After the grueling 1992 Mets season ended with an
ignominious record of 72 and 90, sportswriters Bob Klapish and John Harper penned
the infamous, The Worst Team Money Could Buy which detailed the collapse of the
New York Mets. The team had a then
record-setting payroll of $45 million
and great things were expected of them.
The season started off on a down note when they peddled Gregg Jeffries, Kevin McReynolds and Keith Miller to the Kansas City Royals for ace
pitcher Brett Saberhagen and utility infielder Bill Pecota. As damaged goods, Saberhagen pitched well
when available, but in four years for the Mets he made just 74 starts, an
average of just over 18 per year. Jeffries,
of course, went on to back-to-back All-Star appearances with the Cardinals and
finished with a career .289 batting average.
The thought was he could help replace the departed Frank Viola as the
stopper, but you have to stay on the field to do so.
The big acquisition, of course, was free agent Bobby Bonilla
from Pittsburgh where he’d made four straight All Star appearances and seemed
to have the combination of high batting average and power that would propel the
Mets’ offense. His first year in New
York was not good by his standards -- .249/19/70 -- but he bounced back in the
second year to provide .265/34/87.
Everyone is well aware of how the team eventually bought him out of his
deal with deferred money and we all “celebrate” Bobby Bonilla Day when his
$1.19 million payment is due now and every year through 2035.
The right side of the infield was new in 1992 as well, with
future manager Willie Randolph and future Hall of Famer Eddie Murray both
acquired to shore up the offense. Like
Bonilla, Murray took a year to fully adjust to his new team, providing .261/16/93 but improved to deliver .285/27/100
the following year. Randolph was a grave disappointment after a
.327 campaign in Milwaukee the previous year he only hit .252/2/15 in his last
(and only season) with the Mets.
The rest of that 1992 team was mostly forgettable, with Dick
Schofield at SS, Daryl Boston in LF, Howard Johnson in CF, Dave Magadan at 3B
and a pre-PED Todd Hundley behind the plate.
Bench players included a malcontent 2nd baseman by the name
of Jeff Kent, a future 24 home run hitter in Kevin Elster, and the guy who
couldn’t throw the ball back to the mound, Mackey Sasser. Other pitchers included Sid Fernandez, Doc Gooden, David Cone and Pete
Schourek. John Franco missed much of the
year due to injury, so closing duties went to Mets legend Anthony Young,
buttressed by side armer Jeff Innis and former starter Wally Whitehurst.
Fast forward to 2017 and it may be time for the gents to
write a sequel. Baseball inflation
grossly outpaced normal inflation as $45 million in 1992 dollars would be a
mere $78 million today. The Mets payroll
on Opening Day was estimated to be almost double that at $152 million. Considering how much more they invested to win, you could argue that this team is even worse between cost and expectations.
So what did the Wilpons get for their investment? Well, David Wright hasn’t played a game. Jeurys Familia has played in just 11
games. Noah Syndergaard has been in
5. Matt Harvey has been in 13. Steven Matz has been in 15. Neil Walker has missed 40 games. Yoenis Cespedes has missed 45. Assorted others have suffered injuries as
well, including Juan Lagares, Brandon Nimmo, T.J. Rivera, Asdrubal Cabrera,
Zack Wheeler and Robert Gsellman.
If you extrapolate the team’s record over the course of 162
games they’re neck and neck with the 1992 crew.
Right now they would round up to 73 wins, one full game better than Jeff
Torborg’s squad. Yes, the Mets are
sinking to THAT level. Considering that
the team was officially “All-in” to win in 2017, I’d have to say that this team
is a greater disappointment than the 1992 squad. Then again, the 1992 team did at least
attempt to improve over the course of the winter, something the Mets did not
do.
So, which team deserves the “Worst Team Money Can Buy” crown
of thorns?
Bill Pecota...haven't heard that name in awhile...didn't they name a series of baseball statistics after him?
ReplyDeleteI believe it stands for Player Empirical Comparison and Optimization Test Algorithm. One of the baseball publications/websites uses it to evaluate player performance.
ReplyDeleteI like the one that was "Mets Evaluation Simulation System"... MESS
ReplyDeleteMurray was really clutch with the bags full then...my only positive memory of those days. We invested in bums when we should have invested in BONDS.
ReplyDeleteNo one answered the question? Which team deserves that title?
ReplyDeleteReese -
ReplyDeleteThat's easy.
It doesn't matter how much or how little was spent.. $1 would have been too much for...
1962 Mets
Perhaps...but in 7 years they were world champions. After seven years of Alderson/Collins where are we?
ReplyDeleteThe 1992 team in my book - the pitching injuries crippled this year's team - too many, out too long
ReplyDeleteI go with this year. Despite publicly stating you were all in they did nothing to improve the roster and had inflation-adjusted twice as much invested.
ReplyDeleteThis year's team because its more than triple the payroll and much more was expected but at least I can sleep easier at night knowing Bobby B. won't have to look for work anytime soon.
ReplyDelete