There were any number of reasons the Mets did not get off to
the kind of start they needed last year.
In no particular order you would have to consider health of a great many
players that was compromised before they even left Spring Training. There was the skillset of the sophomore
manager, Mickey Callaway. There was the
defense. Then the baserunning
speed. Let’s not forget some of the
members of the starting rotation. However,
if you wanted to pick one bullseye problem you would have to look no further
than the occupants of the bullpen relied upon to save victories
How bad was it? Well,
the number are ugly and as they say, they don’t lie. There are 30 teams in the major leagues, 15
in each of the two constructs. The Mets
overall finished 24th in relief pitching, coincidentally 12th
out of 15 teams in the NL. Even for as
much ballyhoo as the Nationals got for their pen, they finished ahead of the
Mets. So did the Phillies. So did the Braves. The only trailers were the Marlins
(expected), the Rockies (also expected) and the Pirates.
To get into the specific numbers, the Mets relievers were
not bad when it came to striking out opponents.
They notched 9.63 Ks per 9 IP.
That would actually put them in the
upper echelon, trailing three who broke the 10K per game barrier – the Yankees,
Red Sox and Brewers.
Where things started to get truly ugly for the Mets was the
way they handed out baserunners. They
coughed up 3.63 walks per 9 IP. That’s
bad but not horrific. There were indeed
clubs who approached 5 golden rings of free passes. No, the truly bad number was how well opponents hit
against the Mets’ bullpen. Where to
start…
You hope when you track a player’s BAA with respect to a particular
pitcher he can approach a solid number like .280 which suggests he has a pretty
good chance. For the Mets’ relievers,
the BAA number was a horrific .312. Only
the Royals and Twins were worse. That
generosity (along with the walks) led the Mets’ pen to 26th place
with a 4.99 ERA. They were not quite as
generous with the long ball, faring 22nd place overall.
Any way you slice it, it doesn’t fill Mets fans nor starting
pitchers with a lot of confidence that things are suddenly dramatically improved. We have already recited stats from Edwin Diaz
and Jeurys Familia, both of whom pitched games as if they wore blinders. Each had some health issues and Diaz was
trying to singlehandedly make the dubious trade look balanced. The hope is that they will indeed revert to
career form in 2020.
After that it gets pretty dicey. Seth Lugo has been terrific out of the pen
but prefers to be a starter. Dellin
Betances may or may not be back to full strength. If he is, that’s a HUGE boon. Justin Wilson did quite well last year, too,
so there may be some life vests in the earlier part of the pen.
After them, however, comes a great many arms of suspect
value. Brad Brach was brought back after
demonstrating he had something left to give with a 3.68 ERA which is
practically All-Star material by Mets’ reliever standards, though below his
career mark of 3.33.
Robert Gsellman is still counted on being productive despite
three straight interrupted seasons in which he did little to distinguish
himself. He teased a 2.42 ERA for 8
games in 2016, but it’s been all downhill ever since with marks of 5.19 for
2017, 4.28 in 2018 and 4.66 in 2019.
(And remember, he’s one of the team’s quality veteran arms!)
Beyond that you have a lot of questionable pitchers or legit
pitchers with question marks. This group
would include Paul Sewald, Jacob Rhame, Tyler Bashlor, Stephen Nogosek, Chasen
Shreve, Matt Blackham, Daniel Zamora, Drew Smith and Steven Gonsalves. You also have talented starter who can’t stay
healthy, Michael Wacha, slated for the pen.
This whole exercise would be meaningless if Diaz and Familia
returned to form, Lugo stayed healthy and Brach supplants Gsellman in the
pen. Throw in a recovery by Betances and
all might not be lost. However, at this
time the pen still looks mighty suspect and Luis Rojas is going to have to hope
that Jeremy Hefner stocked up on magic beans.
You are never going to field a playoff team with these kinds of numbers.
ReplyDeleteI especially can't get past the amount of blown saves last year.
For me, a return of dominace by Diaz and a healthy Belances could speak volumes here.
With all those numbers, if Diaz amd Familia were merely mediocre we'd easily have been in the P-S. And both are now healthy and have been working hard all Winter with Hefner to regain their usual form.
ReplyDeleteA back end of those 2, Lugo, Betances and Wilson is formidable. And between Brach, Wacha and Gsellman (who still has options if someone better wons a spot) there's zero reason to believe that the pen as a whole won't be significantly better than last year's.
The sky isn't falling.
I am surprised, though, that Collin McHugh is still out there, and I haven't heard anything about the Mets being interested. He could be the guy who beats out Gsellman for the last spot.
ReplyDeleteSequels usually are inferior to the originals, though Sandy Alderson in particular was good at trading away superior people for inferior replacements. Eric Young, Jr. isn't even in major league baseball anymore, but it also speaks volumes that a pitching rich organization like the Astros were fine letting McHugh walk away AND no one has inked him to a new deal. After going 58 games out of the pen in 2018 with a 1.99 ERA he flubbed big-time in 2019, finishing with a 4.70, bringing his lifetime ERA to 3.95. Gsellman, his inferior counterpart, holds a winning 20-15 career record but with an unsightly 4.44 ERA. Would McHugh be an improvement? Probably. Is he worth what he'd ask on the open market? Probably not.
ReplyDeletePlayers still on the open market in February rarely get what they ask. They settle for what they are offered.
DeleteI'd offer a MnL deal and let him compete for a ML job in ST. And given today's date, I'd expect him to take it.
One other thing that should help both Diaz and Familia this season. They were used sparingly at the end of last year (because they couldn't be trusted, mostly). That should mean they come in with a lot fresher arms this season.
ReplyDeleteWhat is shocking is how many saves EVERY team blew last year. The Mets were bad, yes. But a return to anywhere near 2018 for Diaz and the Mets would rocket towards the top of the Least Blown Saves List.
ReplyDeleteNancy Pelosi saw my next article and ripped it up.
Seems like an old Mets line - if everyone plays at their potential - one if these years it has to happen, right?
ReplyDeleteIt happened for about three months in 2015, but ended a few days too early.
ReplyDelete