1 00:00:00,080 --> 00:00:02,880 Speaker 1: Today's episode of the mets ub podcast is sponsored by Anchor. 2 00:00:02,920 --> 00:00:04,840 Speaker 1: If you haven't heard about Anchor, it's the easiest way 3 00:00:04,880 --> 00:00:07,880 Speaker 1: to make a podcast. Let me explain. It's free. First off, 4 00:00:07,920 --> 00:00:09,880 Speaker 1: that's huge, and that's what we use here on the 5 00:00:09,880 --> 00:00:12,559 Speaker 1: met stub podcast. I highly suggest there are creation tools 6 00:00:12,600 --> 00:00:14,760 Speaker 1: that allow you to record and edit your podcast right 7 00:00:14,800 --> 00:00:17,320 Speaker 1: from your own phone or computer. 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Of course, 16 00:00:57,000 --> 00:00:59,240 Speaker 1: I'm your co host Draftnick Mark, Mark Luino here with 17 00:00:59,360 --> 00:01:02,120 Speaker 1: James Sheiano Jeter had no range talking about the New 18 00:01:02,200 --> 00:01:05,360 Speaker 1: York Mets really painful end of the season. Here, just 19 00:01:05,360 --> 00:01:08,160 Speaker 1: finished up a series where we got we got swept 20 00:01:08,160 --> 00:01:11,880 Speaker 1: by the Brewers. Shocker who saw that coming? Definitely not us, right, No, 21 00:01:12,360 --> 00:01:15,040 Speaker 1: not us, not us did not play well. Played about 22 00:01:15,080 --> 00:01:17,280 Speaker 1: as bad as baseball as we've played all year long. 23 00:01:17,680 --> 00:01:21,240 Speaker 1: Bad offense, bad defense, bad pitching. There really wasn't many 24 00:01:21,360 --> 00:01:23,960 Speaker 1: positive things to take out from these games, but hey, 25 00:01:24,000 --> 00:01:25,960 Speaker 1: we'll still talk about it because we do love to 26 00:01:25,959 --> 00:01:28,520 Speaker 1: torture ourselves here on the Mets Up Podcast. We told 27 00:01:28,560 --> 00:01:30,800 Speaker 1: you we would be here after every series for the 28 00:01:30,920 --> 00:01:33,760 Speaker 1: entire season, and that's exactly what we're doing. So make 29 00:01:33,800 --> 00:01:36,280 Speaker 1: sure you guys are following us on Twitter, Instagram, TikTok app, 30 00:01:36,319 --> 00:01:39,360 Speaker 1: mets up on the YouTube channel Mets up Podcast, follow 31 00:01:39,440 --> 00:01:42,479 Speaker 1: us on Spotify, Apple podcasts, Google podcasts. Whoever you listen 32 00:01:42,520 --> 00:01:44,959 Speaker 1: to us, drop us, give us a five star rating 33 00:01:45,040 --> 00:01:47,480 Speaker 1: or review as well. Really does help us out. And 34 00:01:47,520 --> 00:01:49,480 Speaker 1: that's all I got for the plug here. Let let's 35 00:01:49,480 --> 00:01:51,360 Speaker 1: talk about it now, James, how are you feeling, dude? 36 00:01:51,360 --> 00:01:55,280 Speaker 2: This has been an actual catastrophic collapse by this Mets team. 37 00:01:55,600 --> 00:01:57,320 Speaker 2: The way we've played in the second half. This is 38 00:01:57,360 --> 00:01:59,720 Speaker 2: one of the worst stretches I can remember, literally in 39 00:01:59,760 --> 00:02:02,520 Speaker 2: our life lifetimes from a Mets team, like just rolling 40 00:02:02,520 --> 00:02:03,720 Speaker 2: over and dying like this. 41 00:02:03,720 --> 00:02:07,400 Speaker 1: This one doesn't hurt as bad as you know the 42 00:02:07,640 --> 00:02:10,880 Speaker 1: seven eight teams because those are some different kind of 43 00:02:10,960 --> 00:02:14,360 Speaker 1: historic collapses, but this one hurts different. This one just 44 00:02:15,040 --> 00:02:17,200 Speaker 1: it's really a kick in the balls. I don't know 45 00:02:17,240 --> 00:02:19,760 Speaker 1: how to explain it any other way than that it's 46 00:02:19,800 --> 00:02:22,800 Speaker 1: really disappointing. It's this is like an embarrassing way to 47 00:02:22,880 --> 00:02:23,480 Speaker 1: end the season. 48 00:02:23,639 --> 00:02:26,560 Speaker 2: Before that Pirates series, that string of seven straight games 49 00:02:26,560 --> 00:02:29,040 Speaker 2: against the Pirates that we were so excited for. Before 50 00:02:29,080 --> 00:02:31,320 Speaker 2: the All Star break, the Mets were forty six and 51 00:02:31,360 --> 00:02:33,800 Speaker 2: thirty eight, in the first place in the National League 52 00:02:33,840 --> 00:02:37,400 Speaker 2: East by four and a half games, and the only 53 00:02:37,520 --> 00:02:39,920 Speaker 2: team over five hundred in the National League East at 54 00:02:39,919 --> 00:02:42,800 Speaker 2: the time. The Nationals were only five games behind us. 55 00:02:42,840 --> 00:02:45,400 Speaker 1: Then remember that, do you guys? Remember that? Those were 56 00:02:45,400 --> 00:02:45,960 Speaker 1: the good days? 57 00:02:46,040 --> 00:02:46,160 Speaker 2: Right? 58 00:02:46,200 --> 00:02:48,720 Speaker 1: Remember we were sweating about only taking you know, a 59 00:02:48,720 --> 00:02:52,680 Speaker 1: few games from the Pirates. Oh my god? Where I mean? 60 00:02:52,760 --> 00:02:54,240 Speaker 1: I know we're gonna tell us next year, but where 61 00:02:54,240 --> 00:02:55,000 Speaker 1: did the season go? 62 00:02:55,320 --> 00:02:55,519 Speaker 2: Well? 63 00:02:55,560 --> 00:02:57,280 Speaker 3: As I'm sure everyone knows right now. 64 00:02:57,320 --> 00:03:01,840 Speaker 2: After this second consecutive sweep, the Mets are seventy three 65 00:03:01,840 --> 00:03:05,280 Speaker 2: and eighty two. That was second of sweep right last year? 66 00:03:05,400 --> 00:03:06,120 Speaker 3: Yeah, yesn't. 67 00:03:06,120 --> 00:03:07,320 Speaker 2: Who did you play at the beginning of all the 68 00:03:07,320 --> 00:03:08,080 Speaker 2: Red Sox right right? 69 00:03:08,200 --> 00:03:08,399 Speaker 3: Yeah? 70 00:03:08,639 --> 00:03:10,880 Speaker 2: Won the one Phillies game and swept by the Cardinals. Wow. 71 00:03:10,960 --> 00:03:11,880 Speaker 3: Yeah, So now a. 72 00:03:11,919 --> 00:03:13,880 Speaker 2: Record stands is seventy three and eighty two. So it 73 00:03:13,919 --> 00:03:15,959 Speaker 2: was impossible for the Mets seven winning record this year. 74 00:03:16,000 --> 00:03:17,960 Speaker 2: We were, of course eliminated from the playoffs. We didn't 75 00:03:17,960 --> 00:03:20,200 Speaker 2: even mention that because it doesn't even matter. And the 76 00:03:20,240 --> 00:03:24,360 Speaker 2: Mets since July eighth are twenty seven and forty four 77 00:03:25,320 --> 00:03:27,720 Speaker 2: with its three eighty winning percentage. 78 00:03:28,120 --> 00:03:32,960 Speaker 1: It's like embarrassing, it's disappointing, it's it's so so sad. 79 00:03:33,000 --> 00:03:35,560 Speaker 1: What a travesty, what a waste of a fucking year. 80 00:03:35,840 --> 00:03:38,440 Speaker 1: I mean, to just add salt to the wound. You 81 00:03:38,440 --> 00:03:40,920 Speaker 1: see a team like the Cardinals, who just a few 82 00:03:40,960 --> 00:03:43,840 Speaker 1: weeks ago were seventy one and sixty nine, not a 83 00:03:44,080 --> 00:03:46,960 Speaker 1: particularly impressive record by any means, two games above five hundred, 84 00:03:47,160 --> 00:03:49,600 Speaker 1: then they rattle off sixteen in a row. Imagine if 85 00:03:49,600 --> 00:03:51,640 Speaker 1: the Mets could have just rattled off three or four 86 00:03:51,640 --> 00:03:53,520 Speaker 1: in a row a couple times, where this team could be. 87 00:03:53,640 --> 00:03:57,440 Speaker 1: I mean, I'd love to play sixteen games of good baseball. 88 00:03:57,440 --> 00:03:59,120 Speaker 1: We've we played good baseball in two months. 89 00:03:59,200 --> 00:04:01,200 Speaker 2: I mean, dude, that's the same thing with the Braves too. 90 00:04:01,280 --> 00:04:03,600 Speaker 2: The Braves were meandering around five hundred the entire year 91 00:04:03,600 --> 00:04:06,000 Speaker 2: and had one ten game winning streak that propelled them 92 00:04:06,040 --> 00:04:08,040 Speaker 2: all the way past us. No one with no chance 93 00:04:08,080 --> 00:04:10,600 Speaker 2: to even catch them. They're literally only eleven games over 94 00:04:10,640 --> 00:04:12,720 Speaker 2: five hundred right now. That's the entire season of those 95 00:04:12,760 --> 00:04:14,720 Speaker 2: games after the trade deadline. 96 00:04:14,760 --> 00:04:16,760 Speaker 1: Like, I feel like what happened is normally like the 97 00:04:16,800 --> 00:04:18,840 Speaker 1: last few years, we've had a bad May in June, 98 00:04:18,880 --> 00:04:21,200 Speaker 1: that's where we've our season's fallen apart, and then we've 99 00:04:21,200 --> 00:04:23,200 Speaker 1: had a lot to make up from This year, we 100 00:04:23,240 --> 00:04:25,840 Speaker 1: had the nice cushion We got through those months really easy, 101 00:04:26,400 --> 00:04:29,880 Speaker 1: and the dog days of summer hitting this team just stunk. 102 00:04:30,000 --> 00:04:31,680 Speaker 1: I mean, there's no way around it. The team's been 103 00:04:31,920 --> 00:04:36,640 Speaker 1: god awful, terrible, awful, disappointing, disgraceful. A three to eighty 104 00:04:36,680 --> 00:04:41,839 Speaker 1: win percentage. We're talking like Baltimore Orioles, Arizona diamondbackspat. That's horrible. 105 00:04:41,960 --> 00:04:44,640 Speaker 2: And we did have the six game winning winning streak 106 00:04:44,760 --> 00:04:48,640 Speaker 2: through that awful run of Washington Miami Washington Miami. 107 00:04:48,360 --> 00:04:50,200 Speaker 1: Which is also crazy that we had a six game 108 00:04:50,240 --> 00:04:52,080 Speaker 1: winning streak, but. 109 00:04:52,680 --> 00:04:55,200 Speaker 2: That was only one of our two winning streaks of 110 00:04:55,240 --> 00:04:58,640 Speaker 2: at least three games just three games since that July 111 00:04:58,760 --> 00:05:01,960 Speaker 2: eighth time, and the other three game winning streak was 112 00:05:01,960 --> 00:05:05,480 Speaker 2: three in a row against Washington in the beginning of August. 113 00:05:05,720 --> 00:05:08,359 Speaker 2: So if you take out games against the Nationals in 114 00:05:08,440 --> 00:05:10,920 Speaker 2: the over these last three months, that's seventy one games. 115 00:05:10,920 --> 00:05:12,280 Speaker 2: That's not a joke of a sample. The M's have 116 00:05:12,320 --> 00:05:14,400 Speaker 2: been one of the worst teams in baseball over about 117 00:05:14,400 --> 00:05:16,120 Speaker 2: half of a season. And if you take out the 118 00:05:16,400 --> 00:05:19,000 Speaker 2: easy series with the Washington team that sold almost all 119 00:05:19,000 --> 00:05:20,920 Speaker 2: their good players, they've had Lane Thomas, the world beater, 120 00:05:21,080 --> 00:05:23,520 Speaker 2: leading off now for about a month. We don't even 121 00:05:23,520 --> 00:05:26,160 Speaker 2: have any winning streaks whatsoever. It's been such an other 122 00:05:26,560 --> 00:05:28,159 Speaker 2: collapse of this team. They look dead. 123 00:05:28,240 --> 00:05:29,800 Speaker 3: I've never seen the Mets team look this dead. 124 00:05:30,040 --> 00:05:33,200 Speaker 1: So dead, it's we'll talk about it because even Gary 125 00:05:33,240 --> 00:05:36,040 Speaker 1: and Keith and it's starting to get a little uh. 126 00:05:36,080 --> 00:05:37,640 Speaker 1: I don't want to say chippy because that's not the 127 00:05:37,680 --> 00:05:40,800 Speaker 1: right word, but ornery. Ornery ornery is the word. Is 128 00:05:40,839 --> 00:05:44,240 Speaker 1: starting to get ornery Mets fans on Twitter rightfully so 129 00:05:44,800 --> 00:05:46,719 Speaker 1: not happy. It feels like everyone's kind of done with 130 00:05:46,760 --> 00:05:49,000 Speaker 1: the season. I can't blame you, I really can't. It's 131 00:05:49,000 --> 00:05:52,200 Speaker 1: hard to invest time into watching what is literal garbage 132 00:05:52,240 --> 00:05:55,880 Speaker 1: on the field right now, bad bad, bad vibes. This 133 00:05:55,960 --> 00:05:58,320 Speaker 1: is not what I expected at all this year, not 134 00:05:58,640 --> 00:06:00,880 Speaker 1: in the sliders. If you told me we wouldn't win 135 00:06:01,000 --> 00:06:03,640 Speaker 1: first place, which was my prediction anyway, I would have 136 00:06:03,640 --> 00:06:05,440 Speaker 1: believed you one hundred percent, maybe even miss out on 137 00:06:05,440 --> 00:06:07,760 Speaker 1: the playoffs because the wildcard would have been competitive with 138 00:06:07,800 --> 00:06:10,919 Speaker 1: the Padres possibly winning ninety games at one point. Okay, 139 00:06:11,040 --> 00:06:12,919 Speaker 1: I would have been I would have been disappointed in 140 00:06:12,960 --> 00:06:15,279 Speaker 1: that we didn't make the playoffs, but we would have 141 00:06:15,320 --> 00:06:18,040 Speaker 1: at least had something to build on forward. I feel 142 00:06:18,040 --> 00:06:20,279 Speaker 1: like there's more questions than answers right now with this 143 00:06:20,360 --> 00:06:21,880 Speaker 1: Mets team. That's kind of scary. 144 00:06:22,080 --> 00:06:24,800 Speaker 2: There's way more questions and answers. Like we're literally one 145 00:06:24,800 --> 00:06:27,040 Speaker 2: of the worst teams in baseball. We're blocked and loathed 146 00:06:27,120 --> 00:06:29,279 Speaker 2: to have a top ten pick in the draft again 147 00:06:29,400 --> 00:06:32,240 Speaker 2: for what feels like like the fifth time in six years. Honestly, 148 00:06:32,560 --> 00:06:35,120 Speaker 2: we're we're approaching one of the longest playoff drafts, like 149 00:06:35,160 --> 00:06:35,880 Speaker 2: of our lifetime. 