Showing posts with label Ellis Valentine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ellis Valentine. Show all posts

Monday, March 10, 2014

The Best On The Worst: Joel Youngblood

In baseball, the big bucks go to the power hitters, speed demons and flamethrowers.  If you can hit a baseball 500 feet, you're going to get a lucrative deal.  Similarly, if you can cover two-thirds of the outfield while stealing 50 bases, you can run your way to the bank.  And hit 100 on the speed gun, you're set for life.

All of those players can contribute to the success of a team.  But sometimes the most invaluable player is the one who finds many ways to contribute.  Occasionally, that player is needed to fill more than one role on the team, either because of injuries to a teammate or because of extenuating circumstances that don't allow that player to remain tied down to one position on the field.  This player is known as the utility player.

The Mets have had a number of utility players in their 50-plus seasons.  The original Mets had Rod Kanehl hot rodding his way around the field, playing all three outfield positions, as well as all four infield positions.  But utility players aren't just reserved for last-place Mets teams, as Kanehl was.  Ted Martinez played five or more games at six different positions during the 1973 pennant-winning campaign.  Kevin Mitchell might have forgotten to put on his protective cup during the 1986 World Series, but he never forgot to pack all his gloves, as the rookie played six positions for the world champion Mets.  And who can forget Super Joe McEwing, who could hit Randy Johnson and play eight positions (including designated hitter) during his five seasons in New York, although he "only" played six positions for the 2000 National League champions.

As invaluable as Kanehl, Martinez, Mitchell and McEwing were, none of them were All-Stars during their time with the Mets, and only Kanehl had a season of more than 350 at-bats, barely getting there in 1962, when he had 351 official at-bats for the original Mets.  But the Mets have had a utility All-Star in their history, one who had multiple seasons of 500 or more at-bats despite never settling into one position on the field.  Unfortunately, he never shared in the team success experienced by the utility office of Martinez, Mitchell and McEwing during his six years with the Mets.

Joel Youngblood became a star in front of many empty seats at Shea Stadium.

Joel Randolph Youngblood was selected by the Cincinnati Reds in the second round of the 1970 January draft.  Youngblood's ascent to the majors was slow, as he was mired at AAA-Indianapolis for three full seasons from 1973 to 1975 because the Big Red Machine didn't have any openings on their star-laden team.  The outfield consisted of up-and-coming slugger George Foster in left, Gold Glove-winner Cesar Geronimo in center and All-Star Ken Griffey in right.  And Youngblood wasn't about to crack an infield filled with all-time greats Tony Perez, Joe Morgan, Dave Concepcion and Pete Rose.

Despite Youngblood showing a penchant for playing multiple defensive positions in the minor leagues, he was a man whose talent just wasn't good enough for the team that drafted him.  Youngblood did eventually make it to the Reds in 1976, but he was relegated to mostly pinch-hitting, as he played in 55 games but only managed 57 at-bats with Cincinnati.  The extended time on the bench did nothing for Youngblood's confidence, as batted just .193 in his limited action.

With no future in Cincinnati, Youngblood was traded in March 1977 to the St. Louis Cardinals.  Eleven weeks later, Youngblood was on the move again, as he was dealt to the Mets for infielder and singles hitter Mike Phillips at the trade deadline - the same day of the infamous "Midnight Massacre".  It was the one trade made by the Mets on June 15, 1977 that was viewed as a positive move by the team, even though it didn't exactly lead to a bigger number in the win column.

After playing in 80 games but amassing just 84 at-bats for the Reds and Cardinals in 1976 and 1977, Youngblood started at third base in his first three games as a Met, collecting a hit in each contest.  But Youngblood came off the bench in 11 of his next 15 games, batting just .150 over the three-week period.  His second month in New York proved more productive, as Youngblood got more chances to start, playing games at second base, third base, center field and right field.  From July 24 to August 16, Youngblood batted .370, starting more than half the games he played in.  Youngblood finished his first half-season with the Mets batting .253 with 12 extra-base hits in 182 at-bats.  Although he didn't hit any homers, he showed he was capable of playing wherever manager Joe Torre put him.  He also proved he wasn't just a singles hitter, like the man he was traded for - Mike Phillips.

The 1978 season saw Youngblood without a position of his own again, as the Mets used Steve Henderson, Lee Mazzilli and newcomer Elliot Maddox in the outfield.  They also had Doug Flynn at second and Lenny Randle at third, two of the other positions played by Youngblood.  As a result, the 26-year-old Youngblood had just 266 at-bats in 1978.  But Youngblood made the most of his limited playing time, batting .252 with 27 extra-base hits.  He also hit seven homers after not hitting a home run in his first two major league seasons.  Most impressive was his eight triples, which placed him in a tie for 10th place in the National League.  But of all the NL players who had at least eight three-baggers in 1978, Youngblood was the only one to do it in fewer than 437 at-bats.

