It’s January 6th and thus far I’ve maintained my
glass half-full approach to considering what the Mets have. While most of us would do cartwheels if the
team actually acquired some major league hitting talent (not to mention healthy
starting pitching and another veteran relief arm), let’s deal with the reality
of what there is. Towards that end, let’s
consider what we have in former first round pick Brandon Nimmo.
I will tell you that his beaming smile and infectious
enthusiasm about being in the majors contrasts sharply with the sour-faced,
non-communicative person I met in El Paso when he was visiting the hometown
Chihuahuas. He was almost a pariah, not
interacting with any of the other players, warming up on his own, staying off
by himself during the pre-game rituals.
It was therefore surprising to see the positivity he seemed to bring
when he got to Queens.
As a minor leaguer he didn’t really seem to put it all
together until an extended run in AAA in 2016 when he finished with a
.352/11/62 output with an impressive .423 OBP and an OPS of .964 in just under
400 ABs. If you factor in the PCL
effect on hitters and pitchers then you have to scale back those expectations a
bit.
Fast forward to 2017 in the majors and he held his own. He had a multi-homer game (which was
surprising since power is not one of his great attributes), and continued to
get on base at an impressive clip. What
is concerning, however, is a dramatic jump in strikeouts – 60 in just 177 ABs. That’s a Nieuwenhuisian pace.
So what do the Mets really have here with Nimmo? Assuming he relaxes a bit and plays to his
selectivity a bit better, what can they realistically expect? Remember that he did not play organized high
school baseball in Wyoming, so his development is a bit delayed. Consequently, it’s possible he will become
something of a late bloomer.
If you extrapolate the numbers he should be on pace (with
some slight improvement) towards .280/15/70.
Another young outfielder whose parallel I drew a year or so ago started
off his first full time season with a .280/9/54 and followed that up with a
sophomore campaign of .300/7/44. In his third season he made a quantum leap to
deliver .298/21/98 which resulted in a buyout of his next few years. He rewarded his team with a fourth full year
of .282/18/81, down a bit but still showing that the 3rd year was far
from a fluke. So is Brandon Nimmo a
Christian Yelich type or is he merely going to be a 4th
outfielder/fringe starter?
Some early scouting reports were guardedly optimistic. SBnation said:
“Those long limbs and the prospect of filling out that frame could mean that power is on its way. He should be able to leverage the ball for power to all fields, and when he extends completely, he has substantial power to the opposite field. This will especially be true once he gets his swing working well. Right now, Nimmo has the skeleton of a very good swing. He has tremendous hand-eye coordination that allows him to square up well on the ball, and the barrel of his bat spends a long time in the strike zone. He's very short to the ball and has a high finish, but he's overly reliant on his hands—which are very strong—to push the ball where he wants it to go. He'll usually rotate his hips, but he has a tendency to do so too early, before he's even balanced his weight properly. A strong rotational swing will have the arms, hips, and legs all working in concert. Nimmo has the parts working, for the most part, but it will take time to get them to work together. Until that happens, and until he actually adds the muscle we anticipate, the power will remain a projection and nothing more.”
Baseball Digest was similarly cautious in praising the young outfielder:
“Nimmo has plus hitting potential, but being as his experience is limited, as is the video, it’s difficult, if not impossible to label him. Pro scouts are positive about his hit tool, with some saying his “polish with the bat” to be almost as impressive as his speed. During his MVP performance last summer in the Under Armour game, he doubled down the left field line and singled through shortstop for his two hits, so he’s not afraid to use the opposite field and is comfortable with his hitting style and approach.
While not quite as difficult to project as the overall hit tool because not everyone HAS power, it still can be a tricky one to figure out at times. It is also the one tool which causes the most disagreement among scouts...Where does Nimmo profile power wise? It’s impossible to say, although no one thought Ike Davis would be a 20 homer guy when he was drafted either, and that’s including playing half the time in Citi Field.”
The good news with the Mets collective inertia based upon philosophy, payroll and injuries is that all signs point toward Nimmo having the opportunity to play every day and let the Mets know what they really have.
