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Experimental
Surgery For Hydrocephalus Successful
NEW YORK
, NY - Mr. Met, the lovably hapless mascot of the New York Mets baseball
team, has had successful correction of long-standing hydrocephalus, according
to sources close to the organization.
 In
addition to the placement of a ventriculoperitoneal shunt, neurosurgeons
at The New York Presbyterian Hospital also removed Met's solid cork pituitary
gland and 3 inches of unnecessary neck tissue during the 8 1/2 hour surgery
(a National League record).
Met's physicians,
who expect a full recovery by the All-Star game, praised the ne'er-do-well
mascot's rascally ways, as well as the neurosurgical advances that contributed
to the experimental procedure's success.
"Thanks
to Mr. Met, we now know that it is possible to replace a worn-out wad
of cork with high tech polyurethane, and that, when you get right down
to it, synthetic leather feels pretty damn much like the real thing,"
said Saeed Patel, MD, a team advisor. "And post-op, we saw some serious
Pennant Fever!"
Met, 38,
was first diagnosed with hydrocephalus at birth in 1962, at which time
his chances for long term survival, much like those of the Mets themselves,
appeared dismal.
"Yeah,
that was the hardest year," Met said outside his home in Flushing,
NY. "Not only did the team lose like a hundred fifty, hundred sixty
games, but on top of that I've got this humongous head!!"
"After
that things got better, and of course you know about the team's successes,
and I'd been able to manage pretty well too. But in the last couple of
years, something changed - maybe it's the air, or the ballparks, or that
androstene-whatchamacallit, but I've literally been all knocked out all
around, and that Fiorinal just wasn't cuttin' it anymore."
Met also
cited the easy target that his skull made for drunken fans at Shea Stadium.
"Those fans, they're the best in the world," he smiled, "but
gettin' hit in the head with a couple dozen of those glass Bud bottles
every game sure does sting after a while."
The Mets
organization has been extremely supportive, said Met. "One time [pitching
legend Tom] Seaver autographed my face by mistake, and next thing you
know, he got sent off to Cincinnati, just like that. That's the kind of
support I'm talking about."
Met is expected
to join the team in August, where he will continue to provide pep support
and comic relief from his usual position atop the Mets dugout.
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