Saturday I took at look at the vastly improved Philadelphia
Phillies and the Atlanta Braves as competitors for the crown, but intentionally
left off the Washington Nationals as they are kind of in a similar spot to the
Mets in that their off-season has to get a grade of incomplete.
They started off with an extremely shrewd move of signing
former Cardinals’ closer Trevor Rosenthal for a quite modest $7 million. The Cards apparently lost patience waiting
for the man to recover from his arm injuries and let him walk away. For his career Rosenthal sports a 2.99 ERA
with 435 Ks in just 325 IP while saving 121 games. Last season he started putting it together
again with a 3.40 ERA and 14.3 Ks per 9 IP.
At age 27 that was an aggressive and astute transaction for the Nats to
make.
Quickly thereafter they secured the services of Kurt Suzuki
who in an earlier article I’d identified as having the best offensive numbers
in baseball for catchers over the past few years. Some might argue that entrusting a tough
defensive position like catcher to a 36 year old may not be too wise, but they
later that same month executed a trade with Cleveland to bring Yan Gomes into
the fold. The 30 year old Gomes has a
bit more power than Suzuki but doesn’t hit for the same average.
The big move, however, was the roll of the dice for one
solid season of Patrick Corbin who GM Mike Rizzo rewarded with a 6-year $140
million contract. That figure ought to
have Jacob de Grom salivating. Whether
or not he’s worth nearly $24 million per year only time will tell. However, the Nationals may have indeed spent
all their money already after realizing that Bryce Harper is going to sign with
whomever is willing to meet his price.
So what does the team look like now?
Well, at 1B you have oft-injured Ryan Zimmerman who is just
a year removed from a .303/36/108 season.
Last year he was available only about half time and the numbers declined
precipitously. He batted .264/13/51. He’ll turn 35 during 2019 and playing
arguably one of the least demanding positions on the diamond so it will be
interesting to see if it was injuries or age-related decline.
At 2B you have Wilmer Difo still penciled in at the
keystone. Given his lack of power, average and modest speed,
you’d have to wonder if Howie Kendrick might see more time there than
originally planned. Consider that
position a weakness.
Shortstop belongs to Trea Turner who is already the kind of
player the Mets hope that Amed Rosario becomes.
He finished the year hitting .271/19/73 with 43 SBs. A.J. Preller and the Padres have to be
kicking themselves for this deal, but perhaps not as much as Tampa Bay as they
received .233 hitting outfielder Steven Souza, Jr. while giving up Wil
Myers.
Anthony Rendon plays 3B.
Enough said.
Rookie-of-the-Year contender Juan Soto did all you could ask
in his first taste of the big leagues.
The left handed hitting 20 year old hit .292 with 22 HRs and 70 RBIs in
just over 400 ABs. Yeah, I think they’re
fine in LF.
In CF the Nats feature another youngster, Victor
Robles. Turning 22 this year, he
features moderate (15 HR) power, moderate speed (up to 20 SBs) and a decent
batting average in the minors, but his under-100-ABs in the majors is too
little to project how he will adjust to the next level of competition.
Before AJ Pollock got the Diamondbacks’ headlines for his
combination of defense, speed and power there was the Snakes’ (and later the White
Sox’) Adam Eaton. Like Pollock he’s been
bitten by the injury bug and has not turned in a full season since 2016. What to expect from him is a great unknown at
this point.
The starting rotation is pretty formidable. Headed by Max Scherzer and newcomer Patrick Corbin,
this duo is joined by Stephen Strasburg, Anibal Sanchez and Joe Ross. Strasburg hasn’t logged 30 starts since 2014,
so health is standing between him and his former dominance. Anibal Sanchez is a highly serviceable
pitcher. Joe Ross is their right handed
version of Jason Vargas.
The bullpen appears to be the team’s Achilles’ heel past
Trevor Rosenthal. You have a lot of
unproven players and thus it is an area I’d expect the Nats to address between
now and Opening Day.
My guess is we are done Reese
ReplyDeleteNo, I think there are still some pitching pieces and jousting at windmills to dump bad contracts.
ReplyDeleteThe Mets HAVE to do more - the Nats, with Soto, Robles, and Turner spearheading the offense and a strong pen and rotation, are, in my mind still better than the Mets.
ReplyDeleteAdd a strong pen arm, at least - and I mean strong, not Swarzak-type stuff.
I don't see a whole lot of separation between the Braves, Mets, Phillies and Nationals at this point.
ReplyDeleteYes, that could change as the rest of the off season rolls onward......but, right now any of the listed teams could win 90 games and take the division title in 2019.