There is an old cliché to be careful what you wish for
because you might just get it. Recently
many were harping on the Mets’ depth in the outfield and how they seemed flush
in that position. Then along comes an
outfield wall to collide with Michael Conforto’s side and all of the sudden
folks are scrambling to fill the void.
You have to remember that some of the Mets’ outfielders are
called that simply because they would not otherwise have a major league job
opportunity. JD Davis, Dom Smith and
others are not really big league quality out there with their gloves or path
instincts on fly balls. Jacob Marisnick
is one of those afterthought outfielders who can catch ‘em with the best of ‘em,
but swings a balsa wood bat on the best day.
Other organizational castoffs like Ryan Cordell or Jarrett Parker are
not going to replace Conforto’s offensive presence in the lineup. Infielders posing as outfielders like Matt
Adams and Eduardo Nunez are not long-term solutions either.
One approach would be to trade Dominic Smith for a real
outfielder. Surely there are teams out
there who could find room for Smith at 1B or DH and would be willing to cough
up a real player to man one of the outfield spots. You hate to trade away potential impact for a
short-term solution, but sometimes bold actions need to be taken.
Some folks have advocated the Mets approach one of the most
high-profile players still out there on the free agent market, Yasiel
Puig. He’s been known as something of a
clubhouse cancer wherever he’s played, but he is a solid hitter and defender
who could help temper the loss of Seattle’s best young right fielder. However, depending on how lucky or unlucky
Conforto turns out to be with his New York-based medical diagnosis, a Puig
solution might be highly preferable to seeing Davis and Smith stumbling around
the outfield together. If it’s a
short-term thing, then you could live with the various NRIs hoping for a last
gasp at the majors.
As I see it, the club right now is not likely going to make
any major transactional moves until they have a clearer idea of just how dire
the Conforto injury is and how long it will take to heal. If the doctors say three weeks, bank on six
at minimum. The club could muddle
through with spare parts for six weeks given the quality throughout the lineup
elsewhere. Furthermore, if you’re still
marketing the club for a buyer, going out now and ensuring a Puig type player
for a mere $10 million or so is the best approach might make for a tough
sell. (Lest you think I’m making up this
number, the LA Times reported Puig turned down a $10 million offer with an NL
team already.)
The other issue with a Puig acquisition is a long term
one. Where does he play when Conforto
returns? Where does Yoenis Cespedes
play? Where does JD Davis play? Where does Dominic Smith play? He’s a solution but it doesn’t appear to be a
particularly good fit. To me it’s less a
matter of money or clubhouse presence than it is what to do with him when
everyone is healthy. In case no one
noticed, JD Davis outproduced him offensively last year in fewer at-bats. And, music to the Wilpons’ ears, Davis earns
minimum wage.
3 comments:
It all depends on Conforto time out and how soon Cespedes is ready to start at least 3 games a week. One year for Puig would be OK if neither are ready soon.
I would just stay with what we got. I would rather us have that extra 10 million in July to spend
Play Fargas in CF and Nimmo in Right (Nimmo played RF in the minors). Have Fargas get on via bunt and steal like crazy.
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