Morning,
First,
we welcome new followers, ex-Mets pitchers Xorge Carrillo
and Zack Thornton and Washington minor
leaguer Dante Bichette Jr.
Carrillo
was drafted in the 14th round of the 2011 draft, out of Arizona
State University (Tempe, Arizona), and Central Arizona College (Coolidge,
Arizona). Hit .330 for ASU in that year.
Spent
seven seasons as a Mets minor leaguers, starting off as a backup catcher.
Earned the starting job in 2015 for Binghamton and hit .240 that year and .269
in 2016.
Finished
his Mets career in 2017 for Las Vegas (252-AB, .270).
Caught
for the Tijuana Toros in 2018 (.300) and last year (.307).
You couldn't ask for more from a backup catcher and I am still shaking my head why we cut him.
Zack Thornton was drafted in the 23rd round of the 2010 draft,
by the Oakland Athletics, out of Ventura College (Ventura, California), and the
University of Oregon (Eugene, Oregon). He was a starter for Oakland and went
9-0 in his final season there.
He
pitched for three seasons in the Athletics organization and one full season
(2013) for the Pirates.
He was
traded in April 2018 by the Pirates to the Mets for 1B Ike
Davis.
Thornton
was an Ironhorse reliever for Las Vegas for three seasons 2014-2016. He pitched
in 145 games there.
Zack’s
professional career ended in 2017 for the Southern Maryland Blue Crabs in Indy
ball (47-appearances, 2-4, 3.63).
Bichette
was drafted by the New York Yankees in the 1st round of the 2011
draft, out of Orangewood Christian HS (Maitland, FL).
He has
played seven season in the Yankees chain, then played Indy ball in both 2018
and 2019, and finished off last year for the Nats AA-Harrisburg team.
His
current minor league stat line is .254/.331//.365/.696.
He was released by the Nats on Wednesday night.
https://www.mlb.com/news/best-mlb-draft-classes-for-each-team -
Best Mets Draft Class –
Mets: 1982
Dwight Gooden took baseball by storm as a
19-year-old in 1984 -- two years after the Mets had taken him with the No. 5
overall pick in the ’82 Draft – to win NL Rookie of the Year honors before
capturing the circuit’s Cy Young Award the following year with an MLB-best 1.53
ERA and 268 strikeouts. He accrued 41.6 of his 48.2 career WAR in New York,
going 157-85 with a 3.10 ERA and 67 complete games over 11 seasons. The Mets’
’82 Draft also produced right-hander Roger McDowell (third
round), a 12-year big league pitcher, and catcher Greg
Olson (seventh round), who would become an All-Star with the Braves in
1990. Southpaw Randy Myers, taken in the June
Draft-Secondary Phase, was a 15.1 WAR performer who saved 347 games across 14
big league seasons, five of which came with the Mets.
In closing…
This is the last week before the draft. Teams are
deciding what prospects they will be placed on their backboard and also what
positions will need the most filler.
We talked earlier this week about the glut of players
that probably will be placed on one the full season teams.
There are plenty of pitchers and outfielders in the
system to hold back some of the ‘filler’ and place them on the GCL team. This
will all determine on the quality of the domestic free agents that can be
signed after the draft will end.
Reese and Tom call for big bats. I call for power
pitchers. The three of us do this ad nauseum.
I love bats. And I try to remind my fellow writers
that, in 2019 (NL), the Mets were 5th in home runs, 6th
in OPS, and 6th in slugging percentage.
That’s a lot of bats.
I still believe a team should draft ‘the
best player available’, but, if we do that all the time, we could wind up with
12 shortstop prospects in the system.
Great football teams happen because
of great quarterbacks. And starters are a team’s starting quarterbacks.
Our system is a little light in this
area. We probably will lose three members of our current rotation to free
agency. Everyone is bragging on Matt Allen and Josh Wolf, but they are years away. David Peterson hasn’t worked out yet. And Thomas Szapucki and Jordan
Humphreys still need to prove they have fought back 100% from TJS.
We need pitchers and this is a
pitcher draft. Two more studs in the first three picks would do wonders for the
future of this team.
And… believe me… the scouting and
cross checking staff of the Mets are working the phones right now making sure
5-10 guys that would have been drafted in the 5th through 9th
round will commit to the Mets the microsecond this draft concluds.
Mack – I call for developing a farm system based on Pitching, Speed and Defense. Then, have each team drum fundamentals into those players. If only the Mets had a manager that emphasized those things. I’d bet they would win their league championship!
ReplyDeleteJohn
ReplyDeleteI can't remember when the Mets valued defense.
A certain Mets team in Brooklyn did last year as well a Mets team in 1969. Who would you rather build a team around? Dave Kingman or Bud Harrelson? I pick the guy who won a WS and an NL Championship and didn't take no trash from Pete Rose.
ReplyDeleteI have tried to find out any dirt on why the Mets dumped The Fonz and crickets.
ReplyDeleteIt has to be his approach to the game.
It wasn't his fault that the cards that were dealt to him had a low slugging percentage going in.
It was an exremely fun team to watch. I have been going to minor league games up here for a long time. I have seen Wally Backman manage, Tim Tuefel, Howard Johnson, Luis Rojas in addition to Fonzie. For years many Met fans I know have been screaming about how the Mets don't play defense, don't stress the fundamentals, don't steal more, don't run the bases aggressively, don't hit against the shift. Last year at a Cyclones game, I finally saw that style of play - I was shocked that this was a Mets team. This was the first time ever I had seen this since Gil. Wally didn't do this, Tim didn't do this, Luis didn't do this. Who did? Fonzie...and he was proven right when the team won a championship, a team that had none of the Mets top prospects until the very end of the season when they wanted Baty and Allan to get some playoff experience.
ReplyDeleteSo what do they do? Fire him. Let's Go Mets!
I always thought Xorge Carillo was going to sneak in there for the Mets. I do not see where Nido is any better, personally.
ReplyDeleteThornton I also had hopes for.
Dante knows, like they do, how tough a business this is if you're not a Pete Alonso.