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Eggs Mayonnaise

All In With The Nuts
MARLINS_METS_BASEBALL.sff_NYS108_20060918222207.jpg


Mets Clinch First Division Title in 18 Years

NEW YORK (AP) -- They soaked themselves in wine and beer, then ran out of their clubhouse to go back on the field, jump up and down some more and share the glee with their fans.

Ending nearly two decades of disappointment in their division and days of delay, the New York Mets brought the NL East title back to Shea Stadium for the first time since 1988 with a 4-0 victory over the Florida Marlins on Monday night.

Then they celebrated as if they had won the World Series.

"If this is what playoff baseball in New York is like, to me it's the best," David Wright said before sticking a cigar in his mouth and high-fiving fans in the first row during the 90-minute postgame celebration.

Jose Valentin, one of their unexpected stars, homered twice. Steve Trachsel, their longest-tenured player, combined with Guillermo Mota, Aaron Heilman and Billy Wagner on a four-hitter.

Fireworks shot off from behind the center-field wall when Cliff Floyd caught Josh Willingham's fly ball to left for the final out. The Mets rushed to the center of the diamond for a bouncing group hug near shortstop.

"I got that ball in my back pocket. For a small fee, I might give it up," Floyd said, laughing.

They are New York's "other team," often obscured by the crosstown Yankees, whose 26 World Series titles' dwarf the Mets' two. When the Yankees celebrate division titles -- they're closing in on their ninth straight -- they resemble corporate executives closing a deal with handshakes. For them, only World Series titles satisfy.

When the Mets win anything, it's time to let loose.

"If we win the World Series this year, it's not going to erase the Yankee mystique," Tom Glavine said. "They've done it year after year, and they deserve all the attention they get. We're just trying to play well and take some of that attention. But sure, we want our piece of the pie."

The Mets had hoped to clinch last week during a trip to Florida and Pittsburgh. But the 280 or so bottles of Freixenet Cordon Negro Extra Dry sparkling wine that had been flown from city to city were neatly arrayed in four trays outside the clubhouse before the game, as if to tantalize passing players.

By the fifth inning, when the Mets were up 3-0, Pedro Martinez was sitting on the edge of the dugout, wearing goggles -- perhaps in anticipation of sprayed sting in the celebration ahead. Possibly remembering the wild celebrations of 1969 and 1986, police deployed four mounted officers on watch behind the right-field fence.

"We accomplished the first step," Martinez said. "Now we have a big job to do and a great responsibility."

Led by the power of Carlos Beltran and Carlos Delgado, the pitching of Martinez and Glavine, the spark of Jose Reyes and Wright, and the closing of Wagner, the Mets took over the NL East lead for good with a 2-1 record on April 6 and put together the best record in the major leagues (91-58).

"It was a little bit frustrating because I wanted the guys to experience it right away," said manager Willie Randolph, a veteran of six World Series titles as a Yankees player and coach.

"It's that adrenaline that you get. It's that real euphoric feeling you get knowing that you accomplished something. Having said that, I've been through this many times. We have a lot to do, man. We've just scratched the surface of how good this team can be."

Just two years removed from a 71-91 finish that led to the hirings of Randolph and general manager Omar Minaya, the Mets ended the reign of the Atlanta Braves, who had won 14 straight division titles, including 11 in a row since their move to the NL East.

The Mets became the first team this season to clinch a playoff berth and can prepare for their first postseason appearance since 2000, when they won the wild card for the second straight season and lost to the Yankees in the World Series. The Mets are likely to meet St. Louis, Los Angeles or San Diego in the first round, starting in the first week of October.

A giddy crowd of 46,729 chanted, clapped and sang at festive Shea -- about 10,000 tickets were sold after Sunday's loss completed a three-game Pirates' sweep. Many arrived for batting practice, and fans already were on their feet cheering during the first inning.

Trachsel felt the buzz when he drove into the parking lot.

"Security guards and construction workers were screaming walking in: 'Get this thing done!'" he said.

Trachsel (15-7), who signed with the Mets in December 2000, allowed three hits in 6 1/3 innings and joined Gary Gentry (1969), Tom Seaver (1973), Dwight Gooden (1986) and Ron Darling (1988) as the only pitchers to win division clinchers for the Mets. Darling was on hand Monday night as a member of the team's broadcast crew.

Valentin, who took away the second-base job from Kaz Matsui early in the season, hit a two-run homer in the third inning off Brian Moehler (7-9), then earned his second curtain call of the night with a solo shot in the fifth. Floyd added an RBI single in the sixth.

"That was something," Valentin said, recalling the fan reaction. "That was a great feeling."

For Florida, though, the playoff picture grows more dire by the day. The Marlins began the night four games back in the wild-card race.

"We're in a tough position," manager Joe Girardi said. "We've got 12 games to go, and we got to win most of them."

