Morning.
Same "my spin" post, just new name.
Now that ST has started, and it turn right into the regular season, I want to give my weekly Sunday report a new handle.
So, this will be the first of many.
--- it has been a messy first week of spring traing for me. First there was a three day trip to Florida which caused me to miss the first two games, both of which were included in my local Dish TV package. Then, I return while my daughter is being taken by ambulance to a local SC hospital.
Everybody is okay and everything is back to normal now (if that is possible in my life) so I can return to baseball.
--- A general statement. The spring version looks pretty good this season. And the output by the kids so far has mostly been promising.
I particularly am impressed with the amount of one inning, 0.00 outings, but if I think back, I'm impressed with this every spring.
Guess the arms win against the bats early each year.
Injuries have begun, but none to major pieces other than Kodai Senga.
I'm particularly beginning to be concerned with the offensive output of one, Brett Baty.
Right now, it's somewhere between Wayne Garrett and Wayne Newton. My guess right now is if "this keeps down" we will see a lot of Joey Wendle.
---- I finally got to watch a game on Friday and I walked away with this...
- Luis Severino looks like he will be a survivable member of the 2024 rotation.
- Talking about green, did you catch Blade Tidwell's two innings? Wow. And I can't even begin to explain the deer in headlights approach to a ground ball to second. To me, he looks at least 1 1/2 years away.
- fielding just didn't exist with team they put forward in the starting lineup. Talk about dropsies, rolling ball to first, kicking it around... whew.
- lastly, I love the drag bunt and the throw to third that Starling Marte executed in the first. Don't let the old man in.
---- On Saturday we got a look at that hairy outing by Sean Manaea.
Wow.
And Brett Baty hit a home run. The string is still out on bat production.
--- I read an online story on Wednesday morning that caught my attention.
The Mets blogger speculated that Pete Alonso will be traded at the in-season deadline period, to the Toronto Bluejays, for top prospects.
Okay. Let's assume this is true and the definition of prospects is TWO.
Let's also assume the Mets will look for a return of a prospect pitcher for, at least, one of these players that would be sent to Queens.
Here are the top three prospect pitchers currently in their chain, accordingly to Prospects1500 -
- (Tiedemann - 5 tier prospect. Untouchable, but I can dream.)
Prospects1500 -
1. Ricky Tiedemann, LHP, 21, Triple-A
Tiedemann is undoubtedly one of the top pitching prospects in the game. Easy Tier 1 choice here. He missed a couple of months with a biceps issue early last season following four starts at Double-A New Hampshire. His rehab went well and he made it back in July to pitch another 30+ innings from FCL, to Single-A, to another seven starts in Double-A, and even one start for Triple-A Buffalo in September. To get him some additional outings, Toronto sent him to Arizona and he threw another 18 innings across four AFL starts, garnering good results with 23 strikeouts and a 2.50 ERA. Seemingly 100% entering 2024, give Ricky some Triple-A games and he’ll likely be with the MLB club by the All-Star break. (@Scotty_Ballgame)In Barriera, the Jays took a chance on a young, high-upside arm in the first round of the 2022 draft. The 6’2” southpaw dealt with injuries last year limiting him to just over 20 innings last year. He has a plus arsenal in his fastball, slider, and changeup that are all high spin offerings. If he can have a healthy season in 2024, he will be a fun one to watch. If his control/command improves there is #2 upside here. Patience will be key. (@JMahyfam)
Maroudis has a true starter’s pitch mix with four offerings, two versions of his fastball, a breaking ball, and a change, but a reliever’s delivery, plenty of short arm and effort. That said, he gets a lot of help from his legs with a really good leg drive, allowing him to hold his stuff deep into outings. That stuff includes a plus fastball, the four seam up to 96 while the two seam in the low 90s with plenty of sink.
Mack
ReplyDeleteFirst I hope every one is Healthy in the Mack’s family.
Secondly I can’t believe I missed your top 10 article.
You have the most unique but one of the most interesting and probably best representation of true evaluation of how this list really may turn out.
I’m excited to hear more about Vargas and Tyler Stuart future progress.
I am interested in hearing if you kept Mauricio off because you feel he exhausted his prospects status (which I believe he hasn’t) or these all have moved ahead of them
Baty has always worried me… for being a top 30 prospect in baseball, the moment I saw him I never saw stud.
You kinda just know a star by seeing him … so his failures have alway made me think that are we just awful at scouting our own team. Why keep him and not Crow ?
To me hopefully who ever had that responsibility is gone in the stern purge
Eddie
Hey Eddie
DeleteSorry for complicating your online life by eliminating the anonymous option.
I really didn't leave Mauricio off the list for eligibility reasons. I just consider himba graduate ow.
Thanks for the compliments. I'll take them.
*I just consider him a graduate now
ReplyDeleteEddie, good morning. We are right to be concerned about Baty (and Vientos) until one or both breaks thru.
ReplyDeleteIn our sidebar, Ernest Dove did an interview with Tyler Stuart. Definitely worth the watch. I did look on Broos Baseball site…his fastball sits at 95.5, he’s developed (according to Stuart himself) an effective cutter. I like to see a guy’s velocity before getting too excited, no reason to think Stuart won’t be a major league starter or reliever next season, IMO.
Mack, hoping for strong health for you and yours. I do not want to think about any trays for Alonzo at this point, personally. I want to see if the Mets can win a wild card slot first. July is a fine time to reevaluate.
Tom
ReplyDeleteI don't want to trade Pete either, but I don't want to get nothing in return if he leaves at the end of the season.
So far, the Cohen administration has mixed reviews in this area.
Mack, nice thoughts and best wishes for a healthy recovery. Best wishes for your daughter as well.
ReplyDeleteI don’t think Alonso will ever bring back equal value and such, I would not trade him. Barriera was considered undersized and there were health concerns when he was drafted, so he fell. They aren’t trading Tiedemann, and I would rather hope that Alonso and Boras come to their senses rather than push Alonso off and then either overpaying him to bring him back or losing him.
For the record, I don’t believe the I❤️NY bullsh.. that he’s selling, and I have a feeling that he will use Cohen like Yamamoto did. Again, actions speak louder than words and hiring Boras was not an act of a player that loves NYC. So, for that reason alone, I’m not attached to him. I just think that his WAR undervalues him and while he isn’t Freeman or Goldschmidt, he is in the next level. I hope he realizes that.
You're confusing Pete with José, our former SS. He said from the start that he wouldn't consider an extension and would sign with the highest bidder. He made no indication of "loving NY", used the Mets to get a ridiculous contract from the Marlins, and lived to regret leaving (but not for taking the $$$).
DeleteI believe that Pete wants to stay a Met, but I also agree that letting him show a strong season that would hit Uncle Steve in the wallet would be best for both him and the team.
Baty will have a solid year. Mark my words
ReplyDeleteRds the Baty Boyz Band bitch
DeleteSpeaking of BB, I loved King.
ReplyDelete