As Spring Training draws to a close there appears to
be only two roster position battles among the bench players. There are people doing everything they can to make an impression, though the
tendency for the Mets is to go with the familiar player despite underwhelming
results rather than taking a chance on someone new. (We'll leave out the fact that it takes a direct order from the front office to get the manager to pencil a new name onto the lineup card.) Let’s take a look at the contenders for each
of these last two positions and see how they compare to one another.
Eric Campbell vs. Daniel Muno
“Soup” was a great story last year. He was a long time minor league veteran who
slowly and steadily climbed the ladder to the big leagues. As a 27 year old rookie, the combination of
his batting average and his positional versatility got him into Queens on the
big club where he sat on the bench watching Bobby Abreu and others get chances
to play while he collected splinters. By
the time his manager deigned to insert him into the lineup, he got out of
whatever good hitting groove he’d been in and finished the season slumping
badly, striking out in 26% of his ABs.
His minor league career was respectable.
He was a .284 hitter who knew how to work the counts (resulting in a
career .380 OBP mark). He never showed as
much power as you might expect for a 6’3” 205 pound hitter, but still managed
to produce a .416 SLG over his 2600 career minor league ABs. During his various stops along the way he
played all over the diamond, including significant stints at 1B, 3B and
LF.
This year’s Eric Campbell appears to be Danny
Muno. Leo Durocher once famously said of
Eddie Stanky, "He can't hit, can't run, can't field. He's no nice guy ... all the
little SOB can do is win."
The same might be said about Muno.
When you look at his numbers, nothing is too eye popping, yet it seems
whenever he plays he’d on base in the middle of things. He’s hit as many as 14 HRs in 455 ABs (extrapolated
out to about 19 on a full season). He’s
stolen as many as 19 bases (extrapolated out to about 38). He’s a career .276 hitter. He’s delivered a .395 OBP and a .419 SLG
throughout his 1600 minor league ABs. He’s
a switch hitter who has played 2B, SS and a little bit at 3B. At age 26 this year he’s not yet been in the
majors.
Now Spring Training
stats must be taken with something of a grain of salt as they are small sample
sizes, yet when you compare the two players Muno has outpaced Campbell in this
race. Thus far for the spring Campbell
is hitting .241 with 2 HRs, 9 RBIs, 8 walks, 9 strikeouts and a stolen
base. His OBP is .392 and his SLG is .561.Danny
Muno is hitting .378 with 1 HR, 4 RBIs, 4 walks, 6 strikeouts and a stolen
base. His OBP is .452 and his SLG is
.541.
Given he is a faster
baserunner, left handed, and can play both middle infield positions, it would
seem like it couldn’t hurt anything to give Muno a chance and keep Campbell
ready in Las Vegas. If the experiment
fails, you can flip-flop them.
Anthony Recker vs. Johnny Monell
A similar situation faces the Mets when it comes to
the backup catcher role. Anthony Recker
has seemed to have had a knack for slugging home runs at opportune moments but
in between the long balls he’s below the Mendoza line for his major league
career. At age 30 he’s still never been
able to muster more than the 174 ABs in a season that he got for the Mets last
year. For his career he’s had 375 ABs
and delivered a solid 14 HRs and 50 RBIs but hit a paltry .197 while striking
out 36% of the time. He’s looked good
behind the plate and has the notable honor of gunning down Cincinnati’s Billy
Hamilton.
Johnny Monell is a career minor leaguer who has show
great pop for a catcher, slugging as many as 20 HRs in a minor league season
spanning 415 ABs. That extrapolates out
to about 29 HRs for a full season as a starter.
That’s pretty serious power. The
same holds true for his 71 RBIs which would turn into over 100. This spring he’s done little to diminish his
reputation as a solid hitter while posting a .316 AVG with 3 HRs and 8 RBIs
over 37 spring ABs. Extrapolated over
the course of a full season that’s 48/129 – not likely to happen, but
indicative that he’s got some serious run-producing ability. Throw in the fact he’s a left handed hitter
and it means you can choose which days to sit Travis d’Arnaud when tough
righties like Stephen Strasburg or Max Scherzer pitch and insert Monell into
the lineup.
Recker has minor league options available, so, just
like the situation with Campbell, you could stash the veteran in Vegas and give
the chance to someone with the potential to be even better. You still have the fallback of promoting
Recker should Monell fail to adjust at the big league level.
We Come to Bury Cesar, Not to Praise Him
Cesar Puello is obviously not in the Mets plans and
his lack of opportunity this spring parallels what happened during his post-suspension
year in 2014. He’s not done himself any favors by hitting
.241 with no homers and no RBIs across 29 ABs, so his days in Mets minor league
laundry are apparently over. The only
hope is that he’s done SO poorly that he’ll pass through waivers unclaimed, but
even then he’s likely not to get a starting role in AAA either, so it looks as
if he’s going the way of Brandon Allen and Cory Vaughn.
