopefully for many seasons.

Sunday, April 10, 2005

sunday wrap-up: The Battle for New York

by Guichard Cadet


No one likes to share. The spotlight is reserved for the Yankees and Knicks. In football, the Giants and Jets have what amount to an equal distribution. For the Mets and the Nets, life is about wearing hand-me-downs, even when your success parallels or exceeds your cross-town rival.

This past week, baseball season kicked off as the basketball regular season nears its end. There is a great chance that the New Jersey Nets will make the playoffs. If they do, their playoff success is wholly dependent on not getting the 8th seed and facing the Miami Heat. After a dismal start, the Nets have rebounded, due to the “half-man half-amazing” antics of Vince Carter and the ever-steady stewardship of point guard, Jason Kidd.

On Thursday, the Nets strode into the Garden and soundly defeated the Knicks in a testy battle. Having won the season series 3 to 1, Kidd smugly declared feeling no particular enjoyment beating a bad team. He is right in one aspect: the Knicks are a bad team. It is easy to excuse their losing ways, by pointing to injuries, a coaching change, and mid-season retooling.

The truth boils down to the fact that they do not have to battle for New York hoops supremacy. The Knicks own their arena, the network they play on, and two championship teams. Their legacy is firmly entrenched, whereas the Nets struggle to fill the arena they rent, even when they reigned as Easter Conference Champions.

Though new Nets owner Bruce Ratner caught flack for the team’s off-season transactions, the pending move to Brooklyn is the franchise’s only hope for legitimacy in the region. Will moving to Brooklyn allow the Nets to supplant the Knicks as New York’s team? I doubt it.

Case in point: The New York Mets. Having joined Major League Baseball in 1962, the Mets have won 2 World Series Championships. That number is more than fan-crazed havens like Boston and Chicago. The Mets are not expected to compete with the Yankees’ 26 World Series Championships, with the last coming against the Mets in 2000. Their focus is to not become forgettable or fodder for sportswriters looking to show their wit.

The battle for New York does not depend entirely on wins and losses. It covers real estate, television, merchandising and how your fan base follows you. Recently I came across an interesting question: in a city with tons of bars for Yankee fans, are there any Mets’ bars?

The real estate battle extends to stadium location, wherein the Jets owner, Woody Johnson never considered locating his stadium in Queens. Instead he has endured a highly politicized campaign and media battle spearheaded by community groups and the Knicks owners. Lost in this spat, the New York Giants threw their hat in the mix, offering to defray the construction cost and play their games in the proposed West Side stadium. This could have been a ploy to get more concessions from the state of New Jersey.

Except for the NHL Devils, New Jersey team sports seem to be the result of a bad bluff by team owners who did not think New York politicians would let them bolt. For football, fans only have to trek across the river 8 times a year for regular season games. The teams benefit by keeping the New York name and identity, and fans get the extra space to tailgate.

The Nets had the option of moving from Secaucus (the Meadowlands) to Newark, where the Devils plan to build their new arena. As a former New York team now owned by a New York real estate developer, the team is actually an ancillary part in the new owner’s desire for other real estate ventures in Brooklyn.

Since the arena will serve as the hub, the Nets will have to establish a core NY basketball fan base. Ratner should take a page from the Mets recent management and player transactions. First, plan to build your own television network or join a new network. As it stands, your current deal with YES allows the Nets to get bumped starting in April because the Yankees are back.

Second, draft or acquire a young player that connects the team to the city. By the time the arena (2008 or 2009 season) is built, current marquis stars (Kidd and Carter) will either be gone or in their marketing and playing decline. Look no further than Francisco Garcia or Julius Hodge! Either player fills the void for a backup swing player to lighten Carter and Richard Jefferson’s workload.

Lastly, never give the appearance that you are willing to “bottom out” to save a few bucks.

Friday, April 08, 2005

Can Rivera Regain His Mojo?

by Rob King


Up in the Bronx where the people are fresh…the strongest finisher in the game was topped in back to back games by a Boston Red Sox team with a penchant for strong finishes of late.

Over the last eight seasons Yankee manager Joe Torre would strike fear in the hearts of opponents with one phone call in the eighth inning of games in which the Yankees held slim leads. They knew that phone call would tell the bullpen coach to loosen up Mariano Rivera. Soon number 42 would take off that jacket, warm up and all hopes the opposition had of coming back vanished, along with Maalox moments for Joe Torre in the ninth.

Mariano pitched the ninth inning of those contests but essentially the game was over. The other team didn’t believe they could come back and were accurate in that assessment. Mariano was unhittable!! When opponents did connect it seemed like an act of providence. Mariano’s blown saves during the 1997 American League Divisional playoffs and the 2001 World Series are memorable because they were so infrequent. The New York Yankees and their fans have been spoiled the past eight seasons watching baseball's premier "fireman" extinguish opposition rallies in routine fashion.

