5/6/19

Dwight Hood - To Catch a Backstop: The d'Arnaud Dilemma and Related Mets fan Musings


7 years. 7 years we waited. We waiting for the top catching prospect who came to us with Thor in the R.A. Dickey trade. He played over 100 games only twice in his 7-year Mets tenure. Last April, he would depart, needing Tommy John surgery.  The Mets designated him for assignment late April, and finally released him earlier this week.



PC - Ernest Dove 
Allow me to respectfully alliterate. This is NOT a Diss d’Arnaud Diatribe. This is a symptom of what I think is the greater issue across major league baseball. A catcher that is an exceptional hitter and exceptional defender is very hard to come by.


Keep this in mind, however, that my perspectives are by no means rooted in any sort of objectivity. When you are a kid in the 70’s and you watch Jerry Grote on TV and go see “The Dude” John Stearns at Shea, these guys seem “larger than life” for an 8-year-old. I wasn’t keeping statistics on OPS, RBIs, passed balls, or thinking about WAR (which was not a statistic in the 70’s). I need not go on. I believe we understand where I’m coming from.

Also, PLEASE understand that I am in no way comparing receivers like d’Arnaud, Sasser, Hearn, Plawecki, Buck, and Recker to the likes of Mike Piazza. Our Hall of Fame backstop came to us via a free-agency steal in the late 90s, relegating a promising, power hitting Todd Hundley to 1st base duties and eventual exodus to LA. Even Piazza was criticized for his less than optimal defensive skills behind the plate.

My point is that, throughout the years, we have seen quite a few players come and go at the catching position. Remember Josh Thole, Dickey’s “personal catcher”? How about Rod Barajas, the “I’m gonna swing as hard as I can when I see an inside fastball and try to pull it just far enough over the fence and just far enough inside the left field foul pole to keep it fair” hitting catcher?

Sorry for the rambling sentence. But, whenever Barajas came to bat, my mind would run on.  I would think, “He seems like a good guy, but when are we going to get a “stud” catcher?

So…get this. Yasmani Grandal, the seeming spectator behind the plate during the 2018 postseason, who kept watching baseballs go past him to the backstop in October, turned down a 4-year, close to 60-million-dollar deal from the Mets.

In retrospect, he could have signed the deal and passed half the money on to me. I digress.

I was listening to Jody MacDonald on WFAN yesterday. He was discussing Gary Sanchez, and the early comparisons to Johnny Bench. Johnny Bench??? Didn’t Sanchez bat below the Mendoza line last year? Wasn’t Joe G always on him about his defense, or lack thereof?

This writing is not meant to disparage any of today’s catchers. The intent of this writing is intended to point out that the team I love, the New York Metropolitans, are still in search of that franchise backstop. I’m sure most of us will concur that we wish Travis d’Arnaud all the best with his baseball journey. I’m sure we can all agree that Ramos needs to rake more, run less, and stop letting balls pass by him.

To catch a backstop….  

4 comments:

Mack Ade said...

Dwight

Nice post.

A SALLY league scout told me that catching is the hardest position to project.

Talent in the lower levels cry for a 2-tool projection.. Top defense and .300+ hitting

You then throw in the wear and tear on their knees..

Mike Freire said...

There just aren't too many quality catchers anymore......we have been lucky as a franchise with Piazza (mostly due to his bat) and Carter before him.

It would be hard to name five quality catchers in the game right now that are a dual threat.

Oh and TDA is simply a victim of not meeting his insane hype! When healthy (huge issue), he was a solid catcher, but he never became the player he was "supposed to be".

Hobie said...

Spot on, Dwight.

Grew up with playground debates of Campy vs. Yogi. (Willie, Mickey & The Duke we all agreed would be CF, RF, LF on our fantasy team--without debate). So related...and what nobody wants to hear...is when Steve Chilcott comes along with Campy?Berra class hype, forsaking the best athlete for the best catcher was to us Sporting News/Baseball Digest junkies, no big deal. Them's the breaks.

Sorry Steve & TdA, if you could have stayed in 1 piece...

Tom Brennan said...

Our two best catchers (Piazza, Carter) came in gift trades. Other than them, noJohnny Bench...but plenty of catchers who belonged on the bench.

Grote was a tiger...and taught himself to be an effective hitter. He was really good overall.