A lot has been written lately about bringing the old band
back together and whether or not that is a good thing. The apologists will point out that this club
was beset by an extraordinary number of critical injuries and that the team
that took the field in 2017 was the same as the one that got to the post-season
in 2016. The detractors will suggest
that not taking the roster constructions steps necessary to improve, to have
contingency plans in the event someone did not perform as expected and allowing
the farm system to slide in the bottom five of all in major league baseball as
an indictment of Sandy Alderson’s tenure.
Baseball is a business first and foremost. Hopefully it
provides sufficient entertainment value that the fans will want to come out of
the ballpark, watch the games, buy the hot dogs, take home souvenirs and
advertisers will spend big bucks to run commercials. That has not changed during the current
regime, but the risk aversion has taken root and transformed a losing team
inherited in 2010 into a long term downward spiral.
Why so bitter? What
has been done to deserve this condemnation?
What about the World Series in 2015 (doesn’t that seem a decade ago
already?) and what about the post-season in 2016?
Well, what has been the Alderson way since taking the
reins? First of all is the now infamous “waiting
for the market to come to him” approach to building a roster. While patience could sometimes net relative
bargains as players become a bit more desperate to land a job, it can also mean
you’re left to choose from among the scraps better teams have passed over in
trying to improve their rosters.
No one was the least bit surprised, for example, when the
Mets inked recently suspended and subsequently cut Jose Reyes because he was
available for minimum wage. Ditto Adrian
Gonzalez. On Reyes the move has had its
ups and downs and everyone sincerely hopes Gonzalez once again captures his All-Star
form. However, there’s no
guarantee. For once, however, there are
some alternatives in the forms of Dom Smith, Jay Bruce and Wilmer Flores.
Then there’s his passivity during each off season. While other clubs try to improve in the
attempt to be competitive, Alderson’s MO has been to hold off on adding
anything unless the club finds itself in contention. Think back to 2015 when the offense was so
bad that bench players like Kelly Johnson and Juan Uribe became middle-of-the-order
threats. Ever since that season he was
able to use his then still reasonably attractive farm system to land players,
he has lazily fallen back on that method until the well ran pretty much
dry. He pushed away players such as
Akeel Morris, Michael Fulmer and others who were pretty highly regarded to
bring in Yoenis Cespedes which history revisionists will write as a stroke of
genius (conveniently forgetting he was the consolation prize after the Carlos
Gomez deal fell apart). Sometimes you
step into great luck and Alderson certainly saved his job with that serendipitous
unplanned transaction, but then stepped in something else bidding against
himself not once but twice for Cespedes’ services while not holding him
accountable for conditioning.
People have been clamoring for the Mets to land players such as Josh Harrison but by now under the Alderson regime the cupboard is pretty much bare. The combination of peddling your cheap chips for sometimes mediocre or over-the-hill veterans and extremely poor draft selections have the team now an organizational laughingstock without the pipeline of high quality talent comparable to what other teams have available to build for the future. I’m not indicting any individual player. Like any other fan I hope each minor leaguer defies the often-wrong experts and becomes a major league star. However, the franchise is now far worse than they were when the Wilpons handed the baton to Sandy Alderson and nothing that’s happened this off-season has suggested it will improve.
There are some positives.
There is a new manager who was considered by everyone an out-of-the-box
decision very unlike the Mets. The fact
he commands relatively little money and has almost no track record on which to
challenge his boss must be taken into consideration. They’ve brought back Omar Minaya whose eye for
talent was well regarded. That’s a good
sign as well. They even signed a brand new
major league caliber player in Anthony Swarzak.
I won’t go over the well-worn territory of the contract that
crippled the franchise. Instead, let’s
look at his 2014 off-season which brought such luminaries as Kyle Farnsworth, Dana
Eveland and Buddy Carlyle into the fold. Oh yeah – he added the gasping for breath
Bobby Abreu, too. His big money (by Mets standards) contract for an older
Curtis Granderson was a bit head scratching and senior citizen (by baseball
standards) pitcher Bartolo Colon was met with some surprise as well. Understandably
they finished under .500 at 79-83.
