Showing posts with label Reese Havens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reese Havens. Show all posts

2/20/13

2-20-13 – Justin Turner, Jeremy Hefner, Jordany Valdespin, 2014 Outfield, Reese Havens




Steve Adams of MLBTR pointed out that ESPN’s Adam Rubin has speculated that the Mets will be shopping IF Jason Turner and RP Jeremy Hefner. Both have one more option left. I’m not exactly sure that the Turner rumors continue after Daniel Murphy was sent back to New York for rehab. Debt is not the Mets strong point, especially in the infield. The Murphy injury sound like a week to ten day kind of rest and recovery, but we’ve been here before with Mets infielders. For now, Turner will fill in with players like Brandon Hicks, and Jordany Valdespin (possibly Josh Satin, who isn’t on the 40-man roster).

In a perfect world, Reese Havens would have been ready to take over and we might never see Murphy again (not that I’m wishing that), but the Havens draft pick just hasn’t developed. I’m very curious what the Mets are going to do come April with second base. Havens could wind up back in Binghamton, but it really is Danny Muno’s (.280 at A+) turn to play there.Then there’s Wilmer Flores, who really needs to start a conversion to second at AAA. So, where does Havens go?
As for Hefner, why would the Mets think they could get a player for someone they don’t even want themselves? It must have drove him crazy watching the Mets throw minor league contracts out to all the guys they brought in. Yeah, let’s sign four or five guys and then keep Hefner around until all the other teams have already figured out who their 40-man rosters are going to be? Nice.

It seems to me that teams evolve and the days of both Turner and Hefney playing in Queens might have played out.



Hi Mack, After a very long winter I can’t wait until the games start. I live in Sarasota Fl. and catch the St. Lucie club when they come to Bradenton. First series is April 12-14 and it looks like we'll have a great staff so it won’t matter which games I go to. Two questions for you:

I know TC's talking about Jordany Valdespin at 2nd base but why not try him in right field? He played there in winter ball and has more upside than any other OFer we have. Byrd just takes up space.....really don't get this one.

With the scarcity of outfield help next winter and that's if all those predicted don't sign wouldn't it be more prudent on our part to look for solid AA outfield prospects in exchange for our pitching surplus or are you thinking that they'll go for a big trade for a major league OFer? Yours is my favorite blog by far, keep up the great work. Thanks, Gary Seagren


Hi, Gary.

Regarding Valdespin, it’s confusing to me also because the announcement came before the Daniel Murphy injury. At that point the Mets didn’t need another second baseman and you would think the best place for Valdespin to compete in the spring would be the outfield.
I think you’re seeing Collins cave into veterans being added to the mix of many positions and this just may be his early downfall. Old guys usually play like old guys.

Regarding the 2014 outfield, all bets are off right now. You’re going down the right path and trades for guys like Johan Santana, John Buck, and Shaun Marcus could produce one or two AA/AAA prospect outfielders. In addition, members of the Binghamton and St. Lucie pitching staff will be ripe for picking by other clubs for the right exchange. I’m not exactly sure who on the current Mets team will survive this. Duda, due to his bat, probably has the best chance, and organizationally, den Dekker the best to rise.







Uh-oh… Reese Havens just stood around today and didn’t participate in batting practice. Here we go again…

2/16/13

2-16-13 – Mets Pen, Jose Reyes, Marlon Byrd, Lucas Duda, Reese Havens




Jordany Valdespin, Wilfredo Tovar and Jenrry Mejia are the only players missing from camp.




A tie goes to the veterans. That is how manager Terry Collins views the competition for open jobs in the Mets’ bullpen, as he begins evaluating which arms might belong on the Opening Day roster. LaTroy Hawkins, Pedro Feliciano, Scott Atchison and Aaron Laffey are among the veteran relievers battling for jobs, with Jeurys Familia, Darin Gorski and Robert Carson among the notable younger pitchers in the hunt.

This makes sense to me. The veterans have been there before and they should be called upon first to prove they can still deliver the kind of stats they have in the past.

I assume that Frank Francisco will start the season on the DL.

