THE QUEENS KNIGHT

How do you treat a player who shines and is

the fighting spirit of a championship team personified?

He batted .391 in the ’86 World Series. He scored

the winning run in Game 6 after carrying his team

to a tenth-inning comeback, and he hit the vital go-ahead homer

in the final game of the match against the Bosox. He symbolized

the team’s never-quit mystique that year. Earlier in the season,

this ultra-talented collection of individuals … Gooden, Strawberry,

Carter, Hernandez, Fernandez, Darling, Wilson, Johnson, Orosco,

McDowell … melded into one rough yet smooth machine when this

semi-star and the Reds’ Eric Davis began a brawl at third base. The

benches cleared and the Mets’ machine never looked back.

Ray Knight, hero of the day, the Series and the season,

was named MVP of that year’s Fall Classic —– and Mets management

rewarded him in his free agency by not fighting for him as he had fought

for them. Ray Knight, 1986 World Series Most Valuable Player and

the straw that stirred the champagne in ’86, played for the Orioles in’87.

He was missed in Queens in the heart of every championship fan. But

As they keep reminding us, it’s, in the end, a business. Emotions do not

enter into business decisions. Why, then, did it hurt so much?

By the way, 2026 marks 40 years since the Mets last won the World Series.

So, how’s business?