4/15/26

RVH - The Lindor Lag

 

It’s become an annual ritual in Queens, and by now, it shouldn’t surprise anyone.

Through 15 games, Francisco Lindor looks out of sync at the plate again. The surface line jumps out for all the wrong reasons: a .546 OPS and zero RBIs.

We’ve seen this before.

If you go back year by year, Lindor’s first 15 games have rarely told you where he’s going to finish. But they do tell you exactly where the team is at the moment.

Here’s the baseline:

Season

Age

Team W-L

15-G OPS

Full Season OPS

2021

27

6–9

.421

.734

2022

28

10–5

.967

.788

2023

29

9–6

.867

.806

2024

30

7–8

.426

.844

2025

31

8–7

.711

.812

2026

32

7–8

.546

TBD

The pattern is consistent.

When Lindor ignites early, the Mets separate. When he lags, they hover.

And yet, the second half of that table tells the other story. The finish almost always normalizes at a high level. The slow start isn’t the destination.

But it does define the present.


Start with where Lindor is right now.

Even in this lag, he hasn’t collapsed. He’s drawn 10 walks, scored 10 runs, and continues to control the strike zone. He’s not chasing, not pressing, not turning a slow start into something worse.

He’s holding the floor.

That matters over 162.

But this Mets team isn’t built to live at the floor.

It’s built to separate.

And that’s where the timing of this lag becomes more important than the lag itself.

Take a step back and look at the system around him.

Juan Soto is out. Multiple position players are scuffling. There are more mental errors than you expect from a veteran group. Players are learning new positions on the fly.

And the pitching, which carried the team early, is no longer fully stabilizing it.

The rotation was a clear strength through the first turn, but over the last couple you’re starting to see cracks. Outings are getting shorter, command less consistent. At the same time, the bullpen has lost some reliability, with Luke Weaver struggling in back-to-back appearances.

Put it together, and you get a team that’s not syncing.

  • The offense has gone cold

  • When runs show up, the pitching doesn’t consistently hold

  • Defensive sharpness has slipped

  • Wins aren’t stringing, and losses aren’t being stopped

That’s not collapse. That’s drift. And this is where Lindor’s role changes.

When the system is aligned, he can be one of many drivers. When the system is out of sync, he has to become the stabilizer and the accelerator at the same time.

Right now, he’s only doing the first part. He’s getting on base. Managing the strike zone. Avoiding further damage. But he’s not yet forcing alignment.

And when your central player is in neutral while the rest of the system is drifting, the team settles exactly where this one has — around .500, without traction.

That’s what makes this version of the Lindor Lag different. Not the performance itself.

The context around it.

Because the Mets are about to head into a demanding road stretch against the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Chicago Cubs — two teams that expose lack of execution quickly.

This isn’t a stretch where you can wait for things to click.

At some point, someone has to force it.

Historically, Lindor gets there. The track record says the bat will come, the production will normalize, and the full version of the player will show up.

But until he shifts from managing his at-bats to controlling the game, the system will keep doing what it’s doing now.

Fumbling, Stumbling.

The Mets aren’t broken, yet. But they’re not yet aligned. Time will tell.

And in this version of the season, the difference between those two states runs directly through Lindor. 

I really hope that he snaps out of it - soon.


Tom Brennan - Mets Lose - Again; Soto Running; Mighty Morabito; Ross Fatigue; Mushy Minors Team Performances; Clobbering Hurlers


SOTO….

Got hurt April 3. Hadn’t even started running as of April 13. Uh-oh.

But tonight, SNY noted he did in fact run on Tuesday, April 14, and hopes to be back in a week. SO needed.


METS LOSE AGAIN LAST NIGHT

Well, last night started well with Lindor’s lead off solo HR against the great Yamamoto.  Nolan McLean was equally great for 7 frames, but Raley and the Mets LOST 2-1, as the dizzying downward spiral continues. The Mets had their chances in the 7th and 8th, but left two on in each inning “late and close”. Benge had a hit, but “0 for his last 23” Mark Vientos did not.

Season’s over? You decide.  “Beware the ides of April”.

Make sure to file your taxes. 

Remember, no tax on Social Security, so try to smile.


MORABITO MIGHT

Lots of folks “expertly assess” Nick Morabito and think, “yeah, he’s super quick, but there’s no pop there”. 