150 00:06:35,880 --> 00:06:38,720 Speaker 1: Here, Yeah we are. Oh, bro, I don't even want 151 00:06:38,720 --> 00:06:40,920 Speaker 1: to hear that. I don't want to even think about that. Uh, 152 00:06:41,640 --> 00:06:44,000 Speaker 1: I can't believe the season's gotten to this. I really can't. 153 00:06:44,080 --> 00:06:46,000 Speaker 1: I know, we've kind of been talking for you know, 154 00:06:46,080 --> 00:06:49,119 Speaker 1: five six minutes here without actually talking about the games. 155 00:06:49,160 --> 00:06:51,279 Speaker 1: But I feel like you guys can feel our pain. 156 00:06:51,520 --> 00:06:54,880 Speaker 1: It's just there's no world where I imagine this happening. 157 00:06:54,920 --> 00:06:56,880 Speaker 1: The Mets might have ninety losses. There's a very good 158 00:06:56,920 --> 00:06:58,800 Speaker 1: chance we do, and it's not even like, actually, I 159 00:06:58,839 --> 00:07:00,560 Speaker 1: don't even know if there's nothing we can't have ninety one. 160 00:07:01,400 --> 00:07:02,640 Speaker 1: We had to lose every game of the year, that 161 00:07:02,800 --> 00:07:06,200 Speaker 1: one plus eighty nine. But it's just it's not even anger, 162 00:07:06,240 --> 00:07:07,800 Speaker 1: like the anger is melted the way we got an 163 00:07:07,800 --> 00:07:08,360 Speaker 1: anger out. 164 00:07:08,200 --> 00:07:08,800 Speaker 3: A few weeks A wait. 165 00:07:08,920 --> 00:07:13,920 Speaker 2: This is just such like disappointment and just what's the 166 00:07:13,960 --> 00:07:17,800 Speaker 2: word apathy. I just don't give a fuck about what's 167 00:07:17,840 --> 00:07:19,280 Speaker 2: going on with his team right now. It's just no 168 00:07:19,320 --> 00:07:22,240 Speaker 2: one even cares. And Friday night that's ironic because this was, like, 169 00:07:22,440 --> 00:07:24,640 Speaker 2: we actually scored first. I can I remember the last 170 00:07:24,640 --> 00:07:27,160 Speaker 2: time we scored first in a game. Had to be weeks. 171 00:07:27,320 --> 00:07:30,880 Speaker 1: Yeah, Brandon Nemo triple because Brandon Nemo is about the 172 00:07:30,880 --> 00:07:33,480 Speaker 1: only thing that's really keeping me interested at all in 173 00:07:33,480 --> 00:07:35,760 Speaker 1: the Mets is that Brandon Nemo is is awesome. I 174 00:07:35,800 --> 00:07:38,920 Speaker 1: love Brandon Nemo. Dude continued to have just a great series. 175 00:07:38,960 --> 00:07:41,520 Speaker 1: You hit really well in Milwaukee this series, three for 176 00:07:41,640 --> 00:07:43,080 Speaker 1: four game I think at one point I had this 177 00:07:43,120 --> 00:07:45,840 Speaker 1: triple in Game one and Lindor drove him in real 178 00:07:45,920 --> 00:07:49,000 Speaker 1: quick too with that RBI, which like productive out something 179 00:07:49,040 --> 00:07:50,640 Speaker 1: that we haven't done a lot of this year. Still 180 00:07:50,680 --> 00:07:52,600 Speaker 1: can't get a hit with runners at scoring position, not 181 00:07:52,640 --> 00:07:54,440 Speaker 1: a thing we do, but we did get a run. 182 00:07:54,520 --> 00:07:56,960 Speaker 2: If Brandon Nemo ever wound up on the Brewers, like 183 00:07:57,000 --> 00:07:58,760 Speaker 2: that was the team he played for, he'd probably win 184 00:07:58,760 --> 00:07:59,200 Speaker 2: an MVP. 185 00:07:59,440 --> 00:08:01,840 Speaker 1: Probably somehow they'd figure out how to get him to 186 00:08:01,880 --> 00:08:04,320 Speaker 1: hit like twenty five homers, still hit three hundred, get 187 00:08:04,400 --> 00:08:06,600 Speaker 1: on base at like a six hundred level. He'd become 188 00:08:06,600 --> 00:08:09,920 Speaker 1: a goal glove center fielder. He somehow get even better. 189 00:08:09,960 --> 00:08:12,040 Speaker 1: I saw someone on Twitter the other day when I 190 00:08:12,040 --> 00:08:15,000 Speaker 1: asked about most OVERA players in baseball, say Brandon Nimo. 191 00:08:15,240 --> 00:08:16,600 Speaker 1: I mean I saw that too. 192 00:08:16,600 --> 00:08:17,840 Speaker 3: I really think they were trolling you. 193 00:08:18,120 --> 00:08:20,000 Speaker 1: Has to be has to be right, because you can't. 194 00:08:20,040 --> 00:08:22,440 Speaker 1: You can't think this if I think he's criminally underrated. 195 00:08:22,560 --> 00:08:25,080 Speaker 2: Your responses under that tweet were raw as fuck. People 196 00:08:25,120 --> 00:08:26,400 Speaker 2: were really putting you through it. 197 00:08:26,560 --> 00:08:29,080 Speaker 1: A lot of lindoor comments, a lot of lindoor and bias. 198 00:08:29,120 --> 00:08:29,360 Speaker 3: It was. 199 00:08:29,440 --> 00:08:31,920 Speaker 1: It was a personal attack. But again, enough about my Twitter. 200 00:08:32,000 --> 00:08:34,080 Speaker 1: Let's get back to this game here, because, uh, you 201 00:08:34,120 --> 00:08:36,400 Speaker 1: know how we scored that first thing run, Well, gave 202 00:08:36,400 --> 00:08:39,640 Speaker 1: it right back Colton Wang because why not Colton Wong 203 00:08:39,760 --> 00:08:41,160 Speaker 1: kick us in the teeth the home. 204 00:08:41,040 --> 00:08:43,120 Speaker 2: Run and the worst part two and now in the 205 00:08:43,160 --> 00:08:45,320 Speaker 2: one to one game that was I want to say 206 00:08:45,440 --> 00:08:47,240 Speaker 2: again it was winnable, but like not because the Mets 207 00:08:47,240 --> 00:08:50,200 Speaker 2: are so bad, but we made Eric Lauer look like 208 00:08:50,240 --> 00:08:51,719 Speaker 2: one of the best pictures on planet. 209 00:08:51,480 --> 00:08:52,679 Speaker 1: Earth, which is just simply not. 210 00:08:52,760 --> 00:08:52,920 Speaker 2: Now. 211 00:08:52,960 --> 00:08:55,439 Speaker 1: He has been very good this year. He has had 212 00:08:55,440 --> 00:08:57,360 Speaker 1: a nice year and he's looked great of late, but 213 00:08:57,760 --> 00:08:59,480 Speaker 1: he is not the best picture on planet Earth. 214 00:08:59,520 --> 00:09:01,199 Speaker 2: No, he's been good, but he's been like a soft 215 00:09:01,200 --> 00:09:03,240 Speaker 2: contact guy who mixes up his offstree pitches, and he 216 00:09:03,360 --> 00:09:05,439 Speaker 2: was good location. The Mets didn't have a hit from 217 00:09:05,440 --> 00:09:07,240 Speaker 2: the second until the seventh inning in this game. 218 00:09:07,440 --> 00:09:09,559 Speaker 1: That haven't hit just a thing we kind of do 219 00:09:09,600 --> 00:09:12,079 Speaker 1: a little too often, Jake Woodford, remember that, but like, 220 00:09:12,120 --> 00:09:12,600 Speaker 1: at least. 221 00:09:12,440 --> 00:09:14,960 Speaker 2: We're putting the ball in play. We had seventeen whiffs 222 00:09:14,960 --> 00:09:17,600 Speaker 2: against Eric Lauer. That's the second most in any start 223 00:09:17,600 --> 00:09:18,920 Speaker 2: he's had in his entire career. 224 00:09:19,640 --> 00:09:21,480 Speaker 1: That's not good. That's not good. It's not like we're 225 00:09:21,480 --> 00:09:23,600 Speaker 1: throwing out the Triple A lineup, even it's we have 226 00:09:23,679 --> 00:09:25,559 Speaker 1: our guys back, we have stars on this team. 227 00:09:26,360 --> 00:09:28,080 Speaker 2: You get a hit and it just compound to the 228 00:09:28,080 --> 00:09:30,319 Speaker 2: problems that McGill was again just like very bad. 229 00:09:30,679 --> 00:09:34,280 Speaker 1: He's uh, he's he's hitting his Taiwan Walker, same thing, 230 00:09:34,440 --> 00:09:35,120 Speaker 1: he's hitting the wall. 231 00:09:35,280 --> 00:09:37,760 Speaker 2: He only had four whis in this game. Edmond Diaz 232 00:09:37,800 --> 00:09:39,440 Speaker 2: literally had five in his one inning of work. 233 00:09:40,400 --> 00:09:41,240 Speaker 1: That's never good. 234 00:09:41,400 --> 00:09:43,959 Speaker 2: Nope, McGill's change up got no whiffs. He threw fifty 235 00:09:43,960 --> 00:09:46,439 Speaker 2: five percent fastballs. Vlasti was up, he touched ninety seven 236 00:09:46,480 --> 00:09:48,320 Speaker 2: and a half is average with Voss. He was over 237 00:09:48,400 --> 00:09:50,520 Speaker 2: ninety five today, which is like almost a full bottle 238 00:09:50,520 --> 00:09:52,520 Speaker 2: an hour take higher than his yearly average. But it 239 00:09:52,559 --> 00:09:55,200 Speaker 2: really didn't matter because he wasn't effective more walks and strikeouts. 240 00:09:55,240 --> 00:09:57,240 Speaker 3: It was just brutal, entirely brutal. 241 00:09:57,040 --> 00:09:59,160 Speaker 1: And cherry on top. Come on, guys, you know what 242 00:09:59,240 --> 00:10:00,760 Speaker 1: it's gonna be. No, we're going to talk about it. 243 00:10:00,840 --> 00:10:04,400 Speaker 1: We have to mention it. Brad Hand, Baby, he's back. 244 00:10:04,480 --> 00:10:06,559 Speaker 1: We gotta see what we have with brad Hand. We 245 00:10:06,600 --> 00:10:08,400 Speaker 1: gotta see what we got out there with that lefty. 246 00:10:08,480 --> 00:10:10,080 Speaker 1: You never know, he doesn't have a body of work 247 00:10:10,160 --> 00:10:12,120 Speaker 1: to take a look at and figure out what he is. 248 00:10:13,040 --> 00:10:15,160 Speaker 1: Came in, gave up a run because that's what he does. 249 00:10:15,400 --> 00:10:16,120 Speaker 1: He's brad Hand. 250 00:10:16,280 --> 00:10:18,240 Speaker 2: I actually wanted to like flame him more and I 251 00:10:18,320 --> 00:10:20,320 Speaker 2: went through like his stats with the Mets, It's really 252 00:10:20,400 --> 00:10:22,200 Speaker 2: not as bad as it seems. He's a three point 253 00:10:22,240 --> 00:10:23,959 Speaker 2: eight to sixty era as a member of the Mets. 254 00:10:24,000 --> 00:10:25,199 Speaker 2: I thought that the number was gonna. 255 00:10:25,000 --> 00:10:25,440 Speaker 3: Be like nine. 256 00:10:25,559 --> 00:10:27,439 Speaker 1: He has a lot of inherited runs friends, I know, 257 00:10:27,520 --> 00:10:28,719 Speaker 1: I know, I know, it's hard to find it out. 258 00:10:28,720 --> 00:10:30,680 Speaker 1: And he's streaking out like almost one guy per inning, 259 00:10:30,679 --> 00:10:32,360 Speaker 1: which is kind of funny. I really thought this was 260 00:10:32,400 --> 00:10:34,640 Speaker 1: gonna be like even strikeouts and walks and like a 261 00:10:34,760 --> 00:10:37,520 Speaker 1: nine point sixty ra Well that's like, that's why it 262 00:10:37,640 --> 00:10:40,000 Speaker 1: fools everybody is because like you can look at that 263 00:10:40,080 --> 00:10:42,120 Speaker 1: and be like, well, maybe he's not that bad, but 264 00:10:42,240 --> 00:10:44,800 Speaker 1: it's you dive deeper into it. You gotta get past 265 00:10:45,520 --> 00:10:47,760 Speaker 1: the blanket of numbers that are out there and look 266 00:10:47,840 --> 00:10:48,599 Speaker 1: look deeper into it. 267 00:10:48,760 --> 00:10:50,319 Speaker 2: I almost think it's the opposite, you know, I want 268 00:10:50,360 --> 00:10:51,600 Speaker 2: to look deep into this at all. If you could 269 00:10:51,640 --> 00:10:53,800 Speaker 2: just watch Brad Hand throw like six or seven pitches 270 00:10:53,800 --> 00:10:56,440 Speaker 2: against any type of competent Major League baseball player, you're like, oh, 271 00:10:56,520 --> 00:10:57,720 Speaker 2: this guy can't get anybody out. 272 00:10:57,640 --> 00:10:59,520 Speaker 1: The eye test the one few times I wanted the 273 00:10:59,559 --> 00:11:01,319 Speaker 1: eye test is better than looking at the numbers. 274 00:11:01,440 --> 00:11:03,280 Speaker 2: Brad Hand is on the man and Willia Damas is 275 00:11:03,320 --> 00:11:05,880 Speaker 2: at the plate like licking his lips. It's like, what's 276 00:11:05,920 --> 00:11:06,720 Speaker 2: gonna happen? Next? 277 00:11:07,160 --> 00:11:10,240 Speaker 1: We talked about the Red Sox batters being really comfortable 278 00:11:10,280 --> 00:11:13,000 Speaker 1: in the box. Buruis batters were super comfortable in the box. 279 00:11:13,080 --> 00:11:15,719 Speaker 2: Two man Brewis batteris. We're bringing beach chairs out to 280 00:11:15,760 --> 00:11:16,880 Speaker 2: home plate lounging. 281 00:11:17,000 --> 00:11:18,760 Speaker 1: And also just a little thing here. How good is 282 00:11:18,800 --> 00:11:19,520 Speaker 1: Willi Adamas? 283 00:11:19,800 --> 00:11:22,800 Speaker 2: He's awesome, He's so good. How often do you see 284 00:11:22,880 --> 00:11:26,040 Speaker 2: like really cool even trades like that where both nevers 285 00:11:26,120 --> 00:11:27,400 Speaker 2: were helped out tremendously. 286 00:11:27,640 --> 00:11:30,400 Speaker 1: It feels like the Rays probably do it more than anybody, 287 00:11:30,440 --> 00:11:33,120 Speaker 1: because like they will give up some pieces in times 288 00:11:33,200 --> 00:11:36,280 Speaker 1: and trades. Obviously not the Archer trade, but they have 289 00:11:36,360 --> 00:11:37,920 Speaker 1: given up some guys in the past that have been 290 00:11:38,040 --> 00:11:39,720 Speaker 1: very competent Major League Baseball players. 