Pages

11/18/15

Reese Kaplan -- Ummm...That's Not What We Really Meant

Let’s get a few things out onto the table right now.  You can’t necessarily spend your way to a pennant.  If so, the Dodgers would have won the World Series instead of getting bumped off in the Divisional round and the Yankees would have made it to the postseason. 

Also, spending and investing are two very different things.  Spending is giving a broken-down 35 year old best suited to be a DH (if wearing a baseball uniform at all) a two year contract for $22 million that costs you a first round draft pick.  Investing is giving legitimate shots to cost-controlled players who could help your team for 4 or more years without breaking the bank.   

Do you remember the infamous fan loyalty letter sent by the tone-deaf Mets to their fans, imploring them to come to the ballpark and remain faithful despite putting an inferior product on the field?  It came on the heels of the Sandy Alderson proclamation that the team would spend once it began winning.

Towards that end, I do have to say Alderson lived up to that promise as we saw more activity in reconstructing the roster between the end of July and the end of September than we did in entire off-seasons of the past.  Brought in were Juan Uribe, Kelly Johnson, Tyler Clippard, Yoenis Cespedes, Addison Reed, Eric O’Flaherty and Eric Young, Jr.  For the most part, what Alderson spent was prospects and pro-rated salaries, most of which were paid for the majority of the season by each player’s former team.  With the exception of O’Flaherty, the moves mostly worked.

So now that the team has gone to the World Series, what are we hearing now regarding the players available on the free agent market or allegedly on the trading block?  They’re too expensive, they want too many years, they’re over the hill or we don’t want to give up what is being asked in trade.

Huh?  Wait a minute…isn’t this team the same one that said they would spend once they smelled success?  Granted, they were indeed pretty stinky at times during the World Series, but they finished as the BEST in the National League.  How much more success was meant in that definition of the word?

Also, wasn’t this the team about which Jeff Wilpon said multiple times, “GM Sandy Alderson has room in his budget to make additions through trades and free agent signings this winter.”  Didn’t Daddy Fredbucks, regarding the financial troubles of the team, also say, “It’s all in the rear-view mirror”?

Given these facts, explain to me why Mets fans are buying into the “No Upton”, “No Cespedes”, “No Heyward”, “No Gordon” mindset of the early Wilpon/Alderson era.  Why are people not out rallying in the streets with pitchforks and torches when they hear that the big off-season acquisitions might be the likes of Gerardo Parra and Tony Sipp.  While these complementary players are perfectly acceptable when you have a strong core, the fact remains the Mets are now without two of their leading offensive weapons in Yoenis Cespedes and Daniel Murphy.  Where are those doubles and home runs coming from to replace what was lost?

A lot of people are pointing to the stellar pitching rotation which is cost controlled by arbitration maximums until 2018 or thereabouts.  Does that mean you’re punting the 2016 and 2017 seasons before you watch the parade of pitchers heading to greener pastures and paydays elsewhere?  If not, you’d better do something to fix the offense which was worst in the league prior to the late season acquisitions who, save for Addison Reed, are all on their way out the door (plus Murphy). 

Now the Royals did indeed show that you don’t’ need future Hall of Fame caliber sluggers in order to win.  You do need some contact hitters to balance out the free swinging ways of David Wright, Curtis Granderson, Lucas Duda and others.  Your best contact hitters were Daniel Murphy (gone) and Wilmer Flores (benched until the Chase Utley incident gave him a chance to play again). 

What’s equally frustrating is that they let the Juan Lagares elbow situation linger all year long and now are going to squander another year of production by trying “rest” as a cure rather than addressing what needs to be done. 

I’m heading out of the country for a few weeks and when I return I hope to hear more than the Mets decided to go all-in to spend on a fading 34 year old Ben Zobrist because there was no draft pick compensation tied to signing him.  When you see the lackluster package the Braves got in return for the stellar-fielding and cost controlled Andrelton Simmons, you’d have to think someone was asleep at the wheel (or not empowering his assistants to make deals at the GM meetings). 




7 comments:

  1. They are counting on spending very little and filling seats with Syrian refugees. There ought to be plenty of them here.

    Ted Cruz does not approve, nor do I. Fans will just have to see it as a "setback."

    ReplyDelete
  2. Leaving the rest of this rant aside, the Braves did NOT get a "lackluster" return for Simmons. They got two of the top pitching prospects in baseball, one of whom will likely be in the Braves rotation in 2016.

    And no one was sleeping at the wheel. We asked about Simmons. They wanted deGrom. Are you making that trade? I'm not. Instead, they turned elsewhere are got a replacement shortstop (Aybar is under-rated, IMHO) and two top pitching prospects on the order of, at worst, Wheeler and Matz. That ain't "lackluster". Our top pitching prospects were dealt to get us to the World Series, otherwise we could have come at them with Fulmer and Meisner. And, at that, we'd likely have had to include a Rosario to get that deal done. Personally, I wouldn't make that deal, either, but I'd consider it ahead of giving deGrom to a division rival.

    Personally, I would try to keep Cespedes. But you wouldn't find me in a bidding war for Upton, Heyward, Gordon or Zobrist either. I don't see a fit there. We have our outfield already (Conforto, Lagares and Grandy), there's no DH in the NL and Zobrist is basically Murphy (at twice the price). At the prices those players will command, that's just throwing money away. Our holes are at first and short (sorry Lucas). None of the guys you mention play either.

    ReplyDelete
  3. You said it, Stubby. If this rant were written this coming January, it might have SOME credibility. But denouncing the Mets' lack of moves two weeks before the Winter meetings even start is just ranting for its own sake.

    Spending and throwing money away are not the same. Throwing money at corner OFers while Conforto has LF and Grandy was our MVPP (Most Valuable Position Player) is crazy. And calling a kid who has yet to reach a .300 OBP a "contact hitter" is pure nonsense, especially when you favor him over a better fielder with a .330 OBP and a better K/BB ratio (2/1 vs 3/1).

    If we're going to review the Mets' off-season, can we at least wait until December is over, if not January? And please stop insisting that you're better equipped to diagnose Lagares' condition than the orthopedic surgeons and other doctors who actually graduated from Med School AND have examined him.

    ReplyDelete
  4. The Braves were fleeced in the Evan Gattis trade for a true top prospect who, this year anyway, flopped. Most pundits have the people they got from the Angels B-level at best. We'll see when they advance to the majors.

    If they would have accepted a one year deal for shortstop and two B-level prospects that could have been done with Wilmer Flores or Ruben Tejada plus guys like Ynoa and Bowman.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You are drastically undervaluing the return the Braves received. Newcomb was a top 20 prospect in he MLB. Ynoa and bowman aren't even close to cracking a top 100 list. Ellis is also no slouch. Matz, Tejada, and Bowman/Ynoa might be comparable. Is that worth a 2-3 war prospect who's value is entirely tied to elite defense?
      And come on with Gattis, he was terrible last year and the verdict is still out on the three prospects received by the Braves.


      Maybe post this if we are sitting in the same spot come January, otherwise it comes off and whiny and uniformed.


      Delete
  5. @SidFinch -- everyone's entitled to an opinion, but the numbers don't lie on the Gattis trade. He hit 27 HRs and 88 RBIs for the Astros. The pitcher they got in return -- Mike Folynewicz -- was 4-6 with a 5.71 ERA and a nearly 1.7 WHIP.

    Who got the better end of that deal?

    ReplyDelete