Well, on Sunday, trailing 2-0 in the 8th, Morabito (.295) hit one out of the park at 109 MPH and 442 feet to tie the game. NO POWER? 

He’s got power, clearly, and is finally playing in a league where the ball flies out. Unlike in the SAL and Eastern Leagues. Let’s see he does this season in Syracuse, unless, of course he gets called up.

BTW, I saw a video montage of the 10 longest MLB HRs of 2026 so far. Morabito’s shot would be # 10. Two more feet, and he would have been tied for 6th longest.


WHY IS DYLAN ROSS NOT PITCHING?

I noted this recently:

“Syracuse placed Dylan Ross on the 7-day injured list March 27 due to arm fatigue, Sam Dykstra of MLB Pipeline reports.”

Me? I’m just fatigued, period. Hopefully both of our fatigue challenges skedaddle along soon. We need Ross to be THE BOSS.


TUESDAY MINOR LEAGUE HIGHLIGHTS

Jonah Tong pitched well for 4 innings, then gave up 5 runs in the 5th. He fanned 10 in 4.2 IP.

Hayden Senger is getting his Cal Raleigh thing going. 2 HRs last night, 5 already on the short season, with 11 RBIs in 32 ABs, leading me to wonder, besides catching, can he play SS?

Brooklyn - Mitch Voit smacked a 3 run, come-from-behind homer. 9-8 winners.

Santucci was solid over 4 innings for Binghamton, but Orellana in relief was not. Ewing went 3 for 5, and is up to .419. I like .419 hitters.

St Lucie got 2 more hits out of the impressive Elian Pena, Salgado smacked a HR, ans the Lucites won, 2-0, with great pitching from Chirinos, Chris Rodriguez, and Ryan Dollar.


WHERE ARE THEY TODAY?

Alex Ramirez? He is a former Mets prospect that fizzled, and is now a AA outfielder for the Chicago Cubs, and is off to a slow start.  We wish him well. 


MUSHY MINORS TEAM HITTING AND PITCHING STATS

We will see what changes in the quality of Mets Minors team stats, but so far, through Sunday, quite unimpressive in pitching, not a lot of hitting:

Syracuse: 7-8, 4.98 ERA

Hitters .236, 54 runs in 15 games.

Binghamton: 5-3, 4.38 ERA

Hitters .222, 6.4 runs/game. Low average, lots of runs. 6 BBs per game.

Brooklyn: 2-6, 4.60 ERA

Hitters .142, 19 runs in 8 games, 108 Ks. Brutal hitting start.

 - But they have had Yonaton H., J Rod, and Trey Snyder out with injuries.

St Lucie: 4-5, 6.08 ERA

Hitters .255 and 44 runs in 9 games - nice.

But, as they say, it is early, Shirley.



WHO WAS THE HITTING SHOHEI OF THE WINDY CITY?

Remember…

Gary Peters?

Twice the AL's ERA leader, and rookie of the year pitcher at age 26 in the early 1960s for the White Sox.  He was the Jake deGrom of his day. 

How so? 

By him once having a 1.98 ERA, but going only 12-10 that year in 1966.

Like Jake, he too could hit better than your average pitcher.  In Peters' case, much better than your average pitcher.  He often was used as a pinch  hitter, and in his career, hit .222/.253/.348, with 31 doubles, 7 triples, 19 HRs and 102 RBIs in 807 career at bats, a similar slash line to Tyrone Taylor's in 2025. He was a .235 career pinch hitter, too.


GARY PETERS MAKING HEADLINES BACK IN THE DAY

From Ballnine.com

Even with his Relatively thundering bat, he was just 124-103, despite a 3.25 career ERA.  

His ERA in his last 4 years showed age-related decline: 4.35.  

Age-related decline, I am afraid, is almost inevitable. I say it more and more as I age myself.

The White Sox were decent at that time, but were a lousy hitting team. 

To illustrate that, in 3 years, 1966-68, they averaged just 523 runs. 

Very much like the Mets of that era. Impotent.

Imagine how CWS would have done without Gary’s potent bat?  

The entire White Sox teams in those 3 years hit just .228/.291/.320, very similar to Peters' career slash line.

For all his success, he earned under $500,000 in his career in baseball. 

Born too soon. In this day and age, Peters might just have made $500 million instead.