291 00:11:39,920 --> 00:11:42,839 Speaker 2: I actually tweeted that out on I think it was 292 00:11:42,920 --> 00:11:45,319 Speaker 2: like Thursday night because Joe Ryan threw another gem and 293 00:11:45,480 --> 00:11:48,360 Speaker 2: like I feel like the narrative about trading with the 294 00:11:48,440 --> 00:11:50,079 Speaker 2: Rays on twitters, like you can't trade with the Rays, 295 00:11:50,080 --> 00:11:50,880 Speaker 2: they rip everybody off. 296 00:11:51,000 --> 00:11:51,960 Speaker 3: Never make a trade with the Rays. 297 00:11:52,320 --> 00:11:53,679 Speaker 2: You should always want to make a trade with the 298 00:11:53,760 --> 00:11:56,000 Speaker 2: Race because every single player in the organization is talented 299 00:11:56,000 --> 00:11:58,280 Speaker 2: and has tons of potential. Like the Twins got Joe 300 00:11:58,360 --> 00:12:00,880 Speaker 2: Ryan for Nelson Cruise while Nelson Cruz and he's probably 301 00:12:00,920 --> 00:12:03,400 Speaker 2: gonna be taking very critical at bats in the playoffs 302 00:12:03,440 --> 00:12:05,520 Speaker 2: for the Tampa Bay Rays as a one seat in 303 00:12:05,559 --> 00:12:07,600 Speaker 2: the American League who clinched it with a week to play? 304 00:12:08,000 --> 00:12:10,360 Speaker 2: Who tell me who saw that coming? Joe Ryan looks 305 00:12:10,360 --> 00:12:12,360 Speaker 2: like an immediate ace like in the major leagues, like 306 00:12:12,679 --> 00:12:15,760 Speaker 2: Joe O'Ryan's legit les fuck. William Domins came to the 307 00:12:15,800 --> 00:12:17,640 Speaker 2: Brewers and was like the difference maker this team's been 308 00:12:17,679 --> 00:12:20,280 Speaker 2: looking for for literally like four or five years, like 309 00:12:20,360 --> 00:12:22,280 Speaker 2: since they made that first run twenty nineteen. 310 00:12:22,360 --> 00:12:24,520 Speaker 1: He's been one of the best players in baseball. Not 311 00:12:24,640 --> 00:12:27,520 Speaker 1: your shortstop players in baseball. Since he's gone to Milwaukee, 312 00:12:27,559 --> 00:12:30,800 Speaker 1: it's unbelievable. Would be cool if the Mets could you know, 313 00:12:30,840 --> 00:12:32,079 Speaker 1: we had a Hapey Biers has been one of the 314 00:12:32,120 --> 00:12:34,800 Speaker 1: best hitters in baseball since getting traded. The problem is 315 00:12:34,840 --> 00:12:36,640 Speaker 1: the team around him just hasn't been very good. 316 00:12:36,760 --> 00:12:38,040 Speaker 2: Well, I mean, we also made a great trade with 317 00:12:38,080 --> 00:12:39,640 Speaker 2: the Rays this year, and this will transition us into 318 00:12:39,720 --> 00:12:42,640 Speaker 2: game too, because rich Hill has been like one of 319 00:12:42,679 --> 00:12:45,319 Speaker 2: the more consistent players in this entire team since we 320 00:12:45,400 --> 00:12:47,000 Speaker 2: traded for him. Like, if we didn't have rich Hill, 321 00:12:47,600 --> 00:12:50,520 Speaker 2: we'd still be awful, but we'd be much much, much worse. 322 00:12:51,040 --> 00:12:54,000 Speaker 1: Like remember we were pitching Jared Iikoff, Gerrod, remember that. 323 00:12:54,320 --> 00:12:57,280 Speaker 1: Like rich Hill is just again, he's not gonna You're 324 00:12:57,280 --> 00:12:59,040 Speaker 1: not gonna watch when you're not gonna go, wow, man, 325 00:12:59,160 --> 00:13:02,080 Speaker 1: what a pitcher he is. But he has just gone 326 00:13:02,120 --> 00:13:04,839 Speaker 1: out seemingly every single start for the Mets and done 327 00:13:04,880 --> 00:13:06,520 Speaker 1: a really nice job. 328 00:13:06,720 --> 00:13:08,679 Speaker 2: And I feel like it's always him who goes toe 329 00:13:08,720 --> 00:13:10,719 Speaker 2: to toe with the aces like he went he like 330 00:13:10,840 --> 00:13:13,760 Speaker 2: threw like equal frames with a wheeler. I think ye 331 00:13:13,760 --> 00:13:15,640 Speaker 2: had another one a couple of weeks ago. I can't remember, 332 00:13:15,679 --> 00:13:17,839 Speaker 2: but like he went out there against Corbyn Burns on 333 00:13:17,920 --> 00:13:20,360 Speaker 2: Saturday night and was like, I'm on this fucking mount too, 334 00:13:20,440 --> 00:13:22,760 Speaker 2: Like you're not gonna fuck with me. And if you 335 00:13:23,400 --> 00:13:25,600 Speaker 2: thought we were gonna have a chance against Corbyn Burns 336 00:13:25,640 --> 00:13:28,040 Speaker 2: after Eric Loward like turned this into Swiss cheese, Like, 337 00:13:28,200 --> 00:13:31,960 Speaker 2: my god, Corbin had twenty two whiffs, nine strike as 338 00:13:32,160 --> 00:13:34,840 Speaker 2: we only had three hard hit balls the entire fucking game. 339 00:13:34,960 --> 00:13:37,440 Speaker 2: He was perfect for the first nine batters of this game. 340 00:13:37,559 --> 00:13:40,800 Speaker 2: It was just it was complete another domination. There was 341 00:13:40,880 --> 00:13:43,280 Speaker 2: nothing else I even possibly expected. 342 00:13:43,360 --> 00:13:44,880 Speaker 1: I mean, he's a cy Young Award winner in the 343 00:13:44,960 --> 00:13:46,599 Speaker 1: National League. It's gonna be hard to hit him. And 344 00:13:46,800 --> 00:13:49,000 Speaker 1: when he's uh, when he's cooking like this, it's really hard. 345 00:13:49,280 --> 00:13:50,960 Speaker 2: I mean, the cy Young's either gonna be Corbyn Burns 346 00:13:51,040 --> 00:13:51,720 Speaker 2: or Ranger Suarez. 347 00:13:51,760 --> 00:13:52,160 Speaker 3: One of the two. 348 00:13:52,400 --> 00:13:54,520 Speaker 1: Ranger Suarez is not winning it. I will not let 349 00:13:54,600 --> 00:13:57,160 Speaker 1: you infiltrate our viewers' brains. 350 00:13:57,640 --> 00:14:00,520 Speaker 2: Ranger Suarez is going to have pass'll be the lowes 351 00:14:00,559 --> 00:14:02,000 Speaker 2: era in Major League history. 352 00:14:01,760 --> 00:14:03,560 Speaker 3: With more than one hundred innings throw in his season. 353 00:14:04,040 --> 00:14:06,000 Speaker 1: That is a true statement. Does it matter? 354 00:14:06,640 --> 00:14:11,120 Speaker 2: Maybe through complete game shutout on Saturday night, wouldn't it. 355 00:14:11,160 --> 00:14:13,720 Speaker 1: Be sick like if, because here's what would happened. One 356 00:14:13,720 --> 00:14:15,599 Speaker 1: of our pitchers would throw a complete game, shutout, but 357 00:14:15,720 --> 00:14:17,360 Speaker 1: we would score no runs and then we'd go to 358 00:14:17,440 --> 00:14:18,840 Speaker 1: the tenth and then that would happen. 359 00:14:19,160 --> 00:14:20,040 Speaker 3: And that happened to rich Hill. 360 00:14:20,080 --> 00:14:21,720 Speaker 2: He threw, I think no hither a perfect game with 361 00:14:21,760 --> 00:14:24,080 Speaker 2: the Dodgers, like six or seven years ago, and it 362 00:14:24,160 --> 00:14:25,680 Speaker 2: was zero zero in the tenth inning and you had 363 00:14:25,720 --> 00:14:26,080 Speaker 2: to lose it. 364 00:14:26,240 --> 00:14:28,920 Speaker 1: Oh man, it's so frustrating, man, so frustrating. Rich Hill. 365 00:14:29,000 --> 00:14:31,800 Speaker 1: Six k's twour and runs through five innings pitched, and 366 00:14:31,960 --> 00:14:34,000 Speaker 1: yes we're still are going up against Corbyn Burns. But 367 00:14:34,080 --> 00:14:36,360 Speaker 1: like he didn't pitch the entire game. He doesn't pitch 368 00:14:36,440 --> 00:14:39,040 Speaker 1: every single inning. You could score against some other guys. 369 00:14:39,080 --> 00:14:41,280 Speaker 2: Through seven and then the Brewers' bullpen comes in. They're 370 00:14:41,360 --> 00:14:44,320 Speaker 2: pretty fucking unhittable. It's a marvel to watch Devin Williams 371 00:14:44,400 --> 00:14:47,160 Speaker 2: live like he was literally built in a lab because 372 00:14:47,200 --> 00:14:49,760 Speaker 2: the Brewers just like scientifically create pitchers. They invented a 373 00:14:49,800 --> 00:14:51,640 Speaker 2: pitch like who does shit like that? 374 00:14:51,800 --> 00:14:52,280 Speaker 3: How do you do that? 375 00:14:52,280 --> 00:14:52,320 Speaker 2: That? 376 00:14:52,760 --> 00:14:54,960 Speaker 1: Weird? Like it's not a screwball, but it is a screwball, 377 00:14:55,000 --> 00:14:56,400 Speaker 1: but it's more of a change up. I don't even 378 00:14:56,440 --> 00:14:58,360 Speaker 1: know really how to describe it, but it's unhittable. 379 00:14:58,440 --> 00:15:01,800 Speaker 3: I know that it's the Airbender. Like Josh Hayter too. 380 00:15:01,840 --> 00:15:03,600 Speaker 3: The Met's are gonna hit Josh fucking Hayter. We had 381 00:15:03,840 --> 00:15:06,680 Speaker 3: Josi part the miracle in June, but like that's never 382 00:15:06,720 --> 00:15:07,480 Speaker 3: gonna happen again. 383 00:15:07,600 --> 00:15:10,280 Speaker 2: Like it was a complete fucking clusterfuck to try and 384 00:15:10,320 --> 00:15:12,520 Speaker 2: win a game like this, Like Jesus Christ. Even Corbyn 385 00:15:12,520 --> 00:15:15,840 Speaker 2: Burns like he didn't he'd like tapered down his repertoire 386 00:15:15,880 --> 00:15:17,560 Speaker 2: for this game. Eighty five percent of the pitches he 387 00:15:17,640 --> 00:15:19,640 Speaker 2: threw were colors and curveballs, and they do make up 388 00:15:19,640 --> 00:15:21,280 Speaker 2: the line share of his repertoire, but not that much. 389 00:15:21,320 --> 00:15:23,040 Speaker 2: And we couldn't do jack shit against either of them. 390 00:15:23,680 --> 00:15:26,040 Speaker 2: We swung at those two pitches fifty four times, and 391 00:15:26,160 --> 00:15:28,280 Speaker 2: we swung and missed on twenty of those. Just there 392 00:15:28,360 --> 00:15:31,400 Speaker 2: was absolutely no chance that we were gonna be able 393 00:15:31,400 --> 00:15:33,960 Speaker 2: to hit Corbyn, Barns, Devin Williams or Josh Haither. 394 00:15:34,200 --> 00:15:36,360 Speaker 1: No, I mean, Hobby got an RBI. That was that 395 00:15:36,440 --> 00:15:38,880 Speaker 1: was nice because Hobby is just still locked in at 396 00:15:38,880 --> 00:15:39,640 Speaker 1: the play pretty much. 397 00:15:39,680 --> 00:15:42,520 Speaker 2: He's he's a Beast's superstar and like, just to get 398 00:15:42,600 --> 00:15:44,360 Speaker 2: back to rich Hill, he gave up the twour and 399 00:15:44,440 --> 00:15:46,160 Speaker 2: runs and it was on like a tough two aut 400 00:15:46,200 --> 00:15:48,040 Speaker 2: single to a wire the West Cobar And as a 401 00:15:48,120 --> 00:15:50,640 Speaker 2: quick aside, I'm super jacked up to watch at Ward 402 00:15:50,640 --> 00:15:51,880 Speaker 2: the West Cabar in the playoffs this year. 403 00:15:52,000 --> 00:15:53,840 Speaker 1: That's my boy. I've I've been telling you about war 404 00:15:54,000 --> 00:15:56,360 Speaker 1: Escobar and you were you weren't as high on me. 405 00:15:56,400 --> 00:15:58,520 Speaker 1: I'm not gonna say you disliked him, but you were like, eh, 406 00:15:58,760 --> 00:15:59,360 Speaker 1: he's whatever. 407 00:15:59,600 --> 00:16:01,920 Speaker 2: I just him before this season because he just struck 408 00:16:01,960 --> 00:16:04,640 Speaker 2: out a ton was rocking like abnormally high bab biss 409 00:16:04,680 --> 00:16:06,400 Speaker 2: for a player with no speed, and didn't hit the 410 00:16:06,440 --> 00:16:08,000 Speaker 2: ball very hard. I was like, eventually, this is not 411 00:16:08,080 --> 00:16:09,680 Speaker 2: gonna work. But this year he's been hitting the ball 412 00:16:09,760 --> 00:16:11,560 Speaker 2: much harder and talking about juice. 413 00:16:11,560 --> 00:16:12,720 Speaker 3: That guy is the king of juice. 414 00:16:13,000 --> 00:16:14,520 Speaker 1: He's a juice man, big juice man. 415 00:16:14,560 --> 00:16:16,000 Speaker 2: Like it's gonna be really fun to watch him and 416 00:16:16,080 --> 00:16:17,960 Speaker 2: this entire Brewers team in the playoffs, like we got 417 00:16:18,000 --> 00:16:19,720 Speaker 2: beat so bad that we're like, they're so good. 418 00:16:19,800 --> 00:16:21,680 Speaker 3: I love watching that with a great fun team. 419 00:16:21,640 --> 00:16:23,520 Speaker 1: Trying to be happy about something. We can at least 420 00:16:23,560 --> 00:16:25,400 Speaker 1: appreciate that we got to watch a team that could 421 00:16:25,400 --> 00:16:27,080 Speaker 1: win the World Series play against the Mets. 422 00:16:27,360 --> 00:16:30,240 Speaker 2: Oh, definitely, And like all the things considered rich Hill, 423 00:16:30,440 --> 00:16:33,360 Speaker 2: while he pitched five inc six k's two ur in rows, 424 00:16:33,400 --> 00:16:34,960 Speaker 2: he only allowed three hard hit balls. Like he matched 425 00:16:35,000 --> 00:16:37,320 Speaker 2: Corbyn Burns in that department. But what are we gonna 426 00:16:37,320 --> 00:16:38,320 Speaker 2: do we only score one run? 427 00:16:38,640 --> 00:16:38,680 Speaker 1: Like? 428 00:16:38,960 --> 00:16:43,360 Speaker 2: And I think Keith and Gary really started to put 429 00:16:43,400 --> 00:16:44,920 Speaker 2: the heat on this team this game, and I think 430 00:16:44,960 --> 00:16:46,520 Speaker 2: it's super warranted. Yeah. 431 00:16:46,560 --> 00:16:48,400 Speaker 1: What was the thing that Keith said? He called He 432 00:16:48,480 --> 00:16:50,360 Speaker 1: basically said they're won a second division team. 433 00:16:50,480 --> 00:16:52,440 Speaker 2: He said the Mets look like a second division team, 434 00:16:52,520 --> 00:16:54,440 Speaker 2: and he's not going to put lipstick on a pig. 435 00:16:54,840 --> 00:16:55,040 Speaker 3: Yeah. 436 00:16:55,120 --> 00:16:56,520 Speaker 1: I mean, I think he hit the nail right on 437 00:16:56,560 --> 00:16:58,480 Speaker 1: the head. I think we want to believe that this 438 00:16:58,560 --> 00:17:00,520 Speaker 1: team is better and that we should be better. I 439 00:17:00,600 --> 00:17:02,720 Speaker 1: don't think we're wrong for thinking at the start of 440 00:17:02,760 --> 00:17:05,240 Speaker 1: the season, But if you're still thinking that now, I mean, 441 00:17:05,800 --> 00:17:08,520 Speaker 1: where's your head at? Because it is what one hundred 442 00:17:08,520 --> 00:17:11,240 Speaker 1: and fifty games into the season and nothing has changed. 