Master Index of Archived Threads
Retired Number Survey
Swan Swan H Jul 18 2013 08:39 AM |
Lots of talk about retired numbers lately, spurred on by the mention of Mike Piazza's upcoming induction into the Mets HOF as well as the presence of retired Mets favorites like Doc, Darryl, Franco, Ventura, Gibbons, Johnson and Piazza at the All-Star weekend, and, oh yes, the starting NL right fielder in that game, fella named Beltran who played here for a while.
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TransMonk Jul 18 2013 08:52 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
I didn't weight in on the other thread, but I would not retire any more numbers at this time.
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metirish Jul 18 2013 08:52 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
I'm confused by the voting process.
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seawolf17 Jul 18 2013 08:54 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
I think you could retire 31 for Franco/Piazza -- it had a solid 15-year run with two guys who are All-Time Mets. I love Keith, but I understand not retiring it; same for Gary/Doc/Darryl.
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Swan Swan H Jul 18 2013 08:55 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
A poll only allows for yes or no. I want to weigh the voting, so a first place vote is worth more than a second place vote.
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Swan Swan H Jul 18 2013 08:57 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
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John's generosity in releasing 31 to Piazza does make this confusing, as does the number he chose to take, which I still think of as Tug's number.
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seawolf17 Jul 18 2013 09:00 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
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Plus PEDRO. Let Wheeler make 45 his bitch, then we retire it in 2030 for Tug/Franco/Pedro/Wheeler.
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Swan Swan H Jul 18 2013 09:01 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
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Sweet idea. I'll be there. You can buy me a Geritol.
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metirish Jul 18 2013 09:02 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
Ok, right now I retire Piazza....I wouldn't argue against Mex....but what about Mookie etc then?
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Frayed Knot Jul 18 2013 09:30 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
None.
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bmfc1 Jul 18 2013 09:38 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
1) 31
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RealityChuck Jul 18 2013 09:49 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
1. 31
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Ceetar Jul 18 2013 09:50 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
1) 31
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Swan Swan H Jul 18 2013 09:56 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
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There is some precedent for the sort of thing you recommend for Mays, most specifically Hank Aaron's 44 being retired by the Milwaukee Brewers.
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bmfc1 Jul 18 2013 10:10 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
Thank you Swan Swan H. (And we saw that the Brewers gave out a Hank Aaron bobblehead. A Willie Mays bobblehead--and a day--would be nice.)
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Mets – Willets Point Jul 18 2013 10:29 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
I kind of like numbers living on to be used for multiple stars, a la 31 and 45. Of course, you have to police the good numbers less they grace the backs of scrubs.
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Ceetar Jul 18 2013 10:32 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
31 is a given imo.
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John Cougar Lunchbucket Jul 18 2013 10:37 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
I'd be for "retiring" No. 86 as a means of acknowledging the volume of contributors to that team without singling out anyone whose Met careers were problematic for number-retirement for reasons of short tenures, flameouts, unimpressive overall bodies of work, etc etc.
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LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr Jul 18 2013 10:39 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
31
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Edgy MD Jul 18 2013 10:58 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
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Abstract number retirement honorees are an interesting ancillary issue. In addition to 86, other prospects would be 69 (for similar reasons) and 62 or 64 for Bill Shea --- whose name is already there anyhow --- designating him either as the father (spiritually anyhow) of the 1962-launched team, or the 1964-launched stadium that bore his name. The '69 notion occurred to me way back-back-back when Ms. Met was decrying the insult of not retiring 20 for Tommie Agee, because the 1969 team was insufficiently honored. Bam! Retire a number that's never issued anyhow. The Bill Shea thing, I think, was something Bucket brought up while appearing on SNY. 62 has been issued three times: to Hubie Brooks for, like, a day, as a September callup, to Juan Lopez as an interim coach, and to Elvin Ramirez during his multiple callups last year --- the last one being on the only mindful issuance. 64 went to Elmer Dessens during his multiple trips to town in 2009 and 2010, and to Josh Stinson during a September 2011 callup. No real harm in taking those out of circumluation either.
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seawolf17 Jul 18 2013 11:08 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
I still don't get why Casey's 37 is retired.
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batmagadanleadoff Jul 18 2013 11:12 AM Re: Retired Number Survey Edited 3 time(s), most recently on Jul 18 2013 11:16 AM |
I like the way this survey is phrased. I think it's kinda pointless to ask which number or numbers the team (owners) should retire because here, there are no rules. The owners are free to retire whatever number or numbers they wish to retire, whether it's Mike Piazza'a old uni or Jay Kleven's. It's their team and these decisions are some of the spoils. When we engage in this uni retirement talk, what we're really wondering or debating, is what numbers we would retire if we owned the team. So with that out of the way, if I owned the Mets, the only numbers I'd retire are 31 for Piazza and 17 for Keith. Next in line for consideration only, would be Doc and Darryl's unis followed by Koosman's. I'm not considering numbers of active players. I don't say that I'd retire 16 or 18 or 36, but that if there was some hierarchy or imaginary line of consideration, the last three would be at the front of my line. I shouldn't be surprised at how often Gary Carter's name comes up in this topic of conversation but I just don't see it. His Met legacy, in my eyes, is crucial - Carter was historically, one of the most important Mets in franchise history, no doubt, but at the same time, his Mets legacy is vastly overstated, and at the expense of the legacies of other Mets.