OTHER PITCHERS COULD HIT, TOO…

Mets fans only had that fine hitter Mike Hampton for a season. But that dude could RAKE!

Other Mets’ pitchers over time have hit well enough - for pitchers. 

Guys like Seaver, deGrom, Syndergaard, Wheeler...but are not even close to decent compared to everyday hitters.  

Seaver did have 12 HRs and 86 RBIs - YAY - but hit .154, not so YAY.

Back to Mike Hampton, though; he got off to a slow start as a hitter when he was young.  A lot of young hitters don't hit great when first called up either.

But from 1998 to 2009, he was impressive: .270, with 40 extra base hits in 561 at bats.  Clearly, he could have played, perhaps excelled, as an everyday hitter.  He had killer numbers in his years playing for Colorado.

But Hampton has had fine company - baseball has had a lot of fine hitting pitchers over time.

Babe Ruth, of course. No need for explanation.

Shohei Ohtani, of course. No need for explanation. Japanese Babe Ruth.

But there are many pitchers-only guys besides Ruth and Shohei who compiled real deal numbers. Like these:

Wes Ferrell - .280, 38 HRs, 208 RBIs.  They even stuck him in the outfield for a few dozen games.  Dude could flat-out rake.

Warren Spahn - despite having 490 declining-years at bats at age 39-44, when most hitters have long since retired, he overall hit .194 with 35 HRs and 189 RBIs in 1,894 at bats.  Heck of an RBI rate.  

Earl Wilson - a big power guy, he had 740 at bats, and a whopping 35 HRs, 111 RBIs, .195/.265/.369.

Ken Brett, George's bro, once homered in 4 straight starts, and hit .262 with 10 HRs and 44 RBIs.

Don Larsen, Mr Perfect, hit .242 with 14 HRs and 72 RBIs.

Don Drysdale, .186 with 29 HRs and 113 RBIs.  Had one season where he hit over .300, with 7 HRs and 21 RBIs. 

At age 21, he also hit 7 long balls.

Don Robinson - hit .231, 13 HRs, 69 RBIs.

Rick Rhoden, .238, 9 dingers, 79 RBIs.  Robinson and Rhoden actually played together with the Pirates for several seasons.  

Let’s not forget relatively recent guys like:

Dontrelle Willis: .244, 9, 39.  Tough competitor at the plate.  Donnie boy hit .320/.370/.580 against the Mets in 50 at bats.

Bob Forsch: .212/12/84 in 891 ABs for the Cardinals,  His overall #s dipped a tad by going 5 for 31 in his last two seasons at age 38-39.

Micah Owings: .283/.310/.502, with 9 HRs and 35 RBIs.  I always wondered why he didn't continue as a hitter after his pitching career ended at age 29.

Carlos Bam Bam Zambrano: .238/24/71.  A guy who loved to hit.

A pattern?  Four guys named Don.  That must be it.

You have to wonder how many of these guys could have been everyday players instead, had they not been good pitchers, which almost all were.

Tony Cloninger was almost on a par with these guys, hitting-wise, but none ever had the game he did one day: two grand slams, an RBI double, and nine RBIs. Insane.

And of course Rick Ankiel, who had one early very good pitching year, developed an incurable wild streak, and went back to the drawing board and became an every day player and hit .240 with 76 HRs and 251 career RBIs. Of course, in his end of career Mets cameo, he hit, well, like a pitcher: .182, with 25 Ks in 66 ABs.

Lastly…Dwight Gooden hit .196 in his career, truly impressive considering that nearly half of his plate appearances occurred before he turned 23.  Doc amazingly hit .214 in 190 plate appearances at age 19 and 20.

By comparison, Carson Benge right now is 23 years old. Major league plate appearances through age 22? Zero. 

How would he have hit against major league pitching at ages 19 thru 22?

And Doc? He wasn’t dumb, being an MD and all…he was hitting-aggressive! 

He swung at first pitches in 52% of his career plate appearances. 

No doubt it helped Doc to attack!

Somebody ought to tell that to laid-back Mark Vientos.

Light tower power we will likely never see?  Nolan McLean. 

He had 9 HRs in 146 minor league at bats. He likely would have needed 4-5 minor league hitting years to right-size his strikeout rate and become a competent MLB power hitter.


