The blog for Mets fans
who like to read

Search
GET THE BOOK!
Faith and Fear Book
Faith and Fear in Flushing: An Intense Personal History by Greg Prince (foreword by Jason Fry), is available now via Amazon, Barnes & Noble and other online booksellers.



This Month
October 2007
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31
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

Use Facebook? Come check out our page, or drop by the personal pages for Greg and Jason.

Or follow us on Twitter: Here's Greg, and here's Jason

Faith and Fear Shirts
Faith and Fear Numbers
The Faith and Fear in Flushing "numbers" shirt has been seen from Verona, N.J., to Venice. You can get yours right here -- price about as cheap as we can make it.

Blog Park @ FAFIF Yards
Dream Seats (Sit Back and Enjoy)
Amazin' Avenue
Metphistopheles
MetsBlog
Mets Guy in Michigan
Metstradamus
Mets Walkoffs
Mike's Mets

Field Level (Close to the Action)
Always Amazin'
BlueAndOrange.net
Eddie Kranepool Society
Hot Foot
MetsGeek
The Mets Police
Real Dirty Mets Blog

Loge (Unique Perspective)
The Ballclub
Brooklyn Met Fan
Dana Brand Mets Fan Blog
The InterMet
Loge 13
Mets Are Better Than Sex
Mets Grrl
Met Silverman
My Summer Family
No No Hitters
Optimistic Mets Fan
Remembering Shea
Section 528
Take the 7 Train
Yankees 2000 Curse

Auxiliary Press Box
Daily News: Surfing the Mets
John Delcos' NY Mets Report
Flushing Fussing
Improve Conditions (Tim Marchman)
Journal News: The LoHud Mets Blog
Newsday: On the Mets Beat
Post: Mets Chat
The Record: Amazin' Stories
Star-Ledger: On the Mets
Times: Bats (Mets Posts)
WFAN: Ed Coleman

Mezzanine (Great Distance)
213 Miles From Shea
Archie Bunker's Army
Chicago Mets Fan
It's Mets for Me
Let's Go Mets
Lone Star Mets
Mets Fan in Chicago
Southern Mets
Transplanted Mets Fan

Upper Deck (What a Crowd!)
24 Hours From Suicide
Betty's No Good
Bitter Bill
Global NY Mets Fan Blog
Go Mets Die Braves
Gotta Believers
I Hate the Mets
Matt Himelfarb
Met Baseball
Mets Fans Forever
Mets Fever
Mets Heads
Mets Lifer
Mets Merized Online
Mets Prospect Hub
Mets Prospects
Mets Today
Metsies & Other Musings
Misery Loves Company
Mostly Mets
Mr. Metzyzptlk
Never Forget '69
Oh Murph
Perfect Pitch
Pessimets
Pick Me Up Some Mets
Priced Out of the Citi
Rational Mets Musings
The 'Ropolitans
Seven Train to Shea
Studious Metsimus
The Wright Stuff
Ya Gotta Believe
Zisk Online

Mets Extra
You Could Look It Up
Baseball Almanac: Mets
The Baseball Cube
Baseball Library
Baseball Prospectus
Baseball Reference: Mets
Cool Standings
Cot's Baseball Contracts
ESPN: Players
ESPN: Scores
Hall of Fame
Metaforian
Mets by the Numbers
Retrosheet
Salary vs. Performance
Ultimate Mets Database

The Youth of America
Buffalo Bisons
Binghamton Mets
St. Lucie Mets
Savannah Sand Gnats
Brooklyn Cyclones
Kingsport Mets

The Braintrust
Daily News
The Journal News
Newsday
New York Post
The Record (N.J.)
The Star-Ledger
New York Times

Road Apples
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Miami Herald
Philly.com
Washington Post

Press Notes
Ballhype
ESPN Clubhouse: Mets
ESPN Local
MLB Press Pass
Sports Illustrated: Mets
Sports Illustrated Vault
SportsSpyder
Yahoo Mets

