Sunday, May 21, 2006
SUBWAY SERIES 2006
It was, at once, less epic and more epic than I imagined it would be And I mean “epic” in the traditional definition of the word: Webster puts it as “extending beyond the usual or ordinary especially in size or scope”. It was David vs. Goliath, it was the underdogs triumphing against evil. The Mets spent the previous week downplaying the entire series which was a colossally right thing to do, because the mindfuck would have otherwise overpowered them to the point where the MFY’s would have triumphed.
You can say it’s just another game, that interleague play is stupid at this point, but in a town like New York, which has a cross-town sports rivalry that DOES NOT EXIST ANYWHERE ELSE IN THE COUNTRY (don’t start. just don’t. because you know i’m right), it’s not just another game. It starts on the streets, on the way to the game, when an elderly Hispanic gentleman wearing Yankee gray tipped his hat and said, “Best wishes to your team in the series.” The gaggle of Polish kids in Yankee colors who avoided my subway car - lone threatening Mets fan that I apparently appear to be. It was the 7 train rounding the corner at Court Square and riding in the front car in the front window, two Mets fans dressed to the nines and flying the colors. It was the way the Mets fans and the Yankees fans angled themselves to be at opposite ends of subway cars.
It would have been dumb in the extreme to drive to this game (not because of the traffic, we drive back roads and I don’t see it much) but I was glad to have taken the subway because it is part and parcel of the entire experience. Not just because some moron chooses to call it “the Subway Series” but because the subway is the lifeline of this city and the 7 train to Shea is pretty much exactly the way John Rocker described it once (without, of course, the gratuitously racial and sexist slurs). Add a game into the mix and you have Joe Yuppie and his buddies, ties stuck in their back pockets, drinking beer out of paper bags, German tourists who just want to see an American baseball game, a guy on a date with a girl who is going to freeze her ass off in her cute little date outfit, sandals, and woefully inadequate raincoat, and all the 7 train regulars who dread big game nights because it means the number of people that are jockeying for seats multiply, while they are just trying to get home quietly.
Watching the Yankees lined up in front of the dugout during the National Anthem induced almost physical pain. The sisters next to me when they arrived during batting practice: “It’s so WRONG to see them on our field!” For all of that—and given the amount of “Yankees Suck!” chants that erupt on any given night that the Yankees aren’t at Shea, the crowd on the mezz was more subdued than I had envisioned. It wasn’t for lack of Yankees fans around, even though this time apparently Mets fans did actually show up and represent for a change (unlike other series where the Yankees fans dominated because it was so easy to get a ticket).
But, then, the games. On our feet, pacing, chanting, wanting to get in the face of the arrogant Yankee fans but wondering if we really do have a leg to stand on, first place in the division or not. The ups, the downs. Randy Johnson, who, once upon a time, back in, oh, say, 1995, I actually quite *liked*. Heilman rescuing Gonzales. And then, back to David vs. Goliath in the real sense, DW faces Mariano Rivera AND shoots a ball over *Johnny Damon*’s head...
and there was much rejoicing. I stood there, watching the dugout erupt, watching David Wright practically skip down the first base line, and understood: no, it’s not just another game.
Sunday night I was by myself in the upper deck, grabbing a ticket off the drop because I really wanted to see Glavine pitch against the Yankees. Ooops. But, still, even surrounded by Yankee fans (who also can get in on a drop the same way I could), it was the same epic battle. The David Wright home run, I saw it bounce into the picnic area and then I lost track, dancing for joy in front of my seat. Duaner Sanchez (who is my boyfriend’s NSMC, non-sexual man crush, a term stolen from the brilliant Bat Girl) coming through in the clinch, and Billy Wagner - who the Yankees fans had been yelling for all night - when he came out, he probably would have gotten booed—except that this action reminded us that he was OUR guy, and instead he got an ovation—Billy Wagner pulled it out. A very Willie move, and he had to come out and face them again. He had to.
