Every team swings and misses now and then when it comes to
judging talent. New GM Brodie Van
Wagenen has not hesitated to cut ties with Sandy Alderson picks in his attempt
to reshape the roster. It got me to
thinking about which former Mets still playing baseball elsewhere and whether
or not there were enough to field a contending (if not All-Star caliber) team.
The names were plentiful and in many cases of reasonably
high quality as well. For example, the
four infielders on the All Ex-Met team are not horrible. Daniel Murphy is a first baseman primarily at
this stage of his career and that’s what he should be doing to help out the
Colorado Rockies. Expect a corresponding
explosion in his power numbers at Coors Field.
Next up you have former fan favorite Wilmer Flores penciled
in as the starting 2nd baseman.
It’s interesting that he was never given this gig while play in New
York, so it will be interesting to see if the modest investment made by the
Diamondbacks is recouped by his bat.
Although he’s no longer slated to play SS, that was his
primary position with the Mets. This
year the switch hitting Asdrubal Cabrera is expected to man 3B for the Texas
Rangers.
However, for this team the crowning jewel of Sandy
Alderson’s bad decision making was not his assertion of letting Daniel Murphy
walk away for what would have been a QO of about $17 million. No, that booby prize is for deeming Justin
Turner not worth the $800K he earned as the part-time player and designated
pie-in-the-face guy. Don’t you wish they
had him back during all those long David Wright DL stints!
For catcher the ex-Met team is somewhat weak with Kevin
Plawecki getting the starting nod now for the Cleveland Indians. Good luck to the man who has sex toys in his
locker.
Outfield is kind of weak on the ex-Met team as well. Word filtered down that Curtis Granderson
just signed a deal with the Marlins but there’s no telling what role he might
play other than manager-in-waiting. Jay
Bruce is likely to bounce back from his injury-plagued 2018 while starting for
the Seattle Mariners. There is no clear
cut 3rd outfielder, so applications are being taken. Contenders include Jose Bautista, Austin
Jackson and Eric Young, Jr.
The starting pitching is a work in progress. Michael Fulmer is coming back from a
Rookie-of-the-Year campaign, then injury.
He’s Detroit’s ace, but that’s not saying much. Matt Harvey is, well, Matt Harvey. Collin McHugh is thrust into the Astros’
rotation and has had a credible post-Mets career. John Gant is a bit of a stretch because at
this point he’s more of a swing man or AAA reserve for the Cardinals.
The bullpen is a bit stronger, though Addison Reed
flourished more for the Mets than he did previously for the Diamondbacks nor
subsequently for the Red Sox and Twins.
Anthony Swarzak could bounce back if he’s fully healthy. Yusmeiro Petit has carved out a nice career
for himself as a middle-of-the-bullpen piece.
Some castoffs who didn’t get much of a shot like Chasen Bradford and
Neil Ramirez round out the pen with Joe Smith in there somewhere as well. Matt Koch is in the Diamondbacks’ pen though
he never made it to Queens. (I’m
assuming Gerson Bautista will spend the year in AAA).
On the bench you would have folks like Neil Walker, Lucas Duda and Jack
Reinheimer, but there are some notable names yet without jobs like Jose Reyes.
Personally, I was somewhat surprised by this exercise, both in
the quantity of ex-Mets players still in MLB but also how much better the
current squad is than the castoffs. Is
there anyone obvious I missed?
The second baseman departure debacles were enough, all by themselves.
ReplyDeleteI can't think of anyone else - the team has been thin with talent, so it is hard to get rid of guys who could make us say, "oh, no!"
Dykstra, Mitchell are two going back a ways - but sometimes it's the ones you could have gotten, but didn't - like Barry Bonds.
And Griffey Jr. A-Rod...
ReplyDeleteYep, Mets fan as a kid A Rod, who only averaged 46 homers and 136 RBIs in his first 3 seasons instead with the Yanks. The Mets team record for any one season for HRs and RBIs being lower than those average totals.
ReplyDeleteOf course, that was after A Rod averaged 52 homers and 132 RBIs over 3 seasons with the Texas Rangers.
Of course, there was Gary Sheffield who the Mets didn't want. The Yanks did, and in his first two years with the Yanks instead, he was 35/122 while hitting .292.
We only want big bucks, long term guys like Pedro, Santana, Wright, and Cespedes, who are ready to crumble with injuries.
Despite the age difference , I can't agree with giving Reese's all-time fave Met the 2B job over Walker.
ReplyDelete