Great story
on why no one throws a curve anymore –
Well, though late in happening, I welcome the Mets deciding to play the kids into the starting lineup for the remainder of the season. The assumption here is we will see SS Wilmer Flores and LF Kirk Nieuwenhuis on a much more regular basis, at the expense of Chris Young, Eric Young, and Ruben Tejada. We should also see Matt den Dekker as soon as the Mets flip a Young-coin and choose which one goes packing first.
Let's first give failure where failure is due. It was suppose to be David Wright, Curtis Granderson and Chris Young to lead this team out of the abyss this year.None have delivered on their projected numbers, especially the 25+ home runs both Grandy and Young were supposed to add to this lineup.
Playing Duda this year has produced a new 25+ home run hitter in the lineup.
Not giving up on Travis d'Arnaud looks like there is a good chance there will be another next season at this position.
Now, we need to see if Flores can consistently hit in the pros like he did at the AAA level (for 2-years) and wouldn't it be nice if another homegrown outfielder like Juan Lagares was found?
Lastly, all these moves just produce more off-season trade chips. The Mets are going to need multiple players if they want one of the Cubs middle infielders or either Tuol or CarGo in Colorado.
Playing the rest of the season in this direction makes it much easier for both of these teams to scout us and, eventually, get a deal done.
Eno-Chat –
Comment From Vic - Vic Black? Closer anytime in the next year plus?
Eno
Sarris: Dunno, Mejia is good and Black
is walking way too many people now.
Comment From
Jack - Jason deGrom, good pitcher or very good
month?
Eno Sarris:
Very good pitcher. Made the changeup great, has gas, command, and the curve has
improved.
Mail Box –
Mack (Reese et. al.), What’s your take on waiving Granderson FIRST (assuming leaks are to be believed) as opposed to after or with CY, EYJ, Recker…and Colon? Was there a hint of a potential nibble do you think? - Hobie
Mack (Reese et. al.), What’s your take on waiving Granderson FIRST (assuming leaks are to be believed) as opposed to after or with CY, EYJ, Recker…and Colon? Was there a hint of a potential nibble do you think? - Hobie
Bob Gregory -
Mack I see
that Granderson has just entered his revocable waivers. What teams, if any, do
you think would put in a serious claim for him in actual hopes of adding him to
their team?
First
of all, most of the entire Mets team was placed on waivers which is normal at
this time of the year. I wouldn’t make much out of this.
Obviously, you would
have to find a team that believes he can do more than he did here. Other than
that, he’s a good teammate with a wonderful smile that hits around .230 and
didn’t fulfill the Mets hopes of him hitting 25+ home runs this year.
Any hoping
to simply claim and hope the Mets just let him go? Any willing to claim and
actually work out a trade? And of course as the Mets look on to next year and
those that follow, would the Mets be willing to work out a trade with any
potential teams? Or even possibly
willing to just let him be claimed and go? I think that this could actually be
a debatable issue with good points depending on a team's point of view.
I’m
sure the Mets would be open to any of the scenarios you list here, but I expect
he’ll be back next year. I almost wish he would twist an ankle and go down for
the season so we could see an Aug-Sept outfield of Matt den Dekker, Kirk Nieuwenhuis, and Juan Lagares. Wouldn’t it be amazing if we
actually had the solution to our bat problem right in our own organization?
And finally
if you were Met GM for the day what would you be looking for as a preferable
outcome? Thanks again. Bob
Frankly,
I’d keep him and I’d bat him next year at leadoff. He can’t possibly have that
bad of a start again. Also, I don’t want the overall Mets salaries to continue
to reduce.
Bob Gregory
–
Mack, given
the current landscape of young pitchers value, perhaps it is time to reevaluate
what the true worth of each pitcher is in a trade. Wheeler is demonstrating
that things are really coming together for him. Some even are beginning to
speak the "Ace" word again with him. I am sure there are many scouts
and GMs that remember it wasn't too long ago that Wheeler was thought of being
the superior pitching prospect compared to Harvey. If Wheeler continues
developing as he currently is...his age, years of team control still remaining,
and his salary. .... Wouldn't he be a true prize among all prizes in any
potential trade? Isn't it time to re-think just how close his value would be in
regards to a Tulowitzki or any offensive prize the Mets could target in a
trade? I am not advocating to trade Wheeler but could his value when combined
with the Mets pitching depth create a situation in which they can't refuse? What do you think?
Mack
– Hey Bob.
Your ‘true worth in a trade’ is currently 1.
Wheeler, 2. Harvey, 3. Syndergaard, and 4. deGrom… my guess is #5 would be
Montero over Niese and Gee, only because of both their injuries in the past.
Harvey would
return to #1 if and when he proves his arm is 100% healed. Until then, the
‘ace’ of this staff is currently Wheeler.
I know this
four hits a night shit is getting very old, but, you have to trust me here. You
have no idea how wonderful it is going to be when Harvey is followed by
Wheeler, who will be followed by Syndergaard, who will be followed by deGrom,
who will be followed by Montero.
