The question of who should lead off for the Mets has been
something of a black hole ever since the first stint of Jose Reyes. Several have been tried in this role, most
recently including Curtis Granderson.
Now Granderson was at one time fleet afoot and his batting eye improved
with age, but a .230 type hitter is generally not what you’d consider idea,
particularly one who whiffed as often as he did.
Jose Reyes in his return got a number of opportunities to
reclaim that role, but barring injury, he’s a bench player now and shouldn’t be
counted upon to set the table.
We’ve seen Mickey Callaway experiment with Asdrubal Cabrera
in the number one spot in the lineup. On
the surface this choice seemed a bit odd as Cabrera’s lifetime number is a
mediocre .331 OBP, but he quietly has been improving the past two years
including .351 last season. That
compares favorably with the aforementioned Granderson whose best year in a Mets
uniform was just 2015 when he was at .364 but his other years were a more
pedestrian .326,.335 and .323. Even Jose
Reyes living off his reputation only sports a .337 for his career, but in his
second turn in Queens provided just .326 and .315. His leadoff bona fides are more about speed
than getting on base. Cabrera
is the opposite, having stolen a grand total of 8 bases over two full seasons
with the Mets.
Callaway’s predecessor inexplicably used Juan Lagares in
that role as well. Lagares has some
speed, though his high water mark of 13 stolen bases back in 2014, like the
rest of his offensive game, has never been duplicated. Since then he’s been just a .253 hitter with a
.293 OBP. So let’s see…he can’t get on
base, he’s not Reyes-fast, he has no power…so naturally Collins decided he was
well suited for the leadoff role.
Now you can extend the no power and no speed criticism to
the lefty half of the upcoming temporary centerfield platoon as well. Brandon Nimmo has not been known for either
of these tools, yet he does have one of the prerequisites for leading off. He’s always been a high OBP guy, including a
.367 mark for his career. His
opportunities have been few with under 300 major league at-bats, but he’s
demonstrated abilities in the minors. In
2016 in Las Vegas (taken with a whole silo of salt), he hit .352 with 11 HRs, 61
RBIs, 7 SBs and an eye-popping .423 OBP to go along with an OPS of .964.
Granted, Nimmo is not going to be confused with Juan Lagares
out in CF, but if you’re looking for table setting he certainly seems the far
better choice than the former Gold Glover or the Cabrera experiment. He’s doing well thus far this spring, hitting
.333 whereas Lagares is well under .200. It’s a small sample for sure, but for once it
would be nice to see the guys who actually produce get the opportunity to
play.
Brandon Nimmo is certainly building a case to not only be the lead off hitter for the Mets, but to possibly be a darned good one. Because he certainly seems to be able to get on base.
ReplyDeleteAnd he has enough giddy up to make the lead off spot work, too, even if he isn’t Rickey Henderson base-stealing-wise.
Lagares should be a back up OF unless and until he proves he is capable of more. lead off? Not with his OBP.
Reyes is fighting Father Time – each added year stacks the odds against him being a playoff quality daily contributor, so he appears to be headed to a reduced back up role.
Cabrera? The idea of him leading off does not excite me.
Rosario? Maybe an ideal lead off hitter – in 2019.
A couple of meaningless points:
ReplyDelete- Lagares is one of the fastest players on the team, but isn’t a base stealer. They tried to make him one but he only stole our hearts while waiting for him to come back every year. Can’t blame Bozo there.
- Nimmo was a track star in Wisconsin. He has wheels, but after hurting his knee, the wheels aren’t elite any more.
Nice article.
Morning Reese -
ReplyDeleteOur choices are truly limited here.
In my world OBP is the key to being a great lead off hitter.
Lagares is not a lead off hitter. He just is not.
Conforto is my leadoff hitter, but Nimmo can hold the fort down until Conforto comes back.
Did we ever sign that Pirates second baseman?
Mack, Conforto is easy to overlook as a lead off hitter as he is injured, but he reportedly had a fine hitting session yesterday, so maybe he is back sometime in April or by May 1.
ReplyDeletePitchers today:
ReplyDeleteWheeler, Gsellman, Montero, Purke C. Taylor
Conforto can be our version of Mike Trout, I suppose?
ReplyDelete