Author Topic: The dying Mets turn to a Vulture  (Read 703 times)

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Offline EasyAce

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The dying Mets turn to a Vulture
« on: June 20, 2019, 10:03:49 pm »
Phil (The Vulture) Regan is brought to raise the Mets' pitching from the dead---with or without breaking a sweat.
By Yours Truly
https://throneberryfields.com/2019/06/20/the-dying-mets-turn-to-a-vulture/


Former relief ace Phil (The Vulture) Regan,
who’s worked in the Mets organisation since
2009, is now their pitching coach.


To a lot of people, the Mets are the walking dead awaiting the vultures to feed. So when they canned pitching coach Dave Eiland and bullpen coach Chuck Hernandez Thursday, it must have delivered a truck load of laughs when they named a vulture as their new pitching coach.

As in, Phil (The Vulture) Regan. Former bird of prey out of the bullpen himself. Who’s alive and well, apparently, at 82. And who’s probably going to have a few people wondering just how he’s going to fix the Mets’ talented but struggling rotation and a bullpen that’s mostly full of bull.

And, who can’t do a thing to fix the Mets’ pitching’s top weakness—the unsound defense behind them, and the unsound baserunning that runs them out of scoring chances.

This Vulture isn’t worried about either dealing with today’s breed of player or his own age.

“I think kids today, they want you to be honest,” Regan told Syracuse.com. “I don’t ever lie to them. I try to come in and not change their whole delivery. I’m not a big believer in doing that, or taking pitches away from them. But there’s a lot of little fundamental things that you have to do as a pitcher. And sometimes a person can see that, maybe just one little thing. Try it, and if you like it stick with it.”

Where was he when the Mets really needed him?

Ask him about his octogenarian status, and Regan—who once pitched for the Syracuse minor league team during his years with the Tigers—doesn’t exactly sound like a man ready for assisted living.

“I’ve always kind of stayed in the game and done different things,” The Vulture continued. “I still go to the Dominican in the winter and coach down there. I spent twenty years in Venezuela managing and coaching there. So I’ve kept busy all year-round. And I think it’s kind of helped me keep going. I’m 82 years old now, but I don’t feel it.”

That means Regan feeling younger than a lot of Mets must feel more often than not this season. This may be the first time the dying were known to invite a vulture to try saving their lives instead of dining on their corpses.

But are the Mets going to start throwing sweat balls?

After life as a sort of swingman for the Tigers in 1960-65, the Dodgers traded Hall of Famer Sandy Koufax’s buddy and road roommate Dick Tracewski to get Regan away from the Tigers after the 1965 season. His too-obvious itch to get into games, not to mention an early 1966 spell of coming into tie games from which Koufax was lifted late, prompted Koufax himself to crack, “Regan, you’re a real vulture, getting my wins like that.”

“From there, the press picked it up,” The Vulture says. “I got hundreds of these rubber vultures from all over the country. People would send them in. The zoo wanted to put a vulture down in the bullpen, but they wouldn’t let them do it. We had a lot of fun with it.”

Regan thinks he kept Koufax from one final achievement in 1966, Koufax’s last season. “He could have been a 30-game winner his last year,” Regan told the New York Post, “but I vultured a few wins.”

And while having his own career year in 1966—a 1.62 ERA and a 2.33 fielding-independent pitching rate, with a 0.93 walks/hits per inning pitched rate, not to mention a 14-1 won-lost record—Regan began getting away with a pitch nobody could catch for a very good reason.

“I don’t use foreign substances,” George Frazier would crack much later when he was caught throwing funny pitches. “Everything I use is made in the U.S. of A.” Regan could see and raise that: he used part of his body to do it. Specifically, his sweat glands.


They knew why the caged Vulture sang: Phil Regan (facing camera) in the 1966 Dodgers’ bullpen.

“He had an awkward diving delivery,” wrote David Claerbaut in Durocher’s Cubs: The Greatest Team That Didn’t Win, “and his out pitch was a moist one that went with a tough slider. Because Regan threw what might be called a clean spitter, allowing the perspiration to run down his arms onto the ball, umpires were never able to bust him, despite their certainties that the ball coming in was less than arid.”

The Vulture got away with it long enough. “I can’t come right out and tell you that I now throw the spitter,” he once told a reporter, “but I’d say: I don’t use it nearly as much as everybody thinks.” Relief ace-to-be Al (The Mad Hungarian) Hrabosky later said Regan’s money pitch was “the slippery elm.”

