New York Mets Fans' Bucket List
By Matthew Cerrone and David Wright
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Contents
Foreword by David Wright
1. Things to Know
#LOLMets
Laugh with the Comedians Who Are Mets Fans
Get Duped by Sidd Finch
Learn About Davey Johnson and the ’86 Mets
Understand Why Hodges Belongs in the Hall of Fame
Learn About the Other Mr. Met
2. Things to Do
Believe!
Cheer with Cowbell Man
Eat at Citi Field
Attend Mets Fantasy Camp
Fist Bump Mr. Met
Grow a Mustache Like Keith Hernandez
Experience the 7 Line
Learn a Lesson from Bill Buckner
Name Your Kid Shea
Run the Mr. Met Dash
Tour Citi Field
Throw Out the First Pitch
Go to a Playoff Game at Citi Field
Catch a T-Shirt from the Party Patrol
Go to Opening Day
Be Terrific Like Tom Seaver
Enjoy Some New York-Style Piazza
3. Places to Go
Visit Cooperstown
Go to a Brooklyn Cyclones Game
Tour the Mets Hall of Fame and Museum
Meet a Friend at the Apple
See the Mets on the Road
Go to Spring Training
Visit the Bases from Shea
4. Things to Hear
Get Metsmerized
Learn Stengelese
Listen to Bob Murphy
Meet the Mets
Chant Let’s Go Mets!
5. Things to Read
Check out The Bad Guys Won
Learn About Alderson in Baseball Maverick
Click on MetsBlog.com
Learn the Game from Keith Hernandez’s Pure Baseball
Pick Up a Copy of The Worst Team Money Could Buy
Relive The Year the Mets Lost Last Place
6. Things to See
Log On to #MetsTwitter
Watch Kiner’s Korner
Re-watch 1986 Mets— A Year to Remember
Again and Again
Acknowledgments
Sources
Foreword by David Wright
Bobby Valentine yelled into the dugout to me.
I was 18 years old, fresh off being drafted by the Mets, who were kind enough to fly out my family—my three brothers, my mom, and my dad—after I signed. It was my first time in New York, and I had just sat down in the dugout after taking batting practice. Hey, what are you doing? You think you’re going to hit without taking ground balls? Get your glove and get out to third base,
Valentine said.
I had never been so nervous to play a game of catch in my life. I had just signed my contract to start my career in the minor leagues and here I am playing catch next to Mike Piazza after my brothers had been pestering him for an autograph. It was my first time at Shea Stadium, and it was just such tremendous motivation for me to get back to play there.
For anybody who doesn’t believe that we were a Mets family, I can show them a picture currently framed in my dad’s office in Virginia. I couldn’t have been more than a couple of years old when it was taken, and the clothes are all outdated—my dad’s in stonewash jeans—and he’s wearing a Mets hat.
I can’t tell you what life would be like without baseball for me. It’s given me so much more than I ever could have dreamed, and getting a chance to call Citi Field and Shea Stadium my office is about as great as it gets for a baseball player.
The first time I stepped to the plate at Shea for my first major league at-bat, I did everything I could to breathe deep, remain calm, and soak it all in. However, all I could do was keep sneaking a look at the scoreboard to see myself in a Mets uniform on the Jumbotron.
It’s not about just coming to the ballpark and watching a baseball game for Mets fans. Our fans know the game. They know when you do something well—even if it’s something that doesn’t show up in the box score. They also know when you didn’t get the job done because it’s about more than just wins and losses to them.
When I’m struggling at the plate, I get thousands of hitting coaches talking to me on the streets of New York. They want to know you as a person, as a player. They want to offer advice, and I do try to listen. There’s a visible passion I feel when stopped on the street, and they think they can genuinely help you out by fixing your swing because they’ve been watching you since you were 18 years old. This speaks to the intensity for baseball in New York.
During the World Series in 2015, I would occasionally glance up for a few seconds to look over the crowd to see the joy on the faces of Mets fans that had our back for so long. To finally get a chance for them to come to Citi Field and see a World Series game, it was one of the most satisfying feelings that I’ve ever had as a professional baseball player. My teammates and I were finally playing in the World Series. But the reality is we had 50,000 fans at Citi Field—and countless more at home watching on TV—playing in the World Series with us.
As this book shows, there are so many ways to show love for this organization. I’ve even checked one thing off my own list by naming my daughter Olivia Shea Wright. I had a lot of memories at Shea, but it’s more a tip of the cap to the fans for accepting me the way they have. They’ve seen me make a ton of errors. They’ve seen me strike out. But that loyalty is still there. New York is a second home to me, and Shea Stadium is where it all began. Thank you for allowing me to live out my dream on one of the biggest stages in the world. And through The New York Mets Fans’ Bucket List, you’ll learn how to further experience all of the things that make being a Mets fan amazin’.
