4/16/25

MACK - MY WEDNESDAY OBSERVATIONS





Mets scratch Griffin Canning. Does this open the door for Brandon Sproat later this week?

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6282280/2025/04/15/mets-rotation-brandon-sproat-debut-possibility/

That’s the other uncertain aspect here. The Mets believe Canning should be able to pitch no later than Friday, which would allow them to keep the rest of their rotation in order. However, if Canning can’t go by then, New York will need to bring up another starter (and perhaps place Canning on the 15-day IL).

That’s where Sproat can come into the equation. He’s slated to start Thursday for Syracuse, so he’d be on only one extra day of rest to go Friday. And especially if Canning needs an IL stint, Sproat would stick in the rotation for more than one start. Like last year with Christian Scott, the Mets are more apt to call up a pitching prospect if there’s a longer runway to give him multiple starts.

Even if Sproat doesn’t make his debut this week, he’ll likely be needed in the majors before long. After this week, the Mets will need a sixth starter again by the first week of May. It would be a surprise if veteran Paul Blackburn is ready for a return by then, so New York will likely be sifting through the same candidates then as now, with the possible addition of prospect Blade Tidwell.

 

Approach to Juan Soto and Mets’ issues with runners on base

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6282800/2025/04/15/mets-offense-juan-soto-approach/

Starting with the topic du jour, Soto told the New York Post on Monday that not having Aaron Judge behind him in the lineup has changed the way he’s been pitched to this season. And as hot as Alonso has been all season, Soto is right.

In broad terms, Soto is seeing fewer fastballs than ever before: less than half the time for the first time in his career. (It was a career-low 50.8 percent of the time last year.)

He’s also seeing fewer pitches in the strike zone than ever before, at 43.2 percent, down more than 3 percentage points from 2024. This year’s mark is the fifth lowest in baseball.

And if you narrow the zone to the “heart” of the plate, Soto is seeing just 21.6 percent of pitches there, again down about 3 percentage points from last year and again the fifth-lowest mark in baseball.

“We’ve faced a lot of righties lately, and they’re making a choice to pitch around him a little bit more and try to get to Pete, and we’ve been fortunate that Pete is Pete and has been doing a really good job,” Barnes said. “If they don’t throw him a strike, he’s happy to take his walks, and that’s a positive thing for us. Pete’s done a great job so far coming up with some really big hits.”

Now, to be fair to Alonso, Soto was also pitched to more selectively in 2024 — with Judge behind him — than he was earlier in his career. It’s basically a career-long trend of teams pitching to him more and more carefully. In the end, it doesn’t much matter why Soto is being pitched to differently. It matters that he is, and it matters how he adapts to it. Given his home runs each of the last two nights, it looks like he’s adjusting.


This Week in Mets: Three early thoughts for the first 15 games

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6277444/2025/04/14/this-week-in-mets-three-early-thoughts/

Can the duo of Soto and Alonso do something like this all year?

The Mets’ slugging stars have combined for an OPS of .944 through 15 games, nearly 250 points clear of the league average. Alonso, of course, has done the heavy lifting, but even when he slows down, you can imagine Soto picking up his own pace.

So it’s not crazy to think that this is about what the Mets can get from their second and third hitters.



 What is the future of MLB free agency? 'Could be great, could be miserable'

https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/mlb/columnist/bob-nightengale/2025/04/13/mlb-free-agents-lance-lynn-vladimir-guerrero/83060198007/?s=03

(Read this…)

Of course, there is no free agency without exaggerated and fabricated reports.

Remember, under the rules of the collective bargaining agreement, no team is permitted to publicly say that they offered, let alone if they have any interest in the player. A player’s agent can fib, lie, fabricate, exaggerate, or do whatever he or she wants to do, and a team has no recourse.


Mets Prospect Notes

https://sny.tv/articles/mets-prospect-notes-jett-williams-drew-gilbert-4-12-25?s=03

If you don’t already know Eli Serrano III, you may want to start getting familiar with him.

Serrano landed with the organization in the fourth round of last year’s draft -- and he was widely praised for the strong offensive skillset that he displayed during his time at NC State.

The 21-year-old showcased that in a very small sample size towards the end of last year, compiling seven extra base-hits in 17 games as he made his pro ball debut with the St. Lucie Mets.

He was bumped up to High-A Brooklyn to begin this year -- and he’s been able to carry over that production on both sides of the ball thus far.

Serrano has a double, two homers, three stolen bases, seven walks, eight hits, a .457 on-base percentage, and an incredible 1.013 OPS through six games. He also gunned down a runner at the plate with a tremendous throw from center and made a pair of leaping catches at the fence in left.

 

Tyler Zuber certainly looked the part of a big leaguer during spring training.

The right-handed reliever walked four batters but he did well to limit the damage, allowing just one run while striking out six across 7.2 innings of work.

Thus far, he’s been able to carry that success over to Triple-A Syracuse -- bringing his ERA down to a strong mark of 2.08 ERA across four appearances after putting together a scoreless frame on Thursday.

He’s allowed just one run and two hits while walking one, striking out three, and generating eight groundball outs.

The 29-year-old struggled in the minors following a trade deadline deal with the Rays, but after spending a full offseason working with the Mets’ pitching lab, he appears ready to contribute at the big-league level.

There aren’t any openings in the Mets’ bullpen at the moment, but if Zuber can keep this rolling, his opportunity may come before you know it.


Jim Koenigsberger                         @Jimfrombaseball

While working as a scout for the Los Angeles Dodgers, Tommy Lasorda, the legendary former Dodgers manager and baseball ambassador, took a trip  down to the University of Southern California and scouted a young 20  year old pitcher on the Trojans staff.

The Dodgers drafted Tom Seaver in the 10th round of the 1965 draft. The Dodgers balked at Seaver’s asking price of $50,000 to sign. Dodgers scout Tommy Lasorda countered with a $2000 signing bonus offer.

After Seaver declined, Lasorda said to Seaver, who was studying pre-dentistry at USC,

“Good luck with your dental career.”




5 comments:

Tom Brennan said...

Lasorda was a dental case. He also let Ryan be traded to his crosstown rival LA Angels. Tommy, can you hear me?

Weather is normalizing, so I would like to see Sproat pitch in a 60 degree plus game, and see how that goes. Time for him to dominate. Pitching in AAA is like pitching to the Mets’ 5 thru 9 hitters.

Wonder what Canning was so sick from that they knew yesterday that he’d miss his next start?

All’s well that Tidwell.

Paul Articulates said...

From the extensive category of meaningless stats: "The Mets’ slugging stars have combined for an OPS of .944 through 15 games, nearly 250 points clear of the league average."
The reason OPS is such a big deal is that it measures the two measures that lead to runs - runners on base and extra base hits. You have to execute pretty poorly to be 18th in runs scored when your OPS leads the league by 250 points.

Mack Ade said...

Kranick to AAA

Hagerman to Mets

Tom Brennan said...

I don’t care how you slice it, saying Kranick won’t be gone long….but I’d be pissed. One of the best MLB pitchers since spring training started. I’d just send him to NY, and after Hagenman pitches, reverse that and reactivate Kranick.

Mack Ade said...

One day