1908 Buffalo Bisons |
Coming
Up –
10 am –
Reese Kaplan – The Fat Lady Hasn’t Sung
Yet
12
noon – Guilbert/Mack
- Opinion- Current Top 10 MLB Mock Draft
2
pm – Baseball Cube - Transactions
4 pm – MLB Draft Insider - New Revised 3-31 Mock
6
pm - Monte Harrison, Jeff
Hoffman, Derek Fisher, Jack Flaherty, Lane Thomas
8
pm -
OF - Braxton Davidson - T.C. Roberson
Andy Martino @MartinoNYDN - Yes,
very sad, both old and breaking down RT
@sportswatch Better chance Jeter is with Yankees in 2015 than Burkhardt is with
SNY.
There are a bunch of new players in the system that we need to
familiarize ourselves with, especially the ones at the AAA level that could be
called to Queens in a future emergency role.
Dana Everland was signed by the
Mets in the off-season. The 30-year old lefty was a 16th round pick in
2002 by the Milwaukee Brewers. He’s pithed at the major league level for eight
different teams and his combined MLB stat line is: 19-25, 5.44, 1.66, 5.85-K9,
4.41-BB9.
One has to ask what the big deal is other than he’s a lefty and
filling up a slot one of the young arms could be filling.
Amazin’
Avenue: - A career ERA+ of 77 is pretty dreadful, but Eveland's left-handedness
as well as his ability to pitch out of both the rotation and the bullpen make
him a mildly intriguing wild card.
Everland
isn’t the only veteran that the Mets signed during the off-season to a minor
league contract.
6-3
RHP Buddy Carlyle has ‘been around’. He’s
pitched part of 15-years in the minors, compiling a respectful 3.67 ERA, but
his visits with four major league teams (SD, LAD, ATL, NYY) didn’t fare as well
(5.56).
Again,
one must ask why the Mets first sign and now retain the services of this
36-year old.
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-
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Rammy -
Hey Mack - With 2014
season pretty much another one with no playoffs , who are some potential 2015
free agents you see the Mets targeting?
Also do you think with another losing season ownership will be forced by
the media and fans to increase payroll?
Mack – Hey Rammy…
First
thing first… the Mets may have the
worst relief staff in the league and that was before the Parnell diagnosis
today. You can’t even begin to determine who you’re going to go after in free
agency until you decide what direction this team is going this year.
I have
been an optimist about 2014 for three years but I’m not any longer. The plan
didn’t work.
There
simply aren’t enough quality ballplayers on this team, the critical holes
(shortstop, first base, bullpen) were not addressed, and signing people like
Bobby Abreu and Kyle Farnsworth isn’t going to bring a pennant to Queens.
You
have another problem, Rammy. Your General Manager doesn’t like keeping up with
the trend and signing legitimate stars to long term contracts. I always thought
this was a good thing to do plus, it seems like a lot of other teams think so
too.
But not
Sandy Alderson and the Mets.
So,
addressing the 2015 free agent market… hmm…
Well,
first of all, I have to go through another selloff… Chris Young… John Lannan… Jose Valverde…
I also
would try to find a home for Bartolo
Colon’s $11mi 2015 salary
and I would trade off the ‘most tradable’ first baseman, either Lucas Duda or Ike Davis.
(aren’t
you getting a little sick and tired of this?)
You
should go into 2015 ‘okay’ at 1B, 2B, 3B, C, an outfield that has Cesar Puello filling the Young
departure, and a rotation of Harvey, Wheeler, Syndergaard, Montero, Neise,
Mejia, and Gee.
Now,
everyone here keeps saying I’m nuts to move Montero to the pen, but seven
starters simply doesn’t work, especially on a team basically without a bullpen.
So, my
free agency targets?
For
now… I send scouts out to check:
Andrew
Bailey (31), Jim Johnson (32), Chris Perez (29), Sergio Romo (32), Hector
Ambriz (31), Burke Badenhop (32), Ronald Belisario (32), Joba Chamberlain (29),
Manny Corpas (32), Luke Gregerson (31), Carlos Marmol (32), David Robertson
(30), Phil Coke (32), Tom Gorzelanny (32), Jose Mijares (29), Andrew Miller
(30), Franklin Morales (29)
Maybe,
just maybe, you can find yourself two good relievers.
Bob
Gregory asked -
Mack - I heard a
conversation on the "Michael Kay radio
show" (ny) today regarding Alderson
not trading Reyes. The hosts believed
Alderson deserved a pass for not trading Reyes
because they believe the Wilpons did not allow him to.
I however don't agree
with this. I believe Alderson needed to
fight ownership on this (if indeed the Wilpons refused to allow a trade). Alderson knew Reyes would be too expensive to
resign. He knew he could net an
impressive haul of prospects in a trade.
Alderson knew how bad the Mets minor league system was at that
time. From reports Alderson was backed
by Selig and the Wilpons acknowledged Alderson as a knowledgeable Gm they
needed to trust in order to navigate through the mess the organization was
in.
Given all of this I
can't give him a pass on trading Reyes.
He could have and should have fought the Wilpons on that decision as
steadfastly as humanly possible (if indeed it was Wilpons fault)
He didn't
They didn't
Now imagine how the
Mets would have benefited from 2 strong position prospects now ready for the
majors. Maybe this winter's off season
would have played out differently
A penny for your
thoughts
Mack – This really sounds like radio fodder to me.
