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11/30/18
OPEN THREAD - Proposed Seattle-Mets Trade
So...
As of right now, the deal would be:
The Mets get 2B Robinson Cano, $60mil to reduce Cano's nut to $12mil/yr., and CL/RP Edwin Diaz.
Seattle would get OF/1B Jay Bruce, RP Anthony Swarzak, SP Justin Dunn, OF Jarred Kelenic, and RP Gerson Bautisa.
A 'win now' kind of deal...
An all-star closer and the 2nd WAR producer since 2009 (behind Mike Trout), for two dead contracts, a boat load of cash, and chips that haven't proved a thing yet.
Thoughts????
Reese Kaplan -- Maybe BVW Thinks Davis Can Motivate Kids
Many of the people were puzzled by the outside-the-box
decision to hire Brodie Van Wagenen to head up the Mets’ front office. While there is obviously going to be a period
of adjustment to being on the other side of the desk for the first time, for
the most part people are happy that he’s expressing some creativity in the
prospective roster changes that need to be made.
Unfortunately, a lot of that goodwill may come crashing down
quickly if the reports are true that the Mets are signing Chili Davis to be the
hitting instructor. I have nothing
against the man personally, but his track record is fairly suspect. This past season he served as the hitting
instructor for the Chicago Cubs and the media was rife with the, “What happened
to the Cubs offense?” stories throughout their playoff push in September. In fact, in their final series of the year
they managed just 1 run in 3 of the final four games (which means he’ll fit
right in with the Mets).
Personnel decisions are complicated in high profile
endeavors like a professional sports team, particularly one based in the
media-intense atmosphere of New York.
You obviously need to evaluate track record, philosophy, communications
skills, character and media perception.
While there’s some truth to the old cliché, “Those who can’t do, teach”,
the fact remains that if you picked a career offensive lightweight like Mario
Mendoza to be your hitting instructor the media would have an absolute field
day trashing you for making that choice.
Now Chili Davis as a player was a far more impressive force
in the lineup. He’s a career .274 hitter
and three-time All Star who played on three World Series teams with the Twins
and twice with the Yankees. Those are
good bonafides to show you have ability to hit a baseball, but the job of a hitting
instructor is more about teaching players to get the most out of their natural
ability, how to remain focused, how to adapt to changing pitching philosophies
or defensive shifts, and, of course, worshipping at the church of launch angle.
When you delve into the teams where Davis was at the helm of
run production, it’s not a pretty sight.
We already spoke about the downfall of the Chicago Cubs from juggernaut
to Mets-like. They were 4th
in MLB in 2017 in runs scored with 824 and a team batting average of .255. Under Davis’ leadership they dropped to 9th
in runs scored with 761 and a similar .258 batting average. Remember, this a team which has in its lineup
Anthony Rizzo, Javy Baez, Ben Zobrist, Kris Bryant (though hurt some of the
year), Willson Contreras, Kyle Schwarber and Daniel Murphy! The Red Sox players like Mookie Betts, Andrew
Benintendi and Xander Bogaerts all flourished in 2018 in a Davis-less
environment.
Prior to his stint with the Red Sox he worked with the
Oakland A’s for three years from 2012 to 2014.
During this stint by the Bay he inherited a team 20th in
baseball in runs scored with a team batting average of .244. During his first year the number of runs
scored jumped by 68 but the batting averaged dipped to .238. In his sophomore season he fostered a
dramatic jump in offense good enough for 4th in all of MLB. In his final Oakland team in 2014 he
maintained that 4th position but the batting average dipped to .244
once again.
People will accuse me of kicking a dead horse, but this
Alderson-like move is reminiscent of hiring Terry Collins whose Houston Astros
and Anaheim Angels teams improved dramatically once he left. The Cubs saw their offense disappear while he
was calling the shots and the Red Sox improved once he was gone.
So why would Brodie Van Wagenen look to Davis to fix the
problematic offense? The best rationale
I can surmise is that he did his best work with an Oakland team full of no-name
players who needed motivation and direction, whereas in his Boston and Chicago
stints he inherited a bunch of established All-Star types who may not have been
as receptive to his style. The Mets may
be going into 2019 with young players in the lineup regularly, including
Brandon Nimmo, Michael Conforto, Amed Rosario, Jeff McNeil and Peter
Alonso. Perhaps that is the basis of BVW’s
thinking…otherwise the decision to hire the man with the checkered track record
makes little sense.
