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About Us
Faith and Fear in Flushing made its debut on Feb. 16, 2005, the brainchild of two longtime friends and lifelong Met fans.

Greg Prince discovered the Mets when he was 6, during the magical summer of 1969. He is a Long Island-based writer, editor and communications consultant. Contact him here.

Jason Fry is a Brooklyn writer whose first memories include his mom leaping up and down cheering for Rusty Staub. Check out his other writing here.

To comment on the blog, register here. Or you can email us at faithandfear@gmail.com

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View Article  Check for Doneness
The social ramble done passed us by years ago. Shoot, out to sup with other people on a Tuesday night? You crazy kids. Back here in suburbia, it was the microwave and the Mets.

More or less how Brett Myers prepared things.

Mrs. Paul's just introduced a grilled salmon dinner with the oddest directions. Cook on high for four minutes and then take a fork, split the fish in half and "check for doneness". It's a real word, according to Merriam-Webster -- "the condition of being cooked to the desired degree" -- but I'd never seen it. And I've read a lot of frozen entrée boxes.

It barely took four minutes to check for doneness where Tom Glavine serving up meatballs was concerned. It took four batters. Pat Burrell stuck the fork of confirmation in him. The rest was Phillie gravy. Glavine's now had six starts. Four of them have come out of the oven ice-cold.

Allowing for all the caveats (it's early; you're never as bad or as good as you look; he's considered by some a future Hall of Famer), is Tom Glavine done as in the Big Done?

Does Mrs. Paul's use only whole fillets?

Fortunately, there was another way to check to see if a pitcher was done Tuesday night: Is he Brown? If he is, then he is cooked.

I have to admit that I've been ordering off the YES menu more than I ever dreamed I would. If we're gonna lose an unwatchable 10-3 main course, the least I deserve is a sample of the 11-4 salad bar the Devil Rays opened on the Yankees' ample behinds.

Who am I kidding? This was one of those deli salad bars where you go right for the treats. Kevin Brown giving up six runs in the first inning is a meal unto itself. Junk food? Well, technically it's not part of the Mets Diet, but with all the conflicting research out there, who's to say chowing down on Yankee misery isn't good for us? Especially in May when it's so rarely in season. It's one thing for the Yankees to turn sour in October. It's become as delightfully dependable an autumnal event as pumpkin pie. But to taste the possibility that the Yankees won't even be invited to the harvest ball that is post-season is to drool unapologetically.

Ooh, I know I should lay off the sweets, but I gotta have another bite of that creamy thought. Tomorrow, I'll eat my blue and orange veggies. I promise.
View Article  Pass the Pork Loin, Hold the Glavine
So tonight seemed like one of those unfortunate evenings in which baseball must be sacrificed on the altar of a well-rounded life, alias the social ramble. Which a certain wise pitcher once noted ain't restful, and which also can't be good for one's fan karma.

Ordinarily I would have felt guilty that I shut off my little radio and pulled the earpiece out of my ear at approximately 7:33 as Emily tugged on my sleeve to indicate that the old friend we were meeting was already at the restaurant. Ordinarily I would have spent the evening shifting from one side to the other in my chair, making polite noises about the food and whatever it was people had done with their lives since last we caught up while trying to figure out if it had been long enough that I could run off to the bathroom or the front door again to check the score. Ordinarily I would have been scouring the faces of waiters and patrons for some hint that someone had heard a bit of the game in the kitchen or the coatroom -- a contest of interest to millions played just a few miles away must leave some trace, right? The waiter brought my pork loin first -- that must mean we're ahead or tied!

Ordinarily. Alas, tonight by 7:33 it was 3-0 Phils, the boos were rising from the stands, and Gary and Howie were practically elbowing each other aside to announce their disgust with Tom Glavine, aka The Manchurian Brave. So I shut the radio off with a certain guilty relief, went inside and ate very well and chatted amiably. And when I did slip away to actually use the facilities, I turned on the FAN to find out it was 10-1, which isn't exactly the kind of thing that makes one feel guilty for a dereliction of duty. I'm glad Cliff's streak is alive and I'm sure Reyes' first walk was greeted memorably, but I'm not exactly kicking myself for having spent this one asleep at my post.

Tom Glavine's ERA is 7.04. Ordinary would be a considerable step up right now.