Whatever it was, when the Dodgers traded him to the Cubs with outfielder Jim Hickman for outfielder Ted Savage and minor league pitcher Jim Ellis, Regan was almost damaged goods: he’d opened the ’68 season with swollen hands, knees, and legs, including one frightening morning when he couldn’t even lift his cup of coffee.

He got a just-as-frightening diganosis of rheumatoid arthritis but it turned out to be an odd temporary form of the affliction that lasted only a month. The arthritis might have cleared but nobody was clear about what Regan was throwing and just when he might throw it. As with the 1966 Dodgers, Regan became the Cubs’ bullpen anchor, and in too short order it proved to pull him to the bottom.

He was 32 years old by then. He gave the ’68 Cubs the second-best season of his career and it came with a price: Leo Durocher depended on him so voluminously that he burned the Vulture out almost as profoundly as he’d burned out the rest of the ’69 Cubs by the time the Miracle Mets re-heated for keeps down the stretch.

“We just flat wore Phil Regan out,” said catcher Randy Hundley to Rick Talley for The Cubs of ’69. Leo started going to him all the time. What did he pitch, 112 innings in 71 games? That’s a bunch for a short relief man. Now, if he pitches 80 or 90 innings in 71 games, he might survive. But Leo didn’t feel he could count on the other guys out there, so he kept calling on Regan.”

Durocher had a well-established pattern of not trusting his youth and over-trusting his veterans, when he wasn’t refusing to rest his regulars judiciously or making them feel like quitters if they spoke up about being injured.

Somehow, Regan remained Durocher’s favourite bullpen bull despite the toll, until the Cubs finally sold him to the White Sox in June 1972. After ten more games in which he continued to look anything but the bullpen terror he’d formerly been, the White Sox released Regan and the Vulture retired.

A 1966 All-Star, Regan knows only too well the differences between conditioning today and conditioning in his time. Those who think today’s pitchers are “babied” and lacking toughness should wonder how it was pitchers in Regan’s day survived at all.

“I think that the pitchers today are bigger and stronger and throw harder and are in better shape than we ever thought of being,” he says. “When I see the way that they train . . . when I was with the Dodgers they said the two things you don’t do, you don’t lift weights and you don’t swim. Well, those are two of the better things for you now. It’s an evolution a little bit of where we’ve come from where we were. But today the pitchers train year-round. Guys, in my era, used to go get a job during the winter because the money wasn’t there.

“It’s a different era in that in today’s society, in baseball, these are major investments,” the Vulture continued. “I could tell you I pitched . . . in Detroit and never made $20,000 a year. And that’s fine. But that was my era and that was a lot of money in those days. But today, when you have a guy that you’re making $10 million, you need to protect that investment. And that means take care of him, give him the best medical help, give him the best conditioning that we can give him. You protect him better because when you lose $10 million, that’s a major loss as opposed to $7,000.”

Pitch for Leo Durocher and you learn only too well about how not to handle pitchers. No two pitchers are quite alike physically; no two pitchers will have the same endurance or the same physical composition. Neglect that and you face disaster, whether you’re on the mound or shepherding men to the mound.

A near-inveterate storyteller, the one Regan likes most to remember involves the Dodgers’ 1966 pennant clinch, on the final day of the season, when Hall of Famer Don Drysdale’s faltering in game one of a doubleheader forced manager Walter Alston to send Koufax out to pitch and win the nightcap on two days’ rest, which also altered Alston’s pitching plan for the coming and ill-fated World Series.

As Regan and his fellow bulls ran out of the pen toward the clubhouse, a fan snatched Regan’s Dodgers cap right off his head. Twenty-nine years later, Regan received a package in the clubhouse while managing the Orioles. It was the same year Hall of Famer Cal Ripken, Jr. broke fellow Hall of Famer Lou Gehrig’s consecutive games played streak.

The package contained the cap lifted from Regan’s head that day in 1966. The fan who snatched it decided Regan should have it after all those years. Regan invited the fan to an Oriole game personally. “I still have the hat today,” he told the Post.

It isn’t every Vulture who gets his hat handed back to him.

