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
April 2009
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
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  Cheering Frankie, Burying Braden & Tailing the Krane
The Mets enjoyed a statistically familiar Opening Day. Yet I enjoyed a very unusual one. They opened at Great American Ball Park. Yet I watched them at Citi Field. They were led by Johan Santana, Daniel Murphy and Frankie Rodriguez. Yet I was awed by Mookie Wilson, Ed Kranepool and Ed Charles...and Cow-Bell Man. Can't forget Cow-Bell Man.

Here's the surreal deal: A friend with the fine folks who sponsor that swell Pepsi Porch invited me to a New Year's bash on said patio (a rare intermingling of my beverage and baseball lives). We'd eat, drink, mill and cheer the action from Cincinnati on the big screens. And it would be great, unless it rained.

It rained, but it was still great, because Pepsi and the Mets moved the party indoors to Caesars Club. Hence, there I was, eating, drinking, milling, cheering the action from Cincinnati on smaller but very sharp screens and not getting wet. And being surrounded by greatness.

The greatness on the screens is what we all care about, so let us praise not Caesar or even Mookie for a moment, but Johan. From what I could tell when not helping myself to unlimited fare (standard ballpark stuff but with those Citi kitchens, nothing is substandard), it was colder in Ohio than it was in New York (where it was cold enough) and Johan wasn't feeling the ball, thus the four walks. That's the sort of thing that could derail an Ollie Perez — that does derail an Ollie Perez — but this is Johan the Magnificent we're talking about, so he essentially shook off the cold and picked up where he left off last September 27 and 23, respectively.

The Mets, 31-9 to commence their calendar since 1970 and 4-for-4 since 2006, left too many runners on base, of course, but don't they always? Daniel Murphy and defense gave Johan enough wiggle room and the bullpen...OH THAT DELICIOUS NEW BULLPEN! The LOB may be the official state bird of Metsopotamia, but can we declare the blown save extinct? Probably a little too soon for that, but wow, what a difference however much they're paying Green, Putz and Rodriguez makes. They'll have their bad days, but...no! No! Never again! No more bad days! Not the kind with which we've been regularly burdened!

Sorry, just projecting my deepest hope for this season: no more cringing at that bullpen gate or even the thought of it. No matter where you were watching from Monday, you couldn't help but hark back to the last time the Mets opened in Cincy, in 2005, and Braden Looper sabotaging the New Mets before they could spread their wings and fly. That was the first game this enterprise ever blogged and my partner captured the emotion of that ninth-inning, 7-6 loss perfectly when he wrote one word and one word only after Joe Randa circled the Great American bases. (He did so again today in an e-mail that read, in part, "Fuck Braden Looper.")

Four years have gone by. Maybe some Mets fans today had forgotten or never even knew about that wasted first start from Pedro Martinez and how (fucking) Braden Looper just dampened everything for days and then, at just the worst instances, all of 2005. More saliently, nobody's forgotten what last September was like in these parts. Green to Putz to Rodriguez...that's something to remember and repeat.

I'll probably never get to repeat my own personal Opening Day celebration from 2009, but I'll remember it. Credit Pepsi and the Mets' organization for thinking of everything except a temporary SkyDome to shield us on that Porch of theirs. But Caesars did well by its guests in a pinch. My friend who extended the invitation got stuck at work, so I didn't know anybody there, but I felt like I knew everybody there. Everybody came dressed in their Opening Day finery and everybody was focused on the Metsiana of the occasion. Yes, of course, to Murph's home run and two RBI, yes to David Wright and Ryan Church and Jose Reyes playing solid to spectacular defense. Yes to the pitching in its starting and relief flavors (YES!), right up to the impromptu K-ROD! K-ROD! chant that closed the festivities.

And yes to those Mets legends who joined us for the afternoon. I saw a line early and I thought it was for beer. It was for Mookie. Made sense. The presence of Mookie will always be more intoxicating than alcohol. He was signing autographs for children of all ages, including a Pepsi generation's worth of Mets fans who couldn't possibly know anything more about him than how could you not want the autograph of a man named Mookie?

I didn't queue up for Mr. Wilson's signature. Too long a line, too preoccupied by those images of Mr. Santana (and the sausages). But when it got short, I strode over. Somebody vaguely in charge tried to tell me Mookie was about to be done signing. I don't want an autograph, I said, I just want to shake his hand and say hello. I was granted my wish.

"Hi Mookie, my name is Greg, and I want to thank you for being such a great Met and giving us such a great Met career, all ten years of it."

Mookie accepted this completely unoriginal thought graciously before wrapping up his day. I couldn't have let the opportunity go by without telling him what surely he's heard before. He's Mookie Wilson! (I had a copy of my book in my schlep bag and thought about giving it to him, then I remembered that the chapter that focuses on his most famous moment is laced with stream-of-consciousness cursing and that Mookie was the most straight laced of '86 Mets, so I resisted. Maybe for one of the Scum Bunch I'd be less embarrassed by my working blue.)

