I’m
very happy that the Mets hired Kevin
Long as hitting coach
for a couple of reasons.
First,
the Mets don’t have to break him in to working in ‘The Big Apple’ or dealing
with all the extras that come along with our city. This is not like working
for, say, Tampa Bay or Cincinnati. This is New York where you are constantly
surrounded by the press, fans, and critics. What better primer to working for
the Mets than to be working for the Yankees?
The
other reason would be his background with OF Curtis
Granderson (which
I wouldn’t be surprised that Grandy didn’t sign off on). Superstar ballplayers
are a funny lot… but superstar ballplayers that are hitting .230 and have a
stranger come up to them and start telling them how to change their swing…
well, that could be a whole different situation.
The
2015 Mets need Granderson to come out of the box and their best chance of
getting that done could be having Long on the payroll. Long has danced this
dance before. He adjusted Grandy’s swing when he came to the Yankees from
Detroit, which helped produce 108-HRs over three seasons.
The
Mets have now begun to bring in the fences where Granderson likes to hit
baseballs. Now, they have brought in his old hitting coach. The Mets need him
to return to a middle-of-the-lineup hitter in the .250, 30-HR, 80-RBI range and
it seems to me that the proper steps are being taken to get there.
I
was watching Game 3 of the World Series and the announcers were talking about
how each manager’s strategy was to get their starting pitcher ‘into the sixth
inning so their bullpen could take over’.
Here
I was watching two great starters, Jeremy
Guthrie and
Tim Hudson, and all their managers wanted
was six innings out of each of them.
It
was then that I began to wonder if I have been looking at this whole thing
wrong over the past few years. I’ve been bitching and moaning that the Mets
starters can’t work their way into the eighth inning when here the plan all
along was to put the ball into the hands of fresh arms as soon as the first hit
is made in the sixth inning.
How
many World Series have I written about and said that the secret of winning was
having those ‘three guys that can throw 97 for 16 pitches each’? Sure, I was
exaggerating, but isn’t the likes of Greg
Holland, Wade Davis, Brandon Finnegan,
and Kelvin Herrera really winning the games for
Kansas City?
So
how close are the Mets to this kind of approach?
Well,
I guess the majority of us here would put both Jenrry
Mejia and Jeurys Familia into
this kind of lightning approach. Is there currently a third on the team? Vic Black? Bobby Parnell?
I’ll
say it one more time… send Rafael
Montero down
to the pen permanently and you have your three dynamic right handed relief
pitchers that can dominate the ending of the majority of games next season.
Michael
Scannell wrote
-
Hi Mack,
since LJ Mazzilli is playing so well in AZ,
where do you think he starts next year and do you think he's made a case for
being included in the team's long term plans? Thanks!
Mack
– Interesting question, and one that could easily be answered if the Mets
promoted based on talent/results, but they have so consistent pattern over the
years regarding this. Some do, some don’t.
Right
now, Mazzilli continues to prove all the critics wrong who said that the best
he was, was the son on another player named Mazzilli. Harsh, but those words
were said by some.
No
one would ever hold against a ballplayer hitting under .250 or throwing over
4.00 in the Arizona Fall League, because you are just coming off an entire
season, only to then have to go up against a six team league of the top prospect
talent in the higher levels on the 30 team’s systems. Yet that being said,
Mazzilli is once again hitting over .300 against some of the top pitchers he
would have to be successful against someday at the pro-level.
We
could argue all day as to who is the top second base prospect… right now…
Mazzilli or Dilson
Herrera. I’ll save you the
argument by saying this. The Mets system (with Daniel
Murphy holding fort in
Queens) has the depth to deal any one of these three and still walk away with a
safe play full of long term depth for the position.
Me?
I’m still old school and I’d keep the guy who made the all-star team this year.
You can pick from there.
Mets Injury
Updates –
Well, nothing but good news here…
Jeurys
Familia joined
Jenrry Mejia on the hernia operation list.
This is the time of the year you, ya know, get a new glove, have bone chips
removed, and have someone rebuild your groin. This is pretty routine stuff and
both will be ready by January to report for pitchers/catchers.
I
had a report out of camp that OF Michael
Conforto developed
some back discomfort during the Instructs, but Adam Rubin reported that the
recovery time was swift and he returned to play before the league ran out.
And
with five weeks done in his six week, non-surgical rehab program, David Wright reports ‘very steady progress’
with his shoulder.
I was hoping David's answer would be "shoulder's night and day better." It was a more nuanced answer, so I am only cautiously optimistic.
ReplyDeleteWanting Murphy due to being "old school" leaves out the fact that in the old days, it is a no-brainer. Murphy would cost 5 times as much as Herrera, and that 5 times would be small potatoes. Now it is $500,000 vs. $10 million. Will Daniel give you $9.5MM better production? Hard to keep him, thinking like a Wilpon.
Imagine if Doc Gooden had been limited to 6 or 7 innings, instead of 771 innings in 3 seasons before he turned 22? Maybe he wins 300.
Kudos to Mazzilli for confounding us all. He has had a tremendous 2014.
I will reserve judgment on the fence shortening until I see the finished product, but what I can make out in the photos makes it look very beneficial to lefty hitters like Grandy, and maybe Wright will sneak out 2 or 3 more that way. I'd still like 402 in dead center, but it is their fences.
I agree with you on the picture of the fence
ReplyDeleteI'd still like to know the dimensions. Can't figure out why the FO is keeping them so close to the vest.
ReplyDeleteOf course, if Terry did actually limit most of his SPs to 6 IP, he'd be accused of burning out and "destroying" Black, Familia, Parnell, Mejia and Edgin.
ReplyDeleteWhichever approach he uses, he's guaranteed to be "wrong".
If Maz is raising his profile around the league it only adds to the Mets' depth
ReplyDeleteMichael -
ReplyDeleteNothing against Mazzilli, but I remember what they were saying about him when I terviewed him while he was still in college and there really wasn't any prospect-ink out there. Most of what was written was his association with his father.
There's been a change similar to how Lagares has stepped up.
We see so much in the other direction (Cecchini) that we need to recognize that he jsut might be an answer to the long term second base projection.
It would be a nice surprise. If he steps up and takes over 2B that's fine. With all of our young MIF talent, I have no horse in the race, I just want the best player to get the job .
DeleteJust to note, Nimmo and Reynolds were named to the AFL all star game but Maz is conspicuously absent.