Yesterday I gave Sandy Alderson a deserved hard time
regarding his holistically poor approach to building a competitive
ballclub. Today I’d like to take the
glass half-full position and look at what may be behind the strategy he’s taken
to assembling the 2018 team that hopes to dethrone the Washington Nationals
from atop the NL East. If the familiar path is chosen once again, he will either add or subtract players in July.
First Base
Dom Smith certainly looked a bit overmatched in his extended
first trial in the majors, finishing with a .198 batting average. Ironically, that same struggle didn’t seem to
mean anything when it was Jose Reyes and Curtis Granderson who had horrific
long stretches to begin a season, but he felt it might be prudent to give Smith
more time to hone his craft in the minors.
That’s not necessarily a bad thing for a 22 year old. This time around he has backup solutions in
Jay Bruce and Wilmer Flores should scrap heap pick Adrian Gonzalez suffer from
ill health or diminished abilities. It
may also well be that after a few months in AAA Smith proves he’s ready to
handle the rigors of day-to-day duty.
Second Base
Right now this position is a great unknown. Allegedly both Jose Reyes and Wilmer Flores
are slated to be utility players and not starters, so there may be another move
up Sandy’s sleeve. Also waiting in the
wings is T.J. Rivera who has demonstrated a solid bat and room will have to be
made for him to be a part of the 25 man roster once his arm is sufficiently
healed to handle the rigors of major league play.
Shortstop
While Amed Rosario did not make anyone forget Corey Seager
or Carlos Correa, his performance in the minors and his raw athleticism make
people more lenient and hopeful about him than they were about his AAA teammate
who was promoted last year. The club
does have some depth here with Jose Reyes, Asdrubal Cabrera and even Wilmer Flores
available to fill in should injury or sophomore slump demand a change at the
position.
Third Base
Very few people argued about Asdrubal Cabrera’s offensive
potential, and the ongoing uncertainty about David Wright made picking up his
option a relatively sure thing. Cabrera’s
defense is not what it once was, and he’s missed quite a few games with
assorted minor injuries since coming to the Mets. While he’s not likely to provide David
Wright level of production with his bat, he’s above league average. Lately Cabrera has voiced the opinion he’d
now actually prefer playing second base which could be a good thing if it means
one of the free agent third baseman is preferable to the free agent second
basemen still on the market, or it could be a distraction if the club truly
wants to improve its defense up the middle.
Catcher
I’m one of the very few who is taking a “leave well enough
alone” stance regarding the catching position.
The aggregate numbers from the four-headed catching last year were in
the top five in the game. Yes, Travis d’Arnaud
could be a better defensive catcher with a better throwing arm and Kevin
Plawecki could ideally generate more power.
However, the tandem should be fine.
Outfield
If Yoenis Cespedes is healthy, everyone knows what he is
capable of doing. The return of Jay
Bruce ensures another solid middle-of-the-order bat to help score some
runs. Centerfield is a bit of a
challenge until Michael Conforto returns to play out of position. Now he didn’t embarrass himself in Todd
Hundley fashion playing the outfield, but he’s no Juan Lagares out there
either. Unfortunately Juan Lagares has
not yet established a consistent offensive side to his game to accompany his
awesome arm and golden glove. Brandon
Nimmo is the interesting wildcard in this equation. A lot has been written about his patience at
the plate and apparently other clubs have noticed his potential. It should shape up to be an interesting
battle in spring training to see which of the two healthy options gets the lion’s
share of play in centerfield until Conforto can swing the bat again.
Starting Pitching
It’s no accident that the man hired to replace Terry Collins
was known as a pitching whisperer.
Alderson knows that the Mets need to score enough runs to win games if
their staff can perform to their potential and hold the opponents to 4 or fewer
runs per game. Even more than the injuries to Yoenis Cespedes
and Michael Conforto, it was the failures of the pitching staff due to injuries
that led to the dismal record in 2017.
Here, however, it’s a little more difficult to cut Alderson some slack
because his plan is to rub a lucky rabbit’s foot that Jacob deGrom will remain
healthy, and Steve Matz, Noah Syndergaard, Matt Harvey and Zack Wheeler will
somehow manage to stay healthy all year.
Seth Lugo and Robert Gsellman both had some injury issues as well, and
Rafael Montero was simply ineffective.