11/29/18
OPEN THREAD - WHAT IS THE BEST TEAM YOU COULD BUILD FOR THE METS WITH A BUDGET OF $206 MILLION?
OPEN THREAD:
WHAT IS THE BEST TEAM YOU COULD BUILD FOR THE METS WITH A BUDGET OF $206 MILLION?
As Macks Mets' Mike Friere pointed out in his fine article this morning, the Mets had a payroll of $150 million last year.
Presumably, that was reduced by roughly $15 million by net insurance receipts on David Wright and Yoenis Cespedes.
Now pretend you're the new GM and have been given the green light to go right up to the salary luxury tax threshold this year.
How would you sign and trade your way to the best $206 million team you can assemble, assuming you chose to spend that much? $206 million is the amount that, above which, luxury tax begins.
How would you sign and trade your way to the best $206 million team you can assemble, assuming you chose to spend that much? $206 million is the amount that, above which, luxury tax begins.
Remember, you are trying to build a sustainable winning franchise, not just a potentially great 2019 team that will collapse in subsequent years due to lack of foresight in making the right deals.
What would you do, and who would be on that team?
What would you do, and who would be on that team?
Mike Freire - Restoring Competitive Balance
Recently, Mack posted one of his "From The Desk" articles and there was an entry that paraphrased "Super Agent" Scott Boras and his concerns about the lack of "competitive balance" in Major League Baseball. Another way of stating the obvious is that the "rich" teams are dominating the landscape and the "dregs" are left to fight over the scraps and draft positions.
What was mildly amusing is that agents are partially responsible for the current state of the "salary madness" that has infected the
baseball landscape. Furthermore, baseball is the only major sports
league (including football, basketball and hockey) that does not have
a traditional salary cap structure for teams to follow. Is it really a
surprise that the structure has gotten pretty far out of whack?
Below, I have listed the 2018 MLB Team Salary Figures for general reference. With that said, the team with the largest payroll expenditure
(Boston) also won the World Series. Furthermore, their total outlay of
cash was almost FOUR TIMES more then the team at the bottom of the
barrel (Tampa Bay).
Or, consider that the average payroll for all thirty
teams was a shade over $139 milllion dollars. The Red Sox were
roughly $90 million dollars OVER the average, or basically what the
Pirates spent as an organization. Does that sound like a recipe for competitive balance?
The
top ten teams in payroll last year (see below) had an average record of
91-71 and the group included three of the final four teams left
standing in the playoffs, plus both World Series combatants and the
eventual champion. So, despite a few teams that didn't get their
money's worth (San Francisco, Washington, Los Angeles Angels), there
appears to be some correlation between spending money and posting a winning record.
***On
a side note, for all the crap the fans throw at the Wilpons, the Mets
were 12th in all of baseball last year with a payroll of just over $150 million dollars. Granted, we all want that number to rise, but it is far from the bottom teams on this list.
Before
anyone accuses me of being Socialist, I know that you cannot have
everyone with exactly the same amount of money to spend. What you can
do, however, is level the playing field a little bit by institution a
hard salary cap, along with a minimum salary amount that functions as
a "floor" (which would keep teams from doing what the Rays are doing).
The biggest push back would be a loss of overall salary (dollars) for
the players as a collective, but it can be mitigated by raising the
floor (ideally, you add as much to the bottom as you take from the top).
For
example, there are thirty teams in the league so you could figure out
your salary cap by averaging the salaries for the top fifteen teams on the
list and you could figure out your salary floor by averaging the
salaries for the bottom fifteen teams on the list. Using this logic,
the salary cap would have been $172
million dollars for 2018, while the salary floor would have been $107
million dollars for the same time period.
Furthermore, you
would lose approximately $157 million dollars in salary expenditures
from the top teams, but you would gain $140 million dollars in salary expenditures
from the bottom teams which is close to a "wash". The numbers could be
adjusted as needed to get the differential closer to even, if need be.
By
implementing this sort of system, you would have much better chance at
"competitive balance" since the top teams and the bottom teams would be much closer together and it would keep teams like Boston from an "unfair" advantage that excessive cash represents.
It is likely "crazy talk" on my part since greed will always win out in the end.
What do you think?
