As a follow up to the “Do Something” article, I figured the end of April was as good a time as any to analyze the stats of this surprisingly successful
15-11 Mets team. Someone asked me before
the season how I felt they would do during their first 22 game tough stretch to
open the season against some of the league’s best and I said I had expected
something along the lines of 9-13. To
have them prove me wrong feels good – very good – but there’s so much more that
needs to be done.
This club is built on pitching. That revelation should come as no surprise to
anyone. It’s the pitching that’s largely
responsible for the early season success.
Right now the team is in the top half of baseball in most pitching
categories, including 12th in ERA, 14th in strikeouts, 12th
in batting average against and 13th in WHIP. The only black mark on an otherwise credible
record is home runs surrendered -- they are 27th out of 30
teams.
It’s nice to know on any given night the Mets should produce
a quality start. Gone are the days of
starters like Aaron Laffey, Mike Pelfrey and Chris Schwinden when multiple 3
run innings were never far from the back of your mind. In fact, after the initial stumbles against
Washington, the bullpen hasn’t been bad, with pretty much everyone contributing
something positive at one time or another.
Unfortunately, the hitting is even worse than I
suspected. Paradoxically, for an
offensively challenged team they are in the 18th and 17th
spots respectively for Runs and RBIs. The
Mets seem to draw a lot of walks and steal bases when on the rare occasions
when they get men on base, but after that they’re ranked 27th to 30th
in every other offensive category. Hits, batting average, OPS, HRs…you name it,
they’re trailing nearly everyone. They
are 29th (or 2nd depending on your perspective) for
hitters racking up strikeouts and dead last in both total bases and
slugging.
Some things are pretty sure to improve. David Wright and Curtis Granderson should
show more power. Chris Young might
rediscover his mojo. Lucas Duda might
become consistent. Travis d’Arnaud is
showing signs of life. Daniel Murphy
already has 6 steals and may top 30 for the season.
The area where the team has an ongoing problem is shortstop where Ruben Tejada has become something of a divisive figure among
Mets fans. There doesn’t appear to be
anyone straddling the fence. He’s either
bound to regain his previous success or he’s destined for the Chin-lung Hu
scrap heap of players who never put it all together.
In his best year – 2012 – Tejada hit a commendable .289 over
501 ABs. His OBP was .333 – better than
the career mark of the guy Terry Collins trots out there night after
night. Unfortunately that’s where the
highlights end. He had just 1 HR and only
25 RBIs. He stole 4 bases but was also caught trying to steal 4 times. That’s
bad by anyone’s standards. If that level
of performance is the best fans can expect, then perhaps a change really is in
order. He’s been a bit hot lately, with
his average up to the .220s (which is an improvement over his abbreviated 2013
campaign which saw him finish at a paltry .202). However, over his last 300+ ABs he’s on a 162
game pace for a .207 AVG with 0 HRs, 32 RBIs and the same 4 SBs. Right now he is ranked dead last on Fangraphs in WAR among qualifying shortstops.
Unfortunately the stories emanating from the ubiquitous
anonymous source on Wednesday suggested that the Mets are not keen on the
Wilmer Flores to shortstop experiment.
With neither Danny Muno nor Anthony Seratelli proving to be the answer,
you could dip down into AA. Matt
Reynolds is hitting well for the first time in his minor league career -- .373
-- but his defensive skills are about on par with what you’d get from
Flores. Wilfredo Tovar can flash the
leather but he’s never been much of a hitter despite his current .317
average. He’s got a little speed and no
power, so he’s probably not much of an upgrade over Tejada. Like Tejada, he can play either of the middle
infield positions. This year he’s
primarily at 2B.
It’s about time to look outside the organization to do
something bold. Whether it’s an
established major league shortstop or a highly regarded top prospect, it might
be time to part with some of the arms we’ve been stockpiling since the Omar
Minaya days. Jon Niese, Dillon Gee, Jenrry
Mejia, Steve Matz and Matt Harvey all came under his stewardship. Sandy Alderson has added to this wealth with
pitchers like Noah Syndergaard, Rafael Montero, Jacob de Grom, Gabriel Ynoa and
others. Throw in Bartolo Colon, Zack
Wheeler, Daisuke Matsuzaka and Jeremy Hefner.
They can’t possibly find slots for all of them. It’s time now to turn these chips in and grab
some prizes off the top shelf. If the
new shortstop can also lead off and steal some bases, then multiple problems
will be solved with a single trade.
3 comments:
Reese -
Good post.
I go back and forth on Tejada and SS. I always wanted the kid to work out, and I still do... and, if the current pitching staff can continue to pitch the way they are doing so far, I'm willing to give him the rest of this season to prove to everyone that he should remain the Mets shortstop... but I truly believe the 2015 Mets shortstop is currently not in this organization and will come to this team in either an off-season trade or in free agency.
That's just how I believe the Mets will handle this position.
Today :)
I am willing to be a little patient and see what the bats can produce this month, including Ruben's. The pitching they will face in May has an ERA of (I'm guessing) about a run higher than April. That, and as Chris pointed out, warmer weather, may unleash the bats. April's .220 may become May's .260.
If anything, trim around the fringes (say, Satin down and Campbell up). If Tejada swoons, bring up Flores and give him a shot. Big deals as needed in June and July.
Pen-wise, Thornton, Black, Carreno and even Montero as choices for reinforcements if the pen should blow a piston.
Baseball really needs to extend the 25-man roster for August also... would sure help a team like the Mets trying to figure out who to play where.
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