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5/22/13

Mack Ade – Morning Report – 5-22-13




Today was Rafael Montero’s spot start at the AAA level and you have to leave impressed: 6.2-IP, 2-ER, 5-K, 1-BB, 2.70-ERA. I’ll take that all day in that league. He actually held Iowa scoreless for the first six innings which is absolutely amazing and it will interesting to see if the Mets now ship him back to Binghamton. I like Michael Baron’s comments today on Twitter: “I would not be shocked if Montero got a cup of coffee this year. The Mets can potentially have a ridiculously good rotation in 2015.”

We talk all the time about the lack of success of the starting rotation, the non-outfielder situation, and the bullpen that is ranked last in the League, but we need to target on another factor regarding why our beloved team is a mess. We know this engine is flawed, but there are active pistons that fire every day and keep this dream alive. The problem is, three of those pistons just aren't punching out the kind of horse power they are supposedly capable of. Ruben Tejada (.213), Lucas Duda (.223), and Ike Davis (.152) have all hit in the range of .280 before in their professional career. Tejada has hit it a number of times as a Met and both Duda and Davis have had hot months that have produced even bigger numbers.. The problem is they aren't close to this season. Look, I don't know how to translate this, but if these three 'pistons' were hitting .280, and Duda and Davis were putting out the kind of power they can, my guess is the Mets would have won at least, oh, let's say, four games. Sure, many of them could be 8-7 losses what with the state of the pitching staff, but four wins seems like a safe number. That would take the team from a 17-25 record to 21-21... and, all of a sudden you're three games away from a wild card slot. Still a rotten pitching staff and no outfield... just your main pistons putting out.

A Cesar Puello update… Puello continues his one man protest of Cory Vaughn being named player of the week. His batting average (as of post 5-20 game) is .320, ranked 7th in the Eastern League (Vaughn is 11th at .305).He’s .395/.465/.579/1.044 in the past 10 games and there is nothing left for him to do at this level. I find the whole Juan Lagares promotion to Queens interesting because it gives me a chance to compare some of these guys games. In my opinion, both Puello and Vaughn have more talent and dimension than Lagares, so maybe there is some hope to building a home grown outfield next year around a Korean to be named later (hint hint).



Congratulations to Joe D and Mitch Petanick on their joint venture, MetsMinors.Net (http://metsminors.net ). The Mets world can’t have enough coverage on the kids in the system and Mitch does as good a job as all the rest of the dedicated bloggers out there. Keep up the good work guys!



From Steve Wilson – Hey Mack, not sure if you've noticed but Toronto has been batting Bautista 2nd! Do you think its something the Mets should try with Wright? Bat David 2nd after Murphy…

                Mack – Can’t hurt, but someone still has to drive them in and, as I wrote earlier, the ‘pistons’ aren’t firing. Steve, just sit back and watch this team once every five games. Harvey will keep the team in the game and you’ll watch around a .750 winning percentage for the year. Forget the rest of the games. They don’t count.



We listed the “Big 10” pitchers in the chain. There are others that are ‘on the cusp’, like St. Lucie’s Alex Panteliodes. The big lefty won his first FSL game yesterday afternoon, going 5.2-IP striking out four, while walking two. There was only one earned run and ‘Pants’ went away with a highly respectable 2.49-ERA.  This was only his fourth start of the young season, after starting out on the DL with ‘inflammation’, or something like that. This is Panteliodes’ second season in the Mets organization (2012 – Savannah: 5-8, 3.64) after being drafted out of the University of Florida. He’s known more as a control pitcher and his ‘go-to’ is his ++ curve that sets up his entire game. His DL stint this spring probably will prevent any chance of him to move on to Binghamton until next season, but, with this team, you never know, right?

Others that could have been considered for this list were starters Hansel Robles, Jake deGrom, Gabriel Ynoa, Luis Cessa, Matt Bowman, and Robert Gsellman and relievers Jack Leathersich, Jeff Walters, and Adam Kolarek.

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