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• Morning Briefing: Mets set to visit grieving Marlins
MIAMI -- The New York Mets will take part in a solemn event Monday.
The Mets will be the visiting team in Miami as the Marlins return to playing baseball after the death of 24-year-old ace Jose Fernandez in a weekend boating accident.
Cognizant that the Mets must balance the proper respect with the need to win ballgames during the final week, Terry Collins said he will meet with his players Monday afternoon in the visitors’ clubhouse at Marlins Park.
Fernandez’s next scheduled start had been for the series opener against the Mets.
“I know they’ll be very, very respectful,” Collins said. “There’s still a lot at stake. I know Jose Fernandez well enough to know the one thing he wants is the game played -- and the game played right, because that’s how he went about it. So in honor of him, we’re going to go out and play the game right.”
The Mets (83-73) lead the San Francisco Giants by one game and the St. Louis Cardinals by 1½ games in the National League wild-card standings. Both of the Mets’ adversaries lost on Sunday.
The Mets have a pair of three-game series remaining -- at Miami, then at Philadelphia to close the regular season.
Collins believes the Mets have the correct pitcher on the mound in the opener at Marlins Park in 43-year-old Bartolo Colon, since the veteran should be best prepared to be unaffected by the emotional surroundings. Colon and Noah Syndergaard will combine to start four of the final six games if the Mets’ fate is not resolved until the final day of the regular season.
If the Mets can clinch early, they can hold back Syndergaard for the Oct. 5 wild-card game.
On Sunday at Citi Field, Yoenis Cespedes taped a Mets jersey with “FERNANDEZ” and No. 16 on the back to the wall of the Mets’ dugout. Cespedes indicated the Mets will bring the jersey to Miami and hang it in the visitors’ dugout as a sign of solidarity with the Marlins.
"It's going be another tough day," Cespedes said through an interpreter. "I can tell you that we're going to take the jersey with us and we'll be putting it up again. We want to let him know that we're still thinking of him -- knowing that's his town and we're on his field."
MIAMI -- The New York Mets will take part in a solemn event Monday.
The Mets will be the visiting team in Miami as the Marlins return to playing baseball after the death of 24-year-old ace Jose Fernandez in a weekend boating accident.
Cognizant that the Mets must balance the proper respect with the need to win ballgames during the final week, Terry Collins said he will meet with his players Monday afternoon in the visitors’ clubhouse at Marlins Park.
Fernandez’s next scheduled start had been for the series opener against the Mets.
“I know they’ll be very, very respectful,” Collins said. “There’s still a lot at stake. I know Jose Fernandez well enough to know the one thing he wants is the game played -- and the game played right, because that’s how he went about it. So in honor of him, we’re going to go out and play the game right.”
The Mets (83-73) lead the San Francisco Giants by one game and the St. Louis Cardinals by 1½ games in the National League wild-card standings. Both of the Mets’ adversaries lost on Sunday.
The Mets have a pair of three-game series remaining -- at Miami, then at Philadelphia to close the regular season.
Collins believes the Mets have the correct pitcher on the mound in the opener at Marlins Park in 43-year-old Bartolo Colon, since the veteran should be best prepared to be unaffected by the emotional surroundings. Colon and Noah Syndergaard will combine to start four of the final six games if the Mets’ fate is not resolved until the final day of the regular season.
If the Mets can clinch early, they can hold back Syndergaard for the Oct. 5 wild-card game.
On Sunday at Citi Field, Yoenis Cespedes taped a Mets jersey with “FERNANDEZ” and No. 16 on the back to the wall of the Mets’ dugout. Cespedes indicated the Mets will bring the jersey to Miami and hang it in the visitors’ dugout as a sign of solidarity with the Marlins.
"It's going be another tough day," Cespedes said through an interpreter. "I can tell you that we're going to take the jersey with us and we'll be putting it up again. We want to let him know that we're still thinking of him -- knowing that's his town and we're on his field."