While evaluating prospects you occasionally become convinced
that some are destined for greatness but for reasons due to health, skill or
off-the-field issues cripple the great untapped potential.
Recently many would have put a guy like Zack Wheeler on that
list who came up with quite a reputation and delivered a terrific rookie
campaign, a solid follow up in 2014 but then his arm troubles began. Many pretty much wrote him off until last
year he put together a 4.2 WAR season which included a 12-7 record, a best-ever
3.31 ERA (even better in the 2nd half of the season), and a best
ever greater than 3:1 strikeout to walk ratio.
Other recent Mets who would make this list are sleepy headed
Dominic Smith whose minor league success never translated into productivity at
the major league level. Smith took a
little while to get it together to justify his high draft position. His batting average and defensive prowess
were there from the start, but he showed no power and little in the way of RBI
production. His .295 rookie league
campaign took a step backwards with a .271 the following season, but in St.
Lucie he eclipsed .300 for the first time.
In Binghamton in 2016 the middle-of-the-order bat started to emerge as
he whacked 14 HRs but drove in 91 while keeping his average again north of
.300. In 2017 in Las Vegas he really put
it together when combined he hit .320 with 26 HRs and 102 RBIs between AAA and
the Mets. Last season started off on a
sour note with the alarm clock issue, the subsequent foot injury and his
banishment to AAA for most of the year where the newly svelte Smith only hit
.258 with 6 HRs and 41 RBIs in a hitter-friendly league. Now he’s mostly an afterthought after a
failed experiment as an outfielder.
There is another current Met who I felt was in that
category. Peruse the minor league
numbers of Paul Sewald and you will see someone who was punching above his
weight level for sure. Suppose I offered
you an anonymous prospect who had a 20-8 minor league record with a career ERA
of 2.16 and a better than 5:1 strikeout to walk ratio in a trade? You’d break your finger getting to the phone,
right? Unfortunately the majors have not
been kind at all to Mr. Sewald through parts of two seasons in which he’s
accumulated a fugly 0-13 record with an ERA of 5.25 with a drop of 2.89 to 1
strikeout to walk ratio. He’s hanging
onto his 40-man roster spot by his fingernails.
We’re all familiar with the many names of players the Mets
retained rather than use as trade chips which came back to bite them, including
Fernando Martinez, Benny Ayala, Gavin Cecchini, Generation K, and others. However, we all surely have some more obscure
players we felt were destined for far more than they achieved.
A recent corner infielder who was only granted a whopping 31 ABs in the majors was Zach Lutz. He'd never shown the eye-popping power that makes folks take note, but he always had an RBI bat and hit .282 for his minor league career. Some foot problems derailed an otherwise promising career that has now extend to Japan and the Independent leagues.
I remember in my grade school days watching the offensive
exploits of one Brock Pemberton, a switch hitting 1st baseman who did
not have much power but who hit around .290 throughout his minor league
career. It’s a tough road for singles
hitting corner infielders to make it to the bigs to stay and such was the case
with Pemberton.
Another one who never measured up to expectations developed
a reputation as a Spring Training superstar, outfielder Darren Reed. He once put together a .321/28/95 minor
league season. The batting average
dipped later on as he ascended the ladder but did have a AAA campaign in which
he hit .265/17/65 which suggested his offensive prowess was for real (if not
spectacular). Unfortunately, over a 153
AB trial in the majors he didn’t eclipse the Mendoza line though did hit 6 HRs
and drove in 16 which would translate to 24/64 over the course of a single
season had he gotten the opportunity. He
finished his career hitting .345 at age 30 for the Duluth-Superior Independent
League team.
Who will you admit to having had on your “sure thing” list
who never achieved that potential?
I always thought Anthony Recker could be so much better...
ReplyDeleteWho is Anthony Recker?
DeleteIn the Mets organization, there are so few who you'd think that were can't miss that did miss. Ike Davis almost fits that category, except he did make it for a while. Ruben Tejada too.
ReplyDeleteOne who I thought had the chops and would pull a Jeff McNeil was Jayce Boyd, who hit like neck until a thoracic injury. He actually had a very strong couple of months in his last go-round in AAA in 2017.
Gavin Cecchini had real similarities to sleeping Dom Smith, strengths but flaws. Hit like heck in 2016, but couldn't field...in 2017 didn't hit but did field, and 2018, hurt. 2019? Who knows? The majors are a long shot, it seems.
Matt Reynolds had a terrific stretch of minors hitting, but he had an unsustainable BABIP, and hence could not move past marginal.
A larger list of guys who excelled after leaving, for sure.
Matt den Dekker too. And Jack Leathersich.
ReplyDeleteBrock Pemberton WOW Reese that really dates us. Had to be 72' maybe 73' and I remember waiting patiently for the March issue of Baseball digest to finally find out about our Met prospects and other than the Sporting News there was virtually no other baseball info to be gotten from seasons end to the next seasons spring....ahh the old days.
ReplyDeleteAlso the news about Nimmo being one of the top right fielders is very interesting because as a first round pick it was much criticized and I don't think he still get's much respect but he really had a super season and funny that he will probably be moved to center to get McNeil in the lineup so I guess we never really know.
ReplyDelete.400+ OBP was an amazing Nimmo stat.
DeleteI was a Lastings Milledge believer, myself. He looked like he had all the tools and showed great personality in interacting with the fans.
ReplyDeleteAnd who can forget MnL Player of the Year and future HOFer Gregg Jeffries? A sure "can't miss" right? 🤔
But what I see in this article is what I have been saying for years A prospect is just a prospect. I am not afraid to trade one to get a proven ML talent
OK, are you ready for Alonso to have a JD Smith-like first 100 ML AB's?
ReplyDeleteOr on the other side of the ledger a Dominating Dominic March & April?
My take on McNeil is that he IS Gregg Jeffries (with a better attitude) and not Mike Vail, but who knows?
And there ws the AAA 32HR/.974OPS Cliff Cook the Mets stole from CIN...and oh, PCL batting champ & MVP, Jesse Gonder. Was excited about them at one time.
Gregg Jeffries was a two-time All Star and had a career batting average of .289. I would say he is a prospect who made it even if the Mets were stupid enough to trade him away.
ReplyDeleteReese,
ReplyDeletejeffries was despised in the clubhouse, not so McNeil. Talent-wise, I think they're comparable.
I thought Keith Miller looked pretty good until I saw him play in Center. I am glad they no longer are counting on an infielder to play the outfield.
ReplyDeleteHobie, McNeil being comparable to Jeffries talent-wise? I'll take that offensively.
ReplyDeleteJohn from Albany, great point on Keith Miller. McNeil was an IF/OF in college, with a whole off season to shake off the OF rust. I think he will do fine out there. Better than Miller did.
Was Jason Tyner touted highly enough to be a bust?
ReplyDeleteTom, I hope you are correct.
ReplyDeleteTexas Gus, the Mets for decades have led the majors in busts - or at least it seems that way. Hopefully, that will dramatically change with Brodie.
ReplyDelete