I’ll give
you this. You will accomplish your ‘bat needs much quicker if you sell off
Wheeler. You will get a top level shortstop or left fielder in an hour. You
might get both.
You then
would be left with a 2015 rotation of Harvey, Colon, deGrom, Syndergaard, Gee,
Niese, and/or Montero.
It’s tempting. It’s very tempting.
John Looby –
Hey
Mack, another question for you to ponder.
Putting your
scouting hat on, at what level do you start looking at what numbers players are
putting up when you judge them? I understand that players in short season or
lower level ball may be asked to work on a specific weakness of their game
which could lead to a short term town turn in production.
Mack
– You basically judge nothing that is done at either the GCL or Kingsport
level. These are pure teaching schools where Mets coaches are trying to build
on the player’s natural talents, not what they were taught in school.
Going
from Brooklyn up to Binghamton (up to three promotions) comes from the staff
and is based on overall performance and the team’s judgment on whether the
player is ready to make the jump to the next level. Don’t get me wrong… stats come
into play but only to make the jump to the next level.
It’s
only gets real at the AA level. You’re not going anywhere if you don’t put your
total game together here.
Don’t
get me wrong. You will notice when certain aspects of one game stick out. Take Cory Vaughn and Dustin Lawley. Both have had disappointing
overall seasons in the past while, at the same time, led their respective
league in a major offensive category. Team officials will definitely recognize something like
this and will spend a few more years with players like this trying to turn them
into the complete package.
You
also could get an early glimpse at a future strikeout artist (Jack Leathersich, Akeel Morris), while, at the same time,
early stats could expose a pitchers control weakness by the number of walks he
throws.
But
you have to remember… everything being done at these lower levels are mostly
being done against players that never will make it in this game.
But…
as a general rule… St. Lucie stats begin to be taken serious followed by a
demand to produce in Binghamton.
On a related
matter, how much stock to you put in Sabrmetrics when judging a young player,
or even the production of big league players? I am reading "Dollar Sign on
the Muscle" at the moment. It's a wonderful read and really got me thinking
about scouting and judging prospects.
You’re
asking me a tough question because I’m not a Sabr person. I have nothing
against it; in fact, I think it’s a wonderful new tool that should be used in
conjunction with what happens on the field, but I’m one of those old farts that
sit behind home plate with a radar gun (I never sat in the press box when I was
a reporter).
There
isn’t a SABR person in the world that can put down in some equation what Eric Young Jr. did today, cutting off that
ground ball on the way to Juan
Lagares.
Now,
I will ask Christopher
Soto and Stephen Guilbert to chime in here and give them
the other side. I believe both are pro-Sabr guys and maybe they can answer this
question better than I can.
Terms I work
with -
Batting
Pitching
Fielding
AVG -
Batting Average
G - Games
Played
AB - At Bats
R - Runs
Scored
H - Hits
2B - Doubles
3B - Triples
HR - Home
Runs
RBI - Runs
Batted In
TB - Total
Bases
BB - Bases
on Balls (Walks)
SO - Strikeouts
SB - Stolen
Bases
CS - Caught
Stealing
OBP -
On-base Percentage
SLG -
Slugging Percentage
OPS -
On-base Plus Slugging Percentage
Other:
AO - Air
(Fly) Outs
GIDP -
Ground into Double Plays
GO - Ground
Outs
GO/AO -
Ground Outs/Air (Fly) Outs Ratio
HBP - Hit by
Pitch
IBB -
Intentional Walks
LOB - Left
On Base
NP - Number
of Pitches
SAC -
Sacrifice Bunts
SF -
Sacrifice Flies
TP - Triple
Play
TPA - Total
Plate Appearances
XBH - Extra
Base Hits
7 comments:
Who left yesterday giddy? Mets announce they will play the kids, Mets win (Flores 2-4), Colon increases trade value, Mets DFA CY (Biggest woo!), Mets call up MDD.
Hey Dallas, biggest woo for me is calling up MDD. I want to see what a guy who goes .420/.500/.700 in his last 42 games can do, playing DAILY in the bigs. If he flops, so be it, if he excels, so be it...play him and find out.
While Kirk has had some more success than MDD in majors, Kirk never came close to the #s I listed above, and MDD and he used to be equally strikeout prone. MDD has cut his K rate a lot this year, Kirk never has improved his terrible rate. And MDD is the better fielder. I want to see 40 games of MDD before this season ends.
I'm all for these moves. However, they should've done all of this six weeks ago. A little late now.
Forget Akeem Morris-- he gave up a run the other day. Obviously he's finished. ;)
Often the move of placing someone on waivers is not to make a deal now (since they are revocable) but to gauge who might be interested in the future for a deal.
Reese--
All the more reason to wave Colon now.
I'm still wondering why Granderson was the FIRST to be dangled. Any word on whether he passed through?
@Hobie
For all we know Colon may have already cleared waivers....
These lists are generally not public. The only team I have seen publish the players who have passed through waivers are the Phillies
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