12/18/18

From The Desk… HOF Voting, Dusty Baker, Jacob deGrom, Jeff Kent, The Shift





Good morning.



Baseball Hall Of Fame's  Prestige Takes Another Hit –

Here are some names to keep in mind now that Baines is about to be enshrined. Steve Garvey. Dave Concepcion. Tommy John. Dave Parker. Dale Murphy. Don Mattingly. This is a partial list of players that Baines finished behind - some by a substantial margin - during his relatively short stint on the BBWAA ballot. Of that group, I'd set aside John, and put him on  higher plane - he lasted 15 years on the ballot, maintaining a significant level of voter support.

Mack – The sad part is there still is no movement to get Gil Hodges into the Hall. 18 seasons. 370 home runs. 1,274 runs batted in. .846 OPS. And the heart of the original Mets. Sad.


Baseball Legend Dusty Baker  Wants to Harness the Power of the Sun –

               
        The avuncular baseball legend, who played with Hank Aaron and managed Barry Bonds years before the Washington Nationals fired him in 2017, is competing in a new arena. His Baker Energy Team, a startup based outside Sacramento, California, is developing, pitching and working on large projects for historically black universities, cannabis-growing operations, tribal reservations and commercial businesses. He’s just come back from touring the site of a 15,000-square-foot estate in development that needs an energy plan.


Mets and Jacob deGrom   get down to business on contract –

                 
      According to an industry source, team officials convened with Jacob deGrom’s representatives at the winter meetings in the first step toward potentially locking up the ace right-hander to a long-term contract.
Team COO Jeff Wilpon and assistant general manager John Ricco were among those who participated in the discussions — GM Brodie Van Wagenen is not allowed in the talks because he was deGrom’s agent with CAA.

Mack – Good. The three most important ballplayers we need to sign and lock down are deGrom, Noah Syndergaard, and Zack Wheeler


The 2019 Hall of Fame Ballot:   Jeff Kent –

                  
     Offense isn’t everything for a second baseman, however, and in a Hall of Fame discussion, it needs to be set in its proper context, particularly given the high-scoring era in which Kent played. Taking the measure of all facets of his game, he appears to have a weaker case with regards to advanced statistics than to traditional ones. On a crowded ballot chockfull of candidates with stronger cases on both fronts, he has struggled to gain support, topping out at 16.7% in 2017, his fourth year on the ballot.

Mack – Kent hit .290, 377-HR over 17 seasons. That’s HOF numbers.


Banning the shift  in MLB generates growing, heated baseball debate –

                 
      Major League Baseball’s competition committee recently gave Commissioner Rob Manfred a green light to explore ways to limit shifts. The reason: Manfred, and many others throughout baseball, believe the game’s slower pace and lack of action is hurting the product. The shift, they contend, is a major culprit.

Mack – I’m old school. I like two infielders on the right and two on the left. How can we determine how a second baseman plays his position defensively if half his territory is taken by the shortstop? This isn’t baseball to me. It’s building a wall.


17 comments:

Viper said...

Mack,

The reason the shift exists is that major league players don't know how to bunt. If they did, they would get a base hit every time the shift is used and teams would stop using it.

Tom Brennan said...

Jeff Kent also played a long time in San Fran, not a hitter's paradise. Put him in the Hall. 7 years above 95 ribbies. 1,518 in total. Almost 1,000 extra base hits. Yep. His power #s were nothing special for the Mets...Flushing humbles hitters,

Sign Jake long term now, Zach midseason, Thor at season's end.

Tom Brennan said...

Why bunt for a hit when you can hit a sharp grounder into the shift? You then get to sit and rest in the dugout. I guess bunting is for sissies? Brett Butler sure did all right bunting.

Tom Brennan said...

Fred McGriff for Hall? 493 homers, 1550 RBIs.

Reese Kaplan said...

Kent's numbers were solid for NY, but, like Greg Jeffries, he just didn't fit the mold of what they thought a player should be. They were burned on both.

Tom Brennan said...

Didn't Kent also have a lack of fan and press appreciation while a Met?

Viper said...

Jeff Kent and Fred McGriff to me are HOF.
Yes, sign deGrom long term and give Wheeler a 3 year 30M and hope he takes it without testing free agency.

If Syndergaard stays healthy and performs to his normal levels in 2019, you extend him at the end of the season.

Mack Ade said...

Viper -

Like your plan

Hobie said...

Shift, schmift. Just "hit 'em where they ain't."

The shift IS (very) old school. The SS (#6 on your scorecard) was a roving short-(out)fielder who played against hitters strengths. The "baae-men" hung out near their sack. Since most batters were RH, the SS morphed into n IF position on the LF side with the 2B "cheating" toward first.

And anyway, the only way to legislate against the shift is to mark up the field into areas and limit occupancy to therein to one. The "2 IF on each side of 2B" doesn't prevent the 3B from backing up into LF, the LF moving to center & the CF in the hole between 1B & 2B. Just bleeping hit the other way.

And no, I don't actually remember the SS in short RF, but my tutor, Uncle George (1877-1959), did.

Hobie said...

And another thing ... :-)

The Gil Hodges travesty: at the time of his retirement he held the RHB record for career HR. (Ralph Kiner called the play when Gil overtook him as a Met). There's only one reason IMHO Gil isn't in the Hall--to many 50's Dodgers there. With Robinson, Campy, Reese & Snider enshrined a fifth member of the same lineup (that only captured 1 WC) seems incomprehensible to those who didn't relish the Boys of Summer.

Tom Brennan said...

Hobie, Gil got screwed.

All this talk of the shift reminds me of the stubbornness of Jay Bruce.

Just keep pulling those grounders into the shift, Jay - glad he has been shifted to another team.

Met Monkey said...

Tom, his approach was certainly shiftless. Haaaa!

Tom Brennan said...

They had a judge in NYC a few decades back whose name was Bruce. He let felons off easy - he got the nickname Cut 'em Loose Bruce. He was certainly shifty. The NY Post "loved" him.

Met Monkey said...

Well-played!!!! Watching Jay Bruce lumber down to first, I swear I felt continental-shift.

Mike Freire said...

I hate to see over regulation.....if a team wants to play weird alignments, that's up to them. I agree with most of you here that the answer is to hit the ball into the void (bunt or adjust your swing and hit the ball the other way).....tons of baserunners would curb that behavior a bit, right?

When I was a kid, our coaches taught us to hit the ball to all fields.....seems to be missing nowadays with the pull heavy generation that populates the MLB. Well, the Red Sox were the exception last year and look at how dangerous that team was! Situational hitting is a dying art, IMO.

On a side note, since we are discussing rules.....it is time to have each league play by the same ones. Either dump the DH in the AL or add it to the NL....that's a bigger issue then shifts.

That Adam Smith said...

I think that every pull hitter needs to be taught to push bunt (and to hit the other way from time to time) in the minors, if not earlier, assuming that the shift is being used in HS and college ball. Regulating where players can be positioned on defense isn’t baseball. Adjustments and counter-adjustments are baseball.

That Adam Smith said...

Now that Wilmer is no longer a Met, i’m back to my lifelong opposition to the DH. Of course, I reserve my right to change my mind again depending on what Alonso looks like defensively. :-)