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Victor Zambrano

Victor Zambrano
Ultimate Mets Database popularity ranking: 417 of 1252 players
Zambrano
Victor Manuel Zambrano
Born: August 6, 1975 at Los Teques, Venezuela
Throws: Right Bats: Both
Height: 6.00 Weight: 203

Victor Zambrano was the most popular Ultimate Mets Database daily lookup on August 6, 2004, and June 1, 2005.

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First Mets game: August 5, 2004
Last Mets game: May 6, 2006

Share your memories of Victor Zambrano

HERE IS WHAT OTHER METS FANS HAVE TO SAY:

Tom
September 1, 2004
This is what we got for Scott Kazmir? I feel sick!

Joe Figliola
September 9, 2004
Gee, I didn't hear all these negative comments about the trade when Zambrano pitched well and won his first two decisions. It's only after his injury and Kazmir winning his first start (he has since been bombed) that everyone's been screaming.

My problem with this trade is that it was too thin. I think that both sides needed to add players in what could have been one blockbuster of a deal. Had the Mets offered more (Matt Peterson and Cliff Floyd, for example), perhaps they could have added Carl Crawford (a great leadoff/average/triples hitter) or Rocco Baldelli (a steady .280 hitter with some pop and a pretty decent arm) to their roster.

Leave Zambrano alone. He was so upset when he got hurt... at least he gives a damn about playing and trying to give a good show. Let's wait a year or so before we can start playing the blame game.

Bob Sagget
September 24, 2004
This guy has good stuff but he is pretty wild with a ton of walks. To trade your best pitching prospect for him is crazy. He is not that good. The trade is supposed to be for now and the future but they traded away the brightest star in the organization for a guy with a bad arm. Dumb, dumb, dumb. This will be a huge mistake in a few years. I hope Zambrano does well but I hope Kazmir does well too. Too bad they paased on Kazmir for Soriano earlier in the year. That would have made a lot more sense.

Mr. Sparkle
November 18, 2004
I was in Binghamton to catch a B-Mets game on Friday July 30th hoping to catch the phenom Scott Kazmir start a game. I'm standing in front of a black board with the line up written on it and I see Kazmir's name as the starting pitcher so I'm pumped. Then a guy comes up and tells me that they traded him. So I'm floored since I think this is their best pitching prospect since Dwight Gooden. So I say to the guy "For who, Randy Johnson?" And he says no, Victor Zambrano. What? VICTOR ZAMBRANO!! Are you kidding me? This guy has thrown 96 walks in 128 innings! That is atrocious! And they trade their best pitching prospect in 20 years for him! I don't get it.

I immediately thought, well how come they didn't trade him for Alfonso Soriano? That I could understand. But for a mediocre pitcher with control problems? Then you find out later he had arm problems the Mets knew about before they traded for him. What the hell are they thinking? I know everyone loves Rick Peterson but come on! Did Al Leiter really black ball Kazmir? That shouldn't happen in any organization.

I know prospects don't always pan out and Mets prospects in particular don't but if I'm wrong about Kazmir than I will never care about another prospect again. Then again I thought Ed Yarnall was a can't miss prospect. They say Zambrano has "good stuff" but that's what they said about Dave Mlicki and other than his one start in the first subway series game ever, what they hell did he ever do? I doubt Zambrano will be a stud.

Danny Baseball
November 19, 2004
This is yet again another Mets mistake. We traded away the second coming of Jerry Koosman for this dud with bad pitching mechanics. This guy's arm problems are caused because he puts too much stress on his elbow but I guess these are the same dopes who scouted Kaz Matsui. I'm telling you if I were a drug dealer I'd supply the Mets scouts their drugs.

Joe P.
March 14, 2005
As I watched Zambrano get lit up in Vero Beach, then read the next day in Newsday that Kazmir was named the D'Rays number 3 starter, it makes this deal look even dumber than it did at last year's deadline. Regardless of what Ricky P may profess, we will rue the day this deal took place. The only thing that Victor Z can take out of this horrible part of his short career that will surely end in his release will be that Jim Fregosi will owe him a beer for getting him relieved from the short end of the worst trade in the Metropolitan's history.

