The 2010 Summer’s Best Event Debate… Two Perfect Summer Days

May 10, 2010

Read the opposing arguments from Loyal Homer and Bleacher Fan.

Summer has always held a special place in the hearts and minds of Americans. When we were children it offered a retreat from teachers, homework, and the annoyance of school. In our adulthood it provides a similar escape from the stress and rigors of dealing with work, bills, and, in general, adult responsibilities. The magical moments made possible by more daylight and warmer temperatures may not be measureable, but they are very real. For a sports fanatic like me, summer comes to a fevered pitch for two days in July with the pinnacle of all Summer sporting events.

With the patriotism of the Fourth of July still fresh on our minds, Americans turn to their national pastime to be treated to one of the most grandiose displays in all of sports. Two days of clutch hits, eye-popping Web Gems, and jaw dropping long ball blasts that reward the baseball faithful, and convert the nonbelievers. It is two days of, unequivocally, the most anticipated and greatest sporting event of the summer. The two days are the MLB All-Star Game and Home Run Derby.

The marquee event itself, the MLB All-Star Game, is truly fantasy baseball in the real world. Fans get to see what an N.L. infield of Albert Pujols, Chase Utley, David Wright, and Hanley Ramirez is capable of, or the A.L. lineup containing the potent fire power of Ichiro Suzuki, Derek Jeter, Manny Ramirez, and Alex Rodriguez. But, the All-Star Game is not just a glorified batting practice. Elite level pitching gets its chance to shine as well. Fans are treated to watching many of their favorites and frontrunners for the Cy Young Award engage in matchups against the best hitters in the game. In the same respect, All-Star rosters contain mind-blowing bullpens that include shutdown closers like Joakim Soria, Jonathan Papelbon, and Mariano Rivera in the AL. and Jonathan Broxton, Francisco Rodriguez, and Trevor Hoffman in the N.L. The All-Star Game is a virtual cavalcade of the best players in baseball. The greatest pitchers and batters converge on that one night creating lasting memories of one unforgettable experience.

Like baseball itself, the All-Star Game has a rich history. The game isn’t just about what might happen, but what already happened. The Great Bambino hit the first home run in All-Star Game history during the 1933 game. Just 16 years later, number 42 continued to break barriers as he and three other African American players integrated the All-Star roster. Some 50 years after the tradition of the All-Star Game began there had never been a grand slam, but the California Angel’s Fred Lynn hit the game’s first. And he did it in Comiskey Park, the same place the game began, and where Babe went yard half a Century before. Even in the modern millennia the game reaches new heights. In 2007 Ichiro hit the first inside the park homerun in the game’s impressive history. As records get broken and history gets written, fans are treated to one of the greatest displays in all of sports. The All-Star game is simply a can’t-miss event.

As exciting as the All-Star Game is, it is preceded by an event of equal magnitude – The Home Run Derby. The Derby is pure excitement. What do people like about baseball more than a home run? Absolutely nothing! The home run is the most exciting aspect of baseball, and the derby puts it on center stage. The shock and awe display of batting firepower leaves fans breath-taken. Players don’t just hit homers at the derby; they perform superhuman feats, smashing balls into the Summer night. In 2002 “Slammin” Sammy Sosa mashed the longest dinger in the history of the Home Run Derby, sending the ball on a 524 foot one way trip. In 2005 Bobby Abreu surprised the fans at Comerica Park in Detroit by shattering records hitting a massive total of 41 homeruns into the Detroit night. It turns players and casual fans alike into children again. Little boys that marvel at the greatest hitters in the game doing what they do best. Grown ball players ask each other to pose for pictures and sign autographs. They even overlook team and divisional rivalries to represent baseball and their league. It is one great night for baseball, and one great night to be a fan.

The best part of the All-Star Game and Home Run Derby are the unexpected storylines. In 2008 the All-Star Game and Derby returned to New York for Yankee Stadium’s swan song. Everyone expected Yankee Stadium itself to steal the show as the Yankees spared no expense to give Baseball’s Cathedral the type of send off the hallowed grounds deserved. But another story dwarfed any story the baseball world was pushing. Josh Hamilton did something special during the 2008 Home Run Derby.

Rangers outfielder Josh Hamilton, who was once banned from baseball and struggled through multiple stints in rehab, seemed to be living his dream, and America was there to witness every emotional minute of it. On that one night in Yankee Stadium Hamilton let the world see how far he had come. Hamilton’s fight against substance abuse nearly cost him his baseball career, and more importantly, his life. But the world saw him overcome his personal demons one swing at a time. With his old (and I mean old) BP pitcher Claybon Council throwing to him, Hamilton established himself as one of the premier sluggers in the game. He hit an astonishing 28 homers… in one round. Hamilton’s historic shots surpassed the previous benchmark of 24 established by Bobby Abreu in 2005. Hamilton also hit the third longest home run in derby history, a 518 foot blast. The big story of the night was not the incredible number of home runs Hamilton hit, but the unforgettable tale of redemption that it represented.

Completely spent from the first two rounds, and his 71-year-old pitcher Council still somehow hanging on, Hamilton finished in second place overall, but walked away as the peoples champ and clear winner on the night.

Each year’s All-Star Game and Home Run Derby bring the opportunity for stories like these to be written. This year, when the greatest players in baseball converge on Anaheim California, another unscripted, miraculous story will develop. You don’t want to miss it.

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The New York Mets are the Worst Debate – A Tough Mets Season Does Not Make Them The Worst Franchise in Baseball

August 13, 2009

Read the debate intro and Loyal Homer’s argument that the New York Mets are the worst franchise in baseball.



