1 00:00:00,680 --> 00:00:14,600 Speaker 1: Get Up, Get Up, Get Up? 2 00:00:15,320 --> 00:00:17,880 Speaker 2: What's up? Mets fans? Welcome back to Episode one twenty 3 00:00:17,920 --> 00:00:21,200 Speaker 2: one of the Mets Stuff podcast, wrapping up this short 4 00:00:21,239 --> 00:00:23,520 Speaker 2: and quick series out in the Bronx against the New 5 00:00:23,600 --> 00:00:26,439 Speaker 2: York Yankees. Did not go our way. Was not one 6 00:00:26,480 --> 00:00:28,480 Speaker 2: of our favorite series by any means. Definitely a little 7 00:00:28,480 --> 00:00:29,880 Speaker 2: bit different than the first time that the Mets and 8 00:00:29,920 --> 00:00:32,400 Speaker 2: Yankees played this year. So we're gonna go over this 9 00:00:32,440 --> 00:00:34,000 Speaker 2: game talk about a little bit. The boys are at 10 00:00:34,000 --> 00:00:36,479 Speaker 2: the stadium for Game two along with producer John, So 11 00:00:36,520 --> 00:00:38,959 Speaker 2: the boys had a night out talk about our experience there. 12 00:00:39,000 --> 00:00:41,160 Speaker 2: We got some good TikTok content. We're just gonna kind 13 00:00:41,159 --> 00:00:43,440 Speaker 2: of have a little bit of a more casual episode, 14 00:00:43,440 --> 00:00:45,199 Speaker 2: like not a whole lot of notes here because these 15 00:00:45,240 --> 00:00:47,400 Speaker 2: games are relatively straightforward, and I think it's a little 16 00:00:47,400 --> 00:00:50,360 Speaker 2: more narrative based right now than really statistical basis for 17 00:00:50,400 --> 00:00:51,960 Speaker 2: this one. So if you guys are enjoying what you're 18 00:00:51,960 --> 00:00:54,040 Speaker 2: seeing here, makes you follow us on all our social 19 00:00:54,080 --> 00:00:56,360 Speaker 2: media at Mets Stuff. That's gonna be on TikTok, Twitter, 20 00:00:56,360 --> 00:00:58,560 Speaker 2: and Instagram. If you're looking for the YouTube video, go 21 00:00:58,560 --> 00:01:01,240 Speaker 2: over to the New York Mets YouTube channel. Go subscribe 22 00:01:01,240 --> 00:01:03,040 Speaker 2: over there, you'll be able to watch us and if 23 00:01:03,040 --> 00:01:06,039 Speaker 2: you're listening to US, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Odyssey, 24 00:01:06,120 --> 00:01:08,880 Speaker 2: wherever you find your podcast, drops the rating, drops a review, 25 00:01:08,920 --> 00:01:11,560 Speaker 2: and download the episodes so you don't miss out. James, 26 00:01:11,600 --> 00:01:13,679 Speaker 2: what has it been thirty five minutes? I mean that 27 00:01:13,840 --> 00:01:16,280 Speaker 2: hellish ride back from the Bronx. I can't believe the 28 00:01:16,319 --> 00:01:17,240 Speaker 2: four train goes local. 29 00:01:17,840 --> 00:01:19,800 Speaker 3: The Yankees do a lot of things wrong in terms 30 00:01:19,800 --> 00:01:22,760 Speaker 3: of like stadium fan engagement, all that stuff, but having 31 00:01:22,800 --> 00:01:26,720 Speaker 3: that four train run every single stop from Yankee Stadium 32 00:01:27,080 --> 00:01:29,680 Speaker 3: all the way through the one hundred's and the nineties 33 00:01:29,720 --> 00:01:31,600 Speaker 3: and the eighties all the way, it doesn't It doesn't 34 00:01:31,640 --> 00:01:34,160 Speaker 3: even get expressed until you get to Grand Central, and 35 00:01:34,200 --> 00:01:36,440 Speaker 3: that most of the people there are even not even 36 00:01:36,760 --> 00:01:37,960 Speaker 3: going to Grand Central. A lot of people want to 37 00:01:37,959 --> 00:01:39,479 Speaker 3: go to the Pen station. That guy who were sitting 38 00:01:39,520 --> 00:01:41,959 Speaker 3: next to from Cranford, he was like sitting there, he 39 00:01:42,000 --> 00:01:43,280 Speaker 3: was like, oh my god, wait, this goes straight from 40 00:01:43,319 --> 00:01:45,640 Speaker 3: Grand Central forty second Street yep. And the second day 41 00:01:45,640 --> 00:01:47,160 Speaker 3: said it, he like jumped dart off the train. He 42 00:01:47,280 --> 00:01:49,920 Speaker 3: barely made it by a second. That was so annoying 43 00:01:49,960 --> 00:01:51,080 Speaker 3: after such an annoying game. 44 00:01:51,480 --> 00:01:53,600 Speaker 2: I mean, they might have won the series, but the 45 00:01:53,640 --> 00:01:56,120 Speaker 2: train battle, they don't even come close. I mean the 46 00:01:56,160 --> 00:01:58,360 Speaker 2: fact that they said they don't they don't we have 47 00:01:58,400 --> 00:02:01,080 Speaker 2: a super express. They don't even have an express train 48 00:02:01,160 --> 00:02:04,080 Speaker 2: home Like that's that's honestly one of the biggest flaws 49 00:02:04,360 --> 00:02:06,520 Speaker 2: of the entire Yankee Stadium experience is that you have 50 00:02:06,560 --> 00:02:09,040 Speaker 2: to sit on that train for like sixteen stops to 51 00:02:09,040 --> 00:02:10,280 Speaker 2: get to fifty ninth. 52 00:02:10,560 --> 00:02:12,640 Speaker 3: Just especially because no one's getting out at one hundred 53 00:02:12,639 --> 00:02:14,440 Speaker 3: and twenty fifth Street or one hundred and nineteenth Street 54 00:02:14,480 --> 00:02:15,520 Speaker 3: or one hundred and third Street. 55 00:02:15,760 --> 00:02:17,919 Speaker 2: We saw what maybe one or two people get off, 56 00:02:17,960 --> 00:02:20,720 Speaker 2: and we saw one person get on, which is crazy 57 00:02:20,840 --> 00:02:23,720 Speaker 2: to make that decision to get onto an absolutely packed 58 00:02:23,760 --> 00:02:26,480 Speaker 2: for train at what ten thirty at night? It was. 59 00:02:28,520 --> 00:02:30,240 Speaker 3: It was very annoying. I just gonna say something else 60 00:02:30,240 --> 00:02:31,680 Speaker 3: about it, and I lost it about the train. Oh, 61 00:02:31,760 --> 00:02:34,320 Speaker 3: also the fact that that whole train RAN's underground. You 62 00:02:34,400 --> 00:02:36,120 Speaker 3: go home from City Field, you're on your phone. It's 63 00:02:36,120 --> 00:02:38,040 Speaker 3: a relaxing, it's a leisurely ride. 64 00:02:38,200 --> 00:02:38,720 Speaker 2: It's great. 65 00:02:38,880 --> 00:02:40,880 Speaker 3: You're just sitting there like you're just packed in with 66 00:02:40,919 --> 00:02:43,000 Speaker 3: people sweating, and you're like, I just just can't be it. 67 00:02:43,000 --> 00:02:44,040 Speaker 3: This just really can't be it. 68 00:02:44,240 --> 00:02:45,840 Speaker 2: The Mets do it right. The Mets do it right, 69 00:02:46,080 --> 00:02:47,760 Speaker 2: Met's do it right. What else you want to talk 70 00:02:47,800 --> 00:02:49,359 Speaker 2: about here? The series stuck, the mess didn't lead for 71 00:02:49,360 --> 00:02:52,200 Speaker 2: one second the series. You realize that, Yeah, that that 72 00:02:52,200 --> 00:02:54,280 Speaker 2: feels right. That feels like a correct statement. And I 73 00:02:54,320 --> 00:02:56,399 Speaker 2: don't think you're making that one up. Yeah, just from 74 00:02:56,400 --> 00:02:59,400 Speaker 2: the start had a weird feel. And honestly, I think 75 00:02:59,760 --> 00:03:01,639 Speaker 2: why this game. I think the Mets just looked a 76 00:03:01,639 --> 00:03:03,320 Speaker 2: little bit tired from their long road trip. I mean, 77 00:03:03,360 --> 00:03:06,520 Speaker 2: they've played some strenuous games against the Braves and the Phillies, 78 00:03:06,520 --> 00:03:10,280 Speaker 2: two division rivals, and not that the Yankees are in arrival, 79 00:03:10,320 --> 00:03:13,240 Speaker 2: but it's just it's a little bit less important normal 80 00:03:13,320 --> 00:03:15,400 Speaker 2: than playing the Braves and the Phillies at this point, 81 00:03:15,880 --> 00:03:18,600 Speaker 2: long road trip, the doubleheaders, the four game series like 82 00:03:18,639 --> 00:03:20,480 Speaker 2: this and that with the travel. Have they had an 83 00:03:20,480 --> 00:03:21,720 Speaker 2: off day during this road trip? 84 00:03:21,760 --> 00:03:24,960 Speaker 3: Even the mets last off day, I can't remember what 85 00:03:25,000 --> 00:03:26,919 Speaker 3: it was. I'm gonna scroll their schedule now and find out. 86 00:03:28,080 --> 00:03:30,520 Speaker 2: Just go. I think also the emotional drain from that 87 00:03:30,680 --> 00:03:33,799 Speaker 2: Sunday win. Yeah, and it was like a seven hour day, 88 00:03:33,960 --> 00:03:36,560 Speaker 2: like it was such a long Sunday as well, and 89 00:03:36,600 --> 00:03:39,200 Speaker 2: that series began after playing a night game, a draining 90 00:03:39,240 --> 00:03:41,680 Speaker 2: Thursday night game in Atlanta, then going straight to Philadelphia 91 00:03:41,720 --> 00:03:44,200 Speaker 2: for four more games and then the doubleheader before the 92 00:03:44,240 --> 00:03:46,600 Speaker 2: long game on Sunday. Like, it's just been a very 93 00:03:47,280 --> 00:03:50,880 Speaker 2: very very long and strenuous and kind of like just 94 00:03:51,360 --> 00:03:54,280 Speaker 2: exhausting road trip for the Mets. And I'm sure these 95 00:03:54,320 --> 00:03:57,440 Speaker 2: guys are super excited to not do anything tomorrow. The 96 00:03:57,480 --> 00:04:01,320 Speaker 2: Mets last off day was Thursday, August eleventh, so nearly 97 00:04:01,360 --> 00:04:03,080 Speaker 2: two weeks ago. That's crazy. 98 00:04:03,280 --> 00:04:04,960 Speaker 3: And they had a double Heather mixed in there too, 99 00:04:05,040 --> 00:04:08,200 Speaker 3: And in that time they played four games against the Braves, 100 00:04:08,200 --> 00:04:10,280 Speaker 3: seven against the Phillies, not two against the Yankees. 101 00:04:10,720 --> 00:04:12,480 Speaker 2: That's that's an insane. 102 00:04:12,080 --> 00:04:15,080 Speaker 3: Stretch, YEP, it is insane stretch. I can't I can't 103 00:04:15,120 --> 00:04:16,800 Speaker 3: believe the schedule us this way to do it. But 104 00:04:16,800 --> 00:04:19,400 Speaker 3: we've been complaining about the schedule is a little bit 105 00:04:19,520 --> 00:04:20,680 Speaker 3: fugazi mentally. 106 00:04:20,800 --> 00:04:24,279 Speaker 2: Everybody plays relatively the same player or teams, I should say. 107 00:04:24,200 --> 00:04:26,200 Speaker 3: Especially A lot of this is Pat baked him because 108 00:04:26,200 --> 00:04:28,560 Speaker 3: of missing those first two weeks. Because the lockout, the 109 00:04:28,640 --> 00:04:30,560 Speaker 3: Yankees was played better than the Mets of the series. 110 00:04:30,560 --> 00:04:32,080 Speaker 3: Like the Yankees, were able to do things that the 111 00:04:32,120 --> 00:04:34,560 Speaker 3: Mets weren't able to do. One of them was Aaron 112 00:04:34,640 --> 00:04:37,400 Speaker 3: Judge hitting two home runs. Mets hit one home run 113 00:04:37,440 --> 00:04:39,240 Speaker 3: the series, Aaron Judge hit two. That's a big reason 114 00:04:39,240 --> 00:04:41,360 Speaker 3: you find a way to lose these fifty to fifty games. Also, 115 00:04:42,080 --> 00:04:44,839 Speaker 3: massive shout out to Clark Schmid for just dogging the 116 00:04:44,839 --> 00:04:46,320 Speaker 3: Mets for the last like what four innings? 117 00:04:46,360 --> 00:04:48,960 Speaker 2: Almost, Yeah, we were trying. You were trying your hardest 118 00:04:49,000 --> 00:04:50,920 Speaker 2: to use the Chiano Jinks on him, Like he came 119 00:04:50,960 --> 00:04:52,440 Speaker 2: into the game. You're like, he's so good, And I 120 00:04:52,480 --> 00:04:54,320 Speaker 2: was like, wait, say it again, what is it? He's good? 121 00:04:54,400 --> 00:04:56,919 Speaker 2: You're telling me like this. That was kind of on you. 122 00:04:56,920 --> 00:04:58,520 Speaker 2: You tried to go the too much. I was being 123 00:04:58,520 --> 00:04:59,440 Speaker 2: really honest because. 124 00:04:59,240 --> 00:05:01,280 Speaker 3: I do love Clarks, just like as a pitcher and 125 00:05:01,320 --> 00:05:04,280 Speaker 3: as a prospect, Like he's a really fantastic, fantastic guy. 126 00:05:04,400 --> 00:05:04,640 Speaker 2: Was good. 127 00:05:04,640 --> 00:05:07,200 Speaker 3: If he's really good right now, just with like the sinker, 128 00:05:07,400 --> 00:05:10,240 Speaker 3: the sinker sly their combination with a little fastball. If 129 00:05:10,240 --> 00:05:12,120 Speaker 3: he can ever get his change up along or I 130 00:05:12,120 --> 00:05:13,840 Speaker 3: guess he's got a knuckle curve here now I'm seeing 131 00:05:13,880 --> 00:05:17,280 Speaker 3: on Savant's a sly their fastball, sinker knuckle curve. He 132 00:05:17,360 --> 00:05:19,640 Speaker 3: only said somehow he only got three whiffs. That is 133 00:05:19,760 --> 00:05:21,320 Speaker 3: one of the most shocking things I've seen all night. 134 00:05:21,640 --> 00:05:24,000 Speaker 2: I mean, the Mets like put up, I want to say, 135 00:05:24,040 --> 00:05:27,240 Speaker 2: better at bat this game, especially like Game two, it 136 00:05:27,320 --> 00:05:29,280 Speaker 2: was such a weird game because like the bats and 137 00:05:29,320 --> 00:05:31,919 Speaker 2: there was there's chances. It felt like almost every inning, 138 00:05:31,960 --> 00:05:33,159 Speaker 2: like there was a little bit of a lull when 139 00:05:33,160 --> 00:05:35,640 Speaker 2: Montess got into that rhythm. But at the start we 140 00:05:35,680 --> 00:05:37,599 Speaker 2: had guys on first and second. Towards the end we 141 00:05:37,640 --> 00:05:39,080 Speaker 2: had guys on first and second. I mean we ended 142 00:05:39,120 --> 00:05:41,919 Speaker 2: the game with the bases loaded. So there were just 143 00:05:41,960 --> 00:05:44,560 Speaker 2: so many opportunities, and it just felt like this series, 144 00:05:44,600 --> 00:05:47,360 Speaker 2: in particular the Mets sometimes like I mean we've talked 145 00:05:47,360 --> 00:05:49,440 Speaker 2: about in the past before, but like the way that 146 00:05:49,520 --> 00:05:52,000 Speaker 2: this offense is built, especially where it's not live and 147 00:05:52,040 --> 00:05:54,520 Speaker 2: die by the home run. Sometimes those hits just aren't 148 00:05:54,520 --> 00:05:56,440 Speaker 2: going to drop, like the Francisco Lindor went down the 149 00:05:56,480 --> 00:05:58,479 Speaker 2: line that went like an inch foul, Like sometimes it 150 00:05:58,520 --> 00:05:59,159 Speaker 2: just doesn't fall. 151 00:05:59,680 --> 00:06:01,960 Speaker 3: I think the Mets left a man in scoring position 152 00:06:02,080 --> 00:06:04,120 Speaker 3: like five of the nine innings, if not more than 153 00:06:04,120 --> 00:06:05,800 Speaker 3: that that's the top of my head, just trying to scroll through. 154 00:06:05,839 --> 00:06:09,720 Speaker 3: Now that's one, two, three, four, And there's a lot 155 00:06:09,720 --> 00:06:11,279 Speaker 3: how many double plays? I felt like to hit into 156 00:06:11,279 --> 00:06:13,440 Speaker 3: a lot of double plays too, which like again this 157 00:06:13,520 --> 00:06:15,520 Speaker 3: is this is everything in this game. 158 00:06:15,680 --> 00:06:18,920 Speaker 2: Just felt like it showed signs of just like exhaustion, 159 00:06:19,160 --> 00:06:21,240 Speaker 2: like double play, I mean like and then we saw 160 00:06:21,279 --> 00:06:24,159 Speaker 2: some like something of concern too, was when Dan vogel 161 00:06:24,160 --> 00:06:27,280 Speaker 2: Back hit that ball in the eighth was six, by 162 00:06:27,320 --> 00:06:28,960 Speaker 2: the way, six innings the Mets left a runner in 163 00:06:28,960 --> 00:06:31,680 Speaker 2: scoring position. Dat's game. Yeah, but that double play that 164 00:06:31,760 --> 00:06:35,279 Speaker 2: vogele Back hit late in the game, yeah, was concerning 165 00:06:35,279 --> 00:06:38,360 Speaker 2: a little bit too, because of how he was running. Yeah, 166 00:06:38,400 --> 00:06:40,480 Speaker 2: he was not running well whatsoever. 