Good morning.
I just finished off my
annual series of posts where I break down who we have in the pipeline, by
position, and what I think of them.
Now it is time to turn
to the parent club next season.
First, let me say this.
I have become much more optimistic after watching what the Mets did in the
final month of the season. They confirmed my repeated claim that starting
pitching comes first in the building of any successful ball team.
You start five guys
that give up less than four runs in the first seven innings and you win games
regardless of how much power is behind your bats.
All five Mets starters proved that in and
September/October:
Sept/Oct
– ERA
Jacob deGrom - 1.80
Noah Syndergaard - 1.73
Zack Wheeler - 2.86
Steven Matz - 2.51
Jason Vargas - 3.27
I don’t care what
anyone says. You do this with your five starters, month after month, and you
will win your division pennant.
As for the relief pen, we made some progress with the recent trade, but we still have some work to do.
Edwin Diaz is a gem and becomes the closer we sorely need. The loss of Jeurys Familia stung, but Diaz represents a grade up at this position. He's considered one of the top five closers currently in the business.
Edwin Diaz is a gem and becomes the closer we sorely need. The loss of Jeurys Familia stung, but Diaz represents a grade up at this position. He's considered one of the top five closers currently in the business.
Seth Lugo is a workhouse (2.66) who will remain
a reliever unless he’s called on to start after an injury to one of the five
listed starters above. Robert Gsellman had a
roller coaster year (1.54-ERA in August… 7.71 in September), but I still think
he deserves a do-over. Drew Smith (3.54) had a
wonderful freshman season. And lefty Daniel Zamora showed
some promise at the end of the season (16-apps, 3.00). But frankly, this was a
short list of highlights.
Past that, we are in
distress. Recent signed lefty, Ryan O’Rourke,
could be a wild card here, and two of last year’s Vegas pitchers… Ian Kroll (43-apps, 2.72) and Bobby
Wahl (36-apps, 2.20) deserve a shot here, but my hopes are than the Mets
reach into the free agent market to fix the weakest position on this team.
One wild card cold be
23-year old RHP Stephen Villines. The former
2017 draft pick is sailing through the pipeline, with 137-Ks in 94-IP. He’s
scheduled to open up in Binghamton next spring but he could easily end the year
as the Mets closer.
Moving on to greener
pastures, the future of the infield looks
solid. One of the great trivia questions next year could be which one will make
the All-Star team next season. SS Amed Rosario hit
.286 in August and .283 in September, with 5-HRs and 24-RBIs. 2B Jeff McNeil took off like an ICBM, hitting .329 from
late July through September (if he did this for the entire season, he would
have won the batting title). And then there is 1B Peter
Alonso. All he’s done is hit 36 home runs last year for Bing/Veg. It
probably won’t be 3B Todd Frazier, but that
might change in 2020 when SS Andres Gimenez arrives.
Yes, the future of the infield is solid.
Moving into the outfield, we currently have one star, another
on the shelf, and another developing. Michael Conforto is
turning out to be everything we could desire. Brandon
Nimmo has exceeding any of our expectations. And Yoenis Cespedes is a true superstar of this game (if he could stay
healthy). This would be an exceptional starting outfield if they were all
healthy but, alas, they are not. Cespedes will spend most of his 33-year old
body in the training room and there is a good chance we not only will not see
him back in 2019, but his talent will be hugely diminished in 2020. The good
news is this will be the last year of his existing contract.
Past this we have an
oft injured center fielder, Juan Lagares, who is a very talented defensive center
fielder that had long strides last season offensively (.339) until he hit the
disabled list for the umpteenth time in his career. He is supposedly 100% again
but we all hold our breath every time a ball is hit to short center and he
begins to dive to catch it. Juan turns 30 in March and his body is too brittle
to be counted on past a utility role.
My guess, right now, is that Dominic Smith becomes one of the backups here, as well as being available to play first.
My guess, right now, is that Dominic Smith becomes one of the backups here, as well as being available to play first.
What we desperately
need here, if you want to compete in 2019, is a healthy center fielder that
hits around four notches above Austin Jackson.
This negative continues
with catching.
I could spend volumes
writing about what we have here and who is in the pipeline, but the fact is we
need some outside help. I no longer expect a divisional rival like Miami to
trade us their star (Realmuto), but there is a fair amount of free agent
mid-range talent that would really help firm up this position for us in 2019.
Past that, we would
have to pick two from Travis d-Arnaud, Kevin Plawecki,
and Tomas Nido.
Pipeline wise, the only
high-level hope we have is Patrick Mazeika, who
would have to return to the hitting levels he had in 2017 for St. Lucie (.287).
He’s get his shot this spring in Syracuse.
Additionally, the Mets
gave out this past year the largest international bonus they have ever made
($2.7mil) to 16-year old Francisco Alvarez. He’s
a hundred years away, but it’s nice to see an attempt here to solve this chronic
problem someday.
Summary:
So, it took all these words
to come back to square one.
We need a catcher, a
healthy center fielder, and at least two stud relievers.
23 comments:
So much could change this week that could greatly impact 2019...and beyond...in Metsville. It's Brodie Time.