League Average $139,175,550
Boston Red Sox $227,398,860
San Francisco Giants $205,665,348
Los Angeles Dodgers $199,582,045
Chicago Cubs $194,259,933
Washington Nationals $181,382,609
New York Yankees $179,598,151
Los Angeles Angels $173,784,989
St. Louis Cardinals $163,784,311
Houston Astros $163,524,216
Seattle Mariners $160,993,827
Toronto Blue Jays $150,946,147
New York Mets $150,187,987Colorado Rockies $143,968,544
Arizona Diamondbacks $143,324,597
Cleveland Indians $142,804,703
Texas Rangers $140,625,018
Detroit Tigers $130,959,889
Atlanta Braves $130,649,395
Kansas City Royals $129,944,821
Baltimore Orioles $127,633,703
Minnesota Twins $115,509,520
Milwaukee Brewers $108,982,016
Philadelphia Phillies $104,297,471
San Diego Padres $101,343,635
Cincinnati Reds $100,305,768
Miami Marlins $91,817,860
Pittsburgh Pirates $91,025,861
Oakland Athletics $80,315,288
Chicago White Sox $71,839,808
Tampa Bay Rays $68,810,167
11/28/18
OPEN THREAD - Robinson Cano Trade
There's been a rumored trade going on at Twitter that was started by Dan O'Dowd. It has the Mets and Seattle Mariners swapping the following players:
The Mets get:
2B Robinson Cano (36/yrs old)
2018: .303
$24mil/year due through 2023
some $$$ would be paid by Seattle and Mets would
work out payoff of later years of contract
CL Edwin Diaz (24/yrs. old)
2018: 73-apps, 1.96/0.79, 57-SV
team controlled 4 years
CF Mallex Smith (25/yrs. old)
2018: .296 2-HR
team controlled 4 years
Seattle gets:
OF-1B Jay Bruce (31/yrs old)
2018: .233 9-HR
$13mil through 2020
1B-OF Dominic Smith (23/yrs old)
2018: .224 5-HR
team controlled 4+ years
SS Andres Gimenez (20/yrs old)
2018: AA/Bing: .277 0-HR
team controlled 4+ years
SP Justin Dunn (23/yrs old)
2018: A+/AA: .359 134-IP 156-K
team controlled 4+ years
The plan would be for Jeff McNeil to move over to 3B and Diaz take over the closer role.
Thoughts?
Reese Kaplan -- Power Vs. Speed
One of the things I found most frustrating about the Sandy
Alderson regime was the pigheadedness with which he sought to build a
roster. Every year he would seek out
all-or-nothing hitters who would generate a lot of power while simultaneously
racking up prodigious strikeout totals.
OBP was perceived to be a good thing even if making contact was rendered
irrelevant. Think Curtis Granderson,
Todd Frazier and players of that ilk who struggle to stay respectably over the
Mendoza line.
Fast forward to the post-Sandy Alderson era towards the end
of 2018 when instead the Mets brought up a contact hitter you might have heard
of named Jeff McNeil. He took quality
ABs, made hard contact successfully, and pretty soon had people saying, “Asdrubal
who?”
Similarly Brandon Nimmo went through a tale of two seasons
in which he was very, very good and then there was a stretch during which he
proved to be a strikeout machine.
However, the hope is that he can transform the good portion into
sustainable success. Again, in a tough
situation you probably wanted him to be at the plate because everything was on
the table – base hits, home runs, walks and HBP.
Brodie Van Wagenen is saddled with many of the talent
miscues promoted by Alderson and signed off by the Wilpons. In addition to Frazier, there’s Jay Bruce and
the currently injured duo of Yoenis Cespedes and Juan Lagares. I’ll leave the latter two out of the equation
for the moment but instead focus on Mssr. Frazier and Bruce.
In Todd Frazier the Mets have the classic Alderson hitter. The last time Frazier had a respectable
batting average was back in 2015. You
remember that year – despite Terry Collins the Mets made it to the World Series
on the back of Yoenis Cespedes. It seems
like forever ago, no? Anyway, that year
he hit .255, but since then has offered up .225 in 2016, a combined .213 in
2017 and again .213 in 2018. One year
might be a fluke. A three-year run of
mediocrity is a trend. Even more
disturbing is you can’t justify the average with power as that’s been trending
downward as well, from a high water mark of 40 HRs in 2016 to just 18 last
season. (For what it’s worth, the
aforementioned Brandon Nimmo hit 17 in 39 fewer ABs without being considered a
power hitter).
Jay Bruce is a tale of three hitters. The first one who arrived in the summer of
2016 to try to help the anemic offense at a cost of former prospect Dilson
Herrera was flat-out awful. He finally
started putting it together in mid-September, but by then the season ran out on
him. He returned in 2017 and was more
the type of player they thought he was when they acquired him. He was, in fact, leading the league in RBIs
at the time he was dispatched to Mickey Callaway’s Cleveland Indians for Ryder
Ryan, a so-called relief prospect who, after a spectacular 2018 got his career
ERA down to a pedestrian 3.71. (Yeah,
Sandy knew how to pick ‘em, alright!)