167 00:06:40,760 --> 00:06:44,679 Speaker 3: It was a very slowly hit ground ball that almost 168 00:06:44,720 --> 00:06:47,520 Speaker 3: probably almost any other any other player in baseball pizza 169 00:06:47,520 --> 00:06:49,280 Speaker 3: of that, but just I mean vocal back though it's 170 00:06:49,360 --> 00:06:51,800 Speaker 3: him running is not really I would say, I think 171 00:06:51,800 --> 00:06:53,680 Speaker 3: of a point of concern because he's almost never gonna 172 00:06:53,680 --> 00:06:55,159 Speaker 3: play the field and you just kind of want the 173 00:06:55,200 --> 00:06:57,719 Speaker 3: bat in the lineup anyway, and him like not being 174 00:06:57,720 --> 00:07:01,120 Speaker 3: able to run didn't matther on Tuesday, dude, No, that 175 00:07:01,200 --> 00:07:03,480 Speaker 3: was Monday, Monday, I can't believe serious start on Monday 176 00:07:03,600 --> 00:07:05,280 Speaker 3: because hit that hit, that big hit, the big home 177 00:07:05,360 --> 00:07:07,560 Speaker 3: run got them closer there. He had a chance to 178 00:07:07,560 --> 00:07:09,600 Speaker 3: do that again, but that weird grundball. That was also 179 00:07:09,600 --> 00:07:13,080 Speaker 3: a weird situation where Aaron Boone had an opportunity to 180 00:07:13,160 --> 00:07:15,760 Speaker 3: go to a left hand reliever rather than leave Schmidt 181 00:07:15,760 --> 00:07:17,320 Speaker 3: in the game. I saw a lot of Yankee fans 182 00:07:17,360 --> 00:07:20,160 Speaker 3: before that happened getting upset about it. And I also 183 00:07:20,240 --> 00:07:22,440 Speaker 3: think my dad texted me saying that Keith and Rodney 184 00:07:22,480 --> 00:07:24,440 Speaker 3: were talking about that was a missed opportunity for him. 185 00:07:24,480 --> 00:07:26,440 Speaker 2: But then we talked through it a little bit at 186 00:07:26,440 --> 00:07:29,200 Speaker 2: the game of like, maybe it wasn't necessarily the wrong 187 00:07:29,320 --> 00:07:32,040 Speaker 2: move to leave in Clark Schmidt, because what was it. 188 00:07:32,080 --> 00:07:33,680 Speaker 2: We said that if you bring in a lefty to 189 00:07:33,680 --> 00:07:36,800 Speaker 2: face Vogel back the Mets bringing Darren Ruff, Yeah, and 190 00:07:36,920 --> 00:07:39,800 Speaker 2: you probably like your odds with Dan vogelback better because 191 00:07:39,800 --> 00:07:42,080 Speaker 2: of the double play opportunity. Just that if he hits 192 00:07:42,440 --> 00:07:44,120 Speaker 2: it was first, it was first and second, nobody out. 193 00:07:44,320 --> 00:07:45,880 Speaker 3: The only thing you want there is double play, So 194 00:07:45,920 --> 00:07:47,680 Speaker 3: I think you kind of Then they ate worked to 195 00:07:47,760 --> 00:07:50,600 Speaker 3: perfection for them, and then Jeff McNeil next, McNeil's just 196 00:07:50,600 --> 00:07:52,400 Speaker 3: been so on fire. I don't know, I left I 197 00:07:52,400 --> 00:07:54,320 Speaker 3: don't know if a lefty versus Rydy's gonna really do 198 00:07:54,360 --> 00:07:56,400 Speaker 3: anything to stop him. Even to today, he had three 199 00:07:56,400 --> 00:07:58,440 Speaker 3: more hard hit balls. Guy's average up to three twenty 200 00:07:58,480 --> 00:08:01,200 Speaker 3: one eight or the eight opsdu. 201 00:08:00,440 --> 00:08:01,680 Speaker 2: Was rope And I mean the Met's had some hard 202 00:08:01,760 --> 00:08:03,600 Speaker 2: hit balls too today that just like found gloves, like 203 00:08:03,600 --> 00:08:06,000 Speaker 2: Brandon Nemo with a for three hundred and ninety six 204 00:08:06,040 --> 00:08:08,280 Speaker 2: foot fly out, that line drive you hit to Josh 205 00:08:08,320 --> 00:08:10,800 Speaker 2: Johnson at third base, like similarly to the Ben and 206 00:08:10,800 --> 00:08:13,320 Speaker 2: Tendi won that fell. It just didn't fall for the Mets, 207 00:08:13,320 --> 00:08:14,600 Speaker 2: like their guy was in the right spot at the 208 00:08:14,680 --> 00:08:16,560 Speaker 2: right time, piece of the ball one. 209 00:08:16,520 --> 00:08:18,800 Speaker 3: Hundred and sixteen miles an hour for a single after 210 00:08:19,040 --> 00:08:19,880 Speaker 3: Jeff bat. 211 00:08:19,800 --> 00:08:21,560 Speaker 2: Jeff lined out a couple times, I feel like, or 212 00:08:21,640 --> 00:08:23,800 Speaker 2: lined out once whatever. It was like there was so 213 00:08:23,840 --> 00:08:26,120 Speaker 2: many opportunities and just didn't fall. I think there were 214 00:08:26,120 --> 00:08:28,480 Speaker 2: what two for thirteen with rons in scoring position tonight 215 00:08:28,600 --> 00:08:30,600 Speaker 2: like just one of those nights. It was kind of 216 00:08:30,640 --> 00:08:34,040 Speaker 2: just one of those series. And I know you guys 217 00:08:34,040 --> 00:08:36,520 Speaker 2: are gonna be so tired of us being like it's 218 00:08:36,520 --> 00:08:39,040 Speaker 2: not the end of the world, Like there's there's people 219 00:08:39,080 --> 00:08:41,600 Speaker 2: freaking out. Anytime you lose to the Yankees, especially like 220 00:08:41,600 --> 00:08:43,840 Speaker 2: two in a row, especially with the Braves like closing in, 221 00:08:43,880 --> 00:08:46,920 Speaker 2: I feel like people definitely get a little smothered of 222 00:08:47,000 --> 00:08:48,280 Speaker 2: Like so it's because. 223 00:08:48,080 --> 00:08:50,880 Speaker 3: It's because the Yankees were playing poorly. Yes, like the 224 00:08:50,960 --> 00:08:52,880 Speaker 3: Yankees were playing very poorly. The Mets were coming off 225 00:08:52,880 --> 00:08:54,640 Speaker 3: a big victory. Then you had Max Scherz a versus 226 00:08:54,640 --> 00:08:55,320 Speaker 3: Domingo Herman. 227 00:08:55,760 --> 00:08:57,480 Speaker 2: Yeah, losing that game. 228 00:08:57,400 --> 00:08:59,959 Speaker 3: Is really would hurt because once that Tywa Walker was 229 00:09:00,040 --> 00:09:01,880 Speaker 3: slide in for here with the ground moving back to 230 00:09:01,920 --> 00:09:03,880 Speaker 3: pitch against the Rockies, you were like, Okay, you win 231 00:09:03,920 --> 00:09:05,760 Speaker 3: the shares a game, you lose the Walker game, you 232 00:09:05,840 --> 00:09:08,959 Speaker 3: beat to Mingo Herman, just okay, you can make do 233 00:09:09,080 --> 00:09:12,199 Speaker 3: with that. But losing on Monday was disappointing because it 234 00:09:12,280 --> 00:09:14,559 Speaker 3: was kind of the exact same stuff we're talking about now. 235 00:09:14,559 --> 00:09:16,840 Speaker 3: There was just guys on base, but you couldn't really 236 00:09:16,920 --> 00:09:17,480 Speaker 3: drive him in. 237 00:09:17,559 --> 00:09:19,880 Speaker 2: They're actually, well, they didn't have any guys. They were 238 00:09:19,960 --> 00:09:21,600 Speaker 2: zero for one with the runners of scoring position, so 239 00:09:21,600 --> 00:09:23,560 Speaker 2: they had one at bat with the runner scoring position. 240 00:09:23,600 --> 00:09:25,680 Speaker 2: They just kind of got dominated a little bit which 241 00:09:25,720 --> 00:09:26,160 Speaker 2: is crazy. 242 00:09:26,559 --> 00:09:28,520 Speaker 3: I think they were just swinging a lot. We talked 243 00:09:28,520 --> 00:09:30,160 Speaker 3: about too. We were just talking through the game, We're 244 00:09:30,200 --> 00:09:33,080 Speaker 3: watching it to Mingo. Herman just kind of throws those 245 00:09:33,080 --> 00:09:35,320 Speaker 3: sinkers and those curve balls all around the plate all 246 00:09:35,360 --> 00:09:36,960 Speaker 3: the time, and the Mets were taking hacks at it, 247 00:09:37,040 --> 00:09:39,559 Speaker 3: just weren't really doing that much damage against it, which 248 00:09:39,600 --> 00:09:41,720 Speaker 3: is frustrating against the gall like Herman, who doesn't really 249 00:09:41,760 --> 00:09:43,880 Speaker 3: pop off the page, but he is something of a 250 00:09:43,880 --> 00:09:46,040 Speaker 3: wily pitcher. His pitch makes is useful. The Mets have 251 00:09:46,080 --> 00:09:47,800 Speaker 3: plenty of hard hit balls too, they just were either 252 00:09:47,800 --> 00:09:51,200 Speaker 3: finding gloves or just not really caught generating enough damage. 253 00:09:51,200 --> 00:09:54,040 Speaker 3: And Aaron Boone did his best, his absolute best, yeah 254 00:09:54,080 --> 00:09:55,880 Speaker 3: to keep the Mets in this game by letting hermand 255 00:09:55,880 --> 00:09:57,360 Speaker 3: because he didn't have a high pitch count. But like 256 00:09:57,440 --> 00:09:58,920 Speaker 3: as you know, with a guy like Herman, he doesn't 257 00:09:58,920 --> 00:10:00,920 Speaker 3: have that many tricks up his sleeve. You let these 258 00:10:00,920 --> 00:10:02,600 Speaker 3: professional hitters in the Mets see him for at their 259 00:10:02,600 --> 00:10:04,000 Speaker 3: time you have a chance to do some damage. And 260 00:10:04,040 --> 00:10:06,240 Speaker 3: that did happen their time. Mets got around the order 261 00:10:06,240 --> 00:10:08,480 Speaker 3: in the seventh inning that Vogel back home run we mentioned, 262 00:10:08,760 --> 00:10:10,719 Speaker 3: and where there were those moments where we got to 263 00:10:10,840 --> 00:10:12,679 Speaker 3: three two, three to two when you felt like, Okay, 264 00:10:12,760 --> 00:10:14,319 Speaker 3: that's gonna make a run, that's gonna make a run, 265 00:10:14,360 --> 00:10:16,679 Speaker 3: that's gonna make a run, and then the Yankees just 266 00:10:16,760 --> 00:10:18,840 Speaker 3: score the When the Yankees score the run, the bomb 267 00:10:18,880 --> 00:10:21,440 Speaker 3: that ending. When a team does that, you really feel 268 00:10:21,440 --> 00:10:23,640 Speaker 3: like deflated. And they did that, I believe a few 269 00:10:23,640 --> 00:10:29,839 Speaker 3: times tonight. But even this came yesterday. Dominger Hamman allowed one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, 270 00:10:29,920 --> 00:10:33,000 Speaker 3: ten hard hit balls in eighty six pitches, and the 271 00:10:33,120 --> 00:10:36,400 Speaker 3: bullpen between Ron Marnaccio and Jonathan Lowi Siga and inning 272 00:10:36,440 --> 00:10:37,640 Speaker 3: in a third of the each allowed. 273 00:10:37,360 --> 00:10:39,640 Speaker 2: No hard hit balls. Yeah. So I mean, like so 274 00:10:39,960 --> 00:10:41,640 Speaker 2: the balls just didn't drop for the Mets. Like really, 275 00:10:41,720 --> 00:10:43,240 Speaker 2: at the end of the day, it just kind of 276 00:10:43,280 --> 00:10:45,360 Speaker 2: got you know, as lucky as this team mass have 277 00:10:45,400 --> 00:10:48,040 Speaker 2: been that people have said they got unlucky this series. 278 00:10:48,120 --> 00:10:50,679 Speaker 2: Like I we're trying to think about it while we're 279 00:10:50,720 --> 00:10:53,800 Speaker 2: at the game to explain this series. And it's not 280 00:10:53,880 --> 00:10:57,200 Speaker 2: that like the Yankees played better or the Mets played 281 00:10:57,240 --> 00:10:59,640 Speaker 2: bad baseball. It was just like the Yankees were just 282 00:10:59,640 --> 00:11:01,439 Speaker 2: a little better and the Mets were like a little 283 00:11:01,440 --> 00:11:03,800 Speaker 2: bit worse. I mean, this series is what two to 284 00:11:03,840 --> 00:11:06,560 Speaker 2: two now on the year for a relatively meaningless series 285 00:11:06,600 --> 00:11:09,280 Speaker 2: outside of like standings, but two two on the year 286 00:11:09,320 --> 00:11:10,600 Speaker 2: we won the two in city, they won the two 287 00:11:10,679 --> 00:11:12,760 Speaker 2: Yankee Stadium, and we were sitting next to a guy 288 00:11:12,800 --> 00:11:15,000 Speaker 2: on the train. I'm sorry, buddy, I forgot your name. 289 00:11:15,080 --> 00:11:17,400 Speaker 2: He's from the seven line. I see him everywhere, but 290 00:11:17,480 --> 00:11:18,960 Speaker 2: he was like he went through the game was like 291 00:11:19,160 --> 00:11:21,920 Speaker 2: thirteen to thirteen. Both scored thirteen runs in the four 292 00:11:21,960 --> 00:11:24,120 Speaker 2: games against each other. Like, this is two of the 293 00:11:24,160 --> 00:11:26,800 Speaker 2: best teams in baseball. We know that this is a 294 00:11:26,840 --> 00:11:28,640 Speaker 2: series that I think me and you, I think a 295 00:11:28,640 --> 00:11:30,400 Speaker 2: lot of us would be really excited to be great 296 00:11:30,400 --> 00:11:32,280 Speaker 2: for baseball if the Mets and Yankees end up meeting 297 00:11:32,280 --> 00:11:33,559 Speaker 2: in the World Series. I think you would see a 298 00:11:33,559 --> 00:11:36,880 Speaker 2: seven game series like these are two really, really good 299 00:11:36,920 --> 00:11:39,800 Speaker 2: teams who at their best are just gonna kind of 300 00:11:39,800 --> 00:11:41,959 Speaker 2: battle out these games and sometimes it's gonna come down 301 00:11:42,000 --> 00:11:43,959 Speaker 2: to like one or two lucky breaks, Like I mean, 302 00:11:44,320 --> 00:11:45,800 Speaker 2: pe dropping the ball in Game two was kind of 303 00:11:45,840 --> 00:11:47,520 Speaker 2: their lucky break a little bit because that changed the 304 00:11:47,520 --> 00:11:49,240 Speaker 2: field bit. Yeah, to change the. 305 00:11:49,200 --> 00:11:50,760 Speaker 3: Field a lot, and it was just I don't know, 306 00:11:50,800 --> 00:11:53,240 Speaker 3: these games really mirrored the way they went in City Field, 307 00:11:53,240 --> 00:11:54,920 Speaker 3: because those games in City Field, the only lead the 308 00:11:55,000 --> 00:11:57,240 Speaker 3: Yankees had was the top of the first of that 309 00:11:57,320 --> 00:12:01,199 Speaker 3: first game. Yeah, when Judge and did the mehell rizzo. 310 00:12:01,200 --> 00:12:03,960 Speaker 3: They hit back to back home runs against Taiwan Walker, 311 00:12:04,000 --> 00:12:05,800 Speaker 3: and then the Mets took control of the bomb theginning 312 00:12:05,800 --> 00:12:07,079 Speaker 3: and they just went on to win that game. It 313 00:12:07,120 --> 00:12:09,040 Speaker 3: got close to the end, similar to Game one of 314 00:12:09,080 --> 00:12:09,920 Speaker 3: the series, but the. 315 00:12:09,880 --> 00:12:10,760 Speaker 2: Mets wound up hang on. 316 00:12:10,800 --> 00:12:12,400 Speaker 3: The next game was a little more back and forth 317 00:12:12,720 --> 00:12:14,840 Speaker 3: with this. That time was the Mets getting a walk up, 318 00:12:14,840 --> 00:12:17,160 Speaker 3: this was the Yankee scoring the late run on the misplay. 319 00:12:17,160 --> 00:12:19,080 Speaker 3: That's kind of how it goes to gets two really 320 00:12:19,120 --> 00:12:22,760 Speaker 3: really freaking good teams. It's just it's just it's just 321 00:12:22,800 --> 00:12:24,760 Speaker 3: funny that the Yankees are playing like their worst baseball 322 00:12:24,800 --> 00:12:27,560 Speaker 3: of the season before this, and now they'll probably get 323 00:12:27,640 --> 00:12:30,119 Speaker 3: back on the right track, which is frustrating. 