Do you remember when the word came out that the Wilpons were actually considering the sale of the New York Mets? Most folks reacted with glee, thinking that the nightmarish chapter of their ownership was finally coming to a close. Some cheered. Some drank. Some gave high-fives to their fellow Mets fan friends and family members. There was not a sad nor dry eye in the house.
Then came word that the then-current partial owner, Steve Cohen, was going to be the one making the investment in the New York National League franchise. Cohen had a bit of an uneven reputation in his investment circles, but he was a billionaire and would have the deep pockets to improve the ballclub that heretofore shopped at the scrap heap. Happy days are here again...or so we thought.
Yes, this relationship started off well with a major trade pulled off to bring top flight shortstop Francisco Lindor and top flight pitcher Carlos Carrasco to the Mets. This type of deal had been long in coming and fans did cartwheels in the street when they saw that the Mets were willing to use every means necessary to improve the team. When free-agent-to-be Lindor was quickly given a ten-year $341 million contract, most Mets fans just shook their heads in disbelief, muttering, “This sure isn’t the Wilpon family anymore!”
Accompanying these new acquisitions were free agent deals with Taijuan Walker, Aaron Loup, Trevor May and a handful of others to help reinforce what should have been a decent but underperforming team. Money wasn’t being thrown away recklessly on these deals, but it was flowing and that very type of transaction had seemingly fallen by the wayside in Queens.
When the Mets relatively quickly ascended into first place which they held for more than half the year, everyone was ecstatic. True, Lindor didn’t perform as expected. Carlos Carrasco, Noah Syndergaard, Jacob deGrom, Seth Lugo, Kevin Pillar, Luis Guillorme, Brandon Nimmo, Joey Lucchesi, David Peterson, Jose Martinez, Jordan Yamamoto and others were quickly gone for long stretches on the IL and it seemed a minor miracle that the Mets held onto the top of the division as long as they did when scoring runs was almost a forgotten skill.
Even the trade deadline acquisition of All Star and Gold Glove fielder Javy Baez didn’t seem to help. When the spiral into losing went from a few poor games to an out-of-control avalanche towards the bottom, the boo-birds were out, condemning the Mets for their hitting, their pitching, their lack of baserunning, their role players and their injuries. Manager Luis Rojas did not escape most fans’ wrath either, and this week even owner Steve Cohen tweeted out his embarrassment at how badly the hitters have been doing.
If you want to start a long and disagreeing argument with Mets fans, ask them what they need to do to right the ship. Some will say it’s the front office that has messed things up (starting with the now-departed Jared Porter). Others think it’s the emergency replacement manager, Luis Rojas, who is at fault. They’re already replaced the batting coach only to see things get worse instead of better. Then there are a whole roster of poor performances from the hitters whose only real exception appears to be Pete Alonso. Even Brandon Nimmo who has hit for a good batting average has seemingly forgotten how to steal bases and hit the long ball. J.D. Davis is hitting well, but the fans have long since condemned him as incapable of playing the field defensively.
Then there is the pitching. Word is out that there is a greater than 99% probability that ace Jacob deGrom will be shut down for the rest of the year if the team is indeed out of postseason contention. Carlos Carrasco was seemingly rushed back based upon his flat out awful performances as a starter. While pending free agent Marcus Stroman has been terrific and surprising success from Taijuan Walker helped quite a bit, the rest of the rotation is a shambles. They have tried trade deadline acquisition Rich Hill with not much to show for it. Tylor Megill has pitched amazingly well in his starts but there is concern about how many innings he’s logging on his recuperated arm. A variety of others have tried and failed or tried and gotten injured. Then there’s Noah Syndergaard who media reports is being groomed to come back in September to work out of the pen. Oh yeah, he’s a pending free agent, too.
While many Mets fans will debate the need to pay and retain the services of both Stroman and Syndergaard, that dismisses the whole problem of the anemic offense. Others think the Mets need to build themselves into a latter day version of The Big Red Machine who fielded All Star hitters at almost every position but crossed their fingers on the days Don Gullett wasn’t pitching.
The truth of the matter is that the Mets need massive improvements on both sides of the diamond. The question underlying that assessment is whether or not the current slate in the front office and the field manager are the ones capable of converting a boatload of new acquisitions into a winning endeavor. You can argue long into the night over that one for sure.
What Mets fans need to understand is that a new regime isn’t going to hit on all cylinders right out of the gate. Lots of things need to happen, lots of changes need to be made and a fresh approach to team construction needs to evolve. There is no single right or wrong answer.