“Locks” to me in the bullpen are Bobby Parnell, Brandon Lyon, and Josh Edgin (I’m missing somebody…)

Past that, it’s any combination of the names listed above plus Chuck James, Greg Burke, Jeremy Hefner, and Scott Rice.
IMO, the only youngster that stands a chance to come out of this camp with an MLB job is LHP Robert Carson, mainly due to how he pitched the back end of last season. Jeurys Familia still has to prove he can pound the zone, Darin Gorski needs to make the conversion to a reliever in the minors, and the opportunities for Elvin Ramirez may have come and gone.

Teams don’t sign all these veterans if they have confidence in their youngsters.

Regarding Las Vegas, look for new AAA pen additions Brad Holt (yeah, he’s still around), St. John’s Craig Hansen, Ryan Fraser, and Armando Rodriguez.




Kevin Kernan on old d’Arnaud coaches:

Roly de Armas was his first manager. Mike Compton was the Phillies’ minor league catching coordinator. D’Arnaud has earned a special place in both men’s baseball hearts. “I’ve started professionally in 1965 and I worked with and seen a lot of great catchers, and the great ones just have a different gear. Travis is one of those guys,’’ Compton told The Post yesterday at the Carpenter Complex, where Phillies’ minor league players train. “It’s like Usain Bolt; he can just run faster than other people. It’s just there.

“I was with Johnny Bench when he was a young fella,’’ said Compton, the Phillies field coordinator, “and Travis, when he’s off on another field and you look over; physically, he walks and looks a lot like Johnny. His shoulders hang like John’s; he’s got big hands like John, and the mannerisms. He’s got a lot of tools and he is such a gifted hitter.’’

Jesus, they compared him to Usain Bolt and Johnny Bench in the same story. Now, that’s pressure.





Jose Reyes said that two days before he was traded from the Marlins to the Blue Jays, Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria assured him he was not going to be traded by the flush-it-down the drain Marlins. “Two days before the trade, I was having dinner with him in New York,’’ Reyes explained.  At that mid-November dinner, the Marlins owner went so far as to tell Reyes to buy a house in Miami. “He was talking still about getting a nice house in Miami,’’ the former Mets shortstop said. “That was kind of crazy, how do you want me to spend my money in Miami when I have my house in New York and you are going to trade me in two days? “Then I went on vacation with my wife and I found out I was trade. I thought people were joking but when I called my agent he said yes I was traded … I was shocked.

          Are we talking scumbag or what?

Couldn’t you at least cancel the dinner? This trade will never be equaled in sheer arrogance by an owner. And the sad part about it is there is nothing anyone can do about it.

Let’s remember this team was dismembered two other times after getting to the World Series. It’s absolutely impossible to believe anything that comes out of this guy’s blow hole.

I really feel sorry for Reyes and I still miss him. He will always be a New York Met to me and we’ll never know what went wrong between himself, Sandy Alderson, and Fred Wilpon. This was an easily workable contract for a guy that could still be at short while Ruben Tejada moves over to second.


Kevin Burkhardt‏ - @KBurkhardtSNY

Terry Collins saying the Marlon Byrd, who arrived today, can win the RF job without platooning. I also think Cowgill and Baxter will get more and more consideration to lead off by TC, so platoons in RF and CF seem logical

I seem to remember Terry Collins doing this same “so-and-so can be a starter for this team” crap last year. I know it’s nice to say good things about your players, but everybody can’t start and haven’t you already said about eight other guys can start in the outfield?

TC reminds me of Vice President Joe Biden. There’s always just a little too much coming out of his mouth during the pressers.
I’m not sure if many of you know this, but one of the originators (and maybe the originator) of the platoon system was Casey Stengel.

(boy… the one thing missing on this site is a writer telling old stories about old Mets…)


Mike Puma‏ - @NYPost_Mets

Alderson says he will make a decision Monday regarding Santana and WBC. Santana says the Mets prefer he doesn't participate.

I just can’t see any scenario that would say this was a good idea. 
He’s coming off an injury, he’s your ace for a run for the playoffs, or he’s trade bait at the halfway point of the season. Pick one and there’s no reason to risk another foot injury.
I remember that game. I saw him land funny and I said to myself “take him out now”. You let this guy go ‘home’ and he gets hurt playing funny baseball for the WBC and you throw away any chance you have at either a pennant or another Zack Wheeler deal down the drain.




