5/6/26

Reese Kaplan -- A Rare Mets Win When Most Things Went Right


In the opening game of the Mets/Rockies series the Mets had some interesting developments.  Manager Carlos Mendoza opted to go with a reliever-first “opener” approach, using Huascar Brazoban, then Austin Warren and finally handing the ball to former starter David Peterson.  For three innings Peterson looked like a totally different pitcher, striking people out easily and keeping the scoring threat under complete control. 

Then, of course, came the 4th inning of his work which was highlighted by a Carson Benge tripping and falling incident in center field which resulted in a somewhat ugly triple for the opposition.  By the time the inning came to a merciful end two runs had crossed the plate and the game was no longer a four-run gap but merely a two-run one. 

The question many have asked is did Carlos Mendoza err by riding the hot hand given how dominant Peterson was during his first three innings or should he have yanked him and let him have a perfect memory to inspire him for his next game?  You could make cases either way and the latter one is very easy to advocate given 20-20 hindsight.  As it is now Peterson’s ERA jumped to 6.23 given his 8.00 ERA for this four inning appearance.

The question that comes to mind now is which David Peterson do the Mets expect the next time around?  Yes, throughout his career he has had intervals where his performance was once even All Star worthy yet there are other times you’d be hard pressed to justify keeping him on a major league roster.  With a starting rotation already missing Sean Manaea, Kodai Senga and David Peterson now that Christian Scott is back in the majors to get the ball every 5th game, it’s an odd situation.  Behind him in the minors you have Jonah Tong who is striking people out readily but still allowing lots of runners to cross the plate.  Jack Wenninger is doing much better with a 1.61 ERA and at age 24 might be ready to make the big leap.

On the side of offense, well, the four-run inning was a most welcome sight.  During it we saw Carson Benge go long for the third time this year and his batting average is now threatening to reach the Mendoza line.  That’s a huge jump from his horrific April and despite the odd triple situation today he’s put together a number of highlight reel defensive plays during the past several games.

The second run of the game came on a pair of back-to-back doubles by catcher Francisco Alvarez inserted as DH and reserve catcher Luis Torrens blasting one to right field to plate Alvarez.  That was an unexpected and most welcome development.

The one guy who does not get much recognition for what he’s been doing lately is emergency first baseman Mark Vientos.  The day before he had a pair of homers and four RBIs then in this game against the right handed reliever he lined a single to center field to drive in two more.  All of the sudden Vientos is up to a .250 average which is not All Star worthy, but suddenly he doesn’t look like the waste of roster space many had assumed he was.

On the flip side, the club has another player approaching the Mendoza line but from the other direction.  At game’s end Brett Baty is another O-fer away from descending into the .100s.  Given the injuries to Ronny Mauricio and Francisco Lindor his leash is necessarily quite a bit longer than otherwise might be warranted, but suddenly his most vocal proponents have conspicuously gone quiet. 

Finally, let’s wave our hats and stand up to applaud a 1-2-3 ninth inning by closer Devin Williams which included a game ending strikeout.  Maybe it’s only in New York where he can’t pitch effectively, but for a stellar six-pitch appearance he looked like the guy everyone hoped he would be.  Let’s hope it’s the beginning of an positive trend.

5/5/26

Cautious Optimist - The Data and the Damage Done? Is there a compelling objection to the Data Analytics Approach in baseball (Part I)

 


Ok, I love Neil Young.  I used to hold the view and expressed it too often to deny it now that the better musical talent in the Buffalo Springfield (and CSNY) was Stephen Stills.  So instead of denying the obvious or pretending I wasn't wrong (I was), I hope to redeem myself by ripping off the title of one of Young's many painfully touching songs.

And now for something completely different

I had an opportunity to read a recent Bill Madden column in which he criticized the current Mets' approach to roster construction.  The problem stems from David Stearns' approach which, according to Madden, has relied on 'analytics' at the expense of other strategies, which are not specifically identified, but which share the feature of not relying primarily on analytics.  While I have not followed Madden's work over the years, I have no reason to believe that he is anything other than professional, takes his craft seriously, and is good at it.  

I read the article carefully in search of an account of what Mr. Madden takes the 'analytic approach' to baseball or to roster construction to be, and an explanation of why following such an approach would be a bad thing.  My search was not rewarded.  To be sure, Madden ascribed such an approach to Stearns, but with only a name and not a characterization of the approach, I could only guess at what exactly he had in mind when using the term 'analytics.'  He did give a couple of examples of ways in which the roster has failed to measure up to expectations, and other examples exist of players who were let go and have now found success elsewhere.  

Excuse me for demanding more, but there is no evidence offered that the player Stearns let go was released because he failed to measure up on some analytics criteria, let alone any argument that he would not otherwise have been let go for the usual reasons players have always been let go -- long before there was such a thing as 'analytics' (if ever there was).  So without an account of what analytics is and why it's bad, and more importantly, why it has led to the the Mets miserable performance this year, Madden's piece is little more than an example of the logical fallacy of 'post hoc ergo procter hoc' which is roughly understood as inferring that A is the cause of B because A precedes B. 

