Sometimes trades work out and sometimes they don’t. The Mets have been involved in a couple of
rather high-profile trades of relievers during their club’s existence. As is true in most things in life, you win
some and you lose some.
The Big Loss
Let’s start out with one definitely in the loss column,
indisputably so. Do you remember back in
the days when Montreal featured a young outfield of Andre Dawson, Warren
Cromartie and Ellis Valentine? It was
one of the strongest triumvirates in the league and was truly a head scratcher
(or at least a nose scratcher) when they opted to trade star right fielder
Ellis Valentine to the Mets for a little used but solid 25-year-old relief
pitcher by the name of Jeff Reardon.
Reardon
had gone 10-9 for the Mets over parts of 3 seasons, appearing in 97 games and
pitching to a 2.65 ERA. He’d only racked
up 10 saves, so handing him the reins as closer was not a guarantee of future
success. Accompanying him was the
never-was Dan Norman who had the misfortune of being part of the package that
Cincinnati sent to the Mets for Tom Seaver.
In five years Norman accumulated just 348 ABs with some power – 11 HRs –
but just a .227 average. Valentine had
power, speed, featured a cannon of an arm, and had hit .288 as an Expo. He was just 26 when the trade happened, so it
seemed like the Mets had surely pulled on over on GM John McHale and the Expos’
braintrust.
Little did the Mets know at the time that Valentine was
fighting his own demons in the form of a cocaine addiction. It started after he was hit in the face by a
pitch that required him to wear a protective cage over his face to shield his
once-shattered cheekbone. He did finish
strongly in 1982, going .327 over the final few months of the season, but the
Mets could find no takers and he was allowed to leave as a free agent. He was never the same hitter after that and
he was out of baseball by age 30.
Though Norman didn’t amount to much in the majors, Jeff
Reardon became a mainstay first for the Expos and then for the Twins as a
closer. He finished his 16-year major
league career with a 73-77 record, 367 saves and an ERA of just 3.16. That’s a loss with a capital L on that trade.
The Big Win
This one will surely have many disagreeing with me, but the
numbers make the case easily as a huge W for the NY Mets.
Back in 1984 a little left hander made his rookie debut as a
setup guy in the Cincinnati Reds bullpen, going 6-2 over 54 games exclusively
in relief, finishing the year with a 2.61 ERA.
That sensational rookie campaign led to him being handed some more
responsibility in 1985, finishing the year with 12 saves and an even better
2.18 ERA while going 12-3. At the ripe
old age of 25 he was anointed the Reds’ closer and made his first All Star Game
appearance, appearing in 74 games and saving 29 while pitching to a 2.94
ERA. During his six years in Cincinnati,
John Franco saved 148 games, went 42-30 and had an ERA of just 2.49.
In 1985 through 1989 the Mets had a volatile closer named Randall K. (Randy) Myers who could throw very hard though not always where he intended it to go. Still, during these five years he went 17-13, racked up 56 saves and had a 2.74 ERA.
After the 1989 season the Mets and Reds swapped relievers,
with the righty Myers joining Rob Dibble and Norm Charlton to form “The Nasty
Boys” power arm bullpen, while the softer tossing lefty Franco made his way
back to his hometown of New York City.
During his first year as a member of the Reds, Myers was
sensational, pitching to a 2.08 ERA, accumulating 31 saves and making the All
Star team for the first time. John
Franco wasn’t exactly chopped liver for the Mets, notching 33 saves, an ERA of
2.53 and also making the All Star team once again.
Perhaps it was the fact Myers was a couple of years younger
or that he had that whole paramilitary thing going for him which made him seem
invincible. However, it was a career
that quickly fell into not quite disarray, but never was he able to replicate
anything close to that first year in Cincinnati. In fact, they only held onto him for one more
year whereas Franco spent 14 years in a Mets uninform as their closer and then
as a setup guy for Armando Benitez.
When the dust settled on their respective careers, Myers had
nothing to be ashamed of. He pitched for
14 years, saved 347 games and finished with an ERA of 3.19 although with a
losing record of 44-63. Most Mets fans
would love to have a guy like that in the pen right now.
Franco crushed him in every stat. His career was seven years longer, he finished with an ERA of just 2.89 and he saved 424 games (still the most ever by a lefty), more than Hall of Famers Dennis Eckersley, Rollie Fingers, Goose Gossage and Bruce Sutter as well as the aforementioned Jeff Reardon.
Although he was never beloved the same way Myers was in his
brief Mets career, the trade for Franco was a big W for the Mets front
office.
8 comments:
Another fine article.
But the worst trade ever, reliever-wise, was the excellent Jason Isringhausen for 18 games-as-a-Met-and-lousy-too Billy Taylor. In my humble opinion.
Isringhausen did not go on to have a borderline HOF career. Reardon did.
Reese, I agree - but the Izzy trade was ridiculously bad. We got nothing but a washed up bum for a guy who saved 300 career games.
As such, I think that one was worse. At least for Reardon, they thought they were getting something of real value in Valentine. It looked pretty even. Did not turn out that way.
But Taylor was just cooked. They threw Izzy away.
Like they threw Robles away. Like some fans want to throw Diaz away.
Agree with Tom....excellent article, Reese.
I was a bit younger in 1982 so I don't recall the trade that sent Reardon to Les Expos, but the statistics certainly back up your argument as one the team would like to have back.
I have much better memories of John Franco and his Mets' tenure. He was effective, but I can't lie.....I always held my breath when he was on the hill. His "stuff" was less then intimidating and he looked like he was about to get lit up. But, he won a lot more battles then he lost thanks to his nasty screwball (a pitch you don't see that much anymore).
My best is yet to come and his name is Edwin Diaz
Did trading Reardon result in Neil Aalen being made the full time closer which later resulted in the Neil Allen for Keith Hernandez trade? One can only imagine.
Mack, Bobby Parnell threw hard like Diaz, too, but without the movement. Diaz, when right, is far superior.
John, that may be what happened. Bad things can turn into great things sometimes.
Walt Terrell obtained for Lee Mazzilli eventually turned into Howard Johnson.
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