Mets Triviology: Fascinating Facts from the Bleacher Seats
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Mets Triviology - Christopher Walsh
For Mets fans everywhere, especially the ones I went to school with at the University of New Hampshire.
I just want to taste what it’s like to win in New York.
—David Wright
Contents
Introduction
1. The Basics
2. National League History
3. Famous Firsts
4. The Stadiums
5. Nicknames
6. The Greats
7. Jersey Numbers
8. The Records
9. Quotes
10. More Than 50 Years, More Than 50 Questions
11. Opening Day Lineups
12. Drafts, Trades, and Free Agency, Oh My!
13. The Miracle Mets
14. The Postseason
15. Miscellaneous
16. The Hot Box
About the Author
Introduction
It was the fall of 1986 and I was a freshman the University of New Hampshire. I had grown up a sports nut, but nothing quite prepared me for those first couple of months on campus when the New York Mets and the Boston Red Sox were on a collision course to meet in the World Series and the whole region went nuts.
I mean really, really nuts, which was fitting considering the way things played out on the diamond, yet that was my first taste of what people meant when they said that Boston and New York were baseball cities. With each big victory, impromptu victory celebrations broke out and lasted well into the morning hours.
Two friends down the hall had a TV and we’d all cram into their room to watch every game, with those rooting for the Red Sox on one side and the Mets fans on the other (being the foreigner
from Minnesota I sat in the middle). When the ball went between Bill Buckner’s legs in Game 6 everyone screamed, some in joy, others in absolute horror. My roommate who had been making plans to celebrate the victory froze and sat in shock staring at the screen for about 90 minutes after we turned both it and the lights off.
Years later I got a second, even stronger taste when I was a sportswriter based in Phoenix and the Arizona Diamondbacks faced the New York Mets during their first appearance in the playoffs. Buck Showalter, then the manager of the Diamondbacks, once said to me, New York is a special place in October when the teams are in the playoffs,
and it certainly was, but not for his team.
After losing Game 1, Showalter rolled the dice a little and held Cy Young winner Randy Johnson for a potential Game 5, which gave Game 4 a definite must-win feeling for the Mets at Shea Stadium. Because his bullpen had been sketchy in the series he brought in closer Matt Mantei as part of a double move with one out in the eighth (taking out third baseman Matt Williams, which raised more than a few eyebrows in the press box).
The inning ended with the Mets having tied the score 3–3, and Mantei stayed in the game not only through the ninth, but into the 10th when backup catcher Todd Pratt hit a long fly ball to center field just beyond Steve Finley’s reach for the game-winning home run. I’m still not sure how the stadium remained standing following the emotional explosion that was like nothing I had ever experienced before.
That’s what the Mets taught me over the years, what October baseball was really all about, and how wonderful it could be.
Hopefully some of that will come through in the pages to follow.
In putting this book together my aim wasn’t to be overly easy or difficult, or have it serve as a quiz to measure the baseball IQ of even the most die-hard fans, but rather to celebrate, honor, and inform. The Mets are one of the most interesting and colorful franchises to have ever existed, and it’s hard to believe sometimes that they’ve only been around since the 1960s.
The book is organized into sections to make it easy to use and at times it breaks down into subsections. The questions range in difficulty from No, duh
to extremely difficult, and those in the Hot Box section are practically impossible.
Above all else, I hope you enjoy it and learn a few things along the way.
1. The Basics
It began not just with something lost, but also the notion that New York needed to have more than just one Major League Baseball team (or as some would put it an alternative to that team in pinstripes). With the Dodgers and Giants moving to the West Coast, which just never felt right in a city that prided itself on fierce allegiances and loyalties that transcended territories and families, what they left behind was more than a bad aftertaste, but a burning desire to reclaim something that had been taken from them.
Thus was the essence of the subsequent threat, because that’s what attorney William Shea did in response, threaten Major League Baseball to its core by announcing in 1959 the formation of a third major league. The Continental League would begin play two years later and one of the charter teams would be placed in New York.
A year later the league disbanded, but out of it the New York Metropolitan Baseball Club Inc. became an expansion franchise on March 6, 1961. After the conclusion of the subsequent season the first expansion draft in National League history was held on October 10 at the Netherland-Hilton Hotel in Cincinnati.
The new team spent $1.8 million to select 22 players and 18 days later construction crews broke ground on building a new stadium.
Also unveiled in November 1961 was the circular Mets logo, which has virtually remained unchanged. The circular shape obviously represents a baseball, and the bridge in the foreground symbolizes the National League returning to New York.
According to the Mets’ media guide the skyline also has special meaning: At the left is a church spire, symbolic of Brooklyn, the borough of churches. The second building from the left is the Williamsburg Savings Bank, the tallest building in Brooklyn. Next is the Woolworth Building. After a general skyline view of midtown comes the Empire State Building. At the far right is the United Nations Building.
The Basics
1. Why were the Mets said to be wearing copycat
uniforms?
2. The Mets’ colors are also the official colors of what else?
3. Who designed the Mets’ logo?
4. Which former minority owner of the Giants, who voted against the franchise’s move to San Francisco, was the Mets’ first owner?
5. Who was the first team president and hired Casey Stengel to be the team’s first manager?
6. Who was the first player the Mets took in the expansion draft?
7. What happened on April 10, 1962, when the new franchise was set to play its first regular-season game?
8. What other anomaly occurred during the Mets’ first home game at the Polo Grounds?
9. What did it take for the Mets to win their first game on April 23, 1962?
10. What lengthy streak did that same player help end later in the season? (Hint: It was a franchise record that still stands)
11. What did the Mets do for the first of 1,859 times on April 19, 1964?
12. What did Shea Stadium host only once, on July 7, 1964?
13. Between November 17–23, 1964, what two future Hall of Fame players did the Mets sign?
14. What three well-known Mets broadcasters worked together for 17 years?
15. Who notched his first win in the Major Leagues on April 14, 1968?
16. What supposedly brought the Mets good luck during the 1969 pennant chase?
17. What did the Mets host for the first time on October 14, 1969?
18. Who threw the strikeout to clinch the 1986 World Series?
19. What was the outcome of the 2000 Subway Series?
20. Who hit a two-run home run in the eighth inning to lead a 3–2 victory over the Atlanta Braves in New York City’s first sporting event after the tragic events of September 11th?
Maintenance crews work on March 29, 1962, to prepare the Polo Grounds for the inaugural season of the New York Mets.
Answers
1. The Mets’ colors are Dodger blue and Giant orange, "symbolic of the return of National League baseball