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Remembering the Mets - 50 Years

metirish
Mar 31 2011 09:12 AM

This is very cool ......


Tom Seaver got help from Mike Howard both on and off the field upon his return to the Mets in 1983 .


Each Thursday, Mark Simon will commemorate the Mets' 50th season with stories and notes related to the history of the team. The goal will often be to find little-known notes, facts and anecdotes, and we begin that mission with our first piece here:


For some major leaguers, Opening Day marks the beginning of what they hope will be long and prosperous baseball careers, or a fresh start to a new season filled with hope and excitement.

In the case of former Met Mike Howard, he’s the rare player for whom Opening Day represents the ending of a big league career.

In the 1983 season opener, the Mets beat the Phillies, 2-0, in a game most remembered for Tom Seaver’s return to the team after five-and-a-half seasons with the Reds. Forgotten is their right fielder that day, Howard, was the last to start the opener at that position before the arrival of Mets legend Darryl Strawberry.

With the game scoreless in the sixth inning, Howard came up with the bases loaded and no outs, and singled off Hall of Famer Steve Carlton to put the Mets ahead. It would be the last of 66 major league at-bats for Howard, who finished with a .182 batting average and 12 base hits.

“The thing I remember about that day was that I was with Seaver warming up in the bullpen,” Howard said. “When he finished throwing, he said ‘I need to do something' [to kill time before the game started], so I pointed to a guy who had a cast on his arm, or was in a wheelchair and said to Tom that he should give the guy a baseball. I was thinking ‘Wow. Tom Seaver just asked me what to do.’ That was cool.”

The Mets had a glut of outfielders in the mix before Strawberry’s arrival, so others got opportunities in the next few games. After not needing him for two-and-a-half weeks, the Mets sent Howard to Triple-A. Howard remembers clubhouse manager Herb Norman telling him to take his Mets uniform with him. Howard declined.

“I’ll be back,” Howard said, not knowing at the time that he wouldn’t be.

“I was a utility guy, the insurance man,” said Howard, whose nickname was “Mad Dog” because his style of play emulated that of Pete Rose, such as how both sprinted to first base after drawing a walk. “The problem with being the insurance guy is that you never use him, because you don’t know when you’re going to need him.”

Howard went into a funk after being demoted, hitting below .200 at Triple-A. He was sent to rookie ball with the intent of adding catcher to the list of positions he could play. (Howard played every one, including pitcher, at some point in his pro career.) But the Mets didn’t recall him.

Howard became a free agent that offseason, signed with the Pirates organization, but retired after an injury-filled season and the knowledge that his wife, Vicki, was pregnant.

According to the Elias Sports Bureau, he’s one of only three players since the end of World War II whose last major league game was as a starter in his team’s opening game (the others: Lew Riggs of the 1946 Dodgers and Manny Lee with the 1995 Cardinals).

Howard has held a variety of jobs since retiring from baseball. For the last 10 years, he has been self-employed as a painter and carpenter in Jackson, Miss., where he lives with his family.

A year after the Mets put leftover items from Shea Stadium up for sale, Howard’s daughter, Kallie, found both his jersey, and an eight-foot canvas picture that hung in the ballpark that featured her father in the background, on E-Bay. She bought them and gave them to her father for his birthday. They’ve since replaced her wall of Barbie dolls in the family home.

Howard admitted difficulty in making the transition from ballplayer to former ballplayer, but in the last few years, he’s embraced it. This year, he went to spring training in Arizona to catch up with his ex-roommate, Giants manager Bruce Bochy. And he’s well known in Jackson.

“There are four Mike Howards in Jackson,” Howard said with a laugh. “I’m the ballplayer, not the optometrist. I can’t go anywhere in town without people saying they know me.”

Five Things You Might Not Know About the Mets and Opening Day
(cap-tip to Baseball-Reference.com)

1--The Mets' five-game Opening Day win streak is the longest current streak in the major leagues, and their 32-17 mark on Opening Days is the best by any team.

2--The Mets' subsequent Opening Day right fielder, Strawberry, has the team’s best batting average in season openers. He was 11-for-22 (.500) with four home runs and eight RBIs.

3--Tom Seaver was 6-0 with a 2.13 ERA in 11 season openers for the Mets, but was 0-for-22 as a hitter in those games.

4-- Only one Met making his major league debut has homered in an Opening Day game -- Kaz Matsui in 2004. Brad Emaus would be the sixth Mets position player to make his major league debut by starting on Opening Day. The only other second baseman was Kelvin Chapman, who went 2-for-5 in a 1979 win over the Cubs.

5-- Feeling down about the Mets coming into 2011? At least it’s not 1963, when the Mets followed up their 120-loss season. The famous story told in the 1981 book This Date in Mets History is that after the Mets' first pitch of the season sailed wide, a fan in the upper deck of the Polo Grounds yelled loud enough for the ballpark to hear: “Wait ‘till next year!”



http://espn.go.com/blog/new-york/mets/p ... ike-howard

Edgy DC
Mar 31 2011 09:31 AM
Re: Remembering the Mets - 50 Years

The original idea was for Howard to be a platoonist with Danny Heep in right. I don't know why a second start never quite came for the guy.

TransMonk
Mar 31 2011 10:25 AM
Re: Remembering the Mets - 50 Years

Benjamin Grimm
Mar 31 2011 11:11 AM
Re: Remembering the Mets - 50 Years

That, along with 1985, are my two favorites of the Opening Days that I attended.

Too bad Seaver's return only lasted one year.

metirish
Apr 07 2011 09:50 AM
Re: Remembering the Mets - 50 Years

This week

Remember when we Met: Beating the best


US Presswire/Getty Images
The Mets have had their share of notable wins against baseball's greats, including Juan Marichal, Curt Schilling, and Roger Clemens.


