Suppose the Mets were theoretically playing first place baseball with a long seven-game winning streak, the trade deadline approaches to coincide with the long awaited return of Jacob deGrom, and aside from a few minor tweaks the club did nothing to improve its offense nor its bullpen? How would fans react?
Well, Tom Brennan yesterday offered up the opinion that (if you'll forgive the one-hit-wonder reference of Timbuk 3), the future's so bright I gotta wear shades. That is entirely a glass half-full perspective that after watching the Mets peddle away their top prospects in the recent past that this time they intend to hang onto them rather than having a Javier Baez sequel.
As the trade deadline approaches (and it's entirely possible something will happen during my nighttime while I'm here in Malaysia 12 hours ahead of the folks in New York, but as it stands right now the additions of Daniel Vogelbach and Tyler Naquin may be all that comes into Queens from outside the organization.
I'm not going to rehash the pros and cons of these two professional ballplayers, but even the most ardent Mets fans would have to agree that neither of them is in the same league as Josh Bell, Willson Contreras, CJ Cron or even a seemingly diminished Nelson Cruz.
To read the media lately it appears the high hopes for the team barring any 11th hour surprises that folks like the surprising (and former Met) Brandon Drury might be the buy-low caliber of player the team could potentially target. Drury is having a fantastic full time season for the hapless Cincinnati Reds and with free agency pending it's also entirely possible that they would rather get something than nothing for him at this last opportunity of 2022.
However, let's assume for the moment that David Robertson, Michael Fulmer, Aaron Loup, Andrew Chafin and other bullpen reinforcements are similarly off the table. That would leave the Mets with what you see now plus the soon returning trio of Trevor May, James McCann and Tylor Megill joining the 391-deGromless Mets as August and September additions to the roster. Is that as bad as it seems?
Well, right now former starters David Peterson and Tylor Megill appear to be slated to shift to the bullpen. That would mean some of the shakier options (particularly when multiple innings are required) will not be expected to carry the load while standing on shaky ground. That's a good thing if they can make the relief pitcher adjustment.
David Peterson got off to a rough start after enjoying a streak of extended success in the rotation. However, everyone is entitled to an off-day. Megill is still an open question and may be seen in about 2+ weeks. Trevor May is really the key man here as he carried a heavy workload of 68 games during his Mets debut season in 2021. Having him back will fill Jeremy Hefner and Buck Showalter with quite a bit more confidence than they have in the suspects occupying seats in the bullpen right now.
So on the pitching side, the Mets would appear to be in pretty good shape even without external resources entering the clubhouse. However, the right handed half of the DH platoon is still a wide open question as JD Davis couldn't even hit against the subpar starter like Patrick Corbin. Having Billy Eppler not pull the trigger on someone to complement new acquisition Daniel Vogelbach seems short sighted.
Some believe an imminent promotion of Mark Vientos is happening and his right handed bat is indeed looking formidable in the minors. This year he's looking pretty productive with 19 HRs and 54 RBIs in about a half season's worth of ABs. However, not everyone enters Citifield and immediately turns it up a notch to face the stronger caliber of pitching, fielding and base running found in the majors.
Well, this speculation will all shortly come to an end as the trade deadline is rapidly approaching. No one can confidently predict what will happen. All we can do is speculate what if nothing does...what do the Mets do to engineer August and September baseball in preparation for the national stage in October.
Reese
ReplyDeleteMy thoughts on yesterday's events post up at 9
Mets get Darin Ruf for JD Davis + Szapucki/Seymour/Zwack
ReplyDeleteI HATE this trade, the guy is 36, I've never heard of him, he's batting .216,
and the 3 prospects were all having fine seasons.
FU*K
meanwhile, Drury went to the Pods, and Robertson to the Phils
Every one of our competitors have improved WAY more than us.
Today, the Phillies just put themselves into post-season and the Mets
just blew their chances to win the World series.
Teams that went all-in like the Padres and Phils have clearly won the
trade deadline.
Meanwhile, Drury went to the Pods, and Robertson & THOR to the Phils
Every one of our competitors have improved WAY more than us.
Boston and Cubs chose to let their walk-year players walk than
accept what we were offering.
What the Mets desparately needed was a LRP. They screwed up not signing Chafin
after the lockout ended, after having screwed up not retaining Aaron Loup. They again screwed up today, not acquiring Chafin again. They could have had him for nothing but $ back in the spring. Now they having nothing from the left side for the rest of the season and post-season except Jo-Ellie. That's not going to cut it against any good team...our Achilles heal
Likewise, after screwing up by not signing Realmuto last year, and depriving the Phils of him, they gave a long-term contract to an impotent McCann instead. Then repeated the same screwup by not signing Schwarber after the lockout, and depriving the Phils once again. Now, needing a bat, they had to give up 3 prospects, when they could have solved this after the lockout. They did well before the lockout, then just quit.
Now, with all their oponents having improved hughly at the trade deadline, the Dodgers and Padres are at a higher level then they are, and I predict that the Mets don't even get to sniff the World Series.
So.
DeleteYou didn't like this?
I'd say that Nickel got his 10 cents worth on that comment.
ReplyDeleteThere will be a lot of speculation today about the Mets' bullpen. Just getting Givens doesn't look like a really strong move. I understand that we will soon have May, and eventually May, Peterson, and Megill in the pen. But last night looked like a disaster when Ngosek and Lopez turned a close 1-1 game against a AAA team into an easy WSH victory. Ouch! That's what our pen will look like if there are more injuries to the renewed pitching staff in the second half. Pray for health!
The Ruf trade really was stupid. I believe this is why Eppler never got another job: he cannot negotiate a deal. Ruf is 36 years old and he traded away a disappointing hitter, but three young pitchers? One wasn’t enough? Zwack is old for his league, ok. Szapucki may not be more than a reliever, ok. And Seymour was merely in A ball doing well, ok. But all three with Davis? And he couldn’t get Drury or Grossman? Why not keep these guys and bring up Vientos?
ReplyDeleteGus, could not agree more. Eppler seems to be Ineppler.
ReplyDeleteNickel, could not agree more - objectively, we improved, but did so much less than our adversaries.
ReplyDeleteLet’s see what the three platoons do. I think they’ll work. Givens and May should be solid additions to the BP. Lugo is looking better. Maybe Peterson and Megillah will click. Key is can Sherzer and DeGrom be Aces,if they are I like our chances.
ReplyDeleteNext season,catcher Alvarez,3B Baty,DH Vientos,LF Mauricio. Don’t worry,be happy.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad we have Ruf. He mashes LHP, that's the idea.
ReplyDeleteHe's 36, so what. Is he signed for the next 5 years or something?
The guys we sent are fringe at best.
Our system sucks, which was the main problem. Eight years of Sandy.
Jimmy