New York Mets cheerleader Jerry Seinfeld blames the team’s collapse on Timmy Trumpet, who played Edwin Diaz near Kom recently.
The New York Mets had some solid success after the All-Star break with the Crosstown Yankees struggling. But, as baseball progressed, momentum shifted away from the Mets and toward the Atlanta Braves. After losing 8-2 to the Pittsburgh Pirates on Tuesday night, the Mets shared the top spot in the NL East with the Braves, who defeated the Oakland Athletics 10-9.
What went wrong with the Mets? Well, if you ask comedian and Mets comedian Jerry Seinfeld, he misses Timmy Trumpet.
Jerry Seinfeld holds back Timmy Trumpet for Mets loss in the Premier League
Timmy Trumpet has teamed up with Blasterjaxx for the hit song “Narco,” which the Mets near Edwin Diaz uses to enter the game from the playing field. In the September 1 game against the Los Angeles Dodgers, Trumpt was alive in person to play Diaz on the Mound.
Since then, they have lost two of their three games to the Washington Nationals. Not only that, but first bowler Max Scherzer was put on the injured list due to a problem with his left side.
As you can see in the tweet above, Seinfeld talked about the time the Baha’ men played “Who Let the Dogs Out” at the 2000 World Championships. That was the team’s reunion song that year, and the musical group played it before Game Four. Next, the Mets lost 3-2 in Game 4 and 4-2 in Game 5 to drop the World Championship to the Yankees.
Seinfeld has seen this before, and he feels that the live trumpet performance may have given the Mets a “bad mojo.”
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