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Posted by metsgrrl at 02:20 AM |
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Sunday, May 14, 2006
Mets vs. Brewers, the weekend series
It is Friday night, and I am itching because the Mets are on the road and the only way I can see them is if I walk down to the Turkey’s Nest, and while there are women who visit this particular bar on their own, I am not one of them.
I pick up the phone. I call Time Warner Cable. I make inquiries. I decline and hang up the phone.
15 minutes later I do it again. “If I order SNY now, how long do I have to wait before I have it?”
“You’ll have service before you hang up the phone.”
That did it. 30 minutes later, I am watching first pitch in Milwaukee, and caught the whole series, or as much of it as I could, overcoming my I-don’t-like-watching-baseball-on-TV assertion. However, I may have been the one who managed to jinx the series for us - although TBF asserts that it is his fault, that he drove up to Milwaukee on Sunday to catch the game, and that he will never ever go see the Mets play on the road ever again.
Saturday’s game did earn Mr. LoDuca the purchase of a t-shirt with his number on it. Although I liked him so much better before Willie rescinded the facial hair ban.
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Posted by metsgrrl at 02:15 AM |
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Friday, May 05, 2006
May 5, 2006: Mets vs. Braves
If you were there, you know, and maybe it isn’t so dramatic to you if you have been through one of these Great Adventure-style-rollercoaster of an extra-innings game before, but for me, it was some kind of great parable acted out on a baseball field.
The Braves. Again. After last weekend’s trip to our personal chamber of horrors - WHERE WE TOOK THE SERIES!! - to face them at home.
I don’t have SNY at home - we are waiting for TBF to come home for good before we make that investment - but I can finally listen to a baseball game on the radio, and that combined with Gameday on the Mets web site is enough for me to follow. I find that, unsurprisingly, that I prefer listening to the game to watching it on TV, my imagination can put the tiny players on the field and make them move around like I’m playing Risk—or something like that.
But this game! Me understanding vividly why they refer to Trachsel as “the human rain delay.” Reyes/Delgado/FLOYD, “that tall glass of chocolate milk,” as per my seatmates. I love watching Billy Wagner walk in, extended ridiculous theatrics and all. It’s perfect. Even the fact that you have seen it before doesn’t change it, it makes it better, like knowing that Bruce Springsteen is going to jump on the piano at some point during “Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out”.
Somewhere around the 10th inning we got restless. People behind me are switching seats. “What are you *doing*,” one friend asks the other. “You’re gonna ruin our mojo.” He moves back. We are all bemoaning the fact that beer sales were discontinued three innings earlier. By the 12th inning, we start surmising that if we, in fact, begin what looks like AN ENTIRE OTHER GAME, perhaps the beer regulation should be revoked. TBF sends a text informing me that he believes there will be another 7th inning stretch in inning 14… which there is.
And shortly after which Mr. Wright brought it all home for us, 14 innings, I drift off to the 7 train on the phone to the baseball-fanatic-friends out West: “I just got out of my first extra-innings game.” I come back home to Brooklyn dazed and smiling and utterly unable to fall asleep, like a 10-year-old kid.
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Posted by metsgrrl at 02:01 AM |
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Tuesday, April 18, 2006
April 18, 2006: Mets vs. Braves
When I started learning about baseball, TBF introduced me to the concept of “Triple Happiness”: Mets win, Braves lose, Yankees lose.
The Braves. Our nemesis. Our division rivals. I understand this well. I know all about John Rocker and Mr. Jones and who we are booing and why. (The booing. That is something that never happened in my baseball experiences out West. You would be ejected from the park if you booed. I know, because I did the first game I ever went to [along with a handful of other East Coasters] and we were chastised for un-sportsman-like behavior.)
So I understand, even more, the pain that ensues with a 7-1 loss.
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Posted by metsgrrl at 01:53 AM |
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Sunday, April 16, 2006
April 16, 2006: Mets v. Brewers
Easter Sunday. No point in trying to work, so I headed to Shea. Upper deck was $2 but I couldn’t sit in row V, so I sprang for a upper deck box seat. Mr. Met played Easter Bunny. Home runs from Nady and Delgado. Beautiful sunny day. I drive out to Coney Island afterwards for hot dogs and sea air.