324 00:12:30,400 --> 00:12:33,439 Speaker 2: Yeah, it's it's more frustrating just for like, I mean, 325 00:12:33,480 --> 00:12:35,640 Speaker 2: the reasons that all of us Mets fans have ever 326 00:12:35,880 --> 00:12:37,559 Speaker 2: had a disdain for the Yankees. It's just because like 327 00:12:37,559 --> 00:12:39,640 Speaker 2: we don't want to hear it. We really at the 328 00:12:39,720 --> 00:12:42,640 Speaker 2: end of the day. Both of our teams are irrelevant 329 00:12:42,679 --> 00:12:44,280 Speaker 2: to each other unless we play each other in the 330 00:12:44,320 --> 00:12:47,360 Speaker 2: World Series. Like the Yankees aren't competing against us. We're 331 00:12:47,360 --> 00:12:49,320 Speaker 2: not competing against the Yankees to make the playoffs, like 332 00:12:49,559 --> 00:12:52,000 Speaker 2: we don't face each other that often. But like the 333 00:12:52,080 --> 00:12:55,360 Speaker 2: discourse and the conversation, and like man, listening to talk 334 00:12:55,440 --> 00:12:58,280 Speaker 2: radio tomorrow is I think I'm glad I don't have 335 00:12:58,320 --> 00:13:00,760 Speaker 2: to commute, not because like man, like I don't want 336 00:13:00,760 --> 00:13:03,720 Speaker 2: a real job. Listening to talk radio tomorrow is going 337 00:13:03,760 --> 00:13:06,600 Speaker 2: to be so annoying. There's gotta be I feel free, 338 00:13:06,600 --> 00:13:08,160 Speaker 2: you Mets fans, we're gonna listen to that because it's 339 00:13:08,160 --> 00:13:11,800 Speaker 2: just gonna be It's gonna be overreactions. It's gonna be annoying, 340 00:13:11,960 --> 00:13:14,600 Speaker 2: like Yankee fans going crazy. There's gonna be some Mets fans. 341 00:13:14,640 --> 00:13:15,959 Speaker 2: I probably get a little bit too down in the 342 00:13:16,040 --> 00:13:19,679 Speaker 2: dumps too, like everything is okay. Sometimes you just lose. 343 00:13:20,360 --> 00:13:22,839 Speaker 2: This isn't losing to the Marlins. This isn't losing to 344 00:13:22,880 --> 00:13:25,240 Speaker 2: the Nationals. So the Yankees are seventy six and forty eight, 345 00:13:25,280 --> 00:13:27,000 Speaker 2: Like I don't I don't care how bad of baseball 346 00:13:27,000 --> 00:13:28,679 Speaker 2: they're playing. They still are a good team. 347 00:13:28,880 --> 00:13:30,959 Speaker 3: All those people are not gonna listen listen to talk Raater, 348 00:13:30,960 --> 00:13:32,839 Speaker 3: They're gonna listen to us. That's the whole true, it's 349 00:13:32,840 --> 00:13:33,600 Speaker 3: the whole reason we're here. 350 00:13:33,600 --> 00:13:35,120 Speaker 2: When you're talking, you're trying to send people away from 351 00:13:35,160 --> 00:13:38,840 Speaker 2: this podcast. How dare you? It's just it just like 352 00:13:38,920 --> 00:13:41,280 Speaker 2: that last episode we did with the After the Yankees 353 00:13:41,320 --> 00:13:43,280 Speaker 2: series was so much fun, so much fun. 354 00:13:43,600 --> 00:13:45,280 Speaker 3: And I mean like, and you have to give credit 355 00:13:45,280 --> 00:13:47,439 Speaker 3: words due the crowd of US US Mets fans of 356 00:13:47,480 --> 00:13:49,880 Speaker 3: city Field, that place was significantly more lively in the 357 00:13:49,960 --> 00:13:51,640 Speaker 3: Yankee Stadium for these two games here. 358 00:13:51,880 --> 00:13:54,000 Speaker 2: Well yeah, I mean even Bucks said it himself, Buck 359 00:13:54,040 --> 00:13:57,000 Speaker 2: taking a rare shot at the Yankees. Buck's usually pretty quiet, 360 00:13:57,080 --> 00:13:59,200 Speaker 2: but he said, uh, it was. It was almost like 361 00:13:59,240 --> 00:14:01,280 Speaker 2: city Field right where he's thinking, said like, yeah, it 362 00:14:01,320 --> 00:14:03,280 Speaker 2: was a little bit like city Field, but we were louder, 363 00:14:03,360 --> 00:14:06,360 Speaker 2: which I agree with. The only thing that really Yankee 364 00:14:06,400 --> 00:14:09,440 Speaker 2: Stadium does that's louder is just simply play their music 365 00:14:09,520 --> 00:14:12,120 Speaker 2: and that I'm I'm not gonna curse, but that f 366 00:14:12,200 --> 00:14:17,120 Speaker 2: and siren is like it's anxiety inducing. Hanging out in 367 00:14:17,200 --> 00:14:22,760 Speaker 2: Yankee Stadium is not an enjoyable experience. I'm not gonna lie. 368 00:14:22,840 --> 00:14:24,680 Speaker 2: Like the only thing they do well are the bars 369 00:14:24,680 --> 00:14:26,120 Speaker 2: outside of the stadium before the game, and that's not 370 00:14:26,120 --> 00:14:27,320 Speaker 2: even Yankee Stadium. 371 00:14:26,960 --> 00:14:28,680 Speaker 3: Really, But those bars don't even really do it well 372 00:14:28,680 --> 00:14:30,680 Speaker 3: anymore because I think those bars have realized that they're 373 00:14:30,720 --> 00:14:33,400 Speaker 3: relatively well, but now they just basically charge more for 374 00:14:33,480 --> 00:14:34,640 Speaker 3: drinks than inside. 375 00:14:34,760 --> 00:14:36,920 Speaker 2: I couldn't even believe you guys want to hack. If 376 00:14:36,960 --> 00:14:39,920 Speaker 2: you ever go to a Yankee game, just go inside 377 00:14:39,920 --> 00:14:43,200 Speaker 2: and drink beer. Wait, it's it was I think ten 378 00:14:43,280 --> 00:14:46,320 Speaker 2: dollars for a cours for a whatever, like the little 379 00:14:46,400 --> 00:14:50,320 Speaker 2: aluminum bottle that I had, and inside like a tall boy, 380 00:14:50,400 --> 00:14:52,880 Speaker 2: so you get what basically two of those was fourteen. 381 00:14:53,200 --> 00:14:56,400 Speaker 2: That's like, that's a way better deal. A white claw 382 00:14:56,480 --> 00:15:01,560 Speaker 2: twelve Flu announces was ten twelve dollars. That's Woobar stands 383 00:15:01,560 --> 00:15:04,200 Speaker 2: are Billies. That was Billies. That was Billies. That was Billies. 384 00:15:04,240 --> 00:15:06,280 Speaker 3: They I mean, they're both fine. Just the idea of 385 00:15:06,280 --> 00:15:08,560 Speaker 3: having a bar outside of the stadium is so novel 386 00:15:08,560 --> 00:15:10,360 Speaker 3: to Mets fans. That's like such a joy to do. 387 00:15:10,720 --> 00:15:11,360 Speaker 2: And it is done. 388 00:15:11,440 --> 00:15:11,720 Speaker 1: It is. 389 00:15:11,840 --> 00:15:14,840 Speaker 2: It is nice. I would like if but for those deals, 390 00:15:14,880 --> 00:15:16,680 Speaker 2: I'll just go into the stadium. Two hours early and 391 00:15:16,720 --> 00:15:19,760 Speaker 2: start having fun because like, really see the way they 392 00:15:19,840 --> 00:15:22,800 Speaker 2: lay it out too, It's so uninviting. It's like just 393 00:15:22,880 --> 00:15:25,600 Speaker 2: hard edges. The colors are everything is gray and black. 394 00:15:25,760 --> 00:15:28,240 Speaker 2: It's so gray, it's so gross, Like who's this? Who's 395 00:15:28,240 --> 00:15:30,440 Speaker 2: the stadium for? It feels like a mall. I mean, 396 00:15:30,440 --> 00:15:32,520 Speaker 2: it's for the corporate big wigs over there who want 397 00:15:32,520 --> 00:15:34,240 Speaker 2: to go and leave in the fifth inning so that 398 00:15:34,280 --> 00:15:35,560 Speaker 2: they can, you know, beat traffic. 399 00:15:35,840 --> 00:15:37,880 Speaker 3: They do none of that fun stuff in between innings 400 00:15:37,880 --> 00:15:39,720 Speaker 3: like we do with Mike and Emily and City Field. 401 00:15:39,760 --> 00:15:42,040 Speaker 2: Like it's nothing at all. There's so little panash in 402 00:15:42,040 --> 00:15:45,920 Speaker 2: that stadium. Ugh, it's it's baseball, the pure baseball. I'm 403 00:15:45,920 --> 00:15:47,280 Speaker 2: sure that's what they would say. This is a this 404 00:15:47,360 --> 00:15:48,640 Speaker 2: is a place of history. 405 00:15:48,840 --> 00:15:50,800 Speaker 3: So I mean, of course that's what is the place 406 00:15:50,800 --> 00:15:53,040 Speaker 3: where Frankie Montis has to shave his goatee before you 407 00:15:53,120 --> 00:15:55,360 Speaker 3: hitch those on the map, because you can't. You can't, 408 00:15:55,440 --> 00:15:57,440 Speaker 3: you know, you can't disrespect all the Yankee legends from 409 00:15:57,480 --> 00:15:59,000 Speaker 3: from the coal coal mining era. 410 00:15:59,440 --> 00:16:02,000 Speaker 2: I heard it interview from Jordan Montgomery this week talking 411 00:16:02,000 --> 00:16:04,360 Speaker 2: about when he was with the Cardinal or now that 412 00:16:04,400 --> 00:16:06,200 Speaker 2: he's with the Cardinals, talking about what he would do 413 00:16:06,200 --> 00:16:09,600 Speaker 2: about his facial hair, and he said that like basically 414 00:16:09,960 --> 00:16:12,400 Speaker 2: like hal or somebody up top would just like we 415 00:16:12,520 --> 00:16:14,640 Speaker 2: look at the players and be like that guy needs 416 00:16:14,680 --> 00:16:16,920 Speaker 2: number five, doesn't even they don't even necessarily know their names. 417 00:16:16,920 --> 00:16:18,960 Speaker 2: I'm not talking about how, but whoever is in charge 418 00:16:18,960 --> 00:16:21,280 Speaker 2: of this looks at them as like number fifty two, 419 00:16:21,720 --> 00:16:23,760 Speaker 2: so got shaved. That's a little it's getting a little 420 00:16:23,840 --> 00:16:25,720 Speaker 2: you know, dark on the face there. We gotta keep 421 00:16:25,720 --> 00:16:27,479 Speaker 2: it clean. It's unbelievable. 422 00:16:27,560 --> 00:16:30,480 Speaker 3: I feel like the Metsha of all like rocked like 423 00:16:30,520 --> 00:16:33,240 Speaker 3: major beards for this is just to go into Yankees 424 00:16:33,280 --> 00:16:33,880 Speaker 3: name as much as. 425 00:16:33,800 --> 00:16:35,840 Speaker 2: They could have had. You could do a mustache, right 426 00:16:35,840 --> 00:16:37,640 Speaker 2: if you're a Yankee, mustache is okay? 427 00:16:37,720 --> 00:16:40,760 Speaker 3: Matt Carpenter, Yeah, Baby Ruth reincarnation, Oh my god, there 428 00:16:40,800 --> 00:16:42,440 Speaker 3: was one that we had it too. We were just 429 00:16:42,480 --> 00:16:44,200 Speaker 3: taking a lot of time tonight just like looking at 430 00:16:44,280 --> 00:16:46,440 Speaker 3: Yankee fans and like trying to understand like what makes 431 00:16:46,440 --> 00:16:48,600 Speaker 3: them tick. Yeah, there was one. There was one dude 432 00:16:48,640 --> 00:16:51,760 Speaker 3: who was standing like fifteen twenty feet away from us. 433 00:16:51,800 --> 00:16:56,320 Speaker 3: He was wearing like really baggy, really long red jim shorts, 434 00:16:56,400 --> 00:16:58,680 Speaker 3: like the kinds that like the scene and war in 435 00:16:58,680 --> 00:16:59,400 Speaker 3: like seventh grade. 436 00:16:59,480 --> 00:17:01,920 Speaker 2: Yeah yeah, oh, John literally typed in one as well. Yeah, 437 00:17:01,920 --> 00:17:04,840 Speaker 2: there were and one shorts to tell you everything you need. 438 00:17:04,880 --> 00:17:07,199 Speaker 2: And if you don't know what one shorts are, holy 439 00:17:07,560 --> 00:17:09,840 Speaker 2: my goodness, you're way too young, because that was Those 440 00:17:09,840 --> 00:17:11,600 Speaker 2: were the shorts to wear in the early two days, 441 00:17:11,800 --> 00:17:12,360 Speaker 2: like shimmer. 442 00:17:12,480 --> 00:17:14,320 Speaker 3: It's like, guess the only way to describe them material 443 00:17:14,400 --> 00:17:17,240 Speaker 3: seems like I can't even imagine where what the origination 444 00:17:17,280 --> 00:17:19,320 Speaker 3: of that material is, Like, how do you start that? 445 00:17:20,320 --> 00:17:22,840 Speaker 2: Well, yes, sir, that's like gotta be a polyester that's 446 00:17:22,840 --> 00:17:25,359 Speaker 2: like been burned a little bit. There's no cotton in 447 00:17:25,359 --> 00:17:26,520 Speaker 2: those shorts. I got their shit. 448 00:17:27,400 --> 00:17:31,320 Speaker 3: But this dude was also wearing the core for Yankee Jersey, 449 00:17:31,359 --> 00:17:34,320 Speaker 3: so stashed from top to bottom with the numbers two, 450 00:17:34,560 --> 00:17:41,560 Speaker 3: forty two, fifty six and forty forty, twenty forty six 451 00:17:41,600 --> 00:17:45,200 Speaker 3: and twenty Yeah. So either Mariano saw the Andy Peviot, 452 00:17:45,240 --> 00:17:47,000 Speaker 3: which like four mid players. 453 00:17:47,040 --> 00:17:51,240 Speaker 2: Really, I mean, Mariano was pretty good. 454 00:17:51,400 --> 00:17:54,040 Speaker 3: Mariano was Marianno was a fine player, but I'll never 455 00:17:54,119 --> 00:17:57,320 Speaker 3: ever ever get over him being the first one hundred 456 00:17:57,320 --> 00:17:57,800 Speaker 3: percent in the. 457 00:17:57,720 --> 00:17:59,600 Speaker 2: Hall of Fame. Yeah, I mean, like as one of 458 00:17:59,600 --> 00:18:02,640 Speaker 2: the most just things that baseball's ever done. Like Hank 459 00:18:02,720 --> 00:18:04,760 Speaker 2: Aaron didn't get one hundred percent Willi Mays. 460 00:18:04,560 --> 00:18:08,679 Speaker 3: Tom Seever, Like it's like there's literally there's no explanation 461 00:18:08,760 --> 00:18:11,520 Speaker 3: for Mariano Rivera getting the first hundred percent for that reason. 462 00:18:11,600 --> 00:18:14,080 Speaker 3: Like while he was definitelyn above average reliever, he's the best. 463 00:18:15,240 --> 00:18:16,920 Speaker 3: He's probably the best reliever of all time. Also a 464 00:18:16,920 --> 00:18:19,680 Speaker 3: failed star the people forget, but to get one hundred 465 00:18:19,720 --> 00:18:22,080 Speaker 3: percent of the voting for only for only pitching like 466 00:18:22,080 --> 00:18:23,760 Speaker 3: three innings a week for your whole career, Like. 467 00:18:23,720 --> 00:18:24,359 Speaker 2: Are you kidding me? 468 00:18:24,440 --> 00:18:26,159 Speaker 3: Like with a with a joke, all of those riders 469 00:18:26,240 --> 00:18:28,439 Speaker 3: every how could none of them? Like I figured that 470 00:18:28,480 --> 00:18:30,240 Speaker 3: when the writers were doing the Hall of Fame and 471 00:18:30,320 --> 00:18:32,399 Speaker 3: someone was a lock first ballot, everyone got together and 472 00:18:32,520 --> 00:18:34,480 Speaker 3: was like, who's voting now, Yeah, because you have to 473 00:18:34,480 --> 00:18:36,440 Speaker 3: do that. Griffy didn't get a hundred percent, you said, 474 00:18:36,520 --> 00:18:39,600 Speaker 3: Hank Aaron, Willie Mays, Frank Robson couldn't even get in. 475 00:18:39,520 --> 00:18:42,320 Speaker 2: For an even years. Anybody who's in the Hall of Fame, Williams, 476 00:18:42,480 --> 00:18:44,480 Speaker 2: Ted Williams didn't get a hundred percent of the vote, Like, 477 00:18:44,640 --> 00:18:47,199 Speaker 2: I mean, literally, anybody who's not Mariano Rivera did not 478 00:18:47,200 --> 00:18:47,920 Speaker 2: get one hundred percent. 479 00:18:48,000 --> 00:18:50,040 Speaker 3: Every single person. So based on the Baseball Rise saying 480 00:18:50,040 --> 00:18:52,680 Speaker 3: Mariano Rivera is the greatest players ever touched the field, 481 00:18:52,760 --> 00:18:54,920 Speaker 3: I have to go counter that and just basically say 482 00:18:54,920 --> 00:18:56,760 Speaker 3: that he was a failed starter who you know, called 483 00:18:56,760 --> 00:18:57,640 Speaker 3: a break found a pitch. 484 00:18:57,880 --> 00:19:00,520 Speaker 2: Yeah, as much as I hate the yank, because it 485 00:19:00,560 --> 00:19:02,879 Speaker 2: is a hate, i'd probably give them a little more 486 00:19:02,920 --> 00:19:05,160 Speaker 2: respect than you do with their players. Like I don't 487 00:19:05,200 --> 00:19:07,719 Speaker 2: hate Jeter or I don't. I don't slander Jeter as 488 00:19:07,800 --> 00:19:09,280 Speaker 2: much you don't. I don't hate either. He just was 489 00:19:09,320 --> 00:19:11,520 Speaker 2: in the right place at the right time. I mean 490 00:19:11,640 --> 00:19:13,159 Speaker 2: a singles with a bad glove like that. 491 00:19:13,880 --> 00:19:15,600 Speaker 3: I mean, yeah, could you imagine he was really good 492 00:19:15,600 --> 00:19:17,520 Speaker 3: at it? No, he was so good hitting singles and 493 00:19:17,560 --> 00:19:19,680 Speaker 3: making errors, Like could you imagine, like, what, what's the 494 00:19:19,720 --> 00:19:22,120 Speaker 3: equivalent to like Derek Jeter in accounting? It'd be like 495 00:19:22,560 --> 00:19:24,280 Speaker 3: it just be like a really, it'd be like a 496 00:19:24,320 --> 00:19:26,600 Speaker 3: dude who just like hung out like a sea level 497 00:19:26,640 --> 00:19:28,560 Speaker 3: firm in you know, Central Arkansas. 498 00:19:29,000 --> 00:19:31,240 Speaker 2: That's it. Wait, you didn't even finish the story about 499 00:19:31,240 --> 00:19:33,720 Speaker 2: this guy was wearing these jerseys in the end. 500 00:19:33,760 --> 00:19:37,480 Speaker 3: One so this guy's and won the Core for Jersey. 