He may well be right in his conclusion but his argument for the conclusion lacked the basic elements of a sound argument.

What was missing?

My goal here is to educate, not to criticize.  Madden's piece is not an outlier. It's common to criticize the analytic approach to baseball generally or some particular use of it in baseball without specifying what the author means by 'analytics.'  And it is equally commonplace to attribute a failure in a team's performance to its adoption of an analytic approach without defending the claim that the approach is the cause of the failure, which on some accounts of causation would amount to showing that the failure would not otherwise have occurred but for adopting the analytic approach.  

I take the latter criterion of causation to be too strong, but it is reasonable to ask for some causal evidence to support the claim.  Right?  

So two things are missing, not just in Madden's piece, but in virtually everything I have read about analytics and its failings in baseball

    * An account of what makes an approach 'analytic'

    * An account of how the analytic approach is responsible for the failures attributed to it.

I'm prepared to believe that the analytic approach may be inapt in baseball and other activities and that implementing it is responsible for some bad baseball performance (though I am also prepared to believe that it may well be responsible for some baseball success stories).

What I am pretty sure of is that we have no clear or shared conception of what the analytic approach is and that we have no agreed upon account of how we can determine which outcomes on the field can be attributed to it.  Lots of fire in the criticisms but precious little light.

So let's try to shed some light, OK? 

To be honest and fair, the only thing that most people associate with analytics in sports (and in other areas as well) is a (distinctive kind of) reliance on data, particularly quantitative information.  This conception of the analytic approach identifies it with related terms like 'data analytics' and 'quantitative assessment'; and it invites the following kind of objection.  

    * There is an important difference between quantitative and qualitative information.  The objection to the analytic approach is that it ignores or undervalues qualitative information.

This objection doesn't survive even modest scrutiny, because while there is a difference between quantitative and qualitative assessments, many, if not most, qualitative assessments are grounded in quantitative information.  So, for example, if we are trying to figure out whether a risk is worth taking, i.e. justified or even mandatory, we surely would want to know and thus be able to compare the expected costs of taking the risk and the gains that could be expected to be realized.

So even if we were committed to assessing players on some qualitative standard applying that standard to the facts at hand often requires developing data and analyzing it; and not just in baseball. In many areas of life, our judgments about what should be done depends on the numbers.  And as the saying goes, why guess at the numbers when you can measure?

On the other hand, I know of no serious data analytics person who believes that qualitative judgments are or can be eliminated in favor of data.  Data needs to be interpreted, at the very least in the light of some goals or interests that helps sort which data is relevant and why.  Data is an instrument, a premise in an argument.  It is insufficient on its own, without norms or standards, goals and interests, values and principles, to warrant a conclusion of any sort.

If the issue is simply that the data analytics folks eschew qualitative standards in favor of numbers then that's a straw man and should be of no real interest to anyone.  There's nothing to argue about.

    * One variation of the above objection is that the analytics geeks rely too heavily on the measureable and too little on the non measurable.

Here the objection is a bit different.  The response to the first objection is that both quantitative and qualitative information are interwoven with one another.  Qualitative judgments require support and often that support takes the form of quantitative data. At the same time quantitative data doesn't tell us what to do absent qualitative standards, interpretive principles, goals and interests.  So they are inextricably linked.

This objection takes a different form.  It relies on the idea that commitment to analytics is not just commitment to the role of data as support or evidence that requires some independently specified criteria or goal.  To be committed to data analytics is also to be committed to a certain quantitative kind of criteria. Here are some examples.  When comparing risks and benefits, the relevant criteria is always going to be optimal risk reduction or maximizing benefit relative to risk.  If comparing probabilities of a righty hitter facing a lefty pitcher and a lefty hitter facing a lefty pitcher, the correct standard to apply is: higher probability of success, period.  And so on.  The criteria are themselves suggested by the data: higher probability of success, greatest expected gain, lowest expected risk or cost, and so on.

And so the objection is based on the idea that if you are true believer in analytics, you are also a believer that the data call for a certain kind of standard of assessment: one that puts emphasis on 'more' 'less' 'efficient' 'optimal' and the like.  The problem is that there are genuinely different kinds of criteria that are applicable in baseball, like, BB IQ, intuition, instinct, creativity, character, discipline, leadership, and so on.

The criticism can now be understood as the claim that the data analytics folks rely too heavily on criteria of the first sort as compared with criteria of the second sort: in effect, criteria that seem suitable when dealing with numbers as opposed that rely on the less measureable attributes of players. 

Now this objection is getting closer to a genuine concern, but it is not yet there, because as stated, the objection is really a call for the right balance between the two kinds of criteria. Finding that balance must be decided team by team. Its resolution depends on where the expertise lies in the organization and the results the team produces.

    * A slightly different objection focuses on the difference between quantitative and qualitative information and calls into question the actual possibility of balancing criteria of the one sort with criteria of the other.  Call the former 'hard variables' and the latter, 'soft variables'.   Height and weight are examples of the former; beauty and creativity are examples of the latter.  Balancing the quantitative and qualitative requires that the two to be commensurable.  In other words, there has to be something common to both that allows me to trade one off against the other.  