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Frayed Knot Jul 18 2013 11:13 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
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Essentially for the same reason as Mays: a NYC baseball icon even though only briefly a Met. Then throw in the part about being a media favorite who was present at the launching of the franchise.
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sharpie Jul 18 2013 11:17 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
None.
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Edgy MD Jul 18 2013 11:20 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
Surely you must get it. I mean, even if you disagree with it, you must certainly be able to glean what they were thinking.
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Chad Ochoseis Jul 18 2013 11:29 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
None. I don't want to have to drop $20 on a new Fafif t-shirt.
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Vic Sage Jul 18 2013 11:46 AM Re: Retired Number Survey |
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This... exactly this.
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batmagadanleadoff Jul 18 2013 12:00 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
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I missed FK's post about re-circulating 8 & 24. Sign me up for that, too.
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sharpie Jul 18 2013 12:03 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
I also endorse the 8 and 24 re-emergence.
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metirish Jul 18 2013 12:08 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
A while back I was at the local CVS....I was wearing my
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Frayed Knot Jul 18 2013 12:13 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
We all know that the Mays/24 thing was the result of some kind of promise made to Willie from Joan Payson. Now with Payson long gone and her relatives no longer connected with the club, and with Willie not really having connections either nor much of a family to object (he just out-lived his 2nd wife) I wonder if they're waiting for him to die in order to feel that the promise was fulfilled and #24 is fair game again.
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Swan Swan H Jul 18 2013 12:26 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
1) 31
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G-Fafif Jul 18 2013 12:29 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
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From the Brewers:
By 1979, when coach Willie Mays was inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame, he had spent 14 of 29 seasons representing New York's National League interests (15, counting the year he was wearing Uncle Sam's uniform), almost all of them as one of the undisputed legends of the game -- which he was, really, by 1952, no later than 1954. If upon his election to Cooperstown it was announced no Met will ever again wear 24, for essentially the same reason no Milwaukee player would wear 44 again, it would have been easily understood and widely applauded. Since he was still using his uniform, and the Mets had never retired a number while it was still on the back of someone wearing it, there was no prevailing reason to make a thing of it. Then came the Bally's job that took him officially out of baseball, the sale of the team to owners who had their own agenda, his eventual return to San Francisco's employ upon his reinstatement and, 30 years later -- with only 41 retired since 1979 -- it would be beyond the parameters of modern "if they didn't do it for this one, how could they do it for that one when he only did this as a Met?" sniping to retire 24 to honor a career and a man who touched multiple generations as National League New York's own. That said, hell yes. 1) 24 (listed first because they better get on this soon if it's not to be posthumous; and invite Kelvin Torve to the ceremonies) 2) 17-8-18-16 (the greatest team and era in franchise history was defined at its topline by all four of them; Kid going into the HOF complicates my instinct to make it just 17, and from there, I can't leave out the homegrown yang of Darryl and Doc as it applies to Kid's and Mex's acquired yin) 3) 31 (hopefully academic to ownership once he's in the Hall with a fun little NY on his cap) Save a space for 5.
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86-Dreamer Jul 18 2013 12:29 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
1. 31
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Chad Ochoseis Jul 18 2013 12:30 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
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I was being a minor wiseass here, but I really would vote none. I like that Mets management has been conservative in retiring numbers. It's tough to make a case for retiring 31 but not (ultimately) 15. Both were established stars who came to the Mets mid-career. Both had great careers as Mets, and both spent about the same amount of time as Mets. Both have a good chance of getting into the HOF, and both have a good chance of going in with Mets caps.
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Ceetar Jul 18 2013 12:56 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
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Both were amazing in the postseason but didn't win rings. Both made the final outs. I remember, i think anyway, when Derek Bell came to the Mets and specifically asked Gooden about wearing 16. That might be the route to go with 24 and 8. (hint, d'Arnaud, hint..) Have them ask permission, feed them a line about idolizing them or something. Give it to a top ranked guy like that and I think it'd be hard to say no, and you break the ice. then even if they suck you've broken the seal and can give it to the next schlub you call up.
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Edgy MD Jul 18 2013 01:03 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
There are still PUH-lenty of ways to honor a guy without taking his number out of circulation. As far as I know, the Mets have never even made a public statement about unofficially retiring 8. So if Sandy or Kimmy would be unlikely to complain about d'Arnaud getting number 8 shortly after the Mets made a donation to the Gary Carter Foundation or named a field in St. Lucie after him. Any columnist that made a stink would look pretty foolish if the family is being gracious.
