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12/2/19

Reese Kaplan -- A Winter Meetings Game Plan



We’re less than a week out from the annual Winter Meetings which this year are taking place in San Diego, California. Thus far we’ve seen executives from other teams move aggressively to secure the services of various players, including relievers Will Smith,  Chris Martin, A.J. Cole and Drew Pomeranz, catchers Yasmani Grandal, Yan Gomes, Mike Zunino and Travis d’Arnaud, and utilityman Josh Harrison.  Swingman Jose De Leon was traded by Tampa and the Padres pulled off a swap with Milwaukee. 


To be fair, Brodie Van Wagenen has been busy, too.  Let’s see.  He released Drew Gagnon and plucked sore-armed Chasen Shreve released by St. Louis for a minor league deal.  He did add one player to the 40-man roster with limited major league experience – putting in a waiver claim for former top prospect Stephen Gonsalves of the Twins who has a sparkling 2.50 ERA for his minor league career but hit a 4.15 wall in AAA last year and a worse 6.57 in 24 big league innings.  He’s likely going to be in AAA since he has not yet had a full season there. 

So, one of these things is not like the other.  In the first group you have GMs actively trying to improve their rosters and in the second group you have Sandy Alderson flashbacks with scrap heap pickups being the “action” of the off-season.  Going into 2020 everyone knows the priorities already – improving the bullpen, defense, speed, a backup catcher and 5th starter.  While there’s no law against waiting to make these moves further along in the Hot Stove season, similarly there’s no reason deals can’t be struck earlier if you want to assure yourself of obtaining the players you desire who may not be available but the time you extricate your hands from beneath your posterior to dial the phone and make inquiries. 

Stretching out low-cost Seth Lugo into a starting role (where he’s failed in the past) makes economic sense if you’re intending to obtain multiple Justin Wilson types – mid tier relievers at $5 million or so per year prices.  That is for sure cheaper than going after proven starting pitchers, but is it the smart move?


Similarly, the Mets have a bit of dead money on their roster, including surprising video star Yoenis Cespedes ($29.5 million), Jed “Waldo” Lowrie ($11.5 million), and you could probably throw in Jeurys Familia as well ($11.7 million in 2020 and $17.7 million in 2021).  Then, of course, there’s the Moby Dick of contracts – Robinson Cano.  He is owed $24 million per year for each of the next four years – his ages 37, 38, 39 and 40 seasons. 

In the outfield, you have a few good hitters with no place to play in J.D. Davis and Dom Smith.  Brandon Nimmo and Michael Conforto are better defensively so you would think they will play.  Then there’s .321 career hitter Jeff McNeil who turned himself into a credible outfielder as well.  Right now there appears to be no room at the inn on the dirt with Pete Alonso, Robinson Cano, Amed Rosario and $11.5 million man Jed Lowrie penciled in there. 

For catcher you have the good bat of Wilson Ramos and the good defense of Tomas Nido.  Neither are ideal and pitchers have certainly been vocal about preferring to pitch to the stronger catcher. 


Of course, it’s easy to play armchair GM and if you accept the Metsian reality that they will not go over the luxury cap threshold, then there’s precious little money available.  That means you have to fortify your roster through trades or get highly creative in how you get some more budget dollars to spend.  

The Mets have been loathe to pay down contracts, but to me it seems the obvious route for BVW to take if he’s serious about plugging holes and improving the roster.  If you put 50% down on the white elephant collection in the previous paragraph, you’d reduce your salary obligation for that quartet due $70 million plus in 2020 and instead make it $35 million and create some space on the roster.  Let’s assume they found someone to take on these contracts (I know, I know – a lot easier said than done).  What would the team look like?

Well, you could insert Jeff McNeil at 2nd base, J.D. Davis at 3rd and open up LF for Dom Smith.  Plus you would have $35 million plus whatever is currently available to plug the holes in the rotation, the bullpen and behind the dish. 

