At a dead even 27-27 record coming into last night’s game,
the Mets were most definitely at a crossroads for their 2018 season.
As Yogi Berra once said, “When you come to a
fork in the road, take it.” The problem
for us Mets fans, however, is best summed up by Dee Snider who defiantly proclaims, “We’re
Not Gonna Take It!”
To continue with the musical analogies, it’s time to take a
sad song and make it better. How then
can the Mets salvage what’s left of the long season?
Why is it
that other teams that are competing for a pennant can entrust starting
assignments to players who are 20, 21, 22 or 23, yet the Mets feel it is better
to employ a lineup with the likes of Jose Bautista, Jose Reyes, Adrian Gonzalez
and others whose best days are clearly behind them?
Now if you’re running a team and you want to reinforce your
bench with credible veterans who can impart wisdom and leadership to a younger
crew, then a case can be made for that approach. However, when the diminished skillset players
are taking valuable time away from people who might be a part of your future,
then it’s indefensible. We saw that with
James Loney and Jose Reyes recently under Terry Collins. Treading water is not a viable plan for
progress. By very definition it is to
stand still and go nowhere.
Now you can’t lay all the blame on Mickey Callaway when he’s
not being fed quality players from the farm system that his boss has failed to
develop. Still, a manager needs to walk
into the GM’s office and declare who is and who is not getting it done and at
least make the case for reinforcements.
Anyone with even a passing interest in the Mets knows well
how scalding hot both Pete Alonso and Jeff McNeil have been for
Binghamton. Couldn’t the team use some
youth and power about now? The left
handed McNeil and the right handed Alonso will have some growing pains, for
sure, but I’d sooner live with people who will likely get better with
experience than those whose best hope for the remainder of their long careers
is to aspire to be a replacement level player.
The pitching staff is not exempt from this approach
either. With the injuries to Rafael
Montero, Anthony Swarzak, Noah Syndergaard, Steve Matz, AJ Ramos and others the
Mets have had to reach deep into their system to give innings to guys like former
El Paso Chihuahua Buddy Baumann. Buddy
may be a nice guy but as a ballplayer at 30+ years of age and only 30 IP under
his belt, it’s highly unlikely he’s suddenly going to morph into Aroldis
Chapman.
Instead, it took multiple injuries and multiple 60-day DL
stints until someone with potential like Tim Peterson ever got to sniff the big
league roster. They recently pushed Seth
Lugo into a starting assignment out of desperation due to injuries to starters
Syndergaard and Matz. Maybe that’s where
he belongs as the team has to conclude what to do with Zack Wheeler and Jason
Vargas next season. Both could be here
but should they be?
Recently Mickey Callaway showed he can indeed learn from his
mistakes when he took a less-than-stellar Jeurys Familia out of a game after
his 8th inning fueled by some Amed Rosario defensive heroics and let
Robert Gsellman close it out. Wow, think
about it – taking out an ineffective pitcher and inserting the one who’s been
getting it done handily. It worked. Imagine that!
It is almost as simple as “Play the kids!” It’s a frustration we’ve experienced throughout the Alderson era under Terry Collins and threatening to repeat itself under Mickey Callaway.
So I’d like to made a modest proposal as the Mets enter
their second third of the season. Put
the following folks on notice about their current roles – Adrian Gonzalez, Jose
Reyes, Jose Bautista and Jeurys Familia.
The former three should be on borrowed time, each departing as people
like Todd Frazier, Yoenis Cespedes and Wilmer Flores get healthy. Familia should be positioned as the setup guy
to Gsellman to see how the latter adjusts to the high pressure role. Then Familia should be traded at the deadline
for a package similar to what the Yankees got for Chapman when he was in his FA
walk year.
Jay Bruce needs to be held accountable for his miserable
season. It was not as if there were
people beating down his door for his services.
