Saturday, March 1, 2008

Sanatana gets his first day of work in

They say these Spring Training games don't matter, and maybe they don't. But try telling that to the thousands of fans who piled into Tradition Field on Friday to catch nothing more than a glimpse of Johan Santana. Try telling it to the family of four sporting matching blue Santana T-shirts or to the guy leaning out of his seat and screaming, "Let's see what you got!"
Try telling it to anyone who watched the Mets falter during the final few weeks of last season or to those who felt somehow healed by the acquisition of baseball's premier lefty starter. Few outside of the clubhouse walls would even care to listen.

"There were a lot of people waiting for this, and it's finally done," Santana said. "But this is just the beginning of my career here with the Mets."

And an inauspicious beginning at that.

By the time Juan Gonzalez's three-run home run had landed beyond the left-field fence on Friday, Santana's two innings were irrevocably stained. He didn't mind -- this was just regular work on a regular day -- but so many others did. That home run shattered Friday's hype and dented its optimism, regardless of whether or not that's fair.

"I've got to get used to it," Santana said of his zealous new fans, who journeyed from New York and Florida and points in between. "It's part of the game. They're going to be like that, so it's good. They really get you going and keep you in the game. They always want us to go out there and do good."

Santana couldn't match their expectations, though he did just fine in matching his own. This wasn't meant to be a day for glory, only a day for a bit of hard work. He wanted to concentrate on locating his fastball -- which he did -- and on throwing his changeup and slider for strikes. Check and check.

So don't fret, say the Mets. This was but a shell of the Santana that's still to come.

"I've seen what he's made of," third baseman David Wright said. "He doesn't have to go out there and beat Spring Training hitters to prove to me that he was worth the contract or worth the trade."

The Cardinals amassed four hits off Santana, three of which went for extra bases. The fact that Gonzalez, an outfielder fighting to extend his career with the Cardinals, hit the longest shot was nothing new. In seven career regular-season at-bats against Santana, he has accumulated six hits, including two doubles and two home runs.


In this latest meeting, Gonzalez drilled the first pitch that he saw. Go figure. Santana's main goal was to throw strikes early and often, and he succeeded in 22 out of his 30 attempts. The Cardinals knew that, of course, so they jumped on first pitches, and Santana had no reason to adjust.

"We were trying to locate my fastball, trying to throw fastballs in and out of the plate," Santana said. "But they were swinging right away."

And so the stat line suffered. Yet a different scene, perhaps more than any other, defined this game. As a blend of Mets regulars and bench players battled to win their first Spring Training game -- they lost, 5-4 -- Santana stalked off to a quiet mound to throw 15 more pitches and finish his work. Those 15 brought his daily total to 45, which is what mattered to him most. Work now, win later.

"It's Spring Training," Santana said. "I'd rather leave everything here in Port St. Lucie and then when we head north, we'll be ready to go."

The only problems were those 5,038 fans swarming around Tradition Field, yearning only to see a glimpse of the future. And they weren't alone. Even Santana's teammates were out on the top step of the dugout, just as excited as anyone else.

"I think they were curious to see one of our best pitchers work," manager Willie Randolph said. "I'm sure everyone was anticipating his first outing."

Now it's done. It's all done. There will be hype like this again -- Opening Day in Miami beckons -- but Santana can now complete his spring work in relative peace. Every start will be something of a spectacle, to be sure, but that important first dose of reality hit on Friday. Santana wasn't perfect, isn't perfect and won't be perfect.

He's just awfully good, and that will have to be awfully good enough.

"I'm very happy to be able to perform today, even though the numbers will say something different," Santana said. "I don't really go by that."

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

SANTANA READY TO SHINE

PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. -- The entire equation changed for the New York Mets with the arrival of Johan Santana. That means more than just the pitching equation.
Without Santana, what is going on now at Tradition Field could have been as much group therapy as Spring Training. There was emotional baggage remaining from the Mets' epic fade last September, and there were going to be questions asked, probably unpleasant questions, certainly in endless amounts.

But now, with the arrival of Santana, the best left-handed starting pitcher in the game, instead of looking back in real discomfort, the Mets can look forward with genuine optimism. They still have a remarkably talented lineup on the field, and now they have added an ace of aces.

You wondered how this might be taken by the Mets' previous king of the hill, Pedro Martinez. No problem.

Martinez held court on the topic of Santana on Tuesday, graciously, intelligently, expansively.

"Santana's the best, to my understanding, the best pitcher in baseball," Martinez said.

Now, it must be added that Martinez, even if he has ceded the top spot to Santana, does not exactly see himself as the mound version of chopped liver. To the question of whether he could still be an ace, he responded:

"If I take the ball against anybody, I'll take my chances."

