Every spring, it is the same scenario. As the leaves bud into a beautiful, green bloom and thoughts of spring renew hopes of glory, there comes a revitalization of interest from each fan.
If hope springs eternal, then for the New York Mets, autumn is where those hopes die.
Throughout the scorching summer months that follow the resurgence of life in spring, the team keeps their chances alive and their fans' interest piqued. However, as the leaves wither away into a cold, shriveled shell of their former selves, they begin to gracefully fall to the ground.
So with the change of the season, the visions of grandeur change into delusions as the team also withers away into irrelevancy.
As players begin to fall one by one, some in not-so-elegant fashion and others float into another team's backyard, one thing is clear: The chances grow more dim by the hour. As the seasons begin to change, so the baseball season has already done so; both have changed into an icy, cold and still demise. The eerie quiet of winter will be upon us much sooner than we anticipate.
Just as the change in seasons is inevitable, it is equally so for the Mets.
There will be change. This current management cannot withstand the awesome weight of multiple collapses and multimillion dollar busts much longer before it buckles under the enormous pressure. The one carrying the brunt of the weight is GM Omar Minaya.
How much longer can he sustain the scrutiny and weight of the future on his shoulders?
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