After a productive 1978 season in limited action, the stage was set for Youngblood to have a breakout year for the Mets in 1979.  All he needed was the playing time.  The Mets made sure to oblige and they were rewarded with one of the best all-around seasons by a player in their short history.

The 1979 season began with Steve Henderson and Elliot Maddox once again starting in left and right field, respectively.  But simultaneous injuries to both players allowed Joel Youngblood to start more games in the outfield.  With Henderson out two months with a severe ankle sprain and Maddox sidelined for a month with a pulled hamstring, Youngblood made it impossible for the Mets to keep him on the bench.  The utility man played in a career-high 158 games in 1979, batting .275 with 37 doubles, five triples, 16 homers, 60 RBI, 90 runs scored and 18 stolen bases.  He also had an accurate arm in the outfield, finishing second in the league with 18 assists.

Youngblood's 37 doubles in 1979 tied a franchise mark set by Felix Millan in 1975.  Youngblood's co-ownership of the club's single-season doubles record lasted until 1989, when Howard Johnson ripped 41 two-base hits.  Youngblood also became the fourth Met to score 90 or more runs in a season, joining Tommie Agee (1969, 1970), Cleon Jones (1969) and Rusty Staub (1975).  In addition, Youngblood became just the fourth Met to finish a year with at least 15 homers and 15 stolen bases, after Agee (24 HR/31 SB in 1970), Lee Mazzilli (16 HR/20 SB in 1978, 15 HR/34 SB in 1979) and John Stearns (15 HR/25 SB in 1978).  And Youngblood's 58 extra-base hits in 1979 represented the fourth-highest total in club annals, behind Agee (61 XBH in 1970), Frank Thomas (60 XBH in 1962) and Dave Kingman (59 XBH in 1975).  Defensively, Youngblood became the third Met with at least 18 outfield assists in a single season, joining Rusty Staub (19 assists in 1974) and Steve Henderson (18 assists in 1978).

Very quietly, Youngblood had a great all-around season for the Mets in 1979 without having a regular defensive position.  He played most of his games in the corner outfield positions, starting 82 games in right field and 53 games in left.  But he also saw time at third base (seven starts), second base (six starts) and center field (four starts).  The thing he saw the most in 1979 was the other team celebrating a victory, as the Mets needed to win their last six games to avoid their first 100-loss campaign since 1967.

In 1980, the Mets began to move away from using their overpriced veteran players and started to dig into their minor league system for talent more often.  As a result, Youngblood had almost 100 fewer plate appearances in 1980 than he did during his breakout 1979 campaign despite never missing more than two consecutive games at any point in the season.  Youngblood's .276 batting average remained consistent with his 1979 performance, but his other numbers fell off a tad, as you would expect from a player who spent more time watching the kids play.

Youngblood finished the 1980 season with 26 doubles, two triples, eight homers and 14 steals.  Although he hit half the number of home runs as he did in 1979, Youngblood did manage to drive in a career-high 69 runs in 1980, batting .290 with men on base as opposed to a .257 average in similar situations in 1979.  He also benefited from batting lower in the order in 1980.  Youngblood was the team's leadoff hitter 51 times in 1979, hurting his RBI chances.  A year later, his name was penciled in the fourth, fifth or sixth spot in the batting order nearly 100 times.

Going into the 1981 season, Youngblood had become one of the team's veterans.  He was also two years removed from his best season in the majors and was about to turn 30.  If Youngblood was going to prove that he should remain an everyday player with so many capable youngsters ready and willing to take playing time away from him, he was going to have to force the Mets to play him, even if his all-out style of play was conducive to injuries.  He did force the Mets to play him in 1981, but he also forced his way out of the lineup by being too aggressive.

Youngblood spent most of the first month of the 1981 campaign on the bench because manager Joe Torre had gone with an outfield of Lee Mazzilli in center, first-year player Mookie Wilson in right and the recently-reacquired Dave Kingman in left, despite Youngblood being one of only two players on the team to play in over 300 games in 1979 and 1980.  Torre didn't start Youngblood until the seventh game of the season and went with a Kingman-Mazzilli-Wilson outfield alignment in ten of the team's first 18 games.  In early May, a slumping Wilson finally forced Torre to give Youngblood the opportunity he needed to produce on a consistent basis.  And boy, did he ever produce when he got that chance!

Joel Youngblood is living proof that determination always leads to success.

From May 2 to May 26, Youngblood started 22 games for the Mets, batting a whopping .430 (37-for-86) and posting an eye-popping 1.150 OPS (on-base plus slugging percentage).  The new everyday right fielder produced a dozen extra-base hits (six doubles, two triples, four homers) and drove in 19 runs in the 22 games.  By the time his streak came to an end, Youngblood was leading the league with a .368 batting average and had opened the eyes of All-Star voters across the country.  But Youngblood's storybook season was about to change, and not in a good way.

