10/22/24

MACK - Tuesday Morning Observations

 


Mathew Brownstein                    @MBrownstein89

 

Highest single postseason OPS in New York #Mets history (min. 40 PA): 

Carlos Delgado: 1.199 (2006)

Daniel Murphy: 1.115 (2015)

Rusty Staub: 1.096 (1973)

Mike Piazza: 1.045 (2000)

PETE ALONSO: .999 (2024)

MARK VIENTOS: .998 (2024)

  

John Mayer             @JohnMayer

Thank you Francisco Lindor

Thank you New York Mets. You never know when you’re going to find a new source of inspiration, and Francisco became that inspiration for me this year. You could see the dedication in his eyes, in his plays - you could even see it in his strikeouts; it wasn’t a case of “couldn’t,” only “didn’t that time.”

My Sphere concerts this summer became games in my mind. Wins were when the music was cooking, when the notes matched the intention, when the zone could be found. Every weekend was a series, and every show was a home game.

When I injured my finger and looked down to see half the nail sheared off and bleeding, my first thought was how to play with the other three fingers. That was what Lindor would have done, and so that’s what I did.

The Mets’ talent makes them aspirational, but their humanity makes them relational. It means that it’s never out of the question what’s being done on that field could be done by you and I in our pursuits, too. 

 

Jim Koenigsberger            @Jimfrombaseball

Conway Twitty was first drafted by the Phillies after HS, before being drafted once again into the US Army. While stationed in Japan, he kept both his dreams alive by forming a band and  playing on the local Army baseball team. His first band, the Fuji  Mountain Boys represented their Yokohama unit & won the 1954 All-Army Talent Competition. Twitty changed the band’s name after their big win to The Cimarrons.

 

SNY                @SNYtv       

Jesse Winker says "it'd be incredible" and "amazing" if he could return to the Mets next season:

"I said it was a dream come true and it really was. Hopefully I could come back because it was really special to be part of this team and this organization"


Benny BKG               @BennyGreenberg)

Should be an interesting Winter for the #mets...

FREE AGENTS

1B Alonso

INF Iglesias

SP Quintana

SP Severino

CF Bader

OF Winker

RP Raley

RP Ottavino

RP Stanek

RP Smith

DH J.D. Martinez

OPTIONS

SP Sean Manaea, $13.5M player option

RP Phil Maton, $7.75M club option

 

Arizona Fall League Update (thru Sunday):

            RP Saul Garcia – 0-0,  0.00-ERA

            RP Noah Hall –   0-1,  3.18-ERA

            SP Jonathan Pintaro – 0-0,  3.00-ERA

            RP/SP Jawilme Ramirez –  1-0,  7.71-ERA

            RP Dylan Ross –   0-0,  32.40-ERA

            2B Jacob Reimer –  0-HR, 4-RBI, .154

            SS/OF Jett Williams –   0-HR, 2-RBI, .192

            OF Drew Gilbert -  1-HR, 2-RBI, .083

 

Jim Koenigsberger            @Jimfrombaseball

"We wept, Brooklyn was a lovely place to hit. If you got a ball in the air, you had a chance to get it out. When they tore down Ebbets Field, they tore down a little piece of me. The field was even greener than my boy's mind had pictured it. In later years, friends of ours.  -  Duke Snider

In order to make Satchel Paige eligible to receive his pension, Braves President Bill Bartholomay signed Paige to a contract running through the 1969 season as the Braves pitching coach. Satchel would actually suit & pitch a couple of innings during two exhibition games early in the  spring`69, but he’d spend the rest of the season “coaching” from his living room in Kansas City.

After reaching his 158 required days, Paige left the Braves  organization & less than three years later, began drawing that Major League pension.

Satchel Paige received $250 a month.

 

Every organization's Hitting and Pitching Prospects of the Year –

https://www.mlb.com/news/prospects-of-the-year-for-every-org-2024?partnerID=web_article-share

 

Mets

 

Nick Morabito, OF (No. 19)

A dream leadoff hitter, Morabito led Mets full-season Minor Leaguers with his .312 average, .403 OBP, 135 wRC+, 142 hits and 59 stolen bases in 119 games between Single-A St. Lucie and High-A Brooklyn. It wasn’t particularly close on the basepaths either, no one else in the system swiped more than 45 bags.

 

Jonah Tong, RHP (No. 10)

The 2022 seventh-rounder was one of the breakout stories in any system as he climbed three levels from Single-A to Double-A in his age-21 season. Tong struck out 160 in 113 innings, finishing third among MiLB full-season qualifiers with a 34.2 percent K rate, and posted an organizational-best 3.03 ERA in that span.

