Tangotiger
@tangotiger
#Statcast
Over last 5 years, the most popular primary pitch is
4-seam fastball, with 2512 pitchers having thrown it
No surprise either the 2nd most popular primary pitch is
Sinker (886 pitchers)
The most popular SECONDARY pitch is the Slider
Most popular combos:
FF/SL
FF/CH
Here are the run values for pitchers who throw each
primary (left column), secondary (top row) combo
Minimum 30+ pitchers throwing that combo
Note: correlation is NOT causation
Pitchers whose primary pitch is a sweeper just means they
throw great sweepers
More obviously ½
BUNT RATE, since 1969
Runner on 2B only, 0 outs
Home Team Bunting, Down by 1
9th or Extra Innings
Re-grading
the 3 big NY Mets trades for center fielders David Stearns has made
1) Tyrone Taylor (and Adrian Houser)
This is a slightly more complicated trade because it
involved another player who failed to make it through the year. In fact, if we
go back to how we honestly felt about this trade with the Milwaukee Brewers,
there was as much, if not more, reason to think Adrian Houser would be the
better Mets player.
It didn’t turn out that way. Tyrone Taylor became the far
better player acquired in this deal that cost them minor league pitcher Coleman Crow. Oft-injured with plenty of
uncertainties, swapping one low-ranking pitching prospect for a pair of major
leaguers always made sense.
Initial
Grade: A-
How do we feel now? Houser’s struggles as a starter in
2024 and later his low ceiling as a reliever had the Mets cutting him mid-year.
Taylor remained with the club and, once again, helped them in their time of
need as a regular center fielder. His defense is topnotch. The offense, while
regularly inconsistent, is acceptable only because of how perfect he does the
little things.
This trade deserves the same grade as it originally
should have received, just not for the reasons we thought. Until Crow does
something at the major league level, this is an A- worthy trade by the Mets.
Updated
Grade: A- but not for why we thought
MACK – remember this name…
Perfect
Game USA @PerfectGameUSA
Striker Pence is
unfair
He was sitting at 99-101 and hit 101 four times
Did we mention, he’s only 16?
Francys Romero @francysromeroFR
The Nationals have parted ways
with four area scouts from their international department, sources confirmed.
Among them is Modesto Ulloa, who led the Dominican Republic area
and was involved in signings or processes of players such as Juan Soto, Victor Robles, and Jose Ferrer.
MACK
– hmm… what?
https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6701964/2025/10/09/mets-mailbag-center-field-upgrade/
How
does the team not win one game after the eighth inning with the talent on this
team? I think that reflects on the manager’s preparation and ability to
motivate. — Jeffrey D.
Tim: Yes, the Mets went 0-70 when trailing after eight
innings; they were the only team in the majors that didn’t record a single
comeback win in that situation. They only tied the game twice, meaning opposing
closers were 41 of 43 in traditional save opportunities against New York.
President of baseball operations David Stearns called
the stat “inexplicable.”
But I hesitate to reach any grand conclusions about the
manager’s preparation or the players’ collective heart/grit/whatever you want
to call it based on that. First off, with the same manager and a lot of the
same players, the Mets won eight such games in 2024. Only one team this century
— Colorado in 2001 — came back in the ninth inning more often.
Second, it’s a weird stat, and one that doesn’t really
correlate to overall team success. Those 2001 Colorado Rockies? They went 73-89
despite all those comebacks. The two teams that didn’t own a ninth-inning
comeback in 2024? The historically bad Chicago White Sox and … the division
champion Houston Astros. The 2000 Mariners made it to the American League
Championship Series without a ninth-inning comeback in the regular season. The
2015 Pittsburgh Pirates won 98 games without one.
I think it’s part of the story of the 2025 Mets, and it’s
worth investigating why it played out so differently from 2024. For instance,
why did the offense experience so many extended lulls against opposing bullpens
(even as, in another contradiction, its overall performance against bullpens
was in line with 2024)? Maybe that’s one reason why Jeremy
Barnes and Eric Chavez were let go.
Finding the worst realistic fit for the top 10 MLB free
agents
https://fansided.com/mlb/worst-realistic-fit-top-10-mlb-free-agents
Edwin Díaz, CP: St.
Louis Cardinals
The Cardinals are all but officially entering a
transitional period, which some teams view as an opportunity to spend big and
bring in a proven All-Star. Díaz again dominated opposing lineups, posting a
brilliant 1.63 ERA and a 98-21 K-BB ratio across 66 1/3 innings. Plenty in the
Mets’ organization deserve blame for one of the worst collapses we’ll ever see
in sports, but Díaz only allowed five earned runs in 28 1/3 second-half
innings.
With that said, Díaz can do far better than the
Cardinals. There should be no shortage of contenders trying to land Díaz, and
we’re sure that the Mets will break out the big bucks if it means keeping their
star closer. Unless Díaz’s priority is money, then there is no reason for him
to even think about joining the Cardinals — and if money is the priority, then
we obviously won’t blame him.
https://sportsnaut.com/mlb/new-york-mets-rumors-trade-targets-sp
Erick Fedde, starting
pitcher, Chicago White Sox
Chicago White Sox starting pitcher Erick Fedde should be
near the top of the list of New York Mets trade targets. For a club seeking
stability for its rotation, Fedde provides it as demonstrated by his 3.11 ERA
with a 1.14 WHIP and .225 batting average allowed (FanGraphs) in 121.2 innings
this season. Making Fedde just as valuable, he’s owed less than half of his
remaining salary ($7.5 million) this season and he’s under contract at that
same cost in 2025. If New York is serious about contending, Fedde should be
prioritized.
Finding the worst realistic fit for the top 10 MLB free
agents
https://fansided.com/mlb/worst-realistic-fit-top-10-mlb-free-agents
Framber Valdez, SP:
New York Mets:
Speaking of the Mets, a major reason why they fell apart
in the second half was a lack of impactful starting pitchers. Kodai Senga fell apart, and while the duo of David Peterson and Clay
Holmes tried their best, they couldn’t save the Mets from themselves.
The Mets gambled on their rotation, and their reward came in missing the
playoffs entirely.
Valdez remains a workhorse, pitching 192 innings over 31
starts for an Astros team that barely missed the postseason. However, his hits
per nine rose from 7.1 to 8.0, and his 3.2 walks per nine marked his highest
since 2022. We won’t be surprised if Valdez slowly loses a lot of what’s made
him efficient, and that would be terrible news for a Mets team teetering toward
desperation. As bad a fit as this is, we nonetheless expect the Mets to ignore
us, sign Valdez anyway, and then act shocked when he’s a replacement-level
pitcher within two years.




5 comments:
Mack, the one person I think the Team missed was JD Martinez in the dugout. He really did not bring much with his bat down the stretch but I think his mature mental approach to hitting helped the whole team. He seemed to be a steadying influence from the moment he joined the team, a natural leader. I believe he did much more for the team then Mendoza did, it would be an awesome sign if they could bring him back as a hitting coach.
Many others share your opinion here
Striker Pence? Egads.
Coleman Crow had a solid AA bounce back after injury. Can’t keep them all.
The big missing player from last year was Iglesias hands down. He was the second most important Met last year after Lindy something Mack and I talked about last winter. From his play on the field to impact in the dugout to OMG it was a big missing factor in 25'. Striker Pence could there be a more perfect pitcher name but my question is: has he had TJS?
also on Valdez when did he last have TJS?
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