Mack Ade – 2013 Prediction – New York Mets
First, let’s go back a few years.
I predicted that the Mets would finish in 3rd place in 2008, 2009, 2010, and 2011.”
I then predicted they would finish 2012 in 4th place.
(they finished 2nd in 2008 and 4th in the other
four years)
The Mets had plenty of talent over these years but were plagued with the
injury bug throughout each season. Add to this the lack of depth and direction
and they simply never were a true pennant contender during this period.
The 2013 Mets contain some really good parts. The team is obviously
building around its rotation, similar to the way the San Francisco Giants have
won two out of the last three World Series. The Giants have really only one
true every day star (Buster Posey), similar to the Mets and 3B David Wright.
They have won with dominant rotational pitching and excellent relievers as
well.
The 2013 Mets will feature Matt Harvey,
who currently projects out as the ace of the staff and a future star within the
league. In addition, Jon Niese remains one of
the most sought after lefties in the league, both because of his reasonable
contract and success in the past. The rest of the rotation will include some
combination of Johan Santana, Dillon Gee, Jeremy Hefner,
and Shaun Marcum, which ranks it as one of the
upper half rotations in baseball.
The exciting part is the future… Zack Wheeler in
2014 and Rafael Montero and Noah Syndergaard in 2015… but, for now, the Mets will
have to settle for just being pretty damn good when it comes to starters.
Moving on to the field, the Mets have one superstar, 3B David Wright. There seems to be some additional
positive signs being developed here. SS Ruben Tejada has
become a steady, excellent defensive shortstop that shows a remarkable amount
of plate patience for a ripe old veteran at 23-years old. 1B Ike Davis was one of the top power hitters in the
second half of the season and rookie C Travis d’Arnaud has
already showed spring training followers that he’s going to deliver immediate
dividends come May.
But, that’s about it here. 2B Daniel Murphy is
adequate, but what you saw in 2012 is the best you’re going to get.
Still, the infield on Davis, Murphy, Tejada, Wright, and d’Arnaud,
coupled with the current rotation, might be enough if you could add to this a
decent relief staff and the typical power and pop you find in a big market
playoff team outfield.
Relief wise, whatever was planned didn’t work out. Another horrible
multi-year contract was given to closer Frank Francisco
who simply never panned out. Because of this, Bobby
Parnell is now being asked to walk away from his successful 8th inning
roll and become the closer he has failed at becoming before. Past this, you
have a handful of kids that haven’t panned out yet (Josh
Edgin, Robert Carson, Elvin Ramirez, Jeurys Famila) and a group of aging
veterans that were picked up on waivers in hopes of them churning out one more
decent year.
This is NOT how great teams build relief staffs. I’ve said this every
playoff season. Watch the teams that play deep into the playoffs. They all have
stars as the 7th inning guy, the 8th inning guy, and the closer. The 2013 Mets
do not have one relief star that would qualify to be on one of those playoff
teams.
And now we move on to the outfield. I’m not going to spend any more time
here talking about failed prospects, trades that didn’t happen, and the lack of
solutions in the pipeline. The fact is that the 2013 Mets outfield is an
embarrassment for a team that plays in the largest city and media market in the
country. The Mets may be the only team in the past fifty years that went to
camp without being able to tell you the name of one starter among these three
positions. It was only then, when someone pointed this out to Terry Collins, did he declare that Lucas Duda was the starting left fielder. Only the
current quarterback situation on the New York Jets reaches this absurdity.
Making a prediction as to where this team will finish in the NL East
really comes down to where you think the Mets and Marlins will finish. I’m not
going to waste my time going player to player on Washington, Philadelphia, or
Atlanta. All three are far superior teams both in current pitching and on the
field hitters. What’s left are the Mets
and Marlins who will finish fourth and fifth in this division.
Frankly, I like what I see in the kiddie corp. down in South Florida.
One, they aren’t going to be distracted by anyone in the stands and there is
absolutely no pressure on them in the field.
At the same time, I see a complete implosion of the Mets. There’s a good
chance that this rotation never gets going and you could see a complete
meltdown by the all-star break. Fingers will begin to be pointed, players will
speak anonymously to beat reporters, and owners will visit clubhouses, all
resulting in more disarray, continued loses, and heightened disconnect by all
parties.
Will Terry Collins survive? No.
Will Sandy Alderson survive? Yes, and ‘plan B’ will be implemented a
little earlier than expected. Every prospect will bump a level, existing
contracts will be first financially eaten and then unloaded for prospects, and
there’s a good chance that the Mets will wind up with one of the top five picks
in the 2014 draft.
What comes out of this is a small base of decent players… Wright, Davis,
Tejada, Harvey, d’Arnaud, Wheeler, Niese, Parnell, Edgin, Gee… followed by a
smaller list of new prospects… Flores, Montero, Gorski, Mazzoni, den Dekker…
What’s left are ten openings that will determine whether this is the
“future” team we have all written about here or are the Mets just becoming
another of the many excuses people like us call ‘professional’ sports
franchises.
2014 Needs: Two outfielders, one starter, and three relievers… quality guys bought or
traded for early on.
My prediction for 2013 is 66-96 – last place
But it’s my prediction for 2014 that is now in jeopardy unless the Mets
get their act together soon.
2 comments:
I love it Mack. I'm looking at the 2013 season as a collection of good stories instead of hoping for collective success:
- David Wright having an MVP season
- Ike Davis reaching his potential
- Jon Niese and Ruben Tejada continuing their development
- Matt Harvey establishing himself as an SP1
- Zack Wheeler's debut
- Travis d'Arnaud's debut
- Valdespin, Duda, Murphy, etc. playing well enough to showcase themselves as attractive trade pieces
- Alderson leveraging whatever tradable assets (Santana?) he has at the deadline to get the greatest return possible.
- Continued progression of the team's minor league prospects as well as a strong draft.
Basically, I'm looking for the continued success of the Next Mets players and the bolstering of the team's farm system. The W-L record and media drama means next to nothing to me.
I see a definate fourth place finish, but also a team that at times plays at a level that shows glimpses of a better future.
I haven't been impresses with DarNo, but that's because they're not giving him a chance to actually win the job. There's no question this team would be better with him starting and Buck backing up, yet this ny team is counting their pennies yet again.
This whole spring has been a joke and I'm honestly just hoping team USA wins the WBC because at least then, my team will win a championship.
Last place: 67- 95
Collins reassigned or "promoted" to a jerk off FO role.
Bob Geren takes over next season.
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