Jose Reyes hit for the cycle in June. It was the first time the Mets ever lost a game in which a Met cycled.
Jose Reyes hit three home runs tonight. It was the first time the Mets ever lost a game in which a Met hit three home runs.
Jose Reyes will throw the first no-hitter in Mets history tomorrow and will lose on an error by Chris Woodward.
Jose Reyes will turn eight unassisted triple plays on Thursday and the Mets will lose on a fly ball mishandled by Lastings Milledge.
Jose Reyes will walk, steal second, third and home four times on Friday and the Mets will lose 5-4 because they were no-hit.
Jose Reyes will fill in for Darryl, Doc, Davey and Ray at Old Timers Night on Saturday, retroactively win the 1986 MVP award and the Mets will lose the World Series to the Red Sox. They'll also lose to the Rockies despite Jose Reyes' five inside-the-park homers.
Jose Reyes will break ground on the new ballpark, construct it to make it triple-friendly and triple nine times Sunday and the Mets will lose when he passes Mike DiFelice on the basepaths during his last triple.
Jose Reyes will sit out next Tuesday. Then maybe the Mets will win.
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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. Like a Word With Us?
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Tuesday, August 15
by
Greg
on Tue 15 Aug 2006 04:47 AM EDT
You already know Monday night in Philadelphia was a bad dream. Monday morning in my subconscious was just a weird dream. In lieu of anything remotely pleasant to talk about from Monday night, thought I'd let you know about what I dreamt Monday morning.
This isn't a bit. I really had this dream. Stephanie and I, after spending some time in a presumably local dry cleaners that let us linger about its premises like it was a Starbucks (after midnight, no less), were visiting another city, some combination of Chicago, San Francisco and Los Angeles, maybe more. Though it didn't look like Chicago, for at least a little while it must have been because I wanted to swing by this one particular spot under the El to show Stephanie the House of Blues Hotel, where I stayed on a 1999 business trip, the same one that allowed me to grab a foul ball off the bat of Carlos Lee at Comiskey Park. But the House of Blues Hotel wasn't where I brought us to, which was more under a freeway than under an El. We took a cab to find it, but once it became clear we didn't, we were now on bicycles. And we were lost. Worse yet, it was dark out. So dark that we couldn't see much beyond what our flashlights and/or none-too-powerful bicycle headlights would allow. A scary situation. Still we pedaled. Glided on our ten-speeds was more like it. Found ourselves in a neighborhood of rowhouses near the water. Maybe that was the San Francisco part. In any event, it didn't feel like we were finding our way back to our hotel in, ostensibly, the city that we were visiting. Next thing I knew, the three of us — my high school buddy Larry Russo, the auteur from my high school reunion had somehow joined us — had climbed the steps from somebody's basement to somebody's kitchen. It was setup like the house I grew up in. There was a see-through door between the stairs and the kitchen, also like my house. I rapped on it. There was a family inside. Big family. Three generations maybe. Nobody recognizable to me. As you could imagine, they were startled that three strangers had entered their home, but I explained that we were biking around (Larry was still wearing his helmet), had gotten lost and needed directions to our hotel. Stephanie explained that we were staying in "the baseball district". They accepted the explanation immediately and couldn't have been friendlier. Come on in, they said. We're watching the ballgame. So they were. It was the Giants and Dodgers, the same matchup from ESPN Sunday night. This is where I got the feeling we were in Los Angeles because they were cheering for the Dodgers, who were winning. I think they were because I was a little uncertain of what was going on in the game and I was more uncertain as to where in California we were, so I hedged my bets. I said something like, "Hey, you must be happy with the way this is going." Indeed, they were happy. I explained again why we had entered their home. We were visiting town and had gotten lost on our bicycles and it was really dark out and if you could just give us directions, that would be great. An older man, the father or perhaps grandfather, laughed: "I guess there's no 7 train around here!" It wasn't foreboding or anything. In fact, it was comforting. He kind of nodded at the rest of the family and indicated implicitly that he knew who I was, that he knew I blogged about the Mets, giving me the sense that maybe he, like the guys from Entourage, was from New York originally. For an instant, in their kitchen, I saw a sign that pointed to where the platforms for the 7 train and the Long Island Rail Road at Shea were. But we were still in their kitchen. Almost verybody was having a good, friendly time: me, Stephanie, the unknown family. Larry, still wearing his helmet, however, was disengaged from the conversation. Instead, he asked a direct question of the man. "Do you have a car?" "Oh sure." "Could we put our bikes in your trunk and could you drive us home?" "Sure!" Oh good, we were going to get a ride home or back to our hotel from the nice man in, uh, Los Angeles who didn't mind us entering his house unannounced and knew of my apparently mildly famous Mets fandom. That's the last I remember of the dream. Most dreams that I can remember are disturbing. This one was actually pretty OK. |

