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Heard a funny rumor
Kong76 Sep 30 2008 05:55 PM |
Yogi, Inc. charged the Mets an appearance fee to get him to slum it and
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SteveJRogers Sep 30 2008 06:03 PM |
Wouldn't be surprised if several of the non regulars "charged a fee."
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soupcan Sep 30 2008 06:05 PM |
Good, why not?
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Kong76 Sep 30 2008 06:13 PM |
SJR: Wouldn't be surprised if several of the non regulars "charged a fee."<<<<
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metirish Sep 30 2008 06:27 PM |
I hope Yogi got cash because it's as good as....never mind.
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cooby Sep 30 2008 06:29 PM |
heheheh
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Centerfield Oct 01 2008 07:39 AM |
How did the fans treat Yogi? If anyone deserved boos, it would be him.
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AG/DC Oct 01 2008 07:44 AM |
I've got a rule about hating on octogenarians.
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Benjamin Grimm Oct 01 2008 07:46 AM |
One newspaper account said that Yogi got the biggest hand of all, but I suspect it was written by a Yankee-loving troll who was just hearing what he wanted to hear.
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themetfairy Oct 01 2008 08:41 AM |
I concur with BG. Warm, but not the warmest.
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metsguyinmichigan Oct 01 2008 08:56 AM |
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Why boo Yogi? Obviously some serious Yankee taint, but the guy did lead us the the World Series in 1973 and was a coach for close to a decade. I've never heard him say anything bad about anybody other than Steinbrenner. Now, "Traitor Al" Leiter, I get.
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Centerfield Oct 01 2008 09:11 AM |
Not having lived through his tenure here, the only story I hear about Yogi is his decision to pitch Seaver on three-days rest rather than hold him back for Game 7.
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themetfairy Oct 01 2008 09:20 AM |
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Yes CF. I didn't boo, but pitching Tom Seaver on three days' rest in Game 6 of the 1973 World Series when George Stone was available for the game and a rested Seaver would have been more effective if there was a need for a Game 7 is eternally boo-worthy. My husband says I have to let this one go, but I can't....
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Centerfield Oct 01 2008 09:25 AM |
No one can. Certainly not Howie Rose. He was lamenting about it earlier this month.
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Frayed Knot Oct 01 2008 09:30 AM |
Yogi is a good guy who was an only so-so manager, but the fact remains that no one should get booed at this sort of thing.
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G-Fafif Oct 01 2008 09:33 AM |
I applauded and yelled for Yogi but immediately thought "George Stone" as soon as he showed his face.
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HahnSolo Oct 01 2008 10:01 AM |
Since I was only five, I'll ask this: why not Stone in game 4 or 5? Was it the fact they lost game 3, and Yogi felt 4 and 5 were must wins, so he was going to go with Matlack and Koosman in 2 must games? Was the plan to pitch Stone in game 4 if they had held on in game 3?
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SteveJRogers Oct 01 2008 10:09 AM |
Granted it mostly comes from Yogi and Met-Hating or Yankee-loving spinners, but there is a theory that Seaver went to Yogi and demanded to pitch the clincher in Game 6.
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SteveJRogers Oct 01 2008 10:12 AM |
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Interestingly enough, Wally Mathews (who is one of the those who I've heard tell the "Seaver demanded the ball for Game 6" theory from) actually said he lost a ton of respect for Yogi when he actually buried the hatchet with George and came back to Yankee Stadium. I wouldn't be surprised if Yogi got boos because of that warped line of thinking.
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AG/DC Oct 01 2008 10:14 AM Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Oct 01 2008 10:27 AM |
Matlack was a co-ace. The idea, then and now, was to try and align your rotation to get three starts from an ace. To try to get through the series, in fact, with a three-man rotation.