Anyway… What are your great hitting pitcher memories? 

Wyatt Young throwing a mop up inning after a 6 RBI night does not count.

Reese Kaplan -- Is David Stearns Feeling More Urgency in 2026


For many months fans and writers have quietly questioned some of the highly debatable moves made (or not made) by the Mets front office to address performance and the corresponding lackluster results on the field.  Nothing underscored the uneasy attitude by the media and by the people who want to see the Mets win ballgames more than the absolute cratering of the club last June which did not get any better as the year progressed.

Yes, after making bizarre roster moves such as Jose Siri for center field and Frankie Montas for the starting rotation, the club was beset with a raft of long term injuries that kept Sean Manaea, Kodai Senga and many others off the field.  During 2025 the methodology applied was to tread carefully over the sinking lifeboat until FINALLY at the end of July just before the year’s trading deadline David Stearns made some moves which, unfortunately, did not work out as expected.

Now flash forward to the 2026 season and the sleepwalking Mets team is not hitting, often not pitching, not fielding and not running as was envisioned during those run prevention meetings which were pontificating on what the new Stearns-designed Mets would do when the season actually began.  The current losing streak is in itself very tough to swallow as are the injuries that have kept Juan Soto and AJ Minter off the field while also addressing substandard performances by Jorge Polanco (himself dealing with injury), Francisco Lindor (slump or injury recovery) and overmatched rookie Carson Benge.  Let’s not forget expensive FA Bo Bichette who also has not exactly resembled the .317 hitter from 2025.

Unlike 2025, this time around Stearns is being a bit more proactive.  While he can’t do anything to speed up the recoveries of Soto and Minter, he can remove what isn’t working and replace those players with ones who hopefully can help contribute to wins which have long since not happened for this club. 

The first of these moves were to jettison the reunion no one wanted when Dicky Lovelady was given his long overdue DFA to open up a bullpen slot for future Hall of Famer Craig Kimbrel.  On paper at least this move makes an inordinate amount of sense and fixes a short term fill-in spot that was singlehandedly responsible for opposing teams’ batting averages and slugging percentages increasing significantly.

The second move was to cut loose another head scratching move when they signed veteran mediocre reliever Luis Garcia who now has been shown the exit door three weeks into the 2026 season.  Believe it or not, he was pitching even worse than was Lovelady.  Now his replacement, Joey Gerber, is another treading water maneuver while the club patiently awaits for news that AJ Minter is again ready to pitch regularly.  The now 28 year old Gerber has not had a bad albeit brief major league career, but he’s not likely going to contribute the 50-60 games the club would expect out of Minter.

The only offensive moves made thus far were a bit unusual.  When Soto hit the IL the thought was that the team would reach into AAA to retrieve an outfielder so that at least defensively the club would have another body ready to fill in when needed.  Instead infielder Ronny Mauricio was brought on board and after delivering a game winning hit for the club (remember when they last won a game?????), he was dumped to make room for 38 year old disgruntled reunion roster member Tony Pham.  As a career .248 hitter he’s not exactly going to contribute to run scoring in a big way, but perhaps the feeling here is that his aggressive attitude is being made a part of the clubhouse which heretofore has seemed ill prepared to tackle the challenges of professional play.

While none of these moves are alone going to fix all that has already gone wrong with the Mets roster and their on-the-field performance, it is at least a dim yet welcome light from the 2025 version of David Stearns who wasted more than half a year before making any effort to improve the club.  Chances are that Pham and other fringe ballplayers will be gone long after Bichette starts hitting and Juan Soto does what he does when fully healed. Still, with so little having gone right for Stearns since year one when the club made the playoffs.  Unfortunately 2025 and 2026 have been rapidly downhill from there so it is refreshing to see a bit of motivation to make changes coming from a guy who in the past has not shown this level of urgency.  

4/14/26

Cautious Optimist - It Hasn't Been Pretty

 



A confession

The Mets are off to a terrible start.  Really, they are.  Is it as bad as I am going to make it out to be in what follows?  I doubt it.  But it is bad.  Oh, the confession.  I have always been emotionally connected to how the Mets have performed.  Probably to an unhealthy degree.  But it's worse now that I write about the Mets, and I have spilt a lot of ink endorsing the path I understood the Mets to be on.  Not just that, I found myself something of a fanboy. So when the Mets play as poorly as they have, I am not only distressed and unhappy.  I feel let down: betrayed.  That's the confession. 