—David Wright
Bucket Ranking
The items throughout the book are accompanied by one to five bucket symbols—relative to where they rank on a bucket list, with five as the highest. Everything included in this book is worthy of a Mets bucket list; some just rank higher than others in the author’s opinion.
1. Things to Know
#LOLMets
Bucket Rank:
In their 55-season history, the Mets have won two world championships, won six division titles, and reached the postseason nine times. There are 10 other baseball teams that have gone longer without a World Series title than the Mets, but the Mets have a way of doing things that frequently get them mocked, ripped, and ridiculed by all of baseball.
Maybe it’s the success of the New York Yankees during the late ’90s to early 2000s, which has confused local sports fans and validated the idea that the Mets are the city’s redheaded little brother or second-class citizen. Or maybe success and arrogance from the Bronx helped enhance a New York bias that ends up influencing opinions outside of Queens. Or maybe it’s the tabloid nature of New York City’s print media. Or maybe it’s the fact that a dozen beat writers—where most teams have two or three reporters on their tail—compete for stories about the Mets on a daily basis, working to dig up and exploit every little thing the team does. Or maybe it’s all of the above.
Or maybe it’s actually the Mets.
The truth is the Mets sometimes do things that make even the most optimistic, loyal fan scratch his or her head. It happened so often during their 2009–2014 rebuild, the #LOLMets hashtag was created, shared, and frequently trended on Twitter.
The Mets have done some silly things on field, but so do most teams. I’m pretty sure every big league team has dropped a pop-up to lose a game or had a player miss third base when trying to score from second. They’ve all made costly errors or forgot the number of outs in an inning. However, it’s the off-field moments that make the Mets unique. Here are the 10 best (or worst, depending on your point of view) off-the-field moments from the last 20 years that define what it means to be #LOLMets.
1) Citi Field is criticized for being Ebbets Field 2.0
Citi Field opened its doors in 2009, at which point fans and media were put off by how little blue, orange, and Mets history were present in the building. Instead, with its Jackie Robinson Rotunda, critics said it looked and felt more like a new Ebbets Field, which is where the Brooklyn Dodgers played before leaving for Los Angeles in 1958. Of course, it didn’t help that Mets principal owner Fred Wilpon grew up a Dodgers fan, attending games and romanticizing his experiences at Ebbets. In subsequent seasons the Mets eventually made structural and design changes to make Citi Field look and feel more like a home for its team, but it didn’t erase how people felt when the building debuted.
2) Hey, All-Star catcher Todd Hundley, go play left field
The Mets traded for Los Angeles Dodgers catcher Mike Piazza in May of 1998. He was (and still is) the greatest hitting catcher of all time. It was a great trade, which transformed the franchise and resulted in back-to-back postseason appearances. The only problem was that when they traded for Piazza, the Mets already had Todd Hundley, who was a fan favorite and two-time All-Star who also held the record for most home runs by a catcher in a single season. To make room for Piazza, the Mets put Hundley in the outfield, where he had never played. It was a total disaster. After the season the Mets traded Hundley to Los Angeles, where—in a weird twist of fate—Piazza started his career several years earlier.
3) Go fish, Rickey
In Game 6 of the 1999 National League Championship Series, while their teammates were fighting for their lives against the Atlanta Braves, Mets outfielders Rickey Henderson and Bobby Bonilla were reportedly playing Go Fish in the clubhouse after being switched out of the game earlier in the night. Obviously, it’s not something you want players to do when you’re playing any game, let alone a playoff game,
Mets general manager Steve Phillips said when asked about the situation after the series.
Bonilla was eventually released, though he is still on their payroll through 2035 (see below). On the other hand, Henderson was voted 1999’s National League Comeback Player of the Year and returned to the organization the following season. However, during a game six weeks into the season, Henderson did his notorious, casual, flashy, home-run trot on a ball that hit the outfield wall and resulted in a single. Henderson was put on outright waivers the next day. He was not claimed, became a free agent, and eventually signed a deal to end the season with the Seattle Mariners. At some point, when you continue to do the wrong thing and say the wrong thing, you continue to wear out your welcome,
Phillips said, when asked about Henderson’s release. We were at the point where we were having to compromise our ideals too many times. When taking everything into account, the offense, defense, and the alternatives we had, and what it does to the fabric of the team, we thought it was the right thing to do.
4) Happy Bobby Bonilla Day!