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G-Fafif Oct 01 2008 10:22 AM |
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Honest to gosh, I don't remember (and it's a great question). Stone pitched Game Four in the NLCS and did quite well (Rose homering off Harry Parker in extra innings was the killer). Seaver had pitched a complete game loss in Game 1 against Cincy (10/6) and into the ninth in the clincher (10/10). Three days' rest there, much less sharp in Game Five than Game One (when he had four days rest after the division clincher, when he ran out of gas against the Cubs). He was brilliant in Game 3 of the World Series (on five days rest), another hard-luck situation where eight innings of two-run ball ND'd him (and we lost in extras). The prevailing wisdom as I recall it was Tom was tired, Stone was rested and we had a 3-2 lead. Stone would have represented well and, had we not won, there's Seaver, four days rest, ready to go on Sunday. I can understand Yogi's default logic: it's Seaver. But it's always bugged those of us who don't let it go that he could have had an even better Seaver and a pretty darned good Stone. Tom threw 314.2 innings in 1973, postseason included, entering Game Six. That was more than he'd ever thrown in his entire career. He gave the Mets seven more on Saturday. He was wonderful by modern standards (7 IP, 2 R, 6 H, 2 BB, 6 SO), but you could see he didn't quite have it. Plus the Mets didn't hit. One more day, facing Holtzman instead of Hunter...ah, who knows?
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batmagadanleadoff Oct 01 2008 10:36 AM |
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I suppose it would depend on the team. On most teams, there is a huge gap in talent between the #1 pitcher and the #3 pitcher ... between the ace and the #2. Not so with the '86 Mets. Rick Aguilera probably could've been the ace starting pitcher for a few teams that year. Sid was relegated to the bullpen. I agree with you: it was a terrific move. With a starting rotation as deep and talented as Davey's '86 squad, it was never necessary to pitch anyone on short rest.
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G-Fafif Oct 01 2008 10:43 AM |
Times change. Jack McKeon had a four-man rotation through the first four games of the 2003 World Series and then shocked the world by skipping the eminently skippable Mark Redman and coming back up three games to two with his ace Josh Beckett. It worked.
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AG/DC Oct 01 2008 10:54 AM |
Talent gaps is the key, and measuring that against the estimated gap created by the short restage.
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batmagadanleadoff Oct 01 2008 11:06 AM |
I would guess that McKeon's method is not so unusual, and that there would be numerous instances of postseason pitching rotations set up on a hybrid four days rest/three days rest schedule, instead of purely four or three days rest.
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AG/DC Oct 01 2008 11:13 AM |
Comes down to how impressed you were by George Stone's impressive second half and how real you though it was
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Iubitul Oct 01 2008 11:21 AM |
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I totally disagree - what Stone does in game 6 is irrelevant. Having Seaver on 4 days rest in game 7 is.
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AG/DC Oct 01 2008 11:24 AM |
Irrelevant? You'd start Rich Rodriguez and bump Matlack to get Seaver in there a day later?
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batmagadanleadoff Oct 01 2008 11:29 AM Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Oct 01 2008 11:30 AM |
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Hey! You fooled me. Davey went with a three man rotation against the BoSox. Darling, Ojeda and Gooden were the only WS starters for the '86 Mets.
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Iubitul Oct 01 2008 11:29 AM |
no, of course not. George Stone > Rich Rodrojas.
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Benjamin Grimm Oct 01 2008 11:32 AM |
Yeah. Davey planned to have Aguilera start Game 4, but once the Mets dropped the first two at Shea, he scrapped that plan and went to a three-man rotation.
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AG/DC Oct 01 2008 11:32 AM |
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Yeah, my lousy memory must be conflating the NLCS with the World Series. Fernandez went in the NLCS.
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themetfairy Oct 01 2008 11:34 AM |
I agree with iubitul. If Stone won Game 6, that would have been nice. But Seaver was never at his best on short rest, and he would likely have been better fully rested in Game 7 than he was in Game 6.
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batmagadanleadoff Oct 01 2008 11:35 AM |
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Yeah. Sid was odd man out only because of Fenway's configuration. Against any other AL team, Sid would've pitched one of the middle of the series road games and Davey would've had his four man rotation.
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AG/DC Oct 01 2008 11:44 AM Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Oct 01 2008 12:31 PM |
It wouldn't have been nice, it would have been a world championship. Of course his quality is a factor.
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G-Fafif Oct 01 2008 12:24 PM |
Not that those A's weren't a pretty tough outfit.
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