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Marty on 50ths


G-Fafif

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Posted


Noble puts the Mets and Astros into respective 50th anniversary perspective.

Both are neat articles, to say the least. Here's the money passage from the Mets' column:

The Mets are a 50-year-old franchise with roots that seem significantly deeper. Their first game came shortly after Glenn's three orbits and Wilt's 100 points, but their birth seemed to coincide more with Lindbergh's flight and Babe's 60. They have played more games in Queens than the Dodgers played in Ebbets Field or the Giants played in the 46-year incarnation of the fifth Polo Grounds.

They were classmates of the Astros, nee Colt .45s, products of the first round of NL expansion. They are markedly more accomplished than the Texas team that will jump to the American League next year with more no-hitters and NL MVP Awards, but more than likely, with merely one pennant and not a single miracle or parade down the Canyon of Heroes.


Posted


MN: The K Corner -- not to mention its many wonderful derivations -- had its genesis in the upper deck in left field at Shea Stadium when Dwight Gooden was doing for K what Zorro had done for Z.

-- Maybe I'm off here, but I remember the first displays of Ks in Anaheim during Nolan's games there. My first impression of seeing them for Dwight was that it was kind of an imitation. It became ours but I don't think it started that way. Same with the rhythmic clapping at two strikes which I first heard during Guidry's hey-day in the Bronx.


-- And in the chart comparing the two franchises under the Astros article there's this:
Players used Mets = 923
Players used Astros = 762
That's a pretty big disparity, much bigger than I'd have ever thought, and I guess it says something about the different ways of going about things between the two although I'm not sure what.


Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
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Posted


I don't know this for sure, but would suspect those personnel numbers would look a lot closer if we compared them, say, 10 or 11 years ago. Starting with the Steve Phillips years the Mets really tore through players at a whole new level than before.


Posted


I'm similarly curious. I wonder what the respective counts were, say, in 1970, 1980, 1990, and 2000. The Mets did accelerate the player count, as Johnny said, some time in the 1990's, but I don't have any idea if the Mets were any different from the other teams. Was there overall change that made most teams start churning through players much more quickly, or is it just a Mets thing?


Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
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Posted


I do believe the disabled-list trends league wide spiked around then as well, which would tend to add players (Steroids!!) But still doesn't fully explain the disparity.


Posted


Grimm's stuff looked at another way

NEW players introduced for each team during ...
1960s - Mets = 185; Astros = 178 (when obviously ALL players were new)
1970s - Mets = 126; Astros = 118 (minor differences so far)
1980s - Mets = 128; Astros = 118 (still small but surprisingly consistent)
1990s - Mets = 212; Astros = 168
2000s - Mets = 244; Astros = 172 (holy shit those are huge gaps!)


Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
Guests
Posted


We need a third team or league averages for a control group!


Posted


And here I thought Drayton McLane resorted to erratic hiring and firing policies.


Posted


The Mets and Angels (usually) have more money to spend than most of the other 60s expansion teams and have been more willing to invest in free agents and - possibly - to trade prospects for high priced established major leaguers.

Also - without checking - the Mets have probably contended more frequently than the other teams, meaning they'd be more likely to make trade deadline moves that would add major league level talent to the org.

Just some guesses.


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