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Posted


Rusty Staub has been getting a lot of hits over the past few weeks, and checking the server logs I see that a lot of it is a result of people entering the Google search phrase "is rusty staub gay"?

I know that this is an old "meme" (if I'm using the word correctly) but has something happened recently to call attention to this?


Posted


His birthday was April 1st , can't think of anything else ....Gary mentioned on air that it was Rusty's birthday.....didn't mention the old nugget that he may be gay.


Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
Guests
Posted


Didn't he throw out the first pitch?

I think that RS is secretly gay is well known by now, yes?


Posted


Either its well known that he's secretly gay, or it's a secret that he's well known to be gay. I'm not sure which. Maybe the latter.

Steve Zabriskie, when chatting here, lightly said that he long believed Rusty was in love with his wife. Do with that what you want.

Guy comes out of the woodwork every now and then, a lot of trouble-making uncles are going to be burping the old saw at their coming-of-baseball-age nieces and nephews.

    >> "Uncle Pete. Who's Rusty Stopp?"

    >> "Le Grande Orange? Great ballplayer. Huge homo. (slap!) What?! What did I say?!"



  • 3 weeks later...
Posted


UMDB Facebook page wrote:
Matt Harvey's quick 4-0 record this season had us wondering about other Mets pitchers who won each of their first four starts of a season. It turns out that Harvey is the eighth Mets pitcher to accomplish this. The full list:

Jerry Koosman, 1968. 34.2 innings, 27 strikeouts, 1.04 ERA.
Tom Seaver, 1972. 30.2 innings, 33 strikeouts, 1.47 ERA.
Jerry Koosman, 1973. 34 innings, 14 strikeouts, 1.06 ERA.
Dwight Gooden, 1988. 26 innings, 22 strikeouts, 2.77 ERA.
Frank Viola, 1990. 27.1 innings, 29 strikeouts, 1.32 ERA.
Armando Reynoso, 1998. 28 innings, 12 strikeouts, 1.93 ERA.
Pedro Martinez, 2006. 26.2 innings, 28 strikeouts, 3.04 ERA.
Matt Harvey, 2013. 29 innings, 32 strikeouts, 0.93 ERA.

Gooden, Viola, Reynoso, and Martinez were the only four of the above to extend the streak to five games. Gooden's streak ended at six games. Frank Viola is the only Mets pitcher to get a win in each of his first seven starts in a season. At the conclusion of the game of May 5, 1990 he was 7-0 with a 0.87 ERA and 52 strikeouts in 51.2 innings. He ended the season 20-12 with a 2.67 ERA.


Posted


Of those, only Koosman's 1968 season was around the same age as Harvey and with the same approximate ML experience.
All others had some sort of established rep at the time of their hot starts.

Koos: 25 + 4 months at opening day. 9 games pitched/3 starts (22.1 IP) the previous season

Harvey: 24 + 2 weeks at opening day. 10 games/10 starts (59.1 IP) the previous season


And Koos had the advantage of coming out during the most pitching-friendly era since the dead ball days.


Guest Swan Swan H
Guests
Posted


Frayed Knot wrote:
And Koos had the advantage of coming out during the most pitching-friendly era since the dead ball days.


Unlike Rusty Staub, who never really has.


  • 1 month later...
Old-Timey Member
Posted


Got it, Got it, Got it, Got it, Got it, Orlando Hernandez! kool! Pelfry! Aw, got it.

This is like opening a pack :)


Posted


Of the 127 cards, two are not ready to go public yet. (They're active Mets players who may yet win a Schaefer POTM award, so I'm holding them back.)

The 1970 Brian Stokes is mine, as is the 1971 Johan front and back.

Maybe I'll post a checklist in this thread in the next day or so.


Old-Timey Member
Posted


Oh, I see. Those above have the autographs added. So that means I have rare unsigned copies of some of your cards.

I'll trade you a '71 unautographed Piazza for one of your unreleased cards.

