While most Met fans are calling for action, very little is
happening on the field. The 2014 Mets have been hovering near the .500 mark all
season. Not good enough to be a contender and not bad enough to leave Citi
Field totally barren. But one thing’s
for sure, since the All Star break the Mets offense has shriveled up and
disappeared.
I can’t even blame Terry Collins for this one. Back in June
the Mets fired their hitting coach and brought in Lamar Johnson. It seemed to work. Prior to the All-star game
the Mets went on an 8-2 tear and things looked to finally be gelling in the
right direction. For those 10 games was saw a nice marriage of timely hitting,
power and terrific starting pitching and a solid bullpen. The pitching and
bullpen pretty much have continued to impress, but the hitting has gone ice
cold.
With the exception of Lucas Duda and Daniel Murphy the Mets
bats have been very quiet. Duda has enjoyed a breakout season and has been
reasonably consistent and is providing the power and RBI production at 1st
base they’ve been hoping for. Murphy has downright been excellent the entire
season. He was the Mets sole representative at the in Minnesota at the all-star
game and has done everything asked of him. As for the rest of the Mets?
David Wright –
The Captain his having his most disappointing season since 2009. The questions
have been asked: Is he starting to decline? Is he hurt? Is he not protected in the line-up? No one knows for sure, but whatever the reason .271 8 homers and 56 RBI in the 3 rd spot isn't going to do it.
Curtis Granderson
– Granderson had an absolutely HORRID April. Calls of “Grander-Bay” rung out
all over Citi Field and the web, and Granderson was performing like another
free agent bust. But then through May and June he got hot and showed all of
Flushing why he was signed. He hit with power and drove in runs and got on
base. But then July came….and he has struggled ever since. .221 15 homers and 47 RBI isn’t nearly worth
the price tag he demanded on the market. Granderson even cleared waivers
earlier in August. I can see why.
Travis d’Arnaud –
I almost included d’Arnaud with Duda and Murphy as a positive. It’s been a tale of two seasons for d’Arnaud.
His .180 hitting struggling doubtful start to the season, or the rocket hitting
consistent power source he’s been since.
I have to list him as a negative, because, for better or for worse he
still has some to prove. However, I get the feeling that Travis is going to
fulfill his promise and be the star the Mets thought he was.
Juan Lagares –
Lagares has improved a lot since 2013. But he still has some ways to go. He’s
batting a decent .272 with 2 homers and 34 RBI…but with just 14 walks and a
.314 OBP he’s relegated to the bottom of the order. With his speed and his
contact ratio, if he could just get his walks up he would be a decent lead off
guy or perfect for the two slot.
Left Field – Left
field has been the no-man’s land for the Mets in 2014. No one who’s been
plugged in has distinguished themselves. It’s still too early to call on Matt den Dekker, but so far Chris Young, Eric Young Jr., Kirk Nieuwenhuis , Bobby Abreu and Eric Campbell have all given it a whirl. I think it’s too early to call on den Dekker he has actually showed some life at the plate but is still a work in progress and I suspect for him to really flourish he need to lead off. But where to bat Curtis Granderson? Batting Granderson 7th in the order would be admitting that he is NOT the
player they thought he was. My thought is…DO it…light a fire under his butt.
But it won’t’ happen. Additionally the Mets only see Campbell as a bench player;
otherwise he might produce as an everyday player in left as well.
Shortstop – Ruben
Tejada was and is not the answer. But
his fielding was above average and He does have the 2nd highest OBP
on the team. Enter Wilmer Flores.
Finally given a shot to impress, he has shown decent fielding ability (he
certainly hasn't hurt the team) but his bat is lagging. There’s still nearly 40
games left, perhaps he’ll finally break out and show us the bat that was
lighting up AAA. Otherwise a deal must be made for this team to show any
improvement in 2015.
As I said earlier as much as I’d like to blame Terry Collins
for the Mets hitting lull. I can’t.
Collins doesn't go on the field and play; he’s not the one looking at
third strikes or popping out to short with runners on. Is it Lamar Johnson fault? He looked like a
genius when he first started. The Mets instantly got more aggressiveand it was
paying off. Whether it’s his fault or
not, if the Mets don’t start hitting, Lamar more than likely not be invited
back in 2015. I can’t even blame Sandy Alderson. I, for one, am glad he didn’t
mortgage the farm for Troy Tulowitzki or Carlos Gonzales, both of whom are since
out for the season. I will go so far as to say I hope that they NEVER come to
Flushing. The splits and the injury tendencies on both of them point towards
them being huge disappointments.
I don’t claim to have the answers. I just can clearly see
the problem. The Mets have to hit. They have a pitching staff that can carry
them far into the playoffs, and the pitching is only going to get better. If 2015 is going to be “the year” the Mets
finally get competitive…..the answer is clear on what has to change.
Currently, Lagares is 7th in WAR amongst all NL position players. His defense is that good. So, regardless, he is part of the solution.
ReplyDeleteAs I just posted before, this team's hitting is, as you note, Craig, anemic.
ReplyDeleteMove the fences in, take the pressure off. Mets are last in batting average at home (.226) and 18th (.243) on the road. Neither # is good, but where is the home field advantage? Not in Citifield.
Terry Collins is the anti-Billy Martin. Do you remember how Martin would get non-descript players to perform over their heads? Terry takes proven players and makes them mediocre and does everything in his power (benching, batting eighth, etc.) to marginalize the chances of anyone other than his proven mediocrities who are no longer cutting it. He manages to get people to underperform. Why they would have picked up his previous option after year one is a mystery...extending him is a Sherlock Holmes-worthy case and bringing him back in 2015 is simply insanity.
ReplyDeleteAll of you that comment here are some really intelligent Mets fans.
ReplyDeleteWe all have tried to find more bats in this system and maybe Conforto and Nimmo will prove out in 2016, but past that is possibly another catcher (Plawecki) that we have no place to play anyway.
The Mets have a .304 slugging percentage since the All-Star break.
Rey Ordonez had a .310 slugging percentage in his career.
Come on.
Actually I have some hope that Matt Reynolds may be the immediate future at short and that Flores and pitcher and maybe Plawecki will go for a top notch outfield power prospect.....
ReplyDeleteI know that it requires another year of patience, but my bopper target is not Stanton, but Justin Upton after next year. will still only be 27 and no way he resigns before getting to FA for the first time. a second choice would be Jason Heyward, who also wont resign before FA and may cost a little less. in order to afford either one of them, they will have to keep the wallet shut this off season and shoot for another Marlon Byrd, not CY. If they ever got Upton, they would have to figure out something to do with Grandy, who will still have two years left, but it would also free up either Nimmo or Comforto for a trade. If the Mets hold onto all young buck pitching, they could trade Colon, Niese and Gee for talent and clear over $20M in payroll going into 2016
ReplyDeletealso, replacing Murphy with Herrara frees up another $8-9M. Harvey, Wheeler, Thor, deGrom, and Matz in rotation and almost $30M cleared in payroll
Delete