With
25% of the off-season budget already spent on former Oakland A and former
Arizona Diamondback Chris Young, the Mets have their work cut out for them to
fill the other outfield vacancy while simultaneously looking to upgrade at
shortstop. To pull off these feat will
take some creativity on the front office’s part (a trait they’ve not yet
demonstrated being able to do with trade acquisitions in the current regime
bringing in luminaries like Collin Cowgill.
At the major league level their biggest acquisition to date is probably
Eric Young, a guy who can run but do little else and was being unceremoniously
dumped by the Rockies but wound up getting swapped for another Collin (McHugh)
facing a similar fate in Queens.
With
Jhonny Peralta already gone to St. Louis and Stephen Drew too rich for the
Wilpons’ collective digestive system, that leaves the trade route if they are
seeking to improve at that position.
Yes, there are a few free agents out there who were once good in a past
life such as Rafael Furcal, or Japanese import Munenori Kawasaki who
is a career .294 hitter who’s stolen as many as 44 in a season but who has not
yet shown anything in the USA (shades of Kaz Matsui). Someone suggested returning Omar Infante to
his original position at SS. Or you
could simply do nothing and hope for another empty .280 average from Ruben
Tejada.
Assuming
the crown jewels of the position like Troy Tulowitski and Hanley Ramirez are
off the table for reasons of salary and need by the current employers, how then
can the Mets front office find a pearl hidden among a sea of overpriced
oysters?
Talk
to the division rival Washington Nationals about their erstwhile 2nd
baseman Danny Espinosa who has completely fallen out of favor due to decreased
production directly attributable to injuries to his shoulder and then a broken
bone in his wrist. It got so bad for the
26 year old Espinosa that when they moved uber-prospect Anthony Rendon to his
former home at 2B, they did to him what the Mets did to Tejada – refusing to
promote him to the big club in September to stave off his Super Two status from
kicking in. Espinosa came up as a
shortstop and has slugged over 17 and 20 HRs in his first two seasons in the
big leagues, yet he’s become the forgotten man in Washington as a result of
some health problems. He finished his
AAA season on a 14/22 tear and should not necessarily cost a fortune in terms
of talent to acquire.
Speedster
Dee Gordon of the Los Angeles Dodgers is another player with nowhere to ply his
trade with Hanley Ramirez firmly entrenched at shortstop. Speed is the name of his game. In 669 big league plate appearance he has 66
stolen bases. The problem with trading
with LA is that they’re so loaded at nearly every position that they aren’t in
need of very much (except, perhaps, salary relief). If you want to expand the deal then talk to
them about Joc Pederson who has no place to play in the 4-man outfield of Matt
Kemp, Yasiel Puig, Andre Ethier and Carl Crawford. I’d even entertain Ethier if the Dodgers were
willing to eat 50% or more of his salary.
His contract is horrific with an average annual salary of nearly $18 million
per year through the year 2017 (including a buyout of his 2018 season). Ugh!
Now
that Peralta cashed in on better living through chemistry, it’s unlikely the
San Diego Padres feel any shame in hanging onto Everth Cabrera, another speed
burner. However, if you catch them on a
particularly sanctimonious day then dangling Ike Davis, Ruben Tejada and some
minor league pitching might make them consider it. Yonder Alonso can move to the outfield where
none of the regulars are making the All-Star team anytime soon.
Three
teams come to mind with an embarrassment of riches at the shortstop
position. The Tampa Bay Rays have both
Yunel Escobar ($5 million per season through 2015) and Ben Zobrist ($7.5
million per season). Both would
represent a huge upgrade for the Mets.
They need someone to replace James Loney.
The
Oakland A’s have Jed Lowrie coming off a terrific season and they may just want
to sell high on him since they have Hiroyuki Nakajima in AAA. They also just signed utilityman Nick Punto
so it’s entirely possible one of them may be up for grabs. Their highest priced player is Yoenis
Cespedes who is slated to earn $10.5 million per season for the next two
years. It’s possible to approach them
about one of their shortstops plus Cespedes for Ike Davis and some strong
pitching prospects like Rafael Montero.
That would solve two problems for the Mets.
The
Arizona Diamondbacks similarly have a surplus of riches on the left side of the
diamond. Didi Gregorius and Chris Owings
are both natural shortstops who have power and speed. Owings numbers are actually better than
Gregorius’ but he came with the higher accolades from the minors. Currently they have one of the weakest
outfields in baseball and obtaining Daniel Murphy would enable them to replace
one of the light hitters with incumbent third baseman Martin Prado who has
played plenty of outfield in his career.