Game notes
Delgado has the most games (1,703) among active players without a postseason appearance. ... When the Mets clinched their first division title in 1969, the game ended when the Cardinals' Joe Torre grounded into a double play -- Randolph's former mentor on the Yankees.
 
I went to see the Mets & the Jets when I was 19. I couldn't drink the beer, everyone told me I wasn't missing much.

The Jets was bizarre, at one point Bridgette Nielsen Stood up in the crowd a few rows from me and jiggled her tits at a quarter back she was shagging. It was an odd moment.
 
^^'Twas a linebacker, not a quarteback, name of Mark Gastineau. He's more famous now for being the ex-husband and the father of those reality tv sluts "The Gastineau Girls".

Yeah, yeah, the Mets din't win nuffink yet! NUFFINK!!

j/k, congrats, hopefully the Phils will be in this position sooner rather than later!
 
Great article from Newsday:
It's a Subway Express

Shaun Powell
Newsday Columnist
September 19, 2006

All throughout baseball, there's a fear of the inevitable, the unmistakable sign of the apocalypse, the queasy feeling that those uppity New Yorkers will give themselves another good reason to sneer at the rest of the country.

And so, a plea is being issued and a search begins to find someone, or some team, to save the sports world from the worst nightmare of anti-New Yorkers everywhere. With the baseball playoffs looming and the skies glooming, this burning question is searing a hole into the souls of those haters: Can anyone prevent Mets vs. Yankees?

If New York winds up with the World Series all to itself, a very real possibility, the rest of the country will turn to football. Such was the case back in 2000 when our city held an October baseball party and nobody west of Jersey bothered to RSVP. There simply wasn't much rooting interest anywhere else, and while the country does want someone to beat the Yankees, most would rather have that done by a team not from New York, to ensure there will be no celebrating in New York.

Problem is, everywhere you look, no one frightens the Mets or Yankees. All the serious contenders seem to have given up.

Really, now: Can you spot a 2004 Red Sox, or a 2002 Angels, or a 2001 Diamondbacks, or any of the Braves from the 1990s? Can you sift through the list of playoff stiffs this October and find someone with a gleam or a shine or a glass slipper or a trace of pixie dust? Didn't think so. That team doesn't exist. There's no one around that drips with destiny, that gives you the impression this is their year, that casts a domineering shadow over either New York team.

If anything, this is looking more like a brisk autumn stroll through Minnesota or San Diego or wherever the road to the championship will take the Mets and Yankees.

In the National League, especially, the posse chasing the Mets is armed with straws and spitballs. All season, the NL has failed to produce a challenger that can remotely match the Mets for talent and wins. It's a pretty sad picture when the compelling team of the moment is Philadelphia, and the Phillies might miss the playoffs. This is the weakest collection of division leaders and wild-card chasers in years.

The league is filled with flawed teams that get decent pitching every other Tuesday and Saturday. Here's all you need to know about the NL: Until the other day, the Florida Marlins were thick in the hunt.

The fire-sale-holding, Triple-A-looking, 7,000-fan base Florida Marlins. Those Marlins.

Elsewhere, the pitching is mostly pathetic and will doom any team hoping to silence a deep Mets lineup. In a fantasy world, Mike Piazza would give the Padres an edge by having a 2000 flashback.

In a perfect world, the Cardinals would finally wake up and ride Albert Pujols to another trip to the Series. More likely, the Mets will overcome their Pedro problem and do what they've done all year: crush what passes for competition.

Here's what's strange: About two months ago, the Yankees were perhaps third or fourth in the American League order, sitting beneath Boston and Detroit and the White Sox. There was even a question whether the Yankees were playoff-bound. Then, a funny thing happened: They went 5-for-5 in Boston, then the Central Division suffered a collective collapse. Right now, the Twins are playing the best ball and yet they're down a star pitcher, which will cripple them in a playoff series, if they're lucky enough to have one.

Baseball would get a real kick out of the tightwad Oakland Athletics giving the Yankees problems. You can almost hear the yuks: "Moneyball" showing moneybags how to get the most bang for the buck. Except you figure the A's and their pocket-change payroll will eventually be exposed and shrivel up like a Wal-Mart suit once the October heat gets turned up.

As we inch closer to October, we're also coming closer to the truth. So we might as well admit it: The team that frightens the Mets and Yankees is each other.
Personally, I don't want a Subway Series. It was novel back in 2000, but the way the rest of the country shuns it kinda takes the fun out of it. I like the idea of a Mets-Oakland series, since they met in '73 and Oakland kicked their asses. I think the outcome would be a little different this time...
 
Eggs Mayonnaise said:
Great article from Newsday:

Personally, I don't want a Subway Series. It was novel back in 2000, but the way the rest of the country shuns it kinda takes the fun out of it. I like the idea of a Mets-Oakland series, since they met in '73 and Oakland kicked their asses. I think the outcome would be a little different this time...
subway_dsc02117.jpg
 
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