Sunday, December 04, 2011
JOSE REYES TO THE MARLINS.
Created with Admarket’s flickrSLiDR.
Yeah, I got nothing to say. But I do have 6 years of photographs.
Created with Admarket’s flickrSLiDR.
Yeah, I got nothing to say. But I do have 6 years of photographs.
I was contacted first thing this morning by Mets VP of Ticket Sales Leigh Castergine. We finally spoke this afternoon, and Ms. Castergine apologized for yesterday’s incident, and addressed my concerns. I told her I would be posting this update on the site, and she was fine with that.
I look forward to speaking to a ticket office representative in a few weeks when the information regarding partial plans is available.
If you’ve just arrived, please see the Update to this post.
The phone rings. I don’t recognize the number, I Google it and see it’s from the Mets. I answer.
“Hi, Caryn, this is Josh from the New York Mets. I wanted to see if you’d heard about some of the changes we’ve made to ticketing plans, and see if you had any questions.”
“Why, yes, I do have a question.”
“Great!”
“Are the Mets going to re-sign Jose Reyes?”
“Well (laughing), you know, I don’t control that, we certainly do want him back…”
“Right, but that’s what I want to know, and I don’t think we’re going to commit to a ticket plan yet without knowing that.”
“So you don’t think that the Mets can win without Jose Reyes?”
“That’s not the point.”
“So if we don’t sign Jose Reyes, you’re not going to be here. I get it. Goodbye.” *click*
He hung up on me.
HE HUNG UP.
A representative of the Mets organization hung up on me.
In a million, trillion years, I did not expect that reaction.
I think it’s kind of insane that in my quietest blogging year ever, I get nominated as one of the blogs in the Shape Magazine Best Sports Blogger contest, but - I am nominated, and if elected, I will serve, as they say.
Vote for me, so that the Yankees and Red Sox blogs don’t win (and thanks to Matt Cerrone’s retweet earlier today, I’m beating both of them right now).
You do NOT have to register to vote!
Vote early, vote often, and thank you!
Tuesday night, I sat in the first row of the promenade reserved infield, leaned over the railing, held my breath and watched Jose Reyes on third base, a base he had obtained by getting a single and then strolling over to second on a throwing error and then, of course, stealing third base. This was after watching Jose Reyes make the Home Run Apple light up not once but twice, improbably, impossibly, twice - once was amazing but twice just felt supersonic.
And now he was doing what he does best, which is annoy pitchers as he dances while taking a healthy lead down the baseline. He is dancing down the third base line like he is going to steal home and he totally unnerves Aroldis Chapman, flame throwing Aroldis Chapman, and the fans who are in the ballpark erupt in a cheer without aid of scoreboard idiocy and I murmur, wouldn’t that be something? In this 3/4 empty ballpark on the second to last night of the season, wouldn’t that be something?
Wouldn’t that be something, indeed.
Click to continue reading MY GOODBYE TO JOSE REYES.The Office of the Commissioner of Baseball
Allan H. (Bud) Selig, Commissioner
245 Park Avenue, 31st Floor
New York, NY 10167
Dear Commissioner Selig:
Your actions at last night’s Mets-Cubs game at Citi Field on 9/11/11 were reprehensible. Not allowing the Mets players to wear the NYPD and other First Responder hats - at a meaningless game you co-opted as a platform to grandstand MLB’s relevancy - was inexcusable.
Learning that you not only denied the Mets’ official request to wear the hats, but that a MLB representative went the extra yard to confiscate them from the team at the conclusion of the pre-game ceremonies, so that no one could defy your order and do the right thing and wear them anyway, makes me ashamed to be a fan of Major League Baseball.
As a result, I will not purchase one new item of MLB clothing, whether a New Era hat, a Majestic Athletic shirt or jersey, or any other officially sanctioned MLB item, for the duration of 2011 and for the entire 2012 season, and very likely beyond that. My household could previously be counted on spending significant dollars in MLB merchandise every year; I can assure you that will no longer be the case.
Sincerely,
Caryn Rose
==
NOW WRITE YOUR OWN LETTER. You have the address. Don’t email, don’t tweet, don’t just blog about it, don’t comment, don’t sign a petition - write your own letter and put it in the mail. That will count. That will make a difference.
I will be participating in A Night of Baseball Stories on Wednesday, September 14.
WORD, Largehearted Boy, and Vol. 1 Brooklyn are pleased to present a night of baseball storytelling (and free beer provided by our pals at Six Points brewery) featuring readers Jens Carstensen, Jason Diamond, David Gutowski, Sean Manning (Top of the Order, Things That Need Doing), Howard Megdal (Taking the Field), Caryn Rose (B-Sides and Broken Hearts). Attendees may be required to sit according to team affiliations.
Details here. Hope to see you there.
We knew it was bad.
We knew there were rumblings.
I had people coming to this site and posting comment after comment insisting that the Wilpons had no money problems, that to say otherwise was bullshit (and worse).
We heard the rumors that the Mets were wholesale dumping blocks of tickets with ticket brokers at deeply discounted prices, who were then recycling them through StubHub and the other broker sites, which was why there were so many cheap tickets out there for so long.
And now, this. This is just about as far rock bottom as you can get. (I was originally going to say “Even the Astros aren’t selling tickets on Groupon” but oh, yes, they are.)
As someone who still holds tickets to six games this year, it’s infuriating. Friday night against the Braves is a discount ticket? When I paid full price (at the season ticket holder discount) earlier in the year? Do you know how much it upsets me to think about the obnoxious calls to and from the Mets ticket office earlier this season, with their arrogant attitude, about why aren’t I renewing my ticket plan?
Everything I want to say isn’t nice, isn’t polite, isn’t anything except the result of a world of anger and disappointment and misery - the same world that you are all living in. It’s not new. It’s just the bottom of the hole.
Last night I said that I was looking forward to see how the Mets were going to some how spin, obfuscate or otherwise justify the ticket price increase next year. TBF insists they wouldn’t dare. I say, just wait and see.
Six more games. I suppose we will still go, because we bought the tickets, we spent the money, and when baseball is gone for the year, I will miss baseball.
But they’re not making it easy on the fans to show up or give a damn.
You know, I adore R.A. Dickey just like everyone else. I think it’s a gift from the heavens that he’s on Twitter, and know that every fan from every other team is miserably jealous.
But after a miserable, swift, embarrassing 10-0 shutout in Philadelphia, I do not want to see him yukking it up on social media. I just don’t. Especially not so close to the end of the game (given, that end came VERY EARLY LAST NIGHT, but still).
Is it just me? Probably.
Call me cynical, but it’s hard for me to read about this and not think, “We just don’t have enough group sales to fill those crappy Big Apple seats so we’ll cave and do one of those social media nights that the kids are into these days.”
For $41:
I hate the Big Apple seats and find them to be very, very overpriced, even with a $18 food and beverage credit (because they only do that because they hope that most people won’t use all $18 of theirs) and the rest of me says, “NO ONE ON AT&T WILL HAVE SIGNAL ANYWAY.”
Let’s take a look at what other teams are doing for Social Media Night.
Click to continue reading ABOUT SOCIAL MEDIA NIGHT AT CITI FIELD.