Then, when no one was appearing to show any interest in Bruce, the Mets
bid against themselves and extended him the same AAV of $13 million not for
one, not for two, but for three more years.
2018 was pretty much a lost cause due to issues with plantar fasciitis,
and his year-end numbers were fugly as a result.
There’s been a lot of whining about bringing in someone like
Manny Machado to play SS or 3B, rendering Todd Frazier into pop off the
bench. While that would indeed transform
the lineup into a powerful one, please remember it’s the Wilpons we’re talking
about and long term, high ticket contracts are not their modus operandi.
Similarly, there were others advocating a short-term deal
for Josh Donaldson in a pillow contract to allow him to reestablish his value
after a 2018 lost to injury. That’s
exactly what the Braves extended to him, though the $23 million price probably
caught most everyone by surprise.
PC - Ed Delany |
Instead, one element greatly missing from the Mets attack
over the past several years has been speed.
We saw some flashes of it from Rosario late in the year when not
coincidentally they were playing their best prolonged stretch of ball. Perhaps when looking to replace Frazier
and/or Bruce they should be targeting base stealers instead of sluggers.
One name bandied about as being readily available on the
trading block is Dee Gordon. The Gold
Glove winning infielder has twice had 200 hit seasons and stolen as many as 60
bases in a season. Last year the
Mariners played him in the OF until Robinson Cano’s PED hiatus forced him back
to the infield. He’s not cheap -- $13
million plus in 2019 and 2020, with a 2021 option of $14 million or a $1
million buyout. In other words, he’s
going to cost about $28 million at minimum. Guess who also makes $28 million over the next
two years – none other than Jay Bruce.
PC - Mack |
Others who have enviable stolen base totals are the Royals’
Whit Merrifield and the Orioles Jonathan Villar. In these cases I would simply shift McNeil to
3B and open up 2B to one of the speed demons.
The Pirates’ Sterling Marte and the Mariners' Mallex Smith both play CF, a
position of need given Juan Lagares’ inability to stay on the field and Jay
Bruce’s inconsistency.
Having guys who can not only get on base but disrupt the
pitchers, making them focus less on getting out the subsequent hitters than on
preventing the runners from advancing could have a major ripple effect on the
thus far moribund offense.
With the manner in which the Mets have struggled to hit ever
since Sandy Alderson was steering the ship, I’d say it’s time to try a new
course.
11/27/18
OPEN THREAD - 1B/OF - Jordan Patterson
As of yesterday morning, the Mets had an open slot next spring at first base (once Peter Alonso is promoted) and in the infield.
That seems to have been filled now.
The Mets signed 26-year old LHH Jordan Patterson who was waived from the Colorado Rockies.
Patterson was a fourth round 2013 draft pick, out of the College of South Alabama. He has played all six professional seasons in the Rockies chain.
He has a career major league batting average of .444 (18 at-bats, 2016), which he has followed with 26-HR, 92-RBI in 2017 and 26-HR, 76-RBI in 2018 at the AAA level.
This is not the kind of move that wets the Reese whistle, but organizations need quality filler material, Patterson is a professional bat that is a phone call away in case of an injury.
No, it's not Brian McCann, but I'll take it,
Tom Brennan - To Which I Say, "SO WHAT?"
Former Mets minor leaguers turned free agents Jhoan Urena, Levi Michael, and Nabil Crismatt just signed with other organizations.
I could wax eloquent about them. I could say, "Oh, no!"
Instead, I say: "So what?"
I mean, don't get me wrong - I liked following how the trio were playing in 2018 and prior seasons.
But, if one is focused on the Mets winning a World Series, which has happened just once in 49 years, I have to say again, as regards these 3 fellas, "So what?"
Those 3 are likely to be no more than marginal major leaguers, if they reach the bigs in the future at all.
Likewise, the Mets, like all big league teams, released a slew of under-performing minor leaguers after the season.
To which I say: "So what?"
Not that I did not follow them closely, to see if they might somehow evolve into the next Jeff McNeil or Seth Lugo, but they didn't, "So what?"
Where I don't, however, say "So what?" is where the Mets most often fall short, and cannot afford to do so in this winnable upcoming season.
In past years, while true contenders opened the purse unabashedly and with great purpose, the Mets signed cheaper, aging, previously injured players in hopes of reversal and over-achievement.
