By Rob Rogan August 22, 2020
Leave it to the Mets to take a seemingly obvious decision and make it in the most excruciatingly inept way with what appears to be an almost embarrassing lack of forethought. After days of refusing to commit to Steven Matz‘s next start and flirting with the idea of moving Seth Lugo into the rotation, the Mets appeared to announce their decision by keeping Lugo out of Wednesday’s win over the Marlin’s that the unexpectedly Lugo-less bullpen almost blew. Luis Rojas officially announced that Lugo would start in place of Matz the next day, with the added surprise that Lugo’s stay in the rotation would be more than simply a spot start.
Leave it to the Mets to take a seemingly obvious decision and make it in the most excruciatingly inept way with what appears to be an almost embarrassing lack of forethought. After days of refusing to commit to Steven Matz‘s next start and flirting with the idea of moving Seth Lugo into the rotation, the Mets appeared to announce their decision by keeping Lugo out of Wednesday’s win over the Marlin’s that the unexpectedly Lugo-less bullpen almost blew. Luis Rojas officially announced that Lugo would start in place of Matz the next day, with the added surprise that Lugo’s stay in the rotation would be more than simply a spot start.
To be completely fair, moving your most consistent and arguably best reliever into a role where he will almost certainly go from “borderline elite” to “mostly average” will have ripple effects on the entire pitching staff. The team has no idea what to expect from Lugo as a starter and even less insight into how Matz will perform as a reliever, and this lack of confidence was apparent in their indecisiveness. It’s possible that the move may strengthen a rotation ravaged by injuries while only slightly degrading a bullpen that still has some big names, but the team also runs the risk of both Matz and Lugo imploding in their swapped roles. In such a short season, and with a current record of 12-14, this would have a devastating effect on their postseason chances.
Of course, we can’t undersell just how much of a boon even an average performance from Lugo would be in the rotation considering its current state. It’s a near certainty that Lugo is less valuable as a starter than he has been as a reliever in a vacuum, but in the context of the Mets’ current situation the trade off may be worth it to bolster a rotation hurting for effective bodies. The problem with the Mets’ thinking here, however, is that it’s incredibly shortsighted.
The Mets’ rotation hasn’t performed as hoped, though it was certainly knocked down a few notches in quality with the loss of both Noah Syndergaard and Marcus Stroman. Even so, the overall team results don’t quite match the individual, isolated performances of most of the staff. The table below includes a few key stats for all of the Mets’ starting pitchers so far this season.
Name | IP | HR/9 | WHIP | BABIP | ERA- | FIP- | xFIP- |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jacob deGrom | 28.0 | 0.64 | 0.89 | .269 | 45 | 49 | 60 |
Steven Matz | 23.0 | 3.52 | 1.57 | .318 | 211 | 159 | 97 |
Corey Oswalt | 4.1 | 0.00 | 1.15 | .385 | 97 | 46 | 85 |
Robert Gsellman | 3.2 | 2.45 | 2.45 | .400 | 230 | 182 | 160 |
Walker Lockett | 6.0 | 1.50 | 1.5 | .333 | 176 | 117 | 125 |
Michael Wacha | 14.0 | 1.93 | 1.64 | .395 | 151 | 106 | 98 |
David Peterson | 21.2 | 0.83 | 1.15 | .250 | 68 | 92 | 110 |
Rick Porcello | 25.0 | 0.72 | 1.64 | .402 | 135 | 74 | 95 |
The numbers above generally paint an ugly picture, but if we look a bit closer we can see two of the main culprits for the rotation’s underwhelming performance so far this season (beyond the injuries): bad luck and suspect defense. The former can mostly be attributed to small sample sizes, but the latter is something the team was well aware of heading into the season. If we look at the differences between ERA- and FIP- for everybody but Jacob deGrom (class of his own) and David Peterson (possible blip), we see that their fielding independent performances have actually run the gamut from about average to quite good. Combine these independent performances with sky-high BABIP for pitchers like Michael Wacha and Rick Porcello, which are much higher than their career averages, and we begin to see why health isn’t the only poor luck that Mets starters have faced this season.
Continue reading by clicking here. Continue reading by clicking here.
Continue reading by clicking here. Continue reading by clicking here.
I have heard that they may use Matz as a pitching partner with Lugo as Seth builds his stamina as a starter, the co-starter thing. At this point, it's not looking like Hefner is getting through to Matz, as they've been working together since February to revamp how Matz uses his stuff and which of his pitches to use. Lugo has been begging to return to a starting role as he rightly believes he will garner a larger contract as a starter. However, if he goes from elite reliever to average or below average starter, he's not doing his case, or the team, any good. Like all projects of this nature, it would've been far better if it was able to be handled in spring training, but in these most insane of times, it "almost" makes sense. And in the Mets world, anything makes sense while nothing makes sense - and so it goes.
ReplyDeleteWith Peterson and Wacha expected back soon, this should be a temporary move.
ReplyDeleteI wouldn't put Matz into a close game, but as a long man in a blowout he should be fine.
It may be just the thing Matz needs to snap him out of his Home Run Jamboree. Many relievers up their FB by 2 MPH, which might give him more success.
ReplyDelete