The problem with writing days in advance is that sometimes things happen to change the context of what you had planned to say. Let's hope the injuries to Michael Conforto and Jeff McNeil are no more than the minimum amount of time away from the field.
Anyway, let’s play the “What if?” game, New York Mets edition. What if the team actually was committed to winning and made the roster changes necessary to do so?
Anyway, let’s play the “What if?” game, New York Mets edition. What if the team actually was committed to winning and made the roster changes necessary to do so?
Change Number 1 – DFA Todd Frazier
The concept of a sunk cost never seemed to resonate with the
Mets’ front office. There’s a new
Sheriff in town but apparently, he also must kiss the, ummm, ring of the guys
who sign his paycheck. Consequently, the
mistake his predecessor made must remain because they’re paying the guy. He’s hitting .151. He’d have to rally big-time to hit the
not-very-robust .213 level at which he’s played THE LAST TWO YEARS. He’s done.
Move on. Even if you think there’s
something left in the tank, he’s not part of the future. Let's see more of J.D. Davis until Jed Lowrie limps to Queens.
Change Number 2 – DFA Adeiny Hechavarria
There’s a reason the good glove/no-hit infielder was only
able to land a minor league deal. It’s
the fact that after being mostly a starting player for his major league career
people realized that his glove was not Ozzie Smith caliber to justify his
pitcher-like hitting capability. He
doesn’t run and has no power, so unless he’s doing backflips as he turns the
double play, why is he here? At least Luis Guillorme has a solid bat in the minors...I'd rather see him get chances than someone who is a proven failure at the big league level.
Change Number 3 – Trade Juan Lagares
Yes, a guy who’s barely able to hit .200 isn’t going to
bring back a king’s ransom and to get anyone to bite at all you will likely
need to eat some of his inflated salary, but he’s also no longer part of the
future. The reason I advocate losing
Lagares rather than the struggling Keon Broxton is primarily financial. Broxton is not as bad as he looks right now,
but he’s probably not much better than what you’re getting out of Lagares. He does have more speed and more power but
more importantly he plays for minimum wage and will do so for the next few
years. As a 5th outfielder I
could live with him.
Change Number 4 – Look to Deal Zack Wheeler
Anthony Kay may indeed be the guy to step up to take his
place and Wheeler has been good enough to think that you will get a decent
return for him in terms of prospect capital.
He’s a FA come November and unless you’re planning to pony up a QO (not
happening) or extending him a’la Jacob deGrom (also likely not happening), then
you’re going to lose him for NOTHING. I’d
force feed Kay up into the rotation and try to improve the club through
whatever wildcards you can get in a deal for Wheeler.
Changes Number 5 and 6
Be aggressively talking to both Dallas Keuchel and Craig
Kimbrel. Wait them out for the June draft
deadline to pass and compensation no longer an issue, then be prepared to
overpay slightly for Kimbrel for a shorter term deal and look at Keuchel as a
longer term Jason Vargas replacement.
Next season you are likely missing two starters in Vargas and Zack
Wheeler. Anthony Kay replaces just one
of them. Remember that both Noah
Syndergaard and Stephen Matz will soon hit those FA years, too, and you need to
think about who is part of the long term future. So far Chris Flexen and Corey Oswalt have
fizzled, so your immediate rotation depth isn’t all that. If you paid Keuchel theoretically $18
million per year and Kimbrel $20 million prorated for this season alone, that
$38 million would still keep you under the luxury tax threshold and put you
back into contention.
Changes Not to Make Right Now
Until another pitcher inserts himself into the conversation
for 2020 starter, you might as well keep Jason Vargas around. Before he went on the IL with hamstring
problems, he’d actually strung together a cluster of decent appearances. His salary is such that trading him is not in
the cards and releasing him leaves you short a starter. You could insert Kay into his spot in the
rotation, but you’d get nothing in return.
Consequently the wiser move would be to see if the Yankees or someone
would overpay for Wheeler.
Don’t go crazy for a 4th outfielder. Live with a Carlos Gomez or Rajai Davis along
with Keon Broxton until Yoenis Cespedes is ready to return. By then perhaps J.D. Davis will have had
enough outfield exposure to be part of the mix for 4th/5th
outfielders as well (and he would not get many starts at 3B when Lowrie is healthy).
Give Brandon Nimmo a defacto deadline of the All-Star
break. If he doesn’t show signs of
busting out of his prolonged slump by then, send him up to Syracuse to allow
him to get out of the spotlight for awhile.
Long Term Changes
Start quietly interviewing new managers. Jim Riggleman is fine for treading water on
an interim basis but his history is more losing. We’ve seen quite enough of that with the
incumbent and his white haired predecessor.
Wouldn’t it be nice to have
someone with a positive track record for a change?
Good morning Reese -
ReplyDeleteI believe that the Mets have the depth in the field to get through this hiccup.
The addition of Carlos Gomez will help big time. He can immediately start with what I believe will be a much higher success level than Broxton.
The temporary loss of McNeil in the outfield force an opportunity flor Lagares to earn his keep out there.
Carlos Gomez is what a 4th or 5th outfielder should be. He's superior to Lagares and Broxton which is what's wrong with the roster composition. With both Jeff McNeil and Michael Conforto out you're forced to play 2 of these three which is essentially giving away more outs in the lineup (along with Frazier and Nimmo).
ReplyDeleteHopefully, Conforto and McNeil are not out long. They're what, 11 wins in 29 games WITH those two. Without them, the Mets are better than...the Marlins?
ReplyDeleteWhat do you think about trading Wheeler?
ReplyDeleteReese -
ReplyDeleteFor what?
Let's see...
ReplyDeleteoutfielders
relievers
starters
replenishing the farm with real talent, not the Alderson sell-offs for high powered wild relievers.
I like the trading Wheeler idea. Besides the points you raised, he always seems to be a couple of good starts then a bad start kind of guy. Other than the end of last year, he never showed much consistency.
ReplyDelete