It surely seems eons ago that the Mets started off the
season 11-1, then came the ignominious streak of losing, only to provide the
quick and false hope things were once again going right. There was a 4 game winning streak and people
started bursting with optimism. Then
they lost a 5-1 game to the Marlins primarily on bad fielding by Jose Reyes,
then came the gut punch with a Jeurys Familia meltdown in the 9th
inning. All of that renewed good will
was quickly rendered impotent.
Of course, the impact of those two games was exacerbated by
highlighting some of the fundamental flaws on the roster. First there is the inexplicable love affair
with Jose Reyes. I remember writing
often that the Mets kept Ruben Tejada around (and usually starting) when he couldn’t
hit, run, drive in runs and was at best a slightly above average fielder. Now the rationale of the one trick pony is
there with Jose Reyes who can’t hit, drive in runs or field any position where
he’s playing, yet he maintains slightly above average baserunning ability. Note to self…Ruben Tejada can’t even get a
bench job in the majors despite Terry Collins’ infatuation with him. Déjà vu, perhaps?
Next came the loud groan when it was announced that the Mets
signed Jose Bautista to major league contract.
His .203 batting average last year was followed up with a .143 average
this year, yet the front office felt this move was what the club needed to do
to right its offensive ship? Maybe they’d
be interested in a civil engineering structure I have for sale that links
Manhattan to Brooklyn…as P.T. Barnum said, there’s a sucker born every
minute. Now the midway hawkers are whispering to Sandy that Hanley Ramirez is available...
Lest you think this condemnation is strictly aimed at the
General Manager and/or his assistants making the roster decisions, manager
Mickey Callaway is similarly culpable. I
swear I was watching the younger version of Terry Collins on Wednesday when it was clear by the 2nd batter on Wednesday that Jeurys Familia simply didn’t have it. I
don’t blame that on the manager or the pitching coach. Everyone is entitled to a bad day. However, it is the job of the pitching gurus
to realize that and take corrective action.
Instead, you saw them stubbornly cling to the “he’s my closer” mantra
and the game that was a 1-0 win became a 2-1 defeat. What happened to no set roles in the
bullpen? What happened to setting
pitchers up to succeed? What happened to
actually trying to win games even if it came at the expense of a player’s ego?
So I sit here now thinking about the season rapidly
devolving into Terry Collins Part Deux, with veterans playing over youngsters,
changes not made when clearly they should and losing becoming an acceptable way
of doing business. Towards that end I’m
already pondering 2019, what can and should change to help the club finally get
into the right direction which they once took almost singlehandedly on the back of Yoenis Cespedes
despite his manager’s puzzling decision making.
If by July you are foundering around .500, cut bait and try
to get something in return for both Jeurys Familia and AJ Ramos. Both are set to be free agents and neither
looks to be a $10 million or so investment worth making. Use the balance of the year to test drive
Robert Gsellman, Paul Sewald and Tim Peterson in that role. Peterson after a hiccup in one game is UP to
a 2.36 ERA. However, the thing that’s
even more important is that he now has 6 saves and is showing he can do it in
high pressure situations.
Part ways with Adrian Gonzales. I’ll be the first to admit that even at the
mediocre level he’s producing he far exceeded my expectations. However, 35
year old players are not cornerstones around which to build. Move Dom Smith (deserving or not) up to
Queens to platoon at 1B with Wilmer Flores and move Pete Alonso up to Las Vegas
to see if he can handle the next level of pitching. Plan B would be when Yoenis Cespedes returns
to indeed hand your $13 million slumping right fielder a 1st baseman’s
mitt and let him platoon with Flores.
Either way, playing Gonzalez nearly every day makes as little sense as
playing Jose Reyes every day did in 2017.
Speaking of the former cowardly batting champion who rested on his, err, laurels rather than earn his title, it’s long past time to say “Adios” to him. Who here doesn’t think Luis Guillorme, Phil Evans, Gavin Cecchini, Jeff McNeil or a one-armed T.J. Rivera couldn’t out produce the smiling and ineffectual Reyes? Take a hint from a WINNING organization in Beantown that just cut loose someone with 6 HRs and 29 RBIs. Somehow I think the Mets could withstand sacrificing Reyes' 1 HR, 1 RBI, 2 SBs and his anemic .145 average to go along with his lead glove. Sentimentality doesn't win pennants anymore than living in the past does.
