TP wrote –
Mack, Here's my 2 cents, or 1 cent - whether Alderson lied
about 2014 or miscalculated doesn't matter to me. He misrepresented their
intents the last 3 years by saying then intended to be competitive, whatever
that is. I understand with the fiscal constrains there was no other choice, but
from a fan perspective he was double speaking. The standard for 2014 is
fielding a team that can compete for a playoff spot, regardless of cost. At
this point, with an $82 million payroll, less than last year, he has failed to
do so. Even the most optimistic fan can't reasonably see this group as better
than 80 wins. The Nats, Phillies, and Marlins are all improved. The Braves
haven't improved but were 20+ games better than the Mets last year. Alderson
needs to add another 5 potential wins to this team between now and opening day
or I will consider this offseason another failure. Not just in the sense of
2014, but the weaker the team is in 2014, the less of a chance it will be good
in 2015 and 2016. Other teams have good young players on the way too. It isn't
acceptable to just keep waiting for the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.
Mack – Well, we seem to have hit a nerve on Mack’s Mets about
whether or not Sandy Alderson and the Wilpons
have lied to the fan base about the amount of money the Mets were going to
spend this year on the team.
Yes, we all thought the Mets would spend more in this
off-season. Some of you think Alderson and or Wilpon has lied to the fan base.
I don’t.
I think we all went into this off-season anticipating that it
would take two new outfielders, a new shortstop, an addition to the pen, and
some insurance in the rotation. Every expert, from Mets officials to beat
writers, figured this would result in an overall salary higher than last year.
Two of these pegs remain missing, and could remain missing
when the season starts, but everyone has to realize something… there are no
other positions to fill right now. You might not like the signings of Colon,
Lannan, Granderson, and/or Young, but, other than short and maybe one pen slot,
the 2014 team is done regardless to what the overall salary is.
No one was ever looking for someone on first, second, third,
behind the plate, or other pitching slots.
And, it’s not Wilpon or Alderson’s fault that most of the 2014
team are either players working their way through arbitration or under team
control.
And one more thing… the Mets may still sign Stephen Drew and some reliever in the $3-5mil a year
range. This story isn’t done until April 1st.
Bob said...
Mack, these cost cutting decisions that the owners/gm have
made for the Mets have hurt the organization in so many ways. It is not just
the on field product that we have had to watch over the past few years. These
poor decisions and misleading statements have resulted in the entire Met brand
being reduced to garbage in the baseball world’s eyes. How many fans have
stopped watching, going to games, paying for merchandise? How many fans have
stopped encouraging the next generation of fans to come on board? Players avoid
the Mets. Money has not been spent to improve the minor league system to the
degree it could have been. (not only draft decisions, but also international
free agents from Japan, Cuba, Latin America).Our Triple A team has become
nomadic and un-wanted. One minor league team was disbanded and then reformed. The
Mets have lost their Flag-ship radio station. the list goes on and on. How much
money have the Wilpons lost over the past few years and the future because they
were trying to save? I would love to see an analysis somewhere tallying up what
these decisions have cost the team already and in projections in the next few
years. Playoff revenue, ticket sales, merchandise sales, tv revenue, radio
revenue, missed opportunities in other marketing opportunities that I have no
idea about. I don't have the answer to these questions. I don't know if the
ledgers would lean one way or the other. but, the teams misrepresentations and
poor decisions have not made me confident they have thoroughly taken all
aspects into account in a cost-benefit analysis.
Mack – Jesus, after reading you I’m ready to slit my throat,
but the bottom line is still, whether you believe Alderson and/or Wilpon, the
money still wasn’t there. The banks have them by the nuts and there isn’t
enough projected revenue in 2014 to warrant
$100mil+ payroll.
This is much more personal for you and some of the readers
here. I stopped being a Mets fan the day I became a Mets beat reporter.
Frankly, you can’t be both at the same time.
As I said earlier to TP, let’s see how the pre-season ends up
on April 1st and revisit this. But it still doesn't change the fact that the monies they currently owe under refinancing deals with lending institutions just doesn't allow them to free spend at will.
I wish it still worked that way but it doesn't
.Adam Rubin –
I wish it still worked that way but it doesn't
.Adam Rubin –
Even after adding left-hander John Lannan to the
fifth-starter competition, the Mets still may be in the market for more
rotation options. "Lannan does not necessarily preclude us from signing
another starter," assistant GM John Ricco told ESPNNewYork.com.
Mack – this is the kind of operational chatter that stumps
me. First of all, if it is true, keep it to yourself. And lastly, if it isn’t,
why play games like this? This is how Sandy Alderson and
Fred Wilpon got in trouble this year saying the
Mets were going to spend more than was on the payroll last year, and they then
go out and replace huge salaries with smaller ones. There are just so many
slots on a roster folks.
Five major contracts came off the books. Johan Santana ($25.5mil), John
Buck ($6.5mil), Frank Francisco ($6.5mil),
Shaun Marcum ($4mil), and Jason Bay ($18.125mil). That’s a total of $60.625mil
They’ve been replaced by Curtis
Granderson ($13mil), Bartolo Colon ($9mil),
Chris Young ($7.25mil). Both Granderson and
Colon’s contract were back ended so there would additional money available for
a proper signing of a shortstop and reliever. Omar
Quintanilla should add around $700K here and John
Lannan another $2-3mil.
There seems to be plenty of money left to sign Stephen Drew if negotiations haven’t soured each party
against each other.
Let’s wait this out.
4 comments:
Mack,
Thanks for taking the time to respond to my comments. I do agree that there is still time for improvements, and opening day is the deadline. Hopefully Alderson still has a couple of tricks up him sleeve.
If the banks are holding them up with spending, how do they find money to be involved in rebuilding the chop shop area across the street and being involved in a soccer team? I just don't get it... And please don't tell me that's what business people do, cause that just doesn't cut it for me. They need to either spend more money or reduce the price of tickets to represent what they are actually investing in payroll.
They have their heads so far up their arses, they don't know how to run the baseball business. So please sell the club!!!
And now I read Ike's father is calling the Mets out, for stupid sit again? They are run all wrong from ownership to the 4 headed gm...they need to learn to shut up or put up that's the only way to make it in the NY market.
John -
This is a lesson in apples and oranges.
First, you're assuming it's the same lending institution. It probably isn't.
Second, there will be a whole different projection of future revenue not based on baseball. Chop shops become condos and projected revue become rents, leases, or purchases of real state.
Thirdly, there can easily be a differet mix of partners on each of these ventures.
You're angry at the results of the Mets deal, but this doesn't stop the wheels of progres in the real estate world. The Queen side of the neighborhood around CitiField is going to be a booming investment area and a fool wouldn't want to be part of it.
In the long run John, this will translate as good hit for the Mets. There eventually be a renegotiation of the SNY deal and, like every scandal, fans will eventually return if the team starts winning.
And they will in 2015.
I wish I still had the link to the projected land projects for that area. Theya re incredible if only half of them are built.
Support sporting events like soccer, tennis or any other sport will just enhance the area.
But why is it that they cry poverty, make us payoff their debt and have enough $$$ to invest in something else. So we are holding down the fort for them while they go out and play? That doesn't bode well for me, maybe it does for others?
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