Most fans would be much happier if Sandy can land a bonafide and healthy
starting pitcher to join the Fab Five who have yet to make a full turn through
the rotation. Yes, it would be a great
things for all of the planned starters to be both healthy and effective, but
having the foresight to anticipate injuries and perhaps render one of the five
starters available in high leverage relief situations would help win ballgames.
Bullpen
According to reports Mickey Callaway is considering a
different approach to the back end of ballgames by not designating a
traditional closer and instead using the most effective arm in any given
situation. Towards that end the top four
relievers – Jeurys Familia, AJ Ramos, Jerry Blevins and Anthony Swarzak – are a
very good start. The remaining 4 slots
(assuming an 8-man bullpen) will be decided in spring training.
Important Dates
When the season starts, the club as it’s currently
constituted will only have four traditional outfielders. Michael Conforto will likely be on the
disabled list which means a versatile player like Jose Reyes will be the
emergency fifth outfielder. When Michael
Conforto returns, an important roster decision will have to be made. Do they go with the traditional
five-outfielder roster configuration? If
so, who gets dropped? Will it be the 8th
reliever? Will it be someone on a short
leash like Adrian Gonzalez who gets a month or so to show what he’s still
capable of doing?
The next major decision will come when T.J. Rivera is again
ready to join the team. Who would go in
that case? Assuming there is one more
infielder to come, it’s not likely going to be Reyes, Flores, Cabrera or that
hypothetical ballplayer.
The third player to watch is Dom Smith. If, through the first month or so of the AAA
season, he’s tearing the cover off the ball, what do they do? The investment in Adrian Gonzalez is minimal
and he represents a bridge to the future which may occur sooner than anticipated. (What that would mean for Pete Alonso is
another matter entirely).
For all of the frustration (and outright hostility) fans feel about how little Alderson has done to improve the club, he still has the chance to change people’s minds between now and opening day by addressing the need for another infielder, perhaps another veteran bullpen arm like Tony Watson, and perhaps a solid starter. All we can do is wait and see.
If injury impact is flipped vs. 2017, and we are a top 5 healthy team rather than the bottom 1 or 2 teams of 2017, Sandy will be well on his way to looking like a 2018 genius.
ReplyDeleteWalker at 1 year, $10 million?
I agree on catching - if this were the go-go 1980s when stealing bases was much more of a factor, the two catchers would be highly suspect - since this is 2018, the ability to throw out baserunners is not as critical.
I've changed my thoughts on the future of the infield.
ReplyDeleteI would move Cabrera over to second and sign Frazier to a 2-year deal with a 3rd year team option. I love his pop and defense and I can live with his (lack of) batting average.
I would then go into the season and, if both deGrom and Syndergaard were healthy and producing like the past, I would do what it takes to lock these two up through, at least, 2022.
Flores was as "good" defensively as Cabrera was at 2B. Why spend on Frazier and instead just give the job at 2B to Flores and put the money into more pitching?
ReplyDeleteAs you know, I have been supportive in Flores getting the second base job for a year and then turning it over to Luis Guillorme in 2019, but I have had second thoughts on Gulllorme. I love his defense, but I loved Dilson Herrera's as well. No one can guarantee if these kids can hit in the majors. Look at Rosario,
ReplyDeleteIt has taken a number of years for Flores to raise his game to this level, but he will never offer this team the defensive skills I would demand from my starting infield.
Dom Smith, Cabrera, Rosario, and Frazier give me the BEST defensive infield I could have this year.
I am hoping Adrian Gonzalez is on a very short leash since there is not much invested.
ReplyDeleteAnd I'm hoping he will return to his pre 2017 form, making the leash unnecessary. If Smith is tearing up the PCL, having Adrian on the bench to PH and play when Smith needs a day off is fine with me.
DeleteNot much more to add. I am totally with Mack on the Frazier - Rosario - Cabrera - Smith infield, although it won't be with Smith until later in the season. The NY Pundits are saying that the Mets have narrowed the field (infield addition, that is) down to Frazier, Nunez, Walker or Harrison. I still favor a Harrison trade, but realistically don't expect it. Hence, Frazier.