501 00:19:37,520 --> 00:19:39,919 Speaker 3: We've set the scene here, all the patches to by 502 00:19:39,920 --> 00:19:42,440 Speaker 3: the way, yeah, tons of patches. Adam out of the 503 00:19:42,480 --> 00:19:45,640 Speaker 3: Vino comes in the game, and Adam out of Vino 504 00:19:45,680 --> 00:19:49,520 Speaker 3: I didn't realize, was like a hated figure by Yankee fans. 505 00:19:49,520 --> 00:19:52,320 Speaker 2: Which like they traded him. It's not like he even left. 506 00:19:52,320 --> 00:19:54,040 Speaker 2: And then like, but that wasn't it. We know that 507 00:19:54,080 --> 00:19:54,879 Speaker 2: wasn't the real story. 508 00:19:54,960 --> 00:19:57,440 Speaker 3: So if you guys remember the estimate that we gave 509 00:19:57,600 --> 00:20:00,200 Speaker 3: before that, I just crush Mark again so bad. 510 00:20:00,200 --> 00:20:03,040 Speaker 2: We have to change the rules this time. Yeah, it was. 511 00:20:05,320 --> 00:20:07,440 Speaker 2: It was the boozel here the Yankee stadium. The only 512 00:20:07,480 --> 00:20:09,320 Speaker 2: all the baboo because of course Yankees won two games. 513 00:20:09,359 --> 00:20:11,480 Speaker 2: They played good baseball. Was at Adam on the Vino. 514 00:20:11,359 --> 00:20:12,480 Speaker 3: Came in the game and we're like, why are they 515 00:20:12,520 --> 00:20:14,679 Speaker 3: bling Adam on the Vino And then this guy started 516 00:20:14,680 --> 00:20:18,080 Speaker 3: screaming something. We all realize that they hate Adam on 517 00:20:18,080 --> 00:20:20,480 Speaker 3: the Vino because he said publicly three or four years 518 00:20:20,520 --> 00:20:22,920 Speaker 3: ago that he could strike out Babe Ruth, which is 519 00:20:23,040 --> 00:20:25,920 Speaker 3: effectual statement, subjectively one of the truth things I've ever heard. 520 00:20:25,960 --> 00:20:28,119 Speaker 3: I mean, I think, I mean, anyone could strike out 521 00:20:28,160 --> 00:20:29,600 Speaker 3: bab Ruth. I think if you rag got on the mat, 522 00:20:29,600 --> 00:20:31,040 Speaker 3: we can give Baby Ruth a run for his money. 523 00:20:31,320 --> 00:20:33,639 Speaker 2: Yeah, I mean Babe Ruth was basically like see an 524 00:20:33,680 --> 00:20:36,200 Speaker 2: underhand soft toss during his days. 525 00:20:36,280 --> 00:20:38,360 Speaker 3: So and every single time Ata on a video threw 526 00:20:38,359 --> 00:20:39,879 Speaker 3: a pitch that wasn't a swing and a miss or 527 00:20:40,000 --> 00:20:42,959 Speaker 3: called strike, this guy was screaming, he thinks he can 528 00:20:43,040 --> 00:20:45,960 Speaker 3: strike out the babe as if Babe Ruth was all 529 00:20:45,960 --> 00:20:47,919 Speaker 3: like alive, as if Babe Ruth was it was like 530 00:20:48,000 --> 00:20:48,760 Speaker 3: there or something. 531 00:20:48,800 --> 00:20:50,440 Speaker 2: It's it was absolutely crazy. 532 00:20:50,600 --> 00:20:52,560 Speaker 3: Such creature is there are so many guinea tees and 533 00:20:52,880 --> 00:20:54,199 Speaker 3: I only eve if I could say that in the podcast, 534 00:20:54,200 --> 00:20:55,560 Speaker 3: but I definitely can't say the other version of that. 535 00:20:55,680 --> 00:20:58,639 Speaker 2: Yeah, big gold chain, so many, so much hair dye? 536 00:20:59,119 --> 00:21:01,960 Speaker 2: Do you no hair dye? Harry who had the lowest 537 00:21:02,000 --> 00:21:05,560 Speaker 2: era in Major League Baseball in nineteen twenty one, one 538 00:21:05,560 --> 00:21:08,680 Speaker 2: of the years that Babe Ruth was playing in Dizzy Nelson. Now, 539 00:21:08,720 --> 00:21:11,920 Speaker 2: the guy we're looking for is Bullet Rogan of the 540 00:21:12,000 --> 00:21:14,399 Speaker 2: Kansas City No, No, that was no, never mind, hold on, 541 00:21:14,440 --> 00:21:17,159 Speaker 2: hold on, it was actually Red Faber, My bad, it 542 00:21:17,200 --> 00:21:19,960 Speaker 2: was Red Faber. A fun fact about Red Favor he 543 00:21:20,000 --> 00:21:22,200 Speaker 2: was twenty five and fifteen that year because he threw 544 00:21:22,240 --> 00:21:25,439 Speaker 2: three hundred and thirty innings. You know how many batteris 545 00:21:25,440 --> 00:21:28,440 Speaker 2: he struck out in nineteen twenty one seventy six, They're 546 00:21:28,640 --> 00:21:31,480 Speaker 2: really close. He struck out one hundred and twenty four 547 00:21:31,560 --> 00:21:35,560 Speaker 2: of the thirteen hundred batters he faced. I mean, was 548 00:21:35,600 --> 00:21:37,200 Speaker 2: the k ray John give me quick math in that 549 00:21:37,280 --> 00:21:40,160 Speaker 2: k raise Red Fabers hall of Famer. Oh my god, 550 00:21:41,760 --> 00:21:44,840 Speaker 2: Red Fabers a Hall of Famer. That's crazy. Babe Ruth 551 00:21:44,840 --> 00:21:46,200 Speaker 2: one of the greatest players of all time. He's playing 552 00:21:46,200 --> 00:21:48,840 Speaker 2: against studs like Red Faber. Yeah, Bill Doakan, I mean 553 00:21:48,880 --> 00:21:50,640 Speaker 2: he didn't play the National League, so no, no, Bill 554 00:21:50,680 --> 00:21:52,960 Speaker 2: doak Love, I guess for Babe Ruth. But I mean 555 00:21:53,359 --> 00:21:55,399 Speaker 2: some of these names that I could throw out. Man, 556 00:21:55,440 --> 00:21:59,400 Speaker 2: the American League had bad pitching too. About George Modridge 557 00:21:59,720 --> 00:22:00,640 Speaker 2: was the Yankees? 558 00:22:01,119 --> 00:22:01,320 Speaker 4: He was? 559 00:22:01,560 --> 00:22:04,680 Speaker 2: No, he was on the Washington Senators. Another guy who 560 00:22:04,680 --> 00:22:06,399 Speaker 2: struck out a ton of batters, one hundred and one 561 00:22:06,440 --> 00:22:10,800 Speaker 2: of the twelve hundred batters he faced, he walked sixty 562 00:22:11,040 --> 00:22:13,240 Speaker 2: two hundred and eighty eight innings. I mean, like crazy 563 00:22:13,240 --> 00:22:14,760 Speaker 2: fact about Babe Ruth. Babe Ruth. 564 00:22:14,760 --> 00:22:16,840 Speaker 3: Everyone always talks about the trades from Red Sox the 565 00:22:16,920 --> 00:22:20,320 Speaker 3: Yankees is being egregious. But originally his organization was the 566 00:22:20,320 --> 00:22:22,320 Speaker 3: Orioles and they traded him to the Red Sox. And 567 00:22:22,359 --> 00:22:24,400 Speaker 3: this is funny because Babe Ruth was actually a young 568 00:22:24,520 --> 00:22:27,320 Speaker 3: orphan boy in the streets of Baltimore who was adopted 569 00:22:28,040 --> 00:22:30,919 Speaker 3: by a leading member of the Orioles franchise. And before 570 00:22:30,920 --> 00:22:33,119 Speaker 3: he even played a Major league game with them, his 571 00:22:33,119 --> 00:22:35,400 Speaker 3: his I guess, his guardian sold him to Boston. 572 00:22:35,600 --> 00:22:40,800 Speaker 2: Imagine that's crazy, Babe Ruth. His dad tells you. The 573 00:22:40,840 --> 00:22:42,600 Speaker 2: only other thing I can think of is when Alavilla 574 00:22:42,640 --> 00:22:44,960 Speaker 2: trades Alexavilla every year while when he had a job, 575 00:22:45,760 --> 00:22:47,960 Speaker 2: that's the only chance you get. I guess, Oh my god, 576 00:22:48,080 --> 00:22:51,880 Speaker 2: this is painful. It's painful. You guys can see we're 577 00:22:51,960 --> 00:22:53,720 Speaker 2: really going off the cuff here because it's just like, 578 00:22:54,560 --> 00:22:57,199 Speaker 2: there really isn't much to talk about with what the 579 00:22:57,200 --> 00:22:57,600 Speaker 2: Mets did. 580 00:22:57,680 --> 00:22:59,400 Speaker 3: We didn't have we didn't have a lead in the series. 581 00:22:59,440 --> 00:23:01,800 Speaker 3: Mex and pitch that well, no, there was one home 582 00:23:01,840 --> 00:23:03,000 Speaker 3: run who was hit by a guy who has no 583 00:23:03,119 --> 00:23:04,639 Speaker 3: legs right now. 584 00:23:04,840 --> 00:23:06,080 Speaker 2: For that, I mean the ninth. 585 00:23:05,840 --> 00:23:08,760 Speaker 3: Inning on Tuesday was I really thought we were going 586 00:23:08,840 --> 00:23:10,920 Speaker 3: to get him. Lindor put that ball down the line 587 00:23:10,960 --> 00:23:13,680 Speaker 3: off of Wandy Pearo alto which the Yankees only having 588 00:23:13,760 --> 00:23:15,600 Speaker 3: Wandi Pearolta to go to in a ninth inning with 589 00:23:15,640 --> 00:23:17,600 Speaker 3: Francisco and Door and Planzo du up. It's just like 590 00:23:17,640 --> 00:23:19,720 Speaker 3: that is the gift like they want. They wouldn't have 591 00:23:19,760 --> 00:23:21,720 Speaker 3: a team in the world just because the roll. This 592 00:23:21,920 --> 00:23:23,800 Speaker 3: is so wild, like you can't bring the bass. A 593 00:23:23,840 --> 00:23:25,120 Speaker 3: loaded situation. 594 00:23:24,960 --> 00:23:26,159 Speaker 2: And huge credit. 595 00:23:26,240 --> 00:23:28,520 Speaker 3: And in that inning to Starling Marte who got down 596 00:23:28,560 --> 00:23:31,320 Speaker 3: oh two worked a walk and uh Todd Nakeman Drew 597 00:23:31,320 --> 00:23:33,800 Speaker 3: walk has been playing the best ball brand Nemo when 598 00:23:33,920 --> 00:23:34,480 Speaker 3: some got single. 599 00:23:34,520 --> 00:23:36,119 Speaker 2: Actually, then we're gonna sing Nimo. Put the ball and 600 00:23:36,160 --> 00:23:38,000 Speaker 2: play and beat it out right, Yeah, something like that. 601 00:23:38,080 --> 00:23:39,560 Speaker 2: I think that was It might have been ruled in erics. 602 00:23:39,560 --> 00:23:40,959 Speaker 2: I saw in the box where the Yankees had an error, 603 00:23:41,000 --> 00:23:43,000 Speaker 2: and I saw the Mets did not have one, which 604 00:23:43,040 --> 00:23:45,160 Speaker 2: is it was Catcher's interference. 605 00:23:45,320 --> 00:23:47,679 Speaker 3: Oh right, right, right, right right, yeah, but yeah, the 606 00:23:47,720 --> 00:23:49,480 Speaker 3: Pete drop ball was not an eric because he didn't 607 00:23:49,480 --> 00:23:51,240 Speaker 3: touch it. But Lindor put the ball down the line 608 00:23:51,280 --> 00:23:53,480 Speaker 3: off of Parolta after going down to it really looked 609 00:23:53,520 --> 00:23:56,119 Speaker 3: like it was gonna drop in. Howie allegedly went crazy 610 00:23:56,160 --> 00:23:56,679 Speaker 3: on the radio. 611 00:23:56,960 --> 00:23:58,720 Speaker 2: Yeah, scared, scared. 612 00:23:58,480 --> 00:24:02,719 Speaker 3: Some people, and then Lindor hit one decently, but it 613 00:24:02,760 --> 00:24:03,960 Speaker 3: was just it was right to a fielder and that 614 00:24:04,000 --> 00:24:04,960 Speaker 3: was it, right dogg game. 615 00:24:05,359 --> 00:24:08,120 Speaker 2: Yeah, I mean, what else about this Yankee stadium experience 616 00:24:08,119 --> 00:24:10,680 Speaker 2: can we talk about? Because the food was pretty good, 617 00:24:10,840 --> 00:24:14,200 Speaker 2: the uh yeah, the media food is definitely pretty good. 618 00:24:14,400 --> 00:24:16,879 Speaker 2: Was solid. We had a nice taco spread. Enjoyed that 619 00:24:16,960 --> 00:24:19,359 Speaker 2: I had four tacos. I was very full, like I 620 00:24:19,400 --> 00:24:22,240 Speaker 2: had so big ball to good French fries, too good, 621 00:24:22,400 --> 00:24:24,800 Speaker 2: great French fries. I don't know if you guys have 622 00:24:24,920 --> 00:24:26,800 Speaker 2: seen this. If you haven't, you probably just haven't been 623 00:24:26,840 --> 00:24:28,760 Speaker 2: on social media much. But there was a guy at 624 00:24:28,760 --> 00:24:31,560 Speaker 2: the Monday night Mets Yankees game who did one of 625 00:24:31,600 --> 00:24:33,399 Speaker 2: the most egregious acts I've ever seen, and it was 626 00:24:33,440 --> 00:24:37,120 Speaker 2: caught on video, which makes me sort of skeptical whether 627 00:24:37,200 --> 00:24:39,760 Speaker 2: or not this was planned or not. But this dude 628 00:24:39,840 --> 00:24:42,680 Speaker 2: bought a glass of beer because for some reason, by 629 00:24:42,680 --> 00:24:45,880 Speaker 2: a can. But we figure out why bought a nice 630 00:24:46,200 --> 00:24:48,080 Speaker 2: cup of beer. Is that how you say you say 631 00:24:48,119 --> 00:24:50,560 Speaker 2: a cup of beer? I just say a beer? He 632 00:24:50,600 --> 00:24:52,480 Speaker 2: bought it? Okay, he bought a beer that was in 633 00:24:52,520 --> 00:24:54,240 Speaker 2: a cup, not in a bottle or in a can 634 00:24:54,320 --> 00:24:56,640 Speaker 2: or a bottle. He also had a hot dog with him. 635 00:24:57,000 --> 00:24:58,959 Speaker 2: He also had a straw with him. And in this 636 00:24:59,080 --> 00:25:02,040 Speaker 2: video you see this man who was wearing like winter 637 00:25:02,119 --> 00:25:04,680 Speaker 2: clothing by the way, and a plaid Yankees hat, which 638 00:25:04,720 --> 00:25:07,760 Speaker 2: is insane, take his straw and stick it in the 639 00:25:07,800 --> 00:25:10,439 Speaker 2: middle of the hot dog long ways, so like, you know, 640 00:25:10,520 --> 00:25:12,959 Speaker 2: not not split in half right down the middle and 641 00:25:13,080 --> 00:25:16,680 Speaker 2: core it out. Then dip the hot dog into the 642 00:25:16,720 --> 00:25:19,840 Speaker 2: beer and use it as a straw to drink his beer, 643 00:25:19,920 --> 00:25:25,080 Speaker 2: which I don't That clip was everywhere for almost twelve 644 00:25:25,080 --> 00:25:26,000 Speaker 2: hours straight. 645 00:25:25,960 --> 00:25:28,160 Speaker 3: Had ten million views as of like five o'clock today, 646 00:25:28,200 --> 00:25:30,240 Speaker 3: which is crazy for less than twenty four hours. Also, 647 00:25:30,320 --> 00:25:32,360 Speaker 3: he as he was like digging into his hot dog 648 00:25:32,440 --> 00:25:34,520 Speaker 3: with his straw. He was putting the end of the 649 00:25:34,520 --> 00:25:36,040 Speaker 3: straw in his mouth so as not to waste those 650 00:25:36,080 --> 00:25:38,720 Speaker 3: bites of hot dogs. Going to waste hot dog bites? 651 00:25:40,320 --> 00:25:42,560 Speaker 3: I mean, he is anymal thinking about this logically for 652 00:25:42,600 --> 00:25:44,640 Speaker 3: a second, it's kind of not that easy. I feel 653 00:25:44,680 --> 00:25:46,399 Speaker 3: like to get that straw straight through the hot. 654 00:25:46,240 --> 00:25:49,119 Speaker 2: Dogs, that's precision. That doesn't mean like you're risking the 655 00:25:49,119 --> 00:25:51,480 Speaker 2: integrity of your hot dog there, and that's a guy 656 00:25:51,760 --> 00:25:54,840 Speaker 2: who's done this before, because he sure he did not 657 00:25:55,000 --> 00:25:58,520 Speaker 2: falter on falter is that the right word. He's sticking 658 00:25:58,520 --> 00:26:00,200 Speaker 2: that straw on the hot dog. It's also just like 659 00:26:00,240 --> 00:26:02,240 Speaker 2: a weird thought to think that, like a man just 660 00:26:02,240 --> 00:26:05,000 Speaker 2: like bought a hot dog, takes it out of the bun, 661 00:26:05,400 --> 00:26:07,159 Speaker 2: playing with it, puts it in the beer, and then 662 00:26:07,280 --> 00:26:09,840 Speaker 2: starts like using it as a show is so insane 663 00:26:09,880 --> 00:26:13,000 Speaker 2: because you're having the beard travel through a warm hot 664 00:26:13,040 --> 00:26:15,760 Speaker 2: dog like that can't be warm beer is awful. It's 665 00:26:15,760 --> 00:26:19,320 Speaker 2: gotta get so like foamy as it's traveling through the 666 00:26:19,359 --> 00:26:21,480 Speaker 2: hot dog. It can't be a good experience. I wanted 667 00:26:21,520 --> 00:26:23,160 Speaker 2: to try it today, but I had the four tacos 668 00:26:23,160 --> 00:26:23,720 Speaker 2: and I was full. 669 00:26:24,640 --> 00:26:26,920 Speaker 3: There was also a comment underneath that video that said 670 00:26:26,960 --> 00:26:29,000 Speaker 3: someone and this could be a bold faced lie, of course, 671 00:26:29,040 --> 00:26:30,480 Speaker 3: but the guy had it was like top comics. It 672 00:26:30,520 --> 00:26:31,960 Speaker 3: got tons of likes, and some guy said used to 673 00:26:32,040 --> 00:26:34,439 Speaker 3: work with him, and he said, again, this could definitely 674 00:26:34,440 --> 00:26:36,199 Speaker 3: be a lie. I said this guy had done this before, 675 00:26:36,280 --> 00:26:38,919 Speaker 3: which I assume that's true, but I also will not 676 00:26:38,960 --> 00:26:40,600 Speaker 3: assume that that person is telling the truth. 