Looking ahead to 2016 the Mets roster will have some
dramatic changes taking place from who goes north this year. Along with those changes come some salary
relief that can address any issues that arise this year. Let’s take a look at how things may differ
this time next year.
Starting Pitching
The rotund Opening Day starter with the 7.01 ERA will be a
memory. Bartolo Colon’s contract ends
and there’s no reason to think the team would want him back. It’s not a matter of age but simply good
business. No matter how well he does
this year, there’s a pipeline of starters behind him, including Rafael Montero,
Noah Syndergaard, Steve Matz, Matt Bowman and Tyler Pill. Now if he pitches well this year, then the
Mets can benefit by trying to flip him somewhere such as Minnesota where they just
lost Ervin Santana to a PED suspension for half a year.
Behind him you have Dillon Gee, the newly named 5th
starter. He’s the new Mike Pelfrey in
that he shows enough flashes of competency that you could delude yourself into
thinking he’s a part of the solution, but numbers suggest he’s no better than a
4/5 starter on most team. Again, that
same pitching pipeline of minimum waged hurlers will price Gee out of his
job. At $5.3 million he’s fairly paid
for what he delivers, but he’s not ten times better than the people knocking on
the door (and likely not a better pitcher than they are). If he’s still on the team by the end of the
year he’s a non-tender candidate.
Now the interesting one is Jon Niese. If he pitches well this year he could find
himself on the trading block as well. He’s
earning a reasonable $7 million but staying healthy has been his problem. When he’s not battling injuries he’s thrown
some gems but he goes up to $9 million next year. The Mets probably are hoping he hurls 180-200
quality innings to open up the possibility of trading him elsewhere to save
money.
I haven’t forgotten Matt Harvey or Jacob de Grom. What I wish for them is health and a 1-2
punch to head up the rotation next year.
Bullpen
Right now the Mets are featuring two men who have served as
closers, newly shorn Jenrry Mejia and surgically repaired Bobby Parnell. Parnell is earning $1.4 million than Mejia
despite having thrown just an inning in 2014 and starting this season on the
DL. When both are available and healthy
it will be interesting to see which direction they take with the role. Some have written critical comments about
the amount of personality Mejia exhibits and he has some issues with
control. Parnell successfully converted
himself from a triple digit thrower into an effective reliever, but if he takes
over the closer’s role during 2015 then he’ll be in for a big bump in pay come
next year. For now
I’m penciling both in
for the 2016 bullpen.
Backing them up are two guys who seemingly have closer’s
stuff in Vic Black and Jeurys Familia.
Despite the former’s shoulder issues and the latter’s lackluster Spring Training
there’s no question about their ability when healthy.
Behind him are the southpaw newcomers, Alex Torres and Jerry
Blevins. They are likely pitching for
their futures. Torres is still in the
controllable low-wage years but Blevins is already earning Mejia money. I could see a Dario Alvarez replacing him if
he can learn to harness his control.
Josh Edgin is likely out until the All Star Break, so there
will still be a need for guys like Sean Gilmartin to take up the innings he
would have provided.
Rubber-armed Carlos Torres reinvented himself as a reliever
when he got to the Mets and provides a steadying presence to a sometimes
volatile pen.
Infield
Whether the Mets can manage to lock up Lucas Duda before the
season or roll the dice and wait until afterwards, the fact remains he’s likely
manning Keith Hernandez’s old position for the foreseeable future.
Daniel Murphy must definitely see the handwriting on the
wall when the club locked up Juan Lagares, are considering doing the same with
Lucas Duda and no such effort has been made on his behalf. Franklly, you can’t blame them as they have
Matt Reynolds and Dilson Herrera playing middle infield positions and set to
earn minimum wage when they make it to the majors to stay. At $8 million already, Murphy is a goner. The only question is whether it happens
during the season via trade or at the end of the year when he departs as a free
agent.
Wilmer Flores is one of the true wildcards for the
team. He’s been an solid run producer
throughout the minors and this Spring did nothing to dissuade people that his
bat is for real. The questions about his
glove and his range will always be there (much like they are for Murphy), but a
shortstop who can produce 15/65 is a hot commodity. Considering he’ll be making close to minimum
wage, it makes him both desirable to the Mets and also trade bait with a middle
infield with high potential playing in Las Vegas.
