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Hustle Already

12
Vote

by user Mjsenno

Jose Reyes still has some growing up to do. Nobody made a big deal Tuesday night when Reyes failed to run out a grounder back to the mound in Tuesday night’s blowout loss in Colorado. Randolph removed Reyes after the incident. A blip on the radar, no incident, no news articles, no comments about it. One assumes Randolph quickly handled it in house.

Fast forward to Friday night, a dribbler to third base in the eighth inning of another disappointing Met loss. For a second the ball appeared it could go foul, but Mike Lamb fielded it in fair territory. Where is Jose Reyes during this play? He is still standing at home plate, taking in the scenery. Inexcusable, especially for a speedy player who always has a chance to beat a throw out if an infielder bobbles the ball for a split second. To add insult to injury, Lamb slowly jogged toward first and nonchalantly lobbed it over to record the out.

Randolph pulled Reyes after the inning, and then made it clear after the game that not running hard is unacceptable. Unfortunately, Reyes failed to get the point. The All-Star’s post game demeanor and comments were more whoops, hope it does not happen to me again, rather then apologetic for letting the team down.

Before the next night’s game, Billy Wagner, who never is at a loss for words, backed Randolph, going as far to say Reyes should be benched for the weekend. Wagner finally issued a useful quote, instead of his typical shoot from the hip commentary that becomes bulletin board material in other clubhouses. Wagner called out Reyes. That is veteran leadership, but it begs the question, where the leaders are amongst the everyday players. Pitchers typically deal in there own fraternity. Where was Paul Lo Duca, David Wright, Carlos Delgado, Carlos Beltran? Someone needed to step up publicly and lay into Reyes, enough to wipe the smirk off his face and make sure he gets the point.

A week ago, in the opener of the doubleheader in Philly, Reyes lost his cool following a blown call on a stolen base attempt. Players argue bad calls all the time, Reyes, and his coaches, did well to control the outburst preventing an ejection. Two on the field controversies in the same week. Coincidental string of events, or burgeoning attitude problem?

The lack of hustle becomes a bigger problem since the Mets are struggling. When things go south, every mistake, every negative facial expression, each negative comment, the media magnifies. If the Mets had won 8 of 10, maybe the play becomes an afterthought, addressed in the manager’s office, without any public scrutiny.

I applaud Randolph’s reaction, but comments during an interview earlier Friday afternoon directly contradict his handling of the situation. When questioned during his Friday spot on WFAN about Julio Franco not running out a slow grounder in Colorado, two days after the initial Reyes incident, Randolph claimed it was no big deal. He continued, that there was little chance to beat the throw even if he ran hard, and that it's alright since he is 47 years old. Yes, I know comparing Reyes and Franco, is like comparing apples and oranges. As a veteran leader, on the team for little more than clubhouse leadership, given his performance this season, Franco needs to set a better example. How can Franco confront Reyes if he does not run every play out?

The situation diffused over the weekend. Reyes makes his All-Star debut in San Francisco on Tuesday. The break gives Reyes an opportunity to reflect on his actions, or lack thereof, and Randolph’s punishment. Let’s see if he gets the message.


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Dayala718JV Squad
875 days ago
Score 4+-
Hopefully, he has gotten the message. I think Willie is just reaching to light a spark under his players at this point. If you look back on the good (or bad) Met teams of the past decade, there have been much greater controversial issues than not running out a slow rolle. Jose Reyes is Jose Reyes because of how he plays. If you're going to single out one incident when he doesn't run (or one week), be quick to point out all those times he stretched singles into doubles on bloop hits over second base when he first came up. Be quick to show how he yearns for steals, triples, and inside the park hr's. Lastly, be quick to show his dedication to the game that is seen in his acquired ability to draw walks, read pitchers, and stay healthy (hard work after many claimed "he would never play a full season, and if he does, he'll always be a slap hitter." The kid is still just that, a kid. We all go through growing pains. If this is the biggest negative we'll ever have on Reyes' career, let's be greatful. But yes, hopefully, he has gotten the message.
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Niteowl049AAA-er
875 days ago
Score 1+-
Was watching the game Friday night when Reyes stood at home plate and never moved while third baseman fielded a grounder close to the third base line. It was the most sickening display of not hustling I have ever seen. Even Little Leaguers are taught to run in case a ball stays fair. I saw Reyes was not at his position when the Mets took the field right after the incident so thought he may have been reprimanded but Randolph cannot have a double standard for Franco just because he is so old. Franco set a terrible example for Reyes by not running even if he was almost surely going to be thrown out. If the first baseman misses the throw and the catcher is backing up first on a play like that he still could have been out if he didn't run. This is a pet peeve of mine of runners not running full speed to first base...have noticed more loafing running to first base than ever the last couple of years. It is like they are going through the motions. Fans appreciate hustle and if a Phillies player pulled a Reyes he would booed out of the stadium. Phillies fans love their stars but still let them have it when they deserve it.
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JuTMSY4Legend
875 days ago
Score 1+-
When i saw the play in philly, i lost a lot of respect for the kid...Niteowl is dead on, if Reyes had pulled that as a Phillie there would have been hell to pay...jeez, even Freddy Garcia didn't run out a grounder and was lustily booed... And Philly fans are so bad for booing? In this case, I think its expecting more from a player...Those are the types of people who support a hell of a game, even if you did lose it...Pete Rose is a prime example
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JuTMSY4Legend
875 days ago
Score 1+-
oh and Mjsenno...welcome aboard, this is a fine and interesting article...
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MjsennoWaterboy
874 days ago
Score 0+-
thanks
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Baltimoresports247All-American
875 days ago
Score 1+-
I can't stand that kind of stuff...Miguel Tejada pretty much crawls down the first base line during groundballs, and could have reached base a few times due to errors...of course, when the infielder bobbles the ball, THEN he starts to sprint...
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Niteowl049AAA-er
874 days ago
Score 2+-
Wish more fans were like the Phillies fans...you can bet Barry Bonds is happy he won't be going back to Philadelphia this season so he won't have to worry about passing Aaron in Philadelphia and getting booed when he does it.
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JuTMSY4Legend
874 days ago
Score 1+-
Mmm, maybe you don't...for every hard respectible philly moment there's a bad one...this is true for most fans...and especially the most passionate (Chicago Bears fans, Boston Red Sox Fans, Detroit Red Wings fans) do as many smart things as they do dumb... but I appreciate the compliment...
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KelsdadAll-Star
874 days ago
Score 0+-
The point is Reyes IS a veteran, and should know better. And so is Wagner. There is no seperation on a team unless you're going thru game preperation. There's no excuse for Reyes, especially doing it twice in a week. Randolph needed to show Reyes despite his importance to the Mets and their postseason chances. On the other hand, when issues like this happen with a veteran, it could be the sign of a more serious problem. This definitely needs looking into from the Mets front office.
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ChristofMVP
874 days ago
Score 0+-
You should pipe in the "Do the Hussle" mp3 as an intro to this article.
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AllonthefieldVarsity
874 days ago
Score 0+-
Reyes' attitude is indicative, I think, of this generation of baseball players. Sure, there are those who still lay it all on the line every night (e.g., Aaron Rowand), but incresingly, those guys are becoming the exception, not the rule.
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