Jason is glad the Mets are back -- and hoping he feels the same way after tonight's game.
That was my Facebook message late this afternoon -- happiness at baseball being back, eagerness to see if the Mets could continue their Lazarus act, and yes, worry that tonight would prove the beginning of the cruelest possible tease from a team that's specialized in them. As the Mets go, I'm what financial types (and dorks channeling them) would call a lagging indicator -- whether it's distrust or just being slow on the uptake, I felt myself slide into Watch This With One Eye mode after the Reds battered Johan around their park. (Which was curiously muted on SNY -- did anyone else notice that? You could hear Gary and Keith just fine, and the sound off the bat, but the crowd was a faraway, tinny buzz. It was like a really crappy 80s console game.)
But then all of a sudden Wright singled in two, it was 5-4 and my dim brain remembered that hey, we'd reeled off nine in a row. And then Fernando Tatis lofted a fly ball over that too-close fence in right-center (we'll take it) and it was 6-5 and Johnny Cueto was trudging off with that look you see on the faces of fireballing rookies whose brains need to catch up with their arms -- anger and embarrassment and the disbelief of the youthful who really had no idea that what just befell them was even possible. And so when Scott Schoeneweis missed Schneider's glove and hit all of Javier Valentin's bat, I kept both eyes on the proceedings. We'd already shown the kind of fight rarely imagined in the June '07-June '08 Year of Famine; who would be so low and vile a nonbeliever as to say there wasn't more where that had come from?
And indeed, WHAM WHAM WHAM WHAM WHAM WHAM! Argenis Reyes got us started in the ninth, despite the fact that he's done something ill-advised to his head and now looks like a butterscotch sundae. Wright got us even, Delgado got us out in front, and Tatis got us insured. And Billy Wagner decided there'd been quite enough drama, thank you. 10-8 Mets.
And now what's this? There appears to be somebody in our seat.
You -- the guy dressed in red, with the fans who are even meaner than ours and the cheesesteaks. Yeah, you. Out. What's that you say? We're 52-44, so git. Really? Lemme see. Huh. How about that. So what do we do now?
Ninety-six games turned out to settle nothing. Here we are, Mets and Phillies, tied atop the NL East with 66 games to settle it. It's marvelous. It's unexpected. It's baseball, in other words. God how I've missed it.
The blog for Mets fans
who like to read Search
GET THE 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. Recent Entries
Recent Photos
This Month
Month Archive
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
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 FAFIF Says...
Very Hot Stove
Met Hell First Circle Second Circle Second Second Circle Fourth Circle Fifth Circle Aw Heck Sixth Circle Seventh Circle Eighth Circle Ninth Circle Redemption Look Who's No. 100-1 Criteria 100-91 90-81 80-71 70-61 60-51 50-41 40-31 30-21 20-11 10-1 * Years to Remember 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 Moments of Silence Hunter S. Thompson Bernie The Cat Nate Fisher Donn Clendenon John Spencer Lou Rawls Tom Belcher Five Years Later Cory Lidle Highlight Films Greatest Hits of 1986 Winter League 2005-2006 The 2005 Faith and Fear Yearbook |
Thursday, July 17
by
Jason
on Thu 17 Jul 2008 11:32 PM EDT
by
Greg
on Thu 17 Jul 2008 05:53 AM EDT
When it was announced that Billy Joel would have the honor of presenting the final non-merengue concert in the history of Shea Stadium, some Mets fans scoffed that he was not worthy, he was not worthy, that he had nothing to do with the Mets nor the history of Shea.