On May 29, Youngblood was forced to leave a game versus the Chicago Cubs in the third inning with back spasms.  That night, the team acquired right fielder Ellis Valentine from the Montreal Expos for reliever Jeff Reardon.  To add insult to Youngblood's injury, Valentine was acquired by the Mets while he himself was on the disabled list.  Youngblood was limited to one pinch-hitting appearance over the next five games before he was able to start a game against the Houston Astros on June 5.  A day later, Youngblood doubled and scored a run against the Astros, but had to be removed for a pinch-hitter prior to his next at-bat.  This time, it wasn't back spasms that kept Youngblood from continuing.  It was a ligament strain in his left knee.  And it required him to go on the disabled list.

Less than a week after Youngblood doubled against the Astros to hike his average back up to .359, Major League Baseball went on strike.  The strike actually helped Youngblood, as the two-month layoff caused him to miss just four games.  It also kept his average atop the National League leader board, which helped Youngblood make his first All-Star team.  As the Mets' sole All-Star representative in 1981, Youngblood made his return from the disabled list in the delayed All-Star Game, which was held in Cleveland on August 9.  Youngblood was the first player off the bench for the National League, pinch-hitting in the second inning for über-phenom Fernando Valenzuela, who would go on to win both the Rookie of the Year and Cy Young awards in the strike-shortened season.  Youngblood flied out in his lone All-Star plate appearance.

Upon returning from the All-Star Game, Youngblood was back in the Mets lineup, collecting hits in four of his first five games following his time on the disabled list.  Youngblood has shifted over to left field to accommodate Ellis Valentine in right.  But just five days after playing in the Midsummer Classic, Youngblood had to be removed from a game once again due to injury.  And this time, he didn't have a players' strike to keep him from missing too much time.  Youngblood had injured his left knee for a second time, and he would not play again in 1981.  His final season totals in just 43 games played were excellent (.350, 16 extra-base hits in 143 at-bats), but Youngblood still considered his season a disappointment because he couldn't stay healthy and be a part of his team's unexpected march into second-half contention.  The Mets finished the second half of the season with a 24-28 record, competing for a split division title until the final two weeks of the season.

Despite the front office's insistence on bringing in veterans to play in the outfield (Ellis Valentine, Dave Kingman, etc.), Joe Torre had always been able to find a spot for Joel Youngblood in the lineup during his four-plus seasons as manager of the New York Mets.  It started immediately after Youngblood was traded to the Mets, when Torre removed the "player" from his player/manager status, opening up a roster spot for Youngblood.  (Torre was officially "released" by the Mets on June 18, 1977 to fully focus on managing the team.  Six days later, Youngblood made his Mets debut.)  But Torre was relieved of his managerial duties on the final day of the 1981 season, leaving Youngblood without the manager who believed in his ability.  The move shocked Youngblood, as well as several of his teammates, some of whom had difficulty coping with general manager Frank Cashen's decision.


(video from Eyewitness News broadcast posted by Jon Bois on YouTube)

Cashen's firing of Torre (as well as long-time pitching coach Rube Walker) was the first of many moves the club made during the off-season in an attempt to end a five-year stretch of losing seasons.  Speedster Frank Taveras was traded to Montreal and Gold Glove-winning second baseman Doug Flynn was shipped off to Texas in December.  Lee Mazzilli was also sent to Texas, in a deal that wrangled Ron Darling and Walt Terrell away from the Rangers.  The Mazzilli trade opened up a spot for Mookie Wilson to become the everyday center fielder.  With Ellis Valentine firmly entrenched in right field, that left one outfield spot for Youngblood to claim.  The only problem was that Cashen had already found his man for the position.

George Foster, one of the many stars of the Big Red Machine in the mid-'70s, became a Met on February 10, 1982.  Cashen traded three players to Cincinnati for the slugging left fielder, then signed Foster to a five-year, $10 million contract, which at the time was the most lucrative deal ever given to a player by the Mets.  Six years after Foster contributed to keeping Youngblood out of the Reds' outfield mix in Cincinnati, he reprised that role with the Mets.  And this time, Youngblood didn't have Joe Torre to put him somewhere in the lineup.

The new Mets manager in 1982 was George Bamberger, a man who had no allegiance to the veteran Youngblood.  Bamberger used Foster and Wilson as his everyday left fielder and center fielder, but platooned Youngblood, Valentine and rookie Gary Rajsich in right.  Through the team's first 46 games, Youngblood had started 19 games in right, with Valentine starting 17 times and Rajsich getting the call on ten occasions.  Neither man played well enough to claim the everyday job so Bamberger started Mike Jorgensen and Rusty Staub in right field 17 times in July and August.  Still, no one player could make the position his own.