443 00:17:11,480 --> 00:17:13,320 Speaker 2: I feel like such an asshole for thinking the Mets 444 00:17:13,359 --> 00:17:15,600 Speaker 2: were gonna be like one of the elite hitting teams 445 00:17:15,640 --> 00:17:17,400 Speaker 2: in baseball this year. Like, I look up and down 446 00:17:17,440 --> 00:17:20,920 Speaker 2: this lineup, and half of these guys just they can't play, 447 00:17:21,160 --> 00:17:22,080 Speaker 2: Like they just can't do it. 448 00:17:22,280 --> 00:17:25,439 Speaker 1: No, we don't have capable everyday players at every position, 449 00:17:25,520 --> 00:17:27,720 Speaker 1: and that's really tough when there are a bunch of 450 00:17:27,800 --> 00:17:28,760 Speaker 1: teams who do have them. 451 00:17:28,800 --> 00:17:30,280 Speaker 2: Tons of teams that have them, a lot of them, 452 00:17:30,400 --> 00:17:31,920 Speaker 2: all the ones that make the playoffs have those, and 453 00:17:32,080 --> 00:17:35,080 Speaker 2: we just don't. And then after this, Gary started taking 454 00:17:35,119 --> 00:17:37,720 Speaker 2: shots at Rojas. I think everyone is pretty much done 455 00:17:37,760 --> 00:17:40,879 Speaker 2: with him. While he's not like the worst manager in 456 00:17:40,920 --> 00:17:42,760 Speaker 2: the world, he's definitely being scapegoaded for a lot of 457 00:17:42,800 --> 00:17:44,880 Speaker 2: these issues, which I don't know. You got, you gotta 458 00:17:44,920 --> 00:17:46,280 Speaker 2: sometimes you just gotta hate the lunch lady. 459 00:17:46,720 --> 00:17:49,160 Speaker 1: Yeah that happened. I don't know. I again, I think 460 00:17:49,160 --> 00:17:51,400 Speaker 1: we're both in the same boat here that Rojas isn't 461 00:17:51,440 --> 00:17:54,080 Speaker 1: the problem, but he also might not be the solution. 462 00:17:54,320 --> 00:17:57,400 Speaker 1: And I think that's maybe where we've changed our thought 463 00:17:57,440 --> 00:17:59,280 Speaker 1: process from the beginning of the year, is that we 464 00:17:59,320 --> 00:18:01,159 Speaker 1: thought Rojas is gonna be the guy, He's gonna be 465 00:18:01,160 --> 00:18:03,200 Speaker 1: the dude to help lead us there. And maybe that 466 00:18:03,320 --> 00:18:05,119 Speaker 1: was a mistake on us. Maybe we were getting a 467 00:18:05,119 --> 00:18:09,160 Speaker 1: little excited, but I don't know, I'm starting to lose 468 00:18:09,200 --> 00:18:12,000 Speaker 1: faith that he's not the answer again, not the problem, 469 00:18:12,040 --> 00:18:15,600 Speaker 1: but not the solution. Gary was upset that Rojas was 470 00:18:15,640 --> 00:18:18,040 Speaker 1: not chirping the umpire and before the game the Mets 471 00:18:18,080 --> 00:18:20,320 Speaker 1: had found out that they were eliminated from playoff contention, 472 00:18:20,560 --> 00:18:23,320 Speaker 1: well known public info. The players, the managers, they had 473 00:18:23,359 --> 00:18:25,560 Speaker 1: to know. There's no way you didn't. If you didn't know, 474 00:18:26,200 --> 00:18:29,000 Speaker 1: you know, the season's over. Gary wasn't calling him out 475 00:18:29,000 --> 00:18:31,040 Speaker 1: for dogging it. He wasn't saying you weren't trying hard, 476 00:18:31,119 --> 00:18:33,280 Speaker 1: but he was upset that Rojas seemed to not care 477 00:18:33,320 --> 00:18:36,080 Speaker 1: about the balls and shrikes, which were, you know, questionable 478 00:18:36,160 --> 00:18:38,240 Speaker 1: at times, especially when Rojas has been one of the 479 00:18:38,320 --> 00:18:41,159 Speaker 1: more vocal managers in baseball this year about balls and shrikes. 480 00:18:41,480 --> 00:18:43,920 Speaker 1: So Gary he was upset. He was basically like, listen, 481 00:18:44,320 --> 00:18:46,560 Speaker 1: even though you're out of playoffs season, those season's over. 482 00:18:46,880 --> 00:18:48,760 Speaker 1: You still gotta play the games. You still gotta go 483 00:18:48,840 --> 00:18:50,560 Speaker 1: out there, you still gotta fight a little bit. I 484 00:18:50,760 --> 00:18:53,440 Speaker 1: think Gary's kind of right. This is something that we're 485 00:18:53,440 --> 00:18:55,880 Speaker 1: seeing with this team right now. There just really isn't 486 00:18:55,880 --> 00:18:58,600 Speaker 1: a fight left in them right now. And can I 487 00:18:58,680 --> 00:19:01,600 Speaker 1: blame them no to long season. It's been a rough 488 00:19:01,680 --> 00:19:03,840 Speaker 1: season for the Mets. It's been They've been through a 489 00:19:03,960 --> 00:19:06,280 Speaker 1: lot of shit. I'm sure they're tired. I'm sure they're 490 00:19:06,280 --> 00:19:08,639 Speaker 1: ready to go home. But got ten more games. I mean, 491 00:19:08,680 --> 00:19:10,760 Speaker 1: you gotta go out swinging a little bit, a little 492 00:19:10,760 --> 00:19:11,320 Speaker 1: bit something. 493 00:19:11,480 --> 00:19:13,840 Speaker 2: I also think that this is more of an issue 494 00:19:13,840 --> 00:19:16,879 Speaker 2: because it's something that Luis Rojas did so consistently earlier 495 00:19:16,880 --> 00:19:18,800 Speaker 2: in the year, when this team was competitive and they 496 00:19:18,840 --> 00:19:21,240 Speaker 2: were like fighting every single day. If he was never 497 00:19:21,280 --> 00:19:24,560 Speaker 2: a vocal manager and he never really tried to chew 498 00:19:24,600 --> 00:19:26,480 Speaker 2: out umpires like I would say, yeah, sure, but remember 499 00:19:26,480 --> 00:19:28,000 Speaker 2: he had that week when things were starting to really 500 00:19:28,040 --> 00:19:30,040 Speaker 2: go to shit in July when he just argued every 501 00:19:30,040 --> 00:19:32,880 Speaker 2: single call, yeah, thrown out like multiple games, like showed fire. 502 00:19:33,000 --> 00:19:35,240 Speaker 3: Like, if that's going to be your personality, you have 503 00:19:35,320 --> 00:19:36,119 Speaker 3: to be consistent with it. 504 00:19:36,160 --> 00:19:38,880 Speaker 2: I don't want it makes me kind of like lose 505 00:19:38,960 --> 00:19:42,200 Speaker 2: faith in his authenticity that he was doing something a 506 00:19:42,240 --> 00:19:44,040 Speaker 2: lot and now was starting not to anymore. And that 507 00:19:44,640 --> 00:19:47,600 Speaker 2: is probably the biggest insult of him. I could possibly 508 00:19:47,680 --> 00:19:49,800 Speaker 2: say that's the biggest red flag that I've noticed now 509 00:19:49,960 --> 00:19:51,920 Speaker 2: over this absolute massive collapse. 510 00:19:52,080 --> 00:19:53,800 Speaker 1: Yeah, if we're gonna make something of it, maybe it 511 00:19:53,920 --> 00:19:56,399 Speaker 1: makes me think that he doesn't really know what to do. 512 00:19:56,720 --> 00:19:58,880 Speaker 1: And that's that is concerning with manager. If you don't 513 00:19:58,880 --> 00:20:01,000 Speaker 1: know what to do, it might not be the right guy. 514 00:20:01,119 --> 00:20:03,440 Speaker 1: And that maybe makes me think that that Rohaus is like, 515 00:20:03,440 --> 00:20:06,280 Speaker 1: maybe I gotta fire these guys up. Maybe that's something 516 00:20:06,320 --> 00:20:08,280 Speaker 1: with the players too. Maybe he's like, I gotta try 517 00:20:08,320 --> 00:20:10,040 Speaker 1: and fire these guys up, or if they're not gonna care, 518 00:20:10,080 --> 00:20:12,240 Speaker 1: I'm not gonna carry. I don't know. I really don't 519 00:20:12,240 --> 00:20:14,119 Speaker 1: know what it is, but it's just not great in 520 00:20:14,200 --> 00:20:16,359 Speaker 1: mets Land right now. And the fact that Gary and 521 00:20:16,520 --> 00:20:18,920 Speaker 1: Keith and Ron and everybody is just kind of openly 522 00:20:19,040 --> 00:20:21,480 Speaker 1: now I don't want to say bashing, but kind of 523 00:20:21,600 --> 00:20:23,800 Speaker 1: not holding back at all. It's kind of showing that 524 00:20:24,400 --> 00:20:25,440 Speaker 1: everyone's kind of done with it. 525 00:20:25,640 --> 00:20:27,200 Speaker 3: Yeah, but that's why these guys are the best in 526 00:20:27,240 --> 00:20:27,560 Speaker 3: the BIS. 527 00:20:27,680 --> 00:20:30,080 Speaker 2: Like you watch other other teams play baseball and their 528 00:20:30,119 --> 00:20:33,720 Speaker 2: announcers are complete fucking snooze fest, Like these are real 529 00:20:33,880 --> 00:20:36,200 Speaker 2: fans who care very much about success of this team, 530 00:20:36,359 --> 00:20:39,200 Speaker 2: and when things are not going well, they're gonna say it. 531 00:20:39,240 --> 00:20:41,240 Speaker 3: And we as Mets fans, have to appreciate. 532 00:20:40,880 --> 00:20:42,440 Speaker 1: That because they're the only reason to turn the TV 533 00:20:42,560 --> 00:20:44,840 Speaker 1: on now, literally, like they are so entertaining and they're 534 00:20:44,880 --> 00:20:46,359 Speaker 1: so good at their job. I tried to watch the 535 00:20:46,480 --> 00:20:49,000 Speaker 1: games today, have just random teams, snooze fest, can't do it, 536 00:20:49,359 --> 00:20:52,200 Speaker 1: can't do it. Good games, close games. Not interested because 537 00:20:52,200 --> 00:20:55,080 Speaker 1: the announcers literally don't say anything, Gary, Keith and Ron. 538 00:20:55,320 --> 00:20:57,240 Speaker 1: They keep you interested in the game even when you 539 00:20:57,440 --> 00:20:59,320 Speaker 1: know the season is dead in the water. 540 00:20:59,400 --> 00:21:01,480 Speaker 2: And I guess that just take us, like slowly and 541 00:21:01,600 --> 00:21:04,639 Speaker 2: solemnly into Game three where Carls Carrasco was pitching, and 542 00:21:04,720 --> 00:21:06,440 Speaker 2: Mark You'll never guess what happened the first inning of 543 00:21:06,480 --> 00:21:08,440 Speaker 2: this game. He had to have a one two, three inning, 544 00:21:08,520 --> 00:21:10,159 Speaker 2: no hits, no runs, You're. 545 00:21:10,119 --> 00:21:12,320 Speaker 3: Like really close, but he gave up a home run. 546 00:21:12,560 --> 00:21:15,200 Speaker 1: Oh okay, yeah, we knew that was common. I mean, 547 00:21:15,480 --> 00:21:16,720 Speaker 1: who do you give it up to this time? Was 548 00:21:16,760 --> 00:21:18,439 Speaker 1: it my boy? It was my boy, Willia Damas, right, 549 00:21:18,560 --> 00:21:18,879 Speaker 1: I think it. 550 00:21:18,920 --> 00:21:22,080 Speaker 2: Was Willia domas As. Yeah, because Cultumong was the game one. Yeah, yeah, 551 00:21:22,080 --> 00:21:25,000 Speaker 2: it was Willia Damas. But this Carls Carrasco. 552 00:21:24,680 --> 00:21:26,800 Speaker 3: First, anything is now just becoming comical. 553 00:21:26,880 --> 00:21:28,920 Speaker 2: This was his eleventh start of the season, so he's 554 00:21:28,920 --> 00:21:32,080 Speaker 2: pitched eleven first innings and he's given up eighteen earned runs. 555 00:21:32,119 --> 00:21:33,240 Speaker 1: It's unbelievable. 556 00:21:33,400 --> 00:21:35,640 Speaker 2: And he completely wasted Francisco indoors top of the first 557 00:21:35,680 --> 00:21:38,360 Speaker 2: inning home run again. Actually, Met's winning early in this game. 558 00:21:38,400 --> 00:21:40,639 Speaker 2: We were leading twice in three games. That never happens 559 00:21:40,640 --> 00:21:41,040 Speaker 2: to this team. 560 00:21:41,160 --> 00:21:43,359 Speaker 1: No, never happens. Don't We don't get ahead early, and 561 00:21:43,720 --> 00:21:45,680 Speaker 1: apparently we don't hold it when we get ahead early 562 00:21:45,760 --> 00:21:49,680 Speaker 1: either anymore. I don't know. I like, I don't want 563 00:21:49,680 --> 00:21:52,040 Speaker 1: to make this a storyline because it it really doesn't 564 00:21:52,080 --> 00:21:53,639 Speaker 1: matter at this point in the season, but like, it 565 00:21:53,800 --> 00:21:58,600 Speaker 1: is fascinating, fascinating how he just continues to get Sheldon 566 00:21:58,640 --> 00:21:59,040 Speaker 1: the first. 567 00:21:59,480 --> 00:22:02,960 Speaker 2: His first era rose this game from fourteen point four 568 00:22:03,080 --> 00:22:05,840 Speaker 2: zero to fourteen point seventy three. And I did some 569 00:22:06,440 --> 00:22:09,720 Speaker 2: stat head research and this would be right now, the 570 00:22:09,880 --> 00:22:13,359 Speaker 2: twentieth highest era of the history of baseball for a 571 00:22:13,440 --> 00:22:16,720 Speaker 2: single picture in a in the first inning, and like 572 00:22:16,800 --> 00:22:19,320 Speaker 2: literally the history of the game, twentieth highest, twenty nine. 573 00:22:19,359 --> 00:22:21,600 Speaker 2: And this is again all pictures who made at least 574 00:22:21,600 --> 00:22:23,800 Speaker 2: ten starts, so at least ten first innings. But it's 575 00:22:23,840 --> 00:22:25,919 Speaker 2: actually not the highest of any pitcher in baseball this year, 576 00:22:25,960 --> 00:22:26,760 Speaker 2: which shocked me. J. C. 577 00:22:26,920 --> 00:22:29,680 Speaker 3: Mahia on Cleveland, who is just not very good. 578 00:22:29,760 --> 00:22:30,400 Speaker 2: He is higher. 579 00:22:30,440 --> 00:22:32,080 Speaker 3: He's in like the low fifteens. 580 00:22:32,280 --> 00:22:32,520 Speaker 2: J C. 581 00:22:32,680 --> 00:22:36,160 Speaker 1: Mhia, that's at that's not even a real person. John 582 00:22:36,160 --> 00:22:40,280 Speaker 1: Carlos Mahia, who we're comparing him to, Carlos Carrasco. 583 00:22:41,320 --> 00:22:43,080 Speaker 2: He has a higher first in the era than him, 584 00:22:43,119 --> 00:22:46,200 Speaker 2: but the twentiest, twentieth highest first in the era in 585 00:22:46,280 --> 00:22:48,720 Speaker 2: the history of baseball, Carlos Carrasco this year, the history 586 00:22:48,840 --> 00:22:49,440 Speaker 2: of baseball. 