677 00:26:41,000 --> 00:26:43,000 Speaker 2: Yeah, I really wanted to do that today, but with 678 00:26:43,000 --> 00:26:45,000 Speaker 2: the Mets losing and the fact that I was full, 679 00:26:45,119 --> 00:26:48,320 Speaker 2: I think I decided not to give it a try 680 00:26:48,320 --> 00:26:50,119 Speaker 2: for myself. But maybe one day, maybe, one day, I 681 00:26:50,119 --> 00:26:52,200 Speaker 2: we'll give it a shot, because I don't think I'm 682 00:26:52,200 --> 00:26:53,639 Speaker 2: ever gonna be able to get that out of my mind. 683 00:26:53,960 --> 00:26:57,240 Speaker 3: The fans also wearing this funny plaid Yankee hat, like 684 00:26:57,400 --> 00:27:00,240 Speaker 3: yeah said before Green and Navy. And also it was hot, 685 00:27:00,320 --> 00:27:01,320 Speaker 3: muggy night on Monday. 686 00:27:01,359 --> 00:27:02,240 Speaker 2: Did you not hear me? 687 00:27:02,359 --> 00:27:04,679 Speaker 3: I said this exactly weird for he was wearing a 688 00:27:04,720 --> 00:27:05,560 Speaker 3: jacket in the khakis. 689 00:27:05,680 --> 00:27:08,600 Speaker 2: I said, he was wearing winter clothing. I'm all mixed 690 00:27:08,640 --> 00:27:10,399 Speaker 2: up right now. It's been a long while. It's twelve 691 00:27:10,400 --> 00:27:12,280 Speaker 2: forty five at night, we're here recording. We still have 692 00:27:12,359 --> 00:27:14,120 Speaker 2: a little bit more to talk about here. Anything else 693 00:27:14,160 --> 00:27:16,959 Speaker 2: to wrap up this uh Yankee Stadium experience. 694 00:27:17,680 --> 00:27:19,960 Speaker 3: I mean, just again, the stadium is not a very 695 00:27:19,960 --> 00:27:22,840 Speaker 3: inviting place. I would say, it's just it's it's weird. 696 00:27:23,040 --> 00:27:24,200 Speaker 2: It's it's the way they. 697 00:27:24,160 --> 00:27:25,920 Speaker 3: Organized standing room is weird too, because it's not that 698 00:27:25,960 --> 00:27:28,159 Speaker 3: many plays you can actually see the game from standing room, 699 00:27:28,200 --> 00:27:30,040 Speaker 3: and they saw plenty of standing room seats and they 700 00:27:30,080 --> 00:27:32,960 Speaker 3: create these like white brackets that fans just pile into. 701 00:27:33,080 --> 00:27:35,560 Speaker 2: It was it was a bizarre situation. Yeah, I think 702 00:27:35,600 --> 00:27:37,680 Speaker 2: it got weird. That's gotsha our boy Vick. 703 00:27:37,880 --> 00:27:40,720 Speaker 3: We found like a nice little enclave of Mets fans 704 00:27:40,760 --> 00:27:43,199 Speaker 3: behind home plate and standing room. Our boy Vic came 705 00:27:43,240 --> 00:27:45,360 Speaker 3: from Connecticut completely alone to this game. 706 00:27:45,440 --> 00:27:47,399 Speaker 2: That's that's goaded Move Dead solo. 707 00:27:47,440 --> 00:27:49,200 Speaker 3: He was hoping to see to gram disappointed that he 708 00:27:49,240 --> 00:27:50,879 Speaker 3: didn't pitch, but we were just chilling with him for 709 00:27:50,920 --> 00:27:52,919 Speaker 3: innings and innings talking to him. Gave him mess up 710 00:27:52,920 --> 00:27:54,360 Speaker 3: sticker play Ryan his shirt immediately. 711 00:27:54,600 --> 00:27:57,120 Speaker 2: Yeah, that's that's our guy. That's a gamer. I hope 712 00:27:57,119 --> 00:27:58,840 Speaker 2: to see Vic at a Mets game soon. And Vic, 713 00:27:58,880 --> 00:28:00,720 Speaker 2: I hope you listen to this. If you do get 714 00:28:00,720 --> 00:28:02,479 Speaker 2: in contact with us on the Mets up Twitter, you're 715 00:28:02,520 --> 00:28:02,959 Speaker 2: a legend. 716 00:28:03,000 --> 00:28:05,119 Speaker 3: Also shout at other friends on the other side, which 717 00:28:05,200 --> 00:28:07,399 Speaker 3: had mustard all over his face. It was so it 718 00:28:07,520 --> 00:28:09,800 Speaker 3: was just spitting and spitting in our producer John's eye, 719 00:28:10,000 --> 00:28:10,800 Speaker 3: trying to talk to him. 720 00:28:11,400 --> 00:28:14,439 Speaker 2: Did you see the hot dog he was eating? It 721 00:28:14,480 --> 00:28:17,200 Speaker 2: was basically just bread with mustard just like cover his face. 722 00:28:17,480 --> 00:28:19,000 Speaker 2: Were talking like and we're Likedude, you got a lot 723 00:28:19,000 --> 00:28:21,240 Speaker 2: of mustle on your face. Much mustard, and then he 724 00:28:21,320 --> 00:28:23,679 Speaker 2: takes his hands, takes his hands and wipes it up. 725 00:28:25,680 --> 00:28:28,240 Speaker 2: It's like, thanks, guys, appreciate it. Like I mean, if 726 00:28:28,240 --> 00:28:29,760 Speaker 2: I had mustard on my face, I would never eat 727 00:28:29,840 --> 00:28:33,439 Speaker 2: mustard because it's awful. But all mustard, hate all mustard. 728 00:28:33,680 --> 00:28:35,760 Speaker 2: Don't like mustard. It's like seventy five different kinds of mustard. 729 00:28:35,760 --> 00:28:38,360 Speaker 2: You can't hit them all. Don't care for mustard, don't 730 00:28:37,760 --> 00:28:41,000 Speaker 2: cut you don't care about Djon. No, I don't know Jon. 731 00:28:41,080 --> 00:28:43,840 Speaker 2: Mike Jean is the only mustard that I I'll ever 732 00:28:43,880 --> 00:28:47,360 Speaker 2: speak about. It's crazy, remember him, remember Mike Dejeon. I 733 00:28:47,800 --> 00:28:50,720 Speaker 2: the name sounds familiar to two thousands met of course 734 00:28:50,800 --> 00:28:52,440 Speaker 2: John does. But he played with the Mets for a 735 00:28:52,480 --> 00:28:54,360 Speaker 2: little bit, maybe like a year. Isn't it crazy? 736 00:28:54,480 --> 00:28:56,200 Speaker 3: There's own there's only one kind of ketchup, and there's 737 00:28:56,200 --> 00:28:57,240 Speaker 3: one hundreds kinds of mustard. 738 00:28:57,680 --> 00:29:00,160 Speaker 2: There's spicy ketchup now, but I mean that's not it's 739 00:29:00,160 --> 00:29:02,440 Speaker 2: not really hasn't caught on. I guess I don't know. 740 00:29:02,560 --> 00:29:05,440 Speaker 2: And both of them are awful people who put that 741 00:29:05,480 --> 00:29:07,400 Speaker 2: on Like people are like, oh you don't put ketchup 742 00:29:07,480 --> 00:29:09,720 Speaker 2: or hot mustard on your hot dog. I'm a purist. 743 00:29:09,800 --> 00:29:11,320 Speaker 2: I like hot dogs. I don't like the taste of 744 00:29:11,360 --> 00:29:13,400 Speaker 2: ketchup and mustard. I want to taste the dog. I'm 745 00:29:13,400 --> 00:29:19,040 Speaker 2: a purist, just like the DH Yeah, exactly. Yankee Stadium, 746 00:29:19,080 --> 00:29:21,360 Speaker 2: Glad glad, or say you're lying that you said to 747 00:29:21,400 --> 00:29:22,720 Speaker 2: me on the train. I'm not gonna take it from you. 748 00:29:22,760 --> 00:29:26,080 Speaker 2: That was a good one about going back to Yankee Stadium. 749 00:29:26,320 --> 00:29:28,800 Speaker 3: Oh, I'm absolutely not going back to Yankee Stadium as 750 00:29:28,800 --> 00:29:30,480 Speaker 3: regular season. I put my stamp on. I have no 751 00:29:30,520 --> 00:29:31,360 Speaker 3: intention of going back. 752 00:29:31,440 --> 00:29:33,440 Speaker 2: No, I'll do the same thing. You won't find You 753 00:29:33,440 --> 00:29:35,200 Speaker 2: won't find me there unless the don't want beards like 754 00:29:35,200 --> 00:29:37,680 Speaker 2: me and Yankee Stadium unless you match up with them 755 00:29:37,680 --> 00:29:38,320 Speaker 2: in the World Series. 756 00:29:38,600 --> 00:29:41,920 Speaker 3: Mean, that's why said regular season said regular season. You 757 00:29:42,040 --> 00:29:44,400 Speaker 3: making Mickey Mannon roll over his grave. He'sa official hair 758 00:29:44,480 --> 00:29:45,960 Speaker 3: like this, he'd want me to pointed out of the 759 00:29:45,960 --> 00:29:46,960 Speaker 3: country all the. 760 00:29:47,360 --> 00:29:49,960 Speaker 2: Babe Ruth Truthers who were wearing his jersey, because you know, 761 00:29:50,040 --> 00:29:51,320 Speaker 2: that's Nothing's. 762 00:29:50,920 --> 00:29:54,080 Speaker 3: More that's dumb as hell about Yankee fans, Like they 763 00:29:54,120 --> 00:29:55,600 Speaker 3: have this thing where they don't put names in the 764 00:29:55,600 --> 00:29:57,880 Speaker 3: back of their jerseys. But every single idiod fans walking 765 00:29:57,920 --> 00:29:59,320 Speaker 3: around with names in the back of their jerseys, Like, 766 00:29:59,360 --> 00:30:01,160 Speaker 3: what the hell do you think this is Mantle? 767 00:30:01,280 --> 00:30:04,200 Speaker 2: The word Mantle? Gerig? Would you come? I think the 768 00:30:04,200 --> 00:30:06,000 Speaker 2: most egregious one that I saw, and I think this 769 00:30:06,040 --> 00:30:07,720 Speaker 2: would be a perfect way to end the Yankee suck 770 00:30:08,120 --> 00:30:10,640 Speaker 2: is that Yankee fans again always love to say that 771 00:30:10,640 --> 00:30:12,160 Speaker 2: they don't care about the Mets, right, I mean, we 772 00:30:12,200 --> 00:30:15,120 Speaker 2: saw Mets suck stickers at the bar. Yes, I saw 773 00:30:15,160 --> 00:30:18,360 Speaker 2: a guy wearing who bought a real Yankees jersey and 774 00:30:18,440 --> 00:30:20,520 Speaker 2: seven naming a number on the back or whatever they do. 775 00:30:20,720 --> 00:30:23,320 Speaker 2: He put Mets suck on the back of his Yankees jersey. 776 00:30:23,440 --> 00:30:25,840 Speaker 2: That's that's insane. Like imagine getting a Mets jersey and 777 00:30:25,840 --> 00:30:28,440 Speaker 2: putting Yankee suck like that's you can't do that. Oh, 778 00:30:28,480 --> 00:30:30,840 Speaker 2: the Yankees won the World serious night. I'm happy for them. Yeah, 779 00:30:30,840 --> 00:30:32,560 Speaker 2: they can have this one. We'll catch them in the 780 00:30:32,560 --> 00:30:35,200 Speaker 2: real world series for the Subway series that will actually matter, 781 00:30:35,200 --> 00:30:37,480 Speaker 2: and we'll see who the best team is. It's the Mets. 782 00:30:37,880 --> 00:30:39,800 Speaker 3: Because right now it's two to two and thirteen thirteen 783 00:30:39,840 --> 00:30:42,360 Speaker 3: on aggregate, so we've learned nothing. 784 00:30:42,640 --> 00:30:45,480 Speaker 2: It's literally a dead tie. So the records are super 785 00:30:45,480 --> 00:30:47,840 Speaker 2: similar as well. It's like a two game difference. Yeah, 786 00:30:47,880 --> 00:30:50,080 Speaker 2: and of course because the Yankees, one of these two 787 00:30:50,120 --> 00:30:53,000 Speaker 2: games not a single boo, which is just the worst. 788 00:30:53,120 --> 00:30:55,720 Speaker 2: I this is what I get for follow up. Yeah, 789 00:30:55,800 --> 00:30:57,400 Speaker 2: one boo is Adam on the vino because he says, 790 00:30:57,400 --> 00:30:59,440 Speaker 2: strikeout baby Ruth. Yeah, well, this is what I get 791 00:30:59,440 --> 00:31:01,520 Speaker 2: for following my heart and not my head, which I 792 00:31:01,520 --> 00:31:03,400 Speaker 2: think we're gonna stop doing here. But I know we 793 00:31:03,480 --> 00:31:05,680 Speaker 2: brought in John here. John was with us. John, this 794 00:31:05,760 --> 00:31:07,600 Speaker 2: is this is late for you, twelve forty five. How 795 00:31:07,600 --> 00:31:12,640 Speaker 2: are you feeling? And as you guys can see, we 796 00:31:12,720 --> 00:31:14,880 Speaker 2: brought in John who is up a little bit past 797 00:31:14,920 --> 00:31:18,280 Speaker 2: his bedtime here at twelve fifty am. This is remember, guys, 798 00:31:18,280 --> 00:31:20,360 Speaker 2: this is the guy who supper at six o'clock. So 799 00:31:21,120 --> 00:31:24,680 Speaker 2: we're running late here for John. John, how you feeling good? 800 00:31:24,760 --> 00:31:28,160 Speaker 4: I mean, I'm I'm honestly surprised that you guys didn't 801 00:31:28,320 --> 00:31:31,320 Speaker 4: call me out of the stunt type bold bottom of 802 00:31:31,360 --> 00:31:32,600 Speaker 4: the eighth inning. I mean, I kind of thought you 803 00:31:32,640 --> 00:31:34,160 Speaker 4: guys woul giving you the business. 804 00:31:33,760 --> 00:31:35,800 Speaker 2: On that a little bit more than Yeah, I mean 805 00:31:35,880 --> 00:31:39,080 Speaker 2: I wanted to, but also I respect because the car 806 00:31:39,200 --> 00:31:41,080 Speaker 2: driving out the Yankee Stadium is very that those park 807 00:31:41,120 --> 00:31:43,200 Speaker 2: garage is very poorly done. Secret life. It's even worse 808 00:31:43,240 --> 00:31:45,640 Speaker 2: than City Field. So sure you're you're asking for a 809 00:31:45,680 --> 00:31:48,760 Speaker 2: car accident too. Because people at Yankee City when they're driving, 810 00:31:48,920 --> 00:31:51,280 Speaker 2: they they don't abide by any laws, any rules. They 811 00:31:51,320 --> 00:31:53,040 Speaker 2: will just be like, oh, I'm gonna go, and if 812 00:31:53,040 --> 00:31:54,520 Speaker 2: your car happens to be there, it's getting it. 813 00:31:55,600 --> 00:31:58,600 Speaker 4: Yeah, no, I have I have no regrets. Obviously, there 814 00:31:58,640 --> 00:32:01,440 Speaker 4: is a part of me when the Mets. Yeah, when 815 00:32:01,440 --> 00:32:03,000 Speaker 4: when they were when they were starting to rally, I. 816 00:32:02,960 --> 00:32:04,600 Speaker 2: Was like, not gonna lie. 817 00:32:04,600 --> 00:32:05,920 Speaker 3: I thought for a second was like, was John the 818 00:32:06,000 --> 00:32:09,720 Speaker 3: mush well because Mark actually also wanted to leave the 819 00:32:09,800 --> 00:32:11,680 Speaker 3: two hours in the night, and I was like, hold. 820 00:32:11,560 --> 00:32:13,640 Speaker 2: Up, yeah I did say that. I did say that, 821 00:32:13,840 --> 00:32:14,720 Speaker 2: and then we little rally. 822 00:32:15,440 --> 00:32:22,520 Speaker 4: There's no advantage at that point. Yeah, yeah, I at 823 00:32:22,600 --> 00:32:25,160 Speaker 4: least because I've experienced the traffic out of Yankee Stadium. 824 00:32:25,200 --> 00:32:27,760 Speaker 4: It's like one road we in my case to the 825 00:32:27,800 --> 00:32:30,520 Speaker 4: g w B. I was headed back to Jersey and like, 826 00:32:30,680 --> 00:32:34,160 Speaker 4: if you don't beat the traffic, forget it. So an 827 00:32:34,200 --> 00:32:38,480 Speaker 4: hour Yeah exactly. So I'm happy. I did what I did. Obviously, 828 00:32:38,520 --> 00:32:43,000 Speaker 4: great night. H I definitely want to shout out piggyback 829 00:32:43,000 --> 00:32:45,800 Speaker 4: on James, uh, mister mustard. And also I'm gonna shout 830 00:32:45,800 --> 00:32:49,680 Speaker 4: out James for being a good guy. Yeah, going going 831 00:32:49,720 --> 00:32:51,920 Speaker 4: up to a random stranger. It's not your cousin out 832 00:32:51,960 --> 00:32:54,320 Speaker 4: of barbacue. Like he goes up to a random guy 833 00:32:54,320 --> 00:32:56,280 Speaker 4: who's like trying to hide five every time he Yankee 834 00:32:56,280 --> 00:32:59,320 Speaker 4: throws a ball. James, just like, Yo, by the way, dude, 835 00:32:59,400 --> 00:33:03,600 Speaker 4: like you got some mustard. And because this dude is 836 00:33:03,640 --> 00:33:06,480 Speaker 4: saying thank you, Yeah, it hits me right in the 837 00:33:07,040 --> 00:33:08,440 Speaker 4: right in the middle of the eyeball. 