The Mets are mocked every July 1 for having agreed to pay Bobby Bonilla, who has been retired since 2001, $1.19 million every year through 2035. It’s an understandable reaction, though very shortsighted. In 1999 after the infamous card game, the Mets owed Bonilla $5.9 million for the following season, after which he would be a free agent. In an effort to avoid paying him the full amount, they negotiated with his agent, Dennis Gilbert, to attach an 8 percent annual interest rate to the money and defer his payments for 35 years.
In the end with interest, the $5.9 million ends up being $29.8 million, which is why the organization is ripped annually on July 1 by nearly every fan and across more or less every sports media outlet. In addition to paying Bonilla through 2035, the Mets are also making similar deferred payments to Bret Saberhagen ($250,000 each year through 2029) and Carlos Beltran ($3.1 million each year through 2018).
Bobby Bonilla, who drops a fly ball during a 1993 game, will continue collecting $1.19 million a year through 2035. (AP Images)
5) Bret Saberhagen squirts bleach on reporters
In July of 1993, with the Mets 34–65, Brett Saberhagen put bleach into a water gun and fired it into a room full of New York reporters. It took Saberhagen two weeks to confess to being the culprit. I am sorry for the accident and the failure to come forward, both of which have obviously hurt the club’s relations with the media,
Saberhagen later said at a press conference addressing the issue.
The bleach incident occurred the same night Saberhagen confessed to The New York Times that he set off firecrackers near a group of reporters in the clubhouse the previous month.
If the reporters can’t take it, forget them,
Saberhagen said at the time.
Saberhagen underwent arthroscopic knee surgery later that season, after which he returned to go 14–4 with a 2.74 ERA and make the All-Star team. However, the Mets traded him to the Colorado Rockies during the middle of the next season.
6) Scott Kazmir traded for Victor Zambrano
With the Mets four games under .500 but just seven games out of first place the day before the July 31 non-waiver trade deadline in 2004, interim general manager Jim Duquette traded the team’s best prospect and 2002 first-round draft pick, Scott Kazmir, to the Tampa Bay Devil Rays for Victor Zambrano.
A top-rated pitching prospect, the left-handed Kazmir was young, able to throw in the mid-90s. Meanwhile, Zambrano had a live fastball but also a history of injuries and led his league in walks, wild pitches, and hit batsmen the year before. The team’s pitching coach, Rick Peterson, reportedly told the Mets before the deal that he could get Zambrano straightened out in 10 minutes.
The trade was panned all across baseball—not because the Mets traded Kazmir—but because experts and fans all believed Duquette could have easily received more than just Zambrano. First of all, you and some of the critics that have criticized the trade are underestimating the ability of Victor Zambrano. We think this guy has the ability to be a tremendous top of the rotation starter,
Duquette told WFAN radio on the night of the trade.
Zambrano ended up pitching in just in 39 games for the Mets. He was 10–14 with a 4.42 ERA, which hardly constitutes a tremendous top of the rotation starter.
His last start in Queens was on May 6, 2006, when he ran off the field in the middle of a start for seemingly no reason. It was announced later in the game the he had suffered a torn flexor tendon in his pitching elbow, which eventually led to his second Tommy John elbow surgery. Zambrano was later non-tendered by the Mets and made a free agent in December 2006 because he was expected to miss most of the next season.
On the other hand, Kazmir made his big league debut a few weeks after being traded to the Rays. In his first five seasons with Tampa Bay, he was considered their ace, going 47–37 with a 3.61 ERA while striking out 783 batters in 723 innings spanning 124 starts. He is still pitching in the major leagues while Zambrano has since retired.
7) Willie Randolph fired in the middle of the night
Willie Randolph managed the Mets to a 9–6 win against the Los Angeles Angels on June 16, 2008, during which general manager Omar Minaya waited back at the team’s hotel. It had been 16 months since Randolph was hired by the Mets with a multimillion dollar contract. In that time his team had gone from one win away from a World Series appearance to one of the greatest collapses in baseball.
There had been countless rumors in local reports that Randolph might be fired soon. The Sunday before the team made its way west at 33–35, Randolph told reporters that he had packed his suitcase for the trip but was unsure if he would even get on the plane that night. Still unsure of Randolph’s status, Minaya had Randolph fly with the team to Anaheim. Two hours after the Mets won to improve to a game below .500, the Mets announced Randolph’s firing, while his family waited for him to come home back in New York.
The press release announcing the move was issued by the team at 3:12
am
—a time when every newspaper was already written and being shipped and nearly all of the team’s beat reporters and media were fast asleep. The timing of the decision clearly angered New York’s media because they repeatedly made a point in their stories that Randolph had been fired at 3:12
am,
the time they received notification. Naturally, fans picked up on this notion and continued the criticism, seeing it as yet another example of the team’s perceived poor judgement.
Of course, Randolph wasn’t fired at 3:12
am
Eastern time. He was fired