ReplyDeleteI am pretty sure Alderson will add rotation depth and a bull pen arm or two, most likely on minor league deals, as spring training approaches. How about taking a flyer on Jake Peavy? I also think if Dickey is still unsigned in mid February, they may bring him back. How about Sergio Romo for a bull pen spot?
Mack, agree on your Guillorme concerns - because the jump to facing big league pitching is huge. Consider Danny Muno, who has failed in his big league chances.
ReplyDelete645 minors games, .271/.385/.403, 71 of 112 in steals
Guillorme?
474 games, .285/.361/.328, 38 of 59 steals...so he is significantly below Muno in OB% and in slugging %, and steal frequency is lower too.
MLB Professors do not grade on a scale. You hit, or you leave.
Good points on LG. Remember, it was only a few years ago that Juan Lagares hit over.340 at Bingo.
DeleteHerb for GM - I'm on board. Reese would have less to write about :)
ReplyDeleteReese, good job covering the field. The Cabrera comments make me wish they had passed on his renewal, although I was in agreement at the time to pick it up. It seems a leopard will never change his spots and Cabrera’s next contract is obviously an afterthought to him. If Flores and Cabrera are similar defensively at 2B, how does it make Cabrera look, who is the far worse offensive player? Why not make him the utility guy with his buddy Jose, and put Wilmer where he belongs and in the starting lineup for 145 games?
ReplyDeleteIf Nunez is the addition, he and Cabby can play both 2B and 3B. I wonder what the best combo would be. Nunez 3B/Cabby 2B sounds right to me, but it could be the reverse.
ReplyDeleteAs for TJ, he's not expected back until July or later. I wouldn't count on him this year, unless someone else gets hurt.
Mack I agree with Frazier for a 3B but on a 1 year deal...
ReplyDeleteI am dreaming but I want a shot at Machado so I would do nothing to Prevent that dream.
I do feel like Bruce ruined that dream already...
Bill -
ReplyDeleteAnd before that... Anderson Hernandez
Eddie -
ReplyDeleteYes... you are dreaming.
A David Wright retirement might allow the club to plan better for the future and compete in the 2019 free agent class.
ReplyDeleteMack
ReplyDeleteSadly I know... But what else do we have if not Hope...
In my heart I believe my hopes on a Allstar 3B will hinge on Vientos...
But I would have tanked this year, brought in Zero salary and had it all available for Machado, Harper, or Donaldson... (in that order)
Bruce, Swarzak, or any other acquisition would not be worth missing a shot at any of those 3 above for this team...
If David retires for confirmed medical disability, we're still obligated for 25% of his contract. If he simply retires, he gets nothing, which is too much to ask. If the insurance won't help,a buyout might be needed, but IMO that would be for at least half the contract.
ReplyDeleteHe's not just going to walk away and give up what he's owed. Would you?
To me this is looking like another 2017 and 2016 season coming up. Why? The same exact player personnel strategy decision making really. That is to fill every open position with the best veteran player from other teams that the Mets can afford to get. Does not matter how old or that players contract duration running into being a more questionable age than now.
ReplyDeleteIt's not a bad strategy per se, it can workout, but what I tend not to like about it is two-fold. First, it pretty much eliminates the possibility of getting younger Mets players (from like AAA or even AA for instance) into ST for a fair tryout at an open position, instead choosing to fill that position with a veteran pickup signee from elsewhere outside. This kid player not being given a look in ST might as well just stay home and report to their AAA or AA team for the season start there, because the position here in ST was already filled with a veteran signee off season. And secondly, it kind of runs counterproductive to having an organizational scouting and development system in the first place, which was at one time this organization's hallmark attribute.
I am not saying here that every MiLB player should be handed an open position. But at least that kid player would be afforded the opportunity to win an open spot fairly.
Certainly, no ball club can have every position covered down at the AAA or AA level each year. It is not realistic to think that they could. But this season, the NYM do have a few possible alternatives for second base already within their organization. Players that really have not yet been tested playing full time.
In regards to a recent post on the 2018 NYM bullpen and why I never personally worry about the NYM bullpen each season...
ReplyDeleteBecause the bullpen is almost always in a constant state of flux really. What I mean here is that each season some reliever called up from AAA to cover for an injury takes advantage of that call-up and proves himself worthy of remaining up with the Mets after the pitcher they were covering for comes back healthy. Also here, relievers slated preseason to be a sixth or seventh bullpen reliever breaking camp, suddenly prove themselves to be a "go-to type reliever" showcasing their consistency and ability to handle the really tough relief situations before them.