838 00:33:08,720 --> 00:33:10,560 Speaker 2: And you're having a rough eye night too. You had 839 00:33:10,960 --> 00:33:12,040 Speaker 2: that eye drops out. 840 00:33:13,360 --> 00:33:15,080 Speaker 4: I did. I did have a bad eye night. This 841 00:33:15,160 --> 00:33:18,520 Speaker 4: didn't make it any better. So but it was passionate 842 00:33:18,560 --> 00:33:20,640 Speaker 4: and I respect. I respect the hell out of that. Oh, 843 00:33:20,760 --> 00:33:23,920 Speaker 4: Mets fans were definitely loud tonight, Like the second Mets 844 00:33:23,960 --> 00:33:26,320 Speaker 4: got anything cooking. Yeah, Mets fans are going nuts. 845 00:33:26,360 --> 00:33:27,880 Speaker 2: So yeah, we were trying to figure out what the 846 00:33:27,880 --> 00:33:29,320 Speaker 2: split was right before the game. 847 00:33:29,360 --> 00:33:30,960 Speaker 3: I think I said it's not pretty sixty four the 848 00:33:31,000 --> 00:33:32,400 Speaker 3: ish maybe sixty five, thirty five. 849 00:33:33,000 --> 00:33:35,120 Speaker 2: There's a good showing of Mets fans and they were 850 00:33:35,120 --> 00:33:37,920 Speaker 2: allowed a lot of let's go Mets chance, which was great, like, 851 00:33:38,000 --> 00:33:39,960 Speaker 2: especially in the area that we were in. It's also 852 00:33:39,960 --> 00:33:42,920 Speaker 2: weird because Yankee Stadium is so cement and concrete that 853 00:33:43,000 --> 00:33:45,560 Speaker 2: like it's just holding a cement and concrete. It's just 854 00:33:45,720 --> 00:33:48,120 Speaker 2: bouncing and booming off of everything, So you don't actually 855 00:33:48,160 --> 00:33:49,880 Speaker 2: know if it is louder. It's just because you're like 856 00:33:49,960 --> 00:33:51,600 Speaker 2: trapped inside of this concrete cave. 857 00:33:53,320 --> 00:33:56,120 Speaker 4: It was definitely loud, especially in Mets fans. That was 858 00:33:56,360 --> 00:33:59,840 Speaker 4: that was cool to be a part of. But the 859 00:34:00,040 --> 00:34:02,640 Speaker 4: first Jersey I saw it by far and we were talking, 860 00:34:02,720 --> 00:34:06,680 Speaker 4: we were looking all night. Yeah, was a Yankees Randy 861 00:34:06,760 --> 00:34:08,120 Speaker 4: Johnson fifty one. 862 00:34:08,719 --> 00:34:14,520 Speaker 2: Yeah you hated that one. H No, Milk. 863 00:34:15,880 --> 00:34:19,160 Speaker 4: Milkie was cool. I like the Milkie and see for me, Like, 864 00:34:19,360 --> 00:34:21,480 Speaker 4: that's where you need the name on the back because 865 00:34:21,480 --> 00:34:23,879 Speaker 4: twenty eight could be anybody like Jojo already worked twenty 866 00:34:23,920 --> 00:34:27,400 Speaker 4: eight with you after me, So when you put the 867 00:34:27,520 --> 00:34:30,040 Speaker 4: name on the back, that's me being like, wow, okay, 868 00:34:30,080 --> 00:34:33,279 Speaker 4: that's that's the intent of Milkie. Cabrara, that's cool. It's 869 00:34:33,360 --> 00:34:34,920 Speaker 4: just twenty eight. It's tough. 870 00:34:35,440 --> 00:34:36,839 Speaker 2: You speak with it a little bit. 871 00:34:36,920 --> 00:34:39,560 Speaker 3: Yeah, Okay, Hillary, you guys are stat right now that 872 00:34:39,640 --> 00:34:42,480 Speaker 3: the Steve Gelps just tweeted, just interrupt Yeah, hit us 873 00:34:42,480 --> 00:34:45,000 Speaker 3: with it. That's just finished twenty seven games in twenty 874 00:34:45,040 --> 00:34:47,160 Speaker 3: six days and then went eight and nine. 875 00:34:47,600 --> 00:34:50,480 Speaker 2: That's a really good stretch. Yeah, it's a really sick 876 00:34:50,520 --> 00:34:53,279 Speaker 2: stretch to go eighty any stretch of games eighteen to nine. 877 00:34:53,320 --> 00:34:56,040 Speaker 2: You signed up for that every time that twenty three. 878 00:34:57,520 --> 00:34:59,960 Speaker 4: Well, that's exactly it. That's exactly it. That's what the 879 00:35:00,080 --> 00:35:02,520 Speaker 4: game presents you, the opportunity to bounce back. You know, 880 00:35:02,680 --> 00:35:04,560 Speaker 4: you have an off day on Wednesday, and then we're 881 00:35:04,640 --> 00:35:06,920 Speaker 4: right back at it with a ten game homestand. 882 00:35:07,280 --> 00:35:10,880 Speaker 2: Johnny Little R and R arrest relaxation tomorrow. 883 00:35:12,280 --> 00:35:15,680 Speaker 4: That's absolutely right, real quick. Last thing on the jerseys, James, 884 00:35:16,640 --> 00:35:18,879 Speaker 4: both of you guys, I know, are just we saw 885 00:35:18,920 --> 00:35:23,920 Speaker 4: a guy wearing a Rafael Montero. Yeah, and I'm like, yo, 886 00:35:24,239 --> 00:35:25,160 Speaker 4: Rafael Montero. 887 00:35:25,760 --> 00:35:28,360 Speaker 2: No, you just said Jersey. 888 00:35:28,640 --> 00:35:31,399 Speaker 4: Yeah, okay, I did. I did. In my mind, I'm 889 00:35:31,400 --> 00:35:34,200 Speaker 4: saying that I did say six Jersey. It's a bank 890 00:35:34,239 --> 00:35:37,120 Speaker 4: bank thing. You make your comment, you keep walking. We're 891 00:35:37,160 --> 00:35:40,000 Speaker 4: not like one hundred and sixty first and he goes 892 00:35:40,200 --> 00:35:42,920 Speaker 4: banks Man and he points to the back and he 893 00:35:43,000 --> 00:35:46,960 Speaker 4: goes Hey, Susy Jy sus Montero former Yankee cash and 894 00:35:47,000 --> 00:35:50,640 Speaker 4: prospect trade for Michael Pineda. 895 00:35:54,640 --> 00:35:57,080 Speaker 2: He was guy is never once associated with the New 896 00:35:57,120 --> 00:36:00,319 Speaker 2: York Mets organization. No, not once. And if you guys, 897 00:36:00,320 --> 00:36:02,360 Speaker 2: if you guys will follow us on Instagram. The reason 898 00:36:02,400 --> 00:36:04,439 Speaker 2: we like talk so much about these jerseys is because 899 00:36:04,440 --> 00:36:06,640 Speaker 2: we do a little thing on our story whenever at games, 900 00:36:06,920 --> 00:36:10,279 Speaker 2: we do hashtag threadhead and we just look for kind 901 00:36:10,320 --> 00:36:13,000 Speaker 2: of out of place, a little bit wacky jerseys, like 902 00:36:13,280 --> 00:36:16,000 Speaker 2: a Rafael Montero. I mean that's the first Rafael Montero 903 00:36:16,080 --> 00:36:18,279 Speaker 2: jersey I've ever seen in my life. So we take 904 00:36:18,320 --> 00:36:20,719 Speaker 2: those post those pictures on Instagram. So if you guys 905 00:36:20,719 --> 00:36:22,920 Speaker 2: have any crazy jerseys, makes you come up to us 906 00:36:22,960 --> 00:36:24,680 Speaker 2: at a game, because we love to put you on Instagram. 907 00:36:24,719 --> 00:36:26,600 Speaker 2: I think we've seen some crazy ones. I mean like 908 00:36:26,640 --> 00:36:30,040 Speaker 2: Buck is a classic of just like yea a messager jersey. 909 00:36:30,080 --> 00:36:32,080 Speaker 3: I saw Terry Collinson and I couldn't snap a pick. 910 00:36:32,080 --> 00:36:33,279 Speaker 3: It was in the bathroom, so I thought that'd be 911 00:36:33,320 --> 00:36:35,279 Speaker 3: really weird to take my phone out, you see, Huh yeah, 912 00:36:35,360 --> 00:36:38,560 Speaker 3: J Payton, Jaypayne's a good one. Buck Show Walt not 913 00:36:39,160 --> 00:36:41,560 Speaker 3: Billy Buckner with an eighty six number eighty six that 914 00:36:41,719 --> 00:36:47,360 Speaker 3: was absolutely ridiculous. Creative, Yeah, very creative. Jason Williams white chocolate. 915 00:36:47,320 --> 00:36:49,080 Speaker 2: Yeah, white chocolate was a good one. If you guys 916 00:36:49,080 --> 00:36:50,600 Speaker 2: ever have good jerseys at the game, make sure you 917 00:36:50,680 --> 00:36:51,040 Speaker 2: hit us up. 918 00:36:51,160 --> 00:36:53,120 Speaker 3: And also just because we're not that creative on Instagram, 919 00:36:53,120 --> 00:36:55,239 Speaker 3: So this is the one segment we're sticking to because 920 00:36:55,280 --> 00:36:56,640 Speaker 3: we just forget to do things on there. 921 00:36:57,160 --> 00:36:59,000 Speaker 2: We just we like to be in the moment. We're 922 00:36:59,000 --> 00:37:01,080 Speaker 2: not We're super in the moment, guys. 923 00:37:01,160 --> 00:37:05,320 Speaker 4: Yeah, obscure jerseys are I mean, Rafiel Montero is a 924 00:37:05,440 --> 00:37:09,960 Speaker 4: wild obscure jersey I've never seen. That's probably top five 925 00:37:10,000 --> 00:37:12,040 Speaker 4: for me, like I've seen. I think I once saw 926 00:37:12,160 --> 00:37:19,360 Speaker 4: Rob Carson. If you guys remember Rob Carson, Yeah, I 927 00:37:19,400 --> 00:37:22,960 Speaker 4: think it was just Rob anyway. His Twitter handle was 928 00:37:23,040 --> 00:37:26,440 Speaker 4: like Rob Carson will do he had a couple of 929 00:37:26,440 --> 00:37:28,120 Speaker 4: coffee with the Mets. I think in like nine or 930 00:37:28,120 --> 00:37:30,880 Speaker 4: twenty ten. But I saw Rob Carson at City Field 931 00:37:30,920 --> 00:37:36,360 Speaker 4: recently and that that blew my mind. You saw, Yeah, 932 00:37:36,480 --> 00:37:38,520 Speaker 4: that's that's but you know what when you have a 933 00:37:38,560 --> 00:37:41,920 Speaker 4: deep history, long history. Like the Mets. You see a 934 00:37:41,960 --> 00:37:45,520 Speaker 4: lot of jerseys, and that is the transition to este here. 935 00:37:46,160 --> 00:37:49,600 Speaker 4: So all right, So the new rule that Mark alluded to, 936 00:37:50,719 --> 00:37:52,600 Speaker 4: and I think there's just gonna kind of even the 937 00:37:52,640 --> 00:37:53,280 Speaker 4: playing field. 938 00:37:54,680 --> 00:37:57,360 Speaker 3: I'm too good, I'm the cream of them. 939 00:37:57,480 --> 00:37:59,600 Speaker 2: You gotta change the rules on me? Who's like a 940 00:37:59,680 --> 00:38:01,960 Speaker 2: who's when that Kareem adul Jabbar played against that was 941 00:38:02,040 --> 00:38:04,839 Speaker 2: like his competitor. I don't even know who played there 942 00:38:04,840 --> 00:38:06,720 Speaker 2: in college. I don't even know who was playing college 943 00:38:06,760 --> 00:38:10,080 Speaker 2: in the seventies. Changing the games for guys like me, 944 00:38:10,239 --> 00:38:12,000 Speaker 2: Jerry West, I don't know how that feel, right? 945 00:38:12,160 --> 00:38:14,880 Speaker 3: Maybe who's like who the even does? UCLA teams won 946 00:38:14,920 --> 00:38:16,560 Speaker 3: like seventy games in a row. I don't think it mattered. 947 00:38:16,360 --> 00:38:19,000 Speaker 2: Who they played. Againt john Wood in the Goat Legends. 948 00:38:19,400 --> 00:38:21,719 Speaker 2: First practice every year, tell taught them out to tie 949 00:38:21,719 --> 00:38:25,000 Speaker 2: their shoes. Listen, man, everyone take their shoes and socks off, 950 00:38:25,040 --> 00:38:26,719 Speaker 2: and then you put the sock on. You pull it 951 00:38:26,800 --> 00:38:28,440 Speaker 2: up tight, You relace the shoe ty as you can 952 00:38:28,560 --> 00:38:30,799 Speaker 2: tire shoes. Because you get blisters. You can't practice. I'll 953 00:38:30,840 --> 00:38:33,879 Speaker 2: never forget. Uh, just real quick to finish this up, here, 954 00:38:33,920 --> 00:38:37,759 Speaker 2: but my I like playing basketball in my youth. I 955 00:38:37,800 --> 00:38:40,000 Speaker 2: was on a pretty good basketball team. I didn't play much, 956 00:38:40,000 --> 00:38:42,920 Speaker 2: but I was on Winmark was like nine. Yeah, I 957 00:38:43,000 --> 00:38:45,439 Speaker 2: was like nine and shout out to our assistant coach. 958 00:38:45,719 --> 00:38:49,360 Speaker 2: That's the year. Yeah, mister Kane, uh, good guy. He 959 00:38:49,440 --> 00:38:51,400 Speaker 2: gave us at the end of the year the Pyramid 960 00:38:51,440 --> 00:38:53,359 Speaker 2: of Success, a picture of that and the frame thing 961 00:38:53,640 --> 00:38:55,960 Speaker 2: from John Wooden, which is a that's a big thing 962 00:38:55,960 --> 00:39:05,840 Speaker 2: that people like. The period of success. Yes, I couldn't 963 00:39:05,840 --> 00:39:06,920 Speaker 2: tell you no clue where it is. 964 00:39:07,440 --> 00:39:09,319 Speaker 3: You get the estimate we got. We're really forty minutes. 965 00:39:09,320 --> 00:39:10,720 Speaker 3: We're talking about nothing for forty minutes. 966 00:39:11,760 --> 00:39:19,879 Speaker 2: People like it, they do. M yeah, you do come 967 00:39:19,920 --> 00:39:24,400 Speaker 2: out swinging. I'm aggravating. 968 00:39:24,520 --> 00:39:26,799 Speaker 4: All right, that's the met So you guys have your 969 00:39:26,800 --> 00:39:30,319 Speaker 4: paper and your pen ready so that I'm gonna throw 970 00:39:30,320 --> 00:39:32,960 Speaker 4: it out at the guys and they're gonna hold up 971 00:39:32,960 --> 00:39:35,680 Speaker 4: their answers. When I count three, there will be no more. 972 00:39:36,239 --> 00:39:39,319 Speaker 4: I say seven, you say seven, I'm gonna go six 973 00:39:39,440 --> 00:39:40,399 Speaker 4: under each other. 974 00:39:40,680 --> 00:39:44,440 Speaker 2: I that this will make it more interesting, because yeah, 975 00:39:44,480 --> 00:39:48,040 Speaker 2: because you're not good the other way. Yeah, yeah, it is. 976 00:39:52,160 --> 00:39:54,719 Speaker 4: All right, here we go. That's the mat. I want 977 00:39:54,719 --> 00:39:57,240 Speaker 4: to know how many total runs will be scoring during 978 00:39:57,239 --> 00:39:58,520 Speaker 4: the old timers day game? 979 00:39:58,800 --> 00:40:04,359 Speaker 2: Oh, man, like like the actual old timers? How many playing. 980 00:40:04,200 --> 00:40:07,160 Speaker 4: Orange versus the plane? Is three? I believe three? 981 00:40:07,280 --> 00:40:11,400 Speaker 2: And is it gonna be like and everybody hits the rules? 982 00:40:12,320 --> 00:40:16,480 Speaker 2: It's a base all that, Like you need three outs? 983 00:40:17,400 --> 00:40:19,560 Speaker 4: I believe three outs? Is I believe that's what we're 984 00:40:19,560 --> 00:40:20,680 Speaker 4: aiming for? Okay? 985 00:40:20,920 --> 00:40:22,680 Speaker 3: Is it like is it like a celebrity softball game 986 00:40:22,680 --> 00:40:25,000 Speaker 3: where they're gonna play an auxiliary fence, like make a 987 00:40:25,000 --> 00:40:26,120 Speaker 3: small field on the big field. 988 00:40:26,640 --> 00:40:29,320 Speaker 4: I don't think so, But there's gonna be on the field. 989 00:40:30,280 --> 00:40:32,640 Speaker 2: Man, there's gonna be an I gotta assume that. 990 00:40:34,840 --> 00:40:36,200 Speaker 4: All I want to know is how many runs are 991 00:40:36,239 --> 00:40:36,720 Speaker 4: being scored. 992 00:40:38,800 --> 00:40:40,600 Speaker 2: I've got a number that on a right right down 993 00:40:41,160 --> 00:40:42,160 Speaker 2: to the. 994 00:40:42,200 --> 00:40:44,240 Speaker 4: Level playing field. With no one having all the answers 995 00:40:44,239 --> 00:40:44,840 Speaker 4: to these things. 996 00:40:45,120 --> 00:40:48,200 Speaker 2: This is man, I would look like a look up 997 00:40:48,239 --> 00:40:50,640 Speaker 2: some old old timers to find out this course three 998 00:40:50,640 --> 00:40:53,080 Speaker 2: and the old men playing baseball who don't know the 999 00:40:53,080 --> 00:40:53,760 Speaker 2: basis anymore. 1000 00:40:53,760 --> 00:40:55,640 Speaker 4: I mean I'm older that I'm older than others. 1001 00:40:56,280 --> 00:40:58,160 Speaker 2: Josh Hole is probably gonna hit a home run just 1002 00:40:58,200 --> 00:40:59,880 Speaker 2: because he's like thirty two. 1003 00:40:59,800 --> 00:41:03,120 Speaker 4: So did you guys know Josh Totley has a podcast 1004 00:41:03,160 --> 00:41:04,080 Speaker 4: with Ricky Romero. 1005 00:41:04,600 --> 00:41:09,160 Speaker 2: What I found that out yesterday because that's the ultimate 1006 00:41:09,160 --> 00:41:12,240 Speaker 2: cross over the Mets podcast and Josh Romero. 1007 00:41:13,320 --> 00:41:15,799 Speaker 3: I found that Danny woodhead of the podcast. I'll do 1008 00:41:15,840 --> 00:41:17,320 Speaker 3: some I'll do some contact with Danny Woodhead. 1009 00:41:17,880 --> 00:41:19,840 Speaker 2: I don't just number big enough, let me write it bigger. 1010 00:41:19,920 --> 00:41:23,759 Speaker 2: I darkened my a lot. Wow, that's like the worst 1011 00:41:24,080 --> 00:41:26,680 Speaker 2: number I've ever drawn on this is this is like 1012 00:41:26,680 --> 00:41:29,720 Speaker 2: a child who just learned how to draw numbers right numbers. 