Winning the first series of a seven game home stand against two decent inter-division was very important as the Braves quest for their first playoff berth since 2005 continues. Yesterday's thriller showed yet again that this team is one of the most resilient in baseball, and we may see more late-inning heroics as the Braves face yet another team with a weak bullpen.
The Mets were once contending with the Braves for the top spot in the division but have dropped off dramatically since the All-Star break. At the break they were 48-40 but have fallen to 65-65, going 17-25 over that span. Their run differential for the second half of the season is 127-160 compared to 396-347 in the first half.
Pitching Matchups:
Monday, 7:10 pm EST: Jair Jurrjens (5-4, 4.36 ERA, 3.99 FIP, 2.13 K/BB) vs. Pat Misch (0-3, 3.50 ERA, 3.38 FIP, 3.50 K/BB)
Misch only has 18 innings in the majors this season but has been impressive over that short time span. He has lasted six innings in each of his starts, allowing three runs in two of them and one in the other. Jurrjens is coming off of an extremely forgettable performance against the Rockies in which the Braves had a 10-1 lead but lost 12-10, with Jurrjens allowing seven runs over 5.1 innings pitched. Misch is the type of pitcher the Braves often have problems, but he has struggled in 12.1 innings against the Braves in his career, posting a 10.22 ERA.
Tuesday, 7:10 pm EST: Mike Minor (2-0, 4.00 ERA, 2.21 FIP, 5.50 K/BB) vs. Jon Niese (8-6, 3.63 ERA, 3.95 FIP, 2.57 K/BB)
In his career against the Braves, Niese has pitched well. He has a 3.00 ERA over 18 innings and has struck out 18 batters. He has allowed a good amount of baserunners against the Braves but has been able to strand them most of the time. Mike Minor had one of the best pitching days for a Braves rookie in the team's history, which is saying a lot considering how many great pitchers have come through the system. Minor struck out 12 Cubs and walked just one over six innings while allowing three earned runs. He has thrown a quality start, for whatever it's worth, in each of his three starts in the majors.
Wednesday, 7:10 pm EST: Tommy Hanson (8-10, 3.76 ERA, 3.41 FIP, 3.06 K/BB) vs. Mike Pelfrey (13-7, 3.61 ERA, 3.89 FIP, 1.65 K/BB)
Both young starters have had their ups and downs this season. Hanson has looked absolutely dominant in some games and very hittable in others, which is odd to see with a pitcher with such great stuff. Hanson was rolling up until his last two starts, with a 1.71 ERA over 58 innings and nine starts. Since then, Tommy has pitched ten innings and allowed ten runs while striking out seven and walking four. Pelfrey has had a ton of success over his last four starts -- 1.20 ERA over 30 innings and a .561 OPS against. This should be a good pitching matchup, most likely the best of the series.
Thursday, 7:10 pm EST: Tim Hudson (15-5, 2.24 ERA, 3.74 FIP, 1.88 K/BB) vs. Johan Santana (10-9, 3.02 ERA, 3.52 FIP, 2.61 K/BB)
Tim Hudson pitched his best game of the season and one of the best in his career in a 13 strikeout, seven inning, one run performance against the Marlins on Saturday. Huddy had everything going right -- probably due to the shaved beard -- and pushed himself back into the Cy Young conversation after a poor start against the Rockies earlier last week. Santana has pitched well this year, despite the hate he receives in Met country (I reside in it) for not winning ballgames. The Mets seldom score for Santana and I don't expect them to again in the series finale.

Offense:
The Mets have the third lowest on base percentage in the National League, which could be largely contributed to almost no production from second base, catcher, and right field for a majority of the season. They have few players who walk and few players who hit for power, as evident by their 12th ranked ISO. Their wOBA of .306 ranks ahead of only the Pirates and Astros -- two putrid offenses. David Wright, Angel Pagan, and now Josh Thole have been above average hitters while the rest of the lineup has struggled mightily. The oft-hyped first basemen Ike Davis has a wOBA of just .331 which is close to league average, so he has not performed quite as well as some expected after he hit well in his first few weeks.
Bullpen:
The Met bullpen actually ranks fifth in ERA in the NL, but are now without closer Fransisco Rodriguez. They have no real closer right now with Manny Acosta, Hisanori Takahashi, and Bobby Parnell all getting save opportunities since Rodriguez's incident. Takahashi and Parnell have had good seasons so far, as has left-hander Pedro Feliciano. The rest of the Mets have been questionable at best or have had limited success over short spans. We all know Manny Acosta is not really a 2.73 ERA type pitcher and his 3.94 FIP assures us of that.