That said, everything I say in what follows, I believe to be true.  I am genuinely horrified by what I've seen so far from this team. and the thought that it might continue throughout the season is a nightmare I am unprepared to handle.

On the other hand

It's too early to draw conclusions about how the season will pan out for the Mets.  Nevertheless, the team's performance to this point provides no basis for optimism that this story will end well.  The recent 1-5 homestand is something of a punctuation point on the season so far 

If the question is, what's the problem, the obvious answer is, which one

You can't fix the problem without figuring out first what the problem actually is and what its cause is (or causes are).  If you misdiagnose the problem, you run the risk of exacerbating it.  If you fail to identify its cause, how can you hope to eradicate it.  

Unfortunately, eliminating the cause of the problem may not lead to solving the underlying problem.  There are many different ways of causing the same problem!  And just as many ways of failing to solve it.

When it comes to this year's version of the Mets, the most frustrating thing for fans is that -- to this point - many of the most significant problems that dogged the team last year have lingered, and, if anything, gotten worse.  To this point, the changes in position players and coaches seems more a case of moving deck chairs on the Titanic than anything else.

Persistent Problems

There are at least two categories of persistent problems: those that persist in spite of substantial changes in personnel and coaches; and those that persist in part because some of the personnel responsible for last year's problem remain in place.

Let's begin by identifying several of the persistent problems before considering them in order.

1. Inability to hit with runners in scoring position.

2. Defense

3. Starting Rotation

4. Bullpen

5. Manager's Performance/ Team DNA

Inability to cash in runners in scoring position

The 2026 Mets have simply not produced with runners in scoring position.  This is half of a larger problem, a part of which is an inability to get runners into scoring position.  This begins with getting on base and continues with moving runners along.  The overall offensive numbers are down from last year.  On base percentage is down; batting average is down; stolen base attempts are down, runners in scoring position who are left on base per game is up, extra base hits (in total and individually, i.e. doubles, triples and HRs)/game are down.  And more.  The Mets were not great offensively last year, especially in the clutch or with RISP generally.  They are worse this year in virtually every category.

Of course, a team doesn't have to be great offensively to have a good year.  They will need, however, to be better defensively, which is a combination of pitching and fielding.   It's hard to judge overall fielding performance.  For example, the 2025 Mets finished with .986 fielding percentage, which was the league average. On the other hand, they committed 63 errors compared to a league average of 49.  Errors contribute negatively to run prevention, but there are ways of preventing runs that have nothing to do with reducing errors.  

A less than eye-popping defense

I think it is fair to say that the Mets fielding defense has not been crisp to this point, in part a result of a number of individuals being forced to play out of position, e.g. Baty in right, Bichette at 3rd and anyone and everyone at 1st.  It is hard to fathom that the Mets have no actual 1B on their roster while currently having two natural 3B, another who has previously played 3B (Mauricio), while starting someone who has been a lifelong SS whose only other infield position had been 2B (Bichette).    The defense is not just a work in progress, but, at the moment seems more like a Spring Training  experiment.  It is early, but this is not how one would prefer to go into the season.  It could have gone worse, and may well have, had the Mets faced a harder early schedule.

The current infield alignment -- such as it is -- provides a very good example of the general claim that there are lots of different ways to fail.  Ostensibly, this team is stronger up the middle than last year's team, but weaker at the corners.  Bichette moving to 3B from SS is not akin to Rodriguez doing so for the Yankees.  Rodriguez was at least Jeter's equal at SS, if not better, and so his was an adjustment to a new position,  the angles and speed at which the ball got to him were the most important obstacles to his performing well, not his arm or his ability to cover the ground or handle the short hop, and bunt plays, which were among the obstacles Bichette has had to face, some of which would have followed him to any position on the infield.

I have expressed the view before that it is a cardinal sin defensively to make two moves rather than one, when doing so makes you weaker at both positions.  Baty had made himself a better than average defensive 3rd baseman and moving him out for Bichette, who is decidedly less than average defensively at the position, makes the team worse defensively both at third and at whatever position Baty is being asked to play on a regular basis.