Recently it seems as if the top "fireman" in the game is burning out.

On Tuesday, Yankee closer Mariano Rivera surrendered a game-tying homer to Red Sox catcher Jason Varitek in the top of the ninth to tie the score at 3, and ruined the solid pitching effort of Carl Pavano in his Yankee debut Tuesday afternoon at Yankee Stadium.

Derek Jeter helped the Yankees overcome Rivera’s blown save with a walk-off solo homer in the bottom of the inning, giving the Bronx Bombers a 4-3 victory.

Wednesday there was no rally, as the Red Sox scored five runs (one earned) in the top of the ninth off Mariano Rivera to beat the Yankees 7-3. The Red Sox were aided by Alex Rodriguez’s misplay of a game ending double-play ball. The win allowed Boston to salvage the final game of the season opening series between two clubs expected to compete for the American League pennant.

This was Rivera’s third consecutive blown save against his New England nemeses. He failed to close the deal in the ninth inning of game four in last year’s League Championship Series, leaving the door open for Boston’s improbable comeback.

Does Mariano have Red Sox fatigue? Or, are his last three appearances coupled with his spring training arm woes signaling the end of Rivera’s reign as baseball’s most dominant closer?

The Red Sox and Yankees have played fifty-five times since the start of the 2003 baseball season, and Rivera has appeared in twenty-nine of those contests. That familiarity has provided BoSox sluggers plenty of chances to figure out even a closer of Rivera’s caliber. Mariano has blown six of his last eleven save opportunities against the world champions. The Red Sox have made adjustments and appear unfazed by Rivera. Rivera actually seems shook by the Boston batsmen. With sixteen more regular season matchups plus a possible playoff confrontation in October against Fenway’s finest, trouble looms on the horizon for the Yankees in their quest to bring world championship twenty seven to the house that Ruth built.

Thanks to the New York Yankees’ recent stretch of dominance, Rivera has logged a lot of regular season and playoff innings on his right arm. All those extra innings are bound to take a toll at some point. There is a distinct possibility that Rivera’s days as baseball’s most dominant closer are over. Many of baseball’s best closers experience a four or five year window of excellence then taper off. The game’s foremost closers Rich “Goose” Goosage, Bruce Smith and Dennis Eckersley all experienced periods of dominance before gradually becoming solid closers.

Solid closers save games. Dominant closers save games and break the oppositions’ will to rally just by warming up in the bullpen. After Met closer Branden Looper’s blown save in the Mets opening day 7-6 loss to the Cincinnati Reds, rookie New York Mets manager Willie Randolph can certainly discern between the two. Branden Looper has been a solid closer throughout his career. Mariano Rivera has been dominant. Solid closers don’t often save meaningful games in September and they rarely save any games in October.

Mariano “Sandman” Rivera's problems against the Beantown Bashers may just simply be early season rust. Elbow bursitis prevented Mariano from getting normal work in this spring. If A-Rod makes the play on a routine grounder, the Yankees get a game-ending double-play, and maybe all this speculation is mute. With so much invested in this season, the Yankee brain trust must quickly determine whether Rivera’s recent struggles are a slump or something more ominous. The Yankees can win with a solid Mariano but Torre’s charges can only win championships with a dominant Mariano.

Tuesday, April 05, 2005

Not A Closed Loop

by Guichard Cadet


It’s April in New York. Yankees. Mets. Nets, maybe into May. Knicks until month’s end.

For the next two calendar seasons, the terrain is divided between the two baseball teams. It never works out that way because the Mets are normally there just for kicks, in the teeth, or wherever you choose. This year, the Mets have potential to win 90 games – this coming from one of many optimists.

Four guys have been brought in to make the Mets matter more: Omar Minaya, Willie Randolph, Pedro Martinez and Carlos Beltran.

The quote after yesterday’s loss belongs to Manager, Willie Randolph when he realized Brandon Looper is not the kind of closer he has teamed with or coached in the past. "There are not many Mariano Riveras around."

Looper is a capable guy and takes the fall for yesterday’s loss. Had Randolph the foresight to the absolute rarity of the likes of Gossage, Sutter and Rivera, the game would have been theirs.

After using two relievers who pitched shutout seventh and eighth innings, Randolph relied on what he knows best. He brought in his closer, as if reliving his days with Gossage and Rivera.

The call was right and wrong. Today’s game has become one of specialists. Managers often bring in relief for pitchers who are not even on the brink of struggling.

Randolph could have allowed Manny Aybar or Dae-Sung Koo to contine into the ninth inning. If either got into a jam, he would have been second-guessed. So, there was no simple solution.

Now, after just one game, Randolph knows to keep his options open when it comes to closing out these precious wins.