My Take:
The Mets seem to be a somewhat defeated team but with a few ex-Braves and the hopes of playing the spoiler role, the Mets will likely play the Braves tough this series. Niese, Misch, Pelfrey, and Santana are all decent-to-good pitchers who often give the Mets a chance to win, but their terrible offense should lead to good performances from the Braves starters. I expect the Braves to take three-of-four, with the home advantage being a big difference in the outcome of the series.
0 recs | 30 comments
Three lefties?
Did anybody else get really depressed when they read that…?
SuperNewb - August 30, 2010
a little but not really because
we have the lefty killer
Braves24 - August 30, 2010
Matt Diaz
remember, he owns Santana. Clean-up hitter.
royhobbs - August 30, 2010
Does anyone else
get a little bit excited when Diaz starts? He’s absolutely thrilling to watch at the plate. He was a boss in his PA vs. Nunez yesterday, waiting on 4 pitches to cross the plate before he hammered exactly what he was looking for.
I wish he’d get a starting role with us in LF. His hustle and offense really seem to justify it, to me.
DuPu - August 30, 2010
I love Diaz. I wish he could get more playing time. Bring on the lefties and Diaz will make them cry.
Sparhawk - August 30, 2010
I love him too, but...
when he has been a starter he just seems to look lost at times. He is much better in his role the way it is and he accepts it and contributes quite well in it.
aceiii222 - August 30, 2010
He does? He thrived in that role near the end of the 2009 season, as I recall.
DuPu - August 30, 2010
For a short period of time he can get hot. I love the guy don’t get me wrong. He just can be a defensive downgrade if out there every day. I like him against the lefties and Hinske against the righties this year.
aceiii222 - August 31, 2010
This series should be entertaining...
I can’t predict a sweep, but 3/4 sounds about right.
Jman781 - August 30, 2010
Anyone want to predict how many come-from-behind wins we have this series?
I guess 2
aceiii222 - August 30, 2010
Nobody say sweep or this series may just be one...
Like the last sweep that was predicted on TC
SuperNewb - August 30, 2010
Forget the idea of going for a sweep, as such...
What I wanna see is a team developing a killer instinct:
> Getting ahead, and then building a lead; not sitting on one.
> Going after a starting pitching that’s on the ropes… not letting a leadoff double die on the basepaths, for instance.
> Show signs of mentally being in the game for the whole nine innings (manifesting itself partly in correct throws and heads-up baserunning).
> Show a little ‘attitude’ even
Do that and the wins will take care of themselves — but let’s see ‘em start acting like a team that wants to make noise in the playoffs… not one that’s just happy to be there. I know it’s a long and tough season, but now’s the time to start prepping for the post season. The Rockies played like a team that was on a mission. There were signs of that in Atlanta with the Marlins in town. Let’s see some more. The Mets oughta to be beatable — the Braves need to take care of business.
carpengui - August 30, 2010
THIS!
Sir Veza - August 30, 2010
Just wanted to mention
This is the same picture as the Walkoff win thread
MikeTrain - August 30, 2010
Yeah.
What’s happened to the quality of this blog?
frozendesert - August 30, 2010
A little something called photographic rights
Long story short, if you think we’re allowed to use whatever picture we want, whenever we want, you’re wrong.
royhobbs - August 31, 2010
LAZY JOURNALISM
CoxXx - August 30, 2010
Reyes
anyone know why he’s not in the lineup?
VivaLosBravos - August 30, 2010
Because
He’s a delicate little flower.
Sam Jethroe - August 30, 2010
Beat
his girlfriend?
frozendesert - August 30, 2010
Tried to have
surgery without consulting Mets officials?
frozendesert - August 30, 2010
Concussed?
frozendesert - August 30, 2010
Rape
charges in Civil court that he has to attend to?
frozendesert - August 30, 2010
Was traded
for Jeff Francoeur?
frozendesert - August 30, 2010
He re-injured an oblique muscle
Out indefinitely.
DolphinNation - August 30, 2010
Or
this.
frozendesert - August 30, 2010
Or
because he plays for a team, owned by the Wilpons, where Jerry Manuel is the manager and Omar Minaya is the GM.
frozendesert - August 30, 2010
Bird nest
in his dreads/braids.
UMDBHIK - August 31, 2010
anyone know why
Lee is batting cleanup with Bmac in the 5 hole?
BMacAttack - August 30, 2010
left-handed pitcher, derreck lee is righty
CoxXx - August 30, 2010
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