Advertisement

Padres Are Beaten by Mets, 7-3

Share
<i> Times Staff Writer</i>

The most common assault on an umpire’s sensibilities relates to a supposed inability to see.

“Hey, ump, why don’t ya get some glasses?” is a query put to the men in blue since time immemorial.

There was a new spin put on that question on a bright Sunday afternoon when the New York Mets defeated the Padres, 7-3, in front of 32,561 fans.

Advertisement

It was the fifth loss in seven games for the Padres, who open a three-game series against Philadelphia tonight before leaving on their most demanding trip of the season.

First-base umpire Fred Brocklander could have used a pair of flip-down sunglasses as he turned and attempted to track a drive down the right-field line hit by New York’s Danny Heep in the eighth inning.

Padre relief pitcher Greg Booker, who had just grooved a fastball to Heep, didn’t even bother to look. He knew the ball was going into the stands, a two-run homer that would cement the New York victory.

Booker would have had a decent viewing angle, but as catcher Terry Kennedy said, “No one could see a thing today. It was very bright, and the ball kept getting lost in the shirts.”

That was Brocklander’s problem. He had difficulty as the ball curved past the foul pole against a backdrop of pastel shirts.

To most observers, Heep’s drive appeared to be fair by 5 to 10 feet, but it was ruled foul by the first-base arbiter.

Advertisement

He had barely finished waving his arms to impart his decision when Heep and Mets Manager Davey Johnson were in his face.

“I was telling him the ball was fair and if he didn’t see it, he should get help,” Johnson said.

Brocklander admitted to Heep he had lost the ball in the shirts.

Proving that umpires are truly human--that is, subject to error--Brocklander had the class to seek the opinion of home plate umpire Ed Montague, who ruled the ball fair.

“I told Fred, ‘Let’s get it right,’ ” Johnson said, “and then he walked toward Montague and asked for help. I take my hat off to him for that. A lot of umpires wouldn’t have done that.”

As Heep noted, Brocklander didn’t get much of a chance to seek help of his own volition because the Mets descended on him so quickly.

“We were on him hard,” Heep said. “The umps usually stick with their decision.”

Padre Manager Dick Williams didn’t put up the fight some fans might have expected, for the simple reason he thought the ball was fair.

Advertisement

When questioned later, Williams was evasive.

“I can’t say anything,” he said. “The last time (he commented on a call) I was fined $200 for being thrown out of a game and $300 for what appeared in the paper. This time I thought I was going to get thrown out for laughing.”

He was laughing because it was plain the ball was fair, and it was rather comedic to see the Mets tangle with the umpires.

Williams, however, didn’t see much humor in the rest of the game.

Least funny was the pitching of starter Eric Show (4-3), who was charged with five runs and nine hits, and hasn’t won since May 11. He gave up a decisive two-run homer to Gary Carter in the sixth that put the Mets ahead, 5-3.

“He threw me the first fastball I had seen from him this afternoon, and I was on it,” Carter said.

Show had managed to make it through a three-run third inning that enabled New York to erase a 2-0 Padre lead, which Tony Gwynn had provided with a first-inning homer off Calvin Schiraldi.

Schiraldi (2-0) went five innings before yielding to Doug Sisk, who gave the Padres only one hit the rest of the afternoon.

Advertisement

Show, who failed to hold a 3-0 lead in his previous start, did not receive glowing reviews in the Padre locker room.

“He is certainly struggling,” Williams said.

“His location was poor. There were a lot of high fastballs right over the plate.”

Kennedy had no trouble discerning the poor location of Show’s pitches, either.

“I guess you could say he’s in a slump,” Kennedy said. “He hung several pitches in the third,” when the Mets bunched four hits to take the lead.

The Mets, after taking two out of three from the Padres, are clinging to a slim lead over Chicago in the National League East, and second baseman Wally Backman expects it to stay that way through the summer.

“I don’t think either the Cubs or us can afford a long losing streak,” he said. “I think it will be us and the Cubs in the end. I haven’t seen Montreal yet, but I don’t think they’re as good as the Cubs.”

The Padres, meanwhile, have not done themselves any favors on the current home stand. Despite the euphoria they brought home from a recent 7-2 swing through the East, they are below .500 since getting back to San Diego.

Following the series against the Phillies, the Padres leave on a 15-game trip to four cities in 13 days.

Advertisement

PADRES AT A GLANCE

FIRST INNING Padres--Flannery walked. Gwynn homered to right, his second. Garvey grounded out to short. Nettles flied to left. McReynolds singled to left. Kennedy grounded to first. Two runs, two hits, one left.

THIRD INNING Mets--Blocker doubled to center. Schiraldi struck out. Wilson singled to center, Blocker taking third. Backman singled to right-center, Blocker scoring and Wilson moving to third. Hernandez doubled to left, Wilson scoring and Backman taking third. With runners at second and third, Carter grounded to Nettles, who threw home to Kennedy, getting Backman in a rundown. Kennedy threw to Nettles, who tagged out Hernandez at third. With Backman still between third and home, Nettles threw to Show at the plate. Show threw back to Nettles at third, but Nettles dropped the ball. Templeton picked it up and threw to Flannery at second. Flannery tagged out Carter at second, Backman scoring. Three runs, four hits, one error.

SIXTH INNING Mets--With one out, Hernandez singled to right. Carter homered to left, his sixth. Heep singled to left. Knight popped to third. Johnson walked. Stoddard replaced Show. Blocker flied to right. Two runs, three hits.

Padres--Gwynn singled to center. Garvey walked. Sisk replaced Schiraldi. With Nettles at bat, the runners advanced on a wild pitch. Nettles grounded to third, Gwynn scoring and Garvey taking third. McReynolds hit a grounder to Hernandez, who threw to Carter to retire Garvey, McReynolds reaching on a fielders choice. Kennedy grounded to first. One run, one hit.

EIGHTH INNING Mets--With Booker pitching and one out, Carter walked. Heep homered to right, his second. Knight popped to second. Johnson struck out. Two runs, one hit.

Advertisement