Ed Charles had a line, too, but I caught it when it was winding down, and all I wanted from him was about 15 seconds of his time. I shook his hand and said my piece:

"Hi Ed, my name is Greg, and I just want to thank you for being such a great Met all these years. You gave me so many thrills when I was a kid and I can't thank you enough."

"That means a lot to me to hear you say that," The Glider Ed Charles said to me. And he patted me on the back.

It felt good.

Ed Kranepool I was close to, but said nothing. Three reasons:

1) The Krane was not, when I was in his midst, doing his official Krane stuff;

2) I couldn't stop thinking about what a friend of mine who once ran into him in a deli said after introducing himself as a fan: "Ed Kranepool looked at me like I owed him money," though he seemed pretty relaxed today;

3) I was too in awe to say anything. I'm not kidding. This was Ed Kranepool, a Met for the first eighteen seasons that there were Mets. This was Ed Kranepool, king of the Mets record book still. This was ED KRANEPOOL!

As I wandered in Ed's aura (and believe me, this guy's got aura), I found myself behind him as he grabbed a cookie off a tray on the bar. I grabbed the cookie right after his before we diverged to our respective seats. I wouldn't say I ate Ed Kranepool's dust, but it's fair to say we shared a few crumbs.

And Cow-Bell Man was there. I wasn't in awe of Cow-Bell Man, but it was gratifying to see Cow-Bell Man in and out of action. When I walked into Caesars (which puts all airport lounges to shame but could use a few Mets trinkets to make it seem less LaGuardia), I saw somebody who looked like Cow-Bell Man quietly enjoying some lunch. It was him. It was Cow-Bell Man. Cow-Bell Man does Mets parties. Good for him. Now and again, he roamed the room, banging his bell and being Cow-Bell Man, posing for photos, signing t-shirts, making Mets fans a little happier for a few seconds per clank. When the affair was over, I found myself on the same subway platform with Cow-Bell Man. I was going to strike up a conversation, ask how he came to be there today, how he likes Citi Field, what his relationship with the Mets' organization is, whether the bullpen can keep up the good work. But as I organized my thoughts, he walked over to where he wanted to get on the train and I stayed put at where I wanted to get on the train.

Cow-Bell Man's only got so much aura.

Final unexpected guest of the day was that parking lot they're building where Ol' Blue used to stand. Caesars doesn't face the current field, only the former one, or what's left of its dirt. While Jerry made all the right moves in Cincy, while Mookie and the Eds (Cow-Bell Man's real name, too, come to think of it) were eliciting grins, while Mr. Met and the Pepsi Party Patrol were bringing the Seventh Inning Stretch indoors, the men who work the Breeze machines continued to move earth. That thing will be paved over in no time. I watched now and then, between pitches and good cheer. I watched what used to be Shea Stadium get a little more covered up with every passing minute. Never saw that on Opening Day from Cincinnati before either.

Hope they pave over any remnant that indicated Braden Looper and his arsonous successors ever existed but good.

Two New Year's gifts on one Opening Day...you guys shouldn't have! But you did, Ray from Metphistopheles and A.J. from Deadspin (excerpt included in the latter). Read what they're writing about: Faith and Fear in Flushing: An Intense Personal History of the New York Mets, available from Amazon, Barnes & Noble or a bookstore near you. Keep in touch and join the discussion on Facebook.
View Article  This Time, 162
A quick reminder to our boys wrapped in orange and blue layers for when they begin their season in Arctic conditions today or tomorrow or whenever there isn't a projected 29-degree wind chill with 60% chance of snow showers in Cincinnati:

Play every game. There are 162 on your slate. Play all of them. Play all of them as well as you can. Don't take days off unless you, as an individual, have been in fact given the day off. Keep playing. Play now, play later, play to the end. Play hard 162 times. Do not let your minds wander after a dozen or so games. Do not spiral into a funk after sixty or so games. Do not mentally wander the desert after 120 games. Consider the season as an in-progress entity even after you've reached the black-magical mark of 145 games. At that juncture, institutional memory will tell you to ease up, not compete and lose more often than you win.

Do not listen to it. You are contracted to play all 162. You start, the schedule says, this afternoon. You keep going straight through to October 4 at least.

At least.

Thank you in advance for your efforts on our behalf. Please don't make us regret our faith in you again.

A great way to wait out rain delays is to read Faith and Fear in Flushing: An Intense Personal History of the New York Mets, available from Amazon, Barnes & Noble or a bookstore near you. Keep in touch and join the discussion on Facebook.