LUIS ROBERT
Mets Injury Poster Child, Rehabbing For A Mere $125,000 Per Game
David Stearns said this on Tuesday:
“We absolutely have to look at our risk assessment on injured players,” Stearns said.
“We know we’re taking a level of risk when we bring players in with injury histories.”
“We’re feeling that risk right now, and it hasn’t helped that a number of our players have gotten hurt at the same time.”
“It’s not something that we necessarily anticipated, and it’s something we need to look at.”
Well…to that, I say…
You are the baseball decision maker for the franchise. You darned well have to do more than cross your fingers and acquire players with injury histories. You have to, to use your words, “necessarily anticipate”.
Montas, Robert, and Polanco are just 3 very expensive injured puppies that immediately come to mind in that regard.
Then Alvarez goes down, joining Lindor, Tauchman, Mauricio, and Young on the IL with extended stays.
Me? I prefer bumbling to crumbling.
Anyway…
In January, not knowing some of the newly acquired players anywhere near as well as the Mets should have known them, I wrote this:
“I will throw some numbers at you:
110, 127, 139, 138.
That’s how many games Luis Robert, Marcus Semien, Bo Bichette, and Jorge Polanco were in last year.
Collectively, employing my considerable mathematical skills, that comes out to 134 combined games that they were NOT in.
Or, looked at another way, they missed 27% of the 162 games.
So, for those concerned about where Baty and Vientos will get their ABs, those concerned citizens of Metsville should keep in mind that they no longer have to play on the same roster as Messrs. Nimmo and Alonso who, combined, missed just 7 games last year, or just 2% absence, for the percentage-minded among us.
The Iron Men of 2025 are gone. The Part Timers are here.”
How prescient that turned out to be.
Nimmo and Alonso combined missed just 2 games this season thru mid-week.
They were Iron Men in 2025, and are Men of Steel in 2026, too.
We have a team of Putty Men now. Men seemingly made of Clay.
David, I must say: naivety is not an intelligent strategic strength.
It can lead to franchise disaster.
Oh, and back to Alvarez…
Alvarez is hurt - again? I say…Trade him whenever his value is high.
Why? He will likely get hurt again…and again…and again.
Based on his track record.
He takes a licking and just stops ticking.
Oh, and…
Misery, it seems, loves company in Queens…
HOLMES JOINS THE METS’ FREAKY LENGTHY INJURY PANDEMIC
RED ALERT!!
NEXT MAN UP…
The Mets lost two on Friday night:
First, they lost 5-1 to the superior Yankees.
Then they lost Clay Holmes, too. How?
“Clay Holmes was pitching in the fourth inning at Citi Field when Yankees DH Spencer Jones struck him on the right leg with a 111.1 MPH comebacker. The right hander stayed on his feet, even going as far as to jog after the ball, before receiving a visit from Mendoza and a trainer - even then the concern did not immediately present itself. After a couple of warm-up pitches, Holmes said he was fine and remained in the game, throwing 6 straight balls but recovering to strike out two more batters.”
He then came out of the game, and got x-rayed.
He found out that he had a broken fibula.
I fib you not.
Everyone was surprised…
But not me. You see…
The curse is real. An inch to the right or left, and he’s just bruised.
Clay Holmes was not injury-prone.
He was healthy as a horse.
Now, he might return by late July.
A Devastating Blow.
I guess, as of Saturday AM, that Jack Wenninger is next starter up.
It is a matter of “Wenn”, not if.
If so, I have a suggestion for young Jack:
Wear body armor on the mound.