Grant's Tombs
Polo Grounds
Shea Stadium
CitiField

Out of Town Scoreboard
Ballparks, Arenas & Stadiums
Ballparks of Baseball
Ballpark Tour
Baseball Pilgrimages
Clem's Ballpark Diagrams
Digital Ballparks
Frank's Ballparks
Jay Buckley Baseball Tours
Mike McCann's Engaging Images
Stadium Page

Frequency
Bob Murphy
CW 11
Gary, Keith & Ron
MLB Extra Innings
Neil Best's Watchdog
NY Baseball Digest
Radio Roadtrip
SNY
WFAN
XM Radio
YouTube: JPhilips41

The Picnic Area
19th Century Mets
100 Greatest NY Days
Armchair GM
Bad Mets
Brooklyn Ballparks
Bugs and Cranks
Carl's Mets Page
CBS Sportsline: Mets
Centerfield Maz
Crosstown Rivals
DGW Photo Blog
Eephus Pitch
Flushing University
Forgotten New York
Gotham Baseball
Hot Dog Vending at Shea
Howard Megdal
I Heart Mets
Inside Pitch
Jackie Robinson Foundation
Knuckleball From Hell
Long Island Ducks
Mathematically Alive
Meet the Matts
Met Camp
Met Fan Book
Mets Fan Club
Mets Images
Mets Pulse
Mets Short
Mets Tube
Mets Zone
New York Mets Hall of Records
NY Mets Report
NY Sports Day
NY Sports Dog
NY SportSpace
A Piece of Shea
Productive Outs & Cracker Jack
Pro Sports Daily: Mets Rumors
A Quest for Keith
Record Online
SABR NYC
Save the Apple
SportSnipe
Steve's Mets Photos
TNYM
True Fans Bleed Blue & Orange
Very Unofficial Mets Site

Extreme Baseball
At Home Plate
Baseball Analysts
Baseball Bookshelf
Baseball Card Blog
Baseball Crank
Baseball Fever
Baseball Limo
Baseball Talmud
Baseball Think Factory
Baseball Toaster
Blogging Baseball
Bobby V's Way
Brent Mayne
Cardboard Gods
Cardboard Junkie
The Dead Ball Era
The Dugout
Dugout Central
Excruciating Baseball Lists
Hardball Times
Israel Baseball League
Japan Baseball Daily
Jewish Major Leaguers
Life in the Minors
Negro Leagues Baseball Museum
Quality At-Bats
Rob Kirkpatrick 1969
SABR
Sports Collectors Daily
Squeeze Play Cards
Stats on the Back
Streetplay
Super '70s Baseball Cards
Topps Baseball Card Blog
United States of Baseball
USA Today
Write On Sports
Yard Work

Multipurpose Stadium
American Legends
Blooming Ideas
Brooklyn Mutt
Can't Stop the Bleeding
The Daily Fix
Dan Shanoff
Deadspin
Gelf Magazine
Getting Paid to Watch
Get Untracked
Gil Meche Experience
Hot Stove New York
Jeff Pearlman
The Jestaplero
Joe Posnanski
Ladies...
Legend of Cecilio Guante
Mike's Neighborhood
New York Magazine: The Sports Section
Riding With Rickey
Scratchbomb
Straight Flushing
Uni Watch
Uni Watch Blog

The Rotunda
Amazinz
Crane Pool Forum
Grand Slam Single
Happy Recap Board
Mets Refugees
The Mofo
Talk Baseball

Everybody's Comin' Down
Mets: Official Site
The 7 Train
LIRR

View Article  World Series Done, No Monkeys Flung
The weird part about the way the 2007 World Series ended, specifically after the World Series of the past half-dozen years, was seeing no monkeys flung from anyone's back, no albatross peeled from around anyone's neck, no donuts, no bagels, no bupkis filled up or filled in, no getting off the schneid.

