10/14/23

Reese Kaplan -- Set Your Offseason Baseball Calendar Now


As a former project manager schedules and task lists were always a way of life.  Structure helped improve the certainty that all necessary actions were taken in a sequence when it would make the most sense for related and connected decisions to be made optimally.  Towards that end it's a good time to review the Mets team calendar prior to the start of the 2024 baseball season.

The first important date to track is October 31st.  This particular date has a specific significance for the Mets in their theoretical pursuit of Craig Counsell as a new baseball manager.  It is on that date that his current contract with the Milwaukee Brewers expires.  If the head honchos in Wisconsin do not make him an amenable contract extension or he decides not to take a year off from managing to be with his family, it becomes open season to the highest bidder with the greatest opportunity for a veteran manager of 9 years who owns a 707-625 record with multiple appearances in the post season.  Surely the Mets wouldn't be the only team interested in hiring away this 53 year old successful skipper.

The next major deadline is set for November 4th which would coincide with the end of the World Series if it goes the full seven games.  At that time the off-season officially begins and It is when personnel decisions move from theory into actuality.  In the event that Counsell does not choose to come to New York, David Stearns needs to cast that wide net as he said in his press conference when hired into the Mets POBO role.  While there's no reason he cannot be interviewing potential candidates right now who are not under contract to postseason-alive teams, he cannot make the employment offers to them until this time.  Furthermore there is an unwritten rule about not usurping attention from the MLB playoffs and World Series, hence high profile announcements tend to be put on hold out of a sense of professionalism.  

Also coinciding with this date is the actual status change of prospective free agents into real ones.  They are free to begin to sell themselves to the highest bidder who might be interested in his services. 

Five days later on November 9th the Mets face another personnel deadline wherein 40-man roster decisions must be made regarding the players whose contracts include options.  Sometimes the options belong to the player.  Sometimes they belong to the ballclub.  Regardless, these types of decisions are not completely in the team's control but they must be made.

Coinciding with this timetable is the November 7th through 9th GM meetings taking place in Scottsdale, Arizona.  Now whether or not the Mets have a GM in hand or if David Stearns will represent the team himself or appoint someone to represent the Mets is still unknown.

The next important deadline is where major roster changes will be taking shape.  On November 17th the league draws a deadline for the 40-man roster decisions on ballplayers who have contract renewal yes or no questions which must be answered.  There are quite a few athletes who may have played their last game in a Mets uniform as the club seeks to build a younger core of players for the long term and the late 20s and early 30s fringe baseball personnel may not be a part of that blueprint.  

Then comes the December 4th through 7th Winter Meetings this year taking place in Music City, Nashiville.  While traditionally it is during this time that trades, free agent signings and other personnel decisions take place, they sometimes fall earlier or later.  Still, this half-week event draws media types like flies to honey to report on what might happen, what is happening and what isn't happening.

In the middle of this period on December 6th the annual Rule V draft of non-rostered players takes place.  While you don't usually hit home runs with immediate personnel decisions make at this time, it is interesting to see who is not protected on other rosters who could potentially help the Mets just as it is worth observing who the Mets expose to the draft while preserving 40-man roster spots for others they deem more valuable. 

Finally, just prior to the beginning of Spring Training comes the January 12th arbitration deadline for players who are eligible to submit their salary requirements to a binding arbiter who must decide between the number they desire and the one the team feels is more equitable. 

Yup, the off season is a busy one and when it involves a GM, a manager, player options, 40-man roster renewal decisions, the Rule V draft, GM and Winter baseball meetings and arbitration, it's filled with plenty of speculative narrative for fans of all franchises.   

18 comments:

nickel7168 said...

I wonder each day...What is Davis Stearns doing today? I'd love to know.
He certainly could have already interviewed Carlos Beltran for the manager's
job. Carlos is already an employee of his, and in the event Counsell is NOT hired,
IMO Carlos is the best option. For me, he may be option #1. We have no idea if Counsell could handle the different animal that is NY. But we know Carlos can.
I looked at the Mets front office on the internet and there are hundreds of people
working there. Hopefully, DS has found someone to help him w 40-man decisions and Rule 5
exposure. Also, as I said in an earlier post, I hope he is already familier with every
Mets major leaguer, and has seen videos and stats on at least 60 of our prospects.
Dept. heads who are still there are hopefully working with him every day. I'd hate to think he is trying to do all this alone.

Tom Brennan said...

Nice calendar, indeed.