The Mets played all last year with something of a defensive liability in Pete Alonso at 1st base . A defensive liability on balance, Alonso was not without some defensive excellence, e.g. digging throws out of the dirt.  Second base defense was barely adequate as well.  This year's team, allegedly built around run prevention, features a better second baseman, a bevy of marginally worse and considerably less experienced first basemen, the same SS and a considerably worse 3rd baseman.  

I am excited (and surprised) by Alvarez's offensive improvement, but he is not a defensive asset.  I have my doubts about his ability to call a good game.  He's a work in progress, but the comparison with Torrens' defense is far from encouraging.

 Starting Rotation

In many ways the bullpen and starting rotation are, for me, both the most promising and the most disappointing units on the team  With the exception of Peterson, who seems to have inherited the Tylor McGill malady of having at least one inning every game blow up on him, the remainder of the starters have been very good and at times downright impressive -- which is not to say that they have solved the problem that last year's crew created.  While last year's rotation was both individually and collectively unable to pitch deep into games leading to overburdened and eventually burnt out bullpen, this year's group has improved about 1/2 inning's worth in their starts,  leaving the bullpen with fewer innings to cover  I worry that this improvement will be fleeting.  

If his last start is indicative, Senga is not likely to offer consistently deep starts if he continues pitching on regular rest.  He's provided more than ample evidence that he is at his best -- which is really quite excellent -- on more rest than the norm for others.

Senga can be brilliant.  He has an extraordinary assortment of pitches, but every one of them works off his fastball.  In his three starts on 'regular rest', his fastball velocity has dropped consistently, so much so that in his last start, he barely threw his four seamer, let alone deployed it to set up his other pitches.   Hitters waited on the breaking balls and laid off the ghost fork ball.  When Senga can't beat you with the fastball at least once an at bat, he has no comparative advantage to exploit.  

Holmes is a 5+ innings pitcher as is Peralta.  Senga is a 6+ innings pitcher on 5 days rest.  Who knows how many innings/game he can be counted on when he is asked to take the ball on less rest.

McLean is the ace of the staff, or is he?

ou may recall the following basketball joke.

Q: Who was the last person to hold Michael Jordan to under 20 pts/game?

A: His coach,  Dean Smith.

I'm sure you get the point.  

McLean will never become the ace until he is treated as the ace.  That doesn't mean letting him throw 125 pitches.  It means holding him accountable for getting himself out of jams of his own making.  No manager should see his job as protecting his player's from failing.  Failing is part of their development.  You want them to fail, if they must, in the context of a safe and supportive environment.  It's not all that different from how parents should address their children's accountaiblity and autonomy .  You can't prevent your kids from pain, harm and disappointment.  And a manager shouldn't even try to do so.  

Bullpen

With the exception of Edwin Diaz, last year's bullpen was a mess, one of such magnitude that it had a multitude of causes: overuse, injury incompetence, and especially the disastrous performance of the starting rotation. This year, the bullpen has been uneven at best.  There are structural issues that may emerge later in the year if we can't get good performances when called upon by some of our top tier minor leaguers who will join the major league team from time to time.  And it will be worse if Peterson and Manaea don't come around.

Setting the problems the starting rotation creates for the bullpen aside for the moment, the bullpen (over the first three weeks of the season) was structurally unsound -- no matter how well it would have performed, and at times, did.

Williams has done well as a closer, but he is not a 'lights out' closer: more a Hoffman than a Rivera.   The Mets had no long relievers last year; this year they have two.  With two long relievers, the team began the season (in cold weather, with starters not yet stretched) with an effective day-to-day bullpen of 6 pitchers, two of whom have proven inadequate to the task -- Garcia and Lovelady --  both  recently DFA'd

Considering that closers rarely pitch other than in closing situations that leaves a bullpen of 3 day in, day out relievers, in addition to a one inning closer who could in principle pitch 2 out of 3 days.  Overuse of the bullpen, especially this early in the season when starters haven't been stretched out sufficiently, is certain to follow.   

It gets worse. To minimize the extent of the overuse of the day to day relievers, at least one, if not both of the long relievers -- Myers and Manaea -- would have to be used in high leverage situations,  sometimes off schedule.  Alternatively, Lovelady and Garcia would be put in situations they were not suitable for.  The worst approach would be using both the long relievers and the least suited for high leverage usage -- the former off schedule, the latter at all.  This is what the manager ended up doing,  

The underlying problem was structural and not of his doing.  Still, his decision making approach ended up weakening the pens' ability to perform optimally but turning one unavoidably suboptimal outcome into two.