Although Youngblood had played in 80 of the team's first 104 games, he had only started 45 times through early August.  As usual, Youngblood bounced around the diamond, playing six defensive positions and starting games at four of them.  But since he was in the last year of a three-year contract signed after his breakthrough 1979 campaign, the Mets decided it would be better to trade him than to keep him mired on the bench.  On August 4, after going 1-for-2 against future Hall of Famer Ferguson Jenkins, Youngblood was removed from the day game at Wrigley Field, having been traded to the Montreal Expos for a player to be named later (Tom Gorman).  An ex-Met for just five hours, Youngblood then collected a hit off another future Hall of Famer, Steve Carlton, in Montreal's night game at Philadelphia.  In doing so, Youngblood proved his versatility in a different way, becoming the first player in major league history to collect hits for two teams in two cities on the same day.

The Youngblood trade was supposed to give Ellis Valentine the everyday job in right, but Bamberger continued to platoon several players at the position, causing Valentine to declare that there was a "conspiracy" against him by an organization that was "the worst in baseball".  Valentine also went on to say that Youngblood should have been traded earlier in the season, and was displeased by Youngblood's trade destination, saying "they traded Youngblood right back into our own division, and to a contending team.  That was stupid."

Needless to say, Valentine was also a former Met at the conclusion of the 1982 season.  Youngblood, on the other hand, never caught on with the Expos after his historic debut, signing a free-agent contract with the San Francisco Giants prior to the 1983 season.  Youngblood played six years in the Bay Area, spending more time in the infield during the beginning of his Giant tenure.  But after committing 36 errors in just 117 games as the Giants' third baseman in 1984 - tied for the fourth-most errors at the position in a single season since the end of World War II - Youngblood was moved back to the outfield in 1985 and spent most of his remaining years with the Giants alternating between the three outfield positions.  Although Youngblood was a member of San Francisco's division-winning team in 1987, he never played for the team in the postseason.  Two years later, Youngblood closed out his career as a member of the Cincinnati Reds, appearing mostly as a pinch-hitter, just as he did when he made his major league debut with the Reds 13 years earlier.

Joel Youngblood was a fine major league player, whose longevity in the big leagues was due mostly to the fact that he wasn't able to hold down a steady position.  Youngblood always knew his versatility would be advantageous to whichever team employed him, and to this day remains grateful that his former manager in New York noticed that as well.

"From a manager's standpoint, I gave (Torre) an insurance policy on the bench that could go in and play anywhere.  But it took away some of the opportunities for me to play regularly at one position because I was so valuable I could play all positions quite well. ... Joe's always been my favorite manager and I've had great managers - Sparky Anderson, Frank Robinson.  I always felt (Torre) was fair, he was open and listened.  It was great in New York."

Youngblood played in over 1,400 major leagues during his 14-year career, but never once became a regular at any one position.  In six seasons as a Met, Youngblood played 309 games in right field.  But he also spent time in left field (102 games), second base (99 games), center field (75 games), third base (53 games) and even found himself playing shortstop twice.

There are only ten other players in Mets history besides Youngblood who split time between second base, third base and the three outfield positions.  None of them played is as many total games as Youngblood did (Joe McEwing ranks second to Youngblood with 502 games as a Met, which is still more than 100 games short of Youngblood's total in New York) and none of the utility players came close to matching Youngblood's offensive production with the Mets.

From 1977 to 1982, Youngblood was one of only three Mets to produce 100 doubles, score 200 runs and collect 200 RBI.  (Lee Mazzilli and John Stearns were the others.)  When Youngblood played his final game as a Met, he ranked in the team's top twenty in several offensive categories, including hits (519; 14th all-time through 1982), home runs (38; 15th), runs scored (241; 15th) and RBI (216; 14th).  Youngblood cracked the top ten in doubles (108; 9th), triples (18; T-10th) and stolen bases (39; 10th).  All this from a player who could do everything on the field except claim a defensive position of his own.

In 1981, Robert Sullivan wrote an article in Sports Illustrated claiming Youngblood was "a star, not a starter".  It's true that Youngblood was never a fixture at any one position for the Mets or any of the other teams he played for.  But that didn't stop him from becoming an All-Star in 1981.

Although he played hundreds of games there, you couldn't really pigeonhole Joel Youngblood as an outfielder.  He also couldn't be referred to as a second baseman or a third baseman.  But if you had to define Youngblood's role on a team, it would be simple.  Joel Youngblood was a baseball player, and a damn fine player at that.

The Mets weren't very good between 1977 and 1982.  But that didn't mean they were bereft of good players.  Joel Youngblood was a very good player on some very bad teams.  It wasn't his fault he couldn't catch a break with the Big Red Machine.  Nor could anyone blame him for the Mets' troubles in the late '70s and early '80s.  Youngblood just did what he knew how to do - play baseball - and that's something Mets fans will always appreciate.

That's the smile of a much-appreciated Met.


