Sandy Alderson is aiming for the cuddly monkey

Three cans wins you the squeaky bunny, five cans gets you the fluffy lion, take out all our little people, you’ll get… cuddly monkey. Feeling lucky Alderson? I’m reaching the point of offseason nausea.  Not much will be decided (apart from who is going to accept the qualifying offers) before the winter meetings.  Tim Dierkes, [...]

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Mets need better decision making, not a smaller payroll

The main narrative going into the off-season has been the Mets' finances and whether or not the team will spend big money on free agents (FAs). In fact, this narrative has been in place for much of the time Sandy Alderson has been General Manager of the team. The 2013-2014 off-season was surely going to [...]

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A year in David Wright

The 2014 offseason is focused on Free Agents, Trades, Prospects and Speculation.  Will the Mets sign Shin-Soo Choo, trade for Carlos Gonzalez, deal Travis d’Arnaud or not.  We forget somehow that last year at this time the big story was David Wright.  Would Wright re-sign with the Mets? Would he become the captain and cornerstone [...]

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Mets should spend both big and small

There’s no right way to build a contending team in the off-season. Some teams sign marquee free-agents to long-term lucrative contracts in hopes of energizing the fanbase. This strategy has worked well for some teams, and it has not worked at all for others. This offseason, there has been a lot of pressure on the [...]

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Mets 2014: The left field debate

The other day, Joel Sherman of the New York Post gave his ideas regarding a revamped starting lineup for the 2014 New York Mets. It included Norichika Aoki in left field (obtained through a proposed deal sending Ike Davis to the Milwaukee Brewers), Andre Ethier in right field (obtained through a proposed deal for Rafael [...]

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How Mets fans handle rooting for laundry

Every sports fan has been teased by friends with the following in some way, shape or form: "Loyalty to any one sports team is pretty hard to justify because the players are always changing, the team can move to another city, you're actually rooting for the clothes when you get right down to it. You [...]

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Five Mets with the best chances of getting into the Hall of Fame

In kind of a follow up to last week’s story, I thought it might be fun to look at the five Mets who have the best chance of making the Hall of Fame. Carlos Beltran played for the Mets from 2005 until 2010.  He has also played for the Royals, Astros, Giants and Cardinals.  He [...]

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What will it take to land Jurickson Profar?

The main priority for the Mets this offseason is to land a few bats that can help generate more runs for a lackluster offense.  David Wright needs protection in the lineup, and acquiring an outfielder or two to fill the needs might suffice.  Shortstop has also emerged as an unknown position for next year, at [...]

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Mets All-Star history: The 1980s

Picking up on a series started back in the summer on the decade-by-decade look at Met All-Star history. 1980 7/8 Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles NL 4-AL 2 The Mets started what would be their most successful decade still mired in the late 1970s haze, though things would soon turn the corner. In any event, 1980 [...]

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Sizing up David Wright’s legacy

David Wright is underappreciated. Despite having multiple MVP type seasons, he always seems to be considered “not quite” an elite player or his success is attributed to “other players” in the lineup. He has regularly been considered third among the triumvirate of third baseman that entered the league within a few years of each other, [...]

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Early Off-season: Thursday Orange And Blues

It’s cool and rainy in the NYC area today. There is no baseball on the horizon. The Hot Stove is barely lit and probably won’t catch fire for at least a couple of weeks. So what does your intrepid columnist write about? He could pick apart the putative $30 million payroll increase, but there is [...]

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Mets Card of the Week: 1964 Duke Snider

I picked up this 1964 Challenge the Yankees Duke Snider card last week. He is the only New York Met in the 50-card set. The cards were part of the boxed dice game issued by the Hassenfeld Brothers out of Pawtucket, Rhode Island. They marketed and distributed the game in 1964 and again in 1965 [...]

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