Depending on your perspective, the Mets are markedly better,
slightly better or doomed for the future due to the trades and FA signings done
by Brodie Van Wagenen and company since he assumed the reins last fall. And, despite being called the Debbie Downer
of the site, I’m actually in the first column and fully support what I’ve seen
from BVW thus far. The biggest
difference between he and his predecessor is that he’s at least actively trying to
improve the team.
I won’t go into my well-worn speech about the patented
Alderson inertia, but I did get to thinking about some of the transactions he made and tried to figure out the best and the worst of them. Let’s take a look.
Sandy Alderson Good Moves
Many would right away point to the acquisition of Yoenis
Cespedes for future Rookie of the Year pitcher Michael Fulmer and prospect Luis
Cessa. Cespedes virtually singlehandedly
delivered the Mets to the 2015 World Series.
In fact, 2015 was something of a banner year for Sandy
Alderson as he shipped away mediocre prospects for the likes of Addison Reed
and Tyler Clippard to stabilize a very rocky bullpen. He peddled a few more middling bodies to
Atlanta for Kelly Johnson and Juan Uribe.
He also late in Spring Training obtained Jerry Blevins from the
never-amount-to-anything Matt den Dekker.
Others would say astutely selling high on Cy Young Award
Winner R.A. Dickey and obtaining a couple of catchers and an outfielder who
didn’t work out but a lower level pitching prospect who grew into the guy we
call Thor. Yup, that was a win for
Sandy.
There were some smaller wins as well. Choosing Lucas Duda over Ike Davis surprised
a great many people but turned out to be the right call. Signing Asdrubal Cabrera was a positive. Even though Curtis Granderson was a shell of
his former self, he still delivered 10.8 WAR over the course of his contract so
that was a marginal win. Taking a chance
on PED abuse Marlon Byrd was another good one.
He also had a few credible draft picks, including Michael Conforto and Brandon Nimmo, but most of the rest of his draft talent selections should be reserved for the next section.
Sandy Alderson Bad Moves
Oh, where do we begin?
It’s easy to pick on individual players signed to relatively
short contracts that bombed spectacularly.
This group would include Michael Cuddyer (who also cost draft pick
compensation), Chris Young (OF), John Mayberry, Jr., Alejandro de Aza, Antonio
Bastardo, Frank Francisco, Jon Rauch, Fernando Salas, AJ Ramos, Alex Torres,
Jason Vargas, Jay Bruce, Anthony Swarzak and others.
Then there were the various scrap heap picks like James
Loney, Jose Valverde, Rick Ankiel, Bobby Abreu, Adrian Gonzalez, Jose Bautista,
Austin Jackson, Jose Reyes and others.
There’s the category of people who he chose to let walk
away, including Justin Turner, Carlos Torres, Daniel Murphy and (again) Jose
Reyes (without even making him an offer).
Then there are the trades in which he was fleeced. Angel Pagan to the Giants, Colin McHugh to
the Rockies, every salary dump trade he made since 2015…
Another huge dunce-cap moment was the mismanagement of the
AAA franchise which expired in Buffalo after leaving New Orleans ostensibly
because the environment was too distracting for the players. So the next stop after failing to plan ahead
was to sign for multiple year in Las Vegas in arguable the worst stadium and
worst pitching environment in baseball.
Besides, what could possibly distract players in a town nicknamed “Sin
City”?
My number one contender for boneheaded Alderson moves (and now people will accuse me
of revisionist history), was the David Wright contract extension. To be fair, it may very well not have been his decision, but the Wilpons who wanted to grow their own Derek Jeter player-for-life.
Wow, for a team that was very nearly taken
away from the Wilpons due to financial mismanagement during the Madoff scandal,
to hand out a contract to a player who had performed inconsistently in the new
ballpark when you said you had no money to spend was downright foolish. Then that contract became the albatross that
hamstrung the franchise for the next seven years when they claimed they could
not bid on the best available free agents. I screamed as much from the rooftops back in 2012.
At the time I advised that the better course of business would have been to
sell high on a player in his prime, stockpiling prospects into your farm system
and saving $138 million, but everyone told me I was completely wrong. The unfortunate health problems that happened
afterwards caught many by surprise, but he had had a spinal fracture prior to
signing the extension, so it was not a Ripley’s Believe It or Not moment when
he later had ongoing spinal issues.
Debbie Downer? Realistic Reese is more like it LOL.
ReplyDeleteThat Alderson track record was not enviable. Hopefully Brodie VW does MUCH better in his regime. Brodie's only mistake so far is not making it easy for Callaway to pencil in Jeff mcNeil for 162 games :)
Brodie can get a few more pitchers, I wouldn't complain.
SNY suppposedly has the Mets at just 84-85 wins in 2019 - I hope those were typos - that is REAL Debbie Downer projections, that completely overlook how miserable the Mets' Subs and Scrubs (back ups, and back-end guys) did on the field and in the pen in 2018.
Reese,
ReplyDeleteBrodie has spend a lot of money, made a lot of moves but one can argue that not making the Cano trade and simply signing Britton, Familia and Ottavino would have addressed the BP just as good.
We know Diaz is going to be good but expecting Cano to have five good years is a pipe dream. Given that fact, I think the Mets overpaid on that trade.
What would have been better? Machado to become the next face of the Mets or two or three decent infielders?. Sometimes is not quantity but quality that counts.
What's done is done but if Brodie doesn't find a way to extend deGrom and Wheeler, all these additions won't mean squat and the manure cycle will start again. You don't bring in all these players and not lock up your best starters from last year.
As Dave Hudgens was leaving to land on a World Championship team, he made reference to how “they should leave Sandy alone to spend some money”. Wonder who he was talk about?
ReplyDeleteBut, the draft picks and crappy trades were on him. Too, I add the non-trades. His insistence on appearing to hit a homerun on every trade left the team without depth and his rosters were always short a backup shortstop or a centerfielder, or both.
I agree about the non-trades and the non-signings. Hence my earlier commment about his inertia.
ReplyDeleteMy apologies if my attempt at humor in my first new weekly report offended you.
ReplyDelete@Viper -- remember when the Mets wanted Mike Hampton from the Astros? They insisted they also take on the bloated contract of Derek Bell. Bigger numbers this time but it's the same principle. If they wanted the best closer in baseball at near minimum wage they'd have to take on Cano's salary, but that's offset by the salaries of Bruce, Swarzak and the $20 million coming over from the Mariners. Yes, $16 million a year is steep for Cano in years 4 & 5, but the first three years should be in the win column.
ReplyDeleteSigning Britton or Kimbrel might have been another way to go (though I'm not sold on Ottavino at all).
No, Mack, I wasn't offended at all. I am, as Tom said, realistic. And there is much to be negative about in Metsville. I am optimistic for the first time in a long time, but there's still front office work to be done.
ReplyDeleteI put on the Debbie Downer hat at 11 AM!
ReplyDeleteBVW is off to a pretty good start.......but, as you stated Reese, that's all it is at this point.
ReplyDeleteSandy had his moments, but it seemed like he spent too much time nibbling around the edges (low end free agents, reclamation projects) and not enough time addressing the bigger issues. Nibbling is fine, IN ADDITION to being aggressive on all fronts.
I am encouraged by BVW's multilayered approach.....cautiously optimistic, perhaps?