Monday Night, July 8, 2019. I was seated in the second row behind home plate at Joe Bruno Stadium in Troy, New York to watch the Tri-City Valley Cats play the Brooklyn Cyclones. I had been there the night before to see Brooklyn win 6-2 but what happened that Monday night in July showed me just how special this Brooklyn team was. Oh, and Brooklyn ended up losing this game 4-3, but it was the way they played that caught my attention.
In the top of the first, Antoine Duplantis singled. Guillermo Granadillo, the Brooklyn right
fielder that night, hit the other way against the shift to reach first. Duplantis made second and seeing that no one
was covering third due to the shift, kept running to third base. Granadillo then stole second. Duplantis later came home on a passed ball
and Granadillo later stole home on another ball that got away from the catcher.
Two first inning runs on aggressive base running and hitting
the ball the other way. Welcome to 2019
Brooklyn baseball.
This Brooklyn team was different than any other Brooklyn or
Mets affiliated team I had ever seen.
They were the most aggressive base running Mets team from top to bottom. They played tight defense. They manufactured runs.
The NY Penn League can give a manager a very diverse group
of players that are together for the first time in their life. Some are college players that have come right
from the June draft. Others are coming
up from the Dominican leagues for their first taste of American baseball. Others are non-drafted free agents that are
trying to get a chance to play.
Thirty different position players and thirty-seven different
pitchers came through Brooklyn in 2019, yet manager Edgardo Alfonzo kept the
team focused on playing winning, fundamental baseball.
Fonzie used his roster magnificently. He played players all over the diamond while at
the same time having the best fielding percentage in the league. He had hitters work on bunting every day. It was a total team effort.
What’s more, until they called up 2019 draft picks Mathew Allen
and Brett Baty at the very end of the season, very few websites had any Brooklyn
players on the Mets top 50 prospect lists.
Don’t just give the credit to Fonzie, the entire coaching
staff excelled. Endy Chavez joined the
team as bench coach and first base coach and the running game excelled. Delwyn Young became the hitting coach and
players excelled at productive outs to move runners over and get them in. Josue Matos became the pitching coach and he
showed the very difficult skill to get pitchers that were struggling to make in
game adjustments to pitch effectively.
For more examples let’s look at the individual players.
Wilmer Reyes – B-R/T-R; Shortstop (38 games), Second Base (2
games), Third Base (10 games), First Base (2 games), DH (5 games). Wilmer was the hands down MVP of the team
hitting a team leading .333 (fifth in league), 5 HR, 33 RBI, 12 SB. He was solid at short and made great plays when
it counted in the playoffs. He also
played well all over the diamond as Fonzie kept his bat in the lineup when
giving others the chance at short. In
his two previous pro seasons, Wilmer hit .260 and .250 but came alive in 2019.
Joe Genord – B-R/T-R; 2019 9th round draft pick
from South Florida; First Base. Joe led
the team with 44 RBIs (third in league) and 9 HRs (tied for fifth in league). Joe struggled getting hits at home, hitting
just .140 in Brooklyn while .266 on the road for a .206 total average. Joe has tremendous power. I saw him pull a ball down the left field
line in Troy that had to go close to 450 feet in about five seconds. A bullet.
Joe hit 5 home runs the first three weeks of the season and was hitting
over .300. Then pitchers figured out
that you can’t throw him a fastball anywhere near the inside part of the
plate. From then on it was lots of off-speed
pitches on the outside of the plate. Through
it all, Joe still had the ability to drive in runs even when he made outs. He had six sacrifice flies. In the first playoff game, Joe hit a pop up
to the infield that the Hudson Valley catcher did not handle. Genord never stopped running and wound up on
second base later scoring on a single. Sorry, this day and age, plays like this
make a player stand out. It embodied the
way this team played.
Yoel Romero, B-R/T-R; Shortstop (23 games), Second Base (7
games), Third Base (19 games), Left Field (1 game), OF (1 game), DH (4 games); .251,
4 HRs, 15 RBIs, 6 SBs; Yoel hit .340 in July cooling off a bit after that. Still, he was one of the main offensive
players for Brooklyn into the playoffs with the ability to play all over the
diamond. This flexibility has put him on
some of the Mets’ 50 prospect lists.
Ranfy Adon, B-R/T-R; Outfield; One of the fastest players on
a fast team, Ranfy stole 11 bases while playing all three outfield
positions. Fonzie had him in Right Field
during the playoffs and Ranfy had a big homerun in the deciding game against
Hudson Valley in the first playoff round. In the regular season Ranfy hit .270,
with two homers and 13 RBIs.
Jake Mangum, B-S/T-L; 2019 4th round draft pick
from Mississippi State; .247, 18 RBIs, led the team with 17 stolen bases. Jake played solid defense in center field and
right field. In 33 at bats with 2 outs
and a runner in scoring position, Jake excelled hitting .364. With speed, good center field defense, clutch
hitting and the ability to make things happen on the base paths when needed,
Jake is someone to watch in the future.
Luke Ritter, B-R/T-R; 2019 7th round draft pick from Wichita State;.245, 4 HRs,
36 RBIs, 5 Stolen Bases. “Ritter the
hitter” was often the number four hitter in Fonzie’s lineup. Second on the team in RBIs, Luke excelled at
hitting at MCU park with a .317 home batting average. He also provided great up the middle defense
at second.