What the Mets got instead was under-achievement - as in:
Cespedes, Bruce, Swarzak, Frazier, Reyes, Bautista, Gonzalez, Vargas.
To that, I don't say, "So what?"
To that, I say, "The acquisition grade for the above is an F, so what can you do this off season, in terms of player moves, such that the moves will be viewed by impartial observers as an A or a B, not an F?"
The Braves, you see, they want an A or a B.
As in, the Braves, not the Mets, just signed Josh Donaldson.
To that, I don't say, "So what?"
To that, I ask, "Here we go again? Again?"
The Mets need to make excellent, impactful moves to make the team playoff-probable.
Not just sit there getting out-maneuvered by clubs like the Braves, the Phillies, the Bronx Bombers, the Red Sox, and the Dodgers, whose first 10 team goals, I imagine, are summarized as "Winning, and winning big."
To anything else, I say, "So what?"
To anything less, those teams say, "Not interested."
I want a World Series in 2019 in Queens - not the usual excuses, nor distractions that cause me to say "So what?"
Tony Plate - The Mets Name Jim Riggleman Bench Coach
The New York Mets have hired Jim Riggleman to serve as their
new bench coach. General manager Brodie Van Wagenen’s plan for the bench coach
search was to look for someone that had prior experience managing games.
Riggleman has a decent resume. He has served as a manager for 13 years with the
Padres, Cubs, Mariners, Nationals and Reds with a 726-904 record. He was Cincinnati’s
bench coach from 2016 until he became interim manager for five months last
season. He led the Reds to a 64-80 record after taking over for Bryan Price.
I think Riggleman is a fine choice and will be
a big help to Mickey Callaway. Gary DiSarcina who was the bench coach in 2018
was reassigned to serve as third base coach. The Mets have claimed
outfielder/first baseman Jordan Patterson off waivers from the Colorado Rockies.
He has shown good power in the Minor Leagues during the last two seasons
hitting 26 homers each year and has been versatile defensively by playing at
first base and the two corner outfield positions.
The Mets are also
looking to improve their roster in the following areas: catcher, bullpen and
the infield. The New York Yankees have what the Mets need and are looking for while
the Mets also have what the Yankees mostly need and are looking for and that is
another front-line starter even though the Yankees acquired James Paxton from
Seattle last week. They still need another front-line starting pitcher to get
by Boston and Houston.
So, a trade between the two New York teams would be very
interesting. I would like to see a trade
of Gary Sanchez and Dellin Betances to the Mets for Noah Syndergaard, Bobby
Wahl and Kevin Plawecki. In my opinion if the two sides got together and
discussed this type of deal, they both would be fine with the deal especially
since this trade can possibly help both teams make it to the World Series.
The
Mets recently have been shopping Syndergaard and they are not looking for
prospects. They would like an impact player in return since they feel they can
contend in 2019 especially since the starting rotation is very good and is the
strength of the team.
In other baseball news the Mets announced that they have
released Jenrry Mejia who had been granted conditional reinstatement to Major
League Baseball after being banned for life back in 2016. He became the first
Major League Baseball player to receive a lifetime suspension for committing a
third violation of the league’s joint drug prevention and treatment program.
The World Series Champion Boston Red Sox have signed World Series Most Valuable
Player Steve Pearce to a one-year deal.
Mack… Position By Position Analysis: Catcher
PC - Ed Delany |
Good
morning.
We continue
with a projection for the 2019 catchers in the pipeline.
A word about
Queens first. The Mets need to look to a trade (Realmuto) to solve their
catching needs for the next two or three years. If not, it’s back to a one year
decision which two to go with in 2019, d’Arnaud, Lobaton, or Plawecki.
Secondly,
everyone knows that a minor league team needs three catchers on their roster… a
starter, a backup, and a bullpen guy who usually has no chance of making it
someday to the majors.
For some
strange reason, the Mets released a bunch of their minor league catchers. No explanation.
Right now,
there are only 17 catchers that are under contract and will play for the top
seven affiliates. Based on what I said above, that leaves four openings.
So why do
you drop players last month? We know that this is mostly an AAAA position in
the minors.
Makes no
sense.
