With last night’s loss to Washington, the Mets have now finished the first 20% of their season at 21-11 (32 games of 162). This becomes a good point to reflect on how things have played out so far this year and to think about how we would like to see the rest of the year play out. With 4/5 of the season to go, it is waaaaay too early to predict outcomes. The best run teams look at their past successes and failures, take confidence from the successes, and learn from the failures but put all behind them and focus on the next challenge.
There are a lot of things in this category, but
here are my top ones:
The Negatives:
- Two incredible multi-run 9th inning comebacks. The 5 run ninth against the central division leading Cardinals and the 7 run ninth against the rival Phillies were thrilling to watch. But more than that, it strengthened the team’s confidence that they are never out of a game. The Mets were among the league leaders in late inning scoring, but these two victories will leave a lasting “can-do” mindset throughout the summer.
- Buck Showalter has created an environment where everyone contributes. He has not left anyone languishing on the bench letting their skills atrophy. He has rotated players through the DH spot, given Smith, Guillorme, and Davis some spot starts in the infield, and has gotten everyone some rest. Most of all, no one gets special treatment. Alonso and Lindor take days off just like the rest of ‘em. This all contributes to a strong “team” attitude that will pay dividends later in the season.
- The starting pitching has done very well without deGrom in there. Megill has shown real mental toughness and refined his art of pitching. Excluding last night’s ugly 2 innings, he has been a bright spot this year. Scherzer and Bassitt have turned in some great pitching performances as expected, but their greatest contribution to the team could be their intense focus on the game. There is a constant conversation going on amongst the staff on the bench about how to get guys out – my projection is that this will lead to a continuously improving staff throughout the year.
- McNeil is back! As many of us predicted, he has returned to the opportunist hitter that he was pre-2020. He hits the ball where it is pitched and knocks it to where the fielders aren’t. He has admitted that last year was consumed with hard-hit ball rates and launch angles and recognized that none of it helped him get on base against a shift. Now he is hitting in the mid-300’s, has 15 runs scored from the #8 position, and has a .395 OBP.
- The defense has been very good. Despite the batting woes of our two catchers, the battery has been solid this year. Teams are no longer entering games against the Mets with a strategy to run the bases, and pitchers are facing fewer runners in scoring position. In the late innings of many ballgames, Buck will insert Jankowski in left which leaves us with three center fielders patrolling the outfield (Jankowski, Nimmo, Marte). The infield has been good as well – have any of you noticed that when Eduardo Escobar fields a ground ball, EVERY throw hits the first baseman chest-high in the center of the base.
- Edwin Diaz is once again an elite closer. He has regained control of that 100mph fastball and wicked slider. With a 0.85 WHIP and a 15.23 K/9 he is dominating on the mound. When he closed out the combined no-hitter the crowd was electrified like it was the playoffs!
- The Mets have a high baseball IQ this year, and that is not something we are used to seeing in earlier teams. The base running is taking advantage of other teams’ weaknesses, the fielders are intuitively getting into the right position, and batters are having productive outs with men on base. Example: In Tuesday nights’ game, Lindor singles with a runner on second – Juan Soto overthrows the cutoff man, and LIndor immediately reads the throw and takes off for second. Example: Also in Tuesday night’s game, Washington hits a ball in the gap, Marte fields it and throws to the cutoff – McNeil is perfectly aligned, and in one continuous motion he takes the cutoff throw, crow-hops, and fires a strike to the plate beating the runner by a couple steps.
- Pete Alonso is leading the NL in RBI. Nimmo is 6th in OBP.
The Negatives:
Not a lot here, but there is always room for improvement:
- The Mets are not getting productive offense from the catcher or 3rd base positions. McCann (.196), Nido (.200), and Escobar (.216) are just not doing it at the plate, and with 32 games behind us this is more than just a slump. Much has been said about the production of the catchers, but despite his stellar fielding Escobar is going to have to start hitting or he will start losing playing time to Davis and Guillorme.
- Trevor May and Sean Reid-Foley have hit the injured list for prolonged assignments, joining deGrom in the subset of pitchers we could really use as the summer begins. If the Mets’ good fortunes are to continue, they can ill afford to lose much more of their pitching staff.
- Buck Showalter has been through a learning process with the pitching staff, and at times has made some questionable replacements. I think this is more about getting to see what the arms can do in certain situations than it is about poor decisions, so this is more of a caution than a problem.
- Many of the top Mets prospects are struggling in the minor leagues. It’s tough to put a finger on it, but there are several guys that we were looking forward to seeing at some point that are flirting with the Mendoza line in AAA.
Excellent post.
ReplyDeleteLeading the division by this many games takes the sting away from our limited downside.
My biggest concern is the lack of offensive production from Lindor.
21-11 - the plusses have to outweigh the minuses.
ReplyDeletelet's hope Escobar starts hitting. I did notice that Mark Vientos, whose lousy first month of 2021 was followed by sensational months, had a lousy first month this year, but his last 4 games, he's had 3 homers and been on base about 10 times. He could be looming as a possible call up in a month or two if other guys aren't getting the job done.
Interesting that Lindor's stats in 2022 closely mirror 2021. I hope he is better than a .235 hitter with a .325 OBP.
Mack, I had the game off most of last night, once they fell behind 8-3, but I did see Lindor swing right thru a 94 MPH fastball belt-high, right down Broadway. Barry Bonds would have launched that pitch into the water 9 of 10 times. That swing-and-miss concerned me. Make contact there.
ReplyDeleteIf I had a choice (money a non-issue) of having Nimmo, McNeil, or Lindor, that is the way I'd rank them. I just really have to wonder about Lindor.
He got that big contract after torching pitchers in spring training 2020. He slam-dunked the interview. He got the bucks. His numbers in the past 2 spring trainings are 88 at bats, 8 HRs, 25 RBIs, .340. But then....the real pitchers take over.
He played 45% of his games against weak-pitching bad teams in the AL Central before joining the Mets. His stats back then were therefore inflated. He needs to adjust.
That, anyway, is my take. I'm sticking with it. I hope he doesn't try to choke me for it. I will say one thing to Lindor....PROVE....ME....WRONG.
Guys, I agree that Lindor is underproducing offensively. The other thing that concerns me is some uncharacteristic errors in the field - and not on balls that no one else could reach - these have been 'normal' ground balls. His fielding percentage is .966 this year, which is way down from his average. He was a gold glove finalist last year.
ReplyDeleteI hate to speculate about specs, but maybe it is his contact lenses. He is always in glasses at post-game interviews, and sometimes you can have depth perception problems with corrective lenses.
NINE MORE YEARS IS THE PROBLEM and has been since he signed and I don't think any of us saw it coming so I guess Stevie just fell in love with him. Now we all figured we would be eating the last few years but now it could a serious chunk of Cohen coin.
ReplyDeleteGary the only thing to keep in mind is hitting is really down in baseball. I mean, Houston catchers are hitting .082!
ReplyDeleteThankfully, we have a DH. But yes, Lindor is worrisome.