In 2020 and 2021 Major League Baseball ramped up its efforts big time to try to stop the apparent uncontrolled spread of Performance Enhancing Drugs (PEDs) which allegedly give players who take them an increase in their speed, strength and ability to recover from injuries. While many of the anabolic steroids have been well publicized for a few decades, the newest candidate to draw attention is dehydrochlormethyltestosterone (DHCMT), an East German PED developed to help Olympic athletes and appearing on MLB’s list of banned substances. The drug is also known as Oral Turinabol.
Since starting the policing of DHCMT there have been quite a few players nailed for its alleged use. The actions began with minor league players in 2015 but branched over to the major leagues with recently promoted players who allegedly took the drug while working their way up the ladder to the majors. Thus far suspensions include Cody Stanley, Boog Powell, Chris Colabello, Daniel Stumpf, Paul Campbell, Tres Barrera and Kent Emanuel. Stanley’s suspensions were particularly bad as he had become a three-time alleged loser and now has on his professional resume the same dishonor granted to Jenrry Mejia, a lifetime ban from baseball.
What makes this one especially aggravating for the players is that the amount of the drug detected isn’t even sufficient to qualify as enhancing. Furthermore, in their defense several of the players have hired doctors who demonstrated something they refer to as pulsing, an action wherein the drug can reappear many years after ingestion. One of the players suggested he took some supplements while in high school which predates the Major League’s time period for control over what players use, but the courts didn’t accept that explanation. The best anyone’s gotten thus far is a negotiation that a full season’s suspension could be the 60-game 2020 season instead of a 162 game season.
While no one is defending what these players may or may not have done, the whole issue of PED abuse very much should be on the front burner of the New York Mets management team because Robinson Cano is serving a highly conspicuous year without pay in 2021 but is due back for two consecutive full years with pay in 2022 and 2023. That pay is not trivial. Between what the Mets pay and the Mariners share he’ll get $24 million per season.
Now a great many people are advocating that the Mets fight hard to invalidate his contract since he’s obviously violated the league policy multiple times. That move would kick Cano to the curb and free the Mets from a $48 million payroll obligation over the next two seasons (assuming Cano can stay clean during that time period). However, a PED-abuse situation has never before exempted a player from earning his signed contract dollars.
So, if the club is going to be obligated to pay Cano his money, then what should they do? Sure, it’s easy for us to declare to the team’s billionaire owner that locking the clubhouse door to him would send a message to other players, but then that money isn’t coming out of our own pockets. Actually, inevitably it would as the Mets would have to recoup the $48 million somehow and that could correspond to increased ticket, food, parking or souvenir prices, or it could mean spending less on other aspects of running the ballclub which could keep them out of contention.
Consequently, the alternative no one wants to discuss is the prospect of Cano playing the field in a Mets uniform for the next two years. Everyone remembers that his initial foray into Citifield was not a good one. He had his career worst year and finished with a flourish to get his numbers for the season up to just .256/13/39. By stark contrast during the strike-shortened season of 2020 he was hitting .316 with 10 HRs and 30 RBIs in well under half the number of ABs. Not coincidentally, it was after the 2020 bounce back season that he was flagged for his PED abuse and given the 162 game suspension.
So what kind of player would Cano be upon his return? For a frame of reference, he’s a .306 career hitter who in a typical year would provide 24 HRs and 94 RBIs. Those kinds of numbers are indeed gaudy, but you would also expect some decline both due to age (2022 season being completed at age 39 and 2023 at age 40), and perhaps due to refraining from the substances that apparently fueled his offensive success. Suppose he puts up another .300 season with 23 HRs and 75 RBIs. Would that level of production be considered adequate?
Those numbers appear because in 2019, the last full season of baseball, Jeff McNeil provided exactly that and people were already planning to enshrine him in the Mets own Hall of Fame. However, if you look more closely at McNeil’s resume and you find that the HR and RBI numbers were an outlier, though the high batting average has been expected since he broke into the majors in 2018. A typical year according to baseball-reference.com would be .309 with 18 HRs and 71 RBIs. The problem is he’s not doing that in 2021 which has been interrupted with injury, nor did he do it in 2020.