But there is no common ground between height and weight on the one hand, and beauty and creativity on the other. They are incommensurable, and what happens when you have an organization that is run by the analytics group is that the 'soft' variables, e.g. baseball IQ or intuition, instinct, creativity, character, team spirit, fellowship, etc., are 'squashed' by decision makers who are largely trained to assess the numbers and not the other traits that figure just as much, if not more,in ultimate performance and team success.

When drafting players you may be able to find the right balance when you have to trade off between a five tool player and a three tool player who has exceptional skills at those three skills and league average skill levels otherwise, but how can you trade off or find a balance in choosing between great skills with no creativity or instincts on the one hand and great leadership and discipline but major league average physical skill set? 

Even if we could imagine ways of balancing or making trade-offs, the truth is that the leadership is likely to go with what they know best and feel most confident doing.  The real objection here is that those who are trained largely in one way of organizing a baseball team or playing the game are very likely not just going to adopt their approach in hard cases, but to see certain cases that to neutral observers or ordinary fans as  not hard at all; as easy in fact. It's always going to come down to being about the numbers.

I would not dismiss this objection or concern out of hand.  We are all prone to endorse the way we do things or the way we have been trained to do them and while this should not lead us to dismiss other approaches, it often naturally leads to discounting them, and at worse, suppressing them.  This is not a problem with analytics, so much as it is a human failing or shortcoming, and frankly needs to be monitored and checked in every organization whatever blueprint it follows -- from data analytics to the eye test.

But the objection to analytics runs deeper than this

The problem with stopping here is four fold.  

    *  It is unsatisfying to say that the problem is a human shortcoming in favoring the methods with which one is familiar while discounting other approaches.  Acknowledging the human condition may not give proper due to those who object to the modern approach.

    *  At the same time, stopping here with reducing the objection to identifying a human failing kind of cuts the debate off at its knees and never really explains to anyone what analytics is.

    * It doesn't give those who believe that analytics is an overall positive force in baseball an opportunity to explain how and why it is.

    * Finally, it does not give me a chance to open up the discussion of analytics and broaden it by pointing out some of its most glaring shortcomings: shortcomings that even someone who sees the value of analytics -- someone like me -- would have to admit are serious.

In short, stopping the discussion here would prevent all of us from becoming a little more modest about how much we can accomplish through the tools we employ,  recognizing where those tools can be most effectively deployed as well as where they are least likely to be helpful.  In other words, we need to find the limits of our approaches as well as their respective promise.

In the meantime, I'd like to know where most of you stand on the analytics approach to baseball.  Let me know in the comments.



Steve Sica - What Kind of Leader is Francisco Lindor

Brad Penner-Imagn Images


Jeff Passan said that the Met are a team "lacking an identity" right now. He tweeted that out along with a picture of Francisco Lindor.

Lindor is the undisputed leader of the Mets and even when Alonso and Nimmo were there, despite their longer tenure with the franchise and being home grown Mets', you still had the sense that this was Lindor's team.

Lately, well, it feels like every year, Lindor's play, leadership, aura, whichever you want to call it comes into question. This year, the noise is louder than most, thanks for a complete roster overhaul and one of the worst April's in team history. Lindor seems to always bear the brunt of the fan and media ire towards the Mets.

Which leads to the question of, what kind of leader is Francisco Lindor? This is not a question laced with criticism, but a genuine look at the type of player Lindor both on the field, around his teammates and to the media. 

The best example of Lindor leading this team is undoubtedly 2024. He had a career year and put the team on his back to get them to a postseason berth. His two key home runs in Atlanta in game 161 and then his grand slam in game four of the NLDS against Philly were two of the biggest blasts in recent Met history. But it's also a glance into the type of leader Lindor is. 

When he hit that grand slam at Citi Field against the Phillies, all but putting the final dagger into Philly, he ran around the bases like he just hit a home run on some random day game in April with 10,000 fans in the stands. Not like he just hit the most crucial shot in the Met season with a sell out madhouse at Citi Field erupting around him.

Even when the Mets clinched the series, he is seen acting very calm while his teams jump around him. There is nothing wrong with that. In fact, in an era of showboating home runs, Lindor is a breath of fresh air that he simply jogs around the bases in a very "job not finished yet" type of way. Fans though can take this two ways. 

I read somewhere that winning in New York isn't good enough for New York fans. New York fans don't just want you to win, but win with style. It's all too true. New York fans want you to be just as loud and passionate as they are when you're on the field. It's why the 1986 team is so beloved. It's why fans latched onto Matt Harvey as soon as he came up. They love players that show their emotions and fans feed off that in the stadium.

This simply isn't what Francisco Lindor is. He's not the kind of player that's going to give you that fire and brimstone attitude out there. Perhaps that's why his legacy is cloudy. He reminds me of Carlos Beltran. Another soft spoken type of player that just got the job done and was great at it. Although, him jumping on home plate after that walk off against the Cardinals in August of 2006 is an iconic shot, Beltran's legacy as a Met always comes into question.

