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A Culture of Winning

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by user CBRACEY

Last off-season, New York's sports talk radio shows were flooded with callers who were down right furious over Omar Minaya's image of what the 2006 Mets should be. Fans, idiotically, insisted that Minaya was intentionally and exclusively signing Latino ballplayers and was practicing racial bias in his baseball decisions; overlooking talent, and concentrating on skin tone. The people complaining on these shows made comments that bordered on ignorance and flat-out prejudice. Dubbed the "Los Mets" by the media, they were suppose to be Latin America's finest, more than they were New York's loveable losers.

But after a brilliant 162 game season, and a playoff run that left the Mets one Carlos Beltran single shy of the World Series, something tells me you won't hear those same callers this winter. The Mets, black, white or latino, matter now and for the first time since Mike Piazza flied out to Bernie Williams to end the 2000 World Series.

Minaya in just two years has transformed the Metropolitans from the laughing stock of the Majors to the premier team in the National League. No longer are the Mets attempting to overwhelm, over-priced, over-hyped free agents with their deep pockets, but instead now selling players on the idea of being part a winning atmosphere. The type that was established long ago in the Bronx.

The recent signing of Moises Alou to a one-year $8.5 million contract, last year, would have drawn strong criticism from Minaya's harshest critics. They would have said Alou was too old, too injury prone, and too expensive, but what they would have really meant was that he was too hispanic. The Mets are the most diverse team, in America's most diverse city and what's so wrong with that. It's the way it should be.

A long time ago, in Brooklyn, people fell in love with the Dodgers for the same reason. There was an intamacy and a depth to the relationship between the community and the team, because the players were so easily relatiable to the fans. They were black and irish, jews and italian, they were the same type of "bums" that sat in the bleachers.

Minaya has clearly made his mark and maybe he has gone out of his way to bring in latino players, to appeal to the ever-growing latin demographic in New York, but it has worked and he deserves praise. Minaya is without a doubt, executive of the year. He has converted a franchise from pretender to contender, ressurected a team from oblivion and put them on the brink of their first World Championship in over 20 years.

Say anything you want about Minaya the man, his team, or his heritage, the bottom line is that he wins and any culture can appreciate that.


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Awrigh01All-Star
1107 days ago
Score 0+-
I agree that Minaya has turned around the sinking ship known as the New York Metropolitans. I don't really get the Alou signing, but I trust Omar. I think he has a plan and executes on it. I hope 2007 can build upon a great 2006 season. I also hope we sign Barry Zito.
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J CunninghamVarsity Captain
1107 days ago
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After the injuries the Mets' rotation suffered last season, signing Zito would be huge (and give that rotation some much-needed youth and depth). And, per the Hispanic thing, I don't see it so much a race thing as a talent thing. So many of today's top-line players just happen to be of Hispanic heritage that it just gives the appearance that Minaya was going solely after Latin-American players.
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Anonymous Fanatic #1
1107 days ago
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great article. Awright...I actually like the Alou move. This free-agent market is ludicrous thus far and they get a sorely needed right handed bat (that can actually hit LF pitching) at an incredible discounted price. This just buys Lastings Milledge one more year. It's a shrewd move. It keeps the Mets flexible as for how to fill thta corner outfield spot beyond 2007.
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Anonymous Fanatic #2
1107 days ago
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The reason for the "influx" of Latino players is simple - baseball is not nearly as popular in the US as it once was. White kids play other sports and the % of Afro-Americans in MLB has dropped precipitously over the last few decades. MLB has only itself to blame. This is the result of putting the post-season, especially the World Series on at night so that kids, especially on the East coast can't stay up to watch and develop a connection to the game. The Super Bowl is over by 9 - 9:30pm, not past midnight!
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This page was last modified 16:15, 22 November 2006. Content is available under the GFDL.

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