He does now. I will never look at Shea again, not in the 73 days it is guaranteed life, not in the knock-wood month of October, not in the mind's eye without seeing, hearing and feeling Billy Joel playing his heart out in center field. He earned his piece of real estate there every bit as much as Agee and Mazz, Mookie and Lenny, Cameron and Beltran. He's on my all-time Shea team forever more. If you saw him last night, you'd add him, too. Billy gave us a dazzling night in Flushing, a night to call our own, a night that belonged to Shea. You know how artists like to ask, "how ya doin' [fill in name of city]?" Billy did that, but he did it to Shea. "How ya doin', Shea Stadium?" He knew. He understood. He called it with the spot-on observation that was so obvious I never heard anybody quite nail it before: Shea Stadium "is where New York meets Long Island." If you're more New York than Long Island, you don't care. If you're the other way, you got what he meant. I'm the other way. I saw a comedian the other evening who said people tend to round up their hometown to the nearest big city, but as one who strives for accuracy, I usually don't. I'm from Long Island, I tell people. It's not out of pride, it's just because I am. Nobody knows what it means if you're not from here. I'm not sure what it means. I do know they built a stadium where they did because a lot of us were growing up where we were. They stuck it amid highways and railroad tracks so we could get there. And they gave us a baseball team that many of us attached ourselves to because they played there, because we could bug somebody to take us there, because we could get a little older and find our way there ourselves. Then we got a lot older and we came to hear Billy Joel. We were not disappointed. He emptied his songbook. He delved into every single album of original material he ever released. He played numbers I'd assumed he'd forgotten. He resuscitated curios and period pieces. He revved up old favorites and big hits and he made you forget it's been decades since they first breathed. He gasped for air now and then but he never tired. What a showman. He did it for Shea. He did it to leave his mark where the Beatles left theirs. Billy Joel and his sonic pleasure of a band played three Fab Four songs, mostly as an excuse, I believe, to thank Shea's first musical act "for letting us use their room." And in case it wasn't enough, he brought friends. To duet on "New York State of Mind," he dialed up this guy from Astoria you might have heard of: Tony Bennett. To add a few licks to "This Is The Time," he availed himself of the services of John Mayer. Because he was playing in a ballpark, Don Henley's "Boys of Summer" seemed like a good idea — so Don Henley walked onto the stage and sang it. And because he could, he conjured John Mellencamp for "Pink Houses". Tony Bennett...John Mayer...Don Henley...John Mellencamp...all playing with Billy Joel. Imagine the Mets up 8-0 in the third and then just for kicks giving an at-bat to Stan Musial in his prime. Billy Joel opened with the national anthem and tossed in "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" later, but, no, he didn't pledge allegiance to the Mets. He converted a lyric in "Miami 2017" to acknowledge his surroundings ("they said the Mets could stay/and play one more game at Shea"), gussied up his skyline-shaped video screen with iconic Mets imagery for "Zanzibar" (every "I've got the old man's car" gave us Casey conducting Guy Lombardo's orchestra) and members of his band donned the same jerseys BJ wore at the press conference last winter, but Billy framed his baseball associations in the terms that are probably most relevant to him: He asked how many of us were Mets fans. There were cheers. He asked how many of us were Yankees fans. Cheers. Boos, too. "How many out there don't give a shit?" Biggest cheers. Tou'Shea. My section, way down in field boxes good enough to reach out and touch Carlos Delgado if he stumbled into the photographers' box, did have a near-brush with internecine warfare. Some douchebag in a Yankees batting practice jersey was loudmouthing all night in that way people at concerts and ballgames have of not shutting up. I usually chalk it up to rock 'n' roll and alcohol and figure it's part of the cost of doing business. But after "Piano Man," when you figure it's all over — even the jumping that turned Field Level into a trampoline — Billy has one more surprise: "Souvenir" from waaaaaay back, from Streetlife Serenade. It's a lovely coda for a ballpark then 74 days from its scheduled end: Ev'ry year's a souvenir That slowly fades away As he's just getting into it, some fans who'd had floor seats begin to trickle out to gain a step on traffic. Bad form, but no never mind to me — except loudmouth douchebag Yankees fan interrupts the 37th and final song of the night by yelling at them more than once that YOU'RE NOT REAL FANS! No, of course not. Real fans shout rudely over the ballad that the man who's given you three amazin' hours you plan to never forget is trying to close the show with. Maybe it was the Long Island in me. Maybe it was the Shea Stadium in me. Maybe I knew this could not go unanswered. I turned around and barked at him, as quickly as I could so as not to be a douchebag about it myself: "SHUT THE FUCK UP ALREADY! WE'RE TRYING TO HEAR THE SONG! ENOUGH!" The next and only sound you heard was Billy Joel. He finished "Souvenir" and gave those of us who know that place as home some excellent advice I'd presciently taken him up on moments earlier. "Good night, Shea Stadium. Don't take any shit from anybody." |