This wasn't some eternally deprived expansion team sipping at last from the chalice of ultimate success, nor a long-suffering tribe (whether deserving or despicable) reaching the promised land for the first time in eons. This was simply the inevitable becoming reality, the best team earning its just reward after trumping its overmatched opponent in a one-run game that wasn't terribly close.

Terrific if you're a Red Sox fan, not all that electrifying otherwise. World Series sweeps are bad for the losers as well as the unaffiliated observers who just want more baseball. But they can't be over fast enough for the winners who don't need to wait a moment more than necessary for a second World Series sweep in four years.

Red Sox fans are no longer deprived and no longer suffering. Yet I doubt winning is getting old for them.

Their team flat out deserved to win. Not only did the Red Sox lead their division from April 18 on, but they, unlike at least one other Northeastern team I can think of, didn't blow a longstanding and formidable divisional lead in September. They faced down their bout with adversity (behind 3-1 to the Indians in the ALCS) and they supplanted the Rockies as the hottest team in baseball. Colorado started the postseason 7-0. Boston ended it that way.

Swell buncha fellas on television, from the monsters in the middle to the percussion in the bullpen to the rooks to the not one, but two cancer survivors to that pitcher who evokes comparisons to Christy Mathewson, Bob Gibson and, perhaps, Catfish Hunter. The Red Sox blended a roster of experience and youth and power and speed and arms and bats and gloves...it's as if they, among all the other things they did right, gave their versions of Lastings Milledge and Ruben Gotay legitimate shots and their kids did not disappoint.

How nice for the Red Sox, how nice for their Nation. Every Mets fan I know who lives in New England finds his Red Sox neighbors insufferable and overbearing, but I don't live in New England, so I'm happy for them. The village elders didn't have to hang on for one more breath for so they could die happy and no parents needed to wake their babies so they could grow up to say they witnessed a once-in-a-lifetime event. It's twice-in-a-lifetime now. When the Red Sox broke their cold spell in 2004, the Daily News snottily suggested this would be it until 2090. Turns out there wasn't an 86-year wait this time around. Turns out the team of this century, to date, hails from Boston. Turns out that Mike Lowell was the best third base pickup anybody in the A.L. East has made since the winter of '04.

Turns out Alex Rodriguez is still looking for a team whose coattails are long enough to drag him to a pennant. But that's somebody else's problem.

If the Rockies, who stormed into the World Series before being stormed right out of it, had stayed hot, they would have written the more exciting final chapter to 2007. I rooted for them and I'm disappointed for them, but the Red Sox winning is a good story any year...'cept one, as we all know. You New England-based Mets fans may not be able to stand being surrounded by RSN for the next few days (or years), and you have my sympathies, but at least at the heart of their narcissism there is our shared bond. Hank Steinbrenner may have been full of it last week when he dismissed Red Sox Nation as no more than a component of "Yankee universe," but I don't completely begrudge him his point that "if it wasn’t for the rivalry with us, they’d be just another team." Maybe not for true Red Sox fans, but for me and most Mets fans, probably.

At one point or another, I'd venture that just about every Mets fan's favorite American League team has been the Red Sox precisely because they have been the archrival to our least favorite American League team. With the Blue Jays, the Devil Rays and the Orioles all having gone on hiatus over the past decade, the Red Sox have been all we could invest our residual hope in from April through September. They've been all we've had to combat our sidebar hatred. It took them a while, but they've gotten the job done on our behalf and the behalves of good people everywhere. The Red Sox embarrassed their rivals directly in 2004 and have completely upstaged them in every tangible fashion in 2007. The Yankees are left to hold meetings and interviews and conference calls in late October. The Red Sox hold parades.

It's nice to see. It doesn't actually help the Mets, but it's nice to see. And when it occurs to one of their celebrity fans, like the surprisingly surprised Ben Affleck, that there are New Yorkers who are empathetic to his cause, it's nice to read this:

I get a lot of supportive things about the Red Sox, which at first kind of confused me. We don’t understand this in Boston, but half of New York likes the Red Sox because they hate the Yankees and they love the Mets. And I love the Mets. So go Mets!