Note:  The Best On The Worst is a thirteen-part weekly series spotlighting the greatest Mets players who just happened to play on some not-so-great Mets teams.  For previous installments, please click on the players' names below:

January 6, 2014: Todd Hundley 
January 13, 2014: Al Jackson
January 20, 2014: Lee Mazzilli
January 27, 2014: Steve Trachsel
February 3, 2014: Rico Brogna
February 10, 2014: Skip Lockwood 
February 17, 2014: Ron Hunt
February 24, 2014: Craig Swan 
March 3, 2014: Hubie Brooks


Monday, February 4, 2013

The Mets That Got Away: Jeff Reardon

The Mets have a history of trading away young pitchers for offensive help.  In 1971, Nolan Ryan was traded to California for Jim Fregosi in what many consider to be the worst trade in club annals.  Two decades later, David Cone was shipped to Toronto for Ryan Thompson and the eventual all-time leader in home runs by a second baseman, Jeff Kent.  (Of course, the Mets traded Kent away before anyone realized he would become the most prodigious power hitter at his position.)  Cone wasn't the only strikeout king to be traded north of the border, as just this past off-season, R.A. Dickey took his Thesaurus and Cy Young Award to Toronto for top catching prospect Travis d'Arnaud, ace-in-waiting Noah Syndergaard and catcher of the moment John Buck.

Ryan threw seven no-hitters after leaving New York and is the proud owner of a Hall of Fame plaque.  Cone pitched a perfect game, won a Cy Young Award and wears five World Series rings on his pitching hand.  Dickey left a 74-win team to join a vastly improved Blue Jays squad that is looking to win its first AL East title in 20 years.

But it's not just starting pitchers who have been dealt for players who were supposed to provide an offensive spark.  Occasionally, the Mets have traded a relief pitcher for offensive help.  And unfortunately, on occasion that offensive help fizzled while the relief pitcher sizzled for his new team.

One such reliever spent parts of three seasons in New York, but was blocked from being anything but a middle reliever because the Mets already had a full-time closer.  Deemed expendable when the Mets were searching for a bat, he was traded to a team that didn't have a full-time closer, but had a surplus of outfield talent.  In one of Frank Cashen's rare poor trades, Ellis Valentine became a Met, sending Jeff Reardon to Montreal.

Jeff Reardon took a knee in this photo, but after he left the Mets, he had opposing hitters on their knees.

Jeffrey James Reardon was originally drafted by the Montreal Expos in the 23rd round of the 1973 amateur draft.  But Reardon did not sign with Montreal, instead choosing to attend and play baseball at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.  Four years after spurning the Expos, Reardon signed a minor league contract with the New York Mets.  One day after Reardon became property of the Mets, Tom Seaver and Dave Kingman became former Mets, as "The Franchise" and the "Sky King" were dealt away in separate trades by penny-pinching chairman M. Donald Grant.

The team was about to enter into its darkest period, playing before sparse crowds at Grant's Tomb, as Shea Stadium was known in the post-Midnight Massacre era.  But the lack of talent at the major league level meant that Reardon would have a short stay in the minors, provided he could pitch somewhat successfully there.  To say Reardon was somewhat successful as a Mets minor leaguer would be a massive understatement.

In his first professional baseball season, Reardon pitched well at Single-A Lynchburg, going 8-3 with a 3.30 ERA in 1977, with most of his appearances on the mound coming as a starting pitcher.  In 1978, Reardon once again pitched primarily as a starter and was dominant, posting a 17-4 record and a 2.54 ERA at AA-Jackson.  Upon his promotion to AAA-Tidewater in 1979, Reardon was converted to a relief pitcher, making 29 of his 30 appearances out of the bullpen.  The transition went without a hitch, as Reardon's ERA dropped to 2.09 and his WHIP was a stellar 0.97.  By late August, Reardon was in the major leagues.

Reardon appeared in his first major league game at Shea Stadium on August 25, 1979, losing to the Cincinnati Reds when he failed to hold a one-run lead in the ninth.  Two days later, he was on the mound again at Shea, this time against the Atlanta Braves.  Reardon was called upon by manager Joe Torre to pitch the ninth inning of a game that was suspended on June 17 with the score tied, 1-1.  After Reardon pitched a scoreless top of the ninth, his teammates came through in the bottom of the ninth, scoring the winning run on an RBI single by Alex Treviño.  Reardon was credited with the victory in only his second big league appearance.  Because of an interesting statistical twist, Reardon earned his first win two months before making his major league debut, as the game went in the record books as having happened on June 17, even though Reardon was still at Tidewater on that date.  Similarly, Reardon is credited with having made his major league debut on June 17, even though he didn't step on a major league mound until August 25.

