4/19/23

Reese Kaplan -- Small Signs of Positive Mets Things Now Happening


Sometimes when a team has not been performing at its best is worth considering small things that point in the right direction rather than focusing too much on the issues that suggest the below-average play has become endemic.

Take, for example, the recent game against the Dodgers on Monday night when it appeared whatever could go wrong for the boys from Queens would indeed happen, but then other little things added up to baby steps toward steady improvement.

Most folks watching who saw the first Freddie Freeman home run in the very first inning were already having Braves flashbacks from the many times their former first baseman had buried the Mets with the long ball.  David Peterson looked absolutely dejected even though it was a solo homer and only resulted in a very early 1-0 deficit.  


Then came the second inning when the Mets received a solid home run blow from someone they've been waiting to wake up, Daniel Vogelbach.  Yes, the club has benefited somewhat from his positive OBP resulting from his many walks, but his paycheck is for putting the ball over the fence as he has tallied as many as 30 in a single season in 2019 while slugging for the Mariners.  Obviously the home run power is there, but last year's 6 HRs in a Mets uniform suggested that he was not necessarily doing all that he could when it came to driving the ball with authority.  This home run on Monday night reaffirmed temporarily what Vogelbach can do when the pitcher makes a mistake.  Between not swinging at borderline pitches and clobbering ones that cross the plate, the big man can be a factor as a platoon hitter and everyone is already hoping his first dinger is a positive sign of things to come.


This particular game also featured the first major league at bats for searing hot Syracuse Met Brett Baty.  He has that indefinable "look" in his eyes that suggests to you that like Jeff McNeil, line drives and long balls are possible at any given time.  He did respond in this game by providing a run-producing hard hit ball to right and also made a nice throw from third base.  Luis Guillorme came into the game for defense late which was not necessarily a bad thing, but in his first appearance for the Mets and pushing Eduardo Escobar out of a starting role it seemed like one of those little things that simply clicked.

Now to make room for Baty's promotion the Mets placed speedster Tim Locastro on the IL with back spasms.  Cynics whispered aloud about how the timing seemed oddly coincidental or perhaps not even real enough to warrant more than a day or two of rest, but manager Buck Showalter supported the story by stating how Locastro had been feeling the discomfort for quite some time and the move was made out of both necessity and luxury as Locastro needed time to recover while the Mets needed a roster spot.  

What's also interesting is how the Mets plan to use Locastro's spot going forward.  It is entirely possible the club will show more of Tommy Pham in the outfield after he'd been mostly relegated to right handed DH duties.  It could also mean seeing Jeff McNeil out there more often with second base being handled by the sure-handed Guillorme or the less defensive oriented player on thin ice, Eduardo Escobar, who has had a grand total of 140 games at the keystone position amounting to over 900 innings of play there.  Of course, Pham could move to DH with McNeil remaining at 2B while Escobar is the one assuming half of the DH role.  For now it's all too soon to tell.


Another little thing that is getting some highlight reels is the increasingly positive defensive play from weak corner outfielder to strong centerfielder by newly long-term Met Brandon Nimmo.  It seems in every other game or so you have a video replay of a running or diving catch that is rapidly pushing Nimmo from an adequate glove and outfielder into one against whom other teams are starting to recite four letter frustrations when he does what he's increasingly often doing best.  Oh yeah...he's hitting well over .300 as well.  

Pitching is going to contribute to the Mets winning or losing more so than there slow starting offense (and almost non-existent power after a few bats in the middle of the order).  However, the signs of life support are starting to filter in for the offense enough that an occasional clunker like Peterson's game against the Dodgers won't automatically keep the club from adding another W to the team record and the push towards the top of the division.

11 comments:

Tom Brennan said...

They need to transition to youth. Move away from the old and rickety.

Mack Ade said...

Transitioning to youth starters is not really an option this year... or next year.

I'll write about this more on Friday.

