Originally posted by Saxman
To the derisive comments about Cardinals pitching:
Just remember that the Cards pretty much won this series with their arms. Except for Carp in Game 2 their wins came from Weaver, Suppan and the bullpen all but shutting DOWN the Mets.
Well, time to see if Dayne Perry beaten the horse AGAIN about how St. Louis shouldn't have even been there. Stupid national media.
The Cardinals have a terrific pitching staff. Suppan was at his best, as was Carpenter.
That said, both John Maine (a rookie) and Oliver Perez established themselves as big-game pitchers. Maine will only get better. Perez has great talent, but tended to implode. I think the Mets' pitching coach has done a lot to get Perez focused. Despite having three starters out with injurys (Bannister, Martinez and Hernandez), the Mets' emergency starters kept the Cardinals in check.
Endy Chevez made up for a letting Suppan's homer pop out of his glove in game 3 with what will be one of the greatest defensive catches in playoff history.
Umpiring, especially behind the plate was less than good. Last night's strike zone was beyond belief. It hurt both teams, but killed the Met's in the bottom of the 9th. Basically, Wright was handed two strikes that were clearly balls. I watched the replay on the diamond vision display. From where I was sitting (between home plate and first base, 8 rows back), Wright held up on the one pitch, the bat never crossing the plate. First base umpire said he went around. A second strike was called on an pitch that was a foot off the plate... When that happens, a batter realizes that he cannot let anything go by and swings at bad pitches. Both teams suffered from that last night, but the umpiring really hurt the Mets in their last at-bat. Los Angeles suffered from similar woes in their game three loss to the Mets.
Major League Baseball needs replay review... It's long overdue. Especially when an umpire stated (as was heard, picked up by microphone) to Lo Duca during a regular season game against the Braves, "Your guy doesn't get those calls because he's not John Smoltz".
Beltran watches strike 3 with the bat on his shoulder, bases loaded, two outs in the bottom of the ninth... Almost unforgivable. Any little league player knows that you protect the plate with two strikes and you don't look for any particular pitch. Beltran was looking fastball and was stupified by a 75 mph curveball.
Good luck to the Cardinals, I'm afraid they will need some luck to beat the Tigers.
My regards,
Widewing