Francisco Lindor is without a doubt, the greatest shortstop to ever wear a Met uniform. But maybe it's time to stop forcing him to be something he's not. I do think he's a great leader. Captain worthy. But for the fans that want to see this high energy type player, it's just not going to happen. Juan Soto could be that guy, but in my opinion, him acting more like an Ivan Drago type player raises his intimidation factor. 

We can only hope that whenever Lindor's time with the Mets comes to and end, he'll have World Series ring to show for it. Otherwise, we're going to be going down the same road as we did with Beltran. Watching the best Met to ever do it at their position, but focusing on the negative and not appreciating what we have in the moment.

Tom Brennan - Mostly Troubling Mets Tidbits; Nick the Quick; Can Aces Win?


CASEY KNEW WHAT TROUBLE IN METSVILLE LOOKED LIKE

 A black cloud follows this Mets team. California weather was good, but when isn’t it.

Now on to Denver for a Monday and Tuesday night,and a Wednesday day game.

Naturally, the weather forecast turns bizarre:

On Monday evening, dropping but decent temperatures and some showers. Smartly, the game was started and completed HOURS EARLY.

Mets use 5 pitchers, with Brazoban throwing a scoreless 1st inning. Johnny Carson Benge was Johnny on the spot, as he hit his 3rd. Mets bunched 4 with inning runs, compiled just 4 hits, and left one, yes one, man on base. We’ll take it.


Then…

“WINTER STORM WATCH IN EFFECT FROM TUESDAY EVENING THROUGH WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON.”

“Heavy snow possible. Total snow accumulations between 3 and 9 inches expected, heaviest on colder surfaces.”

Early May! COLD!! Snow!! 

Then…

After the series? On Thursday and Friday in Denver, sunny and 70.

Mets? Cursed. But they got game 1.


My article:

I’ll be busy this week, so I drafted these tidbits up mostly on Sunday AM:

We all know the Mets’ abysmal early performance, showing up where it hurts most: in the win-loss column. 

Here are some underlying tidbits:


The Mets through Saturday?

They were DEAD LAST in runs batted in with runners in scoring position. 79.

And one of the lowest team averages, too, with RISP.

85 runs scored with runners in scoring position, as compared to Milwaukee’s 151. 

Quite the difference, huh?

 - sign of a losing team.


They were dead last in OPS (.629).

Braves? First at .796.

Quite the difference, huh?

 - sign of a losing team.


Batting average on balls in play?

Top team hitting .320.

Mets 27th at .273.

Quite the difference, huh?

 - sign of a losing team.


Stolen bases?

Top team has 38.

Mets have 18 (21st overall).

Quite the difference, huh?

 - sign of a losing team.


Home runs?

Yanks # 1 with 53.

Mets # 26 with 25. 

Quite the difference, huh?

 - sign of a losing team.


NOLAN MCLEAN?

Ace of the staff.

2.97 ERA. But just 1-2.

Mets, somehow, are losers of 6 of his 7 starts. Egads.

 - sign of a losing team.


First in baseball’s entire minors in batting average and OBP?

AJ Ewing. .395 and .510.

Promoted to Queens yet?  

No.

- A big glimmer of hope. Is he the next Pete Rose?



Most minor league strikeouts by a hitter?

Elijah Green, former #5 overall, Nats: 

An astonishing 58 Ks in 23 games in A ball.

- rumor has it that he goes to the plate without a bat.

- not to be confused with former Mets 2020 second rounder Isaiah Greene.

  - - Isaiah flopped, and is out of pro ball.

Second in Ks?

Ryan Clifford: 48 Ks in 30 games.

Colin Houck (34 Ks in 21 games) has had a similar per-game rate as Clifford.

I’d much rather see 30 Ks in 48 games, and 21 Ks in 34 games, from these two. How about you?


HERE IS SOME GOOD NEWS:

Jacob Reimer started out extremely slowly, especially with runners in scoring position. But over his last 4 games, he’s notched 7 hits, and over his last 7 games, he’s walked 9 times. Very encouraging. 

Warmer weather works wonders.

And, of course, Mark Vientos’ 2 HRs on Sunday. And 2 RBIs on Monday.


Enough of me…

WHAT TIDBITS OF YOUR OWN DO YOU HAVE TO SHARE?

MOVING ON…


ME? 

I AM WISHING FOR MORABITO TO SHOW UP IN QUEENS ASAP

Nick Morabito in AAA through Sunday has a .397 OBP, 10 steals, and 4 HRs. I think he is just about ready, especially if Robert’s injury persists. 

We won’t apparently be seeing Polanco, Lindor, or the (IMO reckless) Mauricio anytime soon in games.

As much as I’d like to see the blistering hot AJ Ewing called up now, I think he could use the foundation of at least 20 more games in AAA. 

So I say let’s go with Nick.  Do it, and do it quick.

I think with normalizing temperatures, Nick’s bat is about to get HOTTER. 

Last year, he was hitting just .210 on May 10, and then it warmed up, and so did his bat - he hit over .290 the rest of the way - so I base my upward projection on that. 

Get Nick the Quick up here - quick! 

He could replace .200 Tyrone Taylor.


“PULCHRITUDINOUS?”