With Cano pulling 2B away from Jeff McNeil, we may see Jeff a lot at 3B - and also at his old college position in CF. Except, of course, it's Brodie Time, so anything is possible.
Catching could receive a bicycle tire plug fix...or it could be Realmuto, because it's Brodie Time. And Thor could be no more because...well, you get it.
Good analysis, Mack, but I sincerely hope that you will be wrong about Villines becoming our closer this season.
I wish him all the success in the world, but if he becomes the closer, then Diaz has failed or been seriously injured.
I'll gladly settle for Villines becoming a great 8th inning setup guy.
Bill
You probably have Villines' future role correct.
Thank God this post printed out this morning.
I have a funny feeling that today is going to be a crazy day in Vegas
Villines is not a hard thrower. I wonder if the former 10th rounder will run into similar major league problems as another former 10th rounder, winless Paul Sewald.
Mack,
I see that you like me value elite pitching. Having said that and with the continued rumors that the Mets are willing to part with Syndergaard for the God behind the plate in Miami, I have to ask you this question.
Would you trade 3 years of Syndergaard for 2 years of Realmuto straight up as is being rumored in the 3 way trade between the Yankees, Mets and Miami?
Does the upgrade behind the plate better than the downgrade in the rotation?
And finally, with Wheeler in limbo beyond 2019, can you realistically trade Syndergaard which would leave the Mets with only deGrom and Matz controlled after 2019?
What is the Devils Agent seeing that I'm not?
Viper, you don't want to see them cooking your meal in the kitchen...I sure hope when dinner is served AT Brodie's Bistro, we'll be smiling widely, and not looking at it and saying "I didn't order THAT!"
Thomas,
If the cooking involves trading Syndergaard, I am going to have indigestion.
Agreed, Mack......the pen needs the most attention, unless we deal Noah (I hope not). You deal Noah, Zack reverts back to his normal self and Vargas is Vargas....suddenly you have a dearth of starters.
Backing out of my nightmare for a second, I want BVW to sign two more relievers (one from each side)......Robertson and Britton, perhaps? A big outlay, but you keep the rotation intact and add to the pen like this....I think we are much improved (despite who is catching).
I would SIGN Ramos and keep Noah, but that's just me. Not enough of an upgrade from Ramos to JTR to justify gutting our pitching staff.
Oh and why not Adam Jones? Good veteran, would come relatively cheap and could become depth if Nimmo, Conforto and Cespedes are healthy down the road.
My theme is spend some cash in FREE agency and keep your chips for now.
Viper -
I would NEVER trade one of my top 3 starters for Realmuto.
I would pass and concentrate on Ramos and Grandal.
Tom -
I never said Villines threw heat.
Mack,
What if the trade to get Realmuto brought back equal value (additional high value player)
And the concentration on Realmuto instead of a free agent was to save money to spend on Harper?
Mike -
I just have this feeling that we will leave town with Miller.
I also think that Vargas will hit the pen in the spring.
5th starter?
Bob,
The Mets don't need Harper as he is yet another LH hitter. They need Manny Machado.
Mack,
If the Mets get two good BP arms, they can make Lugo the 5th starter.
Could Vargas become what they hoped Anthony Swarzak would be when they signed him?
Brodie is looking at crazy trades because he CANNOT add significant payroll this season. He can take on $ for ‘21 and later, but that’’s gonna force decisions at that time on re-upping one or more of the starters, or keeping Nimmo, Conforto, etc. that’s a dangerous game. Particularly when you’re simultaneously emptying the farm system. The Mets will not add significan current salary. Watch.
The Mets seem determined that their best team includes Rosario over Machado.
I would be all for Rosario.
That being said, I would not pass on Harper just because he hits left handed.
Bob
We need a top catcher. I like BVW's approach. Realmuto is the best out there.
I always liked 3-ways. Even in baseball. And I dont see anything wrong with trading with the Yank.
That being said....
1. I still would NEVER trade Thor
2. If they chose to do it, Muto and CF Hicks (FA 2020) isnt enough.
3. I also need top AAA/AA starter to add to the deal
Adam
I dont believe that.
I think Brodie has an ok for a 200mil salary this year
Any $200 million payroll for the Mets at this point HAS to include Machado or Harper.
I would, if I were the Wilpons, allow the budget to go up to $200 million if it makes this team 1) a mid-90's projection for 2019 and 2) sustainable playoff team to beat over the following 2-3 years minimum.
Stuff can always go wrong (and in Queens, it sure does), but you plan big and have fall back scenarios if guys get hurt.
Mack, my point on Villines is what has worked really well at slower velocity up to AA may not fool folks in the majors. I hope Villines has a strategy to make his stuff work like a Ron Taylor in the majors and not like an 0-10 Sewald.
I do not put all of the blame for 0-10 on Sewald - when teams don't score, it is hard to win - just ask Jake - but my point is Villines, if he will be effective in MLB, will need to be better than Sewald, who was great in the minors.
All due respect, Mack, i’ll Bet you a quarter the payroll isn’t close to that. In fact, my best guess is that they won’t sign a songle significant FA unless they also find a way to shed salary. The Realmuto thing is all about not being able to afford both Grandal and either an OF or relief help. I hope i’m wrong, but I don’t think so.
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