I lost
my press passes when Omar Minaya departed, so I have no firsthand knowledge about anything Sandy Alderson has ever done.
I will
tell you that I talked to Reyes about him leaving the Mets someday. It was
right outside the entrance to the press room in St. Lucie and I asked his sort
of acting out ‘you’re not really considering leaving the Mets, are you?’.
Reyes
said ‘you have no idea how little we come from and when we get the chance to
take care of everyone in our family (he means cousins, aunts, grandmothers), we
go with the money. If the Mets match the offer or make the best one, of course
I would stay’. It said it like a businessman, not a disloyal teammate and I
totally understood where he was coming from.
It
wasn’t any kind of story. It was just two guys talking back in the days I still
smoked and there was an ashtray outside the press room entrance. Reyes came off
the field, we shot the shit for a few moments, and the moment was over.
Bob,
all I can say is after everything happened, I talked to a couple of Mets and
they said everybody… I mean everybody (you read between the lines) on
the team was shocked that no offer came from the Mets. The amount of money he
signed for was not over the top and the Mets could easily have matched it if
they wanted to keep him.
In my
book, they just didn’t want him anymore.
I have
no knowledge of any trade talks and no one talks about this subject. Even the
beat reports have stayed away from asking about the details of this.
I was
taught early in my business career to get rid of the people as quick as you can
once you determine they either don’t fit into your plans or will stand in the
way of you achieving your goals. I still believe this was a 100% Alderson
decision; however, I’ve been wrong before.
I will write about the Sand Gnats tomorrow.
Problem is, Reyes absolutely fit their plans, if they wanted to win, except for his proclivity towards being hurt, which they rightly feared. he did well in 2012, but missed 65 games last year and starts this year on DL. The cost per game is very high.
ReplyDeletePen - hearing commenters say that a Walters is Edgin 2.0, guys in minors have a chance to step up - that means Black, Leather, and Walters, maybe Kolarek - the door is wide open.
Abreu signing makes sub-zero sense. Last year, you'd not be blocking guys too much. This year, you could have made a real case for any of Kirk, Dekker, Puello and Campbell to have made the Mets out of spring training - and yet you plan to waste at bats on this senior citizen (in baseball years, of course)?
Mack
ReplyDeleteso, do you think you can play the "what if" game? What If the Mets traded Reyes instead of letting him go for nothing?
Any ideas of who might have been added to the organization in the trade?
How would it have affected this year's winter and last year's winter?
The saddest part of all of this, is that someone sent some time listening to the Michael Kay show. I mean Franseca isnt great, but Michael Kay makes him sounds like Jimmy Hendrix.
ReplyDeleteThomas -
ReplyDeleteIt's hard to build in an injury factor before it happened. Look how much Bobby Parnell was worth three days ago vs. today.
The only thing I know in my heart is that Jose Reyes should have retired as a Met. He and David Wright represented everything that was the team. And don't belive anything you every read in some other blog... Reyes was loved and respected by all his teammates and was a natural leader for the Hispanic players in the clubhouse
Robb -
ReplyDeleteThat IS funny...
Bob -
ReplyDeleteIt's impossible for me to go back now and remember who the chess pieces were that were being tossed around then.
Frankly, the one thing I do remember is no one took any trade threats or signing elsewhere threats serious. We all knew the Mets and Reyes would sit down and work this out.
The Reyes-Mets negotation was a pivotal momemt in the Alderson era. Was there a message being sent here.
I just don't know.
A pivotal moment that Alderson unfortunately failed.
ReplyDeleteyes Alderson made a couple of impressive trades, but so have other gms
there are many more aspects of the job and team/organization building
unfortunately it seems Alderson has failed in too many areas.
I agree that Reyes should have been signed - but they were dealing with long-injured guys in big deals, and saw Reyes as an iron man in 2005-08 (158 games a season) and legs guys tend to get hurt more as the years move along, And Jose started exhibiting that young: only 116 games per year the last 5 years. Mets were gun-shy and veered away from that. They should have rolled the dice, but they were also broke.
ReplyDeletesaw an article on Nimmo - apparently, his April hand injury plagued him all year, and he added 20 pounds of smart muscle (187 up to 207) working out with top pro athletes in the off season. Let's see him have a dazzling year this year, with power.
The reason why this team signed Abreu is simple. TPTB don't believe in den Dekker or Kirk as major league ballplayers. Also it's the move of a team looking for a veteran presence and bat off the bench in a push for the playoffs. This and the Farnsworth move really make no sense except to create the illusion that the Mets are sticking with veterans because they're contenders and not giving up on the season. That's a line of thinking which went out decades ago, but at this time it seems to be where TC and SA are right now in their actions. Instead the moves show a desperation on the part of the TPTB, a fear that this season could get away from them in hurry and worst of all a lack of confidence in most of the position players and pitchers a level below.
ReplyDeleteI continue to believe that Sandy thought he would be able to resign Reyes. He obviously miscalculated, but no one could have foreseen what the Marlins were going to do in that off season. You know, Reyes was not the only excessive contract the Fish gave out that year.
ReplyDeleteThey could peddle Daniel Murphy for a RP or SS or 1B option and then Terry would get his wish -- a place for Eric Young to play every day. I wonder how that would make Wilmer Flores feel?
ReplyDelete