While recently we looked at the difficult decision making the front office must undertake regarding extending free agent contracts vs. letting folks sell their services to a competitor and use the contractual salary obligation to pay for someone else. Truly Billy Eppler and company will earn their significant salaries figuring out which players are critical to winning and should not walk away while also concluding who is not worth the dollars or health risk to place money at risk with a long term commitment. Remember, they're still paying Bobby Bonilla to this day!
Looking down at AAA to see who might be ready to take that next step, the poster child is most certainly Mark Vientos. While he's been shuffled around the field a bit trying to figure out his best path to the majors (while hiding a less than stellar defensive game), there's no question the bat is banging loudly and suggesting his time has come.
As much as people are advocating that the Mets solve two problems by promoting catcher Francisco Alvarez to address the weak effort the club has gotten from the trio of James McCann, Tomas Nido and Patrick Mazeika, the fact is that his defensive game has not caught up to how well he swings the bat.
Other hitters on the Syracuse roster seem perhaps to top out as bench or utility players rather than future regulars. You're not always right in that assessment. Witness what Brandon Drury did this year first with Cincinnati and then with San Diego.
He is hitting north of .270 with 21 HRs in little more than a half season's worth of ABs. You can't always guess correctly as the Mets erred in letting him walk away from the organization.
Players in this next tier include the occasionally promoted Travis Blankenhorn. He is just a .255 career hitter in the minors and now at age 26 his prospect status is aged veteran. Still, he's hitting over .280 this season for Syracuse with 13 HRs and 48 RBIs, so those numbers would probably play well in a backup role for an infielder.
Even less promising is former first round pick from St. Louis, Nick Plummer. The man has fought through various injuries until he was finally cut loose by the Redbirds. The Mets gave him a major league contract and he's responded by hitting rather poorly, showing neither the batting average nor power that would suggest he's over the hump physically or he simply isn't as good as his draft position would suggest.
Lower down that tier would be Kahlil Lee, a speedy outfielder who once stole 53 bases in the Texas League, but he's not seemingly been able to address the higher level of pitching in AAA and very briefly in the majors. This year for Syracuse he's hitting just .197 and not really running as they would have expected. He's probably on the fringe of being released.
One name not too familiar to all but the most ardent farm team geeks is Daniel Palka. The lefty hitting outfielder and first baseman has clubbed over 20 HRs on four occasions in the minors while maintaining an aggregate .268 batting average.
I'm not going to delve into the pitching side of things as it gets mighty ugly rather quickly. Despite Tom Brennan's advocacy of promoting strikeout whiz Bryce Montes de Oca who has 35 Ks in just 22 IP, he also has given up 14 BBs over that same stretch which helps contribute to an ERA north of 4.00.
The names you know already from various stints in the majors and minors -- David Peterson, Tylor Megill, Stephen Nogosek and Yoan Lopez are what they are. The first two could prove to be capable middle-of-the-rotation starters. Nogosek might prove pen-worthy. Lopez is at best an unknown variable.
One unknown name is Locke St. John who came up through the Detroit Tigers organization before he transitioned to the Rangers, the Cubs and then over to the Mets team structure. He has always struck out close to 1 batter per IP and his career ERA is 3.44 (with a 2022 number of 3.24 in Syracuse).
It would seem that any future transactions the Mets front office make involving bringing back prospects had better look long and hard about improving the next generation of pitching.
Thomas Szapucki, warts and all, was the best of what was in AAA and he's no longer part of the Mets. After that it's a close-your-eyes and throw a dart manner of choosing who to entrust on the mound.
It would seem that Eppler and company have their work cut out for them.
On a daily basis, some fan on Facebook posts something about Dom Smith who, since, mid July last year, has 0 HRs and 2 minor league homers. Meanwhile, Daniel Palka has 20 HRs in 280 at bats, 54 RBIs, and a decent average. Fans should not be asking, "will the Mets call Smith back up" (ans. NO, at least until Sept 1), but "should we call up Palka, and not Smith, if we're planning to call up a 1B/OF"?
ReplyDeleteKhalil Lee and Plummer are failed experiments. Lee had a .450 on base % in AAA last year, so one wondered if he could process from there, but he regressed badly.
Alvarez? If he is not called up this year, I find it very hard to believe he won't be called up for opening day 2023. His catching is OK and obviously will get better day by day.
Vientos has played in just 159 games in 2021 and 2022, hitting 44 HRs. Over the past 2 seasons, he's missed about 60 games. He's missed 30 games this year. Alonso, including Arizona, played in 159 games in 2018 alone. I think that season he missed zero games. Mark needs to stop missing games. Period.
Of course, one guy who played for Syracuse this year hit .352 in 19 games, with a .446 OBP. His name? Wyatt Young.
Baty hitless in his AAA debut last night.
Nice summary of the AAA club. We are still early in the Cohen plan to build strength in the minors, and there are some great draft choices and other talent heading up through the ranks. I suspect that next year's summary is going to be rosier. In the mean time, we have a heckuva MLB team after a long wait.
ReplyDeleteSo, Plummer didn’t do much huh? Do we recollect that he hit a game tying HR in the ninth and then another one two days later to ice a game? He was playing everyday and producing. When he sat, he lost his edge. How do you explain the failures in Syracuse too, when he was just fine in St. Louis’ minors the year before?
ReplyDeleteToo, I saw JD Davis playing third base for the Giants last night. It’s amazing how other teams can take a player that has some warts and overlook them while getting production - like Wilmer Flores - and on the Mets if you aren’t a Hall of Famer, you have to go. How is that working out for us?
As for the AAA pitching, Butto was just promoted, Orze is there and Josh Walker is rehabbing. I beg to differ that it’s a dessert.
I wish I knew the status of Vientos. He's the only person I have being promoted form this team by opening day.
ReplyDeleteThe biggest problem with AA and AAA Mets is the two teams' pitching - but this year, a good bit of that has to do with raiding the minors to fill in capably for the losses of Max, Jake, Megill, May and Smith. Then, using a decent pitcher from AAA, Szapucki, as a chip.
ReplyDeleteGus, it is a dilemma, how some guys on Mets sink (Smith, Davis this year). Davis was up 207 times as a Met, had a 5 RBI game, and 16 RBIs otherwise. Bad year. Dom? They should have left in AAA and let him get torrid and then return. He did have a 3 hit game the other night, but Syracuse scored 18, so he likely took advantage of terrible pitching.
Plummer's brief Mets contribution was truly timely, but then he cratered and is just .225 in Syracuse. Can't blame anyone but himself for .225.
Wilmer? They decided it was WIlmer or JDD. Probably should have kept Wilmer and traded JDD high, but that's 20-20.
Vogelbach, Naquin, and Ruf have been the elixir. The offensive engine now roars. If you said to most Mets fans a week before those acquisitions, "what do you think, should we skip Soto and Get V, N and R?" very few fans would have signed on. That's baseball - they've been great.
Mack, I think this year and last, Vientos has missed 60 games. Alonso in 2018 missed no games. That is a Pete Trademark - always ready. Pretty much demands his name is on the line up card every day.
ReplyDeleteVientos might make it if he can cut the K’s but he’s no Alonzo.Big Pete will be a MVP some day.
ReplyDeleteTrue about Pete. Just keep in mind, though, that Vientos right now is 20 months younger than Pete was when he made his MLB debut. Pete also did not miss a year due to pandemic, like Vientos did. So. I still feel Vientos can become a big time MLB power hitter. Another Alonso, though? I won't rule that out, but...he'll have to want it as much as Pete. Pete is 1000% focused on excellence. And he is ready to play every single day.
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