Good enough. But there was plenty of surplus admiration for Santana. As Martinez pointed out, here is a left-hander throwing a mid-90s fastball and then coming back with the changeup, throwing it "over and over and over again, anywhere he wants, for strikes."

It is a combination that is at once dazzling for the game's observers and baffling for the game's hitters. And it is solidly in the possession of the New York Mets, transforming them from a team with something serious to forget into a team with something really good to anticipate.

There are still regrets, obviously, about what occurred last season. Martinez, who did not return to the active roster until September last year, following rehabilitation from right shoulder surgery, said that placed him in a difficult situation in which he did not feel comfortable exerting his usual influence.

"I had only been with the club a month," he said. "It wasn't right for me to call a meeting and say, 'We have to do something.'

"All I could do was sit and watch."

What happened last September isn't erased by the arrival of Santana. But it could be argued that in the Mets' current mindset, it has been replaced by the arrival of Santana, or at least moved to a back burner.

Santana eventually will impress the Mets with his pitching. For the moment, he has impressed them with his professionalism. He asks for no special treatment. He requires no special dispensations.

"He fits right in," manager Willie Randolph said. "He has his own thing getting ready, but we've talked a little bit about that and he told me from Day 1, that whatever we'd like to do, our program, he's going to try to adjust to that any way he can. So far, there haven't been any problems. Most of his stuff is conditioning. But as far as pitching, you don't change a thing. You leave him alone, man. Don't change a thing.

"With the type of work of ethic that he has, he's knows exactly what he's doing, he knows what he wants to do, he's in great shape," Randolph said. "Those are the guys that are easy to manage, because you know they're going to be ready. They understand how to prepare for the game. Those are the easy guys. He's a pro."

So the Santana era begins, with the Mets looking for something much more like the first place and 97 victories of 2006, rather than the second place and 88 victories of 2007. This seems to be a completely reasonable expectation.

If you get beyond last September, what you're looking at here is a team of exceptional talent. In the rest of the rotation, John Maine won 15 games last year and so did Oliver Perez. Even if there is some debate about the fifth spot, take a healthy Pedro Martinez and a fully functional Johan Santana, and the sky appears to be the limit.

The bullpen was also an issue in the September skid, but if Duaner Sanchez comes back healthy -- and the initial signs have been very good -- that development in itself would provide a major injection of stability.

It is also not difficult to project the position players as a first-place group, even in the difficult neighborhood of the National League East. Certainly, it would be helpful if Carlos Delgado had the kind of season that characterized the rest of his career, rather than the season he had last year. It would also be helpful if Jose Reyes played the way he did from April through August instead of the way he did in September.

Reyes is a singular talent, perhaps the single most exciting player in baseball. With David Wright coming off another truly impressive campaign, the Mets have a left side of the infield that offers the promise of success, in 2008 and well beyond.

Elsewhere, the Mets will have second baseman Luis Castillo for an entire season, as opposed to 50 games, and that should be a plus. The Mets have also improved defensively at catcher, which should be a defense-first position, with the addition of Brian Schneider.

All things taken together, regardless of what happened last September, this does not look like a club that has to settle for second place. You might have been able to make this argument, even without the addition of Johan Santana. But the addition of Santana lends not only credibility, but maybe even a certain kind of joy to the Mets' side of the debate. The recent past is not pleasant to contemplate, but with Santana, a better future beckons.

Monday, February 25, 2008

PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. -- For a few moments, his first moments in a game scenario since July 2006, Duaner Sanchez was the junior high schooler trying to impress the varsity coach. His final warmup pitch and the first two pitches Sanchez threw to Ramon Castro in the Mets' intrasquad game on Monday were all about velocity. Technique, location, setting up the hitter -- none of that mattered.
"That was a pitcher who hadn't pitched in a year and half," said Randy Niemann, the man who directed Sanchez's rehabilitation from two right shoulder surgeries. "He just had to get through that."

Niemann was quite encouraged by the velocity of the three caveman pitches and more pleased by Sanchez's subsequent pitches -- sliders, changeups and more fastballs.

"He threw fastballs inside to left-handed hitters," Niemann said, "and they didn't come back [over the plate]" -- a sign that Sanchez's pitches had power behind them.

Sanchez faced six batters and threw 26 pitches, more than he had planned.

"I'm going to go home and sleep now," Sanchez said after his shower. "I feel like I pitched 15 innings."

On the first day of competition -- such as it was -- in Mets camp, Sanchez's six-batter sequence was clearly the focal point. The Sandy Alomars defeated the Jerry Manuels, 7-5, in six innings. And most of the participants were uncertain of the identity of their team.

But most of them had watched Sanchez's return through the prism of what he can mean in the summer when the swings and misses he accumulates in inordinate numbers will have consequence.

"It looks like he's on the way back," manager Willie Randolph said. "It's very positive to see him now after a year and a half."