Mack’s
Observations –
Jeff McNeil is a professional hitter. We have watched him direct balls over the third baseman all the way to the batting crown and hit for power basically when he wants to. My frustration with him comes with his constant changing of his swing and what he wants to do with a bat in his hands.
We are now witnessing him dropping the “plop in left field”
approach and replacing it with full swings designed to barrel up on the pitch. The
immediate new approach seems to be paying off, but how long will he keep this
adjustment going?
My question to you… which Jeff would you like to see going forward? We know one approach could get him on the base more. We also know he has the power to far past the first row in the seats.
Which one I ask?
I got to know now retired Kevin Kernan, then the Mets reporter for The New York Post. We still follow each other and he used to write on the site here. Anyway, Kevin now lives in St. Augustine and posts on X regarding Mets and Yankee games and baseball. In general.
He posted something on Tuesday that is so simple and makes so much sense:
Let me repeat: The best pitch in baseball right now is the 2 strike fastball right down the middle. Hitters are frozen because their minds are littered with pitch probabilities by the Nerds and their iPads.
The average fan doesn’t understand the pitching process. You have a pitcher that has X amount of different pitches, a pitching coach that sometimes sends signs on pitch suggestions, the catcher that basically is the reaper operator that controls what pitch should be thrown, and the hitter with a cheat sheet on the pitcher. I know the point that Kevin is making, but you can’t throw a fastball down the middle every time someone has a two-strike count.
The art of hitting
has become an educated guessing game between the hitter and what is thrown to
them. Anybody out there that has played organized baseball knows how little
time you have to make a decision if you are going to swing or not. The game is
much more dominated now with pitches that start in the zone until they don’t couple
with fastballs in the paint. To me, no nerds with I-Pads can control where a
pitcher’s curves and sliders only drop off near the end or fastballs that can
hit the corners. Only the pitcher controls that.
Now…
This is where this portion of this post went into targeting a certain Mets starter that might be overthinking his approach on the mound as he continues to punch out results far lower than his prospect projections… Christian Scott. I went and did what every old guy does… take a nap… and then returned a phone call from Gary Seagram. Gary’s first words were “so, what do you think about the Scott injury”? The son of a sailor made me get up early to rewrite this. Thanks Gar.
Every pitcher I ever knew in organized baseball has told me that they could tell you just what their arm was producing while warming up in the pen. One pitcher told me “one third of the time I was spot on, one third half and half and one third for shit”.
I’m steadfast that all these arm problems started with high school managers who pitched their best far past a proper pitch could just to win that particular game. Their arm was heading in the wrong direction before they either went to college or signed out of high school. You add to that the current desire to have more pitches than rooms in your house, plus the need for speed mentality in today’s game, and you wonder why any pitcher doesn’t lose time to a major arm or shoulder injury.
Lastly… pitching chess…
Just when the Mets pen seemed to be coming around, along comes Friday’s announcement that RHP Dedneil Nunez was going on the 7-day IL and RHP Adrian Houser being designated for assignment. To replace these two, the Mets activated SP Kodai Senger and RHRP Eric Orze.
Let’s assume the Senga move is to replace the injured Nunez… that means Orze trumps Houser?
Orze has pitched in one Mets game, giving up three earned runs without getting a single batter out… better known as an infinity ERA. Tom loves this guy and what he has done in Syracuse this season: 3-0, 3.40, 1.21, 28-apps, 42.1-IP, 59-K, and 22-BB, but we’ve seen much better stat lines at the AAA level only to miss their mark at the next level. Is this worth losing a guy like Houser who did so may good things during this run? First indication of the Orze move was the home run given up Friday night.
Then comes some good news… the Mets traded Rylan Thomas for Ryne Stanek. Stanek is a 100+ mph wild man that perfectly slots into the set-up role before Edwin Diaz. Thomas is the kind of prospect level player you want to only have to give up for a seasoned rental. Great move.
Then the Senga injury… now, both Scott and Senga are lost to the rotation for a while. Tylor Megill will fill one of the slots, but the Mets need to sign a starter before the trade deadline next Tuesday.
Thank God this team can hit.
Mets
Transactions –
Mets –
SP Kodai Senga - 15-day IL with a left calf strain5
RP Adrian Houser designated for assignment.
RP Dedniel Núñez placed on the 15-day IL
RP Shintaro Fujinami reinstated from the IL, DFA'ed
RHP Christian Scott - 15-day IL, right UCL sprain.
