Good
morning.
You
all know how and when I write my morning report. Most of the work is done in
the daytime well before the night game of the same day. Example: Today is
Thursday and, right now, I’m writing this Matt Harvey piece
at around 10:30am.
In
a perfect world, I should have written this is yesterday’s post which posted up
the morning after he pitched his last game, but this just doesn’t fit my time
clock anymore. So, I have to keep a check on the results of each game, just in
case something I wrote doesn’t make sense when it posted up.
A
good example of that would have been what I said last post about Jeurys Familia. It was written before ‘’last night’s’
(Wednesday) game. What if he pitched and game up six runs? You see what I mean.
So
today… Thursday… I’m writing about Harvey’s last game on Wednesday… which will
post up on Friday.
Sorry
about that.
Everybody,
including Harvey, has been concerned with his slow start, inconsistent mechanics,
and decreased velocity this year. No one thought he was hurt; they just
(frankly) considered this more mental than anything else. Harvey is a very
emotional person and demands perfection when he reaches the mound. His game
always seems to fall apart when he begins to not achieve that perfection.
The
return of The Dark Knight seemed to begin on April 22nd when Harvey
won his first game of the season, struck out five in five innings, and gave up
only two runs. He followed that up on Wednesday with his second win of the
season, increasing his innings pitched to six, and striking out seven which
giving up only two runs. That’s now 4 runs and 12 strikeouts in 13 innings…
Even
more impressive was his last and 102nd pitch… a 97 mile per hour
strikeout to Jordan Pacheco.
There’s
a way to go here, but I still truly feel that the secret to this guy’s game is
in his head and don’t be surprised his next start doesn’t get even better.
From
Brice Toth -
Hey Mack, I've been watching a
lot of the games so far this season or at least have them on in the background
while doing other things. One thing I've noticed so far about Familia recently
is he's giving up hits but most of them are little dribblers or dinks that if
we had infielders with more range they would be outs. Long way of saying, I
think he has better than his numbers, at least recently. I feel like he has had
a few close pitches not go his way either. Just my two cents.
Mack –
Interesting observation. I live in South Carolina so I don’t get many Mets games
so I don’t see him pitch player to player.
Addison Reed is back
in the SV column. However, don’t go running out to pick up the righty just yet,
as he was merely vulturing a save from Jeurys Familia after
the Mets closer had pitched the last three (and four of the last five) days.
The former White Sox farmhand was solid, tossing a clean ninth with a lone
punchout of Adam Duvall. While Reed’s 2015 was the worst (peripherally) of his
big league career, there have been some positive signs through a few weeks of
2016. His SwStr% is well up, although there isn’t a significant change in pitch
mix or velocity. Reed is also attacking the strike zone and getting ahead of
hitters — his 70% F-Strike% would easily be the best mark of his career. It’s
somewhat tenuous whether these small gains will persist as the calendar pages
turn, but a hot start and his usage patterns show that Reed is (for now) the
handcuff to own in Queens.
Mack – The Mets
bullpen seems to be clicking on all their cylinders right now. I especially
like what’s going on with Jim Henderson (1.17), Hansel Robles (1.80), and Logan Verrett (0.55). I’m not exactly sure what kind of move will be made when
Josh Edgin is named healthy and ready to
return.
From
Reese Kaplan –
Last year the Mets made a
rather unsuccessful trade when they sent Cory Mazzoni and
a PTBNL to the San Diego Padres for Alex Torres
(and his cap). The Mets in August of
2015 DFA'd Torres and he finished up the year in the minors for Las Vegas.
This week what goes around
comes around as Cory Mazzoni was DFA'd by the El Paso Chihuahuas (AAA affiliate
of the San Diego Padres). Sometimes you
hear people talk about the trades that work out for both sides. Here's a case of one that worked for neither.
Mack – Look… the
Mets have traded an awful lot of young pitchers away lately, but, so far, none
have come back to bite the team in the ass while, at the same time, the team is
one-for-one in becoming the NL Champs by benefiting from players received in
those trades.
I have no
problems with what the Mets have done here.
Lexington
6 – Columbia 5 - The Fireflies never trailed in their
three-game series with the Lexington Legends until the eighth inning on
Thursday night - that's when the visitors used a three-run frame to take a 6-5
lead and down Columbia at Spirit Communications Park.
The
Fireflies led, 5-3, to start the eight. Samir Duenez launched his second home
run of the night off of Seth Davis (L, 1-1) to begin the frame. Ben Johnson and
Cody Jones then followed with run-scoring hits to give the Legends the one-run
edge.
Columbia
(12-9) then went scoreless the final two innings. Manager Jose Leger's team has
won six of its last eight heading into its four-game weekend series with the
Kannapolis Intimidators.
The
home team struck first, scoring runs in the first two innings. In the bottom of
the first, Vinny Siena tripled - for the second straight night - and David
Thompson drove him in after grounding out to the shortstop Marten Gasparini.
Then in the second, J.C. Rodriguez doubled off of Legends starter Scott
Blewett. Tyler Moore stepped to the plate three batters later and knocked home
his teammate.
The
Columbia lead expanded to three runs in the third inning. With two runners
aboard, Joe Tuschak tripled for the second time this season. The Fireflies led
4-1 after three frames. Press release.
Lexington
(9-12) responded with scores in the fourth and sixth innings to cut their
opponent's lead to one run. In the bottom of the seventh, though, Thompson
tattooed a fastball from reliever Kyle Kubat (W, 1-1) over the left-centerfield
wall for his second dinger of the season.
Not
to be forgotten, Columbia starter Thomas McIlraith pitched in effective six
innings. He allowed just two earned runs and struck out a career-high nine
batters. Team press release.
Las
Vegas 8 - Tacoma 1
(4.5 innings) - Las Vegas pounded out ten hits in four
innings and beat Tacoma in a rain/wet ground shortened game.
CF
Brandon Nimmo .242) broke out, going 3-3, 2-R, 1-double, and 3-RBIs… 3B Matt Reynolds
was the only other player to produce multiple hits (.304, 1-R, 1-RBI).
Sean
Gilmartin pitched the ‘complete’ five innings: 2-H, 1-ER, 5-K, 4-BB (?), 1.66.