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Posted by metsgrrl at 01:49 AM |
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Friday, April 14, 2006
April 14, 2006: Mets vs. Brewers
My first encounter with a rain delay. I headed for Shea a little late and when I transferred to the 7 at Court Square, my phone went off with a text from TBF, informing me that first pitch was delayed. At that point, unless I wanted to go back home and get the car, or ditch the game (fat chance), I pretty much had to head to Shea and wait it out. This time I was in our seats since my loge-friends were on vacation - but at least our seats are under the overhang, by quite a comfortable margin. Unless there’s serious wind blowing rain won’t impact us all season.
I [heart] our seats. In fact, I like them more than LA & M’s loge seats, because we are straight up from third base, even if we are one more level up. There was an elderly couple in the seats next to me, keeping score, and they had binoculars. I know I have a pair somewhere, which would seem to be welcome equipment on a weekly basis.
The highlight of the rain delay was watching Mets Weekly reruns on Diamondvision, so I could see Wright and Floyd on MTV’s Total Request Live (something which, had I known about in advance, would have had *somebody* TiVO). Highest of high comedy.
Tonight I finally got to meet my compatriots for the rest of the year. The row behind us is a lot of very smart, very fanatic, very funny people, who know a fucking LOT about baseball. There was the token Yankees fan in full regalia in the front row of the section, and a random single guy in between us who felt the need to yell, “YANKEES SUCK!” about every 7 minutes - which would of course cause the MFY fan to get up and posture, various insults be yelled back and forth, and then the whole cycle would begin again in another 10 minutes: “IN CASE YOU FORGOT: YANKEES SUCK!” Again, highest of high comedy.
Yeah, we took the Marlins, 9-3.
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Posted by metsgrrl at 01:46 AM |
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Friday, April 07, 2006
April 7, 2006: Mets vs. Marlins
The first game of the season! Finally. This year, I am all about taking the 7 train and not driving, saving gas, conserving, plus it really is an easy commute from home… there is very little excuse (okay, at least there isn’t on the way out to Shea; coming home, waiting for the G train, I manage to come up with a long list).
You would think that after everything I went through to get my seats, that I would have been running upstairs to sit in them… but for some reason I chickened out and snuck into the Loge to sit with my friends who also have the Tuesday-Friday plan - let’s call them LA and M for short. I didn’t even go upstairs to watch some of the game from the seats. I think I was afraid to compare them to LA & M’s seats or that maybe I made the wrong decision (I had to do this on my own, since TBF was working out of town at the time).
But a chance to check out the new guys, and see the old favorites. It was big and overwhelming and reminding me how much I still have to learn about baseball.
Oh, and we won.
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Posted by metsgrrl at 01:43 AM |
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Sunday, April 02, 2006
April 2, 2006: Mets Workout Day
I was just going to roll up some time around noon, until a friend who also has the Tuesday-Friday plan mentioned he was going to get there at 10:30, and by the time we finish talking and I mention that I’d like to take some photos… we are now meeting at 10.
I wake up excited. Unreasonably so. It’s not even a game. But still, to wake up and pull out my Mets jersey and drive out to Shea for the first time this year is undeniably exciting.
I park under the Grand Central scurry across the parking lot towards gate A. While it is bright and sunny and unseasonably warm (and I am dressed accordingly), on the far side of the stadium it is windy and FREEZING and we have an hour and a half to wait… before the gates open up and I scurry down onto field level to the first section where I can get front row.
After all of that, and the anticipation of waiting, it was a little bit anti-climactic; just like watching batting practice with the Pepsi Party Patrol thrown in, nothing organized, no introductions, and without a yearbook most of us can’t tell the brand new players by face (and most of them are wearing jackets over their batting practice jerseys so we don’t have numbers to help us out).