J.J.
Hardy is in the last year of his deal with the Orioles who could use a major
upgrade at 2B and one at DH. Ike Davis
could slide over to 1B with Chris Davis taking over the DH role. Daniel Murphy could play 2B. They could then slide Manny Machado over to
his natural position of SS. If they didn’t
want Ike Davis, then Wilmer Flores could take over the hot corner.
Also
in his last year is Asdrubal Cabrera of the Cleveland Indians. On the one hand they appear to be in the
win-now mode having inked both Michael Bourn and Nick Swisher last year, then
swooping in early on David Murphy this year.
However, they also let their number one starter and best reliever walk
away, so it would seem that any team that could offer up pitching might catch
their attention. Prospect Francisco
Lindor is knocking on the door and a pitching-centric deal with Ruben Tejada as
a one-year stop gap thrown in might interest them. Cabrera earns $10 million in 2014.
Finally
there’s Starlin Castro of the Cubs. They
have a guy named Javier Baez who slugged 37 HRs this year between A and AA, so
there are footsteps behind him despite his contract that averages $8 million
per year for the next 8 years. This year
it only costs $5 million. Considering
they’re paying a scrub like Chris Young $7.25 million, then Castro being a .283
hitter with as many as 14 HRs, 78 RBIs and 25 SBs in a season at a premium
position could be considered a steal. Still, we know how Mr. Alderson and his
puppeteers feel about long term contracts (David Wright’s notwithstanding), so
the likelihood of striking some kind of deal for Castro is slimmer than signing
Shin-Soo Choo.
It
will take some creativity to solve the myriad of Mets offensive problems. The problem is that this front office doesn’t
have spare Cy Young Award winners, batting champions or All-Star outfielders to
offer up in trade. Consequently it may
take some finagling to get things done.
Here’s hoping they know how to move the chess pieces.
Well done Reese.
ReplyDeleteImpressive.
Danny Espinosa is a very intriguing player considering his proven power (Washington's big ball park)
and young age
Oakland and Arizona are also tempting due to the young ages of their shortstops
Hardy's veteran record however make him attractive
Normally you don't see much dealing between division rivals but despite their underachieving last year, there's a world of difference between Atlanta/Washington and the rest of the division where the rules about not helping a rival may not apply.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the compliment, Bob.
ReplyDeleteI would be very happy to take Espinosa off Washington's hands
ReplyDeleteEspinosa played 294 games at SS in the minors vs. 48 at 2B. In the majors it's almost the reverse -- 352 at 2B and 39 at SS.
ReplyDeleteJared Lowrie and Chris Owings would be nice building blocks to fit into the Mets future
ReplyDeleteBaez would be the pefect dream target (even if he needs some more time in the minors)
Why not let Tejada, Tovar and Flores compete for SS and save your pitching prospects or if you have
ReplyDeleteto trade Montero at least trade him for a big power hitting outfielder! Yes I said Flores and even though the mets don't believe he can play SS he played SS in the minors for years and besides what
do they have to lose? If not he can compete with Duda or Davis for first base or at least platoon there
or he can compete with E Young at 2nd if they trade Murphy?
I remember seeing a game when Jordany Valdespin played SS for the Mets against the Yankees and when the inning mercifully ended, I thought, "Maybe this game is harder than it looks on TV." The same may be true of Flores, but agree that unless you try it you'll never know.
ReplyDeleteBlastingZone - I've been wondering the same thing about Flores @ SS. How much less range could he have than J. Turner? I'm also wondering if the Mets shipping him to fitness camp might make him a bit faster all around - hands, feet etc.
ReplyDeleteBlasting -
ReplyDeleteI'm a big fan of Flores but I watched him in person for 3 seasons and, trust me, he's not a shortstop.
But I don't understand why he hasn't been given the 2014 1B job... and is playing 1B right now somewhere in winter ball.
He potentially could be the best RBI bat in the system
I forget where I read it, 3 yrs ago.. maybe
ReplyDelete.
But the writer insisted the Mets were missing the opportunity to make flores a catcher
Interesting thought (hind-sight at this point)
Imagine if Flores was a catching prospect over the past 3 yrs?