Mets Blogger Roundtable: Our Favorite David Wright Moments
This past week it was announced David Wright was going to be shut down for roughly two months before he can once again resume baseball activities. It was once again a blow to Wright’s attempt to get back on the field. As Mets fans and David Wright fans, this was a blow to the chances of seeing one of our favorite players on the field again. It is a cause to feel a bit melancholy.
However, it is also a reminder of all the great moments Wright had during his Mets career. To that end, instead of lamenting all the problems which have befallen Wright, in the latest Mets Blogger Roundtable, we endeavor to highlight the greatness of David Wright by focusing on our favorite moments of his career:
Roger Cormier (Good Fundies & Fangraphs)
David Wright just found out he was about to play in his first World Series after 12 seasons of playing professional baseball. He probably wanted to (gently) hug each and every one of his teammates for helping him get to the promised land, but he’s David Wright, and Sam Ryan wanted thirty seconds of his time. So it was on television he first saw it: a Mets cap with the World Series logo on it. Thanks to his spinal stenosis, he probably worked incredibly hard just to get out of bed that morning, let alone to play that night. His smile was the most genuine smile in the history of smiles, Smile Hall of Fame first ballot stuff. We are told hard work pays off, that there is a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, and the eyes of the nicest man in the world told the nicest man in the world the shocking discovery: sometimes it’s true.
Mark Healey (Gotham Baseball)
In a 2010 Gotham Baseball piece, Healey wrote why Wright is his favorite baseball player. For him, it wasn’t just what Wright did on the field, but rather it was something Wright said.
Joe Maracic (Loud Egg)
My favorite David Wright memory was when he was first called up. Watching him and Jose Reyes play side by side was so great even Yankee fans were jealous of our young infield.