Next week we'll consider the possibility of getting something
for Neil Walker rather than letting him walk away for nothing at year’s
end. The Mets are in the same boat with
Lucas Duda, but interestingly may find a much bigger market given his rather
reasonable contract. He is currently
earning $7.25 million in his final year prior to free agent eligibility.
There are some red flags, of course. Starting with his back, no one knows how any
of the Mets’ walking wounded will do until Spring Training and then once the
daily grind puts stress on the surgically repaired areas. He’s also notoriously streaky, a poor man’s
Jay Bruce. When hot, he can carry a
club, but the cold streaks have been lengthy.
In his early showing for the Mets he was a high average hitter with
moderate power (which mirrored his minor league record). Then he turned up the power and reached the
30 homer plateau, but it came with a depression in the batting average and an
increase in the number of strikeouts.
While no one is ever going to confuse him with Keith Hernandez, he’s
made himself into an acceptable first baseman, though DH is more likely his
long term future.
In the minors the Mets have their number two prospect, first
baseman Dom Smith, ready to begin the year in Las Vegas. 2016 was something of a breakthrough for the
portly Smith. His power increase, he
drove in 92 and he hit over .300. Those
numbers should improve dramatically in hitter’s heaven in Las Vegas.
So if you have one of your top prospects available to play
the position and Duda likely pushing the $10 million mark next year, the smart
move would be to look to deal him in-season to get something in return rather
than have him walk away and give you nothing.
Now if you did find a taker for Duda, you would have to consider how to
fill that void at 1B. Would it be Smith
getting perhaps rushed to the major leagues or would it be Wilmer Flores in an
interim role for the rest of the year?
Could it even be Jay Bruce and thus creating a spot for Michael
Conforto?
Looking around the league it would seem mostly AL teams that
make sense as potential trade partners.
After all, it opens up both 1B and DH possibilities for Duda. There are a few teams where they have some
relatively weak links for whom Duda would represent an upgrade. If any of these teams found themselves in a
pennant chase, then a mid-year acquisition could help propel them to the top:
A’s – Yonder Alonso has not been a great player, showing
mediocre batting average and arguably the worst power numbers of any first
baseman in baseball.
Blue Jays – Justin Smoak has not ever fulfilled the great
potential they expected of him. He’s a
huge dropoff from Edwin Encarnacion and Duda would be closer offensively.
Pirates – Josh Bell is young and they’re entrusting him with
the position, but his performance to date doesn’t suggest a traditional bopper
profile.
Rangers – They have a guy with highlight reel power in Joey
Gallo, but his trials at the major league level have not been good (including 76
Ks in just 133 ABs). First baseman Ryan
Rua is no Prince Fieldeer with a career slash of .255/14/43.
Rays – Logan Morrison has been a respectable but injury
plagued player who is inferior to Duda. Corey
Dickerson is slated to be the DH but could wind up in the OF if any of the
players there underperform.
Rockies – If the Rockies suffer an outfield injury, another
regression by Gerardo Parra or finally execute a Carlos Gonzalez trade, then Ian
Desmond could find himself moving to the OF again, thus opening 1B.
White Sox – They’re going with Matt Davidson at DH. Who???
Yankees – Greg Bird is a big man who has good but not great
numbers in the minors. Right now he’s
slated to be at 1B. His lefty bat might
play better in the Yankee bandbox than his minors’ best 20 HR season, but you
never know.
Would you push to trade Duda or ride out the season and potentially
lose him for nothing (since the Neil Walker QO debacle will likely have the
Mets declining that option)?
Nice article. There is need for Duda around the majors...keep listening, Sandy. Well high. Bruce and Flores at 1B would be OK if Bruce is amenable. Absent a remarkable 2017, no way Duda remains with this team in 2017.
ReplyDeleteIn this context, you are placing zero value on a potential World Series win. Zero value on what happens in 2017.
ReplyDeleteSure, you can look at the "value" of Lucas Duda in isolation -- but no smart GM would do that. In isolation, you trade him to a team that needs a bat at the deadline and get a prospect or two back. Something, I guess.
Then you also lose what he can give you the rest of the 2017 season. And you potentially downgrade a position so you can later on say, yeah, but we got these two middling prospects for him to maximize our value?
It makes no sense and will never happen.
How about this? The Mets try to win in 2017.
Anon
Trading at the all-star break always comes at a risk for a team that is competing to reach the playoffs themselves.
ReplyDeleteI also am not a big fan of rushing prospect talent to our highest level where they have to compete against the game's premier players. Guys like Conforto start off well enough, but ++ players know know to make the adjustments (especially the quality starters).
Still, it would take one hell of a first half season for me to keep Duda for the entire season.
I'd shop him and, if I could get TWO quality prospects, I would sell him off.
Who do I play for the rest of the season is simple... I would first split time between Flores and Rivera.
Give ANON an A+.... too much Fascination with Trading Players versus WINNING
ReplyDeleteIf they cared about winning they would have improved the roster since 2016 ended. They did not.
ReplyDeleteReese...they are in excellent postion, despite some disagreements I have with re-signings. They have 3 infielders post back Surgery, and 4 pitchers who were shelved at the end of last season.
ReplyDeleteYou evaluate what is in place before you start trading to fill spots....and they have plenty of trade poeder left.
Your fascination with Trades and maximizing player value is NOT winning motivated---and your retort?---- you're "The Pot calling the Kettle Black".
I respectfully disagree. I am simply accepting the reality that they will welcome a pennant if one falls in their laps but they are putting profit ahead of winning. Until the current regime is gone you will bloody your head beating it against the wall demanding that they act like they want to win. Instead figure out how that accidental pennant might happen by selling off pieces you have no intention of keeping and trying to fortify the organization with future talent at minimum wage.
ReplyDeleteThey've been incredibly aggressive at the deadline... you're stuck in an old tune
ReplyDeleteAnd which outsiders would be more likely to help us this year than Blevins, Salas, Walker and whatsisname in LF?
ReplyDeleteBill...I'd have liked to see them be more aggressive by passing on 2 of 3: Duda, Walker, Bruce.... adding a RH power bat at 1b. That said---they have tremendous questions at 3 infield positions (back surgeries) and 4 SP's who were out of service at game 163.
ReplyDeleteThey did what they needed to do with CES...they have retained tradeable assets to add IF and pitching if needed---and assuming/hoping that the health questions are only narrow problems...I assume that will be defiend by D Wright's collapse in Spring/early season.