587 00:22:50,359 --> 00:22:53,639 Speaker 1: It's it's I don't know, I don't know. Like the 588 00:22:53,680 --> 00:22:56,480 Speaker 1: good thing is that these games don't matter. The season's over, 589 00:22:56,760 --> 00:22:59,200 Speaker 1: so that's that's the solace in it. Just get better 590 00:22:59,280 --> 00:23:02,119 Speaker 1: for next year. What's crazy about him is he just 591 00:23:02,600 --> 00:23:05,560 Speaker 1: normally does well. This one not so much. He got 592 00:23:05,600 --> 00:23:06,480 Speaker 1: shelled the rest of the game. 593 00:23:06,640 --> 00:23:08,359 Speaker 2: Oh well, he gave up three more runs in the 594 00:23:08,400 --> 00:23:10,240 Speaker 2: second inning. And he wounds up this game with more 595 00:23:10,400 --> 00:23:12,679 Speaker 2: walks and strikeouts, five and runs and just fifty three 596 00:23:12,720 --> 00:23:14,679 Speaker 2: percent of his pitch for mid nineties fastballs, Like. 597 00:23:14,680 --> 00:23:15,639 Speaker 3: You're not You're not gonna do that. 598 00:23:15,680 --> 00:23:17,040 Speaker 2: I guess the team who could hit like the Brewers. 599 00:23:17,160 --> 00:23:20,040 Speaker 1: There's been this weird twist in what seems like the 600 00:23:20,119 --> 00:23:23,359 Speaker 1: Mets pitchers focus recently. It just feels like very, very 601 00:23:23,480 --> 00:23:27,240 Speaker 1: four seam fastball heavy. Do they think that they're facing 602 00:23:27,280 --> 00:23:29,680 Speaker 1: the Mets batters. I don't know what's going on there, because, 603 00:23:30,119 --> 00:23:32,800 Speaker 1: I mean, typically around baseball, you look around the numbers, 604 00:23:32,960 --> 00:23:35,360 Speaker 1: teams hit fastballs. It's just the Mets having in an uptitude, 605 00:23:35,440 --> 00:23:36,639 Speaker 1: but everyone else seems to hit them. 606 00:23:36,720 --> 00:23:37,960 Speaker 3: I think just trying to crawl to the end of 607 00:23:37,960 --> 00:23:39,679 Speaker 3: the year. Just get the fuck out of here. I mean, 608 00:23:39,760 --> 00:23:40,080 Speaker 3: I don't know. 609 00:23:40,320 --> 00:23:42,440 Speaker 2: Maybe Crasco doesn't have field for zaust beats, maybe he 610 00:23:42,520 --> 00:23:45,000 Speaker 2: just quit this game. Maybe they're I don't even want 611 00:23:45,000 --> 00:23:46,720 Speaker 2: to say they're experimenting because it's a four seam fastball. 612 00:23:46,720 --> 00:23:48,960 Speaker 2: It's probably not experimentation here. It's just they're just not good. 613 00:23:49,000 --> 00:23:51,240 Speaker 2: This team just really not good. We're not competitive. We 614 00:23:51,440 --> 00:23:54,480 Speaker 2: just fucking stink. Like it's literally just Javey Lindor and 615 00:23:54,600 --> 00:23:57,320 Speaker 2: Nemo and jave Lindor did get the RBIs some of 616 00:23:57,359 --> 00:23:58,200 Speaker 2: the RBIs in this game. 617 00:23:58,240 --> 00:23:59,280 Speaker 3: They just guys continue to hit. 618 00:23:59,320 --> 00:24:00,719 Speaker 2: They seem to be like some kind of magic when 619 00:24:00,760 --> 00:24:02,760 Speaker 2: they're on the field together, even though the rest of 620 00:24:02,760 --> 00:24:06,200 Speaker 2: the team completely sucks stick and that error sequence I 621 00:24:06,240 --> 00:24:08,600 Speaker 2: think it was the seventh inning was just such awful, 622 00:24:08,720 --> 00:24:09,840 Speaker 2: bad sloppy baseball. 623 00:24:09,840 --> 00:24:12,040 Speaker 3: It was just the sign of a team that has quit. 624 00:24:12,240 --> 00:24:14,160 Speaker 1: Yeah, we just uh we kind of brought it back. 625 00:24:14,200 --> 00:24:15,640 Speaker 1: It was what five to four, I think at the time, 626 00:24:15,720 --> 00:24:17,239 Speaker 1: or six to four, whatever it was. It was five 627 00:24:17,280 --> 00:24:19,840 Speaker 1: four was one run game, Yeah, close game. Uh VR 628 00:24:19,960 --> 00:24:22,280 Speaker 1: made that weird, just like kind of shit. The bed 629 00:24:22,400 --> 00:24:24,359 Speaker 1: had a freak out, Shantan VR at third base, Like 630 00:24:24,400 --> 00:24:26,280 Speaker 1: you told me off the podcast, you're gonna get that 631 00:24:26,359 --> 00:24:29,280 Speaker 1: sometimes with them. That's what you signed up for, Cabalerra Loco, 632 00:24:29,520 --> 00:24:30,440 Speaker 1: It's it's gonna happen. 633 00:24:30,520 --> 00:24:32,960 Speaker 3: He like deeked the first, like his mind wasn't made up. 634 00:24:33,080 --> 00:24:35,560 Speaker 2: Like when you're playing baseball, you're taught nowhere you're going 635 00:24:35,600 --> 00:24:37,000 Speaker 2: with the ball before it'sits to you, so you could 636 00:24:37,040 --> 00:24:39,120 Speaker 2: just react, and he like made a movement to first, 637 00:24:39,160 --> 00:24:40,560 Speaker 2: and then in the middle of that he decided to 638 00:24:40,720 --> 00:24:42,080 Speaker 2: move it to home. Middle of that, he decided to 639 00:24:42,119 --> 00:24:44,080 Speaker 2: throw the first. He wasn't really set. It was just 640 00:24:44,160 --> 00:24:46,080 Speaker 2: it was just a bad era of real mental laps, 641 00:24:46,200 --> 00:24:48,840 Speaker 2: bad baseball. Lindor also made an error a few bads 642 00:24:48,920 --> 00:24:50,440 Speaker 2: later on a very tough play in the hole that 643 00:24:50,600 --> 00:24:52,200 Speaker 2: like opened the flood games. It was a miracle even 644 00:24:52,200 --> 00:24:55,080 Speaker 2: got to the ball, and sure he made an error, 645 00:24:55,119 --> 00:24:56,680 Speaker 2: like he could have made a perfect throw he didn't, 646 00:24:56,760 --> 00:24:58,399 Speaker 2: But I'm not gonna kill him for that. I'm not 647 00:24:58,400 --> 00:24:59,560 Speaker 2: gonna kill a guy for anything. Right now. 648 00:24:59,600 --> 00:25:01,800 Speaker 3: He's just wound up having like a very good season. 649 00:25:01,920 --> 00:25:04,800 Speaker 1: So yeah, he uh, you know, one of the more 650 00:25:04,800 --> 00:25:06,920 Speaker 1: disappointing years in the stat book because you see that 651 00:25:06,960 --> 00:25:08,879 Speaker 1: seven twenty ohps or whatever it is, and you're like, 652 00:25:08,960 --> 00:25:12,680 Speaker 1: that's not what we signed up for. But it's just 653 00:25:12,880 --> 00:25:15,720 Speaker 1: it's whatever. Man, I'm just so I'm so over the whole, 654 00:25:15,800 --> 00:25:18,119 Speaker 1: like Lindor stinks. Thing, like if you can't take a 655 00:25:18,160 --> 00:25:20,840 Speaker 1: deeper look into what he's actually done since like kind 656 00:25:20,880 --> 00:25:23,239 Speaker 1: of figuring it out, he's back to normally. He's been very, 657 00:25:23,359 --> 00:25:25,520 Speaker 1: very good this year outside of that first two months. 658 00:25:25,359 --> 00:25:27,840 Speaker 2: Dude, he's been actually a fan I want to say fantastic, 659 00:25:27,840 --> 00:25:29,960 Speaker 2: but I think he's been pretty fucking good after that 660 00:25:30,080 --> 00:25:32,120 Speaker 2: dreadful start. The fact that he's gotten his full season 661 00:25:32,280 --> 00:25:35,400 Speaker 2: WRC plus over one hundred is really good. It means 662 00:25:35,440 --> 00:25:37,399 Speaker 2: he's like, literally, even for as bad as he was 663 00:25:37,440 --> 00:25:40,320 Speaker 2: for legit fifty of one hundred and eighteen games that 664 00:25:40,359 --> 00:25:43,359 Speaker 2: he's played, he has become now a statistically above average 665 00:25:43,400 --> 00:25:45,800 Speaker 2: hitre in baseball. It reminds me so much about Tran's 666 00:25:45,800 --> 00:25:47,920 Speaker 2: first year, Yeah, where it was so terrible and he 667 00:25:48,000 --> 00:25:49,879 Speaker 2: quietly looked really good and then he exploded for the 668 00:25:49,920 --> 00:25:51,119 Speaker 2: rest of the contract. Beau, He's one of the best 669 00:25:51,119 --> 00:25:53,440 Speaker 2: players in baseball, just like Lindor. And the top of that, 670 00:25:53,520 --> 00:25:56,040 Speaker 2: Lindor is like walking at a career high rate. His 671 00:25:56,280 --> 00:25:58,280 Speaker 2: power is like pretty much in line with I mean, 672 00:25:58,359 --> 00:25:59,720 Speaker 2: that's definitely well below where he's. 673 00:25:59,600 --> 00:26:00,440 Speaker 3: Been for a lot of his career. 674 00:26:00,520 --> 00:26:02,560 Speaker 2: His babbitp is at like a shocking low for player 675 00:26:02,560 --> 00:26:03,879 Speaker 2: who hits the ball as hard as he does, and 676 00:26:03,960 --> 00:26:06,160 Speaker 2: it was as fast as he is his full season 677 00:26:06,200 --> 00:26:08,160 Speaker 2: sluggings at three ninety seven, I feel like it's gonna 678 00:26:08,200 --> 00:26:09,680 Speaker 2: get over four hundred by the end of the season. 679 00:26:09,800 --> 00:26:12,840 Speaker 2: Like this really isn't like a dreadful year. People who 680 00:26:12,960 --> 00:26:14,840 Speaker 2: want like to kill the guy and just crucify him 681 00:26:14,840 --> 00:26:16,160 Speaker 2: for having it off a year and blaming the shot 682 00:26:16,200 --> 00:26:18,399 Speaker 2: on him, look in the mirror. You can't do that 683 00:26:18,640 --> 00:26:20,359 Speaker 2: this is the best player in this team and you 684 00:26:20,440 --> 00:26:22,600 Speaker 2: must should be treated as such. Well, yeah, outside of 685 00:26:22,640 --> 00:26:24,879 Speaker 2: Jacob d grim best offensive player of course. Yeah, And 686 00:26:25,000 --> 00:26:27,000 Speaker 2: that's again, that's the big dark cloud hangover with the 687 00:26:27,119 --> 00:26:29,320 Speaker 2: entire second half. That's just when Jacob de Grom got hurt. 688 00:26:29,520 --> 00:26:32,239 Speaker 2: If he's pitching every five days, we have seven, eight, 689 00:26:32,480 --> 00:26:34,200 Speaker 2: nine more wins, We're probably still very much in the 690 00:26:34,240 --> 00:26:34,560 Speaker 2: thick of it. 691 00:26:34,680 --> 00:26:36,720 Speaker 1: And it's different juice, too, different juice. 692 00:26:36,520 --> 00:26:38,560 Speaker 2: Way different juice. He's the best player on your team 693 00:26:38,560 --> 00:26:39,960 Speaker 2: and you've lost him. If you think the best player 694 00:26:40,000 --> 00:26:41,639 Speaker 2: off any team in baseball, what do you think. 695 00:26:41,560 --> 00:26:42,080 Speaker 3: Is going to happen? 696 00:26:42,080 --> 00:26:43,960 Speaker 2: Where would the Yankees be without garat Cole, Where would 697 00:26:43,960 --> 00:26:46,760 Speaker 2: the Blue Jays be without that Robbie Ray, as funny 698 00:26:46,760 --> 00:26:48,960 Speaker 2: as he has to say, again, this happened to the 699 00:26:49,000 --> 00:26:50,480 Speaker 2: race you took Tyler glasson that way. But they're a 700 00:26:50,480 --> 00:26:52,080 Speaker 2: different animal. You can't compare yourself. 701 00:26:51,800 --> 00:26:52,240 Speaker 3: To the Rays. 702 00:26:52,520 --> 00:26:55,040 Speaker 1: No, you can't, because you're not going to be the 703 00:26:55,119 --> 00:26:56,840 Speaker 1: Rais right now. It's just not. The Mets aren't built 704 00:26:56,840 --> 00:26:58,359 Speaker 1: to be like the Rays right now. I'd love to 705 00:26:58,560 --> 00:27:00,919 Speaker 1: get there at some point, but we're not there. We're 706 00:27:00,920 --> 00:27:01,480 Speaker 1: not even close. 707 00:27:01,800 --> 00:27:03,800 Speaker 2: Imagine if Zach Wheeler, just as he was out for 708 00:27:03,880 --> 00:27:05,679 Speaker 2: the season in the middle of July, the Phillies would be. 709 00:27:06,119 --> 00:27:07,720 Speaker 3: As bad as we are right now, if not worse. 710 00:27:08,080 --> 00:27:09,200 Speaker 1: No, definitely no help. 711 00:27:09,320 --> 00:27:11,960 Speaker 2: Like this isn't how it works. If Kevin Gousman or 712 00:27:12,160 --> 00:27:14,200 Speaker 2: just like is something bad happened to me and pitched 713 00:27:14,200 --> 00:27:16,040 Speaker 2: the whole second half, the Giants be ten games behind 714 00:27:16,080 --> 00:27:18,080 Speaker 2: the Dodgers by now, so still barely ahead of them. 715 00:27:18,160 --> 00:27:21,399 Speaker 1: And that's why it's so important to have that depth. 716 00:27:21,520 --> 00:27:23,800 Speaker 1: And we've talked about this on multiple episodes, but that's 717 00:27:23,800 --> 00:27:25,920 Speaker 1: why it's so important, and not just from the starting 718 00:27:26,000 --> 00:27:28,800 Speaker 1: pitching or the relief pitching aspect of the game, but 719 00:27:29,040 --> 00:27:32,719 Speaker 1: the entire organization needs to be deep. Look at who 720 00:27:32,760 --> 00:27:34,520 Speaker 1: the Brewers pulled out this series. Look at who the 721 00:27:34,600 --> 00:27:36,760 Speaker 1: Giants have pulled out. We keep saying these same teams 722 00:27:36,800 --> 00:27:39,280 Speaker 1: over and over again because there's a common theme here. 723 00:27:39,560 --> 00:27:41,080 Speaker 1: The teams who are at the top, the teams who 724 00:27:41,080 --> 00:27:44,280 Speaker 1: are succeeding have some of the deepest rosters. They have 725 00:27:44,400 --> 00:27:46,639 Speaker 1: the top line talent for sure, and they have very 726 00:27:46,760 --> 00:27:49,080 Speaker 1: very good players. But then you look at the Giants 727 00:27:49,520 --> 00:27:52,919 Speaker 1: and they've figured a way out to have mediocre players 728 00:27:53,000 --> 00:27:56,280 Speaker 1: play at their best capable possibilities. You're getting Brandon Crawfory's 729 00:27:56,320 --> 00:27:58,960 Speaker 1: thirty five years old, having the best season of his career. 