2/1/24

Paul Articulates - Let the spring begin!


February has finally arrived!  After way too many months of talking about nothing happening in the much too quiet off-season for the Mets, we have finally arrived in Spring Training Month!  Pitchers and Catchers report February 14th, position players report by February 19th, and the first game starts at 1:05pm on February 24th.  Let’s start baseball season!

If I sound enthusiastic, it is because I love baseball, warm weather, and the intrigue of a seven month competition that combines strategy, skill, and luck.  I am not quite so enthusiastic about 2024 being the Mets’ first championship season in 38 years, because I expect this to be a growth season.  It is very interesting to me that the Mets have chosen to work around the fringes after some big spending years.  They clearly are being hurt by the luxury tax, and it is perfectly understandable that they would look to restrict payroll growth.  But it is also interesting to me to listen to the front office talk about expectations for a competitive season.  Let’s try to get into their thinking by exploring some things that drive their arguments about competitiveness.

1) This team is better than people think.  There was an extreme lowering of expectations after last year’s epic underperformance.  It was not just a reset in how fans thought about the team following a strong 2022 season.  It rippled down to every player, where their weaknesses seemed to stand out above their strengths.  But actually, this team has many very good MLB ball players that should have won many more games last year.  They just had a comical combination of bad streaks, poorly timed injuries, and a little bad luck sprinkled in.  Even though we heard nothing but positive attitudes in the public comments from players, coaches, and management you know that the heap of unfortunate events affected their mental state.  They just couldn’t find how to win.  The one thing they needed to change the collective psyche was a winning streak.  Or a new start.  Now they have one.  Expect better things up and down the lineup.

2) This year begins with more harmony from the leadership all the way down through the coaching staff.  Last year’s team struggled with finding a working chemistry.  What to do with Escobar versus Baty; finding arms to replace injured starters; figuring out roles in a bullpen devastated by the loss of their closer; and whether to push veterans to get some wins or insert the youngsters to get some experience.  These were hard decisions. By the end of the season, after Buck Showalter was let go it was apparent that not everyone was on the same page with that approach. 

3) The pitching lab has been in operation for months.  We are already hearing some very interesting anecdotes in interviews about what the pitchers think about the feedback they are getting.  Could this finally be the year that the Mets pitching staff actually outperforms expectations instead of the other way around?  Could there be fewer injuries because of the attention to detail about pitching mechanics and how it affects stresses on the body?

4) The defense is better.  The outfield becomes much stronger defensively with a healthy Marte, Nimmo in left, and Bader in center.  Those three will add the range to track down more balls in Citi Field that just can’t seem to find those distant walls.  This will make the pitching better.  Francisco Alvarez tried to do a little too much last year but with his accumulated MLB experience and his penchant for constantly learning I expect a very strong defensive year from him.

5) The offense is better.  Pete is on a walk year, so expect him to amass some huge numbers.  McNeil had an off year until the last month and with Eric Chavez back in the hitting coach role expect another .300+ season.  A healthy Starling Marte will rejuvenate the lineup.  Lindor will be more relaxed at the plate when everyone around him is finally hitting and could have his strongest offensive year with the Mets.  Alvarez will also be more relaxed and that will result in some great power numbers.  You get the picture – good things tend to multiply.

6) There is no pressure on underdogs.  The Mets are underdogs – most have them third or fourth in the east this year so there will not be “must win” series until September and only then if they outperform expectations.

All this seems very optimistic, and since it is almost spring that is OK.  It is a common theme in baseball.   But you must understand that I am not predicting another 101 win season.  I just think that it is going to be much better than many folks predict.  I hope that becomes a great environment for the young players that will get a legitimate shot this year.


11 comments:

Tom Brennan said...

Yay, spring.

As my article this AM outlines, I agree with you. The combination of Edwin's freak injury with so many missed starts swallowed the team's entire margin for error (to at least attain a Wild Card spot). Marte, Escobar - older hurt a lot. Hopefully Marte is 90% of his 2022.

Old guys break down more than young guys.

And Tyrone Taylor and Wendle add to their defensive upgrade.

Mark said...

Should be a real dogfight between us the Marlins + Nats to finish 3rd

bill metsiac said...

I'm with you and Tom, Paul. We'll surprise a lot of the Gloom & Doomers.
I can't wait for the start of ST, when P & C report in 13 days, on (Bobby?) Valentines Day.

VGB! LGM!

Anonymous said...

What I have learned being a NY Mets fan for such a very longtime.

