An interesting debate arose last night among a group of Mets
fan friends regarding the fundamental problems with the mediocre 2019 Mets
ballclub. On the one hand, people
bemoaned the terrible offense that routinely takes the field, including Adeiny
Hechavarria, Brandon Nimmo, Juan Lagares, Tomas Nido, Carlos Gomez, Aaron
Altherr and Todd Frazier. Then there’s
the camp that feels that the real problem is the ho-hum starting pitching and
the horrific bullpen. About the only
thing people did agree upon was that the guy making the lineup and in-game
decisions was not going to make anyone forget the likes of Connie Mack.
Now to be fair, the myriad of injuries has forced the club
to field a great many substandard players in place of the regulars. The Opening Day vision back in February
included Pete Alonso at 1st, Robinson Cano at 2nd, Amed
Rosario at SS and Jed Lowrie at 3rd.
The outfield would have been some combination of Jeff McNeil, Brandon
Nimmo and Michael Conforto. Of that
group, only Alonso and Rosario have missed stints on the DL. That opened the door for the sub-Mendoza
Mets, as well as the recently hot Todd Frazier who’s all the way up to
.230. Ugh. Currently the team is 10th of 15 spots in batting.
Now we hear that while Cano is due back shortly, there’s no
timetable for the returns of McNeil, Nimmo and Lowrie. Cano’s return will at least take Hechavarria
out of the starting lineup, but unless Matt Kemp suddenly returns to form and
gets promoted to the big club, expect to see a lot more of Michael Conforto and
the hold-your-nose trio. We have seen a
little of J.D. Davis in LF, so there is the potential for only having to endure
one of the odiferous three.
Pitching is a puzzling problem. Jacob deGrom has not pitched like the Cy
Young Award winner he is. Noah
Syndergaard has not pitched like the Cy Young Award contender most people feel
he is. Steven Matz and Zack Wheeler have
been up and down in performance, though Matz leads all starters with a 3.63
ERA. Then there’s Jason Vargas, recently
returned from his IL stint. In this
Bizzarro World Season, over his last five starts (which included the 20-day gap
for his injury), he is sporting a 2.74 ERA.
Who could have predicted that? They are consistent, however -- also 10th of 15 spots in team pitching.
The bullpen, of course, is one horror show after
another. You get some streaks of
competency from the likes of Robert Gsellman and Daniel Zamora, followed by
major meltdowns. You had people who
never got on track at all like Luis Avilan.
You have the injuries that befell Justin Wilson, Jeurys Familia, Seth
Lugo and others. About the only saving
grace is Edwin Diaz who, despite a recent blown save, is still delivering what
they’d hoped to get – a 1.71 ERA with 34 Ks in 21 IP, 13 saves and a WHIP of
just 1.048.
Now the glass-half-full crowd will say that with the team
hovering around .500 despite the subpar performances out of a great many
players and the necessity to use AAAA types and has-beens in more prominent
roles than intended, there’s nowhere to go but up. There is a kernel of truth in that.
To the less optimistic sorts, we’re watching a rerun of the
Sandy Alderson years when holes were filled off the scrap heap of powerhouse
teams like Cincinnati and San Francisco who deemed players not even fit to play
for a last place ballclub, yet somehow we think they are the answers in New
York. Players are available on the FA marketplace
who did not sign a deal before the season began but we haven’t gone down that
avenue. Nor have we engaged in the trade
market to send some of the excess number of infielders and cornermen to address
needs such as the bullpen.
Right now it’s still relatively early in the season and no
one is running away with the NL East.
Reinforcements are indeed coming.
That theoretically should help, but haven’t we heard the same soundbites
about when our players come back from injury it will be just like adding new
talent for each of the past several years?
How has that worked out? What
happened to the bold and aggressive GM that made his presence known this
winter? Sure, some of his deals have not
worked out as hoped (Cano, Broxton, Wilson, Familia, etc.) but at least he was
trying. It seems as if he’s already
given up. Soon, too, so will the fans if
things don’t change.
10 comments:
Ilook forward to the day when my friend Reese, who hasn't liked a Mets mgr since Bobby V or a GM since Frank Cashen, will have an Epiphany and actually find the half-full glass.
But by then it will have evaporated ☹️
I don't understand what you are advocating in this post.
Jimmy P
Gomez and Hechavarria seem to me to be non-traditional Mets backups...ones Who seem capable to play like effective subs. Gomez to me bumps Lagares back to # 5. Maybe Juan gets released and not Gomez when injured guys come back.
@Jimmy P -- the issue to me is that while BETTER players are available as reinforcements, the Mets continue the tradition of picking off the scrap heap of other teams. The one trade they executed was for a pitcher with a career ERA over 6.00 -- which to me also qualifies as a scrap heap pick.
In the meantime the likes of Gio Gonzalez goes elsewhere and other teams are consummating trades of major league players for major league players.
The combination of the inertia and the failed scrap heap strategy is what bothers me.
I will concede this - Vargas is pitching as well as Gio since his bad season's start.
Reese -
As for me...
1. team we have, injuries and all, is the team we have
2. there really is no one at Syracuse that should be considered to promote right now... other than Rene Rivera.
3. There is no chance of Rivera replacing Jake's personal catcher
4. We simply don't have enough young talent as teams like the Dodgers...
So...
The immediate goal here is to limp home at .500. It would be a big victory after this brutal swing
Well, Reese, I still don't know who you are talking about in terms of better reinforcements being available. Do you mean Kimbrel?
Do you have position players in mind?
Who is available?
I mean, you wrote the piece, so you must have something in mind. But at this point, I honestly have no idea what you are advocating.
Jimmy
Gio wanted a GUARANTEED spot in the rotation, which Milwaukee offered and Brodie (justifiably) did not. No marginal SPs are justifiably guaranteed.
Also, he gave preference to the team he was successful with last year.
I was one of the first to express a desire to sign him, but I wouldn't give him a guarantee. And as Tom said, Vargas has been pitching about as well as Gio since Gio's signing.
There are no quick fixes out there. This is a smart smaller dose rebuild. Too many departments need hammering out. Start with the rotation may be sound advice. Then the pen.
Riggleman for now. Baker for 2020. Much work needs to be done from now until 2020 preseason begins.
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