We have a strict NO POLITICS rule here at Amazin' Avenue. Nonetheless, I could not let the passing of Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez go by without sparing a few nonpartisan words about his small role in one of the weirdest nights ever seen at Shea Stadium.

Picture it: Flushing, June 9, 1999. Chavez had been in power for a little over four months. Not yet known as (for lack of a better word) "controversial," he was visiting New York and considered benign enough to ring the closing bell at the stock exchange. Later that evening, Chavez attended the Mets-Blue Jays game at Shea Stadium and received the honor of throwing out the first pitch.

Usually when a special guest is asked to throw out the first pitch at a baseball game, they take a casual approach to the whole thing. Chavez did not.

We have many things to discuss about this photo.

Chavez a lefty? Shoulda seen that coming. And it looks like Chavez not only went into a full windup for his toss, but as this pic shows, he pitched from the rubber, too. I have no idea if his ball made it to the plate without bouncing, but the effort is admirable nonetheless. Chavez brought a glove to the mound, which I consider adorable. Watch people throw out ceremonial first pitches and you will not often see a glove on hand. And keep in mind that he was on official business as a head of state at the time. So that means he either purchased a glove while in New York or brought one with him. My guess is the latter. I like to imagine him flexing and punching it in the stands afterwards, waiting impatiently for a foul ball to come his way.

Usually, folks who throw the first pitch receive their own team jersey for their trouble. I have no idea if Chavez did or not, since his top is obscured by a billowy warmup jacket in Venezuelan colors. We can confirm, however, that he wore uniform pants to the mound. And if you take a look at this pic of the same event, you'll see he also wore cleats. This level of Method Acting makes him the Daniel Day Lewis of ceremonial first pitch throwers.

All of this would be amusing in and of itself. However, Chavez's visit to Shea coincided with a number of odd occurrences, at a particularly odd time of that Mets season. That his presence necessitated a pregame playing of the American and Canadian and Venezuelan national anthems, pushing a 7:40 pm start even later, is perhaps the least strange thing to happen thing that evening.

Before the game even started, the Mets received a blow when rookie Benny Agbayani (then hitting homers at an unsustainable Ruthian pace) suffered a freak injury during batting practice; a foul ball glanced off the batting cage and caromed right into Benny's eye, knocking him out of action. Manager Bobby Valentine was also forced to answer unanswerable questions about Bobby Bonilla, who hadn't played in several days for reasons no one was willing to discuss. "Yesterday, he was asked to pinch-hit and he couldn't," Valentine offered, cryptically. "I was told today it was the same situation. I'm very confused." It would later come out that Bonilla had refused to pinch hit the night before and was being quietly benched for his insolence, but then as now, it was impossible for the Mets to do things like this quietly.

On top of all this nonsense, this game marked the first New York appearance by ex-Yankee David Wells since he'd been traded to the Blue Jays in exchange for Roger Clemens. As such, the sparse crowd on hand seemed tilted decidedly against the home team. With this advantage at his back, Wells shut out the Mets for 8 innings, while his teammates scored three times off of starter Rick Reed.

Wells attempted to finish what he started, but his thoughts may have been elsewhere. June 9 was his birthday, after all, and Boomer had a huge postgame bash planned at SoHo hotspot Veruka. (According to the Times, guests included Sarah Jessica Parker, Lorne Michaels, and Penny Marshall. Club owner Noel Ashman made frantic calls from field level during the game, dictating to his doorman who should be granted entry and who should be made to wait.) Down to their last out, the Mets rallied to tie on back to back doubles from Robin Ventura and Brian McRae.

The game straggled on into the wee hours, outlasting game 5 of the Eastern Conference Finals. (The Knicks beat the Pacers, 101-94, by the way.) There was a palpable frustration in the air when, in the top of the 12th, Mike Piazza was called for catcher's interference. Bobby Valentine protested the call with his usual brio and was ejected for his trouble, not for the first or last time. What was remarkable is that he chose to return to the dugout area looking like this:

Valentine wandered back into the clubhouse less than a minute later, but not before cameras caught him in the act. When questioned about it later, Valentine initially played dumb, then tried to protest he'd violated the spirit but not the letter of the law because he didn't actually enter the dugout. But once he received a two-game suspension and a hefty fine, Bobby V more or less copped to the deed, chalking his antics up to the extremely stressful period the Mets had gone through."It was a mistake," he admitted, "but for a moment the emotions of a group of tight people, it was a break, and for me too." (The Mets won the game, by the way, on a 14th inning RBI single from Rey Ordonez.)

The costumed caper came on the heels of an 8-game losing streak, the Subway Series, and the firing of several of Valentine's closest coaches. It's easy to see how this could make a man snap. However, is it crazy to think that Hugo Chavez's presence at Shea Stadium on an evening when so many crazy things happened was more than just a coincidence? Of course it's crazy. C'mon, now.

Still, uniform pants, guys.