;)


Posted


Here's the checklist:

1967
Wright, David (Mets Hit Kings, with Ed Kranepool)

1970
Davis, Ike
Dickey, R. A.
Harvey, Matt
Lo Duca, Paul (2006 N.L. Division Series Game 1)
Pelfrey, Mike
Santana, Johan
Stokes, Brian
Wright, David
Young, Chris

1971
Beato, Pedro
Beltran, Carlos
Buck, John
Delgado, Carlos
Dickey, R. A.
Dickey, R. A. (2012 N.L. Strikeout Leaders)
Francoeur, Jeff
Hairston, Scott
Jones, Chipper
Murphy, Daniel
Piazza, Mike
Santana, Johan
Santana, Johan (reverse)
Wagner, Billy
Wright, David

1972
Alfonzo, Edgardo
Alou, Moises
Beltran, Carlos
Castillo, Luis
Cede�o, Ronny
Chavez, Endy (in action)
Collins, Terry
Dickey, R. A.
Horwitz, Jay
Martinez, Pedro
Parnell, Bobby
Parnell, Bobby (in action)
Perez, Oliver (in action)
Rauch, Jon
Reyes, Jos�
Reyes, Jos� (2011 N.L. Batting Leaders)
Rice, Scott
Rodriguez, Francisco
Rodriguez, Francisco (in action)
Santana, Johan
Santana, Johan (traded)
Staub, Rusty
Valentine, Bobby
Wright, David
Wright, David (in action)

1973
Acosta, Manny
Beltran, Carlos
Benitez, Armando
Benson, Kris (special Anna Benson "wife" card)
Capuano, Chris
Dessens, Elmer
Feliciano, Pedro
Glavine, Tom
Hernandez, Livan
Jarvis, Jane
Matsui, Kaz
Parnell, Bobby
Pelfrey, Mike
Schoeneweis, Scott
Takahashi, Hisanori
Takahashi, Ken
Valdespin, Jordany
Wright, David

1974
Beato, Pedro
Church, Ryan
Dickey, R. A.
Francisco, Frank
Green, Sean
Heilman, Aaron
Leiter, Al
Nieuwenhuis, Kirk
Reyes, Jos�
Sanchez, Duaner
Santana, Johan
Turner, Justin
Valdespin, Jordany
Zambrano, Victor

1975
Bay, Jason
Delgado, Carlos
Dickey, R. A.
Floyd, Cliff
Gee, Dillon
Hernandez, Orlando
Murphy, Daniel
Pagan, Angel
Pelfrey, Mike
Santana, Johan (2012 Highlights, Santana no-hitter)
Tejada, Ruben
Wright, David

1976
Acosta, Manny
Batista, Miguel
Capuano, Chris
Davis, Ike
Dickey, R. A.
Duda, Lucas
Harvey, Matt
Niese, Jon
Redding, Tim
Rodriguez, Francisco
Shoppach, Kelly

1977
Beltran, Carlos
Dickey, R. A.
Maine, John
Pagan, Angel
Pelfrey, Mike
Ramirez, Ramon
Rauch, Jon
Smith, Joe

1978
Dickey, R. A.
Isringhausen, Jason
Niese, Jon
Nieve, Fernando
Valdespin, Jordany
Wright, David

1979
Barajas, Rod
Edgin, Josh
Pelfrey, Mike
Reyes, Jos�
Santana, Johan
Valdes, Raul


Counts by year:
1967 1
1970 9
1971 15
1972 25
1973 18
1974 14
1975 12
1976 11
1977 8
1978 6
1979 6


Old-Timey Member
Posted



Benjamin Grimm wrote:

1967
Wright, David (Mets Hit Kings, with Ed Kranepool)


How could I not have that card!

Musta slipped thru the cracks.


Old-Timey Member
Posted


This is great, ty. I can get em at my own pace.

The '71 Beltran=AWESOME!!
I like the choice of the "side" type, or whatever they call the alt card frame.


Old-Timey Member
Posted


What's interesting here is that these are actual photos of Zvon chatting on the CPF





yaknowme :)


  • 6 months later...
Posted


This should be obvious to me, but how does Duda ground out to end the fourth and walk to start the fifth?

Where are the other runs scored that inning? Presumably, they all scored on the homerun, but they're not shown to have advanced.


Posted


Yeah... the Mets batted around in the fifth; ten batters went to the plate starting and ending with Byrd. I'll have to see why and how I lost the plate appearances from Cowgill to Buck. And Byrd's strikeout to end the fifth ended up slotted in the sixth inning.

ARRRGGGH!


Posted


Benjamin Grimm wrote:
Yeah... the Mets batted around in the fifth; ten batters went to the plate starting and ending with Byrd. I'll have to see why and how I lost the plate appearances from Cowgill to Buck. And Byrd's strikeout to end the fifth ended up slotted in the sixth inning.

ARRRGGGH!

Clearly batting around is the key to futzing up your programming. That makes sense and futzes up scorers everywhere.

It's just real lucky for you that you displayed a rare game where the team batted around. Else we mightn't have spotted the glitch for years.


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