In 2015 to help prepare for the World Series run that would
follow he did even less. He made a sub
optimal (the same phrase I used at the time) and hasty free agent acquisition of
Michael Cuddyer and his Coors-inflated bat.
He added journeyman John Mayberry, Jr. who wouldn’t make it through the halfway
point of the season. He made two last
minute trades on March 30th, one was bad and one would have been
good if not for an injury that limited the player to just 7 games. Alex Torres (and his hat) are just a bad
memory now, but Jerry Blevins has proven to be a tremendous acquisition. No one given up in those deals – Cory Mazzoni,
Matt den Dekker – went on to anywhere near the success Blevins found in New
York during 2016 and 2017. However, what’s
important to note is the track record that followed – the reacquisition of
familiar faces – Kirk Nieuwenhuis, Logan Verrett and Eric Young, Jr. –
foreshadowed his lazy approach that would follow. To his credit, other than Fulmer, none of the
players he gave up to assemble his 2015 World Series team mid-season amounted
to much – Darwin Frias, Luis Cessa, Casey Meisner, John Gant, Robert Whalen,
Miller Diaz or Matt Koch.
In 2016 you’d think they would want to build on their
surprising success of 2015 but come the off-season their first acquisition was
another lightning-in-a-bottle deal for Jim Henderson. Then there was a trade of a major league
player for a major league player when Jon Niese was sent to Pittsburgh for Neil
Walker. Then Asdrubal Cabrera was signed
to replace the woeful bat of Ruben Tejada to play shortstop. These two acquisitions were positives and
very much out of character for Alderson.
He repeated his journeyman outfielder mistake, this time with Alejandro
de Aza. However, it was his inactions
that would draw headlines, allowing potential free agents to depart, including
Daniel Murphy, Tyler Clippard, Carlos Torres, Kelly Johnson and Juan Uribe. His bargain hunting ways allowed him to
acquire the truly mediocre James Loney for a single dollar to replace Lucas
Duda’s bat. Then the reunions began
again with the return of Kelly Johnson, Jose Reyes, Jon Niese and others. Jay Bruce’s acquisition from the Reds turned
out to be highway robbery (despite his very rocky start to a Mets career), but
as well all know, they were one and done.
So, after going backwards in 2016 he did even less during
the off-season. He added not a single
major league caliber player to the roster for the 2017 season and not
surprisingly they slipped further backwards in the standings. When he finally threw in the towel in July,
he peddled away players like Lucas Duda, Curtis Granderson, Jay Bruce, Addison
Reed and Neil Walker, receiving seven relief pitchers, in return, not a single
rated top-30 talent from another organization for any of them. (As evidence of the weakness of his own farm
system, several of the arms acquired soared into that position for the
Mets). Oh yeah, he did acquire AJ Ramos,
too...
That brings us to the current season. Welcome Anthony Swarzak. Welcome minimum wage Adrian Gonzalez. Those are the new faces. Welcome back Jose Reyes. Welcome back Jay Bruce. If reports are accurate that the Mets are out
on Josh Harrison then don’t be surprised to see Neil Walker welcomed back as
well. It’s not a formula for success to
reassemble what didn’t work in the past.
There is always hope the pitching staff is not injured and the
outfielders and first baseman will remain healthy. However, hope is not a strategy for
professionals.
The off-season is not yet over and it’s possible things can
change but it certainly seems that the plans of Sandy Alderson not to draft the
best players, not to sign the best free agents, not to make off-season trades
(essentially punting half the season) and trading away all the top talent in
the system have made it very difficult for the Mets to build for the
future. Please retire.
There are so many like you who call everything that happened in 2015 lucky - likewise 2016 - and yet you don't attribute BAD luck to the injury wave of 2016-17, like it's totally SA's fault that his best hitter, best starting pitcher and closer - among many others - were all lost early - or you actually lay the blame for the injuries at his doorstep. Try a little balance sometime, or you just come off looking like another one of those hysterical fans who say the sky is falling - two years after we won the pennant for cryin' out loud.
