12/21/18

Reese Kaplan -- Yes, Virginia, the Mets Have Money to Spend



One of the banes of being an amateur sportswriter wedged in and around real life is that often you find yourself working in spurts when opportunities arise.  Towards that end with a busy holiday schedule I’ve found myself with some forced downtime due to surgery which meant I could write a number of pieces only to be caught off-guard by the increasingly unpredictable Brodie Van Wagenen whose sometimes surreptitious actions catch all of us off guard (and necessitate a lot of rewriting).

With that backdrop of clandestine dealings emanating from the Mets’ front office, I will take a stab at the question of who will be on the roster and just how much money do the Mets still have to spend.  Remember that they’ve committed to the prorated salary of Robinson Cano, the return of prodigal son Jeurys Familia and the recently inked Wilson Ramos.  That’s a lot of dough committed by a team that traditionally has been more patient and, ahem, frugal when it came to constructing a roster.  Was it right for BVW to spend all of his budget within a week’s end of the Winter Meetings? 

Maybe, maybe not.  Perhaps he’s just crazy like a fox.

I went through the tedious exercise of projecting who will and who won’t be on the roster (barring any additional trades), plus allowing for the consensus arbitration increases for the likes of players like Jacob deGrom, Noah Syndergaard, Zack Wheeler and Steven Matz.  What I ascertained is that they are indeed two bodies short of a 25-man roster, but the surprising revelation is that they are committed to about $134.5 million.  If you consider that the last few seasons’ budgets hovered around $154 million, allowing for both some inflation, some honeymoon period goodwill and the already resulting positive publicity keeping the Mets on the back pages in a positive way and no longer the fodder of the late night comedians, it’s certainly conceivable the Mets have between $20 and $25 million yet to spend. 

Considering that the big ticket free agents still there for the taking – Bryce Harper and Manny Machado – are likely to exceed that threshold individually, As much as the Mets fans would like to see the team finally start shopping in the steak section of the supermarket, unless there is another salary dump trade up BVW’s cuffed sleeves then this direction is not one worth considering. 

Right now the Mets have more than just a single hole to fill.  They currently have but three outfielders (one chronically injured), no experienced lefthanded relief pitchers and no clear backup to play shortstop (unless Luis Guillorme or Gavin Cecchini have made their way out of the baseball equivalent of the witness protection program). 

So, if you consider they have four needs to fill (4th and 5th outfielders, infielder and a left handed reliever), how can you go about maximizing the return on that $20 to $25 million left to spend?

Bear in mind that for all of the publicity that Robinson Cano’s arrival received, the real key to that deal was the minimum wage closer Edwin Diaz.  In making that deal BVW was able to dump two significant salaries in the persons of Jay Bruce and Anthony Swarzak.  Methinks there’s another similar deal cooking that will help the Mets gain some additional salary flexibility by sending one or more of Todd Frazier, Jason Vargas and Juan Lagares out of town to add $8 to $9.5 million of additional salary dollars to the pot.  

Of course, other general managers are not as gullible as BVW’s predecessor who never met a tertiary level option he didn’t like.  Getting rid of them would require either paying down their salaries or tying these contracts to more of Sandy Alderson’s draft picks. For example, if you found someone interested in Andres Gimenez or David Peterson then you might obligate them to take Juan Lagares or Jason Vargas to make the deal happen.   This approach will rid the club of payroll obligations regardless of the returns obtained.

So, for the sake of argument, one of these deals can be made for a $9 million full boat salary obligation leaving town, then you’re looking at up to $34 million to spend to fill holes.  However, let’s see what can be done to stay well within that total.

For the outfield, I’m coming on board the Nelson Cruz one-year bandwagon.  Yes, he's a DH in outfielder clothing, but bury him in RF and live with one of Conforto and Nimmo in CF.  Figure he would command at age 38 perhaps $9 million on a one-year deal.  That solves a starting outfield position and replaces Yoenis Cespedes’ production until the hobbling man from Havana is ready to return to baseball action. 

Let’s assume Oliver Perez is the LOOGY they have identified to take Jerry Blevins’ role (with Daniel Zamora in the wings behind him).  He’s also an elder statesmen at 37 this coming year and could likely be obtained on a one year deal for about $4 million.   We’re up to about $13 million spent thus far.

Now let’s turn to super utility man Marwyn Gonzalez.  A good comp would be the Cubs’ Ben Zobrist who gets close to 500 ABs per year playing all over the diamond.  Defensively Gonzalez is a bit more versatile (including true shortstop capabilities) but offensively Zobrist is the more complete player.  Zobrist averaged $14 million per season on his current deal.  Figure Gonzalez is perhaps slightly less, call it $13 million.  If you can do that, then you’re looking at $26 million spent and a 5th outfielder still needed.  Now this player could be someone coming in return in the hypothetical prospect+bad contract trade or someone with a minor league invitation or even a AAA type like in-house option Dom Smith. 