We simply do not have enough relievers who can be called upon regularly who can be trusted to perform to a reasonable standard.  Maybe that will change.  Minter's return should help, if healthy and adequately ramped up. , and he will be a substantial upgrade provided he is healthy when he returns.  I don't believe anyone should count on Kimbrel finding a fountain of youth.  At best, he will be serviceable -- which is nothing to sneeze at!

No team with championship aspirations can afford to have any relievers whose best use is mopping up.  The situation is a function of the widespread practice among managers to minimize the extent to which starters face the opposing lineup a third time.  

In the case of the Mets, the situation is worsened by the obvious fact that one of the starters needs an additional day of rest more often than not, and a manager who has shown himself to have an itchy trigger finger.  If we have to live with both of these features of the team, we have to plan for it.  And that means we will have to treat the 6th and 7th innings of most games as high leverage situations.  Everyone in the pen has to be up to the task of meeting the moment.

Bullpens are historically unpredictable.  The relievers the Dodgers were initially counting on,performed especially poorly.  Yet they won the world series.  Hopefully we find help from our minor leaguers and can pull off a trade or two at the deadline to bring in higher level reinforcements.

Manager

The construction of the roster is on Stearns, not Mendoza.  Just think what a mess we would be in had Stearns not acquired Peralta and Myers.  Which is not meant as praise.  It is more a reflection of where the pitching staff Stearns had assembled prior to the late in the offseason trade with the Brewers would have looked like. 

The manager has overworked the bullpen, especially, Weaver and Myers.  I don't know what he is doing with Manaea, or what one would do with him at this point. He has put Garcia in high leverage situations and used Lovelady, while he was with the team, as if he were the Everready battery man.  His approach to the starting rotation is puzzling at best.  He kept Peralta in to help him get a win, but he pulled McLean, his. purported ace to be, when he faced adversity of his own doing when he reached the 'magic mark' of 100 pitches.  Isn't the real issue, not the number of pitches as such, but the demand, the stress of the circumstances under which they are thrown?

And hasn't Senga provided enough evidence that if he is to be moved to a 'regular rest' spot, he should be eased into it.  Last Saturday, he not only barely threw his four seamer, he barely had one to throw.   I'd pitch him with additional rest right up through the All-Star game and reevaluate his usage then.  This is clearly a case in which it makes sense to be cautious.

We have a manager giving his catcher and center fielder days off as they work towards being able to provide high quality performance over a full season, yet he can't give Senga an additional day off in spite of all the evidence suggesting that that day may well make all the difference in the world to his performance. 

The way a team plays reflects its manager's temperament.  The Mets are playing without a sense of urgency.  They seem listless.

Let me put it another way.  We gave up a number of potential home runs in the offseason through trades (Nimmo) and free agency (Alonso).  I was all for it.  On the other hand, I took the changes to mean that we were going to find another way to score runs -- and to do so throughout the lineup.  I thought we were going to play a different style of baseball: work the pitchers, waste good pitches, make contact, put pressure on the defense, have them on their heals, use our speed to move them out of position, making them defensively vulnerable.  Isn't that what you thought too?  Where is the energy? The pressure?  The fun?  We look resigned to every defeat, and satisfied to move on to the next game.  I don't know anyone who has gotten what they have aspired to attain by accepting anything less.  

Every player in every sport has to learn to cope with adversity.  Managers have to as well.  Part of doing so is a matter of temperament, an ability to remain calm.  Mendoza is terrific when it comes to calm in the face of adversity.  The leader can't panic, and he doesn't.  This is an important team-facing attribute.  Players don't want to see panic in the manager's eyes.

On the other hand, the real point of remaining calm is to stay clear headed so that one can address the situation thoughtfully.  Managing through adversity provides the opportunity for the manager to actually add value, to be the source of additional, sometimes unexpected wins.  So far, over two plus years, Mendoza hasn't shown that he can do that.  Even the magical run two years ago was triggered by leadership among a handful of the players, not the manager.  

I wish I could say that the manager is not part of the problem, but I have no basis for that judgment.  I am, alas, pessimistic.