ReplyDeleteSandy the "Genius" Alderson is past his time and should have been let go after the 2017 season. But in true Mets form, they retained him along with Collins. You can't make this BS up. The Mets just don't know how to let go and move on.
ReplyDeleteWhy would you give up two usefull arms in order to bring in Gonzalez and Reyes? Why even bring back Cabrera? Why not release Reynolds and at least keep one of those arms? Stupid..stupid people in charge.
Reese, you however forgot one important part of Alderson's failure while in charge of the Mets. (unless I missed it reading too fast)
**No sense of direction from the upper management"
Think about it, they trade Duda, Granderson, Walker, Reed, etc in order to give the youngsters the chance to become the everyday players.
Then they bring in Gonzalez, retain Cabrera, Reyes and seem open to bringing Walker back if his price continues to drop in order to make the youngsters the bench players again.
Out with the old and in with the new and now back with the old again.
Alderson promised continuous success and has failed miserably.
Tim -
ReplyDeleteReese is our imbalanced writer.
Good luck trying to change that :)
AAAAAA-MEN to that, Mack. 😈
DeleteSandy says, "I can handle things, I'm smart, not like everybody says, not dumb, I'm smart and I want respect."
ReplyDeleteAre you confusing Sandy with The Donald? 😁
Delete
ReplyDelete@Tim -- I acknowledged that there were a lot of injuries in 2017 -- bad luck indeed. However, not having a contingency plan after in the recent past having lost a great many players to injuries as well smacks of incompetence. It's one of the fundamentals of project management -- a risk strategy. Now some of the things he's chosen to do such as passing on the international market, not going for the high-money draft picks, always bottom feeding on other teams' castoffs, not signing top tier free agents and retaining players and coaches who are simply not getting it done, trading off the jewels of the farm system and not replacing them, getting minimal returns during the fire sale and then not letting the youngsters play -- these are all valid reasons to question the job the man has done.
Yes, luck was involved in the pennant of 2015. I also gave Alderson praise for some shrewd mid-season acquisitions that helped, including Johnson, Uribe, Cespedes, Clippard and Reed. Where I have a problem is his passivity in the off-season. Yes, I have seen he will add (or subtract) at the halfway point based upon results, but wouldn't it be better to position yourself to be on top at the All Star break?
I'm waiting to see what the "smartest guy in the room" does with his 40-man roster if he signs a 2B/3B type between now and opening day...he's running out of useful arms to squander.
Wow this might be the stupidest non Peter Hyatt level writing done here. No mention of the Wilpons meddling and not allowing to spend and no mention of the mess Omar left this franchise when he was fired and how omar pissed away Wright, Reyes and Beltran's primes.
ReplyDeleteBig picture:
ReplyDeleteOut of date organizational philosophy, poor player acquisition choices, poor player development, poor drafting, poor international scouting and interest, among other things have resulted in a 21st ranked minor league system that is not in the pre-season outlook as a playoff contender (this year or even next)
The rotation of wonders that Alderson banked the Mets success on is just about gone before it ever materialized due to health, rising arbitration costs, and free agency.
Meanwhile the Yankees not only loaded a major league roster with young talent, they also took a dismal farm system and turned it around into a thing of envy.
A problem can not be fixed until it is recognized.
Please look big picture before focusing on individual excuses or successes.
Reese I agree with you... Professional Sports is a results business... and if your not first your last...
ReplyDeleteSandy was brought in fix Omar's Mess. Yet he went to the WS with Omar's players... (Degrom, Harvey, Familia, Murphy, Matz, Duda, and many I am missing I bet)
So Omar wasn't the Problem because he Lost due to Injuries... (Duane Sanchez and Alou probably cost us 2 pennants)
Yes Omar should have been Fired (contracts to Castillo and Ollie Perez gets you fired)
But what has sandy excelled in? Farm is exactly where it was when omar was here Bottom 5... (maybe 5 years from now we'll say the same as we did with omar There was more there than we knew at the time but we are judging today)
Free agent signing have been far and few
Bullpen choices had been abysmal
He got lucky with Cespedes because his first choice fell through...
