So a great many folks think I’m overly harsh in my
assessment of the team. Let’s try to use
a more reasonable evaluation based upon some people with greater analytical
abilities such as BaseballReference.com.
If this is the projected lineup going into 2019, then here
are the numbers we can expect:
First Base
Dom Smith – 22/57/.210
Todd Frazier – 22/63/.216
Peter Alonso – no projection, but mine would be .235/30/82
Second Base
Robinson Cano – 16/60/.275
Shortstop
Amed Rosario – 10/46/.258 with 10 SBs
Third Base
Jeff McNeil – 7/30/.289 (but only expected to do that in 291
ABs, so you could roughly double that)
Catcher
Travis d’Arnaud – 8/28/.241 (but only expected to do that
over 224 ABs)
Outfield
Brandon Nimmo – 14/47/262 with an OBP of .380
Juan Lagares – 5/21/.251 over 235 ABs
Michael Conforto – 25/74/.250
Starting Rotation
Jacob deGrom – 10-9, 2.76
Noah Syndergaard – 10-6, 3.21
Zack Wheeler – 9-8, 3.83
Steven Matz – 6-10, 4.19
Jason Vargas – 9-9, 4.65
Bullpen
Edwin Diaz – 2-4, 3.03 and 30 saves
Jeurys Familia – 5-4, 3.52 and 14 saves
Seth Lugo – 5-4, 3.60
Robert Gsellman – 6-4, 4.29
Drew Smith – 2-2, .3.92
Daniel Zamora – 2-1, 3.90
So it would seem that in comparison to the baseball experts,
my outlook for the team is positively rosy.
I think they greatly underestimated what Cano, Rosario and Nimmo will
provide. They’re slightly under on
Conforto and McNeil. They are probably
on target with Frazier, Smith, Lagares and d’Arnaud. On the pitching side of the ledger they
appear to be wildly underestimating the results and the wins totals in
particular are disturbing.
Obviously although the Winter Meetings are over, it doesn’t
mean the trading season and free agent signing period has ended. Theoretically groundwork has been laid in
person with a great many targets and there’s no reason to assume that if they
never spoke to a player such as Luis Avilan it doesn’t necessarily mean they
won’t.
So we’re back to the question of whether or not this team is
ready to compete for the post-season?
Now, with BaseballReference.com’s analysis supporting me, take another
look and tell me what you foresee for the 2019 season. Even if the site’s glass half-empty view is
way off base, let’s see what an realistic view might look like:
First Base
Peter Alonso –35/90/.260
Second Base
Robinson Cano – 25/75/.285
Shortstop
Amed Rosario – 20/64/.270 with 30 SBs
Third Base
Jeff McNeil – 18/70/.290
Catcher
Travis d’Arnaud – 18/65/.260
Outfield
Brandon Nimmo – 20/70/.275 with an OBP of .400
Juan Lagares – 8/40/.265
Michael Conforto – 30/85/.270
Starting Rotation
Jacob deGrom – 14-9, 2.35
Noah Syndergaard – 13-6, 2.89
Zack Wheeler – 12-10, 3.35
Steven Matz – 10-10, 3.49
Jason Vargas – 9-9, 4.65
Bullpen
Edwin Diaz – 2-4, 2.76 and 40 saves
Jeurys Familia – 5-4, 3.15 and 14 saves
Seth Lugo – 5-4, 3.50
Robert Gsellman – 6-4, 4.00
Drew Smith – 2-2, .3.50
Daniel Zamora – 2-1, 3.90
So these projections of my own are considerably better, but
it still seems that there’s work to be done to improve the roster. No one can guarantee that Juan Lagares and
Travis d’Arnaud will actually stay healthy enough to produce at their
levels.
So again, with about $20 million to spend, how would you
make it a stronger team more likely to ascend to the post-season? I’m still serious about playing the tie a bad
contract to a desirable resource game to free up some more money to address the
needs properly. Todd Frazier, Jason
Vargas and Juan Lagares all fit into this $9 million+ salary dump picture. If someone comes calling and wants a guy like Andres
Gimenez then insist they take along one of this tragic triumvirate. Then you get back both a player or players in
return in the deal AND you gain some extra money for the next deal, be it now
or at mid-season if indeed you are close to serious contention.
If you want to spend what you have right now, I’m not a fan
of going after Yasmani Grandal. After pillaging
the minor leagues, giving up another draft pick to sign him (not to mention the
AAV of the contract and the term of it) wouldn’t seem terribly prudent. I am also dead set against squandering $6
million per year or more on a guy with a career batting average in striking
distance of Todd Frazier but without the power.