The defense in that scenario is not great (particularly at 3B and LF), but that money saved could be used to trade for or sign more expensive players.  Many want the Mets to go over the Luxury Tax level for one year knowing Cespedes, Wright and other money is coming off the books.  That’s a way to go, too, but I wouldn’t hold my breath on that one either. 

14 comments:

  1. This team is always a conundrum, ain’t it?

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  2. At Thanksgiving, Mets fan family members were NOT hopeful. They’ve learned over time. All have a low hope, wait and see attitude. All have voting levels of disdain for the Wilson’s.

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  3. I stand by my plan.

    1. Promote Lugo to SP5

    2. Target remaining money on new CF and relief

    3. Give Lowrie the starting third job... if he doesn't show up or failed in April, make him a UT or waive him

    4. Change Cano's job to UT

    5. Put McNeil back on 2B

    6. Put Davis on 3B

    6. Build a new outfield around the new CFer, Conforto, and Nimmo

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  4. I would go knee the threshold this year while also trying to build up the farm system. I would try and sign BaumGardner, Alex Wood for the rotation, DiDi and Brett Gardner as free agents

    Trade Dominic Smith to Houston for blocked CF Myles Straw.

    Then trade Conforto, Rosario and Stroman for the best minor leaguers you can get.

    I like all 4 guys to that we would acquire through free agency because right now they are going below market in pricing what you would of figured they might have received just 2 years ago. Also 3 of the 4 have played on winning organizations and have played extremely well under pressure.

    Myles Straw is blocked in Houston and they can use a first baseman. I think that trade would help both teams. Myles is A defensive CF, OBP and speed Machine that we can plug into our roster for the next 6 years.

    We go over the payroll threshold for 1 year, we pick up a bunch of minor leaguers for Conforto, Rosario and Stroman. So that we can plug them into the roster for the foreseeable future at dirt cheap $$$. Maybe you can even trade a Synndergard next offseason to get more depth in the farm system.

    What do you all think?

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    Replies
    1. Sorry was suppose to say Go over the threshold

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  5. Isn't every team? And every Mets fan has a different favorite plan. I've even seen some who want to get rid of Cano and Lowrie, plus MnLers, to get Wil Myers, whose contract is worse than Cano's and would only join an already overcrowded OF. And he wouldn't even address the CF need. Oh, well...

    I'd like to throw this question i to the mix:
    If the Mets were to add $20 mil to the payroll (in addition to raises for current young players), would you like that spent by:

    1) Going all out for one star, via trade or FA, using the whole 20?

    2) Adding two mid-level players at $10 mil per?

    3) Spreading it around for a group of $5 mil players?

    Personally, I'd go for #3, looking for a backup Catcher, a defensive CFer, and help for the pen. But that's just me. What do you guys think?

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  6. Bill

    I will build an OPEN THREAD around your question.

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  7. 1- Aquire players thru free agency on 1 or 2yrs deals
    2- Pick Cristian Santana at through rule 5 draft
    3- Keep the prospects, hold off on trading them away.

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  8. As Tom or someone astutely pointed out we were a 104 win team the last 45% of the season even with a mediocre pen. The Mets do not have to do something massive they were very competitive. The only big loss they have is Wheeler. I can't imagine a backup CF, backup C are going to break the bank. They just need some RP improvement and some SP depth and they will contend. One would like more than that but the payroll is what it is and next year(2021) will probably be more of the same with raises coming to some of the core talent despite some guys coming off the payroll.

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  9. People forget that we were TWENTY games over .500 (46-26) over the final 72 games of 2019. No reason for panic moves.

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  10. True, Dallas, but it largely depends on what the NL East competition teams do. If a lot, does Brodey fight fire with fire, or limp along in 2020 and hope for a miracle?

    Whenever the Bosox made a move, the Yanks would counter. And Vice versa.

    Will the Mets similarly respond?

    I did see Josh Hader might be on the market. Him and Diaz together in Queens? K City at Citifield.

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  11. Would anybody swap Cano & Yo for Stanton (full contract deals)? What, 125MM difference over 8 yrs>

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  12. Hobie

    I can't see the Yanks doing this deal.

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