Friday, May 11, 2007

Toto, I don't think we're in the NL Central anymore

Game 34: Brewers 4, Mets 5
22-12 for the season

the Brewers came to Shea today with the best record in baseball, having won 24 and lost only 10. though the Mets had a good road trip (5 for 7 in Arizona and San Francisco), the Brewers just finished an even more impressive home stand (9 of 10), so I was not optimistic about our chances going into this game. Jeff Suppan, who killed the Mets in the NLCS last year, was on the mound for the Brewers, and though Jorge Sosa pitched well his last time out, he was hardly a sure thing against a red hot Milwaukee lineup. however, I failed to control for the fact that 17 of those 24 wins have come against the NL Central and that three more were against the Nationals. the Brewers were the ones who had something to prove at Shea tonight, and indeed they proved that they've played very well against mediocre teams.




though Sosa walked the Brewers lead-off man, LoDuca caught him stealing (he's got 10 of 16 runners, 63%. no one ran against him again for the rest of the game. I have to admit, with Paulie behind the plate and in the clubhouse, I don't miss Mike Piazza at all. ). Jorge retired the next 9 batters, and gave up just four hits in the 6 and 2/3 innings he pitched. Two of them were solo homers, but with only one walk (that very first batter) until the 7th inning, Sosa had a good outing, and the fans let him know it when he was replaced by Pedro Feliciano with two outs in the top of the 8th after giving up the second of two walks. Feliciano had a great strike-out against the pinch hitter Corey Hart, and was replaced on the mound by Aaron Heilman in the top of the 8th.

Aaron had a fantastic road trip, but looked like he'd left his arm in San Francisco, giving up an infield hit to Weeks and then a home run to Hardy, bringing the Brewers within a run of tying up the game. But Heilman battled back, striking out Prince Fielder (son of Cecil, with a duplicate of his father's body) and retiring the next two batters to end the inning. Billy Wagner pitched as brilliantly as he has all season, bringing his ERA down to an astounding 0.58 after 16 innings, and ending the game in less than 2.5 hours.




how about that 4th inning? though it can't change last October, it sure felt good to watch the Mets beat up Jeff Suppan (though in fairness, they could have done better-- Reyes stranded two at the end of the inning). Easley's homer in the 7th turned out to be necessary for the win, thanks to the homer Heilman gave up to Hardy in the top of the 8th. Both Wright and Delgado hit (which was especially nice to see, again, against Suppan, and because they're the guys who need to be getting the grove right about now), and LoDuca continued his hitting streak.

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