How difficult is it to watch the Mets these days?
Well, it seems that there are days when the hitting seems to be working but the pitchers revert to their Little League nightmare days when throwing strikes became as difficult as settling a centuries old territorial dispute.
Then there are other days when the pitchers are dominating against the best hitters they face, making them guess wrong on location, velocity and spin. It’s on these days that the hitters also channel their inner pee wee baseball days when getting hit by a pitch was a desirable strategy to getting on base since swinging and missing came far too naturally.
Fielding has also had its days in the shade when professional ballplayers seem to forget how to catch, how to throw, how to circle under a pop fly and how to choose which base to receive the attempted yet errant throw.
Through it all everyone keeps wondering why certain players are in the lineup when they fail repeatedly and what kind of blackmail do they have against the youngsters in Syracuse who are hammering the ball yet not getting a chance to see if minor league success can replicate in the majors.
About the only thing the club is doing well this year is stealing bases led by the efforts of still struggling Starling Marte. They say that speed never goes into a slump. The same can’t be said for batting averages, for home runs, for Gold Glove fielding and for intelligent play on the field.
On the pitching side control is often the Achilles heal for guys on the mound who can’t seem to spot the ball in a location that is either a strike or appears to be one which induces the opposing hitters to take full swings at it without making solid contact. Sometimes only one of the pitches is working and just as soon as the pitcher realizes it so too do the hitters. We’ve all seen way too many free passes issued to guys at the plate just as we have seen fat, unmoving pitches right down the middle ripe for plastering.
Yes, in a below .500 season it’s very difficult to get enthusiastic about the team when so many things are going wrong. The issue now (and perhaps more than ever) is what the front office going to do to change the narrative of the misbegotten season.
More and more baseball copy is being written about the best approach for Billy Eppler to take to steer the club into a new and positive direction. I won’t reiterate the buy vs. sell arguments any more than I will revive the “promote the kids” mantra. No one is buying tickets to see more of Daniel Vogelbach.
There are only about two weeks left for the club to either throw its oars in the water, throw its excess baggage overboard or determine if everyone over 30 who isn’t at the top of his game must make way for an unrealistic magic fountain of youth from Syracuse. All we know is if the team isn’t going to win then at least make a concerted effort to make the team interesting once again.
And then, they win 2 straight, and the “maybe, just maybe” folks start coming back into view. Odd season indeed.
ReplyDeleteSomewhere, Edwin Diaz is rehabbing.
DJ Stewart may push Vogie to the back of the AB pile. Which is a good increment.
ReplyDeleteDJ Stewart has 26 HRs over the aggregate equivalent of a full season of play (well, now 27). The batting average, however, is 2023 Alonso-like, so I am not sure this AAAA player is any better than Vogie. I'd rather see Mauricio or Vientos get a REAL shot at the role.
ReplyDeleteI agree that it is very difficult to watch and even harder to explain. These same players have been capable of so much more in recent seasons.
ReplyDeletePitching stinks
ReplyDeleteEnd of story
I think the moment the white flag goes up, Vientos and Mauricio are on a plane. Two straight wins has again delayed that process. Some will say, “we’ve won 8 of 12, we have a chance to make a run.” 90% likely they are wrong.
ReplyDeleteNot just pitching. Pete .293 in late April. But now .205. Geesh!
ReplyDeleteI remember suggesting a category during the Dave Kingman days, "Can he hit his weight?" Pete Alonso is below that threshold right now.
ReplyDeletePete has barely hit Twiggy’s weight over the past 12 weeks. Last 30 games, .140? Every Mets club needs someone to play the Nido role. Right now, it’s hitless Pete. By the way, Nido in 68 PAs in the minors? 3 RBIs. Add in his Mets #s and he’s got 4.
ReplyDeleteWe scored 11 runs last nite and it came down to the last Sox's hitter in the 9th. W/O a BP we're done. Alvy's the "it" guy and boy do we need him.
ReplyDelete2 more hits Wednesday night…Superstar.
ReplyDelete