If Murphy is out, a true "mid IF" backup has more use/value than Soup. That would make Muno a smart Short Term Choice, at least.
ReplyDeleteI believe Monell and Recker have options--- the Season's start is important, and it's a bit more spread out with added "weather days"... I believe they'll start with Recker to make it easier on the Pitchers. The Backup won;t have a very intensive play schedule in the first month. After that, thoughts of a Left Catcher may sway the next decision.
Here's hoping his fourth HR between when I penned this column on Friday and Saturday's game will open some more eyes to the possibility of Monell making the team. For those keeping score at home, this little-known backup catcher is now second to Michael Cuddyer on the club for HRs.
ReplyDeleteAlso, if the miserable output of Anthony Recker the last two years didn't deter them from promoting ANYONE from the minors to take his place, what would make them do so this year? To me, it's a matter of who starts in Queens...Kevin Plawecki is going to start in AAA so the backup who misses out in the Show is going to be collecting splinters in Las Vegas unless they plan on shifting Plawecki to 1B.
ReplyDeleteReese and everyone -
ReplyDeleteMorning.
'Rehabbing' in Florida this week for my mother-in-law's 84th birthday.
I expect either the Muno or Reynolds decision to be a short term one at best, so I'm not that concerned which one goes north.
That being said, the backup catcher slot should be long term and that's in Recker's corner, though Monell has hit better.
Question - when was the last time the Mets made these decisions based on numbers?
I think you've nailed what the two choices are, Reese. I'd only add that I think they're linked.
ReplyDeleteMonell's plus is as a LHB off the bench. In order to be able to USE him that way, a Campbell as break-glass-in-an-emergency catcher would seem to be in order. Soup caught an inning yesterday in a MinL game I understand, BTW.
If Recker is the BUC, another LHB is in order and the switch-hitting Muno seems reasonable if you're not going to carry a 6th OF (den Dekker--who would more accurately OF 5.5 as Vuddyer/Mayberry have some 1B duties)
My guess is that if Murph starts out on the DL, Muno, Campbell, & Monell come north. When Dan comes back, we revisit the Campbell/Monell vs. Muno/Recker packages.
Just realized: Reese's (bench) Pieces, Very nice.
ReplyDelete@Nack -- it took them awhile, but Flores over Tejada was based on Tejada's ineffectual hitting and Flores' pop.
ReplyDeleteOne thing that can't be discounted with Anthony Recker, is that the Mets win more often when he catches than when he doesn't catch. 2013, Mets were 20-14 when Recker caught; 2014, Mets were 24-19 when Recker caught. So, 44-33 for Recker; and 109-128 when he didn't catch.
ReplyDeleteAs far as Muno. Why would Muno be challenging Campbell for a spot instead of Tejada? Muno is primarily a middle infielder, Tejada is a light hitting middle infielder. I'd rather see Campbell and Muno than Muno and Tejada.
ReplyDeleteI strongly prefer Muno and Monell, as I prefer offense to defense, and think those two give Mets more. As long as Recker has option left, see ya -let's try the offensive lefty alternate to d'Arnaud.
ReplyDeleteCesar Puello should start over Vaughn in AAA, period. Puello is MUCH better. As Casey would say, "you could look it up" (if he didn't say it, I should've looked it up :)
BTW, Castellano 2 years ago? Maybe he starts for the Mets.
I am no fan of Ruben Tejada, but once the Mets tendered him a contract a spot on the roster was all but guaranteed. Their only hope to create room for Muno or Reynolds to supplant him is to trade Tejada elsewhere in a "change-of-scenery" type deal where the receiving team figures he can recapture his 2011/2012 form.
ReplyDeleteCampbell as an outfielder is extraneous as they have Nieuwenhuis and Mayberry. He's not a true middle infielder whereas Muno is. That's why I feel he is a better fit (not to mention more power, more speed and better OBP while hitting from the left side).
Muno is having a fine Spring,but was only so-so at AAA in the full '14 season. Campbell showed he could handle ML pitching, and his AAA numbers were superior to Muno's also.
ReplyDeleteThe job should be his to lose.
Puello looks absolutely lost and lifeless at the plate... no aggression--cannot find a fastball "good enough to hit". 1-0 and 2-0 fastballs with the bat shouldered.
ReplyDeleteI cannot believe that he will be a Met much longer---pretty sure he becomes a FA and signs elsewhere in an MILB contract. ---sometimes, this has to happen. He CANNOT become a player here.