Although Reardon gave up runs in two of his first three outings with the Mets, he was brilliant in the season's final month, posting a 0.51 ERA and holding opposing hitters to a .123 batting average.  The Mets closed out the 1979 season by winning their final six games to avoid the team's first 100-loss campaign since 1967, with Reardon playing a large part in the season-ending skein.  Reardon pitched in four of the six games, facing 13 batters and allowing only one of them to reach base - and he reached on an error.  He also recorded the first two saves of his career in the season's final week.

By pitching only 20⅔ innings for the Mets in 1979, Reardon retained his rookie status for the 1980 campaign.  His first full season in the majors was arguably the best by a Mets rookie reliever in the team's first two decades of existence.  Reardon appeared in 61 games for the Mets in 1980, racking up 110⅓ innings in the process.  The right-hander was at his best when he pitched at least two innings, which he did in 38 of his 61 appearances.  Reardon posted a 1.62 ERA in his multi-inning appearances, holding the opposition scoreless in 28 of those 38 games.  Reardon's tremendous season (8-7, six saves, 2.61 ERA, 101 Ks) earned him a sixth-place finish for the National League Rookie of the Year Award, making him the first relief pitcher in Mets history to get Rookie of the Year consideration.

Even though the Mets were still near the bottom of the National League East standings in 1981, they had developed quite a bullpen.  Seven relievers pitched in at least 20 games for the Mets in 1981.  None of them had an ERA above 3.68 and five of the seven posted ERAs under 3.00.  As the June 15 trade deadline was approaching, it was clear that the bullpen was the team's strength.  At the same time, the offense was struggling to score runs.  The Mets won only eight of their first 33 games in 1981, averaging 2.9 runs per game over that stretch.  Other than the recently reacquired Dave Kingman, who hit 11 of the team's first 25 home runs, no Met was hitting for power.  General manager Frank Cashen realized that the team needed an offensive spark and also knew that one way to get it was by trading a strength to fix a weakness.  On May 29, Cashen made such a deal, and Jeff Reardon's career as a Met was over.

In a trade that would go down as one of the few poor deals orchestrated by Cashen, the Mets sent Reardon and outfielder Dan Norman (who came to the Mets in the Tom Seaver trade) to the Montreal Expos in exchange for outfielder Ellis Valentine.

From 1977 to 1979, Valentine was one of the most complete players in the National League. As a hitter, Valentine averaged 31 doubles, 24 homers, 78 RBIs and 12 stolen bases per season over the three-year period.  As the Expos' rightfielder, Valentine was a defensive monster, winning a Gold Glove in 1978 on the strength of his league-leading 25 assists.  No outfielder, regardless of whether of he played in left field, center field or right field, has recorded as many as 25 assists since Valentine accomplished the feat in 1978.  Needless to say, Valentine would have been a great acquisition for the Mets following the 1979 season.  But it was now 1981.  And although Valentine was only 26 at the time of the trade, he was already a shadow of his former All-Star self.

Valentine was limited to 86 games in 1980 because of various injuries, including a fractured cheekbone he suffered after being hit in the face with a pitch.  His numbers for the year (.315, 13 HR, 67 RBI) were impressive for the amount of games he played, but the injuries seemed to change the course of his career.  Valentine started off poorly in 1981, batting .211 in limited duty for the Expos.  He also missed games because of a sprained knee and a pulled left hamstring.  In fact, at the time of his trade to the Mets, Valentine was on the disabled list because he had aggravated the hamstring injury.

Nothing changed for Valentine after the trade to New York, as the once-promising outfielder hit .207 for the Mets in 48 games.  He rebounded to hit .288 in 1982, but had become a singles hitter.  In 111 games, Valentine only produced 23 extra-base hits and collected 48 RBIs.  His speed had deserted him as well.  After four consecutive seasons of double-digit steal totals from 1976 to 1979, Valentine stole one base as a Met in seven attempts.  Valentine never played for the Mets again after the 1982 season and was out of baseball by 1985.  Reardon, on the other hand, was on his way to becoming one of the best closers of his generation.

After the trade to Montreal, Reardon turned into a dominant reliever.  In 25 games for the Expos in 1981, Reardon went 2-0 with six saves.  He also had a sparkling 1.30 ERA, 0.72 WHIP, and held opposing hitters to a microscopic .148 batting average.

Reardon was at his best during the Expos' march to the second-half division title in 1981 (the players' strike divided the 1981 season into two halves), allowing one run, eight hits and no walks in his final 15⅓ innings.  Three of those 15⅓ innings came in Montreal's regular season finale, a game the Expos needed to win to advance to the postseason for the first time in franchise history.  Naturally, the game was played at Shea Stadium, the site of the Expos' first-ever regular season game in 1969.  Reardon came into the game in the seventh inning and was still on the hill when Dave Kingman flied out to leftfielder Terry Francona for the final out of the game.  Four months after being traded by the Mets to the Expos, Reardon was celebrating a split-season championship with his new teammates at Shea Stadium.