“Nimmo has plus hitting potential, but being as his experience is limited, as is the video, it’s difficult, if not impossible to label him. Pro scouts are positive about his hit tool, with some saying his “polish with the bat” to be almost as impressive as his speed. During his MVP performance last summer in the Under Armour game, he doubled down the left field line and singled through shortstop for his two hits, so he’s not afraid to use the opposite field and is comfortable with his hitting style and approach.
While not quite as difficult to project as the overall hit tool because not everyone HAS power, it still can be a tricky one to figure out at times. It is also the one tool which causes the most disagreement among scouts...Where does Nimmo profile power wise? It’s impossible to say, although no one thought Ike Davis would be a 20 homer guy when he was drafted either, and that’s including playing half the time in Citi Field.”
The good news with the Mets collective inertia based upon philosophy, payroll and injuries is that all signs point toward Nimmo having the opportunity to play every day and let the Mets know what they really have.
Time to see what Alderson's prized pick can really do after how many years now?
ReplyDeleteI'd be a sourpuss if I were in El Paso, too...just sayin'. :)
ReplyDeleteHe can probably be a solid 3rd starting outfielder...he just, in my opinion, needs to be more aggressive early in counts to cut the K rate...which I believe he can do, and will do. Twenty homers in 500 PAs should be a goal for him...this year. He loves the triple too...and who doesn't.
Now a married man and strong in his faith, he may just figure it all out on the field in 2018. I hope he does...no one can say he doesn't have a prayer.
Brandon was standoffish to me when he played in Savannah, but I did write a negative piece about him when the Mets drafted him and, if he didn't read it here, I'm sure one of his friends or fellow players showed it to him.
ReplyDeleteI, and the other so-called draft experts, had him as a Sup-1 pick that year so I was especially surprised when the Mets picked him above the likes of Jose Fernandez, Sonny Gray, and Joe Panik.
He is one of many players on this team that, if he steps it up around 10%, we would have a pennant competing team.
Lastly, I think there will be another 'name' outfielder in the Mets clubhouse before the season starts. I'm going to wait on predicting what to do with Brandon until then.
For the Mets to move forward they must first find out what they have in Nimmo, Lagares, Flores and on the pitching side, Harvey, Matz and Wheeler. That's a lot of questions.
ReplyDeleteThe only place that the Mets can improve is 3B but they already committed to Cabrera. If they sign a Frazier type player and move Cabrera to 2B, they will again waste another year to find out what Flores can do.
So either improve the team drastically or stay put at this point.
Nimmo should get some at bats if Conforto’s return is delayed.....otherwise, I like him as a 4th outfielder and occasional starter/platoon partner with Lagares in CF.
ReplyDelete@Viper -- the reason they don't know what they have with Flores, Nimmo, Lagares and others is directly attributable to the guy they finally put out to pasture after becoming the losingest manager in club history. He controlled the lineup pencil and after all it was critical to get more ABs for departing FA Jose Reyes and since cut Nori Aoki.
ReplyDeleteI was wondering when you were going to find another opportunity to kick the dead horse. I thought you had lost your touch.
DeleteWhat a relief!
Bill, it is very hard to ignore the obvious or forget how much the player development guy hurt all young players because Jim Leyland once told him, "young players lose you games".
DeleteTrue, Reese, but both Juan and Brandon were in the repair shop for too long last year, essentially shooting themselves in the foot. Juan, protect the thumb. Brandon, no WBC this year can't do anything but help.
ReplyDelete@Metsiac -- on whom do you blame the pointless lineup decisions -- the beer guy?
ReplyDeleteI don't look for "blame" all the time, nor think that I know more than the professionals. There are decisions I agree with, and those I don't, but I respect those who make them.
ReplyDeleteI don't tell the chef in a restaurant how to cook, or tell my doctor what medicine to prescribe. Just because you don't like decisions doesn't make them "pointless", or the one making them "incompetent".
After his first year it was clear decision making was not Collins' forte. It took the Mets 6 more years to arrive at that conclusion.
ReplyDelete