Pages

12/14/25

MACK - IN FOCUS - The Wilpon Era, Willson Contreras, Francisco Alvarez, Sandy Koufax, Winter Meetings, Team WAR AFTER Meetings

 



Sam Maxwell                @THE_SamMaxwell

I think I just realized that Stearns and Cohen are purging themselves this very offseason and within only a matter of weeks of every last player connected to the Wilpon era.

McNeil is the only one left

That’s exactly what they’re doing

I may do a 180 on all of this.

 

SleeperMets                       @SleeperMets

Should the Mets target Cardinals 1B Willson Contreras?


In 2025, Contreras was an exceptional defender at first base, with defensive metrics of:

+6 OAA(4th in MLB among 1B)    +4 FRV

On offense:

.257 BA    20 HR    80 RBI    .344 OBP    .791 OPS

 

Matthew Searle                  @searlebaseball

On a more positive note, does anyone else feel Francisco Alvarez might have a breakout year in 2026?



He was a completely different player after he returned from the minors last year.

I think if he avoids the hand injuries, he's going to be a major force in this lineup

MACK –

I think everything that has ever gone south with this guy was due to his ticky-tack injuries. Avoid them, and the Mets may have a starter here. 

 

Jim Koenigsberger                                @Jimfrombaseball

"Batters used the word "unfair."

I heard them say that -- "It's an unfair contest" -- after they'd been up to bat against him.

And I remember more than once a batter being up there and looking at that terrific fastball which always seemed to come up as it crossed the plate, and then shooting a look out to Sandy as if to say, "What was that?"

It was as if he'd thrown an Easter egg past them.

It was something different.

The game had been altered.

And then he had that devastating curve so the combination of those two...the batters felt absolutely helpless.

And he was beautiful to watch because he bent his back in a way that other pitchers didn't and he had these enormous long hands and long arms and there was a bow and arrow feeling about the way that he used his  body."

Roger Angell recalling Dodgers HOF pitcher Sandy Koufax at his peak.

 

MLB 2025 winter meetings

https://insider.espn.com/mlb/story/_/id/47265901/mlb-winter-meetings-2025-winners-losers-takeaways-offseason-free-agency

What the New York Mets did over a 24-hour period to end the meetings -- miss out on slugger Schwarber, lose closer Díaz to the two-time defending World Series champion Dodgers and lose Alonso, their franchise home run leader, to the Orioles -- felt like a bloodletting.

Collapses like the Mets' have consequences, and president of baseball operations David Stearns is reshaping them to his liking. Defensive liabilities are a no-no. Record-setting deals for relief pitchers are verboten. How the Mets proceed is anyone's guess, but let's not forget: Steve Cohen is still the richest owner in baseball, and that opens a world of possibilities. But if this period of inaction isn't remedied through decisive moves -- an influx of talent either through free agency or trades -- the Mets' playoff hopes will end before they've begun.

 

Ernest Dove     @ernestdove

Do Lindor and Soto combine for like 20 of the 24.9?

(i kid...................i think)

Team WAR…  AFTER… THE WINTER MEETINGS



27 comments:

  1. I said the same thing as Sam Maxwell a few days ago in one of my rants. Although I said they may keep him around because without Nimmo and Alonso he is pretty irrelevant. He will fade away after the season if he is not traded.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Joe

      Hint

      You don't have to keep telling us what you used to say

      Move forward

      Like the Mets are

      Delete
  2. It seems that every new GM/President has to put his stamp on the team when they take over to show who's the boss. Even if they cut off their nose to spite their face.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Stearns isn't new here

      He has however decided to build his own boat to sail or sink on

      Delete
  3. On Alvarez. I remain extremely skeptical. Mistake to say his troubles are result of injuries. His defensive shortcomings certainly are not. Nor are his offensive ones. I pointed out a month ago, which RVH picked up on, that his kinematic sequence is terrible and wildly inefficient; and that is terrible in a way that makes him especially vulnerable to any pitch middle out with horizontal let alone horizontal and vertical movement. For someone so stout in his legs, he does a terrible job of recruiting energy from the ground. One can be upper body dominant as a power source, as he is, e.g. Stanton, Piazza, but you can't initiate your transition and forward swing with your upper body first (as he does) and you have to stabilize your upper body movements through your legs and pelvis, which he does not do. He overpowered competition early in his career and did not learn proper hitting mechanics, and now facing ML pitchers who have stuff and a clue, not to mention lots of information about holes in his movement/swing, his deficiencies are far too easily exploited. One interesting fact: For a person who swings so hard, he has surprisingly modest bat speed. That is a dead give-away sign to anyone who knows kinematics that his kinematic sequence is miles off.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Good points on Alvy. I just, as Dave Mason once said, don't agree.