"Being sent down is probably one of the lowest points that you can have. I think that you learn from that and you grow from that, hopefully, and learn what you did [wrong] and what you can do to stay. And hopefully, I did that. That first couple of days you're angry, saying, 'Why am I here?' There's a clear-cut reason why you're here. You didn't play good enough to be in the big leagues. I realized that and got it through my head. I realized I wasn't playing well enough to stay there and tried to work to get back. And I did, and I think hopefully this year I'll stay there.”

Didn’t we just write last night about Duda having a lack of confidence? This paragraph ended a lot better than it started and the first step in achieving anything is believing in yourself. The scary part about the Mets outfield is Duda is the least of the problems which exposes just how severe this is. I can’t remember a New York team going into a season with this questionable level of talent in the outfield. I’m sure some of you can and I welcome you to chime in here.


Reese Havens

          "I'm going to have back problems. It's just, I've learned how to try to stay on top of my back with doing core workouts and stretching and stuff. That's just what I've got to do. I'm always optimistic coming in. Last year, I wasn't able to work out like I did this year and I had some doubts about where my back was at coming in. And I still know I'm going to have to stay on top of it. But just the quality offseason training that I had makes me a little more confident this year than in other years."

          I didn’t realize that Havens was in camp already.

Sadly, I have seen this before. His name was Shawn Bowman and he was the original third base prospect before David Wright. Bowman also had a bad back; in fact, he ‘broke’ it twice and, regardless of how well he continued to hit in the minors, he never could stay 100% healthy.

Bad backs are something that don’t go away. Mine was operated on 15 years ago which means I have two stories to tell. One, I had pain for the 15 years prior to the operation and, two, I have no flexibility for the 15 years after the operation.

I wish Havens all the success in the world, but, it’s just a matter of time before we write again about his back problems.

8/26/12

Stuff – Reese Havens, Tillman Pugh, BoSox Prospects, Darin Gorski, ‘The War Room’


Reese Havens
Havens is on another tear. He’s hitting .194 in his last 10 games (through Friday night) and comes in at .220 for the season. Frankly, the .220 was higher than I remembered him hitting this year. He followed up with a home run on Saturday but too little too late. Just a suck year with a stiff back thrown in for grins. I’m sure Sandy is having a hard time projecting David for next season. Danny Muno (who has moved over to 2B) is playing great at St. Lucie and deserves the bump up, and you can’t really promote a guy to AAA with these kind of numbers, can you? Tough call here. 

Tillman Pugh
I’ll never forget the day the Mets cut OF Tillman Pugh this year. We talked on the phone and he told me that the Mets told him that “the organization had too many outfielders”. That’s funny. Pugh was picked up the same day by the CWS and he’s now playing for Kannapolis (.250/.294/.198/.402, 3-SB). Not stellar, but we’re going to check back every six months to see his progress. 

BoSox Prospects
Question: Would you like to change the makeup of your upper levels in one day?
Answer: Here’s the young players Boston now features at the MLB/AAA/AA level:
LHP Felix Doubront               MLB  10-6, 4.70, 119-K, 122.2-IP

RP Franklin Morales              MLB  3-4, 3.77, 76-K, 76.1-IP

3B Will Middlebrook            MLB  .288/.325/.509/.835

C Ryan Lavarnway                 MLB  41-AB, .188 – AAA: .290/.376/.563/.939

RHP Rubby De La Rosa         AAA  On IR most of season  (tear of the ulnar collateral ligament)

2B -SS Ivan DeJesus Jr.         AAA  .295/.333/.415/.749

1B/OF Jerry Sands                AAA  .303/.380/.531/.911

SS Jose Inglesias          AAA  .266/.318/.306/.624

RHP Alan Webster                AA    117K – 121.2-IP

RHP Anthony Renaudo         AA    1-3, 6.69, 9-starts

RHP Brandon Workman       AA    10-7, 3.14 A+/AA (3-0, 1.50 – AA)