The point here is that it’s possible to address the issues at hand without breaking the bank.  It’s even easier and more palatable if you can free up some extra payroll dollars via trade of unwanted assets.  Now this final roster is still not necessarily perfect.  What about another Jason Vargas swoon?  What about a Juan Lagares injury?  What about a Todd Frazier Mendoza-line flirtation?  The suggestions here are an example of a way to go, not necessarily the only way. 

22 comments:

Unknown said...

Reese,
Excellent headline and article.

IT amazes me how many fans are stuck on the notion that the Mets on "have" a budget very close to last year's. This is utter nonsense. The Wilpons can afford a $180 million payroll in a heartbeat if they so choose. That is not saying they should spend to that point or pay "stupid" money like the Phillies.

The reality that they have not been players for either of the big 26-year old free agents is a bit repulsive, especially with a divisional competitor in the mix. Perhaps they are doing so off the radar with Harper, but I'll believe that when I see it. In any event, a reasonable debate can be made as to how much sense it makes to sink hundreds of millions into one player, especially with the coming need to secure one or more of their own pitching stars.

Fine. But until proven otherwise, they are still behaving like a low-end budget conscious mid-market team. Guys like Miller and Soria can help, from what we know publicly the Mets haven't been in on these or other quality arms, with the boastful and aggressive GM tempering expectations...which still sounds like typical Wilpon doublespeak from their shiny new mouthpiece.

So, we shall see how this plays out. The team is improved, but still the 3rd or 4th best team in the division. If they come up short on the acquisition of talent, the Cano trade will look worse and worse. Memo to Brodie - you are not the division favorites, and you are not a post-season favorite either. Not yet.

bgreg98180 said...

Will the Mets be a reliably perennial playoff team settling?

If no, then don't settle.

Each year that passes wastes another year of this starting rotation

Mack Ade said...

Nice piece Reese. Get it? Piece. Reese. He he

Look, no one wants the Mets to spend more on the 2019 25-man and I agree we need another stud in the pen... but you can't go into the season with 2.5 outfielders.

Yes, there is Dom Smith and Rajai Davis to fall back on but we need more than that.

As for the pen, I predict a breakout year for Daniel Zamora.

Viper said...

Reese,

I agree that the Mets can get creative with the money they have left in order to patch the team together. The problem is that patching up the team doesn't make it a winner, a true world series contender.

Once the Mets decided they wanted to play with the big boys, they have to go all way in or it will just be another year of disappointments.

You can build a team two ways: high draft picks, development and signing only those pieces that you didn't develop. That takes time and know how. The Mets are not good at this. At least not under Alderson.

The second way is to spend money on the right players when they become available. Those players are available currently.

Harper and Machado. So lets say the Mets sign Machado (10/300M), that would put according to your calculations at 164M? Sign Perez for 4M, 168M. 5th outfielder? that can be just about any good speedy glove who shouldn't make more than a couple of millions. So all in at 170M?

Backup shortstop? Rosario since Machado will be in SS and Rosario at 3B.

You have to build your team according to your competition. Are the Mets better than the Braves and Nationals right now? Will they be better than where the Phils may end up? Sign Machado and the Mets might be.

Tom Brennan said...

We all make valiant efforts writing about what can make the Mets better, and no one on this site does it as thoroughly as Reese. Great job.

But the problem really is when we are programmed to write "how can you go about maximizing the return on that $20 to $25 million left to spend?"

Up the darned budget by $25 million and go and get elite talent. The Cards are about to get Miller - why not the Mets? I texted my brother on that - with all the Mets have done this off season, he still simply texted back, "they suck." Who can argue, when going over budget can make this team a clear division favorite.

Harper? Why not the Mets?

Spend big, now, as it is a great opportunity to be a top 5 team and likely division winner.

Spend more - with the target of being a perennial top 5 MLB team. It is within the team's grasp if they finally grab for it.

Zozo said...

I don’t want either of Machado or Harper. I would prefer one of 2 trades. Who we kidding i want both these trades.

Trade Nimmo, McNeil and Vargas for Kluber
His contract seems like a bargain considering what everyone else is getting this free agent period. He would cost you about 12 mil this year minus Vargas’s contract,and about 19 mil each year for next 2 years.

Trade Peterson, Matz, Frazier and Lagares for Grienke. Even his deal is looking like a bargain. This year he would cost you about 10 million minus the contracts you send there way, and 30 for the next 2 years.

Yes we will have best rotation ever constructed if all goes well and both of them pitching in a pitchers Park will only help them even more going forward. You also can trade them when they have 1 year left on their deals and get prospects back. So not too much of risk $$$ wide going forward.

I would also offer Wheeler a contract extension ASAP and if he doesn’t take it, you can trade him either now or in July for whatever you may need or build up your prospects.

Imagine A DeGrom, Synndergarrd, Kluber, Grienke and Wheeler rotation. Just wow...

Oh than sign Carlos Gomez and Moostakis to fill out the lineup. Gomez for 5 mil 1 year and Moose for 40 mil 4 year contract.

That’s adding 37 mil to this year’s salary cap. That’s about what Harpers going to receive and with insurance money and being in NY market should be very feasible to do.

Mack Ade said...

By my estimate, the current Mets payroll is $150mil, which includes the full money that would be paid to Wrigth if they didn't have an insurance policy on him.