David Wright will collect $20 million this year to play the
hot corner and another $20 million is carved in stone for 2016 as well. This Spring he’s looked healthy and
productive, so the salary might yet prove to be equitable.
The other wild card for the Mets is Travis d’Arnaud. His well document tale of two seasons had
converted most into true believers, but with just one extra base hit for the
entire Spring Training season you have the doubters coming out of the woodwork
again. Kevin Plawecki is the first
insurance policy in AAA, plus you have the surprising Johnny Monell showing a
lot of pop in his bat as well. Hopefully
what’s behind him in AAA will motivate d’Arnaud to kick his offensive game into
gear. His defensive game, well, it’s
still a work in progress.
Outfield
This area is one where there may not be any changes at all
pending health of all three outfielders.
Michael Cuddyer’s salary jumps from $8.5 million this year to $12.5
million next year. Juan Lagare’s newly
minted contract sees his salary jumping about $5 million higher. Curtis Granderson will be paid $16 million
once again. Hopefully this year and
next, unlike 2014, he actually earns it.
Summary
So you have several
key departures expected in Bartolo Colon, Dillon Gee, Daniel Murphy and
possibly Jon Niese and Jerry Blevins. If
all indeed came to fruition the Mets would suddenly find themselves flush with
a cool $13-$15 million of payroll savings.
The question is what would you do with that money? I’ve already assumed salary increases for
Lucas Duda, Matt Harvey and others….but there will still be that big chunk of
money leftover. Where would the team
seek to upgrade?
The obvious answer to me is the outfield. Neither Curtis Granderson nor Michael Cuddyer
are getting any younger, plus Cuddyer’s deal ends in October of 2016. There’s no guarantee Brandon Nimmo can adjust
to the next levels of pitching he faces (witness his struggles in AA last
year). In addition, no matter how
aggressively they promote Michael Conforto there is no assurance he’s ready to
start next season in the majors since he’s only in High A to start this
year.
So how would you spend that payroll surplus?
7 comments:
Parnell is a free agent after this season.
I frankly haven't gotten my brain there yet, Reese, so I have no suggestions in that regard.
I am hoping Akeel Morris and Jack Leathersich are bullpen pieces in 2016. Morris I hope makes rapid progress and can replace the expensive Parnell, not as closer, but as a bullpen righty.
Maybe there is a Cuban stud to be had next year.
But maybe Nimmo surges this year - good to keep an eye on 2016, but the canvas of 2015 still needs to be painted a bit - so say around May 1, a blurry picture will start coming into focus.
I have my doubts on Puello being much of a fix - if he passed thru waivers, and none of the other 29 teams saw value, we may be over-hyping his real potential.
Reese -
I agree with you... the outfield
My humble opinion is that the 2016 25man roster will again be filled with plenty of homegrown talent.
Herrera for Murph. (Insert arms here) for parnell, gee, colon etc.
Outfield can replace mayberry with homegrown somebody.
Maybe a muno for cambell swap, and reynolds for tejada .
If the Mets do even a bit as well as they should, attendance and SNY rating should be up nicely = more revenue and dare I say it more payroll... so there is a chance there will be $15m-$20m available. Who knows what we'll need by then - so much depends on injuries and rookie performances...
Reese, Mack,
I'll narrow it down even further for you.
Justin Upton. Or, if the Cards don't wrap it up by then, Jason Heyward.
Third choice, if Flores has problems - Ian Desmond.
I agree with Steve, Throw the bank at Jason Heyward to play RF and let Cuddyer, Grandy and Duda, split Abs between LF/1B. I'm not a big Upton fan as I prefer defense and speed over occasional power but I know Wright and Upton are close and we see that matters after signing Cuddyer and giving up a top 15 draft pick& draft money for a 36 yr old one dimensional bat.
If the cards don't lock up Say Heyward, give him a 7/8 yr deal and start talking about championships instead of possible wild card chases.
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