So the difficult question facing the Mets front office and Mets fans in general is whether the club is better off with a combination of Cano and J.D. Davis, Cano and Jeff McNeil or McNeil and Davis at 2nd and 3rd respectively with Cano being the wealthiest benchwarmer in baseball? Me, I’d at least listen to offers on both McNeil and Davis right now for solutions to propel the club into October baseball because like it or not, it would appear that Cano is a part of the Mets future.
I still think the front office has thought a lot about it, won't trade guys now where it might jeopardize the playoffs, and will try to cut a deal with Cano after the season to make him go away - even if that is at 80 cents on the dollar. But to deal with that in the midst of a pennant race seems premature. We'll know a lot more about this team by Friday, which I believe is the trade deadline.
ReplyDeleteTom - Friday at 4 is the trade deadline.
ReplyDeleteMets asked the Rockies to take Cano as part of talks regarding Arenado. The Rockies declined. Maybe in a Josh Donaldson or other big money trade, they can ask a team to take hime back - very unlikely, but it could happen.
Baseball is hardball. I just wonder if the Mets will play hardball with Cano after the season ends - no time for that distraction now. A 5 to 6 month off season lies ahead.
ReplyDeleteOh Say Can You See
ReplyDelete1. JD Davis. Why he is an important cog in this team's overall offense. Respect the man sportwriters because he is truly a gamer here!
2. TB: There is no real comparison between Tylor Megill and Matt Harvey beyond a stats one and that both are starters. Tom Harvey and Tom Seaver would be somewhat of a better comparison perhaps. Both were very hard throwers really.
Tom Seaver was exceptional and pitched in the day when even if a starter's arm was broken or (sheered off) they did not miss a start. Tom really had outstanding secondary pitches to his arsenal as well. They were out pitches for him.
Harvey throws really hard too, but when he lost his ability to continue doing so, he was no longer the "Dark Knight" guy. I think that Tom Seaver could have continued his career even if his fastball had faded earlier on in his respective career. He was that good. Matt just didn't have that going on. Batters knew what to expect I think.
Tylor Megill is more of a complete pitcher than Matt Harvey really. He's a pitcher and not just a thrower. They are apples to oranges really. Like Tom Seaver, Tylor Megill does not have to just rely on his fastball as his only true outpitch. His arsenal is well stocked. Our own Mack saw this here first earlier on I believe and wrote so. Kudos to you Mr. Mack for this.
3. Jeff McNeil. See what I meant last week when I said that Jeff has this uncanny gift of being able to offensively place the ball on the field anywhere that he wants to. And he can hit the dingers as well. It is a talent not often seen to his level.
4. Luis Guillorme. The Mets could play him virtually on moon and he would come through. The guy has developed himself into being a .300 BA hitter playing multiple positions here. Luis as a catcher? Hmm. I wonder. Bet ya' he could!
5. Tijuan Walker. If my call (and be glad I don't run things here) but when Carlos Carrasco comes back, I give rest to Taijuan 2-3 starts, just as a precautionary measure for whatever may be barking at him right now (side) because these two last starts were just not the Taijuan Walker we have come to know here. Really since the All Star event. But with Carrasco coming back, the Mets have him, Marcus, Tylor, and now Hill (a wise move to make), plus wherever Jacob is at in his resting phase. But do not rush Jacob back because it is not necessary to with these other four starters in place here.
6. Tony Banta a good fighter, but I like lefty Josh Walker up better. Go take a look at Josh's stat sheet and see what you guys think. It is still a good time to see.
7. Mets may still be sniffing SRP Jose Berrios. It's a solid move and it gives the rotation insurance.
8. We need Bartolo back in any capacity. The man was fun and I for one miss him a lot too. He kept this all light and fun. We need him.
9. I think this team is in very, very good shape now. The offense is clicking, and our starters (and relievers) are really doing an outstanding job. The bullpen is looking so good now. And Luis Alou Rojas is wonderfully growing into his first year as the NY Mets skipper as well. Like he was always the manager here.