It was scheduled to be unveiled last summer, but the pandemic delayed matters. And it was delayed again when the start of the 2022 season was pushed back by the recent labor standoff.
That the ceremony ended up taking place on April 15 — Jackie Robinson Day, when baseball annually honors Robinson’s first game in the major leagues — was a nice touch, coincidental as it might have been. As it is, the Seaver statue is close by Citi Field’s rotunda, which is graced by a large tribute to Robinson. So the hero of Queens, No. 41, will be within shouting distance of the hero of Brooklyn, who famously wore No. 42.
The Mets will also soon retire the No. 17 worn by Keith Hernandez in a ceremony set for this summer. He was the leader of the Mets’ 1986 championship team and, for some, the best player the Mets have had since Seaver. As with the Seaver statue, it arguably took too long to honor Hernandez. As with the Seaver statue, the decision to take No. 17 out of circulation was actually made by the Wilpons, as was the decision to retire the No. 36 worn by Jerry Koosman, Seaver’s left-handed sidekick, last August.