No Maldonado for me. I’d sooner
roll the dice on the no-compensation choice of Wilson Ramos and hope that half
a season of him and half a season of d’Arnaud would be livable.
As far as centerfield goes, you most definitely need a reinforcement
there. Even if Lagares miraculously stays healthy and maintains his new batting
approach, they are down to three outfielders.
Adam Jones had an off year offensively and his CF days are pretty much
over. You could trot him out there a’la
Curtis Granderson, but unless he’s willing to take a major pay cut on a very
short term deal, move along.
I’d be much more interested in acquiring the lefty Michael
Brantley who made only $11.5 last season in Cleveland and is well known to
manager Mickey Callaway. Last year they
trotted out Nimmo, Conforto and Bruce.
While the latter didn’t produce as desired, it wasn’t as if his left
handedness was the problem. I want teams
to get out of this mindset that lefties can only hit righties and vice
versa. You face far more righties than
you do lefties, so it would make sense to tip the scales in your favor with a
lefty-heavy lineup. I would then live with Brandon Nimmo or Michael Conforto in CF.
For the pen, yes, Andrew Miller would seem to be a primary
target but then you go into the season with an injury-recovering high-priced
player and Daniel Zamora from the southpaw side. Might it make more sense to go after the
healthier and cheaper Oliver Perez, Luis Avilan and/or Tony Sipp?
So now that you have the numbers, both pessimistic and
realistic, are you optimistic?
9 comments:
Good analysis, Reese. I think your projections have more steam than the other ones. At .260ish, might be too optimistic about pounding Pete. I'm guessing mid-240's for him.
We will definitely get another OF and a few more relievers and (I am betting) Grandal - not sure if that will be enough in the resurgent NL East when all is said and done.
Let us all send Cespedes a Get Well SOON card. We'll need a guy like him.
Familia’s back loaded deal and indications that the team is likely done spending “big” on the bullpen seems to support my theory that Brody will not be permitted to increase payroll much, if at all, in ‘19 with not much more wiggle room in ‘20. That’s why they seem so dead set on trading what little talent they have to fill other holes when there are multiple FA options available.
The wishful thinkers among us can keep dreaming about Harper/Machado, but that’s laughable. And even Grandal would require shedding commitments for ‘19 and ‘20 at minimum.
If this team trades Syndergaard - and they’re only considering it because they already know that they won’t extend all three pitchers - because sustained excellence is for others - I might seriously be ready to walk away. It would break my heart, but maybe not as much as it does to watch the only team i’ve ever loved run by these slime balls.
Thanks for letting me unload. You guys are the best. 😏
Adam, sometimes, ya just have to walk away. Hopefully we will feel otherwise when all is said and done.
Good stuff, Reese.
Historically, you need to get to roughly 90 wins to be in the conversation for a playoff spot (sometimes it will also make you competitive for the NL East, as well).
My focus would be on getting from the high 70's (last year) to the listed plateau.
A beefed up bullpen, minus any other additions should add a good chunk of those wins and dare I say a bit more luck in the "injury department" would help, too.
Lefty bullpen help and good catcher should give them a shot, IMO.
Red Sox good? Nope! But, all you have to do is get into the tournament and then let your pitching take over...it has worked
before.
Whenever I see "predictions" like these, about multiple topics (not just the Mets or MLB), my reaction is that they tell me more about the people making them than about their subjects.
Yes, it's the glass half full /empty concept. When I choose people to socialize with, in my neighborhood, I gravitate to those who have cheerful outlooks. There are a few Debbie Downers in my neighborhood, whom I try to avoid.
People with negative attitudes about the present are depressing, but people who can't find anything positive to look forward to in the future, are more so.
Again, I'm not referring to people here, but if the shoe fits...
Currently no shoes fit since my toe surgery on Thursday :)
Excuses, excuses. . 😏
I dont think the baseball reference model has built in assumptions for someone like rosario who improves month to month. Or how to account for nagging injuries/recovery for someone like Conforto. So to me those felt low, but Im in the glass half full camp on Rosario and conforto.
I think everyone is overly optimistic on Alonso, only because it's a very rare player who hits his stride in his first year as a hitter in the ml. Also 30 hrs is a big projection.
If those are cano projections then we are done... this team will be the worse for his entire 5 years here... and the never ending BVW rants
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