1013 00:41:29,840 --> 00:41:33,680 Speaker 2: Was the last time you hand wrote something twenty seventeen? 1014 00:41:33,760 --> 00:41:34,120 Speaker 4: I don't know. 1015 00:41:34,120 --> 00:41:37,240 Speaker 2: I once it became an advertising major, I didn't write anymore. 1016 00:41:37,880 --> 00:41:40,879 Speaker 4: All right, that's that's a good practice. You guys ready 1017 00:41:40,880 --> 00:41:45,200 Speaker 4: to go? Yeah, alright, alright, three, two, one, pal. 1018 00:41:45,120 --> 00:41:48,680 Speaker 2: Nine Oh exciting, nice? Nice. 1019 00:41:49,320 --> 00:41:52,120 Speaker 4: I expected way more from both of you. Like higher numbers. 1020 00:41:52,120 --> 00:41:56,000 Speaker 2: I mean that place to me, If it goes anything 1021 00:41:56,040 --> 00:41:58,400 Speaker 2: over nine, I'm the win winner. 1022 00:41:58,280 --> 00:41:58,600 Speaker 4: I know. 1023 00:41:58,640 --> 00:42:00,640 Speaker 3: I honestly just feel like no one's to run, so 1024 00:42:00,680 --> 00:42:02,279 Speaker 3: how the run is gonna be scored? No one's taking 1025 00:42:02,280 --> 00:42:03,560 Speaker 3: over the fence and no one's running, So I don't 1026 00:42:03,560 --> 00:42:05,520 Speaker 3: think defenders might not run. 1027 00:42:05,480 --> 00:42:10,000 Speaker 2: That's what I was thinking. Franchise that pride themselves on pitching. Listen, 1028 00:42:10,120 --> 00:42:12,600 Speaker 2: like if people will get up there and wing He's 1029 00:42:12,600 --> 00:42:15,719 Speaker 2: not face of course, but if you get like I 1030 00:42:15,760 --> 00:42:19,279 Speaker 2: don't know, you get maybe a little any any shot 1031 00:42:19,800 --> 00:42:23,080 Speaker 2: to win the gap Getron Like you gotta remember the 1032 00:42:23,080 --> 00:42:25,759 Speaker 2: guys around the field probably don't want to want to 1033 00:42:25,800 --> 00:42:28,080 Speaker 2: move that much into there. Like there's gonna regret my 1034 00:42:28,160 --> 00:42:30,359 Speaker 2: number is there's one. There's gonna be a lot of 1035 00:42:30,400 --> 00:42:33,080 Speaker 2: like the little wick wiggle that that's gonna happening. 1036 00:42:34,800 --> 00:42:37,000 Speaker 4: I'm I'm gonna look back time and stuff. Yeah, I'm 1037 00:42:37,080 --> 00:42:39,080 Speaker 4: kind of curious to. I mean, not that it has 1038 00:42:39,120 --> 00:42:40,160 Speaker 4: any bearing, but. 1039 00:42:41,600 --> 00:42:47,080 Speaker 2: Bat Square gonna be timers. Today we got a came 1040 00:42:47,120 --> 00:42:49,960 Speaker 2: in from one one of the people like I can't 1041 00:42:49,960 --> 00:42:53,279 Speaker 2: I can't find But what the question was, who do 1042 00:42:53,400 --> 00:43:02,479 Speaker 2: you think woul would be more valuables roster? Came from John? 1043 00:43:03,600 --> 00:43:08,840 Speaker 4: You think I would go Piazza just because the starting 1044 00:43:08,920 --> 00:43:12,400 Speaker 4: pitching is, you know, has been one of the biggest 1045 00:43:12,440 --> 00:43:15,720 Speaker 4: strengths this team has had all season. You have two aces, 1046 00:43:15,800 --> 00:43:17,879 Speaker 4: I mean, sure, what a third ace or a fourth ace? 1047 00:43:17,880 --> 00:43:19,560 Speaker 4: If you want to call Chris Bassett, who's been an 1048 00:43:19,600 --> 00:43:23,799 Speaker 4: ace since his bad his bad added in San Diego. Yeah, 1049 00:43:23,880 --> 00:43:27,440 Speaker 4: I mean, that's just the rich getting richer. But you know, 1050 00:43:27,960 --> 00:43:30,359 Speaker 4: I guess the one thing that this team kind of lacks, 1051 00:43:30,400 --> 00:43:33,400 Speaker 4: if I had to say anything offensively, is that that 1052 00:43:33,600 --> 00:43:36,880 Speaker 4: power that punch. Yeah, I like Piazza is a forty 1053 00:43:36,920 --> 00:43:39,120 Speaker 4: homer bat into the middle of your lineup. So for me, 1054 00:43:39,200 --> 00:43:43,319 Speaker 4: it's Piazza. But you can't go wrong with Tom Seaver, 1055 00:43:43,440 --> 00:43:48,320 Speaker 4: who should have been a unanimous Hall of Fame inductee. 1056 00:43:49,800 --> 00:43:51,640 Speaker 2: I think I'm just taking Sever. 1057 00:43:51,880 --> 00:43:53,480 Speaker 3: I just I don't know, I'd rather get the I mean, 1058 00:43:53,560 --> 00:43:55,440 Speaker 3: Piazza is incredible and my favorit players of all time, 1059 00:43:55,520 --> 00:43:58,759 Speaker 3: but he's Stiver is a lock for like, I don't know. 1060 00:43:58,880 --> 00:44:00,640 Speaker 3: I mean, I guess I guess maybe the Tom sever 1061 00:44:01,080 --> 00:44:02,800 Speaker 3: maybe isn't as good in this baseball Like, am I 1062 00:44:02,800 --> 00:44:03,879 Speaker 3: getting the exact. 1063 00:44:03,600 --> 00:44:06,960 Speaker 2: Player you're getting? You're getting the prime the best version 1064 00:44:07,080 --> 00:44:09,359 Speaker 2: of these players. So like, I think maybe I will 1065 00:44:09,400 --> 00:44:11,880 Speaker 2: take Piazza. Then I think you take out the era. Like, 1066 00:44:11,920 --> 00:44:14,200 Speaker 2: don't think of like Tom sever pitching in like the sixties. 1067 00:44:14,239 --> 00:44:17,320 Speaker 3: I think it's just like the fact that Sever in 1068 00:44:17,400 --> 00:44:20,160 Speaker 3: his era, like he was a big strikeout guy, relatively, 1069 00:44:20,239 --> 00:44:22,560 Speaker 3: but his level of strikeouts would be like probably even 1070 00:44:22,600 --> 00:44:25,600 Speaker 3: barely league average today. I think it would probably adjust though, 1071 00:44:25,640 --> 00:44:27,440 Speaker 3: you know, okay, well you can you give me the adjustment. 1072 00:44:27,480 --> 00:44:29,000 Speaker 3: I'll probably take sever because he's gonna be one of 1073 00:44:29,000 --> 00:44:30,320 Speaker 3: the best pitchers in baseball of course, one of the 1074 00:44:30,360 --> 00:44:32,319 Speaker 3: best pitchers of all time. But yeah, there's somebody said 1075 00:44:32,320 --> 00:44:35,200 Speaker 3: about Piazza play so recently, just like John said, having 1076 00:44:35,239 --> 00:44:38,279 Speaker 3: that like for the homer punch, one more legit power 1077 00:44:38,320 --> 00:44:40,000 Speaker 3: bad in this lineup, Like it'd be kind hilarious that 1078 00:44:40,080 --> 00:44:41,200 Speaker 3: Pete and Piazza in the same. 1079 00:44:41,080 --> 00:44:42,960 Speaker 2: Lineup would be sick. Yeah, you know, I'm picking my 1080 00:44:43,000 --> 00:44:45,440 Speaker 2: boy Piazza, fair player of all time. I mean, one 1081 00:44:45,480 --> 00:44:47,120 Speaker 2: of the reasons why I like the Mets and like 1082 00:44:47,200 --> 00:44:50,040 Speaker 2: baseball because of Mike Piazza. So hopefully get to see 1083 00:44:50,120 --> 00:44:52,239 Speaker 2: him at all timers day. Would love to just talk 1084 00:44:52,280 --> 00:44:54,400 Speaker 2: to Mike Piazza for as second as he is what 1085 00:44:54,560 --> 00:44:57,080 Speaker 2: you would probably call my baseball hero. So we'll see, 1086 00:44:57,120 --> 00:44:59,480 Speaker 2: we'll see how that goes. John, thank you for helping 1087 00:44:59,560 --> 00:45:02,799 Speaker 2: us out with s MET appreciate you. Well, uh, we'll 1088 00:45:02,840 --> 00:45:06,439 Speaker 2: catch you soon. And then one last question here, which 1089 00:45:06,480 --> 00:45:07,799 Speaker 2: I think is this I think it's a fun one 1090 00:45:07,800 --> 00:45:09,600 Speaker 2: because it's kind of you know, out there too. This 1091 00:45:09,680 --> 00:45:11,759 Speaker 2: one comes from David. Who do you think each of 1092 00:45:11,880 --> 00:45:13,960 Speaker 2: you Okay, that was kind of hard to read. Who 1093 00:45:13,960 --> 00:45:15,960 Speaker 2: do you think each of you think would be your 1094 00:45:16,000 --> 00:45:17,840 Speaker 2: best friend on the Mets roster if you were on 1095 00:45:17,920 --> 00:45:20,040 Speaker 2: the Mets. Well, James, I'll let you take this first. 1096 00:45:20,040 --> 00:45:21,279 Speaker 2: Who do you think you would get along with the 1097 00:45:21,320 --> 00:45:23,680 Speaker 2: best Who would be your best friend? Because we've we've 1098 00:45:23,760 --> 00:45:25,600 Speaker 2: met a lot of the guys, yeah, we have. We 1099 00:45:25,719 --> 00:45:27,840 Speaker 2: kind of have an idea of thinking of the vibe 1100 00:45:27,960 --> 00:45:28,680 Speaker 2: is with these guys. 1101 00:45:29,280 --> 00:45:32,160 Speaker 3: I think the easy answer is is Jeff McNeil, because 1102 00:45:32,160 --> 00:45:33,839 Speaker 3: he's just such a dude, Like he's such a man, 1103 00:45:33,920 --> 00:45:35,480 Speaker 3: He's just a guy's guy. Like we just hang out 1104 00:45:35,480 --> 00:45:38,880 Speaker 3: with Jeffy Pepperoni, you know, just just mess around. Like 1105 00:45:38,960 --> 00:45:41,319 Speaker 3: Jeff's a good dude. Jeff almost fits more to my life. 1106 00:45:41,400 --> 00:45:43,040 Speaker 3: So though of like eating lunchibles and stuff like. 1107 00:45:43,040 --> 00:45:43,960 Speaker 2: That, one hundred percent. 1108 00:45:44,040 --> 00:45:45,439 Speaker 3: But I mean you and I are very good friends, 1109 00:45:45,440 --> 00:45:46,800 Speaker 3: So I feel like that's a really good friends that 1110 00:45:46,920 --> 00:45:49,960 Speaker 3: means besides Jeff, Like when we talked to Bassett, Bassett 1111 00:45:50,000 --> 00:45:52,080 Speaker 3: was such a good guy too. I feel like it'd 1112 00:45:52,080 --> 00:45:53,960 Speaker 3: be fun just going to the guys we've talked. Tommy 1113 00:45:54,000 --> 00:45:55,800 Speaker 3: Hunter is just such a guy, like I feel like 1114 00:45:55,880 --> 00:45:58,000 Speaker 3: me and Tommy Hunter just taught college football and just 1115 00:45:58,080 --> 00:46:00,600 Speaker 3: kind of get along that way. I just we haven't 1116 00:46:00,600 --> 00:46:01,680 Speaker 3: met the rest of the guys, so it's kind of 1117 00:46:01,719 --> 00:46:03,600 Speaker 3: hard to tell. But that's my those are my guys 1118 00:46:03,600 --> 00:46:05,480 Speaker 3: off the bat. Taiwan also seems like such a just 1119 00:46:05,560 --> 00:46:07,239 Speaker 3: a good dude. Yeah, I feel like I'd like to 1120 00:46:07,320 --> 00:46:08,160 Speaker 3: chop it up a Taiwan. 1121 00:46:08,560 --> 00:46:08,719 Speaker 4: Yeah. 1122 00:46:08,719 --> 00:46:11,160 Speaker 2: I've had personal experience with Jeff, so he would be 1123 00:46:11,239 --> 00:46:14,400 Speaker 2: my pick. But I think Pete. I think Pete's probably 1124 00:46:14,840 --> 00:46:17,440 Speaker 2: he just likes to hang. He reminds me a lot 1125 00:46:17,480 --> 00:46:19,200 Speaker 2: of one of my good friends from high school. Shout 1126 00:46:19,200 --> 00:46:21,759 Speaker 2: out to Brad. But he's just he just seems like 1127 00:46:21,800 --> 00:46:23,400 Speaker 2: a guy, like you said, who likes to hang have 1128 00:46:23,480 --> 00:46:25,120 Speaker 2: a good time. If there's a picture of him and 1129 00:46:25,239 --> 00:46:28,080 Speaker 2: you eat wings like he he'll sit down on Sunday 1130 00:46:28,440 --> 00:46:31,040 Speaker 2: and watch six hours, seven hours, eight hours of football 1131 00:46:31,080 --> 00:46:32,680 Speaker 2: with you and have a great time. He'll be into 1132 00:46:32,760 --> 00:46:35,560 Speaker 2: red zone, he'll be ordering food, he'll be telling good 1133 00:46:35,640 --> 00:46:37,800 Speaker 2: jokes like he's just a guy. He's the life of 1134 00:46:37,840 --> 00:46:39,719 Speaker 2: the party. I think and I mean that picture with 1135 00:46:39,800 --> 00:46:41,560 Speaker 2: him in Vogel back when they were getting coffee at 1136 00:46:41,600 --> 00:46:44,239 Speaker 2: the coffee truck there they're bros, Like you want to 1137 00:46:44,239 --> 00:46:46,839 Speaker 2: hang out with those guys. Yeah, that's the pick too. 1138 00:46:46,880 --> 00:46:48,560 Speaker 3: I mean, but there's so this team just seems like 1139 00:46:48,600 --> 00:46:50,120 Speaker 3: it's so well nit, like every guy is kind of 1140 00:46:50,120 --> 00:46:52,240 Speaker 3: easy to get along with. Like I feel like Lindor 1141 00:46:52,320 --> 00:46:54,120 Speaker 3: probably would be crazy fun, like if we're going like 1142 00:46:54,160 --> 00:46:55,759 Speaker 3: that's the other difference here, Like are we just chilling 1143 00:46:55,840 --> 00:46:57,520 Speaker 3: like watching football with Those are the picks we've give him, 1144 00:46:57,520 --> 00:46:59,440 Speaker 3: But we're like going out, going out to dinner and 1145 00:46:59,480 --> 00:47:01,040 Speaker 3: you know, going out going out having some fun. I 1146 00:47:01,080 --> 00:47:03,239 Speaker 3: think Lindor would be a pick Canna, if you want 1147 00:47:03,280 --> 00:47:04,160 Speaker 3: to go out to a nice dinner. 1148 00:47:04,320 --> 00:47:04,799 Speaker 2: Canon's a game. 1149 00:47:04,840 --> 00:47:06,360 Speaker 3: I don't know if we can handle Kannon's dinner, Like 1150 00:47:06,680 --> 00:47:08,880 Speaker 3: if me and Markanon can find a common ground on 1151 00:47:08,920 --> 00:47:10,400 Speaker 3: a restaurant, like if I can find one of my 1152 00:47:10,520 --> 00:47:12,520 Speaker 3: like cheap ot like five star Google reviews. I got 1153 00:47:12,640 --> 00:47:15,000 Speaker 3: to convinced him to come shoutout any of these crazy 1154 00:47:15,000 --> 00:47:16,799 Speaker 3: places I go to, Like that'd be pretty fun. Can 1155 00:47:16,880 --> 00:47:18,800 Speaker 3: also just seems like he's an interesting guy between like 1156 00:47:19,320 --> 00:47:21,400 Speaker 3: just like being from California, being kind of cerebral and 1157 00:47:21,440 --> 00:47:21,600 Speaker 3: like we. 1158 00:47:21,640 --> 00:47:24,280 Speaker 2: Know, his taste of music is also fantastic. Yeah, definitely. 1159 00:47:24,560 --> 00:47:26,200 Speaker 2: So there's a lot of good guys in the Mets. 1160 00:47:26,280 --> 00:47:27,680 Speaker 2: But I think that that was a really fun question. 1161 00:47:27,719 --> 00:47:30,359 Speaker 2: I like that, appreciate you guys responding into the mail bag. 1162 00:47:30,400 --> 00:47:32,239 Speaker 2: Honestly didn't think we're gonna talk as much as we did. 1163 00:47:32,440 --> 00:47:35,080 Speaker 2: Want to answer more. But we're going on forty plus 1164 00:47:35,120 --> 00:47:37,440 Speaker 2: minutes here, so we're you're going to talk about this 1165 00:47:37,560 --> 00:47:40,080 Speaker 2: Colorado Rocky series coming up. Of course Old Timer's Day 1166 00:47:40,120 --> 00:47:43,200 Speaker 2: on Saturday, that is the big highlight. What are the 1167 00:47:43,239 --> 00:47:45,520 Speaker 2: pitching matchups that we're looking at, James, I. 1168 00:47:45,560 --> 00:47:48,200 Speaker 3: Think they're a little bit fluid for the Mets right now, 1169 00:47:48,400 --> 00:47:51,120 Speaker 3: just because we don't know where Jacob Ground's sloting in. 1170 00:47:51,239 --> 00:47:53,000 Speaker 3: We will know if Saturday is going to be Trevor 1171 00:47:53,000 --> 00:47:55,319 Speaker 3: Williams or David Peterson yet, but as of right now, 1172 00:47:55,480 --> 00:47:58,760 Speaker 3: Thursday Evening is Jacob de Ground versus Ryan Feltner. Feltner 1173 00:47:58,880 --> 00:48:01,480 Speaker 3: is a guy who who Ryan Feldoner. He's actually performed 1174 00:48:01,520 --> 00:48:03,439 Speaker 3: pretty well outside of course Field. I think the second 1175 00:48:03,480 --> 00:48:06,279 Speaker 3: year pitcher on the Rockies, he's really not bad. Friday Night, 1176 00:48:06,360 --> 00:48:08,920 Speaker 3: Chris Bassett versus Kyle Freeland. Chris Bassett seems to be 1177 00:48:09,000 --> 00:48:11,560 Speaker 3: scraunching up a lot of these Friday night Black Jersey starts. 