During the Mets powerful 10-0 drubbing of the Washington Nationals on Wednesday night brought with it a piece of horrific medical news when it was revealed that long disabled and previously dominant starter Christian Scott is now aiming to have Tommy John Surgery. All of a sudden that news kind of throws the 2025 pitching picture into a haze.
Stepping back for a moment, know that going into next season the Mets have Kodai Senga, David Peterson and Tylor Megill available to start games. Converted starter turned excellent reliever Jose Butto is another possibility for the rotation.
Then there’s Brandon Sproat whose late introduction to AAA has seen him face more adversity than he faced as he soared through the farm system. During his rookie minor league year he started off in Brooklyn after college days, then onto Binghamton and finally Syracuse.
In Brooklyn he started 5 out of 6 games in which he appeared. He was fanning 11.7 per 9 IP but alarmingly walking 5.7. Still, a 2-1 record with a 1.07 ERA suggested there was a lot more good than bad here.
The bulk of his season was spent in Binghamton where the Rumble Ponies enjoyed his 4-1 record over 11 starts. He was still whiffing over 11 batters per 9 IP but got the walks down to a terrific 2.2 over the same span. His 2.45 ERA was more than double what he’d done in Brooklyn but still was among the finest in the AA league.
Syracuse, unfortunately, did not go so well. In his thus far 6 starts he is facing a huge drop in his strikeouts to just over 6 per 9 IP and the walks rose but this time to 3.7 which is borderline acceptable. However, in 26.2 IP he gave up 31 hits and his WHIP was an ugly 1.575. His record upstate is 1-1 but it’s accompanied by a very ugly 7.43 ERA.
Going forward everyone certainly hopes that Sproat returns to the dominance he exhibited in A and AA, but it’s highly unlikely he will come north with the big club until he shows he has fixed what’s gone wrong and pitches competitively in AAA.
Consequently, the Mets are a bit thin in the pitching department right now for next season. If they chose to move Butto into the rotation along with latecomer Megill, that still leaves them with just 4 starters. That suggests trades and free agency will most definitely need to be explored. The three in-house options are Sean Manaea (with an opt-out), Jose Quintana and Luis Severino. The latter two are slated for free agency when the World Series ends.
On the free agent side of the agenda, Corbin Burnes is the big name and David Stearns has close familiarity with him having been GM in Milwaukee. There are others, including the likely opt-out of Blake Snell, starter Jack Flaherty and starter Max Fried. Aside from the joy of giving the Braves a bit of a jolt if they nabbed Fried, the others are certainly credible arms that will come at a hefty price.
The question facing the Mets in terms of spending big is whether they go after retaining Pete Alonso, hitting the stratosphere with Juan Soto or securing an annual long term pay rate of $25-35 million. If they don’t retain Alonso, the suddenly at least average defense from Mark Vientos could cross the diamond to man 1B and creating budget priced vacancies at 2B and 3B for Ronny Mauricio and Luisangel Acuna. It would still leave the outfield rather empty but could free up money to spend.
Sometimes it’s not easy being a Mets fan.
One unnamed baseball person thought Alonso could go as high as $185 million. Will the Mets let him go if they miss out on Soto? Pete is having an off season, yet has 34 HRs with 10 games to go.
ReplyDeleteScott is a big loss. Sproat is sputtering. Who else do they really have in the system that is any good? Max Kranick? Tong perhaps, but he needs to conquer AA and AAA first, with AAA proving to be a real challenge. They will again need that checkbook for veteran starters in 2025.
ReplyDelete1. Snell, Fried, or Burnes
ReplyDelete2. Manea
3. Senga
4. Peterson
5. Megill
Mack, good plan. Sproat/Kranick at 6/7, or whoever else Stearns can uncover that has ability at low $$. Dedniel's lingering absence has me worried that the prognosis could not be a good one. The pen for 2025 will be a challenge. Stearns will figure it out. And not be slow to jettison and replace bad performers.
ReplyDeleteWhy do so many want to "fix what ain't broke"?
ReplyDeleteOur rotation in the 2nd half, especially in the "meaningful" September games, has been as good as any in MLB, and they've done it without Senga.
Keep Manaea and Sevy, and maybe even Q, pair them with Senga and Peterson, and we're fine, with backup from Butto and Megill.
If we don't spend big bucks on an "ace", maybe we keep Pete AND add Soto.
Bill
DeleteSo many of them are free agents
Do you want the Mets to spend big on these guys?
Define "big". Based on media reports, it would take close to $200 mil to sign one of the "aces" out there. IMO, we could get at least 2, possibly 3, of our current SPs for that much, with $$$ left over.
DeleteDo you honestly care what Cohen spends?
DeleteThe weaknesses as they pursue October baseball are discussed tomorrow morning.
ReplyDeleteCohen wants to WIN. Why should he care about penalties, as long as they don't cause his first rounder to slip 10 spots. But...if he feels like spending more than $280 million in 2025 (the rough level where the will give him fire to truly fight with fire, he will blow past that too. He did not buy this team to not be in the playoffs almost every year. The $65 million for JV, MS, and McCann are off the books in 2025, so he is well-positioned. Sadly, cheap pieces like Scott, Gilbert, and Williams are delayed.
ReplyDeleteSaw a clip of hits Sproat gave up last night. One was a double on a straight looking FB, high in the zone, middle of plate. Another shot was on a fat 96 MPH pitch. One hit, though, was on a pop behind SS that Jett muffed
ReplyDeleteHmmn..."ain't broke?" Last night they gave up six runs. Today it's 8 and counting. Looks flawed to me.
ReplyDeleteYeah, that one game, with the mop-up guy giving up 3 Runs, totally counters the fact that the rotation leads MLB in ERA for the month.
Delete