(we keep saying sandy's regime is filled with Luck)
On his positives side is Conforto and Thor (acquired by a Omar guy in Dickey but he does get credit for it) although the Key was D'arnaud in that deal and Toronto had a choice to give up Thor or A.snachez at the time (they chose wrong)
Awful drafts... (no need to repeat them)
I will say Sandys future will be tided to a couple of players... (D Peterson, A. Rosario, Kay, Alonzo, and Gimenez (possibly Maurcio)
these will be the legacy of Sandy and this present draft...
Omar surrounded Wright, Reyes And Beltran with historically bad bullpens and awful rotations and no depth. The Omar Mets were the ultimate stars and scrubs rosters and he def was the issue and needed to go.
Delete@David -- They gave David Wright $138 million reward...how exactly was that pissing away his prime? They paid and got good value for Carlos Beltran. Same question? Now if you want to say they didn't do anything with Jose Reyes and let him leave, fine, but if you look up the history he never even gave the Mets a chance to match what the Marlins offered.
ReplyDeleteWhat exactly did the Wilpons do to meddle? They did hamstring the budget, I will grant you that. They don't seem to care about winning. I will also grant you that. However, it is Sandy Alderson who makes the roster decisions and he must stand or fall on the success or failure of the players he chose.
For the umpteenth time, if they wanted to develop the club they should have traded David Wright in his relatively healthy prime during the Madoff mess, NOT spent $138 million and replenished the farm system with top tier talent, then had that $138 million to spread around. That's what a smart GM would have done. Now id you want to say it was the Wilpons who wanted David Wright to be the Mets' Jeter, show some evidence.
Wright was a great player and that looked like a bargain contract until his body fell apart. The Wilpons have meddled for 30 years and there's plenty of articles that have pointed that out.
Delete@David Klein
ReplyDelete"The Omar Mets were the ultimate stars and scrubs rosters"
Do you believe that Omar would have not signed more players if he had the budget to do so?
with that he still Brought in Delgado (who he went after in free agency when he took the Marlins money), Duane Sanchez (who needed Dominican food in Miami at 2 am) Krod when he just broke the Saves record...
Omar was the biggest big game GM his problem was handing out bad contracts...(castillo, Ollie, Krod, Martinez)
We didn't waste DWright and Reyes years.. Madoff ruined that run... So sandy should have been adamant about trading both of them... Instead he trade non of them... The 2 biggest Chips and you got what? can you guess? Kevin Plawecki...
Omar had more money to spend than any Met gm ever and had a top five payroll and yet he wasted picks on college relievers over Freeman and Stanton and gave up a pick for 80 year old Moises Alou.
DeleteThis is true.
DeleteYet, Alderson has just as many, if not more, bad decisions on his record.
So, if you were unhappy with Omar, you should be just as unhappy with Alderson.
Look at the Forest not trees.
I'm staying out of this kerfuffle!!
ReplyDeleteI think every fan has decisions by the mgr and GM that we disagree with. But only some of us actually think that they know more than the professionals, and feel that those decisions "prove" that the pros are "incompetent" or "morons".
ReplyDeleteIf nothing else, they (the fans) entertain us with their superior knowledge of the game. 😨
Bozo was a professional.
ReplyDeleteHe was entertaining.
If the Fredo quote wasn't asymptotic enough, may I add my main gripe against sandman is that he lessens my enjoyment of the Mets when he speaks. Why hire such a people-friendly manager, while sounding like a droll, detached, platitude-spilling politician? He gives the utmost appearance of laconic and lackluster smugness,and that mixed with a lack of success, is not a positive for a leader of an organization in the public eye.
ReplyDelete