Now the question becomes whether this Vulture can raise the Mets’ pitching staff from the dead before the real vultures make carrion of them. With or without breaking a sweat.
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« Last Edit: June 20, 2019, 10:21:10 pm by EasyAce »


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Offline GrouchoTex

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Re: The dying Mets turn to a Vulture
« Reply #1 on: June 21, 2019, 12:32:19 pm »
82?
Well, I guess you have to start somewhere.....

@EasyAce
One of the latest trade rumors I've heard is DeGrom being moved, ala Bumgarner.
Can you give any creedence to that?
Have you heard?

Offline EasyAce

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Re: The dying Mets turn to a Vulture
« Reply #2 on: June 21, 2019, 03:14:44 pm »
82?
Well, I guess you have to start somewhere.....
@GrouchoTex
It's not as far-fetched as it looks---Regan's worked in the Mets' minor league system since 2009 and that includes working early in their pro careers with Jacob deGrom, Noah Syndergaard, Zack Wheeler, Steven Matz, Sean Lugo, and Robert Gsellman. He may actually know them a little better than the last couple of Mets pitching coaches really did.

One of the latest trade rumors I've heard is DeGrom being moved, ala Bumgarner.
Can you give any creedence to that?
Have you heard?
DeGrom's just been extended for five years and $137 million; he won't be going anywhere so far as I can see, and he's shaken off his April struggles and starting pitching to his level again---which is better than Madison Bumgarner is now. The most active rumours around Mets pitchers seem now to involve Syndergaard and Wheeler, and more Wheeler than Syndergaard. The question will become who'd want Wheeler and whether they want him enough to part with some blue-chip players right at the major league threshold.

But the Mets are also an organisational mess. Firing Dave Eiland as their pitching coach may have been more a scapegoat move but Regan isn't a bad pick to step in for this season. I don't see Mickey Callaway surviving too much longer as the manager, because---even if the Mets' bullpen isn't made of great pieces---Callaway still doesn't know how to manage that pen, to the point where he boxes himself in in games where he really needs the pen or has it blow up in his face when he reaches too soon. And he's not sharp about monitoring his pen's warmup activity; I've seen a few too many games in which a Met reliever would be warmed up, sat down, warmed up again, then brought into a game with nothing left because he'd already thrown the near-equal of a quality start's worth of pitches before he even got into the game. His mis-management of the pen is hurting his three best pen options especially: Lugo, Gsellman, and Edwin Diaz. One minute they pitch like shutdown relievers, the next they're a mess. And as a former and respected pitching coach himself, you'd think Callaway would know better.


"The question of who is right is a small one, indeed, beside the question of what is right."---Albert Jay Nock.

Fake news---news you don't like or don't want to hear.

Offline GrouchoTex

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Re: The dying Mets turn to a Vulture
« Reply #3 on: June 21, 2019, 03:32:44 pm »
@GrouchoTex
It's not as far-fetched as it looks---Regan's worked in the Mets' minor league system since 2009 and that includes working early in their pro careers with Jacob deGrom, Noah Syndergaard, Zack Wheeler, Steven Matz, Sean Lugo, and Robert Gsellman. He may actually know them a little better than the last couple of Mets pitching coaches really did.

@EasyAce
The Astros pitching coach Brett Strom (the pitch whisperer) is a young whipper-snapper at 71, compared to Regan.

Offline EasyAce

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Re: The dying Mets turn to a Vulture
« Reply #4 on: June 21, 2019, 05:16:33 pm »
@GrouchoTex
Intriguing trade possibility, between the Mets and the Blue Jays---the Mets could deal Dominic Smith to the Jays for Marcus Stroman. The Mets need a reinforcement in the rotation especially if Zack Wheeler is going on the trading floor, and the Jays can use Smith who may be more suited to being a DH . . . and who found himself blocked as a first baseman through no fault of his own by Peter Alonso's breakout. Smith's been very useful off the Met bench and as a late-game sub in the outfield, but the Jays could use an extra bat and Smith would be ideal for them.


"The question of who is right is a small one, indeed, beside the question of what is right."---Albert Jay Nock.

Fake news---news you don't like or don't want to hear.

Offline dfwgator

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Re: The dying Mets turn to a Vulture
« Reply #5 on: June 21, 2019, 05:36:52 pm »
I picked the Mets to win the NL.

Maybe we can see a 69 Redux, on the 50th anniversary of the Miracle Mets.