Earlier this week I wrote about what the team will likely
do. Now let’s talk about what they could
and should do if they were less conservative in building a roster. I have a plan to make GM Sandy Alderson the
envy of everyone in major league baseball. They will write stories about his genius in
this regard. I’m creating a legacy for others to emulate.
Moving forward the Mets primary trade chips this off season
should be BOTH Dillon Gee and Jon Niese.
Why, you may ask? Who will be in
the rotation if that happens?
Well, remember, the Mets are dealing from an embarrassment
of riches in this regard. Right now
without them you still have Matt Harvey, Jacob de Grom, Bartolo Colon, Zack
Wheeler and Rafael Montero all with major league experience in the starting
rotation. Following on their heels (and
cooling them until Super Two deadline has passed) are Noah Syndergaard, Steve
Matz, Matt Bowman and perhaps Logan Verrett.
Even if Harvey requires extended time rehabbing in Florida,
you have a swingman like Carlos Torres who could be inserted in the rotation if
necessary. There are also fillers
available like free-agent-to-be, Daisuke Matsuzaka. You also have lefty Darin Gorski who wouldn’t
be on that Super Two path but was pitching to a 1.83 ERA in AA in 2013 and a
2.22 ERA in Binghamton this year before a broken foot took him out of
action. He didn’t fare as well in the
pitching hell of Las Vegas, but he could likely be penciled in for spot
starting duty in Queens. The point here
is that you can muddle through April and part of May with a makeshift 5th
starter until Harvey is ready or finances more than pitching performance
dictate it’s time to make a move on one of the future rotation stars. When they do finally look to make the call to
Sin City, let it be known around baseball that Big Bart is available for an
A-ball prospect and some salary relief.
Look at what Alderson will have achieved then – a pitching
rotation with five starters, all of whom have first starter stuff at minimum
wage, and cost controllable for the next few years! While everyone was demanding Sandy trade away
his chips for a big bat, instead he could save them all to achieve this bargain-basement
pitching Nirvana that would be the envy of every other team in baseball.
How then do you address the offensive woes? Well, to begin you have gotten out from under
$12 million of salary obligations by dealing away Gee and Niese (assuming Gee
gets $5 million this year and Niese gets his contractually mandated $7
million). You also get out from under
competent but unspectacular mid-rotation pitchers who have both experienced
problems staying on the field. What you get in return – probably prospects –
is less important right now than the salary relief.
The other obvious trade candidate – Daniel Murphy – would
bring at minimum $8 million in additional salary relief (assuming a
well-deserved hefty raise this year).
While I’m not sure the team is ready to slide Dilson Herrera into 2B
without time at AAA (and they worry about a defense featuring Wilmer Flores and
Herrera up the middle), it is possible to go in that direction. That’s $20 million thus far in savings if
you’re keeping track. Throw in a little
less than half of Colon’s salary and that’s $25 million to spend to address
offensive needs WITHOUT INCREASING PAYROLL and without sacrificing a year of
control by promoting top pitching prospects before the Super Two deadline.
Remember too that you have in effect four closers in Bobby
Parnell, Jenrry Mejia, Jeurys Familia and Vic Black. Although Mejia’s antics make him the one most
likely to be moved as a sell-high candidate, until they know Parnell is healthy
they probably wouldn’t make that move.
Still, for the cash-strapped franchise, Parnell’s salary might dictate
he’s the one to leave rather than Mejia.
That’s another $4 million saved.
Now it’s time to play armchair GM and figure out what you
could do with potentially $12 to $29 million to spend.
Remember that within two years you have potentially two
solid bats arriving in Brandon Nimmo and Michael Conforto. Normally I’m the first person to advocate “go
with the kids” when it comes to starting players but here a 1-2 year contract
for older veterans might make sense if the price is right. Even senior citizen (by baseball standards)
Torii Hunter would be a nice fit and perhaps bring a long overdue winning,
competitive attitude to the organization.
He’s coming off a season with a .286/17/83 slash line – not bad at all
for a guy’s age 38 season. He’s
healthier and more athletic than Michael Cuddyer despite being a couple of
years older. I could see him taking a
year at $12 million with an option for another year.
Another short term solution player would be the Red Sox’
Yoenis Cespedes who is on the final year of his contract for $10.5
million. Considering the poor production
Boston has gotten out of its catching position this year, perhaps a Kevin
Plawecki-centered trade might pique their interest. I’d also kick the tires on Allen Craig who’s
not the greatest glove in the world, but who should provide Keith
Hernandez-like offense having hit .300 in 3 of the last 4 years. Mookie Betts would interest me as well, but
it would take more to pry away an inexpensive prospect than one of the
aforementioned veterans.
Although he wouldn’t cost big money in terms of salary, the
other player I would definitely inquire about is Wil Myers. He had a terrible year for the Rays after
they gave up 14 game winner James Shields and 9-2 Wade Davis (who finished the
season with a 1.00 ERA for the Royals).
They received salary relief but got very little out of the former uber-prospect
who slashed just 6/35/.222 in 325 ABs.
Again, you would probably have to start with Plawecki and then add quite
a bit more, but when you consider a minor league resume that included a
37/109/.314 year in 2012, that’s a gamble worth taking on a 23 year old. You could even still achieve that vision of
the minimum wage pitching staff with a prospect or two leftover that could wind
up in this deal (or Mejia). They might
even like Daniel Murphy as they are likely losing super-sub Ben Zobrist as a
free agent.
How would you spend this money to upgrade the offense
without increasing payroll?
4 comments:
I would put Flores at SS!
Perhaps the Dodgers and Mets should make a bold move. Syndergaard, Plawecki, Niese and Kirk for Pederson, Urias and Van Slyke. I dont know if this is a fair deal but it gives the Mets a RF/CF (Pederson) a LF (Van Slyke) (both with power) and a very young and talented lefty (Urias). It gives the Dodgers a solid #4 (Niese) behind Kershaw, Greinke and Ryu. A near ready every day catcher (Plawecki), a near ready starter (Syndergaard) and a #5 OF-er (Kirk)
And why would both teams make this trade? The Dodgers have Crawford (2017), Ethier (2017), Kemp (2019) and Puig (2018) under contract. Other then Puig, no match for the Mets because of the money. So is there room for Pederson? And when the Mets include Kirk the Dodgers might be willing to deal Van Slyke. The Mets on the other hand have a very crowded rotation and even more in Las Vegas so the Mets could deal their top pitching prospect and a "cheap" lefty under contract after 2018. With d'Arnaud the Mets could trade Plawecki and the Dodgers realy dont have any type of catching in their farm.
Again, I dont know if this is a fair deal.
Jonah
I'm all for obtaining top AAA talent ready to step into the outfield, but I don't think sacrificing one of the minimum wage crown jewels is necessarily the way to obtain it. Plawecki is in a different category as you usually only bank on one catcher be it d'Arnaud or him. If one had to go in trade to land an outfielder, so be it. But I think your chips remain Niese, Gee, Colon and Murphy and even Mejia or Parnell before you give up the cost-controlled starters.
I'd be calling Pittsburgh. Marte and Glasnow for Syndergaard-Plawecki-Mejia
there are 3-4 teams, like the Dodgers, that fit perfectly for a trade, but you have to realize that other teams are going to demand Syndergaard in a decent deal for a quality young outfielder.
The Mtes are going to have to consider dealing him up.
Post a Comment