We were there until 3, and it was warm enough to get sunburned, and I got a ton of great photos. Most of all, it was just great to be in the park again, the vivid blue and green reminding me of last summer, watching baseball.
And taking photos of David Wright’s ass.
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Posted by metsgrrl at 01:41 AM |
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Friday, March 31, 2006
:::DISCLAIMER:::
I freely admit that I know very little about baseball. I freely admit that I am learning (if you read anything above, you will note that there is zero attempt at posturing). There are many other excellent and smart individuals on the internet who can provide you with meaningful statistics and analysis; if you come here looking for that, it’s your own fault.
legal disclaimer:
Metsgrrl.com is in no way affiliated with, condoned or given any notice by the New York Metropolitans baseball club, who have their own website. Similarly, we have no association with the ownership group or any businesses related to the Mets. All article text is written by the authors, all pictures are taken by the authors, who retain copyright to their works. No copying or reproduction of any content here, photographic or otherwise, is authorized. Please email us if you wish to reproduce our work or put these photos on your blog (the answer will, most probably be no. Sorry.)
In other words: If you think this is the an official Mets web site, you need help. Don’t take the stuff that’s on here, especially without asking. Play nicely with the other children.
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Posted by metsgrrl at 11:34 PM |
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OUR STORY BEGINS…
When I started dating The Boyfriend (hereinafter TBF), for me to have objected to him being a baseball (and Mets) fanatic would have been like saying, “I don’t like the color of your eyes, can you do something about that?” I knew full well what I was getting into, and truthfully, thought it was something to be admired. It wasn’t that I didn’t like baseball, but that my father wasn’t a huge sports fan (only recently - as a result of All Of This—have I learned that he actually grew up an enormous baseball fan, cutting Hebrew School to sneak into Ebbets Field, and was one of those people who stopped following baseball once the Dodgers left Brooklyn) and I never dated anyone who had enough patience to explain any game to me. I had friends who were big baseball fans and so I have been to more than my share of games, especially when I was living out West, so it wasn’t like I hated baseball—I just didn’t know a damn thing about it.
In 2004, when I moved back to NYC, we went to one game together - I don’t know why we didn’t go to more, probably because I was dealing with moving and unpacking and settling in. But in 2005, that all changed.
I can’t tell you what it was, exactly; we were living together (for all intents and purposes) at that point so I had a better idea of how many games he was going to. And we didn’t have a lot of other plans for the summer. I do know that at some point I said, “I think we should plan on going to a lot more games this summer,” and, well, we did. I went to 10 games last year, at least two of which I went to on my own (after TBF had gone back to the Midwest to work for the year).
Having the friends-as-baseball-fanatics, as well as other friends who had the Tuesday-Friday plan, gave me a lot of ideas. From the friends-out-West I understood the importance of getting in on any kind of seasonal plan before the new stadium was reality.
And I liked it.
And I kept trying to talk to TBF about it, but he is, shall we say, a little more fiscally conservative than I am.
I had a really good month at work last November, about the time the Mets were emailing me to put down my deposit now for the 2006 season, and so I just did it, thinking that we would just talk about it later.
And then I got my phone call from Vito at Guest Services. I guess it’s time to talk to TBF.
He was a little speechless when I told him we were going to get the Tuesday-Friday plan for 2006. Good speechless, but it was a little scary for those first few seconds when he didn’t say anything.
I went out to Shea in December to pick out our seats, and give them the rest of our money, and started my first official season as a baseball fan on April 2, 2006.
This blog is an attempt to chronicle this first year. I wish I had had this brilliant idea back in December, and I could have started writing then. I am a writer, so generally, the way I remember things and work them out and commemorate important events is to write. But in this case, I was loving baseball even more because it was something I *didn’t* have to write about.
But, I’m a writer; I write. So I am starting this for real in June, and having to go back and reconstruct everything that happened before then. It is likely (okay, probable) that the early posts on here will suck as a result.
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Posted by metsgrrl at 11:31 PM |
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