Image your team’s staff ace is Mark Maroth, the league leader in losses (21), earned runs allowed (123), and home runs allowed (34). Image your team’s number two starter is Jeremy Bonderman, second in the major leagues in losses (19), and second in the American League in wild pitches (12). Imagine your team’s first baseman/cleanup hitter is Carlos Pena who leads the American League in errors at his position (13), hit a robust .248 with an impressive 50 RBI. Image your team’s number three hitter – the player who gets the most at bats during a season, outfielder Dmitri Young, is fifth in the American League in strikeouts (130).

If your team was the 2003 Detroit Tigers, you do not have to use your imagination. They lost an epically bad 119 games that season. They managed to break their old record of losing 104 games in a season in 1952. A tough year all around and terrible top to bottom. An ideal example of the worst franchise of a particular season.

If the Detroit Tigers are the poster team for bad franchises, the 2009 New York Mets are not the worst franchise in the 2009 season.

It is nice is that I do not have to rehash the litany of injuries the New York Mets have suffered this season. Loyal Homer did that accurately. The amount of hitting the Mets have lost is extremely high. They lost their table setting speedster in shortstop Jose Reyes, their cleanup hitting slugger in center fielder Carlos Beltran, and their RBI/home run producer in first baseman Carlos Delgado. They lost their prize offseason acquisition, closer Francisco Rodriguez, for nearly a month, too.

Sure, the Mets stink this year, but injuries have the most to do with that. Losing that kind of production will cripple any team. Injuries have nothing to do with how the organization is run either on the field or in the front office. It is a reflection of bad luck… bad luck on a grand scale for these hapless Mets.

It is impossible to argue that general manager Omar Minaya has avoided controversy this season. The tumult within the upper echelons of the organization is obvious when Tony Bernazard, Vice President of Development, was recently fired for what amounts to conduct detrimental to the organization. If the public is hearing about an issue in the front office, it is easy to say that the front office is out of control. However, Minaya apologized for his own actions, and promptly fired the individual who also made the organization look bad (in his own unique style). Is it the best front office in baseball, in performance or organization? Clearly it is not. But, it is not the worst, either.

In fact, it is possible to make an argument for the San Diego Padres, the Pittsburgh Pirates, and the Washington Nationals as the worst franchise in baseball. The Mets have managed 53 wins this season – 13 better than Washington, seven better than Pittsburgh (who traded away every good player they have any may not win another game this year), and four better than San Diego who constantly invent new ways to stink (and should have more losses if their division was not so bad).

It is easy to blame the manager, the players, and the front office. But a keen look reveals the real issue – injuries. The Mets do not have the worst record in baseball (there are nine worse teams than them). They did not trade away every good player to hamstring them for the coming seasons, either. Sure, the Mets stink. But the worst? No way.

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The New York Mets are the Worst Debate – The Mets are in Shambles!

August 13, 2009

Read the debate intro and Sport’s Geek’s argument that the Mets are not the most poorly run franchise in baseball.



Ahhh, those New York Mets. Have things really been the same in Queens since the 2006 NLCS? The Cardinals knocked off the Mets in Game seven that year. While it is true that the Mets got off to good starts in 2007 and 2008, the feel good thoughts were quickly vanquished by the epic collapses. Mets fans will never forget the unforgettable collapse of 2007 when they blew a seven game lead with seventeen to go. I will give them credit, though: they did their best to top that in 2008, but they only blew a 3.5 game lead. With that choke, Shea Stadium was torn down. A new year, 2009, brought new feel good thoughts with a spacious new stadium and a rebuilt bullpen. The collapse did not happen in September, this time. It happened before the All-Star break. They have no one to blame but Omar “I’m no longer the chosen one” Minaya. Why he was considered such a golden boy after coming over from Montreal, I’ll never know!

Minaya has built the team to win now and he built it largely with either older stars or with guys who may have their best years behind. Look at the starting lineup on opening day this season. Shortstop Jose Reyes has been battling a calf injury for most of the season. Daniel Murphy, once viewed as a promising young outfielder with the Mets, has played four different positions and you have to wonder where his head is at this point. Third baseman David Wright, a proven All-Star, has had a statistically decent season, but his power has suffered in Citi Field (think he wishes he got to hit in Yankee Stadium 81 times a year?). First baseman Carlos Delgado and center fielder Carlos Beltran have both been down with injuries. Outfielder Ryan Church now plays for Atlanta, but on his way out of town, he decided to miss third base. Catcher Brian Schneider has underachieved since coming over from Washington. Second baseman Luis Castillo used to be an All-Star earlier this decade, but now he is dropping pop ups. On paper, that team is decent when they are all in their prime. But, you can make an argument that only two of those eight guys are in their prime. What you cannot argue is proven fact. Only one of those eight guys mentioned was in the starting lineup yesterday.

That is just what is happened on the field. The instability is also going on in the front office. Earlier this summer, Vice President of Development Tony Bernazard actually challenged several minor league players to a fight. This is after getting into a verbal altercation with closer Francisco Rodriguez on a team bus last month. Bernazard was later dismissed.

But wait, the madness does not end there, folks!!

In announcing the firing of Bernazard, Minaya gets into a dispute with New York Daily News reporter Adam Rubin during the press conference. This was not behind closed doors and was not in the dugout. This was in the middle of a press conference with media members getting a front row seat. Way to drum up that good publicity, Omar! This is how you run an organization! Ha! What a joke! Somewhere, former Mets general manager and current ESPN broadcaster Steve Phillips is laughing at this mess!

The Mets are in complete disarray right now. They have an aging team with many players locked into long term deals. Everyone is looking over their shoulder in the front office, even Minaya, who does not necessarily have the backing of Mets top officials. It is utter chaos in Queens, with no signs of stability approaching!

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