If you took a poll to ask media and fans what the Mets' biggest problem to solve is right now, you'd get a variety of answers. Obviously they need more hitting. With Buck Showalter gone they need to secure a new field manager. No one knows the health of long term injured players like Edwin Diaz and Starling Marte. They need relief pitching. They need a DH. They need outfielders. All of these statements are very true.
The biggest issue, however, may be who forms the starting rotation (and who is going to lead them). These two questions are very different indeed.
Right now the givens for the fearsome five are well known. Kodai Senga exceeded even the most optimistic projections as an in-his-prime starting pitcher migrating to the major leagues from 10 years of playing in Japan. In the beginning there were a few adjustment starts, but by year end he finished leading the team in wins, had over 200 strikeouts and an ERA of just 2.98.
Yes, he is your current ace (which is somewhat ironic considering how giddy everyone was in the past offseason when the Mets had not one but two future Hall of Famers in their rotation who have since been put out to pasture).
The next one is also a no-brainer in Jose Quintana. After starting the season with a non-pitching injury that kept him shelved for half the season, the fact is that he earned his paycheck in the second half, delivering start after start of competitive pitching. On a stellar staff he might be a third starter, but as things sit right now he's number two.
Here's the scary part. That's it. The Mets enter the 2024 season with a two-man pitching rotation. Yes, they do have other options like David Peterson, Tylor Megill, Jose Butto and Joey Lucchesi, but in anyone's eyes they are at best emergency starters and not providing the quality and consistency needed for someone getting the ball every five days.
Consequently David Stearns and Billy Eppler have some major shopping to do. The question is who are they buying and how much of Steve Cohen's money will they be spending?
Leading off pretty much everyone's list is Yoshinobu Yamamoto, a 25 year old preparing to depart from the Orix Buffaloes and make his way into the majors. Given his somewhat slight stature of 5'10" and under 170 pounds you wouldn't think he'd throw very hard, but he hits above 95 regularly while using a split finger pitch to generate a lot of infield practice as well as swings and misses. His curve ball has an unusual release and the difference between it and the other two pitches make him a confounding hurler for batters to dominate.
In each of his past two seasons he's won the equivalent of Japan's Cy Young honors as well as MVP and his numbers suggest he might make it three straight this year. His control is better than only 4 current major league pitchers. He's going to be scouted heavily by pretty much all teams, but with Shohei Ohtani's pitching on the shelf for 2024, Yamamoto becomes the top free agent pitcher hailing from Japan.
Scouts say that as good as Senga is, he's considered a full grade better and should be the number one pitcher on any team he joins. Being a full five years younger and performing at a higher level, he's going to command a much bigger investment which got higher given Senga's dominant performance piquing curiosity and Ohtani's inability to pitch. Figure at least $25 million per season for 4-6 years.
Somewhat on the down low also hailing from Japan is 29 year old southpaw Shota Imanaga currently playing for the Yokohama DeNa Baystars. His biggest asset is control. While throwing four pitches in the low 90s is a good thing, it's his walk rate and use of all areas of the strike zone that resulted in a season long 2.26 ERA recently. Being a little older and less heavily scouted than Yamamoto, he would be an attractive and less costly option to consider.
On the domestic front there are plenty of options to consider but Mr. Cohen better be prepared to empty his wallet. Aaron Nola is a free agent and sticking it to the Phillies after they did the same to the Mets with Zack Wheeler and Taijuan Walker would be a nice thing indeed.
Julio Urias is a mega talented pitcher who seems to have decimated his desirability and future net worth with his ongoing domestic violence issues. Like former teammate Trevor Bauer before him, don't expect him to be fielding a bidding war from many teams if he's allowed to pitch at all.
Blake Snell is a good candidate to earn a Cy Young award at the exact right time as he hits free agency. He currently earns $16 million for the Padres and while he likely at age 30 looks to double that annual rate, his career numbers are quite good but not among the game's best. a $28 million or so per year rate might be appropriate.
The next group of prospective for-sale types include the surprisingly effective Jordan Montgomery, veteran Sonny Gray and others who are generally solid but not at an elite level. You can bet the front office and the revamped analytics department will turn over every stone attempting to identify folks who could be mound magicians.
