The New York Mets took care of business this week, sweeping the Washington Nationals in a series they needed to sweep. They now stand at 84-68, tied for the second wild card slot with Arizona and 2 games ahead of the Atlanta Braves.
Now they enter the gauntlet, with their remaining ten games against some very tough competition. It starts with four home games against the league leading Philadelphia Phillies. The Mets recently lost their three game series in Philadelphia, but the two they lost could have gone either way.
The Mets will send Severino, Peterson, and Manaea to the mound in the first three games, and the fourth starter has not yet been named. The pitching staff for the Mets has been on a remarkable roll, and they will have to bring their best against a Phillies team that has the third-best OPS in the National League (.751) helped by a .425 team slugging percentage. At least the games are at Citi Field and not in Citizens Bank Park where the fences are among the friendliest in the league.
After that four game series against the Phils, the Mets go on the road for three against the Atlanta Braves and three more against the Milwaukee Brewers. The Phillies and Brewers have already clinched playoff berths and as we well know, the Braves are hot on our heels for one of the remaining spots. I guess you could say that the Mets will have to earn their playoff berth.
The Mets are 3-6 against the Phillies so far this year, 5-5 against the Braves, and 0-3 against the Brewers. It does not look like an easy task, but in baseball momentum means a lot. The Mets arguably have the strongest momentum of the bunch, but in just the last ten games, all four teams are pretty close. The Phillies still have a lot to play for, the Braves are desperate to catch up for a wild card slot, and the Brewers may rest some players having already clinched.
Here is what I like about the Mets’ chances:
- The starting pitching. As mentioned before, they are on a serious roll with not only exceptional stats, but also deep outings lasting seven innings or more. This is what they needed all year and it showed up in the stretch.
- The relief pitching has also been very good. Suddenly the relievers are well rested thanks to the starting pitching and when they do come in, they are holding the opposition to very few runs.
- The contributions from many. Despite the dominant season by Francisco Lindor, this team wins when everyone contributes. Guys like Harrison Bader, Tyrone Taylor, Iglesias, and Mark Vientos are all coming up with plays when we need one. And how about LuisAngel Acuna?! Two home runs and a .500 batting average to go with plus fielding while filling the biggest shoes on the team! Not missing Max Scherzer anymore.
- Nimmo has been invisible since the all-star break, but in the last few games he is getting a lot of barrels. It was only a matter of time before those hard hits would find grass (or the seats). JD Martinez is also having some high velocity outs. If those two start hitting like they are capable it will help propel the team to many more runs.
- Starling Marte is healthy and fresh and he is playing like it. Six for his last ten, stealing bases, finally patrolling the outfield again like the player he used to be. This is what we needed in September of 2022, but I’ll take it now.
Here is what I don’t like about the Mets’ chances:
- Francisco Alvarez and Pete Alonso are still chasing too many bad pitches. They just can’t seem to recognize the breaking pitches and their desire to hit the ball overcomes their swing judgement. If either or both got hot, it would change the probability of success. Unfortunately, chasing pitches is not easy to solve with a few adjustments.
- Edwin Diaz is still a great relief pitcher, but he is not what he was before his knee injury. He gets into ruts where only one of his two pitches seems to work and he overthrows that pitch. It is still hard to hit, but easy to predict. That is not desirable late in close games.
- Francisco Lindor needs to lead this team through the ten game stretch. Unfortunately he tweaked his back, which is one of the most difficult injuries to heal on the fly. It may have an effect on his swing, his base running, and his defense.
- Truist Park is like a haunted mansion after that horrible season ending series in 2022. That team headed to Atlanta with a one game lead and the three top pitchers lined up and came home devastated. This Mets team is very different than the 2022 version and so is Atlanta, but it is hard to ignore the impact that stadium will have on the team’s state of mind.
The interesting part of this ten game gauntlet is that the outcome will not only be determined by the Mets’ play, but also the play of the other three teams vying for those last three spots. As of last night, the Mets were tied with Arizona and only 2.5 games behind the Padres.
The Mets hold the tiebreaker against both clubs based upon their head-to-head season records. Arizona has been stumbling against the Rockies and they also have a gauntlet to run with series against the Brewers and Padres. The Padres have to play the Dodgers and the Diamondbacks.
I think we are all hoping the Mets will prevail, so I won’t ask you “if”, but rather “how”. Who do you think will be the player that has the highest impact on the Mets success in this 10 game gauntlet to end the season?
still comes down to Pete
ReplyDeleteLindor would be my answer followed by Diaz as in which Diaz will we get.
ReplyDeleteAs far as hitting is concerned, the road is where a team's ability to score is put on an even playing field. The Mets have scored 26 more runs on the road than Philly. With a healthy Lindor, they may have the better offense. We'll see if he is ready.
ReplyDeleteGood points, Paul. The Mets' playoffs start today. I personally like that the Mets lead Atlanta by two with the tie breaker. I would like NOTHING MORE than being tied with Atlanta after game 162 and going to the playoffs based on the tie breaker. In 2022, the Braves tied the Mets and won the division on the tie breaker, which resulted in the Mets being in one short series and out. That 2022 season, Marte's broken bone in early September led to overuse of down the stretch of a horrible trio (Naquin, Ruf, and Vogie). I truly hope the injuries to McNeil and Lindor don't cause this team to fall an inch short.
ReplyDeleteMy impact player is Marte. I have been down on him a lot this year because of a perceived lack of effort. Maybe he was protecting his health, which is now strong and he is hitting, running, and fielding like his young self. He can make a difference in the stretch, especially if he gets his power game going.
ReplyDeleteMarte woud be a good DH next year as maybe it would help keep him healthy
ReplyDeleteI think Nimmo steps up.
ReplyDeleteI revise my SP plan for 2025
ReplyDeleteBats are keel but you can't win without a rotation
SP1. either Burnes, Fried or Snell
SP2. Manaea on 2/3 year deal
SP3. Senga
SP4. Peterson
SP5. Megill
Good start and possibly Sprout at some point.
ReplyDeleteAs for outfield
ReplyDeleteJett and Gilbert will be ready by all-star break
Nimmo Marte and McNeil can hold the fort down til then
Wonderful observations Paul. I hope the Mets can get Lindor healthy before he goes out there.
ReplyDeleteTom, I don’t want to be tied with Atlanta. I want to be nowhere near them because the Mets are the #1 wildcard and hosting rather than eeking in as the #3. Let the DBacks or Padres or Braves duke it out for that spot.
Gus good point. But id love to see Atlanta tie record-wise with another team and miss the playoffs on the tie breaker, if that is possible.
ReplyDeleteAt this point, as Paul indicates, the Mets are 5-5 against the Braves. They need to win 2 of 3 to hold the tiebreaker edge over them. If they win 2 of 3 against Atlanta, that means Atlanta will need to make up 3 games someplace else - they have to stay hot while the Mets fall flat against either the Phils or Brewers (or both).
ReplyDeleteAs I was reading this article, my pick for impact player for the last week is Nimmo, followed closely by Luisangel Acuna. And yes, Diaz is key for the pitching.