As the calendar flips today to the month of August the sound of the ticking clock echos loudly as each passing minute drives the club closer to the thus far minor moves made to improve the roster prior to the trade deadline ending post-season ballplayer additions.
Actually, it took over 20 years after Whitey Herzog challenged then-commissioner Peter Ueberroth about roster manipulation in October due to injury. Like most commissioners, he promised to fix the issue but it took over 20 years until the next CBA happened in 2007 for the changes to take place.
The first one seemed almost to go in the opposite direction in which teams were no longer required to replace like players with like players. That change would seem to open up more fraud to replace a pitcher with a player or a player with a pitcher.
The corresponding section of the new rules meant that injuries had to be non-chronic and verifiable by the MLB Commissioner's office to be eligible to make changes at all. This change was indeed a step in the right direction, but does hold the stipulation that the incoming player must have been on the 40-man roster by August 31st and not some hot rookie simply added to bolster a team's chances.
Right now the hefty Daniel Vogelbach is winning the hearts and minds of fans as he's looked decent in a role as a lefty DH and frankly many fans are just enamored with someone who does not fit the mold of what a professional athlete playing baseball does with his bat.
Some of the folks who are eternally optimistic are preparing for the Plan C storyline that the returning players who have been out with injury include folks like Jacob deGrom, Tylor Megill, Trevor May and others which make the addition of pitching not quite the high priority it once seemed.
However, the flip side of that -- improving the offense -- doesn't have a corresponding returning army of now-healthy players to supplant JD Davis from his role as the right handed half of the DH spot in the lineup. The acquisition of Tyler Naquin shoved popular journeyman Travis Jankowski off the MLB roster yet Naquin is not the type of defensive player who could help the team in late innings the way that Jankowski could.
Consequently, the other shoe has not yet dropped. Lately the emphasis has been on right handed hitters like the Boston's JD Martinez and Baltimore's Trey Mancini along with the unlikely probability of a Willson Contreras/David Robertson deal taking place unless the Mets grossly overpay.
CJ Cron has occasionally been mentioned as a possibility as well, but after his best ever season in 2021 laying the groundwork for what appears to be an even better 2022, the price to obtain him may be prohibitive since he's under contract for 2023 as well at a very modest $7.25 million salary.
Of course, the Mets front office has been less leak prone under the current administration than it had been under other GMs and owners. It's entirely possible that Eppler, Alderson and Cohen have discussed someone not yet filling the blogs and print media with pointless speculation.
As the hours pass and people start watching the minutes, everyone is wondering who is going to be the new Yoenis Cespedes who can push the club over the top as the car loving outfielder did when he came to the Mets from Detroit back in that World Series year.
Some live by the "go for it all" philosophy that no one should be untouchable in the quest for a trophy. Others are at the polar opposite extreme who vehemently refuse to allow potential future major leaguers go for short term gains.
Eppler, Alderson and Cohen need to find the balance between these two somewhat valid but inflexible positions to make the early groundwork trades look even better once the rest of the action (if any) actually does take place.
Can the Mets win it all, as constituted, AND keep their top prospects? That is the key question we will soon find out the answer to.
ReplyDeleteI think that adding Vogelbach and Naquin closed the hitting gap which was big enough to cause any team's offense to sputter.
Maybe there is hope that McCann will constitute an upgrade offensively, too, at catcher.
Me? I'd like to keep our main kids - if Khalil Lee goes, though, I will shed no tears.
I share Tom's wishes about keeping the Big 6.
ReplyDeleteThe platoon system seems to be working for the Mets. Check out Guillorme and Escobar's stats to confirm this.
Frankly. With May returning this week and McGill around the corner might not even need an RP
Mack, Montes de Oca still has to show me consistency and reduced walks, but he is on my radar screen. 27 Ks in 13 innings in AAA? Edwin sort of thing. Maybe September 1, if his August is as good as his July.
ReplyDeleteTom
DeleteI think he is currently down the pecking order for the 2022 pen
Another development at AAA is that Szapucki has been used in relief lately, with 2 one-inning scoreless appearances over the last few days.
ReplyDeleteIf he continues on this path, and we don't add a veteran LHRP in trade,he could be the needed replacement for J-Rod.
As Mack said, we may not need to trade for a RP, with May and Megill due back.
Lugo looks like the guy we had in the recent past, and Otto has been better than expected.Along with May, they can be a fine setup trio.
Add the surprising Trevor Williams and the very encouraging Hunter, and subtract J-Rod, and fill in with Medina, Montes de Oca, Szapucki et al, and I won't be upset without a trade.
I like the Vogelbach addition - more on that coming in my Thursday morning post. Naquin I don't yet understand - I'm with Reese on the opinion that Jankowski will be missed as a defensive outfielder with great speed. If only he hit his weight...
ReplyDeleteAs for the speculation on the Mets not making a big trade at the deadline, I concur with the idea that they should place great value on some of their top prospects, but I also don't think that it is wise to be complacent at the deadline. The Mets are great this year, but they are not the best team in baseball. I expect that their rivals for that distinction will all make moves that improve their club, which would create more separation.
Yes, Petersen and Megill will make the pen better. But that's assuming our "big five" who will finally now pitch in sequence will stay healthy. That's probably a bad assumption. We need a strong set-up man. We need a catcher with a batting average above .240 until Alvarez is ready. Make the Cubs trade.
I think a dark horse candidate the Mets might trade for is Wilmer for the RH DH platoon spot. Would love to have him back
ReplyDeleteWould love to see Wilmer back.
ReplyDeleteGetting back to the Contreras/Robertson deal, I agree we shouldn't overpay, but there's no reason why we should.
ReplyDeleteJust as it only takes one more run than your opponent to win a game, we don't have to bid against ourselves here.
The Cubs have to get what they can before the pair walks,and all it takes to get them is the proverbial "one dollar more".
If someone else wants to overpay, walk away. If the highest bid is reasonable, we just have to top it by that proverbial dollar.
And it doesn't have to be a package deal for both. If we only get one of them, it shouldn't cost much.
Wonder what Wilmer thinks.of that idea.
ReplyDeleteI like the Wilmer deal, too. He's never been a great fielder, but he'd fit in that platoon DH role. Would JD and/or Dom be enough?
ReplyDeleteI love Wilmer, but time to let him go. The team has changed and all that will happen is Flores will be nitpicked to death for not being a different player. If they are in fact expecting to promote Vientos after the deadline, I’m willing to give the kid a chance.
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