Antoine Duplantis, B-L/T-L; 2019 12th round draft pick
from Louisiana State; .237, 20
RBIs, 5 SBs; Antoine played mostly left field and led off for Brooklyn. He tripled in the tying run and scored the
winning run in the championship game. A
good defender Antoine had 153 putouts, 16 assists, and just one error.
Jose Peroza, B-R/T-R; Third Base and DH, played just 33 games for
Brooklyn but hit 4 HRs with 22 RBI’s and a .225 average.
For catcher, Fonzie split the time between Jose Mena B-R/T-R; 31
Games, .299, 2HRs, 13 RBIs, 20% CS%; Jake Ortega, B-L/T-R; 27 Games, .237, 6
RBIs, 37% CS%; and Ariel Year, B-R/T-R; 23
Games, .221, 4 RBIs; 10% CS%; Jose Mena
hit the best of the three but as a lefty catcher who can bunt Jake Ortega also
showed worth. Fonzie did a great job
mixing and matching these players to use them when they would be most
effective.
Pitching was led by Garrison Bryant, B-L/T-R; the 36th round
2016 draft pick. In his fourth professional
season, Garrison led the team with a 5-1 record, 2.39 ERA, 75 K’s in 75.1 innings,
and a .84 WHIP. With a fastball that
tops out in the low 90’s, Garrison is not seen as a huge prospect. However, the Mets signed Garrison as a 17-year-old
which means that after the 2020 season, Garrison will be eligible for the rule
five draft. I think that means he may end
up in Binghamton before the end of the year to see if he is worth protecting on
the 40-man roster.
Matt Cleveland, B-R/T-R; the 12th round 2016 draft pick. 3-3 record with a 3.78 ERA, 42 K’s in 66.2
innings, and a 1.28 WHIP. Matt had a
good year and was named along with Garrison Bryant, Joe Genord, Wilmer Reyes, and
Mitch Ragan to the NY Penn All Star team.
Matt too will be eligible for the rule five draft after the 2020 season
and could see promotions next year.
The pride of West Islip and free agent signee Frank Valentino
racked up 63 K’s in 58 innings while pitching to a 2-4 record and a 3.41
ERA. Frank’s biggest game was the last
game of the season against Staten Island when he gave up just one earned run in
5.1 innings as Brooklyn clinched their division championship and home field throughout
the playoffs.
In the bullpen, the team had a number of power arms,
Mitch Ragan, B-R/T-R; 2019 4th round draft pick
from Creighton; named to the NY Penn All Star team with a 3-2 record, 3.09 ERA, 31
K’s in 35 innings;
Free agent signee Andrew Edwards, B-L/T-L; 3-2 record, 3.30 ERA, 35
K’s in 30 innings; Andrew pitched 4
shutout innings in the playoffs including the final two to win the championship.
Free agent signee Matt Mullenbach, B-R/T-R; 1-5 record, 2.84 ERA, 26
K’s in 25.1 innings; Matt showed amazing
stuff including one inning against Aberdeen on August 30th where he
struck out the side on 9 pitches!
Free agent signee Jared Biddy, B-R/T-R; 3-0 record, 0.96 ERA, 34 K’s
in 28 innings; With a mid-90’s fastball, Jared showed lots of power and
potential. Hard to believe he did not
get drafted. Good for the Mets for
picking him up.
Great team effort, great managing, great coaching. Hopefully we will see more of this type of
play on future Mets teams. It sure was
fun to watch in 2019.
An excellent team - and an excellent recap.
ReplyDeleteI think 19 year old Jose Peroza has a chance to be a Top 25 prospect next year. Between Kingsport and Brooklyn, 10 doubles, 10 homers 42 RBIs in 49 games - very impressive.
If Mangum can follow the McNeil model and add some power to his speed, he could be a real top prospect by 2021.
On Garrison Bryant, another guy who started out at around that velocity, I believe, but added 3 or 4 ticks, was Seth Lugo. Maybe Bryant will be up at 95-96 in two years. Then he'd look a whole lot different.
One guy who missed the championship festivities due to being on the 60 day DL (hopefully not due to the dreaded TJS) is 40th rounder Brian Metoyer, who over a 9 game stretch prior to his last outing when I presume he hurt himself allowed just 3 hits and fanned 24 in 17 innings, pretty sick #s.
Genord is an interesting power dude - hopefully, his .206 will be much improved upon in 2020.
Matthew Allan showed Brooklyn a glimpse of what we can all hope will be a Mets # 1 starter in about 3-4 years.
Are we looking for a manager? How about Alfonso as he'd certainly be a fan favorite and the Wilponies would love his salary #
ReplyDeleteAlfonso is the perfect example of the kind of manager we need in Queens.
ReplyDeleteNice write up!
ReplyDeleteIt is also nice to see someone in our organization put together a championship season.
Oh and I could be talked into Fonzie as our next manager...........
Why not Alfonso for next manager? He has more managerial experience than the current occupant did when the Mets made him manager. If he is better, why not?
ReplyDeleteThe biggest problem is that Fonzie and the Brooklyn staff are the exception and not the rule in the Mets organization. Hopefully this is the direction going forward.
ReplyDeleteAlso, getting a player to play hard is easier at the lower levels than the major league level. Plus, the best place to instill those habits is in the lower levels. Could we use Fonzie in Queens? Of course. But we also need him in Syracuse, Binghamton, St. Lucie, etc. The Mets need to take the Brooklyn model and install it all over the organization. What's the best way to do that?