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| Look back at: Divisional Playoffs | 
League Championship |  |  | Friday, October 20 Winning aside, Yankees and Mets are far different
 By Bob Klapisch
 Special to ESPN.com
 
 Any out-of-towner -- anyone who actually needs a map to navigate New York 
City -- understandably thinks the Mets and Yankees are separated only by a 
skinny body of water (the East River). By one bridge (the Triborough). And a 
straight, eight-mile drive on the Major Deegan Expressway to the Grand 
Central Parkway (which is always jammed).
    Sounds easy. Sounds friendly. Sounds downright neighborly.
Truth is, the Mets and Yankees couldn't be further apart -- from the 
personality of their clubhouses, to the way their front offices operate, even 
in the type of fans they attract.
 
Mets GM Steve Phillips concedes, "the Yankees are in a unique position, 
because they're the world champs. They've been on center state for a long 
time, and they're obviously the premier team in baseball."
    He's right: the Yankees are a corporate monolith; the Mets are a start-up 
venture that's just launched an IPO. The Mets have a mascot, Mr. Met. The 
Yankees wouldn't lower themselves to that.
    The Yankees wear the conservative Pinstripes and have never needed names 
on the back of their jersey. The Mets have three different sets of uniforms 
and aren't ashamed to use every in-game gimmick to keep their fans at full 
volume.
    Not that anyone needs to be artificially pumped up for the Subway Series; 
this is a New York holy war, a collision not just of two teams, but two 
different philosophies, which is why the matchup is so irresistible, even to 
outsiders.
    The Mets may be the hotter team, having flattened both the Giants and 
Cardinals this month, and it's true the Yankees struggled in both the 
AL Division Series and the ALCS. But the Bombers have 25 world championships 
to the Mets' two, and have been the virtual rulers of the major league 
universe since 1996.
 
    And for those who think the Yankees' reign is about to end, owner George 
Steinbrenner said yesterday, "when the pressure's on, we'll be there again. 
Don't you worry."
    Of course, it's Steinbrenner himself who sets the Yankees apart from the 
Mets. He runs the Bombers single-handedly, signing off on all major personnel 
decision, and paying all the bills. The Boss' overbearing presence is felt 
everywhere at the Stadium, even when he's not in New York.
 
    Stadium security is far heavier than at Shea and employees work in a 
constant level of fear of a surprise visit from Steinbrenner -- or even an 
unexpected phone call. As one senior official put it, "there are secretaries 
here who worry about not picking up the phone fast enough, because it could 
be George on the other end. And the minute he walks into the ballpark, forget it, 
everyone knows."
    Even the gentle Joe Torre seemed to have been affected by the uptight nature 
of his surroundings. Torre allows reporters one group Q-and-A per day, 
usually during batting practice, after which it's literally impossible to get 
him alone.
    By contrast, Mets manager Bobby Valentine will talk to any reporter at 
any time. He usually receives visitors behind the batting cage during BP, and 
feels so comfortable with the media, he's been known to let reporters linger in 
his office until minutes before game time.
    Unlike the Yankees, who seem to be constantly on guard, watching what 
they say, the Mets generally like the press. They like the attention and are 
reveling in the possibility of actually puncturing the Yankees' air of 
superiority.
    Just as Phillips says, the Mets realize they're New York's second team -- 
in terms of prestige and money. The Mets admit they're at their financial 
limit with an $88 million payroll, and are wondering how they'd be able to 
afford both Mike Hampton and free agent Alex Rodriguez on the same budget 
next year, since the two would fatten the Mets' overhead to $100 million a 
year.
    The Yankees, of course, only worry about winning. The cash-concerns come 
later. "They have no budget," one Met official said enviously. "We run our 
operation more like a business. We're not willing to take a (financial) loss 
for the sake of signing a player. The Yankees obviously do things 
differently."
    Although the Mets are hardly impoverished, they do appeal to more of a 
working-class audience, most of them from Queens and Long Island who 
absolutely loathe the Yankees' corporate-clientele.
 
    Al Leiter, who was groomed as a Yankee in the '80s, said, "there's no 
doubt the Yankees draw more of a Manhattan, Wall Street, after-work type of 
fan. That's why you see so many empty seats in the first couple of innings 
there, because people are late getting out of the office. The fans here (at 
Shea) live and die for this team. They're here before BP."
    Indeed, Met fans are so hungry for a winner, they create an atmosphere 
that borders on hostility towards opposing players. Leiter said, "I had a 
couple of Giants tell me they were kind of intimidated here. They said, 'your 
fans are crazy.' And that's not the first time I've heard that."
    Which is why New York is in a state of siege for the next week. This 
isn't just a World Series, it's a war. A holy war. Pray we all survive this.
Bob Klapisch of the Bergen (N.J.) Record covers baseball for ESPN.com.
|  | “ | New York is in a state of siege for the next week. This isn't just a World Series, it's a war. A holy war. Pray we all survive this. ” |  
 
  
 
 
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