7/29/20

Mike's Mets - Those Marlins Are Dropping Like Flies

 

With the latest news about the Marlins coming out that their season has been shut down until at least next Monday, I'm tempted to write something snarky. I've loathed that team since they joined the league as the Florida Marlins almost 30 years ago. In grudging fairness to them, however, I'm going to avoid taking the easy cheap shot. This could happen to almost any team, given MLB's decision against playing this season in a "bubble."

As collateral damage from the pestilence sweeping through the Marlins, apparently the Phillies season has also been shut down until at least Friday. MLB is working to revise the schedule to avoid having too many missed games, but I honestly question how much longer this season can survive if another incident like this one happens to a different team.

I can't imagine what it would feel like to be a Phillies fan right now. You've lost baseball for at least a few days, and it doesn't even have anything to do with anything that a player on your team did. And how do these games get made up with such a tight schedule for the regular season as it is? This is just crazy.

MLB seems determined to keep this season alive right now, but I find it hard to imagine them pushing on if another team or two undergoes another widespread outbreak like the Marlins are having. There's already some folks calling for baseball to shut it down right now. The season seems to be literarily hanging by a thread right now.

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Anyway, getting back to baseball, while we still have it, I was impressed with Michael Wacha in his Mets debut. He had a good mix of pitches and more than enough velocity on his fastball to keep hitters honest. The Red Sox have a really tough lineup, and he was overmatching them. I'm actually looking forward to his next time up in the rotation, which is more than I can say about Rick Porcello right now.

I don't have a ton to say about Chasen Shreve, other than so far he is the only guy from the "rest of the bullpen" who didn't completely stink up the joint. That ought to at least earn him another chance as "first scrub out" when it next comes up.

As for Jeurys Familia, I take full responsibility for his bad outing last night. I praised him a couple of days ago, particularly noting how well he was throwing his sinker in his first appearance against Atlanta. My praise was clearly the kiss of death for Jeurys, because he literally couldn't throw his sinker for a strike last night. If you DVRed the game take a look. When he tried to throw a sinker he was missing by a mile, and then started throwing his slider and splitter almost exclusively.

Maybe it was just one of those days for Jeurys. His sinker was working too well Saturday night for it to have just been a fluke. Still, it bears watching. If we get Saturday night Familia for most of his outings in 2020, he's going to have a fine season. If we get a lot of Monday night Familia then it's just going to look a lot like last year.

I feel bad for Seth Lugo. I wrote a series of posts on the 2005 season while we were waiting for baseball to come back. Lugo reminds me a lot of Aaron Heilman, who desperately wanted to be a starter but was just too valuable in relief. Lugo is in the same boat now as Heilman was then. To be fair, Heilman didn't have a good enough breaking ball to succeed as a starter, while Lugo has all of the pitches. The last time Lugo was used as a starter was 2017, and he wasn't that good, but I think he's a better pitcher now and would probably do better if they let him be a starter today. I just don't think he'll get that chance. In a game of 5 or 6 inning starters, a multi-inning reliever that's good enough to close is an incredible weapon.

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1 comment:

Mack Ade said...

One more this morning.

Standings:

Marlins: 17

Rest of baseball: 0