Did you ever watch those old Looney Tunes cartoons, where Wily Coyote or Elmer Fudd were chasing Road Runner and Bugs Bunny and fell through trap doors and what not?
Great stuff. Hilarious.
But when Jeff and Fred Wilson built their teams, they'd set up trap doors...like a couple of Daffy Ducks.
Trap doors that weren't great stuff, and which were far from hilarious.
You see, the Wilpons would build teams with a handful of very solid-to-star Mets players, sprinkle a little "hope fairy dust" on the rest of the roster, and hope that back side of the roster would perform adequately. But as we mostly expected ahead of time, those decisions turned out to be trap doors through which many Mets' seasons plunged from Playoff Land.
Yes, the collectively abysmal play of the back half of the Wilpon-constructed 25/26 man rosters, including call ups, acted as a trap door through which the Mets plunged and fell out of the playoff picture.
How many times in the 20 year period did the Mets make the playoffs?
Answer? I'm sure you know, and it's far too few.
Biggest culprit, in my humble opinion?
The "marginal back half of the Wilpon team" trap doors.
Which is why, yes, while the Mets did not sign any of the Big Three of Springer, Bauer, or Realmuto, they have done almost everything else in their power to eliminate the "crappy player, season-killing trap door" scenario going into 2021 under their new Mets regime.
A really successful team needs a number of stars, a solid starting rotation, offense and bullpen, and bunch of solid support and call-up players, and an absence of dreck players.
I look at this team and I think the following:
Starters - addition by subtraction with Steve Matz and his "20-40 in his last 60" record gone, along with Wacha and Porcello, leaving a 2021 rotation of deGrom, Cookie, Stroman, Peterson, Walker, and Lucchesi, and possibly Yamamoto. The latter 2 were off their games in 2020, but were good prior, and could well bounce back (especially, in my mind, Lucchesi).
That starter rotation is (to use an overused word, deep) and matched, IMO, by few other MLB teams. And the mighty Syndergaard should be back for most of the season.
Bullpen - a real Mets' sore spot the last few years, and still a little troubling for 2021 after missing out on the likes of Hand, Wilson, and Rosenthal, but the pen could be solid (we'll see), with Diaz, May, Lugo (when he heals), Betances, Familia, Gsellman, and Loup, and who knows, probably Sam McWilliams and Ryley Gilliam will help.
But so could one of the starters, sliding into the pen. And a Cohen-led team will in my view move heaven and earth to fix the pen if it starts to crap out.
Offense - you tell me you don't like (no, make that LOVE) an offense comprised of Lindor, McNeil, Alonso, Conforto, Nimmo, McCann, Smith, JD Davis, Pillar, Villar, Guillorme and Almora. I'm still a bit nervous at catcher with Nido backing up, due to his moribund (to date, except for one game) bat, but he assures us that he is new and offensively improved.
The above dudes to me collectively look mighty potent (although still somewhat defensively challenged).
Oh, and Jeff Lowrie and his leg brace have slowly left the building, as has no-show, boar-hunting Yo Cespedes, which are two steps in the right direction. Sufferin' Succotash!
Depth - when you sign a Mallex Smith, Jose Peraza, Gil Heredia (assuming they reel him back in), and others who have had fairly recent major league success as possible call ups, assuming they don't make the 25/26 man roster, you have to feel a lot better than the older retreads the Mets had signed in prior years.
I'm sure I left some dudes out, but...
THIS TEAM SEEMS TO HAVE LARGELY CLOSED THE SEASON-KILLING TRAP DOOR WITH A (VIC) BLACK AND (DEN) DEKKER NAIL GUN AND GOBS OF CRAZY GLUE.
And if there starts to be signs of trap door fatigue, I assume Steve Cohen will stand ready for mid-season moves to really nail the trap door shut.
I for one don't think the season-killing trap door will open in 2021. Too much quality. Too little dreck. Look at 1969 and 1986 - lots of quality, and very little dreck, the kind Elmer Fudd would fall into once the trap door springs open.
The notable increase in top-to-bottom roster quality should prevent this season from turning into a Looney Tunes horror show in Metsville.
You can stop reading here, but if you want to revisit what past seasons' Wilpon Dreck looked like, I copied a few of my old articles here for your consideration:
10/13/20
Tom Brennan - ANOTHER METS SEASON, ANOTHER CLUSTER OF HORRID METS PITCHING PERFORMANCES
Tom Brennan - SUBS AND SCRUBS - METS HITTERS IN 2018
Aside from food, every team has offensive starters - and subs.
The Mets' approach leads to a bottom line that is SUB par.
10/13/19
Tom Brennan - THE IMPACT OF SUBS AND SCRUBS ON METS' SUCCESS
For instance, on the Mets World Series win team in 1969, Duffy Dyer, Ed Charles, and some Edwin-Diaz-like bum named Amos Otis (maybe you heard of him) hit .196 in 437 combined at bats.
And on the 108 win Mets World Series win team in 1986, George Foster hit just .227 in 233 at bats.
Rene Rivera (age), Juan Lagares (tendency to under-hit, and frequently get hurt), Carlos Gomez (age), Rajai Davis (age), Adeiny Hecchavaria (career light hitter), Tomas Nido (very weak OBP), Keon Broxton (KKKKKK), Aaron Altherr (has not hit in recent years).
I left Luis Guillorme out of this list, because going into the season, I thought he would find a way to be serviceable, and not be a scrub sub, and it turned out he did just that in limited use.
The pitchers in 311 at bats were not far behind at .167. The rest of the Mets' hitters? They hit a commendable .273.
Pitcher subs and scrubs - guys who, if you asked me to be truly objective, I would have guessed prior to the season they'd under-perform (or I would have reached the same conclusion if added during the season):
The regular non-scrub pitchers (including substandard performers like Diaz, Familia, and Avilan) had a far better combined ERA of 3.89.
As I recall, off the top of my head (see links to those articles at the end of this article), .198 for 20% of the non-pitcher at bats (compared to 14% this year), and 15 subs and scrubs pitchers allowing 7 total runs per 9 innings (since the 6.59 ERA for 2019 above is "earned" runs, results in Scrub Land in 2018 and 2019 were similarly poor.)
My intent here is to demonstrate linkage between the excessive tolerance of ownership to such a large amount of non-performance and the missing of playoffs.
I highlight this in hopes something more will be done by the leadership team to prevent the same from occurring in 2020.
P.S.
Here are my article links from last fall on this same subject, should you care to peruse them and give yourself a detailed look at the failing fringes of the Mets 25 man roster over a 2 year period:
http://macksmets.blogspot.com/2019/01/tom-brennan-subs-and-scrubs-mets.html
http://macksmets.blogspot.com/search/?q=bullpen+subs+and+scrubs
http://macksmets.blogspot.com/2019/01/tom-brennan-subs-and-scrubs-mets_9.html
I guess the comments on this one slipped thru the trap door.
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