Some have suggested that he is tradeable since the team was able to do
so last year. However, they conveniently
forget he was then in a walk year and his compensation was limited to the
balance of his 2017 paycheck. Sandy
Alderson handed out a 3 year deal to Bruce and while he’s perfectly capable of
earning it, currently he is not.
Consequently you have to decide if you are willing to pay down some of
that contract to entice another team to bite and thus solve the dilemma of how
to get Brandon Nimmo into the lineup on a daily basis. Frankly at this point I’d rather see Alonso
at 1B than Bruce (which is the only other way to do it). And, hint to Wilpons, Alonso would earn just
minimum wage. Say you offered to pay the
rest of Bruce’s 2018 salary and one of the two remaining years. The acquiring team would get Bruce for a net
cost of $13 million for two plus seasons.
The cost to the Mets would be $26 million. That kind of deal (and saving $13 million)
should be appealing to another club to take a chance at less than $6 million
per season for someone of Bruce’s caliber.
I’d ask for an outfielder no lower than AA in return.
Even if Todd Frazier is due back within 3 weeks, I would
still promote Jeff McNeil to play 3B every day to see what you’ve got. Then keep him on the bench in place of Adrian
Gonzalez as a left handed bat.
Luis Guillorme is on my team as well. His defense and his peskiness at the plate
make him an asset. Jose Reyes is just
the first part of that word.
Look to promote some other relievers who have not had the
chance yet – David Roseboom, Kyle Regnault and Joe Zanghi. Zanghi has a 1.87 ERA for his pro career and
is turning 24 later this year. Are you
going to wait until he’s 30 to give him a chance??? Honestly, wouldn’t you rather see someone who
might work than someone who is virtually guaranteed to fail such as Hansel
Robles?
I would also quietly be working the phones to deal Asdrubal
Cabrera. Did the concept of “Sell high”
never make it to Queens? You have
McNeil, Guillorme, Gavin Cecchini and Wilmer Flores all capable of manning 2B
if you make a deal for the hot hitting Cabrera who is also slated to be a FA at
year’s end. Again, you don’t build
around people on the wrong side of 30.
Look at the success in Atlanta, Philadelphia and in the Bronx to see
what happens when you let the kids play.
6 comments:
If the Yankees pummel the Mets next weekend, and the Gnats and Scalpers continue to roll, the time for all of what you suggest, except Jay Bruce, should arrive. Eating a ton of Jay's contract now would be wishful thinking. Hopefully, he can right his ship kind of like what Granderson did.
"Standing at the Crossroads, believe I'm sinking down" - prophetic.
Reese -
Morning.
A few things.
1. Another loss.
2. As in past loses, we just don't have enough talent to hold a lead in over fifty percent of our games, be it because of lack of decent pitching. Or lack of bats.
3. Other that Jake, is anyone on this team capable of going seven innings anymore?
4. I REALLY do not like our manager. I think his is a minor league pitching coach at best.
5. Reese, you may want to take a second look at Bautista's Mets stats and A-Gon's in May. They (and Nimmo) are sort of carrying this team.
6. DSL teams start today. I saw the rosters and I am very upset. Most of the top pitchers that earned a trip stateside with a great 2017 have been reassigned onto one of the DSL teams. Seems this organization is never going to change.
7. Clemson baseball on ESPN tonight at 7pm.
Mack, it might compromise their ERAs, but the starters need to pitch to more contact to reduce their pitch per inning counts, and, if not throw complete games, go 8 innings.
Does Jake want to lead the league in ERA or win games? It might be a choice he'll have to make.
Don Cardwell wasn't half the pitcher Jake is, but threw to contact and had plenty of complete games in the 1960's.
Not promoting DSL pitchers seems Dumb Stupid Lousy.
When it comes to the singular mets riff, it's "I Can't Explain" by The Who and "The Hard Way" by The Kinks. Same song. God save the Kinks and the Mets.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qfZVu0alU0I
Self-destruction at that.
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