Saw this in the NY Post about Gary Cohen’s description of Carson Benge’s outstanding diving catch on Sunday:

“Gary Cohen broke out the dictionary to find a way to describe the incredible catch made by Carson Benge in the ninth inning of Sunday’s Mets’ 5-1 win over the Angels. 

“The SNY broadcaster called the diving catch a “pulchritudinous play” on air as broadcast partner Todd Zeile looked as astonished by the play as he was by Cohen’s choice of words to describe it.

“I’m not going to say it was pulchritudinous, but I’m going to take your word for it,” Zeile said, “That was an amazing play.” 


5/4/26

Paul Articulates - Calling them out


The New York Mets’ losing streak ended last week.  When a losing streak ends, it is usually time for renewed optimism, and the players feel better about coming to the ballpark.  That is often reflected in their play.

This is not the case with this team.  There is no more spring in their step than there was in the midst of the dirty dozen consecutive losses.  They had a chance to get back into some successful baseball against the Angels who could have taken over as the team with the worst record in MLB.

Instead, it was more of the same uninspired play.  It was maddening to see them match up on Saturday night against a mediocre lefty Reid Detmers who had awful splits against right handed batters and an ERA over 5.  Instead of blowing the game open early, the righty-dominant Mets lineup got mowed down inning after inning, registering 8 strikeouts against a guy that doesn’t strike out many.  There were so many things in that game that epitomized this season and the end of last season that have just taken the wind out of Mets fans.

With that in mind, I believe it is time to call some people out.  After all, this ball club is one of the highest paid group of athletes in the sport.  Many of the players have recently come to New York on very generous salaries to help the team, and very few are pulling their weight.

Jorge Polanco is being paid $20M this year to sit out with a sore wrist.  He has played two games all season as the “solution” to the gaping hole at first base left by Pete Alonso’s departure.  Polanco did nothing in those two games or in the last two weeks of spring training to prove that he could play first base any better than Pete.  In his wake, a combination of players which has narrowed down to Mark Vientos have filled in.  Bad investment.

Sean Manaea, Kodai Senga, and David Peterson are being paid $25M, $15M, and $8.1M this season to put the Mets behind early and exhaust the bullpen arms.  Last season’s debacle was partly blamed on the overuse of the pen, yet here we are again watching starters go less than five innings.  I find it hard to blame Carlos Mendoza this time, because anyone would pull these guys early with their lack of control of the ballgame.

Francisco Alvarez gets a dishonorable mention here, too.  Although he is still a relatively inexpensive club-controlled player, he was the hope for the future – the most talented of the baby Mets.  Despite all of the accolades coming up on how quickly he improved on the defensive side of the ball, I don’t think he calls a good game from behind the plate.   This could be contributing to the lack of success the starters are having.  I watched Nolan McLean give up three runs in an abbreviated start this weekend.  McLean has the nastiest stuff of all starting pitchers in baseball, yet somehow a team with a .235 batting average managed to string together hit after hit against him like they knew what pitch was coming. 

Mark Vientos and Brett Baty were the other two “baby Mets” that came up with Alvarez amidst much fanfare.  Both of them have shown glimpses of their abilities, but neither has been able to put together a consistent run to prove that they belong in the starting lineup for a championship contender.  Right now they look like a comfortable fit in the starting lineup for an MLB-worst team, but that is not the plan. When they become eligible for free agency, it will be the end of their run.

Devin Williams ($17M); and Luke Weaver ($11M) have not earned their money, as both have shown the inconsistency of a coin flip on the mound.  The back end of the bullpen is supposed to have a high probability of success every time they step on the field.  Without that, the team (and the fans) have no confidence in victory even when the first two thirds of the game goes well.

I won’t call out the rest of the guys, but you can see the theme here.  With none of these guys performing, there is almost nothing that Mendoza or Stearns can do to fix the 2026 problem.  Just to add insult to injury, their attempts to help have been very unhelpful.  Mendoza has used just about every permutation of batters in the lineup and developed elbow tendinitis from pulling so many pitchers so fast.  Stearns keeps sending $1.5M free agent re-treads up to the team to fill for injuries and inabilities.  This has got to be exasperating for the prospects that are striving to get a shot.

For those that are struggling to figure out what to do with this mess, I would focus on one thing.  Players have to step up and play the kind of baseball that got them to this point.  Nothing else short of calling it a lost season and playing a team full of prospects is left.

Reese Kaplan -- Do Platoons Work? They Didn't Help on Saturday


After the Mets made a nice come-from-behind victory against the Angels on Friday there were a a number of Mets fans proclaiming loudly that it was a new month starting off the right way and now we would see the “real” team.  One good game is hardly a trend of correction taking place, but hey, after what’s happened in April you take anything that can be construed this way since there has been so little to celebrate during the early 2026 season.

One of the first signs that things may not be quite so rosy was the starting outfield Carlos Mendoza opted to use for the second game on Saturday night.  In left field the Mets had 33 year old Andy Ibanez, the latest addition from the DFA cesspool of players no longer wanted by their former teams.  Ibanez is a career .251 hitter though lately he hasn’t nearly approached that number.  Over the course of career that began in 2021 he has accumulated 28 HRs and 131 RBIs with the high water marks coming for the Tigers in 2023 when he hit 11 and 41 respectively while hitting .264.  Since then he’s been up 417 times with 9 HRs and 56 RBIs while hitting .235.  Those numbers aren’t bad but his 2026 start with a .118 average demonstrated to his former employer that he was no longer Athletics material.