Last time around I volunteered that the Mets could make this
change easier by securing the services of a speedy right handed hitting
outfielder who would fill the former Juan Lagares role. Well, they got the right handed part correct with Jose Bautista. Speedy? Well, even when he was ten years younger he
tallied but a single stolen base.
Somehow I don’t think at age 37 he’s getting any faster, unless you’re
counting his trips back to the dugout as he’s routinely making them with greater
frequency when he has a bat in his hands.
He’s no longer causing delays with bat flips and slow home run trots.
Another big decision for 2019 concerns who is going to play 2B. Asdrubel Cabrera has done everything that could reasonably have been expected of him (and more) but he’s also going to be looking at a paycheck north of the $10 million mark and he’s going to start next season as an old 33. Already he misses time due to various nagging minor ailments that will only become more frequent and slower to heal as he gets older. Some have suggested that a better way to go is to create a formidable defense up the middle with Amed Rosario and Luis Guillorme manning SS and 2B respectively, but how would we know if Guillorme would be up to the task of handling major league pitching IF HE DOESN’T PLAY?
Catcher is another position that is again in flux. Devin Mesoraco is most definitely a professional how he goes about playing the game, but he too is a free agent and is coming off a Cincinnatti-funded $13 million contract. He’ll likely get a significant cut but will it be enough to tempt the Wilpons? Will he stay healthy enough? Will he produce enough? He’s a tremendous dice-roll and with Travis d’Arnaud coming off TJS, will Kevin Plawecki be considered the primary catcher going forward?
The outfield appears to be set for the foreseeable future
with Yoenis Cespedes’ contract unmovable, Jay Bruce likely unmovable and Michael
Conforto still cheap enough to make them want to keep him around. Brandon Nimmo is certainly showing flashes,
but like Wilmer Flores (hitting .275 since Todd Frazier hit the DL), there are mediocrities ahead of him that relegate him
to a bench role until or unless multiple injuries occur.
So where is your current optimism level about the 2018
season? For which players will you hold
open the door to encourage their departure?
5 comments:
Well I was wrong, I thought it would take about half the season until Reece griped about the manager, it only took 2 months.
Reese -
Good morning.
Before I go into optimism, or my lack of, I thought I would break out the May 2018 batting averages for the players we have currently in the lineup:
Bautista: .400 (7-PA)
Gonzalez: .296
Cabrera: .284
Flories: .273
Rosario: .271
Nimmo: .259
Conforto: .227
Guillorme: .222
Bruce: .194
Mesoraco: .184
Reyes: .120
I have very little optimism left this year which makes it easier for me to distantly follow this team this season. Case in point... I turned off my computer after 9 innings last night and missed the tenth inning loss.
My belief is this team will play .500 ball for the rest of this season, which will keep them hanging around in this division through the trading season. No team is going to do a Secretariat down the stretch and no other team in the NL is going to distance themselves from the pack for the wild card race. Thus, the Mets will still have a chance that will blow up in their face in September.
Me?
I would:
1. Cut Jose Reyes
2. Identify which 2019 free agents I could get some value for. Example... Adrian Gonzalez, Jose Bautista, and Jose Reyes do not. Play them if you want to but get them out of the way for guys like Peter Alonso, who should be promoted after the all-star break.
3. Wait... didn't I cut Reyes? Cut him again.
4. Get on the phones and get what you can for Mesoraco, Ramons, Cabrera, and Familia. Stay away from mid-level minor league relievers with a 4.00+ ERA and a high WHIP. Done that last year. You could probably get a decent chip for Cabrera and a very decent chip (+ one more middle level chip) for Familia
I'll stop here. You know my thoughts on Thor and Jake already.
Harvey Weinstein did a word association game - some said Jose Reyes, and he yelled CUT!!
After Jake's and last night's miserable losses, I am otherwise too disgusted to participate further, other than to suggest to Sandy and Fred:
FIX THE TEAM LIKE REAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT WOULD.
That would include Wild Thing Ramos. Robles is a far better bad choice.
If you cut Robles then you open up a spot for TIM PETERSON.
I actually don't think Robles is a better choice than Ramos. Both must go, but they are too attached monetarily to Ramos to simply cut him. Robles on the other hand is near minimum wage.
Peterson had a bad game, too. We are running out of solutions?
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