In the first-ever National League Division Series, Reardon saved two of the Expos' three victories.  However, he struggled against the eventual World Series champion Dodgers in the NLCS.  Montreal fell one win short in their quest to reach the World Series.  They never won another division title as the Expos.

Former Met Jeff Reardon and future Met Gary Carter celebrate the only playoff series win in Expos history.

From 1982 to 1986, the Expos were a mediocre team, winning between 78 and 86 games each year.  But Reardon was anything but mediocre.  During those five seasons, Reardon established himself as one of the most feared closers in the National League.  He won 30 games and recorded 146 saves over the next half-decade for the Expos, recording an impressive 2.98 ERA along the way.  Reardon  was selected to represent Montreal in the All-Star Game twice and led the league in saves once.  Furthermore, his 41 saves in 1985 earned him his first Rolaids Relief Award and helped him finish 7th in the Cy Young Award vote and 20th in the NL MVP vote.

Following the 1986 season, the Expos traded Reardon to the Minnesota Twins in a six-player deal.  Although Reardon posted a 4.48 ERA in his first season facing American League hitters, he still managed to save 31 games for the Twins in 1987 and struck out a career-high 9.3 batters per nine innings.  The Twins went on to win their first World Series championship in Minnesota, with Reardon pitching 4⅔ scoreless innings in the Fall Classic.  For the second time in his career, Reardon finished in the top ten in the Cy Young vote and he also finished 11th in the race for AL MVP.

Reardon had another spectacular season in 1988, saving a career-high 42 games, lowering his ERA to 2.47 and earning his third All-Star Game selection, but the Twins fell short in their quest to repeat as World Series champions.  In 1989, Reardon's ERA ballooned back over 4.00, but he still managed to record his fifth consecutive 30-save season.  It would be his last season in Minnesota.

Prior to the 1990 season, Reardon signed a three-year, $6.8 million contract to pitch for the Boston Red Sox.  His first two years in Boston were excellent.  Reardon combined to save 61 games in 1990 and 1991, helping the Red Sox win the AL East in 1990 and making his fourth All-Star team in 1991.  After becoming the first pitcher to record a 40-save season in each league in 1988, Reardon enjoyed another 40-save season with the Red Sox in 1991, making him the first player to reach that mark with three different teams.

In 1992, Reardon put his name in the record books once again when he recorded his 342nd career save to pass Rollie Fingers into the top spot on the all-time saves list.  But Reardon struggled after breaking Fingers' record.  Over his next 25 games, Reardon posted a 6.33 ERA and blew seven save opportunities.  As a result, the Red Sox traded Reardon to Atlanta in late August, which seemed to rejuvenate the 36-year-old reliever.  In 14 late-season appearances with the the Braves, Reardon went 3-0 with three saves and a 1.15 ERA, helping Atlanta win their second consecutive NL West division title.  In the NLCS against the Pittsburgh Pirates, Reardon did not allow a run or a hit in three appearances and became the winning pitcher in Game 7 when Francisco Cabrera drove in Sid Bream with the pennant-winning run in the bottom of the ninth.  But the World Series was another story, as Reardon only got into two of the six games against the Toronto Blue Jays and was credited with the loss in Game 2 when he allowed two runs in the ninth inning.

With this slide by Sid Bream, Jeff Reardon became a winning pitcher in a Game 7.  How about that?

The 1992 World Series marked the beginning of the end for Reardon.  He signed with Cincinnati prior to the 1993 season and was used primarily as a middle reliever, going 4-6 with eight saves and a 4.09 ERA for the Reds.  He then signed as a free agent with the Yankees in 1994, but was horrible in 11 games for the Mets' crosstown rivals.  Reardon posted an 8.38 ERA and allowed 17 hits in 9⅔ innings before being released by the Yankees in early May.  The 38-year-old Reardon would never pitch again in the major leagues.

Jeff Reardon began his 16-year career in the big leagues as a late-inning pitcher for the Mets in 1979.  He pitched well in parts of three seasons as a Met, appearing in 97 games and going 10-9 with a 2.65 ERA.  But with Neil Allen entrenched in the closer's role, Reardon could only muster ten saves with the Mets.  However, with the team in need of offensive help (which was a common theme from the late '60s to the early '80s - isn't that right, Amos Otis and Nolan Ryan?), general manager Frank Cashen acquired Ellis Valentine in exchange for the bearded reliever.  Allen eventually gave up the closer's role to Jesse Orosco in 1983 (this time, Cashen got it right - he jettisoned Allen to St. Louis for Keith Hernandez), but by then, Reardon had become a star closer in Montreal.

In five and a half seasons with the Expos, Reardon saved 152 games and recorded a 2.84 ERA.  Although Reardon left Montreal following the 1986 season, he is still the Expos/Nationals all-time leader in saves and ranks second in ERA for pitchers who threw at least 500 innings for the club.  He also pitched the Expos into the postseason for the first and only time during the team's 36-year tenure in Montreal.

