Saturday, August 20, 2011

Summer Baseball Tour 2011 - Citi Field

SAN DIEGO PADRES AT NEW YORK METS
AUGUST 8th, 2011

METS 9 - PADRES 8

Two relatively bad National League teams meeting for a four game series in early August rarely results in compelling baseball but the second game of the San Diego Padres and New York Mets series proved otherwise. The Mets are faced with the rather odd situation of being the second most popular within their own city, always taking a backseat to the more historically successful Yankees. When the Brooklyn Dodgers and the New York Giants moved to California in 1957, New York was left without a National League baseball club.  In 1962, the Mets filled that void and embraced both the Dodgers and Giants fan bases by using blue (the primary color of the Dodgers) and orange (the primary color of the Giants) as their team colors.The Mets have had their share of good and bad, most notably the 1969 Amazin' Mets and the infamous 1986 World Series victory over the Red Sox while also dealing with periods of underachieving and controversy.

Over the past six season,The Mets went from being one win away from clinching the National League pennant in 2006, to being major disappointments in 2007 and 2008 when they twice suffered catastrophic September collapses and have since settled in as a national irrelevance, and are on pace for a third consecutive sub .500 season. This season, Jose Reyes leads the NL with a .336 average and his 16 triples are best in the majors. When healthy Reyes is arguably the most dynamic player in the big leagues but the injury prone shortstop succumbed to another hamstring injury the game before we saw the Mets and was placed on the 15 day DL. Overall, the Mets rotation has struggled without ace Johan Santana who has missed the entire season with a shoulder injury and the Mets offense has been mediocre.

San Diego was last season’s biggest surprise that won 90 games but missed the postseason by one game after a September collapse, had no choice but to trade face of the franchise and perennial All Star Adrian Gonzalez before his contract expired at the end of 2011 where they would lose him to the highest bidder and receive nothing in return. Gonzalez was sent to the Red Sox and in return the Padres received 1B Anthony Rizzo and SP Casey Kelly, two of Boston’s top prospects and thus began the Padres extensive rebuild. This season the Padres have produced a team OPS of .655, the worst in the National League and the 68 total home runs they have hit are the lowest total in either league. San Diego is currently in last place in the NL West.

Mets RHP Mike Pelfrey
The pitching matchup Monday night was Tim Stauffer (7-8, 2.96) versus Mike Pelfrey (6-9, 4.48). Stauffer has been a reliable starter for San Diego this season, following last season where he was used primarily as a reliever and posted a 1.85 ERA in 82.2 innings. However, when you dig deeper into the numbers it’s obvious that Petco Park, the Padres notoriously pitcher friendly home, plays a significant role in Stauffer’s overall numbers; in 75 innings at Petco he’s accumulated a 2.64 ERA, but when isolating his stat line to the 78 innings he’s pitched on the road, that number rises to 4.38. Pelfrey has been a full time start with the Mets since 2008 and he's been inconsistent. Last season was his best to date, posting a 3.53 ERA in 204 innings but he doesn't miss many bats (career 5.07 K/9) and hasn't lived up to the expectations that come with being the ninth overall pick, which he was in 2005.

Citi Field
Citi Field, 2009
Citi Field is located in Flushing, New York within the borough of Queens near Arthur Ashe Stadium and the home of the US Open. Citi Field was built to replace the decrepit Shea Stadium, home of the Mets from 1964 to 2008. It’s another ballpark modeled in the retro classic model, the exterior consisting mainly of bricks. In terms of architecture the design is relatively bland. Citi Field has large concourses and various dining options. The Jackie Robinson rotunda, located at the home plate entrance, is a rousing tribute to bravery and courage of the man who broke baseball’s color barrier and a classy gesture by the Mets organization. Citi Field is a quality modern baseball stadium, but the lack of any pre-game atmosphere dampens the overall fan experience.

Location of Seat

View from Section 513 at Citi Field
Section 513 – Row 1 – Seat 4
These seats were in the first row of the upper deck, right behind home plate. You get a good centered view of the field and the video board is directly in your line of sight. The only downside is the big black protective railing which, depending on how you position yourself in your seat, restricts your view of the game much more than the see-through protective railings you see at many other ballparks.

The protective railing could be altered to augment the viewing experience from the upper deck
Monday, August 8th 
LINEUPS

SAN DIEGO
RF Will Venable
SS Jason Bartlett
CF Cameron Maybin
1B Jesus Guzman
2B Orlando Hudson
LF Kyle Blanks
3B Luke Forsythe
C Luis Martinez
PH Blake Tekotte

Pitchers
SP Tim Stauffer
RP Chad Qualls
RP Heath Bell
Batting third and playing third base, #5 David Wright
NEW YORK
CF Angel Pagan
2B Justin Turner
3B David Wright
1B Lucas Duda
LF Jason Bay
RF Willie Harris – Jason Pride
C Ronny Paulino
SS Ruben Tejada
PH Mike Baxter

Pitchers
SP Mike Pelfrey
RP Pedro Beato
RP Ryota Igarashi
RP Jason Isringhausen


Duda caps 9th innings rally with walkoff single off of All Star closer Heath Bell
My expectations weren’t that high for a game between two bad teams sending out mediocre pitchers in a half empty ballpark but baseball is a funny game and the Padres and Mets delivered a memorable evening of unscripted theater. The game seemed over when All Star close Heath Bell entered in the bottom of the ninth with a two run lead, but the Mets battled and Lucas Duda was the hero when he ripped a two RBI single off of Bell that handed the Mets an improbable walkoff win. Earlier in the game, Angel Pagan, Jason Bay, and David Wright all homered for New York while the Padres used the sixth and the eighth to do the majority of their damage. It wasn't elite baseball but it was an exciting game.

Next stop on the Summer Baseball Tour 2011: Yankee Stadium for Los Angeles Angels and New York Yankees.

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