During the 1990s, as New York was transformed from a crumbling city into
a vibrant metropolis, the New York Mets were anything but vibrant.
Beginning in 1999, the team waged a battle to recapture the hearts of
New York baseball fans from their crosstown rivals, and they came closer
to succeeding than anyone dared dream. At the same time, mayor Rudy
Giuliani--architect of this new New York and those rivals' biggest
cheerleader--was engaged in his own battles to win a Senate seat and to
save his sagging legacy as savior of the city.
Yells For Ourselves chronicles the 1999 and 2000 seasons of the New
York Mets, and explores how local and national politics were interwoven
with the obsessions of a baseball-mad city. It paints a picture of this
forgotten time in the history of baseball and New York, when new
ballparks, rapid expansion, and "enhanced training methods" caused a
home run explosion; when rising free agent salaries separated teams into
the Haves and Have Nots; and when a politico's answer to the question
Mets or Yankees? could make global headlines. Above all, Yells For
Ourselves captures what happened when an underdog struggled to find an
identity in a city with no room left for lovable losers.