So, let’s
start…
AAA – Syracuse
Patrick
Mazeika (25/yrs. old) –
AA: 295-AB .231/.328/.363/691 9-HR
Tomas Nido (24/yrs old) –
MLB: 83-AB .167/.200/.238/438 1-HR
AAA: 17-AB .235/.316/,353/669 0-HR
AA: 215-AB .274/.298/.437/735 5-HR
Colton Plaia (28/yrs. old)–
AAA: 196-AB .255/.332/.474/806 9-HR
Jeff Glenn (27/yrs old) –
AAA: 6-AB .000/.143/.000/143 0-HR
AA – Binghamton
Ali
Sanchez (21/yrs. old) –
A+: 135-AB .274/.296/.385/681 2-HR
A: 193-AB .259/.293/.389/681 4-HR
Dan Rizzie (24 yrs. old) –
A+: 214-AB .248/.304/,318/622 2-HR
A: 22-AB .318/.375/.318/693 0-HR
Jose Garcia (23/yrs/old) –
AA: 18-AB .333/.429/.333/762 0-HR
A+: 14-AB .071/.133/.071/205 0-HR
TBD -
A+ - St. Lucie
Scott Manea (22/yrs. old) –
A: 345-AB .261/.368/.432/800 12-HR
Carlos Sanchez (23/yrs. old)
–
A: 107-AB .178/.198/.196/394 0-HR
Low-A: 26-AB .308/.400/.346/746 0-HR
TBD -
A – Columbia
Jose Mena (21/yrs. old) –
A: 6-AB .000/.000/.000/000 0-HR
GCL: 78-AB .295/.353/.346/699 0-HR
Nick Meyer (21/yrs. old) –
Low-A: 137-AB .226/.275/.270/545 0-HR
TBD –
Low-A –
Brooklyn
Hayden Senger (21/yrs old) –
Low-A: 68-BM .250/.373/.324/697 0-HR
K-Port: 35-AB .400/.488/.600/1.088 1-HR
Juan Uriarte (21/yrs. old) –
Low-A: 1-AB .000/.000/.000/.000 0-HR
TBD -
Rookie –
K-Port
Phil
Capra (22/yrs. old)–
K-Port: 103-AB .146/.266/.184/451 1-HR
Wilfred Astudillo (18/yrs.
old) -
GCL: 50-AB .260/.315/.340/655 0-HR
DSL: 82-AB .256/.371/.354/725 1-HR
TBD
Rookie – GCL
Andres Regnault (19/yrs.
old) –
DSL: 192-AB .333/.420/.573/993 9-HR
Nelson
Mompierre (23/yrs. old) –
GCL: 70-AB .171/.322/.329/650 2-HR
TBD -
Summary –
Finding a great catcher is the most
difficult task in baseball.
The Mets pipeline is particularly low
on fuel.
The closest
we have for a major league prospect would be Mazeika, though he did have a
miserable year in 2018. He was sailing through the chain (2015 K-Port .354…
2016 Columbia .305… 2017 St. Lucie .287) when he hit a wall at the AA level. He
got off to a miserable start in April (.239) which only got worse in May (.176)
and July (.140); however, he bounced back in August (.315) and September
(.545). He’s known for his bat though he has a very powerful arm. He also is a
rare left-hand throwing catcher who many think, at 6-3, is destined to wind up
on a corner position. Still, he needs to return to doing what he does well…
hitting. If he does, he could wind up in Queens before the season ends.
I have Nido listing in Syracuse; however, he is a strong candidate for Queens as a defensive backup on opening day. He's the best defensive catcher in our system, which says a lot when you also have Sanchez. Let's remember he hit .320 in 322-AB for St. Lucie in 2016. He did hit .272 last year in the minors, but poof out in Queens (.167, 84-AB).
I have Nido listing in Syracuse; however, he is a strong candidate for Queens as a defensive backup on opening day. He's the best defensive catcher in our system, which says a lot when you also have Sanchez. Let's remember he hit .320 in 322-AB for St. Lucie in 2016. He did hit .272 last year in the minors, but poof out in Queens (.167, 84-AB).
A lot of
people like Sanchez but, frankly, I need to see more before I get excited about
him. I have seen so many shooting stars like him only fade at the AA level.
Speaking of
shooting stars, keep an eye on Regnault. He’s coming across the channel with a
hot bat which is already showing signs of big power.
Comclusion:
Like the
past years, not much to get excited about; however, players like Senger and
Uriarte could prove me wrong here. Still…
Rating: F
Helium Alert
– The Mets gave 16-year old Francisco Alvarez more
bonus money to sign ($2.7mil) than they have ever done in the International
market. I expect him to start off in 2019 for one of the DSL teams but he will
be fast tracked to Florida before the season ends. Alvarez, though years away,
is easily our top catcher prospect in the system.