As for the start of this team, check the winning percentage vs. the rest of the year shows this team has been a success so far this year.

Marlins one back of Mets

Gary Seagren said...

Mack Ohtani and Urias would be as Sara Evans sang "A Real Fine Place to Start" (great song) because if Uncle Stevie wants to catch Atlanta at any time the near future we'll need bold moves and finding out now about the big 4 prospects.

Mack Ade said...

If the Mets want to remove the first live for the west coast, trade 2 mid size prospect at the all-star break plus pick up remains of his contract and get him in the house.

The Angels would do this. They don't want this guy playing down the street

Then the Mets could work on him in house

bill metsiac said...

Mack, do you really believe that Ohtani could be had for "2 mid-size peospects" at the break?

Even as a rental, the competition to get him would be intense. It would probably include virtually every contending team, and the bidding would raise the price well above 2 mid-size prospects.

Mack Ade said...

I do believe it for a rental

Anonymous said...

Mack:

I would agree with your above commentary, but this Mets team's management is really asleep. They do not get it. The owner thinks that the more he is willing to spend, the better his team will be, which isn't always the case. Japan's Roki Sasaki throws a gorgeous 102 MPH fastball and is 8 years younger than Shohie Ohtani. Ohtani will cost the farm, and is 29 years old and will demand a 5-7 year contract, and get it from some team out there. His hitting is good, but .250 BA career.

All management has to do is to see that this lineup in the field right now is actually the optimal one:

1B Alonso 2B Mauricio SS Lindor 3B Baty LF McNeil CF Nimmo RF Marte C Nido* DH Vientos (seven out of nine homegrown Mets. The way it should be for a really good organization, if your team scouts and develops well.)

They just cannot see that Mack, that Baty, Mauricio, and Vientos are more talented than Escobar, Canha, and Vogelbach. And they probably never will so don't count on it. This is exactly the time to be getting the best deserving younger players in there playing regularly, not September.

It is sort of similar to the NYK right now.

Hanging in with Mitch Robinson (the dunk machine) at center with his big 2 pts (in 21 minutes of play) last night in their loss to Cleveland. Everything in Knickland is in place for the "run to the roses", except the center position.

I might prefer instead going with Jericho Sims and Obi-won Toppin at the NYK's center position with Cleveland's center Jarrett Allen also only being 6'9", and with he and ex-Knick Robin Lopez only scoring a combined 13 pts. last night.

Whatever happened to the 20 pts. a game centers? Vanished into another portal I suppose. Hmm.

Live and learn.

* Tomas Nido - I have watched a ton of video on Tomas batting. He is arm strong enough to hit for more serious power consistently as on occasion we have all seen. But his legs are not allowing him to be that 20+ HR guy every season. They slightly interfere with the fluidity of his swing, keeping him somewhat off-balance, hitting mostly with his arms instead.

My advice would be to simplify the leg stride, lose the toe tap, and stride into the ball fluidly to maximize the swing, so that the whole body mechanics of the swing (arms and legs) are all working on the same side at the same time, and not slightly against one another. It needs slight simplification to preserve maximal and complete fluidity, in my opinion.

There's a nice slow-motion batting video (Best MLB Swings-Slow Mo), and a short one called (50/50 PVC Hitting Drill) on youtube as well. Tomas is actually a power hitter a bit in disguise right now. It's there, we've seen it.

He absolutely has excellent arm strength and could be this type of a more consistent power batter. I'm a big fan of Tomas Nido's and believe in him completely.

Mack Ade said...

This is a Mets site.

Please refrain from Knicks news and other teams as well.

Thank you

Rds 900. said...

I agree. Otherwise I'll be forced to share my thoughts on the Rangers

Anonymous said...

What about my Jets? J E T S what if they finally get Rogers?

Anonymous said...

Omar Narváez

Is his calf still hurting or can the calf run some now?

This is why it may be wise to keep 70% of your team's core players under 100.