      The injuries he has had have hampered his (6 h words in a row) defensive growth.

      Go ahead. Break a thumb or two. See how your game plays?

      Delete
  4. Mack, do hate to disagree on Alvarez and want to send only good energy your way as you face surgery and procedure on Wednesday. I am sure everyone will be thinking about you and hoping the issues you face are resolved positively, that your recovery is swift and that you return to the page soon, full of life, energy and wisdom

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Asking doc to implant new outlook on life but he said NFW

      Delete
  5. There is a plan for next season & the next 5 seasons. They will field a playoff-competitive team & if things break positively, they will be a strong playoff team.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Mack only the best to you for Wed. and remember we both have to make it long enough to see at least a couple of years of Pena.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Sandy was my first and only idol back in the day as he was the GOAT long before they ever used that expression. He was a beautiful pitcher and person and is sorely missed.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Don’t make any trades and keep the young core intact. Sign 2 of these free agent starting pitchers and call it a day.

    Tatsuya Imai
    Ranger Suárez
    Chris Bassitt
    Michael King

    Trade McNiel, Manaea, and Peterson for whatever you can get and keep Senga around
    Also would still like to see Cody Bellinger signed by us

    ReplyDelete
  9. Sandy used to hang out with my Aunt Anne and Fred Wilpom when they went to Lafayette High School in Brooklyn. They used to hang out in my family home back in the day. That was before I was born.

    ReplyDelete
  10. I think right now relievers are more important.

    Zozo, based on his MO, I don't believe Stearns would sign Imai or Suarez. Bassett or King are good pickups

    ReplyDelete
  11. Good luck, Mack. Hope all goes well. Love Alvarez, think 2026 will be a big year for him.

    ReplyDelete
  12. The only way Mets fans will get relief in 2026 is by taking Flo Max.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Zozo has been hitting 500 foot bombs lately. Keep it up

    ReplyDelete
  14. Love Dave Mason. I have an original artist print of him re: Alone Together album that I no longer have room for in our home. Will gladly gift it to you to help you through recovery. Just privately send along your info to me. In the true spirit of a modern NBA style trade, my wife insists that in order to receive the DM print, you have to take on my print of Devo signed by the photographer, which my wife won't even allow me to hang in my office

    ReplyDelete
  15. Speaking of Koufax, my grandmother (on my father's side) Henrietta, had the greatest influence on my love for baseball -- more even than my Dad who was an actual baseball player. She regularly wrote to Walter O'Malley cataloguing Walter Alston's most recent, egregious managerial mistakes, concluding each letter with a demand that she be given the opportunity to manage the club. I kid you not.

    She took me to 15-20 games/year at Ebbets Field from the age of 5 on, required that I memorize batting averages and recalculate them after every plate appearance to develop my math skills. (I prayed for walks or sacrifice bunts.) She also had a dinner at her apartment to which she invited the Jewish players on the Dodgers, including Cal Abrams and Sandy Koufax.

    She regularly served knadle balls (sp?) in her chicken soup that were harder than a Rawlings hard ball (and were capable of causing more damage, whether thrown or eaten).

    We fell out when during my college undergrad years when I joined the DeBoise club after she lobbied for me to join the Young Republicans.

    Just a reminder that, among its most insidious unintended but foreseeable consequence, politics has always been capable of dividing friends and families.

    Thankfully we can all disagree about sports given outlets like this one, do so vigorously yet respectfully, brought together by a shared love for the Mets and the years of shared suffering they have blessed us with :-)

    Again, good luck Mack

    ReplyDelete