In center field the Mets inserted solid fielder Tyrone Taylor who is arguably the best 4th outfielder in the game as he could provide late inning defense when starters could be benched for the 8th and 9th innings.  His bat, unfortunately, never reached the same level of acclaim.  For his career he’s a .237 hitter who during a 162 game season would provide markedly similar numbers to Ibanez with a little more power at 14 HRs and 56 RBIs.  Again, these numbers are bench worthy but as a starter?  Probably not.

Out in right field Mendoza opted to use new Met Austin Slater.  He’s a career .247 hitter with an annual average of 10 HRs and 42 RBIs.  Once again David Stearns felt that the club was bolstered by this DFA addition for reasons that are increasingly unclear to fans observing the games.  After all, if a player is cut loose by a team with a better record what makes you think he’s suddenly going to become Tony Gwynn?

Now getting back to Saturday night, it was obvious that the club was going all in with right handed hitters wherever possible as the Angels were starting southpaw Reid Detmers.  Granted the lefty/righty platoon thing is a known component of baseball but it’s not as if Detmers is Steve Carlton reincarnated.  His 4.06 ERA isn’t bat but for his short career he owns a 4.71 mark dating back to 2021.  Think of him as an Angels version of David Peterson though nearly a half run worse in career ERA. 

So how effective is platooning for hitters and pitchers?  .   

Well, according to statisticians the idea of lefty bats facing righty pitchers and righty bats facing lefty pitchers indeed has advantages.  How big?  Well, the number floating around is an 80 point increase in OPS over what is achieved when the opposition pitcher is on the same side as the player bats.  That’s an argument hard to dispute.

On the flip side, southpaws are significantly more effective against left handed hitters.  The metrics are indeed eye opening.  Lefty hitters lose 141 points in OPS when facing a left handed pitcher.  Consequently the prospect of putting a huge number of right handed hitters into the lineup makes some sense indeed. 

Here’s an extended discussion of this concept from Quora:

Lefty-lefty and righty-righty matchups produce a measurable advantage for the pitcher because of how batsmen see and hit a pitched ball, and how pitchers can control movement and release to exploit visual and mechanical weaknesses. Key physical mechanisms:

  1. Batter sightline and release geometry

  • For same-side matchups (left-handed pitcher vs. left-handed batter, or right vs. right), the pitcher's release point and the incoming ball track originate from a side that partially blocks the batter’s optimal sightline.

  • The ball appears to come more "from behind" the batter’s front shoulder, shortening the time the batter has to see spin and trajectory changes before the swing decision must be made.

  1. Visual perception and timing

  • Batting relies on very small timing and angle cues in the first ~100–150 ms of ball flight. When the pitcher’s release and initial trajectory are on the batter’s glove/shoulder side (same side), the important visual cues (spin axis, seam orientation, lateral motion) are less salient and are revealed later in flight, increasing perceptual uncertainty and timing error.

  • Slight delays or misestimates of pitch location/timing reduce contact quality more than equivalent deviations in opposite-side matchups.

  1. Lateral movement (sweep) and handedness of movement

  • Breaking balls and two-seam/sinker fastballs move laterally due to seam-induced Magnus forces. A left-handed pitcher’s breaking ball tends to move down-and-away from a right-handed batter and down-and-in to a left-handed batter (signs depend on pitch type).

  • Same-side pitchers can more easily deliver pitches that move into the batter’s swing path or jam the hands (inside movement), producing weaker contact, more ground balls, and more swings at pitches that break back toward the bat’s handle where it is harder to extend and square up.

  1. Platoon-specific pitch repertoires and release angles

  • Many pitchers have better command and spin characteristics on certain pitch types (e.g., a lefty with a sweeping slider that naturally moves away from righties but jams lefties). When facing same-side hitters, pitchers can exploit their best pitch shapes and release angles with less fear of a batter turning it the other way.

  • Release point alignment with batter handedness changes perceived horizontal location: a same-side pitcher can make a pitch look like the plate is farther inside or outside relative to the hitter’s swing path.

  1. Swing mechanics and lane of the bat

  • A batter’s swing plane and bat path are tuned by handedness. Same-side movement tends to either run into the hitter’s hands (jam) or move under/behind the bat path, producing weak contact or swings and misses.

  • Opposite-side movement more often runs away from the bat’s sweet spot or invites hitching the barrel to reach outside pitches; some hitters handle that better than being jammed.

  1. Statistical and strategic reinforcement

  • Over many at-bats, these small perceptual and mechanical disadvantages aggregate into lower batting averages, lower slugging, and higher strikeout/ground-ball rates versus same-handed pitchers.

  • Managers exploit this by matching handedness: bringing in a same-side reliever for a tough matchup and platooning batters to maximize favorable lefty-righty splits.