Each Thursday, Mark Simon will commemorate the Mets 50th season with stories and notes related to the history of the team.

Three pitchers have had seasons in which they’ve gone 4-0 against the Mets as part of a Cy Young Award winning campaign.

Sandy Koufax was 4-0 with an 0.29 ERA against the Mets in 1963.

Bob Gibson was 4-0 with a 1.18 ERA against the Mets in 1968 (The Year of the Pitcher)

And Roy Halladay was 4-0 with a 2.56 ERA against the Mets in 2010.

While you wouldn’t put Halladay in Koufax’s or Gibson’s class, he’s making his way towards great-of-the-game status with his two Cy Young Awards and this three-year stretch from 2008 to 2010 in which he went 58-31 with a 2.67 ERA, including a perfect game in the regular season and a no-hitter in the playoffs.

Beating Halladay will be a challenge, but it’s one to which the Mets have a long and storied history of rising. Yes, they’ve had issues with some of the game’s all-time best, most notably Koufax (21-2 vs them) and Greg Maddux (35 wins, the most by any pitcher vs the Mets), but we’re here to celebrate victory rather than wallow in defeat. With that in mind, we ask the question: What is the Mets best win against an all-time great pitcher?

Here are the first nine candidates that came to mind for me. Feel free to share your favorites in the comments section.

The first
The Mets first win against a future Hall of Famer was also their first walk-off win, a 3-2 victory over the Braves on May 12, 1962. The game ended on Hobie Landrith’s two-run home run off Warren Spahn in the bottom of the ninth inning. Spahn would finish his career with 363 wins, including four for the Mets in 1965, his final season in the major leagues.

A dandy versus Sandy
One of the most notable wins of the early days was the one in which they beat Sandy Koufax for the first time. Koufax went 13-0 in his first 14 appearances against the Mets and didn’t lose until August 26, 1965, when a young starter named Tug McGraw (who would become famous later in his Mets career) edged him out, 5-2.

Juan and Done
Hall of Famer Juan Marichal has come to ESPN’s Bristol headquarters on a few occasions, and on one, I asked him if he remembered when the Mets beat him 1-0 in 14 innings on August 19, 1969.

“Tommie Agee,” he said wistfully, recalling the game-winning home run in that contest. “I can still see that ball going over the fence.”

19 K … and a loss
On September 15, 1969, Cardinals pitcher Steve Carlton (who would go on to greatness with the Phillies) struck out 19 Mets, but got beat, 4-3, by a pair of Ron Swoboda home runs. Carlton would win 329 games in his Hall of Fame career, but the Mets beat him on 36 occasions, more than they’ve beaten any other pitcher.

Nailing Nolan
The Mets found themselves in a must-win situation in Game 2 of the 1986 NLCS against the fireballing (and ageless) Nolan Ryan. Much like he would do in Game 5 of the series, Ryan overpowered the Mets early, before an offensive onslaught led to five runs. Keith Hernandez had the key hit, a two-run triple that got the ball rolling in the right direction and helped even the series.

Curt-in Call
Curt Schilling would go on to win two World Series with the Red Sox, but in his Phillies days, he had a few intriguing matchups with the Mets. The most notable of those came on May 23, 1999, when Schilling took a 4-0 lead into the bottom of the ninth inning.

The Mets rallied in a fashion resemblant of some of their best wins in 1986, scoring five runs. John Olerud got the winning hit, a walk-off single with two outs.

Beating Mariano
Mariano Rivera has only one blown save against the Mets, but in came in an amazing game. On July 10, 1999, the Mets beat the Yankees, 9-8 on Matt Franco’s two-run two-out single in the bottom of the ninth. The Mets persevered in a gutty effort, surviving six Yankees home runs to win.

Measuring up to the Big Unit
Randy Johnson had a losing regular season against only one National League team. He finished 6-7 against the Mets, but it’s a postseason loss for which he’s best known. In Game 1 of the 1999 NLDS, after the Mets had just won four straight games (including a one-game playoff in Cincinnati) just to make the postseason, the Mets hammered Johnson for seven runs in an 8-4 victory. Attach a bit of an asterisk here because the Mets got the game-winning hit (Edgardo Alfonzo’s grand slam)off reliever Bobby Chouinard, but Johnson took the defeat nonetheless.

Rocking the Rocket
Mets fans have taken great satisfaction in their success against Roger Clemens, primarily because it’s viewed as payback for both his beaning of Mike Piazza and his throwing a bat shard at Piazza during Game 2 of the 2000 World Series.

Take your pick among Clemens’ six losses to the Mets for the best one. We like two in particular, a 12-2 drubbing on June 9, 2000, and an 8-0 win on June 15, 2002. The former featured a Piazza grand slam. The latter was highlighted by Shawn Estes, missing on his attempt to hit Clemens with a ball, but clobbering a Clemens pitch for a home run later in the game.

There are those who say Clemens got what he deserved for another reason. Next time you watch a replay of Game 6 of the 1986 World Series, check out the shot of Clemens celebrating in the Red Sox bullpen, which was defaced with a huge “RC” in red spray paint.


http://espn.go.com/blog/new-york/mets/p ... g-the-best

attgig
Apr 07 2011 10:36 AM
Re: Remembering the Mets - 50 Years

"5-- Feeling down about the Mets coming into 2011? At least it’s not 1963, when the Mets followed up their 120-loss season. The famous story told in the 1981 book This Date in Mets History is that after the Mets' first pitch of the season sailed wide, a fan in the upper deck of the Polo Grounds yelled loud enough for the ballpark to hear: “Wait ‘till next year!”"

that sounds like family guy ripped off this smart alec remark for their infamous mets joke.