Optioned Eric Orze to Syracuse
LHP Alex Young has been recalled from Triple-A Syracuse.
Signed C/1B Logan Porter
5-11 200 29/yrs old
Lifetime MLB – 0-0 WAR, 31-AB, .194
2024: 188-AB .293
Designated P Cole Sulser for assignment
Syracuse –
LHP Josh Walker has been designated for assignment.
RP Cole Sulser to the Rays for cash
RHP Bryce Montes de Oca - 7-day Injured List
Activated OF Jackie Bradley Jr.
OF Drew Gilbert activated off Syracuse's Injured List
Signed OF Jackie Bradley Jr.
Acquired RHP TJ Shook for reliever Tyler Jay.
Shook – 26/yrs. Old 6-4 220
UDFA – University of South Carolina
2024 – AA:
5-7 4.90-ERA 64.1-IP 77-K 25-BB
Binghamton –
IF Nick Lorusso - Placed on 7-day IL
Brooklyn –
RHP Jeffrey Colon - Transferred from AA to A+ Brooklyn
St. Lucie:
SS Yonaton Henriquez promoted from the Complex
LHP Brayhans Barreto has been transferred to St. Lucie
Promote SS Jose Subero from FCL Mets
Mets draft picks –
Signed 1st round pick Carson Benge $3,997,500
(slot 19 = $4,219,200)
Signed 4th round pick Eli Serrano - $697,500 ($656,400 slot)
Signed 5th round pick Trey Snyder - $1,322,500
(slot value = $476,200).
Signed 14th rounder Tanner Witt: $222,500
Signed 15th round Owen Woodward - $150,000
Signed 16th rounder Josh Blum: $150,000
Signed 18th round Jace Hampson - $150,000
I’ll take Jeff the slugger and Nimmothe slugger. Line up is more dangerous with the two going deep.
ReplyDeleteAgreed, so many pitcher injuries. The Senga one, however, is bizarre.
Megill wasn’t bad yesterday. Any pitcher’s optics are worse when their teams offense sputters. He would have been fine if they led 9-3 after 6 and got pulled.
They gave Snyder “Baro Plus” money. Baro got way over slot last year, but not as much as Snyder. May he provide exceptional return on investment.
Orze? Let’s get him past the nerves stage. The fans ran Paul Sewald out of Dodge, and that reliever has been beastly as a post-Met.
If Senga got hurt a day earlier, he’d probably still be here. But over his last 30 days, he gave up 15 hits and 9 runs in 11 innings.
Mets are finalizing a deal for Jesse Winker. Upgrade over the likely departing DJ Stewart. Cost to Mets not yet revealed.
ReplyDeleteGood morning folks. I would expect Winker to take Gamel’s spot first. Marte can have Stewart’s. It does look like the Mets need a starter. I don’t know the cost for Winker, but I would think Hamel or McLean… I wouldn’t mind though if it were Cortes or Ritter.
ReplyDeleteI would endorse a trade for San Francisco’s Snell and Wilson. They should be able to be gotten for free, almost. Need to win today.
Winkler brings a seasonal 2.1 WAR to the team
ReplyDeleteGreat pick up but my guess is divisional rival Nats aren't doing this for a modest swap
Tyler Stuart
ReplyDeleteStuart is almost 25 and yet to reach AAA. 3 game winner in Binghamton and ERA near 4.00. Never like to trade pitching, but he ain’t Sproat by no means, brother.
ReplyDeleteHe feels like another Corey Oswalt to me, based on this season.
ReplyDeleteGus, Wilson?
ReplyDeleteAnd if they got Snell, how much of his remaining $32 million thru 2025 would the Giants eat?
Stuart showed flashes but missed badly this season regarding dominance on the mound
ReplyDeleteRight now the Mets have NO RED PROSPECT upper level STARTERS in the chain
Sad but true
Mack,
ReplyDeleteAny word on our #9 draft selection possibly signing. I assume the #20 selection will be honoring his college commitment and not signing.
Monday morning I've written about what's been done and what still needs doing. I compare 2024 to what was done in 2015.
ReplyDeleteDJ
ReplyDeleteno word on either
Old Jeff got on base a lot with his hitting approach. The team needed that since their lineup had a low probability of hitting someone in, so more chances, more success. The new lineup is formidable. Lots more hits, lots more on-base. So new Jeff still fills an important role as a more powerful hitter and will drive in runs instead of being driven in.
ReplyDeleteWe still have major holes in the middle of our lineup with JDM and Pete.
ReplyDelete