Although there has been a downward trend in the results, there are some encouraging signs from some familiar and some unlikely places in the Mets organization:
Daniel Murphy
Always notoriously streaky, Murphy has been one of the few
offensive highlights for the Mets this year.
He’s hitting over .300, stealing bases and playing a credible second
base. If the voting was held today, he’s
the offensive player most deserving to represent the Mets in the All-Star Game.
Wilmer Flores
In his extremely limited playing time he has fielded his
position cleanly and gotten hits in 2 of his 3 starts since his arrival this
time. More importantly, in last night’s
game he delivered a 2-out RBI. It’s that
kind of production that this team lacks. He may not be a long term answer but to everyone's relief we were able to see someone other than Ruben Tejada at shortstop.
Juan CenteƱo
While his reputation was that of a serious defensive whiz
behind the plate, he’s had some growing pains, yet his bat is playing
well. He’s got the pop of a Ruben
Tejada, but he makes contact and has delivered a very respectable average each
of his past few seasons. Thus far he’s
doing so up here as well.
Curtis Granderson
At first we thought it was just the return to Yankee
Stadium, but quietly he’s starting to show signs of life as a productive
middle-of-the-order bat. He’s still not
producing at what was envisioned when they inked him for four years, but we’re
seeing flashes that should give us optimism for the future.
Juan Lagares
He’s back up over .300 and playing his usual Gold Glove
caliber defense. In his surprisingly limited
opportunities he’s showing that his offensive game is making him valuable for
more than just his range and his arm.
Dillon Gee
Before his lat injury felled him, he was showing that last
season’s hot run was not just a flash-in-the-pan. He picked right up where he’d left off,
easily being the best pitcher on the Mets staff this year. He’s sporting a 2.73 ERA and barely allowing
1 baserunner per inning pitched.
Jon Niese
The hard luck lefty has a losing record but an ERA even
better than Gee’s at 2.54. He’s not been
quite as efficient at keeping people off base, but you can’t argue with the way
he’s been pitching.
Daisuke Matsuzaka
We all know he isn’t an idea person to have in the pen, but
he’s responded rather well save for 1 or 2 appearances. Overall he’s sporting a very impressive 2.25
ERA in his new long-man role pitching in relief.
Carlos Torres
Last night’s game notwithstanding, he’s been one of the few
steady and reliable arms Collins can choose from his ever-changing bullpen.
Jeurys Familia
The hard throwing big man seems like he’s turned something
of a corner. Control is always a
concern, but his ERA is currently a very respectable 3.10.
Jenrry Mejia
By virtue of his short stints as a starter and the influx of
talent knocking on the door from Las Vegas, Jenrry was dragged kicking and
screaming to the bullpen where in just a few appearances it appears he may have
supplanted the departed Kyle Farnsworth as the new closer.
Wally Backman
Despite having lost 5-6 of his key personnel over the past
couple of weeks, the Las Vegas 51s just keep rolling along with the best record
in the PCL. They’re doing it more with
their bats than their arms lately, but it’s encouraging to see someone who is
able to wrest good performances out of whomever is on his roster. We can dream, can't we?
Thanks, Reese! Nice to see someone look at the good stuff instead of bitching because we didn't sign Drew or did sign CY.
ReplyDeleteI'm having a hard time with silver linings right now... :)
ReplyDeleteSteve Carhart · Old Dominion University
ReplyDeleteThanks, Reese! Nice to see someone look at the good stuff instead of bitching because we didn't sign Drew or did sign CY.
I'm often accused of being too negative, so I thought I'd take a look at some of the positive things to watch on the Mets right now. I couldn't resist the last line in the paragraph on Backman, however. Fix the key problem first before worrying about the roster.
ReplyDeleteReese -
ReplyDeleteI don't expect Murphy to bite part of Wright's ear off over this, but, if this team keeps losing and TC keeps up with his wise ass answers to the press, this is going to boil over and bite him back in the ass.
Agree, a good positive summary. Do we think 1B Duda will join it soon, or would we be better off with some one or two of the following at first in his place? Campbell, Dykstra, Brown, Lutz.
ReplyDeleteI'd offer a similar either/or scenario for Chris Young, but his contract will prevent any possible switch at this time. So let's hope he can get onto the positive list too.
Let's hope deGrom joins the list tonight. With his bat and his arm.
Craig Mitchell · Top Commenter · Actor at Actor
ReplyDeleteI agree with a lot of this. Plus add Lucas Duda. He already is just 14 RBI behind his entire output for 2013 .....
what about that other Scott Boras client?
ReplyDeleteLagares should be given a shot at leadoff and as much as I liked Meijia as a starter he really is the best closer option the team has-and could really become an elite one.
ReplyDeleteD -
ReplyDeleteI'm sticking to my guys here...
Put Familia, Montero, and Mejia in the back end of your pen.
You will begin to turn this temporary pitching problem around
Craig...I've been a Duda supporter. Looked at baseball reference.com which gives all sorts of splits. His hitting in clutch situations remains substandard. He needs to fix it, or the team will not succeed. Nor will he. Last year, he was abysmal in the clutch, but those stats show his woes continue in big spots.
ReplyDelete