In the 2012/2013 off-season the Mets bumbled their contract
with the AAA franchise in Buffalo and were left scrambling to find a new home
for their top tier minor leaguers. It
was ironic that after departing New Orleans years earlier citing its many
distractions being a negative influence on the young ballplayers that they
would ink a deal in Sin City, Las Vegas, who not only had one of the worst
stadiums in all of pro baseball, there surely couldn’t be anything THERE to
take focus away from a 21 year old’s mind, huh?
Throw in the PCL effect on numbers and you can see Alderson booted this
one, big time.
For perhaps the last time ever the Mets finally realized the
error of their ways and cut ties with underperforming Jason Bay who was never
the same after some concussion problems that seemed to permanently impact his
ability to play the game. Ever since
then the Mets have been unwilling to admit mistakes or pay down contracts to
dump players who needed to go. The
difference here is Bay was a Minaya pickup and thus Alderson not only didn’t
lose face but actually gained some esteem by having the “courage” to wave
bye-bye to this costly chapter in the club’s checkered personnel history.
Of course, the huge story of the winter Hot Stove season was
what they were going to do with Cy Young Award winner, R.A. Dickey. It was a rare opportunity for the Mets to
sell high on a player who, at age 38, was likely not going to repeat that level
of success. After many rumored packages
were offered, he was eventually sent north to Toronto along with catcher Josh
Thole (and his knuckleball glove) and light hitting catcher Mike Nickeas in
exchange for top catching prospect Travis d’Arnaud, veteran catcher John Buck,
outfield prospect Wuilmer Becerra and a hard throwing pitcher named Noah
somebody. Best of all (in the Wilpons’
eyes) Toronto was the team on the hook to pay R.A. Dickey handsomely for what
he accomplished for the Mets in 2012. He
wound up getting over $40 million in a contract extension. Count that as a very rare win in Sandy
Alderson’s checkered trading career for the Mets.
Speaking of wins, Sandy Alderson had one under-the-radar free agent acquisition that worked out for him, Carlos Torres, Marlon Byrd was likely his biggest success story. Of course, his keen eye for talent also obtained Aaron Laffey, Shaun Marcum and Rick Ankiel. He sent Jeffry Marte to the coast for the immortal Collin Cowgill. And let's not forget trading future quality pitcher Colin McHugh to Colorado for a man who would prove to be quite valuable if only he could figure out how to steal first base.
In 2013 the Mets hosted the All-Star Game at CitiField, a
rare opportunity for Mets fans to see how winning baseball was played.
Another rare highlight of this season was the Mets’
first-ever sweep of the crosstown rival New York Yankees.
During the latter half swoon the selloff began, with the Mets
trading surprisingly successful Marlon Byrd and John Buck to the Pirates for a
prospect named Dilson Herrera who never amounted to anything and sore-armed Vic
Black. Once again Alderson demonstrated
his lack of skill identifying talent the way Minaya had.
On September 1st things had gotten so bad that
Sandy Alderson had to call a press conference to announce that the club did not
intend to fire embattled Skipper Terry Collins despite his third straight
losing season for the Metropolitans. It
was not as much a show of loyalty as it was an unwillingness to eat the option
year and the admission that he, like the Angels and Astros before him, realized
that they had the wrong man at the helm.
The identical season-ending record of 74-88 was good enough
this time for 3rd place, a mere 22 games off the division winning
pace set by the Atlanta Braves.
Reese -
ReplyDeleteMorning.
Hope your trip is going well.
As for the Dickey deal, I thought t was one of the greatest Mets trades ever done when it happened.
I always considered what Dickey did was an exception to the rest of his career which played out to be right.
The Syndergaard addition was wonderful, but I thought the d'Arnald purchase was a stroke of genius. We all know how hard it is to find an all-star range catcher.
Lastly, I simply loved the insistence by Sandy that Becerra be 'thrown in' to this deal. I followed him out of DSL where he was hit in the face with a ball rendering him on a seasonal DL. Up to that point he was labeled as a ++ prospect.
It may not have paid off as well as I expected it to, but a straight up deal for Dickey for Noah still would have (in the long run) been worth it.
Another rough draft year by Sandy's mob, too.
ReplyDeleteDominic Smith, Bashlor, Guillorme are the best of the bunch - and all are marginal until proven otherwise - only the hidden teens-round gem pick of Jeff McNeil has made this draft a somewhat decent one. The latter pick has worked out far better than anyone could have expected.
Was this the year that the Mets lost their radio home at WFAN also?
ReplyDeleteTom -
ReplyDeleteThe drafting of McNeil and deGrom prove that the process isn't over after Day One.
Bob -
ReplyDeletehttps://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/11/sports/baseball/yankees-moving-to-wfan-bumping-the-mets.html
What years was the Wright deal? while that deal may have been more understandable and ownership driven its still falls on the wrong side of Sandy's ledger...
ReplyDeleteMack, very true, and let's not forget Seth Lugo in the 34th round. Great pick.
ReplyDeleteMcNeil would not have fallen into my "draft power arms, power bats" scenario - he has defied all odds. Jake was definitely a power arm. Excellent pick.
Eddie, Wright's contract did start in 2013 - not sure when he signed it. Even at the lower net cost (after insurance proceeds) of his contract when all is said and done, it was a bad deal in many ways.
Not that bad of a deal. At least they paid one of their own players for the bargain price deals they accepted in first 6 years of major league service. IMO Wright got paid for what he did in the past from the team that should have paid him, it’s a whole lot worse when you pay some free agent for his time with another team. Plus insurance paid most of it, lol
DeleteExtending contracts is a hard business.
ReplyDeleteOne of the best... and cheapest... example of this was the extension given to Juan Lagares.
Lots of UGLY content in the first few years of this series......it is hard to be this bad, isn't it? You almost have to try to be this bad, to be this bad.
ReplyDeleteCursed? Maybe??
I HOPE that 2019 and beyond are a bit better....
Mike -
ReplyDeleteRemember... you want to score with THREE solid draft picks each year and TWO solid Intl guppies.
That's FIVE a year.
15 over three years
Over five years... a team that can stand up against the 2019 Boston Red Sox
Yeah, the Red Sox aren't going away anytime soon......plus, they can spend money and address weaknesses with free agents (not too mention they draft and develop players well, too).
ReplyDeleteExplains four titles since 2004.....we could learn a few things from afar.
That's the difference between a club that wants to win VS one that hopes to win.
ReplyDelete