Master Index of Archived Threads
"They've got their Number"
Frayed Knot Aug 09 2007 08:17 PM |
Is there a more meaningless and over-used cliche in sports?
|
Willets Point Aug 09 2007 08:32 PM |
They came at night leaving fear behind
|
metirish Aug 09 2007 08:34 PM |
"We battled "might be just as overused...."They've got their Number" of course can be said as "he's got his number" when a hitter has great numbers against a pitcher or like Chpper has the Mets number....yeah it''s overused.
|
Edgy DC Aug 09 2007 09:13 PM |
I got it.
|
Frayed Knot Aug 09 2007 09:15 PM |
At least the stuff like "We battled" is just intended to be nothing more than a cliche to say that you played hard.
|
DocTee Aug 09 2007 09:45 PM |
Put your game face on.
|
SteveJRogers Aug 10 2007 06:17 AM |
|
That is something that annoys me whenever someone makes lists of (insert team here) Killers. The reason such a term should exist is for the likes of; Tommy Hutton with Tom Seaver, or Joe McEwing with Randy Johnson. Guys who usually are mediocre or terrible players, whom for whatever reason just play better against that pitcher (or hitter) or team. You shouldn't lump a pretty darn decent player like a Chipper Jones (or dare I say Derek Jeter) into that category, because he does the same to every other team. Chipper is a Met villian, he named his kid "Shea" and I'm sure he enjoys beating the Mets more than most teams in the league. However, the term "Met Killer" almost implies that the Mets are the only team that he does well against.
|
Edgy DC Aug 10 2007 06:56 AM |
|
Or, as Dmitri Young might say, whoop-de-whoo.
|
Frayed Knot Aug 10 2007 07:19 AM |
"The reason such a term should exist is for the likes of; Tommy Hutton with Tom Seaver, or Joe McEwing with Randy Johnson. Guys who usually are mediocre or terrible players, whom for whatever reason just play better against that pitcher (or hitter) or team"
|
metirish Aug 10 2007 07:23 AM |
|
From the post game.
|
Edgy DC Aug 10 2007 07:31 AM |
If believeing that they've had our number gets David Wright motivated, I'll go with it.
|
Frayed Knot Aug 10 2007 07:40 AM |
At least even our cliche-spouting 3rd baseman doesn't buy into the notion that future losses are inevitable on account of this 'number possession' thing.
|
Centerfield Aug 10 2007 09:48 AM |
We had St. Louis's number in the regular season last year.
|
Willets Point Aug 10 2007 10:22 AM |
I recall that the Mets had the Dodgers' number in 1988. Then they stuck the number in their pants pocket and forgot to take it out before it went in the laundry. The Mets tried to open up the amorphous lump of pulp, but the number was washed away. They tried calling information but the Dodgers' number was unlisted.
|
Benjamin Grimm Aug 10 2007 10:27 AM |
The 1988 NLCS taught me never to be too confident going into a postseason series.
|
Willets Point Aug 10 2007 10:39 AM |
That should be "cahn-fident!"
|
Gwreck Aug 10 2007 11:01 AM |
|
Curious, what do you make of Pat Burrell (11.5% of his ABs against the Mets, but 18% of his HRs)?
|
Frayed Knot Aug 10 2007 11:37 AM |
|
Nothing more other than that a larger number of his HRs have occured against the Mets than the norm would suggest. Where I would NOT take it is to blind acceptance that such an inequity is a lock to continue because it's the result of some kind of unalterable fact of life. My objection to the cliche is not that these inequities don't happen. Variations from the norm ARE the norm. It's when the 'got the number' line is used as a substitute for any kind of intellectual reasoning for explaining why something happened as it did or whether it will continue to happen in the future. Burrell HAS hit a lot of HRs against the Mets. But I don't buy the notion that if the team adds a pitcher he's never faced before - or faced but with poor results - that his HR rate is about to take a jump because said pitcher is now wearing NYM pajamas.
|
Nymr83 Aug 10 2007 02:16 PM |
I'm personally not willing to buy that a guy can own a team anymore than I'm willing to buy that a guy can be a "clutch hitter." Thats not to say that a hitter can't own a pitcher or a pitcher own a batter, its also not to say that there can't be something about a ballpark that helps a player out more than most (maybe Burrell really likes the temperature at Shea, gets a good look at the ball with no fans sitting in the outfield, and enjoys the calming sound of airplanes while he bats)
|
SteveJRogers Aug 10 2007 03:14 PM |
|
The other faulty part of the logic is this, that "Team A has Team B's number" statement also implies that the two teams still have the same roster makeup since the last time that was a vaild argument. Take for example, Braves vs. Mets. Chances are the "rivalry" that people still bring up when they say "The Braves STILL have the Mets number" is the run from 1998 to, lets say 2001. In 2001 the Mets finished in third but still were over .500 and had an outside shot of the postseason heading into the final week or so. We all know what has happened since. Anyway, the last 2001 Met to be on the Mets was Steve Traschel, and both he and Mike Piazza were the only ones left on the 2005 Mets, when you can say their recent "era" began. Hence all the Mets since know is that the Braves just were the top dog for all those years. Now lets look at the Braves since 2001: Bobby Cox Chipper Jones John Smoltz Andruw Jones Brian Jordan was reaccquired in 2005 and I presume retired after last season. Julio Franco was around untill 2005, went back last month but has since been DFA'd. Rafael Furcal, Wilson Betemit, and Marcus Giles were around untill 2006. Not too many holdovers from the "glory days" when Braves-Mets was considered one of the hottest rivalries in sports. Why was it considered? I'm not really sure. In any event, that should officially discredit any notion that the Braves "know how to beat the Mets because they've done it SO many times in the past" the way the "UGH, The Braves ALWAYS have the Mets number" crowd says.
|
Elster88 Aug 10 2007 07:07 PM |
I've got her number.
|
SteveJRogers Aug 10 2007 07:29 PM |
She does have Friends
|
Edgy DC Aug 10 2007 07:53 PM |
Miguel Olivo has Billy Wagner's number.
|