Mr. Sparkle
April 25, 2005
I'm trying real hard to not hate this guy but it's not working. He drives me crazy. He's "got good stuff" but he's got a hard time getting it over the plate and then when he does, it gets whacked all over the ball park. He's got potential but he's a lot of work that I don't think Rick Peterson is quite up to the task. Even if Kazmir does not pan out, how do you trade your top chip for a very questionable guy? We should have gotten better quality for our crown jewel. Zambrano could be gone before the season is over if he doesn't get whatever Peterson is preaching.

Mr. Sparkle
October 13, 2005
Zambrano proved to be simply a bad and inconsistent pitcher throughout 2005. He had his moments but was always in trouble, threw a ton of pitches and although he was able to get out of jams some of the time should not have been in them in the first place if he wants to be a reliable starting pitcher. Overall I give him a D+ and that's generous. At the same time I read Scott Kazmir's name as a potential rookie of the year in the AL. I think we can offically call the trade a disaster. I think the only hope for Zambrano is to try to convert him into a set up man with hopes that he can close some day. Or I'd be happy to see him traded but you'll never get close to a Kazmir back.

Barney Beaugareux
December 21, 2005
I hate this guy with a passion. Everyone else points out the trade for Kazmir and that was truly horrible but Zambrano on his own has been a joke. He can't hit the strike zone on any consistent basis. He sometimes pitches well for 5 innings and then implodes. He's always on the ropes and sometimes gets out of it but always makes you sweat. It's like watching Doug Sisk as a starter. Let's admit the mistake and get rid of this guy. Then again, who the hell would want him?

larry_burns_springfield
May 5, 2006
This guy should have pitched for the pre-2004 Boston Red Sox. He could choke on sherbert. He is terrible and will ALWAYS find a way to lose a game. I am beginning to react like some of my college buddies who would turn off Red Sox games when Bob Stanley came in, I cannot watch him. He is terrible and he takes too much time on the mound. Trade him for Cookie Rojas!

Phil Thiegou
May 19, 2006
Sparkle was right. At times he pitches like Sandy Koufax, then the next inning he would pitch like Sandy Duncan. He could strike out a juiced up Barry Bonds blindfolded then give up a hit parade to a bunch of Mendoza line residents. Maybe he blew out his elbow 'coz he tried TOO much. Too bad his elbow wasn't as strong as his heart. Although whenever Scott Kazmir pitches a gem for the D-Rays, the Mets announcers and guys on WFAN put some oomph behind that report.

FrankieB
July 12, 2006
I don't blame Zambrano, he was in a tough spot, but the awful truth of the matter is that the trade for this guy was THE WORST trade in NY Mets history.

Worse than Ryan.

Worse than Seaver.

Worse than Dykstra.

We still haven't learned the whole story of how this idiocy took place. Although we know the end result -- a blue-chip lefty fireballer and All-Star is no longer with us, and Omar Minaya is our counselation prize.

Yes, 'counselation' prize, not consolation prize. A lot of us will need counseling on a shrink's couch when we think of this trade.

Mr. Sparkle
July 5, 2007
Hasn't pitched in Toronto since May 8. Not sure what happened to him. His ERA is over 10.00 and his WHIP is 2.91. He's pitched in 8 games this year, 2 starts, for a total of 10.2 innings. That is atrocious.

Meanwhile Scott Kazmir is 5-5 with an unimpressive 4.28 ERA and a WHIP of 1.56 which is not very good. Kazmir walks way too many batters.

Brendan
September 16, 2007
I don't know what all of you are talking about. This guy was fantastic and it was excellent trade for the Mets.

Who wouldn't want someone whose arm fell off in literally the second game he ever pitched? It reminded me of Jim Fregosi. But it doesn't stop there! Typical Mets organization bonehead moves, refusing to give up on the guy for what seemed like an injury plagued era.

All I ever heard from Mets brass was that Zambrano was on the comeback, but if you saw the way he pitched against the Rockies that fateful day, you know that he was doomed right from the start. What a hopeless loser - he should have stayed as a position player, maybe he would have been useful to us then.

scott r
January 7, 2009
I feel bad for the guy. Not his fault. Part of one the worst trades of all time and blows out his arm. For 2½ season with Mets has one decent season to show for it.








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