1. Always, always, always "go for it all" this season and not the next one. Do not wait, because tomorrow does not have to come you know. The goal here is both going for it all this season, and not just with Methuselah type plugged-in aged arms, like 2023. Developing a talent multi-seasonal high-level consistency of play to last your team for many seasons. A proverbial dynasty of sorts, based upon terrific drafting, and a ton of player homework.

Drafting is not a definite science or art form. But what remains equally as integral with it, is player development, hope and chance. There are no 100% guarantees on a team's player picks, in other words. Some players come here ready to go, and some take a little while to put it all together at the big league level. Patience sometimes being a virtue. Look up Nolan Ryan for an example of that.

Sure, the 2025 season looks a little brighter (right now) than this 2024 one does. But guess what, even here with that said, things can still fall into place very, very nicely for this 2024 season. Very. So by the end of this June, it could possibly just need a player tweak or two to become a Playoff Contention caliber NY Mets team.

And Batting Coach Eric Chavez is BAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAACCCCCCCKKKKKKKKKKKKK!!!!! YES! BINGO!

Anonymous said...

Working a last minute trade for here, maybe not a bad idea.

I am absolutely fine with the NYM's fielding and hitting for this 2024 season. I think that there is more than enough talent there, to make this 2024 NYM team a really solid contender. There are always going to be a couple of question marks heading into ST. That's a big reason why there actually is ST. Resolution.

To me, really just third base is the Mets' question mark. But it will be decided by whomever does the best there in ST between Baty and Vientos. I am confident that it will work out really well at third. Both are second year men having come up the second half of 2024. And both have big league ability written all over them. One starting and perhaps the other one being used as a utility player this season.

The bullpen is shaping up excellently with the very wise addition of righty Adam Ottavino. There is depth there now.

The DH role seems aptly covered as well. There is the possibility, that we fans may possibly see more base stealing in 2024 too. Which is good.

So what's left you ask?

A: Just the starting pitching really. A tweakening.

What concerns me (just a tad bit) heading into the start of 2024 ST, is that of the five NYM starters, two have had arm injuries in their recent past history. Namely Luis Severino (whose addition here I really liked a lot because he has excellence in his NYY past and is not another Methuselah), Jose Quintana, whose recent W/L record and playing time does not overly excite me very much, nor his injury history. I can see people being excited by him being a NYM in our rotation, but you have to remember too that he is now 35 years old, with the 2023 NYM season of pitcher injuries still filling our memories.

What might workout better here now.

The 2024 NYM seem to have trading possibilities that they could use from their own team's depth standpoint, to perhaps acquire that "one more really decent starter arm" to make their 2024 rotation less injury vulnerable and more seasonal effective.

I like Eduardo Rodriquez, or Blake Snell for this, despite Eduardo's bout with Covid19 three years ago that he now seems over with. His 2023 season was amongst his very best and to me, he has not yet peaked but will soon. Blake Snell we all know.

Anonymous said...

MeGill and Vientos. MeGill will be a solid #2 starter. Vientos will be a 5 hole guy with 20+ HRs, protection for Alonso.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for this, Paul. This has been pretty much exactly my thinking about this team. I do think the quantum leap they have taken with a state of the art pitching lab and people who understand how to use it is going to make a big difference. And even with some injury concerns in the rotation, I think they’re banking on getting a look at at least a couple of those AAA pitching prospects for at least a few starts this season. I even think they’ll go with a 6-man rotation for a good part of the year, which should help Senga, Sevarino, and Quintana.

The defense is certainly going to be better, even if Marte is hurt, Taylor is a terrific OF, as Gilbert is supposed to, with the arm to play RF. And with Alvarez a season in, it’s likely you have two above average hitters in McNeil and Nimmo, along with three guys who hit 100+ HR between them in the middle of your lineup. You don’t need a ton more to go right on offense to be a wildcard-competitive team there.

You make another great point that it’s going to be much, much easier and more fun for these guys to play - and not incidentally a much more conducive atmosphere for kids to come up and perform - when no one expects anything from them. In New York more than anywhere.

Anyway, too much from me, but thanks for the piece, it’s great. I’m so happy that February is here. LGM.

Anonymous said...

That was me, above. Forgot to sign in. 😏

That Adam Smith said...

Aaaand, I F’d that up again. Now half the page is me. Sorry all.

Anonymous said...

Maybe vitamins for Baty and Vientos?

Tom Brennan said...

IV vitamins are fine…JV players are not.