Look back at: Divisional Playoffs | League Championship
Monday, October 23
Mets have lost their way since winning pennant
By Bob Klapisch
Special to ESPN.com

Step into the Mets' time tunnel, travel approximately one week back and chances are you'd be coated in champagne, struggling to hear a single intelligible word in their otherwise delirious clubhouse. The Mets had just clinched their first National League pennant in 14 years, and were openly rooting for the Yankees to meet them in an old-fashioned New York street fight.

"I'd by lying to you if I said I wanted to face anyone other than the Yankees," Al Leiter said at the time. All around the room, the Mets uttered a similar "We Own the World" mantra. It was tough talk, loud talk. The baseball community listened in amusement, wondering if the Mets were really capable of taking down an October monolith.

Well, a week later and two games into the World Series, we hardly recognize the Mets. They've been beaten twice with their two best pitchers, Mike Hampton and Leiter; saw their closer, Armando Benitez, blow a ninth-inning save in Game 1; and in the world of macho posturing, appeared too passive after Roger Clemens flung a bat at Mike Piazza in Game 2.

They Mets are home for Games 3, 4 and possibly 5, but that's not to say they're safe or even happy. In the aftermath of the bizarre Clemens-Piazza incident, the Mets seemed confused and in disarray.

In fact, for the first time this season, the Mets failed to stand united in their reaction toward the Rocket. Some, including general manager Steve Phillips, applauded Piazza for not throwing a punch at the Yankee, which the executive said, "might've started a riot. I think Mike's restraint showed incredible strength on our part."

But both Hampton and Lenny Harris disagreed, saying they would've retaliated immediately.

"If anyone throws a bat at me, I would've punched him," Hampton said. Even more outrageously, Turk Wendell said he would've pulled the Mets off the field, even if it meant risking a forfeit.

To this, Bobby Valentine shook his head and said, "that's why Turk Wendell will never be a manager of a team or a leader of men. He's a great relief pitcher, but he won't be a manager."

Valentine is right, of course: The Mets need to win a game, not a fistfight. But the clubhouse is filled with the sense of disbelief that, somehow, the Yankees have seized the initiative in the Series.

Whether it was by failing to win Game 1, when Benitez was just two outs away from a 3-2 victory, or not responding to Clemens' bizarre behavior -- if not with a fight, then with an outburst of runs -- the Mets are wondering what went wrong.

"The Yankees gave this amazing ability to do all the little things right," Todd Zeile said. "They manage to beat you in the little ways, which is why they're so good."

In other words, the Mets are learning how wide the gulf is between the Yankees and the Cardinals and Giants in the NL playoffs. In particular, the Mets say they were shocked at how quickly the Cardinals surrendered in the final two games of the NLCS, as Tony La Russa allowed both Darryl Kile and Pat Hentgen to absorb far too much early-inning punishment.

As for the Yankees ... well, they're a different beast, motivated by a merciless owner. Zeile didn't quite say the Mets are intimidated by their inter-city rivals, but he made his point with the following anecdote:

"Of all the teams I've ever played on, the one that had the most success was the Marlins," Zeile said. "That's because we had 16 or 17 rookies that didn't care about the Yankees or even know about them. They were just excited to be playing in Yankee Stadium, so they played the games there like it was their last ones. And that's why they won."

Could the Mets really be feeling October pressure? Yes and no. Actually, it's the Yankees, despite their obvious resiliency, who appear wearied by the process. Joe Torre, in particular, seems to be paying the price for defending Clemens -- even as the manager backed off his angry stance following Sunday night's incident, saying he now "understood" why the Mets were so provoked.

Still, Torre doesn't look like a man who hasn't lost a World Series game since 1996, and Valentine doesn't look like a man who's only 18 innings away from being swept. He said, "I hate losing, and I hate the fact that we're down 0-2, but I love this. I love everything about it."

That's because Valentine is an optimist, and despite odds and logic which suggest otherwise, still believes Rick Reed and Bobby J. Jones can keep the Mets alive long enough for another set of appearances by Leiter and Hampton.

The Mets may or may not be justified in that faith. But right now, it's all they have.

Bob Klapisch of the Bergen (N.J.) Record covers baseball for ESPN.com.



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