The last issue to consider is who will be the pitching coach. Despite the relative success Jeremy Hefner has shown previously in the role, a new manager is likely going to want to bring in his own people. Hefner may get shown the exit door despite not really deserving the boot.
Pitching every year is a conundrum, this off season more so than ever. Add Yamamoto and your existing starters are a solid rotation. Then, add another, as solid isn’t good enough.
ReplyDeleteMy brother heard Corbin Burnes is a Stearns high priority, and he wants him via trade, Nola, and Yamamoto.
ReplyDeleteWill Hefner be retained to work for a new manager who will likely want to hire his own man?
ReplyDeleteWith the exit of Eppler no I think all the coaches will be new
DeleteOk, plenty to chew on here…. Firstly, Quintana is going to be 36 and has been somewhat inconsistent for several years now. He is a 4/5. You have four young guys in Lucchesi, Butto, Megill, and Peterson that will have at least one spot. So, really you need two or maybe three guys. I’d rather have the southpaw from Japan, as I cannot commit $25MM to an untested MLB piece, no matter how shiny. The outfielder on the Cubs is a can’t miss either, and well, he missed.
ReplyDeleteI will sign Ohtani and wait a year to see how he bounces back. It’s two TJ’s so he may not, but by then Hamel, Vasil and Tidwell, Scott, Allen (j/k), Suarez, and rest of the youngsters will be closer. I would call Trevor Bauer and give him a shot. And, looking at the other MLB free agents, there are some respected arms out there.
Lastly, I don’t think Hefner deserves the job. He hasn’t helped a single pitcher improve. Peterson improved under Phil Regan and then regressed until the second half of this year when he openly said Quintana helped him. If that doesn’t make you raise an eyebrow, what exactly do you want?
There is nothing left for Vasil to do at the AAA level
DeleteHe had 16 starts there this past season. Some bad. Some extremely dominating.
I expect the Mets will throw him into the mix come ST
Quintana is fine in the #4 spot. If 6 years at $25 M is going to get us Yama I think Steve writes the check immediately. My preference for the #3 slot is Jordan Montgomery. Lefty, has pitched in NY before, and isn’t QO eligible. Oh yeah and he shutout and threw a gem in Game 1 against the Rays. If not him E Rod. Another Lefty who pitched in a major market (Bos) and isn’t QO eligible. I agree with Mack and Vasil we be here sometime next year. Take the AAA pitching stats with a grain of salt. They used the ABS system which squeezed pitchers. Pitching stats across the board in AAA were down compared to years without the ABS system.
DeleteOhtani is great but age and the contract he will demand isn’t worth the risk. Someone will give him a 10 year deal for a guy who is injury prone. Let someone else take that risk. I’ll save that $$$ for 25 year old Soto in 2025.
Hefner will not be back. Whoever the new Manager is will bring in his own staff.
Amazin, I like it. That’s fine. I like Soto but not sure if he will be an option for the Mets. I still would call Bauer even though the ban on sticky substances means his slider won’t dart as much.
DeleteThx Tex. Always remember with Boras clients. They go wherever the best deal is. With Uncle Steve’s money I like our chances.
DeleteAs for Bauer with his odd sexual activity he still got railroaded. He deserves a second chance just not sure it’ll be here. Good thing is it would probably only take a 1 year with a team option year with all his baggage.
A Trevor Bauer call transcript with the “lady”, and while his approach to sex is a turn off to many, it further supports it was consensual, requested by her, and he checked in along the way. He got screwed.
ReplyDeleteThey’re going to trade MacNeil for a starter. Maybe the Marlins.
ReplyDeleteWhy? This FA class is loaded with SP. Free Agents only cost money and Steve has plenty of it. We can’t hit the ball and you’re going to trade away our most consistent hitter. A guy who won the Batting Title 2 years ago. A guy who can play 2nd and in the OF. Also why would you trade a guy when his stock is down? Makes no sense.
DeleteVasil has a lot to do at AAA. Let’s see him be a consistent starter who can go 5-6 innings.
ReplyDeleteA 270 hitter with no power. An average ML starter is more valuable.
ReplyDelete