 Practical summary

  • The advantage is a compound effect of altered sightlines/timing, pitch movement relative to the batter’s swing path, and pitcher command/repertoire aligning with those movements. These physical effects are small each at-bat but consistent enough to produce significant career- and season-level platoon splits.

However, you also need to consider the best case and worst case scenarios with these platoons as well as evaluating whether or not the platoon becomes a self fulfilling prophecy.  No one can evaluate other than through historical records how many lefties vs. how many righties a hitter will face. 

Consider the players the Mets have on their rosters and you really do need to wonder whether or not the platooning makes sense.  We’ve already looked at the career numbers of the three starting outfielders and you have to wonder if, for example, MJ Melendez who is hitting .323 with a pair of home runs in his 31 ABs would have served the team better with a bat in his hand than sitting on the bench doing nothing.  Similarly, neither Brett Baty nor Mark Vientos have demonstrated the ability to dominate with a bat in their hands, so you have to wonder if limiting their ABs is going to help improve things.

As it turn out, Slater got two hits on Saturday night, Vientos got a hit and Ibanez went 0-2 but did drive in a run.  So maybe there is some truth after all.  

5/3/26

Tom Brennan - Green Shoots in a Dire Mets Landscape



Without green shoots, we would only have crap shoots in Queens. 
But the minors may give double-green shoot help - pitching & hitting.

This 2026 Mets season so far is like when I ran the 1981 New York City marathon. Imagine if I took a few steps, tripped on my shoelaces, skinned my knee, try to get up and run only to fall again and have my shoe fall off and twisted my ankle. (I didn’t, though….I ran a 3:25 marathon that day).

That image pretty much summarizes the Mets season so far. 

Last night was competitive against the struggling Angelinos but was lost in extras, 4-3, with Waddell pitching decently but not catching breaks.

Bo Bichette and Juan Soto get the goat’s horns. After the Mets rallied to tie in the late innings, with the bags juiced and 1 out, Bichette was retired on a force out at home, and then Soto fouled back a dead-center-of-the-plate fastball on 0-1, and looked really mad at himself. Then, he fanned on a cutter out of the zone on a checked swing. The Mets needed a grand slam there.

The Mighty Soto has 8 RBIs on the season. Meanwhile, Munetaka Murakami of the CWS has 13 - HRs - that is, and 26 RBIs.  Hmmm…

Anyway…my topic is the Mets Minors…

As I recapped this past week, the Mets minors, in both hitting and pitching, has performed nowhere near what you expect of a top 10 minor league organization. It looks more like a 25th best, based on results so far. The hitting has been mostly quite bad, and the pitching has been mostly pretty bad. And that’s not even pretty good.

In fact, in a league where the second-worst team is hitting .224, the Brooklyn Colonics are hitting an incomprehensible .181. Binghamton’s dead last by far Eastern League team average meanwhile is looked upon with envy by Brooklyn hitters, but by no one else.

Meanwhile, the Queens Mutts are 27th in batting average and 29th in runs, a mere 81 runs behind the Braves.

Back to topic…

The formula for the major leagues, though, as it involves the farm system, is to be able to bring up a bunch of pitchers annually that are viable, and a handful of hitters that can get the job done.

Starting with the hitters first, I think there’s extremely little doubt that AJ Ewing is not going to be a major plus. Potential All Star. Not only has AJ had an extraordinary minor-league season so far, let’s remember that in spring training, this happened:

“A.J. Ewing had an impressive 2026 spring training with the New York Mets, batting .381 (8-for-21) with one home run and six RBI in 10 Grapefruit League games.”

Pinch yourself - AJ looks REAL. The dude has hit AAA like a mugger sneaking up behind an unwitting victim. JUST….SO….HOT! 

On base, I believe, in 14 of his first 22 AAA PAs.

Carson Benge? He has most likely gone through the deep dark days of his early rookie season, and it’ll probably be decidedly uphill from here. 

And Nick the Very Quick Morabito has hit quite well in AAA. The Nick average is not sky high, but his on base percentage (.384) is very strong and he’s added long ball power. 

All three of them are fast, so having all three of them up here soon will be a real treat. If somehow, all three of them really click, with their speed, it could be shades of the 1985 Cardinals, stealing bases with great abandon.

That would be extremely helpful, since last year‘s two main base dealers, Soto and Lindor, who combined to steal a valuable 69 of 79 last year, will probably be stealing very few bases this year after their calf injuries, which will need to be carefully managed. 

Another speedster, Luis Robert Junior, is injured so often that I don’t know how much he’ll run either. Some guys, like Robert and like Giancarlo Stanton, are just plain fragile

Beyond those three hitting prospects, I don’t see much else coming out of the hitting prospects in the minors this year, if anything. 

But Jacob Reimer was totally comatose until the last game of April and, thru early on Saturday, he was 5 for his last 9 ABs, quite encouraging.

Further down, speedy Mitch Voit is showing signs of hitting life, and down in St. Lucie, Elian Peña, and Dandy Randy Guzman are both off to terrific starts, and may really be on the radar screen big time starting next year. All three, however, are unlikely to impact the Queens team until 2028.

