10/7/24

Tom Brennan: Vientos, Senga, McNeil, Iglesias, and Alonso





TWO HOMER VIENTOS






Tough game 2 loss 

In a tough house against a tough team. Kudos to Mark Vientos.  No one outside of Metsville knew his name. Two HRs last night, and everyone does now.

Severino was very good - but he is HR prone, as are the Phillies' big hitters.  His mistake IMO was going to the breaking ball one too many times to Trea Turner in the 6th. I wanted him to go with 98 MPH heat up and in.  He hung one, Turner singled, Harper and Castellanos immediately homered and it was 3-3 in a heart beat. Kudos to Nimmo and Pete for going deep, and coming back from 6-4 to tie at 6-6, but Edwin just is not the same, and his immortality of 2022 has morphed to 2024 mortality. 

Megill failed.  Yes, it was a tough spot, tough house, but that game winning hit was off a beach ball.  Can't lose on that pitch which was set up on a tee.  I wish we had Trevor Megill instead.

Back to Citi Field, where the weather will be perfect. 

It will be rocking.

It is reported that Jeff McNeil has returned to the Mets and is ramping up.  My guess, having had a similar broken bone is a similar spot at a similar age, is that he will be good to go for the next series.  

When I had mine, and my wrist came out of the cast, it was sore as heck and stiff as a board.  A week later, it felt like it never happened.  Total mobility, no pain.  Never any sign whatsoever since then that I ever broke anything there. Just have to get into the next round to get Jeff to help.

Before thinking adversely at all about McNeil, as many tend to do (we have Iglesias!) please remember Jeff hit .289/.376/.547 in 41 games after the ASB until he got injured.  Compare that to the season-long stats of Bryce Harper, .285/.373/.525.  

We want Jeff back as soon as he is really ready.  The Mets got their flash in the pan with Acuna, and are eternally grateful for it.  I'd rather have McNeil out there as needed.

Kodai Senga was excellent for 31 pitches on Saturday, the lead off super bomb HR to Kyle Schwarber notwithstanding.  It had good velocity coming in, more velocity going out.  But he pitched like an ace after that.  No reason he could not ramp up to 40-50 pitches in a game 5 on Friday, if one is needed.  If he is not needed, and gets in side work before the Mets hopefully advance to the next round, a side session could get him to 50+ pitches in his next outing.  The idea would ultimately be to get him to 80-90 pitches if the Mets make it to the World Series.

Not enough credit goes to David Stearns for shrewdly acquiring Jose Iglesias.  In past years, the Mets would have had a McNeil go down and tried to get by with a Luis Guillorme type.  Or some other bum from the minors that would go 2 for 20. 

Iglesias is a force.  Guillorme was a back of the bench sub that Mets fans liked, but who didn't do nearly  enough in an extended situation like a McNeil injury.  Good job, Mr. Stearns.

ALONSO AND QUEENS…A DEEP CONNECTION

Saw this in a random on-line Facebook post from the Players’ Tribune…he may want to stay with the Mets more than we realize:

Pete Alonso: “By now, I’m sure a lot of Mets fans know a bit about my ties to New York. That my great-grandpa moved his family to Queens in the ’30s when things were getting unstable and dangerous in his home country of Spain.
But the bonds between my family and this city go so much deeper than just that. My grandpa grew up in Queens and graduated from NYU after serving in WWII. He actually met my grandma down on Wall Street while he was in grad school. The story goes that he didn’t know how to type, so his plan was to try to find the best-looking receptionist in New York City to help him with his papers … and the rest is history.
My grandma delivered my dad at a hospital in — where else? — Queens. And when he was a kid, there were aunts and uncles and cousins around all the time. I was born down in Florida, but from the very first time I visited New York as a teenager … man, I just felt such a special connection to this place.
Then, when the Mets drafted me, it was like destiny or something. When they brought me to town to sign my contract, I couldn’t stop looking around and thinking about how my grandpa might have driven down the same streets back in the day, or walked past the same buildings.
And now, every time I put on my uniform, there’s real, genuine significance there. I feel it deeply. I absolutely cherish the fact that the name ALONSO is what’s on the back of my jersey. It’s not my name, as an individual. It doesn’t say PETE back there. It’s my family’s name. My family’s history! And I feel truly blessed by all the connections there.
My grandpa passed away before I made it to the bigs, but in so many ways I feel like he’s out there with me when I pull that jersey on and head out to first. He loved baseball — he’d tell me stories all the time about listening to Brooklyn Dodgers games on the radio back in the day — and I know he’d be so proud. Not just because his grandson made it to the show. But also because he made it to the show here. In this particular place."

THE IDEA OF A BLOSSOMING BIG POWER BAT LIKE MARK'S JOINING WITH PETE'S IS SOMETHING TO PONDER.  ADD A DOSE OF SOTO AND WHAT A TRIO. MAYBE IT WILL HAPPEN.


Lastly....

Arizona Fall League baseball has begun. 

The team the Mets are on starts on Tuesday.

We will watch closely as Drew and Jett seek to position themselves for 2025.

22 comments:

Viper said...

A lot of things can be forgiven for players that can actually perform in the post-season. Alonso has to do way more for the Mets to consider bringing him back.

Diaz admitted to pitching scared. He has me scared every time he pitches. If the Mets keep bringing him in key situations, we're done. (no gravitas)

Mack Ade said...

This day off is large for both the pen and getting the starter rocking chairs 💺back on the deck.