730 00:27:59,600 --> 00:28:01,879 Speaker 1: While I am shocked by it, I don't understand how 731 00:28:02,000 --> 00:28:05,159 Speaker 1: clearly the Giants figured something out with Brandon Crawford that 732 00:28:05,280 --> 00:28:07,320 Speaker 1: has elevated his game. The Mets need to find these 733 00:28:07,400 --> 00:28:09,520 Speaker 1: kind of people who can help elevate the guys that 734 00:28:09,600 --> 00:28:11,960 Speaker 1: we have here right now, as well as bringing the 735 00:28:12,080 --> 00:28:14,320 Speaker 1: right guys to help fill out that roster, because again, 736 00:28:14,680 --> 00:28:16,920 Speaker 1: we just haven't had the depth that we thought we 737 00:28:17,040 --> 00:28:19,920 Speaker 1: did going into the season. I think we completely undervalued 738 00:28:19,960 --> 00:28:22,000 Speaker 1: that and it's really showing here down the stretch. 739 00:28:22,240 --> 00:28:23,840 Speaker 2: Dude, even if you want to look at the team 740 00:28:23,880 --> 00:28:26,680 Speaker 2: closer than the Giants, the Atlanta Braves in our own division, 741 00:28:26,760 --> 00:28:29,240 Speaker 2: have us have used their depth so well this season, 742 00:28:29,320 --> 00:28:30,920 Speaker 2: especially since the trade deadline. But you look at a 743 00:28:30,960 --> 00:28:33,719 Speaker 2: player like Tuki Tusan, who so many people rode off 744 00:28:33,720 --> 00:28:35,320 Speaker 2: over the last few years say he was reliever, I'll 745 00:28:35,359 --> 00:28:37,520 Speaker 2: never be a pitcher. He's given the Braves like for 746 00:28:37,760 --> 00:28:40,360 Speaker 2: the really really good innings over the last month or so, Oscar, 747 00:28:40,400 --> 00:28:42,480 Speaker 2: you KNOWO came out of God knows where to have 748 00:28:42,560 --> 00:28:44,240 Speaker 2: a great season for them. That's very similar to McGill 749 00:28:44,280 --> 00:28:46,360 Speaker 2: for us, but like, of course much better. But like 750 00:28:46,440 --> 00:28:49,520 Speaker 2: they've gotten so much contribution from so many names that 751 00:28:49,760 --> 00:28:51,760 Speaker 2: meant that you wouldn't have expected. Like we've talked a 752 00:28:51,800 --> 00:28:55,400 Speaker 2: lot about the trade deadline, getting Duval, Solair, Peterson, Eddi Rizzaro. 753 00:28:55,600 --> 00:28:58,600 Speaker 2: That's four outfielders. The Braves acquired four outfielders at the 754 00:28:58,640 --> 00:29:01,040 Speaker 2: trade deadline, Like you only play three. Oh the Mets 755 00:29:01,040 --> 00:29:02,400 Speaker 2: would be like, oh my god, we can't acquire a 756 00:29:02,400 --> 00:29:04,480 Speaker 2: fourth outfielder. Then has Jeff McGill gonna get his at bats? 757 00:29:04,520 --> 00:29:05,280 Speaker 3: It doesn't matter. 758 00:29:05,800 --> 00:29:07,960 Speaker 2: Pressure makes diamonds, the cream rises to the top. You 759 00:29:08,120 --> 00:29:10,360 Speaker 2: just have to get in players not care about feelings 760 00:29:10,440 --> 00:29:12,920 Speaker 2: or anything. Like your Heredi was playing very well for 761 00:29:12,960 --> 00:29:14,920 Speaker 2: the Braves. There weren't like we have our depth outfielder. 762 00:29:15,040 --> 00:29:17,880 Speaker 2: Let's get more depth outfielder. Jack the Jack Pearson's the 763 00:29:17,880 --> 00:29:19,320 Speaker 2: guy who's played in the World Series. No one that 764 00:29:19,360 --> 00:29:21,200 Speaker 2: thinks Jack Pearson is gonna be the best player in baseball. 765 00:29:21,240 --> 00:29:23,360 Speaker 2: But nobody would tell you he's not valuable, Like. 766 00:29:23,680 --> 00:29:25,280 Speaker 1: He's not better than Guermo Heredia. 767 00:29:25,600 --> 00:29:29,040 Speaker 2: No, of course, Like like Richard Rodriguez pulled him in 768 00:29:29,040 --> 00:29:31,480 Speaker 2: the trade deadlines. Very valuable reliever, especially in the season 769 00:29:31,520 --> 00:29:33,760 Speaker 2: when Will Smith and Chris Martin have struggled and Luke 770 00:29:33,800 --> 00:29:34,800 Speaker 2: Jackson is just not very good. 771 00:29:34,880 --> 00:29:36,720 Speaker 3: Like Tyler Matzk went down. He was one of the 772 00:29:36,760 --> 00:29:37,920 Speaker 3: best relievers for most of the year. 773 00:29:37,960 --> 00:29:41,280 Speaker 2: People step up, do some shit like that, like Mets 774 00:29:41,320 --> 00:29:43,200 Speaker 2: were just scared of depth for some reason because everyone 775 00:29:43,240 --> 00:29:45,560 Speaker 2: was such goddamn good friends. The Braves lost Ronald the 776 00:29:45,600 --> 00:29:47,640 Speaker 2: Kunya Jr. And they've been better since. 777 00:29:48,040 --> 00:29:50,680 Speaker 1: It doesn't that that that right there is the sentence 778 00:29:50,760 --> 00:29:54,360 Speaker 1: right there, because rond Acuna Junior, in all intents and purposes, 779 00:29:54,720 --> 00:29:56,440 Speaker 1: is our Jacob de gram. He is the best player 780 00:29:56,520 --> 00:29:58,280 Speaker 1: on that team. He is the most valuable player on 781 00:29:58,400 --> 00:30:00,160 Speaker 1: that team. He's a top five player in base ball 782 00:30:00,160 --> 00:30:02,160 Speaker 1: when he's healthy. I think there's no doubt in anybody's 783 00:30:02,200 --> 00:30:05,280 Speaker 1: mind how good that kid is. And they lost them 784 00:30:05,320 --> 00:30:07,360 Speaker 1: and they got better. The Mets had an opportunity to 785 00:30:07,440 --> 00:30:09,600 Speaker 1: do something similar. The Mets had an opportunity to trade 786 00:30:09,640 --> 00:30:12,160 Speaker 1: for everybody. They gave up nothing for the guys that 787 00:30:12,200 --> 00:30:17,160 Speaker 1: they got nothing, nothing, nothing, Riley Adams, Riley Freakin Adams, 788 00:30:17,440 --> 00:30:19,000 Speaker 1: whoever it was, I don't know that. 789 00:30:19,000 --> 00:30:20,320 Speaker 3: Was the Brett hand tray. That was the Brett hand tray. 790 00:30:20,320 --> 00:30:22,360 Speaker 2: The Brads gave up another backup catcher to get du 791 00:30:22,400 --> 00:30:23,280 Speaker 2: val I forgot who it was. 792 00:30:23,360 --> 00:30:26,760 Speaker 1: They gave him Alex Jackson. That that guy sucks. That 793 00:30:26,840 --> 00:30:28,840 Speaker 1: would be we could have traded Tomas Neito. That's what 794 00:30:28,880 --> 00:30:30,760 Speaker 1: you're telling me right there, because Alex Jackson is not 795 00:30:30,840 --> 00:30:32,960 Speaker 1: even a third of the player that Tomas Needo is. 796 00:30:33,040 --> 00:30:35,600 Speaker 1: Alex Jackson's way worse. We could have trade Tomas Needo 797 00:30:35,640 --> 00:30:38,640 Speaker 1: for Adam duval This also just. 798 00:30:38,680 --> 00:30:41,200 Speaker 2: Comes down to general team building philosophy and where the 799 00:30:41,280 --> 00:30:43,640 Speaker 2: Mets seem to probably still be behind. The Braids knew 800 00:30:43,680 --> 00:30:45,680 Speaker 2: they weren't gonna be able to replace role Y Couny 801 00:30:45,760 --> 00:30:47,360 Speaker 2: with one player. They weren't going to deplete their farm 802 00:30:47,440 --> 00:30:49,240 Speaker 2: system to go out and acquire like some of the 803 00:30:49,280 --> 00:30:51,240 Speaker 2: best players on the market like a Jave or Chris 804 00:30:51,320 --> 00:30:53,840 Speaker 2: Bryant or it was another big bat that was traded 805 00:30:53,920 --> 00:30:55,120 Speaker 2: Nelson Cruiz, even though doesn't. 806 00:30:54,880 --> 00:30:55,720 Speaker 1: Count for the Trey Turner. 807 00:30:56,280 --> 00:30:57,880 Speaker 2: Turner like, you're working to get a guy like that, 808 00:30:58,000 --> 00:30:59,800 Speaker 2: So like, let's play the scrap heep, Let's find a market. 809 00:30:59,800 --> 00:31:02,040 Speaker 3: The inefficiency and let's just get a bunch of players. 810 00:31:02,080 --> 00:31:04,960 Speaker 2: Eventually, some of these guys, who all still have pretty 811 00:31:05,000 --> 00:31:07,280 Speaker 2: good projections in the grand scheme of things, will step 812 00:31:07,360 --> 00:31:09,480 Speaker 2: up because they're good, consistent, solid Major leaguers. They have 813 00:31:09,600 --> 00:31:11,760 Speaker 2: him for a while, all these proven track records. The 814 00:31:11,840 --> 00:31:13,840 Speaker 2: mess don't have anyone in the roster with a proven 815 00:31:13,880 --> 00:31:16,560 Speaker 2: track record like Eddie Rizzario. As insane of a sentence, 816 00:31:16,600 --> 00:31:18,959 Speaker 2: that is, Jorge Hilaire is like top five in baseball 817 00:31:19,000 --> 00:31:20,920 Speaker 2: home runs over the last four years. Like they got 818 00:31:21,000 --> 00:31:23,160 Speaker 2: him for nothing, nothing at all. The worlds gave him away, 819 00:31:23,320 --> 00:31:26,160 Speaker 2: like these opportunities existed. And again I'm not gonna kill 820 00:31:26,160 --> 00:31:27,920 Speaker 2: the mest trade deadline because Richell has been good, Trevor 821 00:31:27,960 --> 00:31:30,000 Speaker 2: Williams has been adequate, and Hobby Bias has been great. 822 00:31:30,200 --> 00:31:31,640 Speaker 2: They did it, but there just had to be more 823 00:31:31,760 --> 00:31:34,000 Speaker 2: filler taken in and you just had to get more bodies, 824 00:31:34,040 --> 00:31:36,479 Speaker 2: and for some reason, we just didn't feel the need 825 00:31:36,560 --> 00:31:36,840 Speaker 2: to do that. 826 00:31:37,040 --> 00:31:39,240 Speaker 1: Yeah, team building aspect, it's a problem. It's something we 827 00:31:39,320 --> 00:31:41,560 Speaker 1: definitely need to look into this offseason and something that honestly, 828 00:31:41,600 --> 00:31:43,360 Speaker 1: I think we're probably gonna talk about a lot me 829 00:31:43,400 --> 00:31:45,240 Speaker 1: and you We've done it the last couple of years 830 00:31:45,320 --> 00:31:47,920 Speaker 1: looking for these guys that could be the next Darren 831 00:31:48,000 --> 00:31:50,200 Speaker 1: Ruffs or the next Lamont Way juniors. You were big 832 00:31:50,280 --> 00:31:51,840 Speaker 1: on a guy like Ryan Cordell, who was a Met 833 00:31:51,880 --> 00:31:53,520 Speaker 1: a few years ago. I would have loved to have 834 00:31:53,600 --> 00:31:56,320 Speaker 1: given him another shot, Like he has the tools that 835 00:31:56,440 --> 00:31:58,600 Speaker 1: can make you think that why not make it work 836 00:31:58,640 --> 00:32:00,680 Speaker 1: if you put him in the right scenario. So hopefully 837 00:32:00,680 --> 00:32:04,040 Speaker 1: the Mets addressed that this offseason. Finish up Game three here. 838 00:32:04,120 --> 00:32:06,479 Speaker 1: The Mets have one win since that Sunday night win 839 00:32:06,520 --> 00:32:08,520 Speaker 1: against the New York Yankees when we said they're back. 840 00:32:09,480 --> 00:32:12,240 Speaker 1: We are not back. We are done. 841 00:32:12,560 --> 00:32:13,040 Speaker 3: We're dead. 842 00:32:13,240 --> 00:32:15,840 Speaker 1: D e A D dead and then some other I 843 00:32:15,840 --> 00:32:19,120 Speaker 1: guess housekeeping things here. No cinderguard rehabbing, But is he 844 00:32:19,320 --> 00:32:20,600 Speaker 1: even rehabbing? What is that? 845 00:32:20,960 --> 00:32:23,400 Speaker 2: It's such a farce what's going on with no cindergarden 846 00:32:23,400 --> 00:32:24,840 Speaker 2: and even Jacob de Gard. But now the fact that 847 00:32:24,920 --> 00:32:26,880 Speaker 2: these guys are even throwing pitches off the mound is 848 00:32:27,000 --> 00:32:29,360 Speaker 2: completely disgraceful, Like there's no reason for this whatsoever. No 849 00:32:29,520 --> 00:32:32,080 Speaker 2: cinderguard can't throw a breaking ball. His fastball is maxing 850 00:32:32,120 --> 00:32:32,880 Speaker 2: out like ninety five. 851 00:32:33,120 --> 00:32:33,720 Speaker 1: That's not good. 852 00:32:34,160 --> 00:32:36,560 Speaker 2: He's that's a subpar picture. That's not a ninety five 853 00:32:36,640 --> 00:32:38,680 Speaker 2: mile hour fastball and like an eighty eight mile hour changeup. 854 00:32:38,720 --> 00:32:40,400 Speaker 2: Who's not gonna hit that in Major League baseball. 855 00:32:40,560 --> 00:32:42,840 Speaker 1: He gets the qualifying offer obviously, right, but you don't 856 00:32:42,920 --> 00:32:44,680 Speaker 1: you don't give a long term contract at all now, 857 00:32:44,800 --> 00:32:46,800 Speaker 1: or if you do, you completely under sell. 858 00:32:46,920 --> 00:32:49,360 Speaker 2: Right, No, I'm gonna I'm gonna low ball the shit out. 859 00:32:49,360 --> 00:32:51,040 Speaker 2: I know, Cindergard, I really don't care at all, but 860 00:32:51,440 --> 00:32:53,240 Speaker 2: I should have still a good picture in there. Sometimes 861 00:32:53,280 --> 00:32:55,320 Speaker 2: it just takes guys like eighteen months instead of twelve 862 00:32:55,320 --> 00:32:57,000 Speaker 2: to come back from Tommy John Sergey. We've seen that 863 00:32:57,040 --> 00:32:59,000 Speaker 2: a lot of pitches in the past, Like it took 864 00:32:59,080 --> 00:33:00,960 Speaker 2: Zach Wheeler about two full years and he became one 865 00:33:00,960 --> 00:33:01,920 Speaker 2: of the best pitchers in baseball. 