Upon bidding adieu to Montreal, Reardon then went to Minnesota, where he won a World Series ring in his first year there.  He also racked up 104 saves in three seasons (1987-1989) with the Twins.  In doing so, he became only the third pitcher to post 100 saves for multiple franchises, following Hall of Famers Rollie Fingers (A's, Padres) and Bruce Sutter (Cubs, Cardinals).

From 1990 to 1992, Reardon saved 88 games as a member of the Boston Red Sox, including his record-setting 342th career save.  Had he not been traded to Atlanta during the 1992 season, he might have become the charter member of the "100 saves with three teams" club.  Then again, had he not become a Brave, he wouldn't have had an opportunity to pitch in his second World Series.

How good was Reardon during the 12-year period from 1981-1992, a period that saw him save 344 games for the Expos, Twins and Red Sox?  In addition to being the Expos/Nationals all-time leader in saves, Reardon also ranks fifth on the Twins' all-time saves list and has the fifth-most saves in Boston's long and storied history as well.  The only other pitcher in baseball history who can make the same claim is Rollie Fingers.  (Fingers is No. 2 in Oakland, No.3 in San Diego and No. 3 in Milwaukee.)  And for the record, Reardon's ten saves with the Mets have him in a 23rd place tie with Turk Wendell, who was also never the team's closer.

Reardon showed he was durable and dependable throughout his career, recording 20 or more saves in 11 consecutive seasons (1982-1992).  In doing so, he became the first pitcher in major league history to accomplish the feat in more than nine straight years.  Since Reardon, only two other pitchers have posted at least ten consecutive seasons with 20+ saves.  Former all-time saves leader Lee Smith did it for 13 straight years from 1983 to 1995 and current saves leader Mariano Rivera pulled off 15 consecutive 20-save seasons from 1997 to 2011.  By comparison, only 16 pitchers have recorded 20 or more career saves for the Mets.  (Cal Koonce and Anthony Young are tied for 17th on the Mets' all-time saves list with 18 apiece.)  And of those 16 pitchers to record 20 career saves for the Mets, only John Franco (1994-1998) and Armando Benitez (1999-2003) reached the mark in as many as five consecutive seasons.

During a career that began in New York with the Mets in 1979 and ended across town with the Yankees in 1994, Reardon recorded 40-save seasons for three different teams.  He was also a four-time All-Star, finished in the top ten in the Cy Young vote twice, and even received MVP consideration three times (1985, 1987, 1988), a feat that is unheard of for a relief pitcher.  Reardon helped four teams make the playoffs and pitched in 18 postseason games for the Expos (1981), Twins (1987), Red Sox (1990) and Braves (1992).  He won two playoff games in his career, including a Game 7, and saved six others.

Reardon pitched in 880 games, with all of them coming in relief.  He finished his career with a 73-77 record, 367 saves (20 of which came against the Mets) and a 3.16 ERA.  Reardon was so dominant that he finished his career with more saves (367) than walks (358).  But as is the case with many other relief pitchers, Reardon did not receive much support when he became eligible for the Hall of Fame in 2000.  In his first year of eligibility, Reardon was named on 24 of the 499 ballots cast, falling one vote short of the 25 needed to receive the 5% of the votes required to remain on the Hall of Fame ballot.

Life after baseball hasn't been too kind to Reardon.  In 2004, his son died of a drug overdose, sending Reardon into a severe state of depression.  Reardon was taking anti-depressants and other medications prescribed to him when he was arrested in 2005 on charges of armed robbery.  However, he was acquitted of the crime when the judge found him not guilty by reason of insanity.  The judge's verdict was based on testimony by court-appointed psychiatrists who claimed that at the time of the alleged incident, Reardon was taking so many medications (12 in all) that he was in a "medication-induced delirium".  Although Reardon will never get over the pain of losing his son, he is now devoting his time to getting his own life back on track.

Jeff Reardon has experienced all the highs and lows life has to offer.  Although he never quite made it to the Hall of Fame, he will still go down as one of the best and most intimidating closers of all time.  In 1981, the Mets were looking for someone to spark their offense.  What they succeeded in doing was igniting the career of Jeff Reardon.  Whereas Ellis Valentine fizzled in New York, Jeff Reardon became one of the best closers in the history of the game.  A team can't win without good pitching.  It also can't win when it lets good pitching get away.
 


 (Jeff Reardon video shared on YouTube by Sebastien Lepage)


Note:  The Mets That Got Away is a thirteen-part weekly series that spotlights those Mets players who established themselves as major leaguers in New York, only to become stars after leaving town.  For previous installments, please click on the players' names below:

January 7, 2013: Nolan Ryan
January 14, 2013: Melvin Mora  
January 21, 2013: Kevin Mitchell 
January 28, 2013: Amos Otis