There
is a chance, though possibly small, that the Mets will have two sizzling left
handed first baseman bats at the end of spring training.
There’s
also a chance they both will be healthy.
If
so, phones will ring and, most probably, will be from both the Milwaukee Brewers and Pittsburgh
Pirates. Both never did solve their first base woes and what better
would be Ike Davis sending line drives to the
gap or Lucas Duda going consistently yard.
Pittsburgh
has already proven they are trade friendly with Sandy
Alderson. Milwaukee hasn’t. An attempted trade by Alderson to secure
pitching almost prospect Tyler Thornburg never
got to… err… first base. I never could figure out that one unless it involved
an unnamed third team that wanted the guy.
The
Mets would be looking to improve at shortstop and a few things need to be said
before discussing this any further. For certain, Jean
Segura will be the Brewers’ shortstop, Aramis
Ramirez will be at third, and Rickie Weeks will
play second. Weeks competition at 2B, Scooter Gennett,
hasn’t played yet this spring, and Jeff Bianchi (14-39,
.368) is the UT guy. Elian Herrera, who has
played some short in the minors, is probably your 3rd consideration for UT.
Others that have played some short this spring include Juan
Francisco (L – 13-26, .346), Sean Halton (R
– 6-23, .261), Mark Reynolds ( R – 10-41, .244),
Martin Maldonado (R - 3-3, .128), and Lyle Overbay(L - 4-33, .121).
The
Brewers simply do not match up with the Mets for a shortstop… but what they do
have is a ton of pitching coming down the pipeline.
The
current rotation stacks up as: Yovani Gallardo, Kyle Lohse,
Matt Garza, Marco Estrada, and Wily Peralta…
but look what’s on the way:
#1
prospect RHP Jimmy Nelson (2013), #2 RHP Taylor Jungmann (2014), #3 RHP Johnny Hellweg (2013), #10 RHP Michael Blasek
(2013), #14 RHP Ariel Pena, #15 RHP Drew Gagnon (2014), #16 LHP Jed
Bradley.
You
would have to think the Mets could approach one of the teams that has an extra
shortstop (or two) with the names of a couple of these pitchers to pick from.
Regarding
Pittsburgh, they still are looking for an upgrade from Chris
McGuiness platooning with Gary Sanchez. They
go into season with three shortstops, none of which light my fire: Josh Harrison (10-30, .333), Jordy
Mercer (5-26, .192), and Clint Barnes (4-21,
.190).
Now,
if you want to really roll the dice, offer up either Duda or Davis for
top prospect SS Alen Hanson (4-10, .400) – ETA 2015
MLB: Scouting Grades:
Hit: 55 | Power: 40 | Run: 60 | Arm: 45 | Field: 55 | Overall: 55
Hanson was one of the
Pirates' breakout prospects in 2012, and he continued that progress in 2013,
finishing his second year of full-season ball with Double-A Altoona.
Hanson has fast
hands, helping him square up balls consistently from both sides of the plate.
He has more power than his frame would suggest and can drive balls to all
fields. He has above-average speed and aggressively uses it on the basepaths,
but is still learning how to be a basestealer.
For all his offensive
prowess, Hanson remains a work in at
shortstop. He has good range and his infield actions are improved, but his arm
strength is fringy. Scouts are divided on whether he can remain at shortstop or
if he is better suited for second base. No matter where he ends up defensively,
Hanson's bat will play.
Other Lists: 100
Prospects (#67) | Top 10 Shortstops Prospects (#8)
You
live with Ruben Tejada for one more season…
well, maybe you start Hanson in Binghamton, send him to Vegas around the
all-star break, and you could even see him in Queens by September.
Just
some food for thought.
9 comments:
Lot of food for thought - but too early to run down for lunch. There is lots to chew on, and let's hope our two guys stay hot and healthy and up their trade value. But I still hope we see Flores to replace Tejada in a few weeks or by May 1. Hopefully, Tejada hits .400 in April - but that is more apt to be his OPS. I want Wilmer's bat in our lineup.
Thomas -
I truly thought that Davis was traded yesterday when they took him out of the game at the end of 4 innings ::)
The Mets will have zero tolerance with Tejada. His goose is already cooked. All that has to be determined is when to serve it.
It looks to me that the search for an outsider to fill the SS role has ended. It will be Tejada, then Flores, and then on to 2015 free agency/trades
And trying Flores soon, before trading for an outside option is OK with me. Just stay healthy, Wilmer.
If Flores has seemed to moved into the possible SS equation, how come he doesn't get more consistent playing time? Yesterday, Q was one of the starters in the split squad game. Get him out there in game conditions!
Dreams -
That's how TC rolls in ST
Don't worry... Wally will work the hell out of him...
Please tell me one offensive player who has flourished under Terry Collins' watch? Outside of Marlon Byrd, I'm stuck. Then again, kids don't get a chance, so it's hard to give Collins credit (or blame) when the veterans suck.
Reese -
You're right about the lack of home grown bat talent, but that might be due to combo of things including duds like F-Mart, etc.
Interestingly, talk surfaced today of the Pirates discussions with the D-Backs on Gregorius. AZ wants major league ready pitching, and it it said Jeff Locke, who looked pretty good in his first full year starting (30 GS, 3.52, 1.383) could be had. Atop the Pirates depth chart at SS is Jody Mercer, who seemed to have a good 2013 too. (.285/.336/.435) Are they really interested in Didi or could it be a prelude to a 3 way with Ike to Pitts, Locke to Zona, and Didi to Mets?
a lot of marginal rotation pitchers have to be moved the next 3 days to make room for players to be added to 25-man squads these players that thought never had a chance of making two weeks ago... could get interesting
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