866 00:33:01,960 --> 00:33:03,680 Speaker 3: I have no doubt that five years down the line, no. 867 00:33:03,840 --> 00:33:06,760 Speaker 2: Cinderguard will be like one of the thirty best pitchers 868 00:33:06,800 --> 00:33:09,440 Speaker 2: in baseball because he's still like not even thirty years old. 869 00:33:09,760 --> 00:33:10,440 Speaker 1: He's still sick. 870 00:33:10,800 --> 00:33:11,520 Speaker 3: Yeah, he's still sick. 871 00:33:11,560 --> 00:33:13,640 Speaker 2: Pictures primes are a little bit later than his primes 872 00:33:13,680 --> 00:33:15,840 Speaker 2: because it's so much more about like your mind than 873 00:33:15,880 --> 00:33:18,440 Speaker 2: your physical ability. Because if you're a freak like I 874 00:33:18,480 --> 00:33:20,520 Speaker 2: got like a Max Chers or a Charlie Morton, that 875 00:33:20,600 --> 00:33:23,080 Speaker 2: physical ability will not win as long as you're training properly. 876 00:33:23,120 --> 00:33:24,640 Speaker 2: The guy like Alex Cobb is gonna have a career 877 00:33:24,640 --> 00:33:26,760 Speaker 2: renaissance right now, from thirty five to thirty eight, Like 878 00:33:26,880 --> 00:33:27,720 Speaker 2: there's no doubt about it. 879 00:33:27,840 --> 00:33:29,280 Speaker 3: You can't let go of no Cindergard. 880 00:33:29,320 --> 00:33:32,520 Speaker 2: But what's going on right now is troubling, strange and 881 00:33:33,040 --> 00:33:34,160 Speaker 2: very old Mets, like. 882 00:33:34,280 --> 00:33:36,280 Speaker 1: Yes, very old Mets like he should not throw a 883 00:33:36,320 --> 00:33:38,160 Speaker 1: pitch in a major league game this year, absolutely not. 884 00:33:38,360 --> 00:33:40,120 Speaker 1: I think another thing to talk about here was pitching. 885 00:33:40,560 --> 00:33:42,800 Speaker 1: Kyle was Body Body. I don't know how browns his 886 00:33:42,880 --> 00:33:44,760 Speaker 1: name like Body Body, Kyle Body. If you guys don't 887 00:33:44,760 --> 00:33:46,800 Speaker 1: know who is He's the drive line guy. He worked 888 00:33:46,840 --> 00:33:48,880 Speaker 1: with the Reds. He was the guy who's been the 889 00:33:49,000 --> 00:33:51,640 Speaker 1: architect behind all their pitchers getting better. I mean every 890 00:33:51,680 --> 00:33:54,360 Speaker 1: single one of them. I know he shall not be named, 891 00:33:54,400 --> 00:33:57,160 Speaker 1: but Trevor Bauer big reason why his game elevated so 892 00:33:57,320 --> 00:33:59,760 Speaker 1: much was because of Kyle Body Body. 893 00:34:00,000 --> 00:34:01,680 Speaker 2: And you look up and down the Red system this year, 894 00:34:01,840 --> 00:34:04,560 Speaker 2: like guys like Nicolodolo and Hunter Green took massive steps forward. 895 00:34:04,640 --> 00:34:07,160 Speaker 2: Vladimer Guieirass came out of the clear blue sky to 896 00:34:07,240 --> 00:34:08,560 Speaker 2: be a consistent major league pitcher. 897 00:34:08,960 --> 00:34:12,040 Speaker 1: Wade Miley's having a career season. A very low key 898 00:34:12,120 --> 00:34:15,239 Speaker 1: prospect on the Reds name is Graham Ashcraft. Just like 899 00:34:15,400 --> 00:34:16,360 Speaker 1: dominated this season. 900 00:34:16,440 --> 00:34:18,560 Speaker 2: He went from High A to Double A, striking out 901 00:34:19,000 --> 00:34:20,719 Speaker 2: thirty four percent of the batters in High YEA, twenty 902 00:34:20,719 --> 00:34:22,680 Speaker 2: five percent of the batteries in Double A. No like, literally, 903 00:34:22,719 --> 00:34:24,839 Speaker 2: no kind of prospect, petigreg whatsoever. But he just throws 904 00:34:24,880 --> 00:34:26,279 Speaker 2: like ninety eight now with a great slider in a 905 00:34:26,320 --> 00:34:28,920 Speaker 2: great card ball. When you have all this technology and 906 00:34:29,000 --> 00:34:32,759 Speaker 2: data and you could turn pictures into like machines, like 907 00:34:32,840 --> 00:34:35,000 Speaker 2: you gotta do it. And the Reds have let him 908 00:34:35,040 --> 00:34:37,319 Speaker 2: go because they're a poorly run organization who treats their 909 00:34:37,360 --> 00:34:40,560 Speaker 2: own like dogshit. Besides Joey Vado, they're basically told Kyle 910 00:34:40,640 --> 00:34:42,120 Speaker 2: Body they're not going to renew him, They're not going 911 00:34:42,200 --> 00:34:44,120 Speaker 2: to pay him, even though he's been like a central 912 00:34:44,160 --> 00:34:45,960 Speaker 2: piece of the organization for the two years since he's 913 00:34:45,960 --> 00:34:48,640 Speaker 2: been hired. During the short and twenty twenty draft, it 914 00:34:48,719 --> 00:34:51,320 Speaker 2: only went five rounds, there was a lot of competition 915 00:34:51,480 --> 00:34:54,560 Speaker 2: to sign the undrafted players, and a lot of pitchers 916 00:34:54,640 --> 00:34:55,880 Speaker 2: have said that a lot of pitchers signed with the 917 00:34:55,920 --> 00:34:57,680 Speaker 2: Reds after that draft, and most of them did it 918 00:34:57,719 --> 00:34:59,480 Speaker 2: because they said it was Kyle Body. And I remember 919 00:35:00,320 --> 00:35:03,640 Speaker 2: some crazy like FCS or Division two I think relievers, 920 00:35:03,640 --> 00:35:05,359 Speaker 2: some guy with crazy strike guys and crazy stuff who 921 00:35:05,360 --> 00:35:08,080 Speaker 2: wasn't drafted because he had no pedigree. Said that basically 922 00:35:08,120 --> 00:35:10,239 Speaker 2: every single team in baseball offers him a deal, and 923 00:35:10,320 --> 00:35:11,960 Speaker 2: that teams like, we can put you in this situation, 924 00:35:12,040 --> 00:35:13,200 Speaker 2: we'd love to do this with you, We love you 925 00:35:13,280 --> 00:35:15,360 Speaker 2: for this, and that they said Kyle Body came to 926 00:35:15,480 --> 00:35:17,600 Speaker 2: him with an entire plan of action for his next 927 00:35:17,680 --> 00:35:20,279 Speaker 2: like two years of development, exactly how he was going 928 00:35:20,360 --> 00:35:21,400 Speaker 2: to train him to be the best he. 929 00:35:21,400 --> 00:35:22,080 Speaker 3: Possibly could be. 930 00:35:22,239 --> 00:35:24,479 Speaker 2: And now he's talking to the Mets about possibly joining 931 00:35:24,520 --> 00:35:26,920 Speaker 2: our organization, and boy would that be a slam dunk. 932 00:35:27,040 --> 00:35:30,320 Speaker 1: Yeah, there's been some conflicting reports. Of course. Andy Martino, 933 00:35:30,440 --> 00:35:32,480 Speaker 1: who just wants to rain on every Mets fan parade 934 00:35:32,480 --> 00:35:34,840 Speaker 1: any chance he can, said that there's been no talks, 935 00:35:34,880 --> 00:35:37,000 Speaker 1: but then other people has been saying that there's heavy talks, 936 00:35:37,040 --> 00:35:39,839 Speaker 1: that the Mets are super interested. Whatever it is Kyle 937 00:35:39,920 --> 00:35:43,160 Speaker 1: Body plus Jeremy Hefner, the two pitching whispers and baseball. 938 00:35:43,520 --> 00:35:46,120 Speaker 1: Sign me up, get those two married. Whatever it takes, 939 00:35:46,560 --> 00:35:48,960 Speaker 1: pay him, pay him, give him the money, Steve, whatever 940 00:35:49,040 --> 00:35:51,279 Speaker 1: he wants, give it to him. This guy is at 941 00:35:51,320 --> 00:35:54,120 Speaker 1: the front line of pitching innovation, he has been. You 942 00:35:54,360 --> 00:35:57,759 Speaker 1: need to get this guy there because this can help 943 00:35:57,800 --> 00:35:59,640 Speaker 1: the pharm system. Is this can help the guys that 944 00:35:59,680 --> 00:36:02,520 Speaker 1: we have year now, you can turn turds to diamonds 945 00:36:02,520 --> 00:36:04,399 Speaker 1: in the rough. Basically, I don't even want to see turds. 946 00:36:04,440 --> 00:36:06,440 Speaker 1: It's a little harsh, but like you could just take 947 00:36:06,480 --> 00:36:09,359 Speaker 1: guys who aren't particularly special and maybe make them into something, 948 00:36:09,400 --> 00:36:11,520 Speaker 1: and then that makes your farmcistem even stronger. You can 949 00:36:11,560 --> 00:36:13,360 Speaker 1: trade those guys and then bring in big pieces. Like 950 00:36:13,400 --> 00:36:14,600 Speaker 1: It's just it seems so. 951 00:36:14,760 --> 00:36:18,440 Speaker 2: Smart, especially because, like you allude to, the Mets pharma system, 952 00:36:18,520 --> 00:36:20,880 Speaker 2: especially in terms of pitching, is very much lacking. We 953 00:36:20,960 --> 00:36:24,120 Speaker 2: don't really have any guys in our entire system who 954 00:36:24,160 --> 00:36:25,960 Speaker 2: I would say have like frontline potential, like I talk 955 00:36:26,000 --> 00:36:28,600 Speaker 2: about Jose Boudo or Adam Aler, Like these are fine pitchers. 956 00:36:28,640 --> 00:36:31,879 Speaker 2: McGill has been definitely success story this year, But Jose 957 00:36:32,000 --> 00:36:34,920 Speaker 2: Bullos can't be the best pitching prospect in your organization. 958 00:36:34,960 --> 00:36:36,760 Speaker 2: Like you're probably not great. The guy throws mid nineties 959 00:36:36,760 --> 00:36:38,600 Speaker 2: with a good change up, like, that's fine. I think 960 00:36:38,640 --> 00:36:41,640 Speaker 2: he'll be a major leaguer. But cow body's taking freaks 961 00:36:41,640 --> 00:36:43,759 Speaker 2: and turning him into monsters. He's taking regular people and 962 00:36:43,800 --> 00:36:45,719 Speaker 2: turning him into freaks. Like that is something that can 963 00:36:45,800 --> 00:36:48,440 Speaker 2: really change the outlook of your minor league system. 964 00:36:48,560 --> 00:36:50,279 Speaker 1: I love to bring him in. I really would the 965 00:36:50,320 --> 00:36:53,160 Speaker 1: two pitching whispers, sign me up, sign me up right now. 966 00:36:53,400 --> 00:36:55,520 Speaker 2: I just hope it wouldn't be body at the expense 967 00:36:55,520 --> 00:36:57,200 Speaker 2: of Heffner. I would be pretty upset about that. 968 00:36:57,400 --> 00:36:59,759 Speaker 1: Yeah, I wouldn't. I wouldn't like that. I don't want 969 00:36:59,760 --> 00:37:01,440 Speaker 1: to get of both of them. I want Jeremy Hefner 970 00:37:01,480 --> 00:37:03,640 Speaker 1: here as long as possible. We know where the half crew. 971 00:37:03,880 --> 00:37:06,000 Speaker 2: Yeah, my helf New Jersey would really really look like, 972 00:37:06,239 --> 00:37:06,960 Speaker 2: really look stupid. 973 00:37:07,000 --> 00:37:10,920 Speaker 1: If that happened, that would really suck. And then we 974 00:37:11,040 --> 00:37:13,960 Speaker 1: got some positive news. I mean not really, it's kind 975 00:37:13,960 --> 00:37:16,040 Speaker 1: of that's kind of mean. But Albert Almore I got DFA, 976 00:37:16,200 --> 00:37:17,160 Speaker 1: So I'm happy. 977 00:37:17,440 --> 00:37:19,600 Speaker 3: That was before Game three, which is just like, fine. 978 00:37:20,640 --> 00:37:22,200 Speaker 1: There's a nice guy. I'm sure he's a great dude, 979 00:37:22,239 --> 00:37:25,200 Speaker 1: but great, good ridden smell you later. Never come back. 980 00:37:25,640 --> 00:37:27,239 Speaker 3: I don't know if he's gonna get another at bat 981 00:37:27,280 --> 00:37:28,160 Speaker 3: in the major leagues again. 982 00:37:28,239 --> 00:37:30,080 Speaker 1: He's a prime KBO candidate. 983 00:37:30,200 --> 00:37:32,640 Speaker 2: It's just so crazy to watch, like the decline of Alberta. 984 00:37:32,680 --> 00:37:34,600 Speaker 2: Moore from like a super prospect who like was in 985 00:37:34,680 --> 00:37:36,880 Speaker 2: all the trade possible offers for some of the best 986 00:37:36,920 --> 00:37:38,799 Speaker 2: players in baseball when the Cubs were making their rise. 987 00:37:38,880 --> 00:37:41,480 Speaker 2: He was a very competent player for them. He made 988 00:37:41,600 --> 00:37:43,400 Speaker 2: major contributions to some very good teams. 989 00:37:43,480 --> 00:37:45,279 Speaker 3: And he just can't hit. He's not even that a 990 00:37:45,280 --> 00:37:46,120 Speaker 3: great defense anymore. 991 00:37:46,239 --> 00:37:48,000 Speaker 1: He's just a bad player, Like there's just no way 992 00:37:48,040 --> 00:37:49,880 Speaker 1: around it. I think a lot of it had to 993 00:37:49,960 --> 00:37:51,680 Speaker 1: do with, like when he did hit that girl and 994 00:37:51,880 --> 00:37:54,640 Speaker 1: like in the stands. I think that probably is done 995 00:37:54,640 --> 00:37:56,080 Speaker 1: a little bit to his mental side of the game, 996 00:37:56,120 --> 00:37:58,840 Speaker 1: and that's really really tough. Don't wish out on anybody, 997 00:37:58,880 --> 00:38:02,400 Speaker 1: but yeah, I just don't need to see that experiment 998 00:38:02,480 --> 00:38:04,440 Speaker 1: with the Mets. So yeah, he's gone, see you later. 999 00:38:04,800 --> 00:38:05,120 Speaker 3: Whatever. 1000 00:38:05,360 --> 00:38:07,000 Speaker 2: And then just one other kind of funny thing I 1001 00:38:07,080 --> 00:38:09,920 Speaker 2: want to bring up is all our football fans out there, 1002 00:38:10,000 --> 00:38:13,239 Speaker 2: the Giants today and playing another dreadfully brutal game and 1003 00:38:13,280 --> 00:38:14,160 Speaker 2: awful loss for the New. 1004 00:38:14,160 --> 00:38:16,640 Speaker 3: York Giants one of the worst New York football teams 1005 00:38:16,680 --> 00:38:16,960 Speaker 3: out there. 1006 00:38:18,719 --> 00:38:19,839 Speaker 1: We won't talk about the other one. 1007 00:38:19,960 --> 00:38:22,640 Speaker 3: No, I don't eve think they played the game yet. 1008 00:38:23,000 --> 00:38:24,280 Speaker 3: Three bi weeks in a row, shocking. 1009 00:38:24,360 --> 00:38:28,400 Speaker 2: But the Giants, very in a very timely manner, retired 1010 00:38:28,480 --> 00:38:30,840 Speaker 2: Eli Manning's numbers. They put him in the Ring of honor, 1011 00:38:31,160 --> 00:38:34,800 Speaker 2: had a great halftime ceremony. Wouldn't that be cool for 1012 00:38:34,880 --> 00:38:37,080 Speaker 2: a team to retire guy's numbers and like a good manner, 1013 00:38:37,080 --> 00:38:38,560 Speaker 2: people who meant the loss of their organization. 