 

Mack – Look, no one will argue that the Mets had a disappointing minor league season with their top prospects. The one (surprising to many) ray of sunshine was infielder Luisangel Acuna when he was an emergency call-up.

I have no problem with either of these two, though I would have given strong consideration to St. Lucie starter, Douglas Orellana (13-G, 9-ST, 1.86, 38.2-IP, 49-K).

Morabito has nothing more to prove in Brooklyn and will start the 2025 season in Binghamton, joining Tong.

 

Kevin Kernan           @AMBS_Kernan

 

Get off the iPad fellas and get on the field. Take some popups, work on fielding the ball in the outfield. You know, basic Little League stuff. Throw strikes.

It always comes down to fundamentals       

https://ballnine.com/2024/10/17/best-of-the-worst/

Mack - Kevin and I first met in the Mets ST clubhouse. We have stayed X friends and he also was a contributor to Mack’s Mets.

READ THIS

11 comments:

Tom Brennan said...

Great Mayer comments. Well said.

I can be Jesse Winker's agent to get him to come back to the Mets. No fee required.

You are not encouraged, are you, by those early on averages from Jett, Gilbert, and Reimer in a hitters' league, are you?

Saul Garcia and Pintaro pitching very well there so far, to their credit. It is a high runs league.

Lots of free agents. - will be captivating to watch the 2025 build out.

Tom Brennan said...

Morabito was great. Even though Morabito inexplicably got only as high as Brooklyn, I thought, as I watched Bader go into Siberian Winter hitting mode over the last months of the season, that Morabito would have done better in the playoffs. Does that seem ridiculous? Bader was just 24 for 147 (.165) after the All Star Game, with just 8 walks and 36 Ks.

I do not want him back. Why would I?

TexasGusCC said...

Interesting Kevin Kernan article. It starts promising but by the middle has become a “I’m holier than thou” where he just aimlessly rags on everyone. It’s so easy to sit in your living room and be an expert. Players have been trying too hard in October for years! Why did Reggie Jackson become Mr. October? Because he sucked all year but of his three homeruns in one game and five in the same Series. Everyone makes mistakes and in every sport; the pressure cooker of the playoffs magnifies and intensifies everything.

Without becoming too sentimental and clingy, the only free agents that I think would age well are Manaea, Alonso and Stanek, and in that order. I would give contracts of five, four, and two years respectively. I noticed that Winker hit .199 in 2023 and .219 the year before. I won’t be seduced by the same magic that allowed this team to ride into late October. Further, while I would kick the tires in Severino, I’m afraid they’d fall off. He doesn’t field his position well but can throw the ball still, but, I don’t know…. What he wants would certainly be of importance, but as I’d like to stop being punished for being over the Luxury Tax, I need to draw the line somewhere.

Mack Ade said...

Tom

I would rebuild 2025 without anyone from the minors right now, though I still feel Baty has value and Pintaro could be first starter up.

Mack Ade said...

I have eye surgery at 10am

Will "see" you all later

Remember1969 said...

Thanks Mack . .good stuff here. The Kernan article hits the spot .. my sentiments exactly, although I think Cleveland was actually a better team than the dis-credit that they got. While I agree that beating up on the White Sox provided an advantage in the standings, Cleveland still beat a good Detroit team that had beaten the mighty Astros. The Guardians, probably more than any team in baseball, plays the game the old way, although they did break down in the ALCS.

Tom Brennan said...

I did not read Kernan, but the Mets did really well and I will leave it at that.

Gus, I liked Winker's swings. His prior problem may have been injuries? Off the cuff, I'd keep him at the right price, for his fiery persona.

Severino I agree. Pete, 4 years could do it, if they also move the fences in 5 feet, which Vientos and Lindor would also love. Notice how much shorter CF was in LAD park? Where hitting conditions are great all season?

Stearns has his work cut out for him - but the $65 million of player-less salary in 2024 drops $65 million in 2025 to ZERO, so that unties the hands. Stanek can stay, but the pen needs lots of help, with no real help on the minors horizon.

Tom Brennan said...

After the eye surgery, Mack will see that the Mets in fact made the World Series, he just didn't see that coming. Hope it goes well and you are the Mets' next 20-20 man.

Tom Brennan said...

Mack, in fairness to Jacob Reimer, he has walked 8 times in 5 games and is on base 10 of 21 times (.476) despite his 2 for 13 average.

bill metsiac said...

You make good points here, Gus, but your comment that Sevy "doesn't field his pitching well" is confusing.

Of all the NL SPs this year, he is one of 3 finalists for the Gold Glove. How can that jive with your comment?

TexasGusCC said...

I can’t believe that Bill! I recall him not backup up throws from the outfield in consecutive games and a couple of times not covering first on a grounder to Alonso. How did he get that nomination?