SS Xander Bogaerts              AA    .339/.373/.532/.909

RF Bryce Brentz           AA    .294/.356/.483/.839, 17-HR

OF Jackie Bradley                  AA    .276/.363/.443/.807 
Darin Gorski
Darin Gorski hasn’t duplicated the incredible year he had in 2011, but you have to give him credit for turning in a decent season at the talent-heavy AA level. Gorski went: 7.2-IP, 1-ER, 5-H, 9-K, 1-BB, 3.66 and pretty much has guaranteed that he will be the lefty rotational dude for the Mets new AAA franchise. Pick up some sunscreen Daris, you’re heading west. 
‘The War Room’
‘The Draft Room’ concept on Sunday was premature. We will return to ‘The War Room’ next Sunday.

3/11/12

Jarod Alley - The Bug is Biting


          Davis, Havens, Wright and Hairston are each having problems with their aching bodies of late. While Wright and Davis seem like they will eventually be fine Hairston and Havens look like there may be a black cloud hanging over head. In years past Mets fandom would be calling for the medical staff's jobs and questioning how little the organization knows about treating player's injuries. This time though one can only think of one word...Fluke! Ike and the "Valley Fever", Wright with a sore back/ribs, Hairston straining the same oblique that put him out of action last year.

          All of these just a bi product of some poor stretch of luck. After David's possible case of  Spondylolysis last year it would be naive to assume that he wouldn't have some sort of re-occurring issues especially with the rigors he faces during training and actual game play but chock this one up to the initial exertion of a player coming to camp. Give him a week and he'll be as good as new doing what it takes to put his best effort forward for the team. Ike is just an example of wrong place wrong time as the fungal sore he's been infected with only seems to be located in the South Western U.S. or Central and South America. True, this kind of fungal infection can be the sign of an autoimmune illness, of which HIV and Cancer are the most prevalent. However, I would like to believe that players get blood work done on a regular basis and Davis is just one of the unlucky few who contract the infection for no other reason than being in proximity of the spore.

          Which would bring us to the two cases I am least optimistic about recovery from. Scott and Reese are both unlucky because they have re-injured prior injuries or in the case of Havens, still cannot overcome the side effects of his multitude of back problems. These two guys will need to benefit from a strategic plan from the training and medical staff in order to come back soon and be as productive as the club hopes hey will be. With a definite need for a utility player and bench bat Hairston's injury seems like it could be the most debilitating. Especially since Havens, while a great asset offensively, has yet to play a full season of minor league ball. Some would say he has the skill set to move up to the bigs regardless but I don't think you supplant a big leaguer to find out. In fact, I think the more prudent thing to do is trade him if and only if he stays healthy in Buffalo this year thus making teams want to take a gamble.

         In all, while it is a bit worrisome, the "injuries" sustained should not hamper what the team will do in fact I will go on record saying no difference is a certainty. A few days missed here by Wright is no big deal, a month by Hairston should be digestible, a week or two for Ike is bearable and Havens if he isn't on the field wouldn't be much different from past years. It will be interesting to see if anything further develops though...and not in a good way.

3/1/12

Mack On – The Future of Second Base, ST Pitchers, Brant Rustich, Reese Havens, Toby Hyde




·         Queens is pretty simply this year. Daniel Murphy is going to play every day until he’s injured again. Justin Turner is the back-up, but only if Ike Davis stays healthy because, according to Terry Collins, Turner also in the back-up first baseman. It’s anybody’s guess past that.

Reese Havens will be the AAA second baseman until he’s injured…  I got stop all these negative waves. Rylan Sandoval looks to be the Binghamton starter while Wilfredo Tovar lines up at Lucy. The big question is Savannah and whether or not Danny Muno begins his switch to second back. He’s blocked by prospect JC Gamboa so now’s a good time to begin the process.

Cory Wimberly and Michael Fisher will fight it out for a utility slot in Buffalo while Luis Nieve may stick in the same role for St. Lucie.

Yucarybert De La Cruz, Carlos Leyva, and Sneider Batista will remain back in the extended camp waiting for the next wave of draft picks.