1178 00:48:11,640 --> 00:48:14,400 Speaker 3: Just somehow, some way really is all over them. Freedom's 1179 00:48:14,400 --> 00:48:17,200 Speaker 3: also a pitcher. Is not terrible, Like Freedom will leave 1180 00:48:17,239 --> 00:48:20,200 Speaker 3: course field. It'll just be good ish Saturday. Like the 1181 00:48:20,280 --> 00:48:22,200 Speaker 3: Rockies don't have anybody names, which is a really good 1182 00:48:22,200 --> 00:48:23,960 Speaker 3: side for the Mets, and the Mets don't have anybody 1183 00:48:24,080 --> 00:48:26,200 Speaker 3: name that's gonna be either Williams or Peterson. I guess 1184 00:48:26,239 --> 00:48:28,799 Speaker 3: whoever they just feel like going with. I don't even 1185 00:48:28,800 --> 00:48:31,359 Speaker 3: know he still in the roster. He got optioned back 1186 00:48:31,360 --> 00:48:33,239 Speaker 3: because he maybe he was twenty seventh man in the 1187 00:48:33,320 --> 00:48:34,319 Speaker 3: double headed last weekend. 1188 00:48:34,320 --> 00:48:36,400 Speaker 2: I'm not like that. A four game series too, right? 1189 00:48:36,480 --> 00:48:36,680 Speaker 4: It is? 1190 00:48:36,800 --> 00:48:39,360 Speaker 2: Yes, because then Sunday one for the Surezer versus met 1191 00:48:39,520 --> 00:48:43,120 Speaker 2: Killer Herman Marquez. Okay, I met her MoMA Marquez said 1192 00:48:43,160 --> 00:48:44,880 Speaker 2: little picture. Although I think this year he's been a 1193 00:48:44,960 --> 00:48:47,000 Speaker 2: little bit off, but it's because he plays in course too. 1194 00:48:48,080 --> 00:48:50,720 Speaker 2: The Rockies have some players. They have a cool story 1195 00:48:50,920 --> 00:48:53,560 Speaker 2: about Wynton Bernard, which I think is cool. You heard 1196 00:48:53,600 --> 00:48:55,480 Speaker 2: about this guy, No, I've never heard of anything. You 1197 00:48:55,600 --> 00:48:59,279 Speaker 2: just said lifetime minor league are thirty one years old. Finally, Yeah, 1198 00:48:59,280 --> 00:49:01,479 Speaker 2: I just know the guy, I guess yah, So shout 1199 00:49:01,480 --> 00:49:04,840 Speaker 2: out to Wynton Bernard. He's also he went to Niagara University, 1200 00:49:04,920 --> 00:49:07,400 Speaker 2: so he's not localis from San Diego, but dude went 1201 00:49:07,440 --> 00:49:10,279 Speaker 2: from Niagara made to the big leagues. He grinded out. 1202 00:49:10,320 --> 00:49:13,200 Speaker 2: You love stories like that, like that's that's always super cool. 1203 00:49:13,560 --> 00:49:14,200 Speaker 2: That was very cool. 1204 00:49:14,320 --> 00:49:16,160 Speaker 3: Rocky is also just the thing with them over the 1205 00:49:16,239 --> 00:49:19,120 Speaker 3: last few years, they just play significantly better at home 1206 00:49:19,200 --> 00:49:20,840 Speaker 3: compared to on the road. The record this year at 1207 00:49:20,880 --> 00:49:22,760 Speaker 3: home is thirty six and thirty one, on the road's 1208 00:49:22,800 --> 00:49:23,799 Speaker 3: eighteen and thirty nine. 1209 00:49:24,080 --> 00:49:26,520 Speaker 2: It's that elevation change. Man Like, people don't realize that 1210 00:49:26,840 --> 00:49:29,080 Speaker 2: as much benefits as you get from playing in Colorado, 1211 00:49:29,239 --> 00:49:32,400 Speaker 2: when you leave it's like devastating to your health. And 1212 00:49:32,520 --> 00:49:35,719 Speaker 2: they are coming from Colorado A game tomorrow at three 1213 00:49:35,800 --> 00:49:37,719 Speaker 2: o'clock or I guess today when you guys are listening 1214 00:49:37,760 --> 00:49:40,439 Speaker 2: day game against the Rangers, coming straight to Cityfield. Yep, 1215 00:49:40,880 --> 00:49:43,520 Speaker 2: some guys keeping out for CJ. Cron. Obviously offensively, they 1216 00:49:43,520 --> 00:49:47,359 Speaker 2: still have Charlie Blackman, Ryan McMahon, Chris Bryant's hurt right 1217 00:49:47,440 --> 00:49:49,680 Speaker 2: he's Chris Bryant. He's not even doing baseball. Ativity's in 1218 00:49:49,719 --> 00:49:52,200 Speaker 2: a walking boot, okay. And then they had called up 1219 00:49:52,239 --> 00:49:55,480 Speaker 2: Elhiris Montero, who's tearing up the miners and he's been 1220 00:49:55,760 --> 00:49:59,120 Speaker 2: hot and cold. They're the Rockies. I mean, they're not bad, 1221 00:49:59,239 --> 00:49:59,879 Speaker 2: but they're not good. 1222 00:50:00,160 --> 00:50:02,640 Speaker 3: Yeah, line the lineup really isn't bad because Brendan Rodgers 1223 00:50:02,680 --> 00:50:04,360 Speaker 3: has been hitting. He seems to have turned a corner 1224 00:50:04,440 --> 00:50:06,480 Speaker 3: as a young major leaguer. He's the power isn't really there, 1225 00:50:06,520 --> 00:50:07,960 Speaker 3: but he's one hundred and twenty hits already and at 1226 00:50:08,000 --> 00:50:10,040 Speaker 3: three thirty three on base, which is not like fantastic, 1227 00:50:10,120 --> 00:50:12,520 Speaker 3: but it's also pretty good seven to sixty oh ps. 1228 00:50:12,640 --> 00:50:14,120 Speaker 2: Like he leads this team in war. 1229 00:50:14,239 --> 00:50:14,480 Speaker 4: C J. 1230 00:50:14,600 --> 00:50:16,640 Speaker 3: Cron is a big power hitlers last swing and miss 1231 00:50:16,800 --> 00:50:20,120 Speaker 3: Charlie Blackman's come from the death scripts to have another 1232 00:50:20,160 --> 00:50:23,640 Speaker 3: good Charlie Blackman season. McMahon solid, Gritchick solid, knor Joe 1233 00:50:23,680 --> 00:50:26,360 Speaker 3: gets on base. This team's not good, but it's not 1234 00:50:26,440 --> 00:50:28,400 Speaker 3: They're not like I don't know, they're not gonna roll 1235 00:50:28,440 --> 00:50:28,880 Speaker 3: over for you. 1236 00:50:29,200 --> 00:50:31,160 Speaker 2: Would love to get to their bullpen early. That's all 1237 00:50:31,160 --> 00:50:31,719 Speaker 2: I'm gonna say. 1238 00:50:31,920 --> 00:50:34,040 Speaker 3: Yeah, I wish we hope you see Antonio sens actually 1239 00:50:34,040 --> 00:50:35,120 Speaker 3: no sense of how it kills the Mets. 1240 00:50:35,440 --> 00:50:36,840 Speaker 2: Yeah, I don't want to see says in Tell, but 1241 00:50:36,960 --> 00:50:37,600 Speaker 2: I would like to see. 1242 00:50:37,920 --> 00:50:41,840 Speaker 3: We're gonna see column A, Ty Black, Robert Stevenson, Jose Urania, 1243 00:50:41,960 --> 00:50:42,680 Speaker 3: old friend. 1244 00:50:42,880 --> 00:50:46,640 Speaker 2: Jolie's Chasine, Justin Lawrenced Nelson Lamett is probably their best 1245 00:50:46,719 --> 00:50:48,680 Speaker 2: arm honestly that they have. I guess this was a 1246 00:50:48,719 --> 00:50:49,160 Speaker 2: weird team. 1247 00:50:49,200 --> 00:50:50,960 Speaker 3: Do you remember Jordan Sheffield then he didn he like 1248 00:50:51,000 --> 00:50:52,640 Speaker 3: pitch a couple of annoying innings to get the Mets 1249 00:50:52,719 --> 00:50:53,080 Speaker 3: last year. 1250 00:50:53,160 --> 00:50:55,040 Speaker 2: No, he pitched a couple of innings and they just 1251 00:50:55,320 --> 00:50:58,360 Speaker 2: shelled them. They like, they just really hit Jordan Sheffield 1252 00:50:58,360 --> 00:50:58,799 Speaker 2: a lot so. 1253 00:51:00,200 --> 00:51:02,799 Speaker 3: Small Timers Day stuff briefly a few minutes. We talked 1254 00:51:02,800 --> 00:51:04,480 Speaker 3: to us about this a lot in amazing but true 1255 00:51:04,560 --> 00:51:07,200 Speaker 3: New York Posts Mets podcast with Nelson Figureou and Jake Brown. 1256 00:51:07,239 --> 00:51:08,640 Speaker 3: So if you guys want a more in depth look 1257 00:51:08,640 --> 00:51:10,759 Speaker 3: at Old Timer's Day, you can listen to our takes 1258 00:51:10,800 --> 00:51:12,120 Speaker 3: on there. Just because it's late and we've gone on 1259 00:51:12,239 --> 00:51:13,240 Speaker 3: way longer than I expected. 1260 00:51:13,320 --> 00:51:14,680 Speaker 2: But John needs to go to sleep too. 1261 00:51:14,719 --> 00:51:16,680 Speaker 3: Yeah, Josh tired, I'm tired, Mark's tired. I he's sleep 1262 00:51:16,760 --> 00:51:18,000 Speaker 3: until noon anyway, so he doesn't care. 1263 00:51:18,400 --> 00:51:21,120 Speaker 2: But it's my neighbor. My neighbors upstairs have changed that 1264 00:51:21,239 --> 00:51:24,040 Speaker 2: now because I don't. I don't really, I don't hate 1265 00:51:24,040 --> 00:51:26,640 Speaker 2: that at all. They start playing basketball at nine o'clock 1266 00:51:26,680 --> 00:51:28,920 Speaker 2: seemingly upstairs. They definitely have a three year old toddler, 1267 00:51:28,960 --> 00:51:30,719 Speaker 2: and it's okay. I'm like, I'm not mad at them, 1268 00:51:31,120 --> 00:51:32,920 Speaker 2: but it would be nice if like that toddler like 1269 00:51:33,080 --> 00:51:35,880 Speaker 2: sat maybe for like, I don't know an hour at 1270 00:51:35,920 --> 00:51:37,959 Speaker 2: a given time, because he's just running back and forth. 1271 00:51:37,960 --> 00:51:39,839 Speaker 2: It's quiet now, but it is one am, so if 1272 00:51:39,880 --> 00:51:41,280 Speaker 2: he was running around, I would have questions. 1273 00:51:41,640 --> 00:51:43,080 Speaker 3: I've got the roster in front of me here, it's 1274 00:51:43,120 --> 00:51:45,279 Speaker 3: gonna just gonna go through some of the crazier names 1275 00:51:45,320 --> 00:51:46,759 Speaker 3: on this list. Of course you're gonna have. You know, 1276 00:51:46,880 --> 00:51:49,480 Speaker 3: Terry's gonna be there as a manager, Bobby V. Bartolo, 1277 00:51:50,239 --> 00:51:53,279 Speaker 3: Ronnie's gonna be there, Josh Franco dot coovin. 1278 00:51:54,560 --> 00:51:56,040 Speaker 2: Wait, I got a fun thing. I got a fun 1279 00:51:56,080 --> 00:51:57,880 Speaker 2: thing for you. Instead of reading out the whole rosters, 1280 00:51:57,960 --> 00:52:00,879 Speaker 2: we have the rosters for Team Willy Randolph and Team 1281 00:52:00,920 --> 00:52:02,360 Speaker 2: Terry Collins. I could just read that out to you, 1282 00:52:02,400 --> 00:52:03,879 Speaker 2: and maybe we could predict to you who think's gonna 1283 00:52:03,880 --> 00:52:05,279 Speaker 2: win as well, just for fun. Sure I was gonna 1284 00:52:05,280 --> 00:52:07,320 Speaker 2: go with the big names, would go for it. Okay, 1285 00:52:07,360 --> 00:52:09,839 Speaker 2: So Team Randolph, David Cone was the number one overall pick. 1286 00:52:09,840 --> 00:52:12,680 Speaker 2: I believe that the entire draft uh Terry Collins was Bartolo, 1287 00:52:13,000 --> 00:52:16,720 Speaker 2: but David Cone, John Franco, Dotgood and Pedro, Billy Wagner, Piazza, 1288 00:52:16,800 --> 00:52:19,880 Speaker 2: Todd Pratt, Lee Mizzilli, Rico Bronia, Tim Tuffle, Cliff Floyd, 1289 00:52:20,000 --> 00:52:24,120 Speaker 2: Kevin Elster, Rafael Santana, Edguardo Alfonso, Benny Agbayani, Pat Mahons, 1290 00:52:24,160 --> 00:52:27,120 Speaker 2: and Doug Sisk and your boy Eddie Lynch on Team Randolph. 1291 00:52:27,719 --> 00:52:29,120 Speaker 2: And if you go to Team Collins, Wow, there was 1292 00:52:29,120 --> 00:52:31,520 Speaker 2: a trade in this. This is crazy bout. There was 1293 00:52:31,560 --> 00:52:34,760 Speaker 2: a trade Doug Sisk for Glendon Rush. They were drafted 1294 00:52:34,800 --> 00:52:36,600 Speaker 2: in the same round, it appears, and they were traded 1295 00:52:36,640 --> 00:52:38,840 Speaker 2: for each other. So that's confusing to me. Maybe that 1296 00:52:39,000 --> 00:52:40,640 Speaker 2: was like a hey, we need we need more of 1297 00:52:40,680 --> 00:52:45,440 Speaker 2: these guys. These teams Team Terry Collins, Bartolo, Josh Tolly, 1298 00:52:45,520 --> 00:52:49,080 Speaker 2: Daniel Murphy, Jose Reyes, al Lighter, Steve Henderson's Jesse Rosco, 1299 00:52:49,200 --> 00:52:54,120 Speaker 2: Todd Zielmoki, Bob Oheeda, Howard Johnson, Robin Ventura, Andy Chavez, Turk, Wendell, 1300 00:52:54,280 --> 00:52:56,840 Speaker 2: Dennis Cooke, Steve Traxel, Glendon Rush, and Terry Leach. So 1301 00:52:57,320 --> 00:52:59,880 Speaker 2: I'll let you have first pick here, what team do 1302 00:53:00,080 --> 00:53:01,319 Speaker 2: you want to go for? I think it'll be fun 1303 00:53:01,360 --> 00:53:03,520 Speaker 2: for us to like pick a team to root for here, 1304 00:53:03,719 --> 00:53:08,600 Speaker 2: this honest in the estimate, a big John we could 1305 00:53:08,600 --> 00:53:10,080 Speaker 2: throw this. Maybe we could just have like a fun 1306 00:53:10,239 --> 00:53:12,239 Speaker 2: bet between me and you. All right, what could we do? 1307 00:53:12,440 --> 00:53:13,120 Speaker 4: What the loser do? 1308 00:53:13,719 --> 00:53:15,279 Speaker 2: Maybe Sunday we have to do something because we'll both 1309 00:53:15,320 --> 00:53:16,880 Speaker 2: be there. Actually we're not going somehow we're not going 1310 00:53:16,920 --> 00:53:18,759 Speaker 2: to be there Sunday, but we'll figure something out. We'll 1311 00:53:18,760 --> 00:53:20,400 Speaker 2: tweet about it. Maybe you guys can tweet at us 1312 00:53:20,480 --> 00:53:22,520 Speaker 2: what you think would be a good punishment for whoever 1313 00:53:22,560 --> 00:53:23,120 Speaker 2: doesn't get this right. 1314 00:53:23,160 --> 00:53:24,960 Speaker 3: If anyone's still listening, you're a real fan. So I'll 1315 00:53:25,239 --> 00:53:26,759 Speaker 3: take what they have to say to heart. Give me 1316 00:53:26,800 --> 00:53:28,560 Speaker 3: the David, Give me the Cony team, my friend David. 1317 00:53:29,200 --> 00:53:31,440 Speaker 2: That's good. I'll take. I got Big Sexy, I got 1318 00:53:31,560 --> 00:53:33,680 Speaker 2: Daniel Murphy, Jose Rays, I got some players here and 1319 00:53:33,760 --> 00:53:35,680 Speaker 2: as John put in the chat, zeal is the man 1320 00:53:35,760 --> 00:53:37,360 Speaker 2: to watch out for. I don't know why is that. 1321 00:53:37,520 --> 00:53:40,759 Speaker 2: I TOAs is just he's in good shape. We saw him, 1322 00:53:40,760 --> 00:53:42,560 Speaker 2: we talked to him earlier before we were official with 1323 00:53:42,600 --> 00:53:45,480 Speaker 2: the Mets. So I like my team Terry Collins. Hopefully 1324 00:53:45,520 --> 00:53:48,000 Speaker 2: we get a nice win and you do something because 1325 00:53:48,120 --> 00:53:50,359 Speaker 2: I'm clearly gonna lose estimate. We hope. So I mean, 1326 00:53:50,360 --> 00:53:52,160 Speaker 2: he's like twelve series left, so it's not I'm not 1327 00:53:52,200 --> 00:53:55,000 Speaker 2: out of the woods, but it's close. Anyways, Guys, I 1328 00:53:55,040 --> 00:53:56,640 Speaker 2: think that's a perfect way for us to wrap up 1329 00:53:56,680 --> 00:53:59,520 Speaker 2: this shockingly long episode. We have a problem. We just 1330 00:53:59,560 --> 00:54:01,400 Speaker 2: like talking too much. But thank you for listening. We 1331 00:54:01,480 --> 00:54:03,400 Speaker 2: appreciate it. If you, guys, are not you following us 1332 00:54:03,400 --> 00:54:05,120 Speaker 2: on all our social media, make sure you are at 1333 00:54:05,160 --> 00:54:07,520 Speaker 2: Mets up on Twitter, Instagram, and TikTok. If you're looking 1334 00:54:07,560 --> 00:54:09,439 Speaker 2: for the YouTube video, it's on the New York Mets channel. 1335 00:54:09,480 --> 00:54:11,560 Speaker 2: Go subscribe over there. And if you're listening to us, 1336 00:54:11,600 --> 00:54:14,440 Speaker 2: which we hope you are, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, 1337 00:54:14,440 --> 00:54:16,200 Speaker 2: outs see wherever you get it, drop us a rating, 1338 00:54:16,280 --> 00:54:18,760 Speaker 2: drop us a review, and make sure you download the episodes. 1339 00:54:18,800 --> 00:54:21,120 Speaker 2: It really does help us out, James, where can they 1340 00:54:21,120 --> 00:54:26,040 Speaker 2: find you? On Twitter? James Underscore, Shiano and I'm Giraffneckmark 1341 00:54:26,120 --> 00:54:27,840 Speaker 2: with the c Thank you guys for listening, thank you 1342 00:54:27,920 --> 00:54:30,080 Speaker 2: for watching, and we'll catch you after the Rocky series. 1343 00:54:30,239 --> 00:54:32,200 Speaker 2: Peace Out, peace Out, I see you next time. 1344 00:54:33,920 --> 00:54:36,120 Speaker 1: Get up, Get up, Get Up,