7 comments:
A normal rate of injuries, rather than an absurd rate, and they’d likely have won a surprisingly weak division. But just for starters, half a season of Jake, little Cookie, little Peterson, Lucchesi crashes and burns, and no Thor, 2 months without Lugo. And others that missed a few like Stroman. It is remarkable they are not 20 under, especially with the injury deleted, inept offense.
Morning Reese
Everybody is going to have a different spin on 2022.
My most important need is an investigation into the injury situation.
Can the team do a better job here?
Can the players do a better job at their off-season program?
And will the Player's Association allow us the drop the hammer here on the players?
I agree with Mack .. it seems like the hamstring and oblique injuries could be reduced by better stretching and training routines.
I remember a broadcast from many years ago that Tim McCarver was doing and commented on the rash of hamstring injuries in baseball. His comment was something to the effect of "you don't see hamstring injuries like this in basketball; I believe it is because of all the running backwards that they do" and he went on to advocate the baseball players incorporate a backwards running into their routines. I don't know if there is anything to that or not, but ...
You guys raise an excellent point about preparatory exercises. It is a reasonable conclusion that it could be flawed, hence the out if control onslaught of injuries.
You say the FO is not hit right out of the gate but really why not?
They chose their guy in Lindor and he was a colossal fail.
Worse they didn’t need to pay him. If we had the money we could have don’t that after the season and we all know we would have passed seeing what we have seen first hand. He wasn’t exactly taking a discount.
And we all know we needed A CF and C and we didn’t address CF and chose the wrong C
We needed Bullpen. Help and one guy sandy mentioned was Hand but we couldn’t secure him even with money.
We actually tried to get Bauer can you imagine if we had
No sorry I don’t agree that the FO can’t hit
And then add the kumar puck which was expected start the pipeline rebuild
Fire sandy and the whole group
A lot to process here. I have to disagree with you on a few things.
To say Lindor was a colossal failure is a bit harsh and really quite premature. It is true that he got off to a poor start and has now been on the IL for six weeks, this is year one in New York. I remember Carlos Beltran's start. Lindor is a quality player and will recover. He will be a major asset to this team for a long time and will be the face of New York. The team needed to make a big move. The Wilpons were criticized for playing small ball and not joining the big leagues.
The fans cannot have it both ways. Unfortunately, the start was not great, but this was the bold move that needed to be done. It will pay off in the end. $341M is a lot of money for many of us, but if Mr. Cohen wants to win, he showed what he is willing to do. More will follow. In short, shortstop would have been an expensive position to fix, and they really did end up with a good one.
Yes, they needed a centerfielder. There were two available on the FA market - George Springer and Jackie Bradley Jr. I was hoping to sign Springer during the off-season, but if they had, we'd be having the same discussion about him at this point. Springer has been hurt more than not in Toronto, will be 32 years old in less than a month, and while reasonably productive offensively, has negative defensive metrics. Bradley has been a disaster in Milwaukee. There were not a lot of options out there.
As far as catcher goes, Realmuto is (still) not worth 3x McCann. McCann has had some big moments and would actually be seen as a valuable cog if the rest of the team was hitting to their capabilities. He has be exposed because of the failures up and down the lineup. I also look for better things from him in year 2.
Bullpen. Somebody has to get credit for the May and Loup signings. Brad Hand has not really been very good - ERA > 4.00. I have no issue with the make-up of the bullpen. It was unfortunate that Lugo was hurt, but relief pitching has been hit or miss on the free agent boards for a long time. The problem with the bullpen is the amount of time they are actually in games - the starting pitching has been the issue. The bullpen kept them in a ton of games early in the year.
Yes, Bauer just being a thing with the team for as long as it was is a problem. That was a disaster without his current problems.
I am not knowledgeable enough to form a final opinion about the Rocker fiasco. It was a losing situation for both the team and the player. At this point in time, I don't know what could have been done better, but I cannot hang it all on the F.O. now. Perhaps the #11 pick next year will help more. (This commenter's personal note on this topic without knowledge is that Boras was central to the whole fubar, but no proof).
I agree with you that Sandy needs to move out and away from all baseball operations.
Eddie, I agree. They signed him to 10 years. If even 5 of those are worth the money I will be surprised. Too danced long. I liked the trade. But the Mets felt they had to make a splash, but the water was only 6 inches deep. Thud! I was OK with the trade itself, but 10 years? Too long.
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