·         The Mets released the pitchers they will use in the first week’s worth of ST games:



o   Friday intrasquad - Dillon Gee, Jeurys Familia, Daniel Herrera, Jeremy Hefner, Matt Harvey, Miguel Batista, Tim Byrdak, Frank Francisco



o   Saturday intrasquad - R.A. Dickey, Pedro Beato, D.J. Carrasco, Armando Rodriguez, Chris Schwinden, Josh Stinson, Fernando Cabrera, Robert Carson



o   Sunday vs. top prospects - Mike Pelfrey, Ramon Ramirez, Manny Acosta, Chuck James, Jon Niese, Jon Rauch, Bobby Parnell, Garrett Olson



o   Monday vs. Washington at Port St. Lucie - Dillon Gee, Matt Harvey, Miguel Batista, Daniel Herrera, Tim Byrdak, Frank Francisco



o   Tuesday vs. St. Louis at Port St. Lucie (split squad) - Johan Santana, R.A. Dickey, Pedro Beato



o   Tuesday vs. Houston at Kissimmee (split squad) - Jeurys Familia, Jeremy Hefner, Josh Stinson



Missing:  Collin McHugh, Elvin Ramirez, Roy Merritt, Fernando Cabrera, Tobi Stoner, Mark Cohoon, Jeff Stevens, Erik Turgeon, Eric Beaulac, Eric Niesen, Jack Egbert, Dylan Owen





·         RP Brant Rustich continues his rehab. He has now completed five bullpen sessions, the best coming on Tuesday. Look for him to be moving on to pitching BP soon.



·         The Mets reported on Wednesday that 2B prospect Reese Havens will sit out a few days with a “stiff back”. Of course, we all hope that’s all it is, but, a bad back doesn’t heal. I can’t recall a single ballplayer that spent the early years of his professional career on the IR ever come back and be productive major leaguers. Genetics is, well, genetics. Sadly, it looks lke the Mets need to come up with a plan B for second base. Next in line would be Jordany Valdespin, followed by Phillip Evans and Danny Muno.



·         Toby Hyde is no longer an employee of the Savannah Sand Gnats.

2/14/12

Mets: Lucas Duda, Reese Havens, Jon Niese, Bullpen



Lucas Duda had trouble coming in on balls and he had trouble going back on balls too. Duda had four Defensive Misplays for failing to anticipate the fence, which rated his biggest defensive issue. Pro-rated over a full season, Duda’s misplay rate would come equate to nearly 60 Defensive Misplays & Errors for an everyday player over a full season. That would be about as bad as could be. Last year’s major league leaders, Justin Upton of the Diamondbacks and Mike Stanton of the Marlins, had 49. Other advanced defensive metrics are not kind to Duda either. Duda was charted as costing the Mets eight runs with his right field defense, combining the value of his ability to get to balls with the deterrent ability of his throwing arm. http://espn.go.com/blog/new-york/mets/post/_/id/37871/simonwhats-next-for-lucas-duda?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter

2-10-12 - seedlingstostars   - Second base: Reese Havens. Havens is a career .301/.379/.505 hitter in Double-A, but he’s only gotten into a total of 93 games the past two seasons due to injuries. Picked one pick ahead of Dykstra in the 2008 draft, he’s now 25 and badly needs a healthy season, but still has the potential to be an offense-oriented second baseman. Grade: B-

Jonathan Niese might be the most underrated young pitcher in the game. If you look at his record last year, you'll see an unimpressive 11-11 record with an equally unimpressive ERA of 4.40. But that cover really doesn't judge the book. He had an extremely high BABIP against last season at .333. Part of that was due to a fairly high line drive rate at 20.6 percent. The Mets' infield defense will be discussed in a moment, but suffice it to say that it didn't help Niese, a ground ball pitcher. Plus, a fairly significant amount of balls hit in the air ended up over the fence. Since opponents do not hit a lot of fly balls against him, we can consider that home rate a bit of a fluke. Niese had a FIP last season of 3.36 and an xFIP of 3.28. He was a much better pitcher than he looked. http://passion4baseball.blogspot.com/2012/02/nl-east-fascinating-place-mets.html?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter

Bullpen: Instead of re-signing the catalyst of this club, –Jose Reyes– Alderson decided to invest $7.5 million in two relievers; and they were paid much more than what they’re worth. What everyone seems to forget is Frank Francisco had a 5.92 ERA in the first half of 2011. He has never been a consistent reliever and now the Mets are committed to him for 2 years. As for Rauch, they decided to give him $3.5 million when he not only had a 4.85 ERA last year, but also is coming off of knee surgery! Aren’t these bottom-of-the-barrel signings supposed to be cheap and at give at least a decent return? The sole improvement to the ‘pen was Ramon Ramirez, and the Mets had to take a major downgrade in centerfield to acquire him. http://metsmerizedonline.com/2012/02/two-schools-of-thought-on-the-2012-mets-part-one.html

2/11/12

Mets: Craig Missigman, Reese Havens, Josh Thole, Matt Harvey, Domingo Tapia


2-10-12 - http://seedl ingstostars.com/2012/02/10/s2s-2012-team-prospect-lists-new-york-mets/?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter   - #10.) Craig Missigman, RHP. I’m going off the beaten path with this one. Missigman was one of 2011′s youngest draftees, as he didn’t turn 18 until the final month of the minor league season. A 37th-round pick, he acquitted himself well in 23 innings in the GCL despite his youth, with an 18/6 K/BB and just one home run allowed. At 6’4″ and 175 pounds, he has a lot of projectability, and he already sits in the 86-89 mph range with two usable offspeed offerings. Obviously, he has all sorts of time to figure out how to attack professional hitters as well. An intriguing deep sleeper. Grade: C+ 

2-9-12 - amazinavenue.   - 2B Reese Havens - What’s left to say about Havens? Once again he showed us he has a great approach at the plate, as evidenced by yet another 11+% walk rate. Once again he showed us he can hit for excellent power from the left side, thanks to another .150+ ISO. His average is still being held down by a highish K-rate but that’s nothing critical. He continues to project as an excellent mix of on-base skills, power and fair defensive ability at second base. But once again he failed to stay on the field, appearing in only 61 games which was unfortunately the second highest mark in his career. Last winter he had a procedure done which was purported to eliminate the chronic oblique issues. Yet in 2011 he still missed time due to back problems -- thought to be associated with lingering conditioning issues. But he went into the offseason healthy. And now that he’s had his first winter sans rehab in quite some time and now that the major health issue is supposedly behind him, it’d be nice to see him reach the 100-game plateau in 2012. Especially since it would also likely lead to a major league call-up. But if that doesn’t happen and he indeed suffers more health woes, it’s time to start seriously questioning whether or not Havens will ever be durable enough to have a meaningful big league career.

Thole’s 16 passed balls last season were the most in the National League and while the majority came while catching knuckleballer R.A. Dickey, he still made many other miscues that did not appear in the boxscores according to Lennon. Josh Thole has been working “intensively with Mets catching coordinator Bob Natal” this offseason, and is now in St. Lucie, two weeks early where he will work with new bench coach Bob Geren, a former major-league catcher. http://metsmerizedonline.com/2012/02/its-now-or-never-for-josh-thole.html?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=its-now-or-never-for-josh-thole

2-10-12 – bullpenbanter - In mid-August Baseball America named Harvey the top pitching prospect in the Florida State League, edging out names like Carlos Martinez, Jarred Cosart, and Trevor May. The difference, to his benefit or detriment, is that Harvey honed his skills at the University of North Carolina, whereas the rest did not. Was Harvey expected to dominate the pitching friendly Florida State League? Absolutely.  Binghamton, though? Initially, I wasn't so sure. Though, based on what polished college arms like Trevor Bauer and Sonny Gray are doing at AA, I'm now inclined to believe, "Yes. A college arm like Matt Harvey should dominate AA." While his ERA isn't as shiny as it was in the FSL, advanced pitching metrics show Harvey has been roughly the same dominate pitcher in both leagues

2-10-12 – AA  - As part of his continuing Top 100 Prospects series for ESPN, Keith Law posted his top sleeper in each organization this morning. For the Mets, that player was Kingsport righty Domingo Tapia; once again, for those on the outside of the paywall looking in, here is a brief commentary: "Right-hander Domingo Tapia is 6-foot-5 and hits triple digits as a starter with some sink on the pitch. He pairs it with a solid to above-average changeup that produced a reverse split in his 50 innings in Kingsport last year. He'll need a more consistent breaking ball to project as a top-end starter, but the velocity and changeup are a good start."