Pitching wise, I am not at all worried about Tong, Santucci, and Thornton, because all three are probably working on refining things to broaden the repertoires, so their current results may not be optimal in the statistical sense, but will pay dividends later on. Tong, in fairness, has 3 outings this year spanning 15 innings where he has allowed just one hit in each of the 3. He’s a lot better than the lousy weather has been.

Wildly Rapid Ryan Lambert (I Am The Egg Man) should almost be ready right now to handle bullpen work in Queens, and hopefully Dylan Ross will be soon, as well.  Both simply need to throw it more through that little rectangular box you see over home plate on your TV screen. When that happens, the pitches are called “strikes”.  When it doesn’t, they’re called “balls”.

Nate Lavender? He might be having Deep Purple music walk-ins from the Mets pen soon in 2026. He’s close.

But I don’t think that the minors pitching depth is what it was this time in 2025.

Trading away Brandon Sproat for Freddie (Krueger) Peralta may not in hindsight have been the smartest move, but only time will really tell. I don’t think anyone expected the club’s horrendous season start. If the season was going well, so far, people would probably be happy that the Mets acquired Peralta. And, the last time I looked, “Suffera-Jett” Williams was not setting AAA on fire this year for his new team. (Advice to David: do not trade anymore Brandon’s. Or Tidwell’s.)  

Tidwell and his Switch Blade got dispatched to Fort San Francisco for a bucket of gruel. 

So, to conclude, the green shoots are pretty sparse in the lunar landscape that is the Mets season so far. But, for the noted prospects, the bright side is that they will probably be showing up sooner than they would’ve otherwise, had the Mets been doing well. 

Well, we can hope (absent a sudden Queens team turnaround, which I think is unlikely with Lindor out) that this is the Met’s latest version of the dismal 1983 season. After 2026, hopefully they are setting themselves up for a repeat of Mets 1984 and Mets 1985 and Mets 1986, all over again.


Guest Post – Mack: 2027 Rotation

 

I found where Mrs. Mack hid my laptop. Need to get this done quickly.

My first guest post outlined what I would begin doing… RIGHT NOW… with this miserable team regarding the eight guys that hit the top step of the dugout to support their pitcher. This post features my thoughts on that pitcher.

CAUTION: These are my thoughts during the first week in May. Things change. Someone may come around and pitch five consecutive perfect games. Probably not, but could. Some I thought I would be writing about here, I am not due to their disappointing results so far. What I am writing about is the five starters, right now, that would be in my rotation after I take out the trash.

No one a year ago thought that the ace of this staff would be Nolan McLean. Kodai Senga probably. Jonah Tong possibly. Longshots were McLean, Blade Tidwell and Brandon Sproat. For reasons that are turning out stupid, Tidwell and Sproat were dealt off, thus, taking away the dream of this new, future, super rotation.

I’m so sick of following a game each night with failed pitchers. Oh, we know the bats suck much more right now, but everything starts with the rotation and the current one ain’t hackin’ it.

Me?

Well, it all begins with Tom Seaver… err… Nolan McLean. What a blessing to have him and I will do all in my power to extend him for, at least, five more seasons past this one. Very few have McLean’s ability to send that ball in so many directions. Enjoy him.

Past that, I would do everything in that same power to secure the free agent, Tarik Skubal. The word is he wants a $400mil contract. That’s like $50mil for eight years. Is that worth it? Well, I ain’t paying it, but that doesn’t mean I am not going balls out to get him to agree to come aboard. Hint: I’ll pay a pile of Benjamins for six years.

I’m expecting Skubal to be wearing Dodger Blue next season, so I still need four more starters.

On second thought, if Skubal doesn’t come aboard, I may have this “Mclean being the Ace” thing wrong. 

I mean, as of 4/29, even in this awful season, the Mets own the 7th lowest ERA in the league (1.75). That guy’s name is Clay Holmes and the day I become the honcho here, I am on the phone with his agent, seeking permission to discuss with him to drop that player option for 2027 and, at least, agree to come back for next season. Me? I want to sign him past that. The 7th lowest ERA for the team with the lowest W-L percentage? Come on.

Next, I would promote the current strikeout leader in the International League. Yeah, the Mets got that guy. His name is Jonah Tong. As of 4/30, his stat line has a little of everything, but the 38-K/25-IP stands out. Sadly, so does his current 5.68-ERA, 1.38-WHIP. Work is still needed here, but it is far too early to turn him into a closer. It takes a while for Nolan Ryan to become Nolan Ryan.

I’m three down and two to go and here comes my future workhorse (158-IP and 31-starts since the beginning of the 2025 season both rank first in the org.)… Jack Wenninger is ready now. He’s currently 1.61 after five starts this season, topped off with his fifth start this week (5.2-IP, 7-K, 0-R).

Lastly, I had hoped to be typing the name of Zach Thornton here but it turned out that the boy just ain’t ready. Enter today’s long man and this year’s off-season steal, Tobias Myers. So far this season, he has produced a +0.4-WAR basically as a two-inning guy. Me? I’m stretching him out in hopes of producing a 5-6 inning starter, at least until Thornton comes of age.