And go Dave Magadan, revered hitting coach of the World Champion Red Sox, the only Met alumnus I noticed in the Boston dugout this October. Magadan (or Mags) hasn't been a Met since 1992, but as with Bob Apodaca (or Dack), I still see him as a Met when I see him at all. I like that he got noticed for the Red Sox taking lots of pitches (and keeping lots of games going lots of hours). I'm always amazed that it's news that if hitters take pitches, it might wear out the pitcher, that the hitter might eventually see the pitch he wants, that the hitter might walk. I seem to recall Mags collecting lots of bases on balls in his Met prime. Indeed, in 1990, his one really good year, he finished one point behind ex-Met Lenny Dykstra for the league lead in on-base percentage and was eighth in walks.

It's probably a poor excuse for irony, but Dave Magadan was the smart-money choice to take over third base from the departed Ray Knight in 1987, but Howard Johnson won the job out of Spring Training when Mags was sidelined by an infected lymph node in his right armpit. HoJo never relinquished third after that and it took until '90, when Mike Marshall washed out as Keith Hernandez's replacement, that Dave became a regular, at first base. The irony? Twenty years later, Magadan and Johnson are both Major League hitting coaches...and Magadan's students have been doing much better.

Maybe the Rockies were overwhelmed by their eight-day layoff, but now we all have an eight-day layoff. Actually, we all have approximately nineteen eight-day layoffs before there's another new baseball game to remotely obsess over. Via the good graces of XM Radio, I listened to the top of the ninth on KOA, the Rockies' station. I switched to WRKO's Red Sox feed for the happier broadcast in the bottom of the ninth. In flipping, I felt a bit like the sheepish Shea assistant clubhouse manager in Jeff Pearlman's The Bad Guys Won who, with Game Six in Metly peril, threw on a Red Sox warmup jacket so he could "be a part of the celebration, any celebration," but I'd decided one sad ending in 2007 was enough for me. Moments after Joe Castiglione announced the Red Sox had become the first team in the 2000s with two world championships to its credit, he threw it to a reporter in the victorious clubhouse. On KOA, they couldn't go to commercial fast enough — visit your Denver-area Dick's Sporting Goods for Rockies merchandise and "show your support throughout the Series!" On Fox, Mike Lowell was named MVP and asked about his free agent plans.

The baseball season was completely over everywhere I turned.

A clip of this World Series might appear in a Chevy commercial down the line, otherwise it's likely being forgotten by all but the participants and their most ardent admirers. Red Sox fans will have their t-shirts and their DVDs and their final assurance, in case any was necessary, that there was never any such thing as a curse. Rockies fans will have their mixed emotions. It took them however long they lived before 1993 to join the league of extraordinarily fortunate markets and have a baseball team to call their own. It took them 15 years to win a league championship. It took them 36 innings to fall back down the mountain. All those empty seats at Coors Field became fans again in late September. I probably won't care in May when the Mets are the visitors and the Rockies just another team we have to beat, but I hope those who were disappointed these last four games remain in love with their team. Wrote Robert Wells of Milwaukee Braves fans after the novelty of winning the 1957 World Series wore off:

When a player popped up with the bases loaded, he was no longer a figure of heroic tragedy but a bum. With triumph as well as aspiration behind them, the team's followers began to be like baseball fans elsewhere. The plump ladies with cowbells and baseball caps started missing games. When it looked like rain, people who had considered going to the stadium decided to stay home.

Whatever Rockies fans decide to do next year, I realize I've just blogged my last baseball game of this year. According to the Weather Channel right now, it's 42 degrees in the vicinity of Shea Stadium. But it feels like 37.
View Article  As True Now As It Was Then and Will Be a Year From Now
People ask me what I do in winter when there's no baseball. I'll tell you what I do. I stare out the window and wait for spring.

-- Rogers Hornsby