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Ex-Mets Jay Hook and Craig Anderson showed class with this answer. Many of us weren’t around for the 1962 Mets. We don’t have much, if any, attachment to the record-setting year.
"I don’t want them to break it," 1962 Mets pitcher Craig Anderson said in a profile by Tim Britton of The Athletic. Fellow pitcher Jay Hook, now 87, recalled the emotional toll of such a trying ...
Craig took the mound for the Mets on April 11, 1962 in an eventual 11-4 loss to the Cardinals in St. Louis. Craig went 10-24 for the team, which finished 40-120, a modern record for futility that ...
Those players include pitcher pitchers Craig Anderson, Galen Cisco and Jay Hook, infielders Cliff Cook, Rick Herrscher and Jim Marshall, and outfielder John DeMerit (89). BUY METS TICKETS: STUBHUB ...
The Mets and David Stearns can finally speak with Craig Counsell again. Less than a week before Counsell’s contract with the Brewers expires, the Mets have received permission from Milwaukee to ...
If the Mets want to talk with Craig Counsell, they might have to wait a few weeks.. Though the Brewers’ season ended with a loss in the wild-card round to the Diamondbacks on Wednesday, their ...
The Mets were granted permission by the Brewers to interview Counsell.But that was just last-second semantics, to some degree. His Milwaukee contract expires Tuesday, and Stearns has not ...
People close to Mets honcho David Stearns insist he is truly serious about considering first-time managers if he can’t lure his longtime manager Craig Counsell away from his hometown Brewers (a ...
According to the AP, Christopher’s death leaves just 10 living members of the Mets’ inaugural season: Craig Anderson, Galen Cisco, Cliff Cook, John DeMerit, Rick Herrscher, Jay Hook, Ed ...
If Craig Counsell doesn’t come to the Mets, the team will need Plan B. Getty Images Though the Brewers were significantly better than the Mets this year and also have a top-five system, they ...
As the Mets set a modern record for futility by finishing 40-120, Stengel would often ask Craig to skip his between-starts throwing session. “MISTER Craig,” Stengel would say.
Roger Craig, who started the first game in Mets franchise history, has died. He was 93-years-old. The news was announced Sunday afternoon by the San Francisco Giants. Craig took the mound for the ...