Coming Up Later -
11am - Christopher Soto - Mack's Met's Top 25- #17 3B/LF Dustin Lawley
Mike Piazza @mikepiazza31 - Heard the news about Derek Jeter and want to wish him the best! He was a credit to his team and the city! Class guy, God Bless!
11am - Christopher Soto - Mack's Met's Top 25- #17 3B/LF Dustin Lawley
Mike Piazza @mikepiazza31 - Heard the news about Derek Jeter and want to wish him the best! He was a credit to his team and the city! Class guy, God Bless!
Here are the OBP
leaders or the organization in 2013: - Alan Dykstra –
Binghamton .436, Eric Campbell - Las Vegas -
.435, Jayce Boyd – Sav/St. Lucie - .410, Cesar Puello – Binghamton - .403, Dominic Smith – GCL/K-Port - .398, Brandon Nimmo – Savannah - .397… How come we never
hear anything about these top three guys?
A little reminder about
the importance of ‘pitcher-catcher’ reporting days. The process is pretty
simple. All pitchers that were invited, be them hard core veterans or free
agent minor league invitees, are assigned a mound to report to at a specific
time. Those mounds are usually located at one of two locations… the four or
five located just outside the back door of the main clubhouse (located between
the stadium and main backfield, next to the team parking lot) or on the stealth
mounds tucked in between two back fields two-thirds the way down towards the
minor league complex. Mets officials don’t like reporters there. I had my
yearly get together with pitching coach Rick Waits one
year there and one of the Mets bross asked me to leave (and leave Rick alone as
well).
The days that pitchers
report can start something really big. I was there when a relatively unknown R.A. Dickey took one of those mounds outside the
clubhouse.
John Delcos –
John Lannan: He’s 29, left-handed and comes with a reasonable contract. The
Mets signed him as Mejia insurance, but he has shown signs of becoming a solid
starter. From 2008-2011, he started 31, 33, 25 and 33 games respectively for
some pretty bad Washington teams, and three times worked at least 180 innings. There’s
promise here, and because of his age, he’s worth keeping. The significant
question: Will he get a chance to show his durability? http://www.newyorkmetsreport.com/2014/02/13/mets-have-numbers-but-also-questions-in-rotation/
Mack – Delcos wrote about all the questions that surround the
2014 Mets rotation, but these were his specific thoughts on Lannon. I really
like this minor league signing and consider Lannan the early on favorite for
the opening day SP5 slot. Lannan became expendable in Washington after they
signed Gio Gonzales and Edwin
Johnson. Prior to that, he pitched 10-13, 33-starts, 3.70 for a crud
team.
Don’t look for mad stats here from the lefty. The fastball barely hits 90, but
he’s learned how to produce the innings needed for a successful SP5. He doesn’t
eat a ton, throws pitchers with less than an hour between them, and s still
north of thirty. Adam Rubin also reported that Lannan is ‘fully recovered’ from
last August’s knee surgery.
David Wright -
Jeff C asked - .
The discussion, as usual, begins with David Wright, the face of the franchise and the team’s best position player. Although he’s no longer the five-category, first-round monster he was in the closing years of the Bush administration, Wright still delivers enough at a typically shallow position to rank just outside third base Studsville, having delivered a .307/.390/.514 slash line with a .391 wOBA last year. Regrettably, those numbers were crammed into less than 500 plate appearances, as a right hamstring injury zapped more than a month and a half and limited him to 18 homers, 58 RBIs and 17 steals. Yes, it’s been four years since Wright approached 30 homers and crossed the 100 RBI threshold, and if you’re concerned about injuries for the 31-year-old – he has, it must be said, averaged just 123 games over the past three seasons – that’s understandable. But on draft day, the third base options after Wright lack Captain America’s upside or ability to spread production up and down a 5×5 sheet. http://www.fangraphs.com/fantasy/mets-infield-david-wright-and-some-upside/
Jeff C asked - .
Here is a question revolving around the SS position.
Now that the Dodgers
have made another international signing, do you think that Dee Gordon would be available? If so, what are your
thoughts on him as a potential SS for the Mets? He is a career .300 hitter in
the minors, good speed, flashes of great D. He just seems like a guy with a
high ceiling that would be worth a shot at
Mack – Jeff, thanks for a very good question.
Before we get into
Gordon, right now my main concern is chemistry. This whole Stephen Drew-Ruben Tejada mess
is just going to leave a bad taste in my mouth no matter how it plays out. At
this point, I want a fresh face, and maybe Gordon could be the guy.
Gordan has some
positive things going for himself (is that proper english?) (do you capitalize
‘English’?). First, he only turns 26 in April. He also bats left, has great
speed on the basepath, and is a natural shortstop. Past that, there are some
questions.
First, he followed up a
nice 2011 (224-AB, .304) with a meh 2012 (303-AB, .228). He spent most of 2013
back at the AAA level and only had 94-at bats with the Dodgers (.234,
.314/OBP). He also had a thumb injury and lost his SS job to Hanley Ramirez.
Not everyone considers
him a good defensive shortstop and word out of Los Angeles is that he is being
converted to second base.
Is he a better option
than Tejada?
Right now, my guess is I’d offer
someone like Jake deGrom or Cory Mazzoni.
Mack,
ReplyDeleteYes we are all Drewed out, and while he is more of a know quantity, I would fully support bringing in a guy like Dee Gordon to provide some competition for Tejada. Yeah he is risky and his glove is inpredictable, but at least he is young with some potential upside. nothing personally against Omar Q, but they just need more out of the position than he can offer.
Lannan presents an intrigueing and troublesome (at least, to me) possibility. We could probably use another lefty in the rotation, and if he pitches to his 2008 - 2011 form he'd be a pretty decent #5. That should be especially true in the NL East, which is stocked with so many lefty mashers.
ReplyDeleteHowever, I'd hate to see him provide a roadblock to Mejia's development. I think Mejia is ready to bust out and have a stellar season if he stays healthy. He could be a long term asset and member of the core if he has a good 2014 with the Mets. The factor that might save Mejia's bacon is that Lannan's career splits vs. LHBs is virtually identical to his splits against righties. So he would offer no big advantage against the Harpers, LaRoches, Freemans, Heywards, Howards, Utleys, Reveres, Browns or Jones.
Herb -
ReplyDeleteThe one problem is, if Mejia and Lannan both pitch well in the spring, you know TC will go with the veteran...