Nickel, good thoughts. Picking the wheat from the chaff in the minors, for one thing, isn't that difficult, and staff should be getting him all the pertinent info. I do my thoughts on the top 35 and about 5 near misses on Tuesday.

On Nov 4, I turn 70 (SMH), and that takes precedence over whether the WS is ending that day or not.

Mack Ade said...

Morning guys

Winter meetings in Country Music USA. Perfect.

There seems to be a lot of dead wood (sic) on the 40 man and I look forward to Stearns tilting the building and let the duds fall out the windows

Rds900 said...

I agree with you Mack. Lots of dead wood on the roster. Therefore, should not be a problem protecting all promising prospects.

Tom Brennan said...

More dead wood than in Canadian forests

D J said...

Reese,
Let's add January 15,2024, for the International signings opening date to our calendar.

TexasGusCC said...

*DECEMBER 5th: Draft Lottery is happening.

nickel7168 said...

How many teams are in the Draft Lottery? 10?
Apparently, the Mets are in it with the #8 worst team record.
It is my understanding that if they can at least move into the top 6
in the lottery, then they don't get penalized the 10 slots for the
luxury tax, because 6 slots are protected. Is that right?

Mack Ade said...

It is my belief that Six are protected from luxury tax penalties

As fornthe actual pick that will be determined when they play bingo with the team names

nickel7168 said...

To Tom Brennan On turning 70 on Nov 4 (SMH). Best of Luck. I can relate having done that 4 ½ yrs ago. But it’s just a number...the state of your health is way more important...mine isn’t great. A good opportunity to share.
I was delivered by Dominic Rossi, the Bkln Dodgers team doctor in Mar. 1949 as the team
headed to Dodgertown at Vero Beach to begin Jackie Robinson’s MVP season. As disappointed Dodgers fans after the 1957 departure, we became rapid NY Mets fans starting in 1961 (a year before they ever took the field) because my uncle was on the Shea Committee and we knew the Mets were coming with all these old Dodgers and Giants players that we knew so well.
BTW..Dr. Rossi once called for the last rites to be read over Pete Reiser after one of his 3 or 4 crashes headfirst into the OF wall. Pete is a reason we now have warning tracks and padded walls in baseball.

Tom Brennan said...

Nickel, prayers for your health to be great again.

Interesting stuff. I was once the Asst Auditor for CrossLand Savings…on the board then? Bill Shea. Really nice guy.

As a lefty turning 70, I can still strike out Vogelbach LOL. My brother Steve when he was a teenage lefty, would have loved facing Vogie…and probably would have embarrassed him. He made a habit out of embarrassing older hitters, and Vogie? Career ONE TWENTY NINE VS.LEFTIES.

Tom Seaver career vs. lefties? .177.

TexasGusCC said...

Tom, Tom Seaver was a right handed hitter… LOL. I bet the entire Mets pitching staff of 1986 hit better than Vogey against lefties; maybe even righties too!

The Mets have the seventh best odds at the top six spots because the Nationals don’t qualify since they have tanked for too long. For me, the Rule V and the lottery are the two most important dates because they will shape the roster. The rest of the dates are formalities.

TexasGusCC said...

By the way Reese, Danny Abriano on SNY.com stole your article today. You had yours up about five to six hours ago and he put his up four hours ago. Watch for those guys..

nickel7168 said...

here is what I found re: the lottery

In 2022, the league and the players’ union agreed to add a lottery system to set the top picks for the July 2023 MLB Draft. Designed to disincentivize tanking, the lottery gives each of the 18 teams that missed the playoffs a chance of getting one of the top six picks. The first six picks are determined by the lottery, and any of the 18 non-playoff teams could land one of those. The teams with the three worst records all have the same chance at the No. 1 pick a 16.5% chance. Beyond the first six selections set via the lottery, picks belonging to the remaining lottery participants remain set in reverse order of regular season winning percentage.

nickel7168 said...

as a refresher, here is the "MLB 2023 Draft Lottery, All 18 Picks!

https://youtu.be/lhv1a08sXQY?si=7mBsqNZcU6gTp8WH

Amazin Z said...

Yes Tex very important date. Glad you brought it up. Between getting pick 6 or 18 will be huge for that precious extra pool money and a much better player in the 1st round.

TexasGusCC said...

The Mets have a 35.7% chance of getting my one of those picks.

Gary Seagren said...

Happy Birthday Tom and although 70 is just a number I liked 20 30 40 50 and 60 better.