To me, the bullpen heading into ST really only needs a definite closer and maybe two set-up solid men. The rest will be decided in ST by performance alone. It's just the way it is, every season. Relievers with names on the back of their shirts we do not know, suddenly step up to become a jewel reliever here.
The one reliever I have been waiting for patiently is lefty Dave Roseboom, hopefully now well healed from his foot injury of 2017. Come on Dave, you can do it man.
On Frazier...
ReplyDeleteHard to deny that he does bounce around some. His stats were awful (BA wise) in 2017. Call me whatever, but I'd take Cabrera straight up over Todd Frazier at third. Just better consistency of play really. Led NYM (BA) in 2017. Could hit 20+ HR's in 2018 from third base. Good glove. No glaring deficiencies, funny hair. But it is a judgement call, I agree. The Mets do sort of need a homerun pickup with Conforto out at least until May.
My bigger concern though...
Michael Conforto's shoulder. If you ever had a bum shoulder, then you know what I mean here. It's a very tricky healing process and can have setbacks arise along the way that are significant in duration.
Also, Adrienne Gonzales...
Got him at league minimum, true, but he has a historic Duda-type back and has missed playing time of late in his career because of it. The back is a major cornerstone to the human body's stability and power. Do not like back injured players per se. Too hard to predict out how they will fare all season long. i.e. 2017 Adrienne'...242 BA/3 HR/30 RBI in 231 AB. Released by Braves. I have never seen the Braves wrong on a player or pitcher in their assessment of.
However, if Adrienne can stay healthy, swing the bat hard again, it could be a Mets signing of the century. You roll the dice with this kind of player. But it is league minimum, so...Snake Eyes Baby!
Flores (to me) is a first baseman and a backup utility professional who plays very well off the bench in shorter stints. The reasons are obvious for this. He can play the whole infield but I like him on first base.
ReplyDeleteSome posters here want Todd Frazier for third, which is fine and understandable. Their reasoning appears to be the homerun game that comes with Todd. But man, that 2017 batting average scares me to death. I pass on Todd myself, maybe opt instead for another right fielder with HR power just in case Conforto's recovery has a major setback, which it could with shoulder injuries.
The Mets do need to find a way to add homeruns though, but not with a .213 BA player 30 years old. The catcher position for this addition would be ideal, but there are so very few HR hitting catchers anywhere in the game today. I have looked.
Advice for the wise... You do not have to pay tomorrow for a hamburger today.
Then, you have first base with Smith/Gonzales/Flores covered, second base with Guillorme/Reyes/Reynolds/Cecchini covered, short with Amed Rosario/TJ Riveria covered, third is A. Cabrera/Flores/TJ Riveria covered. Left field is Cespedes (and his massive fullback leg muscles), center with Nimmo and Lagares platoon, right field with a new HR hitting acquisition not yet here/Conforto (when well again) covered and at the catcher position Plawecki and d'arnaud with Tomas Nido getting ready for a later on look, if case need be.
So instead of Frazier, I get another homerun hitting right fielder added in. Could be a younger player too. Would not hurt and insurance is not a bad word to strategize for now. Bryce Brentz, remember him? Had 31 HR's last season in Pawtucket.
So what happens to this new acquisition HR corner outfielder once Conforto gets back? He becomes the fourth or fifth outfielder until the next injury goes down. Simple. And PH.
"Another HR-hitting RFer"? I've got an idea-- how about Jay Bruce? 😀
DeleteI like the Daniel Zamora trade for Smoker. Mets would have lost Smoker for nothing, unprotected.
ReplyDeleteZamora and Roseboom, maybe someday soon here. Nice.
Anonymous, Brentz might be OK short term, but those 31 homers did not help get him to the bigs last year. I wonder if Reyes is our fifth outfielder this year until Conforto returns.
ReplyDeleteIf we go with 13 Ps, that means a 4-man bench, including a Catcher. Of the remaining 3, two have to be IFers, so we won't have a 5th OFer. I agree with Tom that Reyes could be the emergency guy.
Delete