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dgwphotography Jul 18 2013 01:08 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
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I couldn't say it better.
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Centerfield Jul 18 2013 01:15 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
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I've heard this repeated many times, and some Met fans cite to the lack of numbers on the wall as a source of pride. "We don't just retire any number." I'm calling bullshit on this. The Mets have retired three numbers: 37, 14 and 41. (42 as retired by MLB) Seaver is a no-brainer. The other two are marginal. That means two-thirds of our retired numbers are questionable. Stengel won 175 games (19 fewer than Jerry Manuel) and posted a .302 win percentage. Colorful? Sure. He's a legend and people loved him. But retiring his number? Come on. This is silly. There is no way this would fly today. Hodges is, at least, a stronger candidate coming in at 339 wins, good for third on the Mets' all-time list. He also has a World Series title. But his win percentage comes in at .523, which is lower than Willie Randolph and Bud Harrelson. By illustration, Davey Johnson has the most wins, the highest win percentage, and a World Series title. I've heard people say that Gil was the heart and soul of the '69 team, but this is a silly argument to retire his number. By any objective standard, if Davey Johnson's number is not retired, then Hodges' number shouldn't be either. Whether or not to retire a number is obviously subjective, so there is no right or wrong answer. But pretending that the Mets hold to some higher standard and believing that this makes us better than the Yankees or any other franchise is a weak argument to me. I guess, if you are reaching, you can make the distinction that the Mets hold a higher standard when it comes to players rather than managers. So I guess one can take pride that the Mets retire the numbers of marginal managers only. I think it's going to become more and more rare that a player plays his whole career with one team (or at least as big a chunk as Seaver did with the Mets). I've often heard that this honor should be reserved for Hall of Famers who made their most significant contributions as a Met. That seems ok to me. Personally, I have no set criteria, but I think Piazza should qualify. As much as I love Beltran, I don't think he hits my cutoff.
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metsmarathon Jul 18 2013 01:18 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
i'm okay with not retiring any more numbers for a few more years. it would be cool and all, i suppose, but unnecessary.
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Edgy MD Jul 18 2013 01:24 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
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Of course not. But it wasn't today. It was a choice made at a different time in a very different context.
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Centerfield Jul 18 2013 01:38 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
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Agreed. And many of the numbers retired by the MFY's and other franchises, that some Met fans mock as frivolous, were made at a different time, and a different context. And those numbers look silly to us, just as someone without the base of knowledge can point to 37 and laugh.
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Edgy MD Jul 18 2013 01:44 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
Well yeah, true. In context, the weakest cases for the Yankees (Phil Rizzutto, Elston Howard, Billy Martin, Ron Guidry, Roger Maris) are all probably as strong or stronger than Casey's.
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Centerfield Jul 18 2013 01:55 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
Agreed. And this is not to say that retiring Casey's number was wrong in any way.
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Swan Swan H Jul 18 2013 02:17 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
This list of retired numbers from Baseball Reference shows quite a lot of range. Some of my favorite quirks or curiosities:
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Zvon Jul 18 2013 02:35 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
Without Casey the Mets have a totally different birth. He helped make those first few years bearable. He set a tone with the fans. No one else could have done what he did in the way he did it. That was important IMO.
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G-Fafif Jul 18 2013 02:49 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
I'm down with the Angels retiring whoever they want to retire, the MFYs retiring whoever they want to retire, the Pirates retiring whoever they want to retire (even though they waited more than three decades to do right by Ralph). Family business. I'm also for mocking the MFYs, of course, but still.
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Chad Ochoseis Jul 18 2013 03:35 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
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One trivia question I always meant to ask here is this: Name the five Mets not in the HOF who have had their numbers retired by a major league team. One, of course, is Gil Hodges. And I'm counting Rusty Staub even though his number is now unretired. To avoid threadjacking, I'll just post the other three in tiny type below: Ken Boyer - Cardinals Jim F. Fregosi - Angels Randy Freaking Jones - Padres
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batmagadanleadoff Jul 18 2013 03:38 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
Spahn, Berra and Mays?
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Edgy MD Jul 18 2013 03:40 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
"not in the HOF"
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Chad Ochoseis Jul 18 2013 03:43 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
Operative phrase is "not in the HOF"...answers can be cut and pasted from the post and blown up to normal size.
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batmagadanleadoff Jul 18 2013 03:52 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
Boyer and Fregosi, the latter I got thanks to your hint.
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Swan Swan H Jul 19 2013 02:40 PM Re: Retired Number Survey |
OK, the results are in, and it's a landslide not only for first place but for second as well. Several of you voted in a manner that was, let's say, contrary to the guidelines, but this is for fun so I tried to divvy up the points as I think you intended them to be allocated.
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