1/24/12

Mets: Bay for Burnett, Danny Muno, Reese Havens, Choo Choo Coleman, Philly Fans on Wilpons


The theory goes like this: the Yankees are looking for a righthanded power bat for a corner outfield spot / DH. Why? Because everyone seems to have forgotten that Andruw Jones was re-signed earlier this winter. Additionally, the Yankees are looking to unload A.J. Burnett, who has been — put lightly — a disappointment. Further, the Yankees suddenly have a surplus of pitching, after signing Hiroki Kuroda and acquiring Michael Pineda. Burnett is excess baggage they are motivated to move for a power bat. From the Mets’ perspective, Bay has also been a disappointment, and he’s an expensive contract to bear for a business going bankrupt. Though they’re not exactly flush with outfielders, the Mets are desperate to rid themselves of any and every multi-year, multi-million dollar contract. The immediate future is looking bleak, and even if Jason Bay returns to his monster form, it’s unlikely to make much difference in the Mets’ fortunes. Additionally, the Mets have very little depth behind their projected 5-man starting rotation — and a few of those projected starters have question marks. Getting another MLB starter is a distinct need, and there are worse options than Burnett — who might benefit from a return to the National League. http://www.metstoday.com/7392/11-12-offseason/should-mets-trade-jason-bay-for-a-j-burnett/

1-20-12 - http://metsmerizedonline.com/2012/01/prospect-pulse-the-2012-st-lucie-mets.html  Danny Muno (SS) - I have been asked if Muno is ready for Advanced-A ball, and I think yes, definitely. He is a very well equipped player who comes from a 4-year, major college program that won the National championship when he was a freshman starting shortstop. He has played off-the-hook so far in his professional career, including smacking NYPL pitching around like a playground bully. I don’t think the difference between the NYPL and the SAL is all that huge, and he will not be challenged by playing in Savannah. St. Lucie will be his landing spot and he should team very nicely with Tovar. In a recent interview with MMO, Muno discussed his drive and motivation: “I plan on being in the big leagues someday in the near future and I need to work on all the little things in baseball everyday, and I particularly need to work on the mental game.”

 1-22-12 - http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/prospects/watch/y2012/#list=rhp -  he was drafted out of the University of South Carolina in 2008, the hope was he’d be a college player who would move quickly. Injuries have been the biggest obstacle, with Havens playing in just 213 games over three-plus seasons. When he has been healthy, he’s been as initially advertised, with a good approach at the plate and a solid all-around bat. He’s also played well at second after being a shortstop in college. If he can stay on the field in 2012, he could be ready for New York in a year.

Fifty years later, out of all of the members of the inaugural 1962 New York Mets team, the details about the life and career of catcher Clarence “Choo Choo” Coleman have remained mysterious, as he disappeared from the public spotlight after leaving baseball.



The 76-year-old Coleman returned to New York for the first time in 45 years for a series of appearances at various memorabilia shows this weekend and Tuesday’s Baseball Assistance Team Dinner at the Marriott Marquis.  http://www.examiner.com/baseball-history-in-new-york/for-choo-choo-coleman-it-s-a-homecoming-long-delayed

For Phillies fans, there exists no greater sense of schadenfreude than taking the utmost delight in the failings of the New York Mets. Nevermind that the club has missed the playoffs for the last five straight seasons despite being consistently over the luxury tax, because now -- in the wake of the team's unfortunate involvement with ponzi schemer Bernie Madoff -- they might not have the necessary cash to continuing over-paying their talent.  http://www.csnphilly.com/blog/phillies-talk/post/NL-East-Mets-prep-lawyers-for-Madoff-hea?blockID=636010&feedID=693