Add in that savings, plus the new TV/Cable revenue, and they have plenty of money if they wan to spend it.

Reese Kaplan said...

My math showing estimbates in arbitration from various sources have them at $134.5 including Wright and Cespedes.

Viper said...

Zozo, we need offense but you want to trade the farm for pitchers?

deGrom, Syndergaard, Wheeler, Matz not enough? We had them last year without much offense, how did it work?

Viper said...

Reese,
Could the 134.5M be after they take the insurance money savings from both Wright and Cespedes into consideration?

Either way, the Mets become expensive for only 2 years after which they clear 44M from the Wright and Cespedes contracts.

TP said...

Agree Mack, Tom, and Tom’s brother. No time to get short arms and beaten out by for talent by division rivals and mid-market teams. I din’t Like the body language, it smells of more same old sMe old. They need another quality bat and multiple quality arms. Adding a guy like Soria.for a small commitment make Lugo and Gsellman more available as starter depth if needed. No excuses.

Mike Freire said...

Good work, Reese......if we are going for a veteran OF'er, I still like Adam Jones a bit better then anyone else this side of Bryce Harper. Once Cespedes is back, you would have a four OF'er rotation for the three spots with everyone (except Cespedes) capable of playing all three spots.

I do like Marwyn Gonzalez, too. Between our listed OF rotation and MG's ability to fill in an OF spot, we may not need a designated 5th OF'er?

Another lefty in the pen HAS to be on the list, right?

bill metsiac said...

I don't see why so many fans are so down on Vargas and Lag. JV was an 18 game winner in 2917,and was held back by injury, but was fine after he shook the rust off. He could be the veteran LHRP if we add another righty SP.

Lag's injuries have been a problem but they're not repetitive ones (like Jose's hammies early in his career).
They both can be very productive this year, though they are not sure things.

Tom Brennan said...

Bill, I agree with you on Vargas and Lagares.

I think Vargas can have an ERA between 4.00 and 4.75 - but have a fallback option (Oswalt?) if Vargas sputters.

Lagares has to come to grips with only going all out for acrobatic plays when the score dictates it. Great, you caught that ball with us down 9-3, but whoops, you tore up your thumb again and will miss 4 months. Uhh, uhh, gotta be smarter. If he has another major injury this year, I don't care if he is 100% healed by spring 2020, he'd only a million from some team willing to take a flyer on him.

Stay healthy instead, and put up a solid year with fine, but less acrobatic defense, and Juan could command 3 years $25-$30 million from an optimistic, talent-short team.

The choice is his.

Mike Freire said...

Lagares playing in a majority of the 2019 season would be fantastic.....I am skeptical based on his history, but I hope he proves us all wrong.

I would add Adam Jones in any scenario......four players for three spots until Cespedes gets back and that's no guarantee. But, if he does come back in July, then Lagares (if healthy) would be your 5th OF'er or trade bait.

Extra OF'ers are not a bad idea, IMO....especially since we have had injuries galore out there of late.

bill metsiac said...

How does 5 go into 4? I count our current 3 + Yo as 4. Does the extra guy = 0?

bill metsiac said...

Does anyone have Lag's stats in the Dominican Winter League? I can't find them.

bgreg98180 said...

Lagares is ALWAYS injured.
It doesn't matter if they are recurring or new ones every year.

His warranty must have lapsed and all of his parts seem to just keep failing.

Repeated history should be learned from.

Denying it ignoring it leads to repeating the same mistakes that led to failure in the past

Tom Brennan said...

Bill - Lagares is 6 for 20 in 7 games, including 2 doubles and a triple, a walk, and 2 Ks.

I assume he has not gotten hurt and is playing.

I googled "Juan Lagares Winter League Stats" - Baseball Reference has a tab to show minors and winter ball stats.

bill metsiac said...

I think the season os over and his team missed the playoffs. I'd settle for a . 300 BA from him this season. 🤞

I tried NB Reference, but wasn't successful. Thanks

Anonymous said...

Hi everyone. I’m still not over the need to lose Kelenic and if the option is to sign another outfielder at $13MM and add a reliever, why didn’t they keep Swarzak and Bruce and save themselves Kelenic and Dunn?

Moving on... I don’t want the ridiculously overrated Harper and my jury is out on Machado. Rather than sign Blanco, why not sign the productive Parra? Reese, I disagree with your assessment that this team has $20-$25MM to spend, but I’d love to be wrong. There are still good relievers available and the Mets are targeting LeClerc from the Rangers, who is unhittable but way wild too; like Miller used to be. Too, if they trade Plawecki for a lefty reliever, that’s ok, but why not get a backup CF? It shouldn’t be that hard to get a mediocre outfielder that can stand in CF for a mediocre catcher. There’s your outfielder, trade for two relievers (if Minor agrees to way his no-trade clause) and use McNeil at SS in emergency but get a kid to Queens from Syracuse if there’s a need. What’s the panic about?

TexasGusCC said...

Again, it wasn’t anonymous, it was me, TexasGusCC. I don’t think this site likes me much.