This week there was finally a bit of movement on both sides of the lockout that suggests that the season may indeed begin at some point. How long the delay will be, how short the preseason will be and how much the labor strife affects the enthusiasm of the fan base are all still great unknowns. Right now we are aware that the union has already capitulated on the earlier free agent provision timetable, so being losers at the table seems to be in the cards for them once again.
With this so-called progress, my coterie of Mets fans last night started talking about the prospect of real baseball once again. After getting past the introductions and some personal updates from folks, we rather quickly launched into an age old debate with pitching advocates on one side and hitting advocates on the other.
Now you have to take such rhetoric as a conservative form of blowing smoke because no one wants to think the Mets are all of the sudden shutting their wallet. It's kind of hard to accept that the free spending ways to improve the team have ground to a halt and what you see is pretty much what you'll get. The last time anyone looked at the roster they were still overloaded with infielders, infielders miscast as outfielders, missing starting pitchers and housing several vacancies in the bullpen.
Some folks were advocating the priority of addressing hitting. The reference point of the 2021 season was indeed a painful one as it called to mind some of the long-losing Mets teams who knew that if they fell behind by more than 2 runs the game was pretty much going to be an "L" at the end of the night.
The counterpoint on the hitting advocates is the hot and cold streaks of different players. By season's end, Francisco Lindor was performing as they had hoped, but he had 2/3 of a season worth of mediocrity that suppressed his final numbers. Robinson Cano was gone for all of 2021 as a result of his second indulgence in PEDs. Current free agent Michael Conforto was awful. Ditto Dom Smith. Ditto Jeff McNeil. Ditto James McCann.
So, going into 2022, if you get a career average season from Lindor, a healthy season from Nimmo and a typical season from Alonso, you're already ahead of the pace of the previous year. Then add in Starling Marte every day, Eduardo Escobar and Mike Canha. Then remember you're getting back hopefully the offense of the 2020 version of Robinson Cano. That pretty much leaves McCann as the only offensive variable on which you might not want to bet the farm. It would seem that the offensive side of things has been addressed fairly well.
On the pitching side, however, once you get past the acquisition of all-world starter Max Scherzer, they have done little else. They watched Marcus Stroman, Noah Syndergaard depart from the starting rotation. They saw Aaron Loup cash in on his stellar bullpen efforts and no one was lining up to anoint Jeurys Familia as their new closer. There are holes in both the starting and relieving sides that need to be addressed.
Now let's come back to that concept of merely tweaking the roster. Does that mean you are after more buy-low candidates like last year's Taijuan Walker or seeing to fill in middle inning relief with veteran but inexpensive acquisitions like Tony Watson or Steve Cishek? Or do you think they will try to parlay some combination of Jeff McNeil, Dominic Smith and J.D. Davis along with some minor league poker chips into more conspicuous solutions? At this point we really don't know.
I'm not looking for the Mets to become the Big Red Machine with an All Star at nearly every starting position, but by the same token I don't want them to expect that a two-man unhealthy pitching duo of Jacob deGrom and Max Scherzer is enough to win regularly. The same holds true for the pen. Even if Edwin Diaz morphs into the type of pitcher he was in Seattle, he can't do it alone.
Whether these vacancies are filled via free agency or trade, the fact is that the Mets need to fortify their pitching far more than they need to enhance their hitting. They spent a lot of time and effort doing that already. Now it's time to find folks who can retire hitters like they were 2021 Mets at the plate.
They took the paint brush out of Steve Van Gogh's hand when the lockout started.
ReplyDeleteI disagree with the SNY.TV article. I think there is still some significant improvements to come, post-lockout.
I don't want to postulate on which players that might be. I do think when opening day comes, we'll be a good bit happier with the roster than we are now.
I know Tom wants more bats.
ReplyDeleteHave you looked at the condition of this rotation lately?
We have had some health concerns lately, but Steve Cohen might as well buy a hospital in Port St. Lucie to house what is going to go through there this season.
Pitching, Pitching, and more Pitching. You can never have enough. Injuries happen. Especially pitching injuries.
ReplyDelete5 projected Day 1 or Day 2 starters have already lost their 2022 season to surgery.
DeleteFIVE
During the Wilpon years I saw them trading top prospects for mediocre middle relievers. This time around we have some excess quality of major league players like McNeil, Smith and Davis who should net better than a 4.50 ERA reliever or a 4.00 starter.
ReplyDeleteThe interview John Smoltz had with Garrison Bryant the other day had Smoltz gently but clearly push back on baseball not letting guys pitch to their strengths, but try to throw through walls and pitch as the analytics say the hitter is disadvantaged at - so, a hitter may have trouble with high strikes, but Smoltz was a low ball pitcher, so he'd pitch low, but today they'd pretty much demand he throw high to that guy. All turning pitchers into commodities with shorter shelf lives.
ReplyDeleteSO baseball ends up with a pitcher supply chain problem. Mets used 38 pitchers in 2021, 15 in 1986 and 1969. Baseball doesn't care. It sends guys out throwing all out, and schedule their surgeries in advance. Only the surgeons win.
If Seaver pitched today, he would have needed Tommy John Surgery - at least once.
Randy Jones won a Cy Young once and came in 2nd once. Today, he'd never have made the majors. 1933 career innings, 735 Ks? Forget about it.
ReplyDeleteOn the topic of roster moves to be made after the lockout ends, I tend to agree that there won't be any additional big ticket free agency signings. I do not look for Kris Bryant, Clayton Kershaw, Carlos Rodon, or any of the top relievers to sign with the Mets.
ReplyDeleteThe signings were all done knowing that the lockout was coming and they wanted to get the core roster set.
What I do look for is a trade that will involve of the three aforementioned 'extras' that will return pitching.
Bill, we need lots of pitching still. Will Oller and Josh Walker and perhaps Connor Grey fill some of the gap? I think yes. But if they want to win a pennant, they need a few hundred more innings of top quality pitching - whether by trade or by FA signings.
ReplyDeleteCole Gorden could help as well.
ReplyDeleteI agree with you Tom. I just feel like there won't be any more 'top' signings. You can never have enough pitching. It would surprise me if they didn't trade for rotation help before April
ReplyDeleteHere's a guy who I'd like to see in the Hall of Fame:
ReplyDeleteBrett Butler, career .290, .377 OBP, 1,309 runs scored, 558 steals, 131 triples. One thing hurt him: he only had 366 MLB plate appearances and a .230 average before his age 26 season. Hard to make up for a slow career start. He started his career in the minors at age 22 and hit .340 over parts of 4 minor league seasons. Just started too late. I still think he belongs in the Hall. 49 career WAR, 23rd rounder.