Yesterday I wrote that the Mets are starting to show the characteristics of a mediocre team. They continued that trend last night by allowing themselves to be pretty much shut down by a very unexceptional pitching staff. They also continued the first week trend of not getting big hits. They had a little momentum after taking a pair of games in Boston, and they gave it all back with two lackluster losses at home. And so it goes.
I was watching some of last night's effort and thinking about how much I wanted baseball to come back. I have to keep reminding myself of that, otherwise I might start asking myself if it was worth it. I can't pretend to be surprised by any of this, really. When I first heard the news that Syndergaard was getting Tommy John my first thought was that they had lost their one real chance to be really good. And that was before Marcus Stroman tore his calf muscle.
I realize that we're still only 7 games into the season, but that's the equivalent of 19 games into a 162 game season. There's a lot less time to figure things out and right the course. And I'm not liking some of what I'm seeing so far.
- Mets batters have struck out 64 times in 7 games. Two of the best hitters on the ream, Pete Alonso and Michael Conforto are tied for second on the ream with 9 apiece. Conforto is striking out in just under 1/3 of his plate appearances and Alonso is whiffing about 28% of the time. The big winner in the lineup is our full-time DH, Yoenis Cespedes, who has struck out 12 times in only 25 plate appearances, just under 50%.
- Speaking of Cespedes, the good news is 2 HR in the first week. The bad news? Both were solo, and represent his only 2 RBIs. He only has 4 hits all told, the other two were singles. He still looks pretty slow when he get on base, and doesn't look all that close to playing any LF.
- The team has 4 errors so far. All of them were committed by Jeff McNeill at 3B. He hasn't looked good on some of his throws, and Alonso has not helped him out any at first base. A couple of those bad throws really should have been picked.
It's hard to single out any one guy for criticism, but if I was the manager I would consider giving some other guys a chance to DH a little more often until Cespedes shows some signs that he's capable of still producing. He's 34 years old, missed all of last year and only played half of 2017. Maybe he's not superman after all.
The Mets are playing 4 in Atlanta and then they're moving on to Washington. If they play the way they have this past week, they could be in big trouble. As Yogi Berra once said, "it's getting late early."
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Apparently Rob Manfred has warned the Players Association that the season is hanging on a thread. With a couple of Cardinals players testing positive and tonight's Cardinals - Brewers game postponed, we might be one more teamwide outbreak from seeing the season brought down.
One thing noted in the above quoted piece is the fact that the players are still not wearing masks, high-fiving each other and spitting. There also seems to be some questionable decision making by some young players on the road.
Look, I was pretty stupid in my twenties, convinced that I was bulletproof and not always making the correct decisions when it came to drinking large amounts of alcohol while in the presence of pretty girls that were also drinking large amounts of alcohol. The league seems to have reconciled itself to doing more policing of players on road trips, and that's probably what it will take to get compliance out of everyone. Because that's the basic problem with a voluntary system - you only need one or two guys to act stupidly and it fails.
Season was predicated on quiet COVID spread. Not this level nationwide. I would not cancel...yet. But margin for error is mighty slim.
ReplyDeleteIf they cancel, Diaz has 8 months to work on his mechanics. Like that will help.
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