A question I asked last year came to mind once again
regarding when is it the right time to promote younger players from the minors
to the majors? The problem as I see it is
that the Mets organization has taken a firm philosophical stance that a player
must have X number of innings or Y number of ABs in the minors before they are
deemed ready for the majors.
Standards are a wonderful thing when you’re dealing with
finite things like processes. “We cannot
have more than 1/10th of 1% defects on the manufacturing line.” The last time I looked, however, the game of
baseball is played by PEOPLE and not by machines. People are different. There are early bloomers and late bloomers,
early faders and people like Bartolo Colon who are still productive while most
others his age have gone onto the baseball card show autograph circuit.
I did some preliminary research and discovered
something. The last time the Mets had
the honor of having the youngest player in the big leagues on their opening day
roster was 30 years ago when Dwight Gooden came north with the club at age
19. You know, if you look at the
statistics regarding his performance (before his lifestyle became an issue), it
sure didn’t look like this early promotion harmed him one bit.
In fact, as I perused the list of youngest players in the
majors for the past 30 years, there were quite a few standouts for whom an
early promotion did not seem to damage their tender psyches or get overwhelmed
by the new level of competition. In
fact, you could field a pretty decent All-Star team from this list:
AL:
Jose Rijo
Gary Sheffield
Pudge Rodriguez
Alex Rodriguez
CC Sabathia
Felix Hernandez
Rick Porcello
Chris Sale
Mike Trout
Jurickson Profar
NL:
Greg Maddux
Steve Avery
Cliff Floyd
Andruw Jones
Adrian Beltre
Matt Cain
Justin Upton
Clayton Kershaw
Madison Bumgarner
Starlin Castro
Bryce Harper
Jose Fernandez
Javier Baez
The babying of pitchers hasn’t seemed to have helped, either. In fact, the trend now is alarmingly towards
more injuries and more Tommy John surgeries than happened back in the day when
pitchers completed games and weren't on pitch counts, innings limits or shut down in the middle of a pennant race. Once again
clubs are trying to place one set of rules as if every individual was
identical.
With respect to the Mets, there seems to be a trend in the
opposite direction – artificially holding players down in the minors longer
than necessary (to say nothing of not playing them once they make the big
club). As an example, Wilmer Flores has
been with the organization for 7.5 years and just this month finally got the
opportunity to play steadily while healthy.
The results have not been good thus far, but it’s probably fair to say
you develop quite a bit of rust when your manager only penciled you into the
lineup less than once a week.
Now sometimes late promotions are due to health issues. Jacob de Grom and Steve Matz are examples of
players whose careers got sidetracked by injuries. Pitchers in particular seem to need to have
some time to develop command as we’re seeing with Noah Syndergaard this year as
he’s struggled for the first time. On
the other hand, when you have someone like Rafael Montero who, before his
injury, was exhibiting all of his usual stellar control, there was no reason to
hold him down in the minors as long as they did at the expense of John Lannan,
Kyle Farnsworth, Jose Valverde and others of that ilk. You saw last week what Montero can do when he’s
healthy.
For batters you would assume it’s the breaking stuff and
movement that gets better at each level and it takes some time to adjust. Many people can hit a flat fastball, even one
thrown near triple digits. However, when
the pitches break left, right or drop down it’s a whole new ballgame. Still, why is it that other clubs see fit to
promote 19 year olds while the Mets typically wait an additional 4-5 years
before declaring someone possibly ready for the majors?
To be fair, in the entire history of the ballclub you could
probably count on one hand with fingers left over the number of solid offensive
players they’ve developed. That’s a
topic for another day. Still, if you’re
not going to improve the roster through trades nor acquire in-their-prime free
agents or test the international waters from Cuba or Japan, then you should be
doing what you can to get players up to the show rather than filling the
roster with has-beens whose best days are behind them. Marlon Byrd was a great story, but Rick
Ankiel, Andres Torres, Collin Cowgill, Chin-lung Hu, Danny Herrera, Ramon
Ramirez, Kelly Shoppach, Aaron Laffey, Brad Eamus, Ronny Paulino, Rob Johnson
and others were not.
Going forward for 2015 I’d like to see the following happen:
- Give Matt Reynolds a chance. He was hitting .355 before the PCL and .340 in it.
- Fast-track Dilson Herrera to the majors. If he can’t handle it, there’s always AAA waiting for him.
- Fast-track Michael Conforto. Get him into AA as soon as possible to see how he handles better pitching.
- Fast-track Steve Matz. That enables you to consider trading your sole lefty, Jon Niese.
- Trade Daniel Murphy. As a baserunner and a fielder he’s a pretty good hitter. Sell high.
- Trade Bartolo Colon. Unless you want him to be the next pitching coach, spend his salary on LF or SS.
- Don’t be afraid to sell Dillon Gee or Noah Syndergaard or Kevin Plawecki.
- Find some outfielders somewhere! Curtis Bay gets another year to show if he’s done or not. LF is a black hole. Fill it with a professional slugger.
- Hopefully a winter off will allow David Wright to heal. Either he’s too stubborn (or his manager is) to recognize that his ailing shoulder is affecting his swing. You’re stuck with him until 2020, so don’t make a bad situation worse by running him into the ground.
- For Tom Brennan: Bring in the fences. It’s a change that benefits both clubs’ offense equally but with a great crop of young pitchers, the Mets still will be at an advantage over most of their competitors.
- Finally, get a real manager.
4 comments:
Hi Reese, of course first and foremost, move the fences in!
I agree on all other points, with just the option to first see if the 26 year old rookie den Dekker (now 27, BTW) can show he is worthy to start in LF.
I agree that with Curtis' dead weight in right, and Lagares' average-at-best hitting to go with the bionic vacuum attachment he calls his glove, we need PLUS production in LF. If Dekker can't show he can do that, we need one for sure. Dekker can always be the 4th OF.
Reese,
I agree with all your ideas and the general tone of the article. I'd like to take one player's suggestion even farther. Send Conforto to winter ball and see how he does. It will give us the opportunity to see what level he's ready to compete at that we were denied this summer, at least. At best, we may find out he's ready for AAA pitching. I know that's optimistic, but he was supposed to be just about major-league ready.
If they are going to push, I think they should try Nimmo and bat him leadoff. At the very least, there is good reason to believe that his historical high OBP would carry into the ML and leadoff spot desperately needs to be filled and move Grandy down to 6th.
I had actually been referring to de Grom as the rookie.
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