As the calendar flips to May 1st it’s time to
take a look at the state of the Mets after closing out April of 2019 and the
inevitable comparison to April of 2018.
During skipper Mickey Callaway’s rookie season he finished the month
with a record of 15-9. He slid backwards
a bit with a of 14-11 which represents an inferior winning percentage.
If you wanted to analyze what’s gone wrong for the 2019 Mets
thus far it can be summed up in the single word – PITCHING. The team ERA sits at a ghastly 5.32, the WHIP
is an untenable 1.473 and they’re giving up close to 4 free passes per
game. About the only positive number you
can find amongst the wreckage is a pretty impressive 9.9 Ks per 9 IP.
If you look first at the starting rotation, Jacob de Grom’s
performance is not exactly horrible, but it’s surely not up to his own lofty
standards. He has pitched to a 4.85 ERA but
has struck out nearly 15 per 9 IP. If he's healthy, then he'll be fine, though he's weathered on short IL stint already.
Picture by Ernest Dove
Noah Syndergaard is probably the biggest surprise of them
all. Thus far he’s pitching to a 6.35
ERA, walking few and his K numbers are on par with his career numbers at 10.35
per 9 IP. He simply been hittable.
Picture by Ed Delaney
The Zack Wheeler situation is perhaps the most difficult to
reconcile as he is in his walk year.
Last year he very nearly matched de Grom down the stretch with quality
starts but this year he’s not even as good as de Grom's 4.85 ERA. He’s not striking out people with aplomb and
is walking too many. That’s a recipe for
disaster.
Jason Vargas, well, he’s been an unmitigated disaster since
putting on a Mets uniform. Even with his
strong finish to the 2018 season he ended the year with a horrific 5.77
ERA. Today most Mets fans would sign up
for that quality of pitching considering he’s nearly as bad as Thor. To his credit, in his past three starts
he’s looked markedly better but didn’t last long enough to qualify for a win in the first two though did cross the 5 inning mark last night.
The somewhat surprising saving grace to the pitching
rotation this year has been the enigmatic Steven Matz. He made arguably the worst start in Mets
history when against the Philadelphia Phillies he didn’t record a single out
and gave up 8 runs (6 earned) before he was mercifully yanked from the
game. If you throw away that one
outlier, he’s actually been quite good.
His ERA without that nightmarish game is 1.86.
Picture by Ed Delaney
I won’t even dwell on the bullpen woes. You have Edwin Diaz and Seth Lugo. After that they’re spraying kerosene on the
fires they’re asked to extinguish. Even Diaz had his first klunker this week.
On the flip side, offensively they are doing pretty well. While not necessarily hitting as many homers
as would have been expected, they’re still doing pretty well. They’re currently 9th in the major
leagues in batting average at .261 and 11th with 5.22 runs per game.
If you asked anyone during the past
several seasons of NY Mets baseball if they would be in the top ten in hitting
and just one team off the pace in runs scored, they would have taken the under
given the dismal state of offense the club has experienced.
Personally, I think the pitching will self-correct in the starting
rotation, but I’m not nearly as confident about the bullpen. Robert Gsellman has been mediocre for much
more than this season. Jeurys Familia was never good in non-save
situations yet today he had the chance to nail it down and failed miserably yet again.. Justin Wilson apparently has
gone into witness protection since nothing is being said about the state of nor
duration of his current injury. That
leaves bullpen duty to the likes of Drew Gagnon, Daniel Zamora and the surprisingly
bad Luis Avilan (9.90 ERA!)
When Brodie Van Wagenen set out to create a contender, he
assumed (as did most of us) that the
starting pitching would be just fine & dandy (outside of Jason Vargas), and
the bullpen was vastly improved with the additions of Diaz, Wilson and Familia. It seems that while he’s done his job as
promised when it comes to the offense providing a tremendous amount of depth
(save for outfielders), he’s not done the same on either side of the pitching
equation. It’s a long season and there’s
still time but passing on quality reinforcements like Gio Gonzalez and others
may come back to bite him.
Vargas last 3 starts, 14 IP and just 3 earned runs. New ace of staff.
ReplyDeleteMaybe victorious Drew Gagnon edges his way into the pen.
The puzzling Chris Flexen fanned 11 in 6 IP in AAA yesterday. Maybe that cat will have 10 lives. And Rajai Davis remained red hot. Call him up.
Tom beat me to it:
ReplyDeleteSince April 14th (my birthday)
Pitcher Innings ER ERA
Vargas 14 3 1.93
Wheeler 20 7 3.15
Matz 13 9 6.23
DeGroom 9 8 8.00
Syndergaard 15 14 8.40
Small sample size, but as Gary and Keith said last night, you don't need your 5th pitcher to go 7 innings, you need your #1 and #2 starters to go that long.
Vargas was pulled after a solo homer...maybe he could have gone longer. If he can give us six solid innings, we are good.
DeleteTo me, the key is not Vargas or Matz, who are the "bottom 2" of the rotation. Wheels should be fine, as he fights for a big contract.
ReplyDeleteIt comes down to our two aces. If they revert to form, as I believe they will, we'll be fine If they continue to struggle, we're in trouble.
Bill, I agree mostly, It comes down to our Big Three - and Jeurys Familia.
ReplyDeleteIf Justin Wilson is going to be hurt...healthy...hurt, Jeurys HAS to come around.
Definitely some troubling trends, to date.
ReplyDeleteI have to think that the pitching staff's performance should regress towards the mean (in a good way), fairly soon.
Fingers crossed in the meantime.
They better regress to the mean soon, or a lot of fans will get mean
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