It will take superior pitching to beat this waking 🐻

Remember1969 said...

I am still confused by their pitching strategy. They are paying Diaz $20M to be their CLOSER. Why in the world would they bring him in in the bottom of the 7th? They used those two guys backwards. If their intent was to use Megill and Diaz, bring in Megill first, let him fire away for the 8th and then use Diaz as the ninth inning closer. They also kept Danny Young on the roster - bring him in to get the lefty Schwarber and give him a taste of the post season in really a non-critical spot.
Who knows if Diaz would have pitched better in the 9th than he did in the 8th, but that is what he has been doing forever and what he is paid to do. Don't frog up the pitching staff just because it is playoffs.
Lastly, And while I think Jeremy Hefner has done a creditable job with the pitching staff as a whole, it seems like there has to be something else that can be done to get them to throw more strikes (actually less balls out of the strikezone). Even Diaz strikeout of Schwarber in the 7th was on ball 4 way out of the strikezone.
Throw strikes please!

Tom Brennan said...

Viper, he looked scared. If he said that out loud, shame on him. He is no Mariano. Mariano was never scared. Picture Papelbon for a minute...Kimbrel. Fearsome. It can't be, "I fear I can not dominate these hitters, so I fear more." If that is his attitude, trade him. Where is some drop-out change up to alternate with the fastball and slider. Bartolo should talk with him. Late in his career, all he threw were 88-91 MPH fastballs. With no fear that I could see.

Tom Brennan said...

Mack, I'd hate to think we are the Phillies' equal - except for Edwin. Before this year, he was 16-29. I used to think that was an anomaly. It isn't, I think. It is, I think, that based on his stuff most days, he career-wise has dominated. But, when the other team is putting on pressure, he wilts.

I honestly thought for 2 minutes that Megill might be a good closer; after all, his brother is a pen beast, until he grooved that meatball to Castellanos. Now the answer is a hard no on Megill as a future closer.

Tom Brennan said...

R69, I was not adverse to Edwin coming in for a 7 out save after 2 days off. But I wonder how he looked in the bullpen? He was so erratic in the game, I wonder if that showed at all in the pen? Or was it just he got scared in the huge moment in the hostile park? I agree with you. I would have let Megill do the 7th, then possibly Edwin for 2 innings. We miss Dedniel, as weird as that might have sounded back in April.

But the Mets got to the Brewers' super-elite reliever Devin the other day. He did not look nervous, but the opponents can be so amped up, it is hard to escape alive. Not every player has Michael Jordan late-game nerves when the tension is at a fever pitch. It is a shame Sproat wasn't ready for the Big Show.

Tom Brennan said...

Do you remember Edwin getting ambushed by the Braves in August 2019? He looked scared then, too. He HAS to get it in his mind that the other hitters will sometimes succeed, and that he is better than them and go after them. Panic is not a viable strategy.

Mack Ade said...

Megill is good but he's no Megill

Tom Brennan said...

Is Diaz the new Benitez, who was great except in very high pressure spots?

Tom Brennan said...

Another thought...yes, Severino had a tough 6th, but he was only at 91 pitches and had gotten to the bottom of the order. He was still hitting 98. I would have brought him out for the 7th, unless he said he was done.

Tom Brennan said...

Mack, remember this cartoon jingle?
We've got a gorilla for sale
Megilla Gorilla for sale
Won't you
Buy him
Take him home and try him
Gorilla for sale

D J said...

Tom'
I will throw this out to generate a discussion. Is Diaz a trade possibility at a time he would bring back prospects and shed some salary? Do we have a possible in-house closer candidate? Thoughts?

Mack Ade said...

Mets new Gorilla is Vientos

Mack Ade said...

Only if the Mets had a closer replacement for 2025

Right now they don't

Mack Ade said...

ATTENTION DIAZ DOUBTERS

THIS IS NOT A DIAZ PROBLEM

IT'S THE FACACTA WAY THEY DECIDED TO USE HIM IN THE PLAYOFFS

Remember1969 said...

Mack, I am not sure I can read your underlying message here - whether this is your opinion or trying to throw some sarcastic shade on others (me?), I will accept anything you throw my way - I am in agreement with your comment. I do not understand why they scramble the use of the bullpen just because it is playoff baseball. I will complain about it every time Diaz comes into the game in the 7th inning!

Mack Ade said...

R69

No... no sarcasm directed at anyone. Horrible use of your best arm. He needs to sit on Tuesday. Maybe Wednesday. You also need to figure out who you are going to piggy Senga with. Lastly, you need to determine who will pitch the 9th on days Diaz is rested

Just my opinion

Mack Ade said...

130 pitches over 8 days

Come on

Remember1969 said...

And as I have stated, I totally agree with you. I also agree that this messes up the rest of the pen and rotation. I might have a little different opinion in the 7th game of the World Series because everyone has a winter to rest up, but in the second game of the NLDS, the rotation and bullpen both need a sense of normalcy.

Closers have a different mind-set - don't screw with it.

Viper said...

130 Pitches in 8 innings, True.
Now think about how many leads / loses has Diaz had this year?.
1. Diaz comes into a game and usually he walks someone.
2. Then he pays no attention to the runner who promptly steals the base.
3. He then can't control the slider which makes him a fastball only pitcher

Tom Brennan said...

No worries, Diaz will figure it out. I do think he loves Ks because surrendering hits rattles him.

Tom Brennan said...

Mark Vientos must pinch himself every day.