Santana (With Assist from Cubs) Pitches Mets Even in Wild Card
September 27, 2008 by Mark Reichman
Filed under Major League Baseball, Mets
Wow. Pitching on short rest, three days after a career-high 125 pitch performance, Johan Santana came up huge with a complete game shutout of the Marlins, winning 2-0. Santana was nothing short of masterful. He was locating his fastball. His changeup was convincing and had a lot of bite on it, and proved to be a devastating strikeout pitch. More than anything, Santana harnessed the emotion of the big spot and allowed the Mets to ride on his back and win with a minimum of offense.
Meanwhile in Milwaukee, Cub starter Ted Lilly was almost as dominant. Well, for six no-hit innings anyway. While Lou Piniella was going with his “B-team” (without Soriano, Soto, Lee and Ramirez once again) I was thanking the good lord that he elected to go with his usual setup man, Carlos Marmol, in the seventh inning, when the Brewers had a threat going. Marmol pitched the Cubs right out of trouble. But then in the eighth, Piniella put in starter Jason Marquis, a definite deviation from a normal bullpen progression. And it almost had disastrous ramifications for the Mets. Marquis got the bases loaded and the score cut to a 4-2 Cub lead before he was mercifully pulled. Then with Neal Cotts in, a horrible fielding play by shortstop Ronny Cedeno allowed a Prince Fielder popup to fall in to cut the score to 4-3 with the bases loaded.
But then came a performance from Cub reliever Michael Wuertz, which may have saved the Mets season. Wuertz got the last two outs without allowing further damage. The Cubs tacked on some runs in the top of the ninth to give them (and the Mets!) some breathing room. Still, how delighted was I to see the closer Kerry Wood come in to pitch the ninth despite the fact that it was no longer a save situation. Wood slammed the door shut for a 7-3 Cub win, and as he did, the Mets were tied in the wild card chase!
I agree with my colleague Joe Gallo that Piniella’s monkeying with the lineup and resting of regulars (as far as the hitting lineup was concerned anyway) took away from the integrity of the game. Although Piniella did the same thing against the Mets. However, luck was on the Mets side, as were the appearances of Marmol and Wood, who made up for the misuse of Marquis. After Lilly missed a “pitcher salami” (= grand slam by a pitcher) by only a few feet, which would have made it 8-0 Cubs, I had a bad feeling that luck might swing back to the Brewers. Thankfully that was not the case.
So the NL wild card comes down to one game…or actually two games if the Mets and Brewers both win or both lose, in which case there would be a one-game playoff at Shea. Today’s win-win, best case scenario opens the door for more meaningful baseball. Mets fans will have their fingernails in biting range as Oliver Perez takes the mound. Meanwhile Brewers fans hope that another short-rest start from CC Sabathia won’t prove to be one too many.
Most importantly, the Mets control their own destiny, with redemption and humiliation both still within reach. It doesn’t get any better than this!
Like this post? Share it »Last post (s) by Mark Reichman
- Second Closer Putz Mets On Top - December 11th, 2008
- There's a New Rod in Town...K!! - December 9th, 2008
- CLAW MARKS - Jags Embarrass Selves on MNF Stage - December 2nd, 2008
- CLAW MARKS - Jaguars-Texans: Will Anyone Be Watching?? - December 1st, 2008
- Do The Math...Jags Officially Irrelevant in '08 - November 17th, 2008




September 27th, 2008 at 8:58 pm
Easily one of the best pitching performances I have ever seen, after you factor in what was on the line. I still think Lincecum should be the NL Cy Young winner, but I’ll have no problem with Santana winning it after today’s performance. Lidge and Webb can fight it out for 3 and 4 imo.
September 27th, 2008 at 9:23 pm
Lincecum is a stud but honestly, Webb had no run support this year, not as bad as SF for Lincecum but Webb is such a horse!
September 28th, 2008 at 10:59 am
Webb is a very very good pitcher Kevin, but aside from wins (which are overrated anyways) Linecum blows him away in nearly every other statistical category.
Lincecum:
ERA: 2.66
SO: 252
IP: 220
Hits: 178
K/9: 10.31
BB/9: 3.35
BAA: .233
Webb:
ERA: 3.30
SO: 183
IP: 226.7
Hits: 206
k/9: 7.3
BB/9: 2.58
BAA: .242
September 28th, 2008 at 2:08 pm
Just wanted to chime in with my support for Lincecum as Cy Young winner. As I witnessed when I saw him pitch in SF, Lincecum has to do it all by himself night after night. Not that part of me doesn’t want to see Santana get it, but Lincecum is the choice.