1014 00:38:38,640 --> 00:38:40,080 Speaker 1: It'd be cool if like David Wright could have his 1015 00:38:40,160 --> 00:38:42,399 Speaker 1: number retired. He's been retired for what two or three 1016 00:38:42,480 --> 00:38:42,839 Speaker 1: years now? 1017 00:38:43,120 --> 00:38:44,520 Speaker 3: His numbers should be retired right now. 1018 00:38:44,680 --> 00:38:46,920 Speaker 2: Jerry Kuzman retired in nineteen eighty five, and the Mets 1019 00:38:47,000 --> 00:38:48,960 Speaker 2: retired his number this year twenty twenty one. 1020 00:38:49,719 --> 00:38:52,200 Speaker 3: Twenty years to retire Cherry Kuzman's number. 1021 00:38:52,640 --> 00:38:54,480 Speaker 1: I mean a lot of that is the Willpond stuff. 1022 00:38:54,520 --> 00:38:56,840 Speaker 1: To be fair, like I think I think Steve was 1023 00:38:56,880 --> 00:38:59,279 Speaker 1: like very much in the forefront of wanting to get 1024 00:38:59,320 --> 00:39:01,640 Speaker 1: these guys number retired. There's a list of guys that 1025 00:39:01,680 --> 00:39:05,400 Speaker 1: should be retired, Keith, David Wright. We got Piazzas. We 1026 00:39:05,400 --> 00:39:07,960 Speaker 1: don't have to worry about him. You could retire Johann 1027 00:39:08,040 --> 00:39:08,800 Speaker 1: I'd be cool with that. 1028 00:39:09,160 --> 00:39:09,439 Speaker 3: You can't. 1029 00:39:09,520 --> 00:39:12,879 Speaker 1: There, come on, no hitter. He was great for us, dude. 1030 00:39:12,920 --> 00:39:15,319 Speaker 2: He played for the Mets for like six years. Yes, 1031 00:39:15,400 --> 00:39:17,759 Speaker 2: so you can't be retiring this many numbers. You don't 1032 00:39:17,760 --> 00:39:19,600 Speaker 2: have that many accolades on your team. Like people still 1033 00:39:19,640 --> 00:39:20,280 Speaker 2: gotta win numbers. 1034 00:39:20,280 --> 00:39:21,839 Speaker 3: We're not the Yankees. Like the Yankees retire a lot 1035 00:39:21,840 --> 00:39:22,880 Speaker 3: of numbers because they have like. 1036 00:39:22,880 --> 00:39:26,560 Speaker 1: Tons of MVPs whatever to get them all. 1037 00:39:26,760 --> 00:39:28,000 Speaker 3: We're getting down slippery slow. 1038 00:39:28,040 --> 00:39:30,319 Speaker 2: It's like the stupid fucking montage the Mets played before 1039 00:39:30,360 --> 00:39:33,880 Speaker 2: every single game where they where they give they they 1040 00:39:34,000 --> 00:39:37,400 Speaker 2: mark the date for like super inconspicuous and consequential events 1041 00:39:37,440 --> 00:39:37,920 Speaker 2: in the history. 1042 00:39:38,000 --> 00:39:40,960 Speaker 1: It's like the Mets, Mets won a wild card game. 1043 00:39:41,680 --> 00:39:43,239 Speaker 3: Mets won the division nineteen eighty eight. 1044 00:39:43,360 --> 00:39:45,879 Speaker 2: Nineteen eighty eight was ridicularly disappointing season, the last year 1045 00:39:45,920 --> 00:39:47,920 Speaker 2: that that corps was together, and they lost the series 1046 00:39:48,200 --> 00:39:50,839 Speaker 2: to a Dodger team that was significantly worse than they were. 1047 00:39:51,040 --> 00:39:52,120 Speaker 3: Why are we celebrating that? 1048 00:39:52,440 --> 00:39:55,000 Speaker 1: To Todd Pratt big home run in like the playoffs, 1049 00:39:55,040 --> 00:39:56,520 Speaker 1: It's like, what the mess to do that year they lost. 1050 00:39:56,560 --> 00:39:57,640 Speaker 1: The next series they died. 1051 00:39:57,640 --> 00:39:59,080 Speaker 2: It was like an nld as a home run in 1052 00:39:59,160 --> 00:39:59,879 Speaker 2: nineteen ninety nine. 1053 00:40:00,040 --> 00:40:02,920 Speaker 3: Why is that on our montage? That montage is eight 1054 00:40:02,960 --> 00:40:04,560 Speaker 3: minutes long, It could be forty eight seconds. 1055 00:40:04,640 --> 00:40:06,320 Speaker 1: We're the Mets man, where the mess? There's just not 1056 00:40:06,440 --> 00:40:07,920 Speaker 1: a whole lot of great that's kind of on in 1057 00:40:08,120 --> 00:40:10,040 Speaker 1: the what sixty years of existence. 1058 00:40:10,520 --> 00:40:13,320 Speaker 2: I was at a Subway Series game with one of 1059 00:40:13,360 --> 00:40:15,799 Speaker 2: my puzzies. Shout out to Luke, big Yankee fan. Also 1060 00:40:16,000 --> 00:40:18,000 Speaker 2: just a big fucking troll. What the toy on your 1061 00:40:18,040 --> 00:40:19,880 Speaker 2: side is hanging out with Luca Ario. He knows if 1062 00:40:19,920 --> 00:40:21,319 Speaker 2: he's not gonna listen to this, but I'll just talk 1063 00:40:21,320 --> 00:40:23,799 Speaker 2: shit to him non stop. And now every single time 1064 00:40:23,880 --> 00:40:25,759 Speaker 2: the Mets do something minorly good, which hasn't been that 1065 00:40:25,840 --> 00:40:27,279 Speaker 2: much in the last few weeks, but I remember after 1066 00:40:27,360 --> 00:40:30,400 Speaker 2: the Hobby thumbs down game turned into the walkoff hit, he. 1067 00:40:30,480 --> 00:40:31,560 Speaker 3: Was like, put on the montage. 1068 00:40:32,760 --> 00:40:34,520 Speaker 1: They probably would. They probably would if they could make 1069 00:40:34,560 --> 00:40:35,040 Speaker 1: those edits. 1070 00:40:35,120 --> 00:40:37,440 Speaker 3: If they resigned him, it's gonna be on the montage. 1071 00:40:37,560 --> 00:40:40,399 Speaker 1: Yes, oh, the video next year, without a doubt. 1072 00:40:40,440 --> 00:40:41,279 Speaker 3: It's ridiculous. 1073 00:40:41,360 --> 00:40:43,640 Speaker 2: But also like when the Lindor hit that big home run, 1074 00:40:43,640 --> 00:40:45,480 Speaker 2: saying in that baseball He's like, that's on the montage, 1075 00:40:45,520 --> 00:40:47,000 Speaker 2: and I was like, I hate you, but you're right. 1076 00:40:47,360 --> 00:40:50,200 Speaker 1: You're so right. Remember when Francisco Lidoor had his moment 1077 00:40:50,280 --> 00:40:51,759 Speaker 1: three home runs of one game. That was cool. 1078 00:40:51,880 --> 00:40:54,279 Speaker 2: Francisco and Door with a signature Mets moment in the 1079 00:40:54,560 --> 00:40:56,200 Speaker 2: second d and then thanks mad vascaration. 1080 00:40:56,480 --> 00:40:59,640 Speaker 1: Fucking he's awful. All right, Well, what who got next? 1081 00:41:00,080 --> 00:41:00,600 Speaker 3: Arland's man. 1082 00:41:01,480 --> 00:41:03,160 Speaker 1: Yeah, we're going to a bunch of games. 1083 00:41:03,320 --> 00:41:04,759 Speaker 3: We're breaking up with the mess. It's gonna be We're 1084 00:41:04,760 --> 00:41:06,560 Speaker 3: gonna get really drunk and get sloppy this week. It's 1085 00:41:06,560 --> 00:41:07,120 Speaker 3: gonna be awesome. 1086 00:41:07,239 --> 00:41:08,759 Speaker 1: If you guys are there, keep an eye out for us. 1087 00:41:08,800 --> 00:41:10,879 Speaker 1: We're gonna be all around the ballpark. Gonna be sitting 1088 00:41:10,920 --> 00:41:12,000 Speaker 1: behind home played a little bit. 1089 00:41:12,360 --> 00:41:14,000 Speaker 3: We're gonna sneak into the club level, no doubt. 1090 00:41:14,120 --> 00:41:16,040 Speaker 1: Gonna be sitting behind home played a little bit, maybe 1091 00:41:16,080 --> 00:41:18,839 Speaker 1: a little upper deck action. To be with the folk 1092 00:41:18,920 --> 00:41:21,320 Speaker 1: that are the true fans, of course, and we'll be 1093 00:41:21,440 --> 00:41:23,759 Speaker 1: with the richies too, why not. But if you see us, 1094 00:41:23,760 --> 00:41:25,799 Speaker 1: make sure you say what's up? Say hi. Love talking 1095 00:41:25,840 --> 00:41:28,160 Speaker 1: to the fans of interacting with you guys, and let's 1096 00:41:28,200 --> 00:41:30,080 Speaker 1: have some fun out a Mets game because watching them 1097 00:41:30,120 --> 00:41:32,400 Speaker 1: on the field gonna be painful. It's gonna stink, it 1098 00:41:32,520 --> 00:41:34,320 Speaker 1: really is, but we can make the most of it. 1099 00:41:34,520 --> 00:41:36,520 Speaker 1: Have a couple of drinks, a hot dog, enjoy our time. 1100 00:41:36,680 --> 00:41:36,879 Speaker 3: Yeah. 1101 00:41:36,920 --> 00:41:39,200 Speaker 2: Literally, if anyone's at the game this week, hit up 1102 00:41:39,239 --> 00:41:41,640 Speaker 2: a messages tweet at us. We'll definitely like to say 1103 00:41:41,719 --> 00:41:44,080 Speaker 2: hi because and just commiserate together because the team is 1104 00:41:44,120 --> 00:41:44,960 Speaker 2: such a fucking disaster. 1105 00:41:45,160 --> 00:41:47,640 Speaker 1: Yeah, pitching matchups, let's just do it for the sake 1106 00:41:47,719 --> 00:41:50,040 Speaker 1: of consistency. Let's let's find out who we're gonna watch 1107 00:41:50,080 --> 00:41:50,560 Speaker 1: pitch this week. 1108 00:41:50,840 --> 00:41:53,239 Speaker 2: All right, We've got Marcus Stroman pitching. We actually have 1109 00:41:53,239 --> 00:41:55,080 Speaker 2: a double heather on Tuesday, Are you kidding me? Oh 1110 00:41:55,239 --> 00:41:55,680 Speaker 2: my god? 1111 00:41:55,960 --> 00:41:57,000 Speaker 1: Double header Tuesday. 1112 00:41:57,360 --> 00:42:00,640 Speaker 2: Marcus Stroman Game one against Trevor Rodgers. That's not gonna 1113 00:42:00,640 --> 00:42:03,920 Speaker 2: be fun. Tywan Walker in the second game. He's probably 1114 00:42:03,920 --> 00:42:07,640 Speaker 2: gonna get shelld. Tyler McGill on Wednesday night versus Eliezer Hernandez, 1115 00:42:07,760 --> 00:42:09,839 Speaker 2: that probably won't be great. And our Ace rich Hill 1116 00:42:10,160 --> 00:42:10,719 Speaker 2: is gonna. 1117 00:42:10,520 --> 00:42:11,120 Speaker 3: No, no the race. 1118 00:42:11,200 --> 00:42:13,080 Speaker 2: Dispect Marcus strom It's not true towing the rubber on 1119 00:42:13,160 --> 00:42:14,799 Speaker 2: Thursday night as we send off the met season. 1120 00:42:14,880 --> 00:42:16,920 Speaker 1: I guess Edward Cabrera and we'll behind home played for 1121 00:42:17,000 --> 00:42:18,799 Speaker 1: that game. Can't wait. We get to watch rich Hill 1122 00:42:18,880 --> 00:42:21,440 Speaker 1: in the prime seats and the best seats now, so 1123 00:42:21,480 --> 00:42:24,080 Speaker 1: I'm excited to have a nice comfy cushion seat to 1124 00:42:24,080 --> 00:42:25,399 Speaker 1: see rich Hill throw eighty six. 1125 00:42:26,280 --> 00:42:27,480 Speaker 2: I want to get his attention. I want to like 1126 00:42:27,520 --> 00:42:28,879 Speaker 2: tell Rich Hill he's done a great job. I want 1127 00:42:28,880 --> 00:42:31,200 Speaker 2: to make contact with him and compliment him. 1128 00:42:31,280 --> 00:42:34,200 Speaker 1: All Right, stadium gonna be empty. What's gonna be the 1129 00:42:34,280 --> 00:42:35,160 Speaker 1: vibe at the stadium for this. 1130 00:42:35,280 --> 00:42:37,560 Speaker 2: It's gonna be so empty, dude, it was so empty 1131 00:42:37,640 --> 00:42:39,800 Speaker 2: last week. The stadium is gonna be absolutely empty. The 1132 00:42:39,880 --> 00:42:42,040 Speaker 2: Red Sox the Philly series looked like a joke, and 1133 00:42:42,080 --> 00:42:44,480 Speaker 2: that was on a weekend. Even those Cardinals games looked ridiculous, 1134 00:42:44,560 --> 00:42:47,439 Speaker 2: Like I can't see there being more than twenty thousand 1135 00:42:47,480 --> 00:42:48,439 Speaker 2: people any of these games. 1136 00:42:48,520 --> 00:42:50,960 Speaker 1: It's gonna be Uh, We're gonna have a blast regardless. 1137 00:42:51,000 --> 00:42:53,040 Speaker 1: I'm not allowing myself to let the game ruin it. 1138 00:42:53,239 --> 00:42:54,520 Speaker 3: No, We're very much gonna get after it. 1139 00:42:54,600 --> 00:42:56,359 Speaker 2: Even the game that we are gonna be sitting close 1140 00:42:56,400 --> 00:42:58,520 Speaker 2: because we we just we went we bought some club 1141 00:42:58,600 --> 00:42:59,920 Speaker 2: seats for a very affordable rate. 1142 00:43:00,360 --> 00:43:01,600 Speaker 3: I want to get there like five o'clock. 1143 00:43:01,640 --> 00:43:04,200 Speaker 1: Really just take a oh, definitely, definitely, and a few 1144 00:43:04,719 --> 00:43:05,960 Speaker 1: few roads sodas as well. 1145 00:43:06,000 --> 00:43:08,920 Speaker 2: Why not if you've ever just no doubt will be consumed. 1146 00:43:09,040 --> 00:43:10,640 Speaker 1: Well. I think that's a perfect way for us to 1147 00:43:10,680 --> 00:43:12,920 Speaker 1: wrap up episode number fifty three of the Mets Up Podcast. 1148 00:43:12,960 --> 00:43:14,920 Speaker 1: Thank you guys for listening, Thank you guys for watching. 1149 00:43:15,080 --> 00:43:18,200 Speaker 1: Follow us on Twitter, Instagram, TikTok at mets up YouTube 1150 00:43:18,280 --> 00:43:20,640 Speaker 1: channel mets up Podcast. You can find our video content there. 1151 00:43:20,880 --> 00:43:23,920 Speaker 1: Follow James on Twitter at Jeter had No Range, me myself, 1152 00:43:24,040 --> 00:43:27,439 Speaker 1: Mark Luiso at Draftneck, Mark with the c uh Yeah. 1153 00:43:27,760 --> 00:43:29,040 Speaker 1: Give us a five starr rate and give us a 1154 00:43:29,040 --> 00:43:32,359 Speaker 1: review Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google podcast. It's all I got 1155 00:43:32,400 --> 00:43:34,000 Speaker 1: for you, guys. Thank you so much for listening, Thank 1156 00:43:34,040 --> 00:43:35,680 Speaker 1: you so much for watching, and we'll see you on 1157 00:43:35,719 --> 00:43:37,280 Speaker 1: the next episode of the Mets Up Podcast. 1158 00:43:37,360 --> 00:43:39,120 Speaker 3: Peace Out, peace out, guys, thanks for listening.