Tom Brennan has been waxing poetic about the state of the NY
Mets pitching throughout the Spring Training season. It’s hard to argue given the great success they’ve
achieved, not just from their starting pitchers and relievers, but also from
the ones scheduled to be reinforcements in the minors should the need for extra
arms arise throughout the long playing season.
Some of the pitchers were expected to excel. Jacob deGrom, of course, is coming off two
consecutive Cy Young Awards which is not too shabby for a former
shortstop. Although Noah Syndergaard’s
pre-season has been more about him going shirtless or pantless than about his
performance, the fact is he’s looked more like the dominant kind of guy who
made the All Star team back in 2016 than the shell we’ve seen the past few
years. Marcus Stroman is looking like a
guy playing for a Zack Wheeler sized contract as he hits free agency in
2021. None of those pitchers are real
surprises.
The next tier is definitely unexpected. All three fighting for the next two starting
slots are having remarkable springs. No
one expected much of anything from Rick Porcello who turned in his worst year
ever in 2019, but he’s hurling to the tune of a 2.53 ERA thus far in the
Spring. He’s giving up hits, yes, but he’s
getting out of the jams and has walked just a single batter.
As I discussed yesterday, both Michael Wacha and Steve Matz
are having terrific auditions for that number five starter role. My feeling is you go with the lefty who
theoretically is healthy rather than relying on another righty who could get
rather pricy if his arm and shoulder hold together for once. I know I feel a lot better about the suspect
bullpen with a Michael Wacha out there rather than turning innings over to the
likes of Jacob Rhame, Tyler Bashlor or Paul Sewald.
Then there are the top four guys in the bullpen mix. Edwin Diaz has looked better but not
great. Ditto to Jeurys Familia. Seth Lugo returned to a 1-2-3 inning after
losing his collision with a hotel room ottoman and Brad Brach is showing why he
was once one of the more dominant closers in baseball. The only one with a true question mark is
newcomer Dellin Betances, but his issue seems more related to being out of
practice and operating at partial strength, rather than arm or leg issues.
Towards the back end of the mix you have the usual suspects
like Robert Gsellman who is thus far pitching to a 1.50 ERA over 6 relief
innings. Justin Wilson has only been in
two innings but he’s been perfect in his limited work. Even journeyman Walker Lockett has been
throwing shutout ball over nearly 5 innings of work.
Obviously the news of an injury to Michael Conforto is not
welcome, but it would appear that with modest replacement from someone else the
club seems deep enough in pitching to withstand a temporary loss of their
former All Star outfielder.
4 comments:
Reese -
Good morning.
Hard to predict what these arms will be after a minimal one month shutdown.
We shall see.
But that is true for all teams, not just the Mets.
Betances will be throwing 99 again when baseball resumes. Hope fully he won't BE 99 when it resumes.
I was thinking that the team that may benefit the most from the layoff is the Nats. It gives their pitching staff some extra time to recover from the World Series hangover.
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