These are the Mets cuts from yesterday and some of the information I
had saved from my old “Keepers” series.
P Brad Holt:
The Mets picked Holt in the
supplemental portion of the 1st round in the 2008 draft. College stats: 3.18 ERA, 11-1, 93.1 IP, 78 H, 36 BB, 95 K,
.225 BAA, 8 HR allowed
Holt pitched the day before the
draft… threw 149 pitches and was clocked at 94 in the 9th inning.
In 2008, Holt was spot on for
Brooklyn, going 5-3, 1.87 in 14 starts. He also struck out 96 batters in 72.1
IP. Holt won the Sterling Award as the the top Met player for the 2008 Brooklyn
team.
5-29-10: - Brad Holt got one more shot at starting last
night and he past the test. I remember talking to Rick Waits out on the back
mounds about Holt in the spring of 2009 and he told me that the emphasis last
year would be on creating secondary pitches for Holt. I left that day thinking
his ERA would be up for 2009 (which it was) simply because you’re going to have
to throw these new pitches during game time condiditons. Well, it hasn’t
worked, and now Holt’s velocity on his fastball is in question. Listen, if
you’re a one pitch pitcher, it better be a fastball… and if it’s a fastball,
you’re a bullpen pitcher… and if you’re a one pitch fastball pitcher with lost
velocity… well, you’re playing in the Central Park League.
6-23-10: - Well, sending him back
to St. Lucie doesn’t seem to be the answer to Holt’s woes. He pitched last
night, giving up five runs, four earners, in 4.0-IP. That’s a 9.00 ERA, still
up in the range of his 10.20 in Binghamton. Only two strikeouts and eight hits
against him; yes, eight hits in four innings. Boy, if there was ever a pitcher
that needs to be shut down…
6-30-10 from: - Holt had a rare
good outing Tuesday night, though it was at the A+ level, at least one level
below where he should be dominating at this stage in his professional career.
Stats were: 5.0-IP, 1-ER, 2-H, 1-WP, 5-K, and still 5-BB. This is the best he’s
been all year long and the last thing we should be applauding is five walks and
one wild pitch in five innings, but in his case, we’ll take what we can right
now. Holt’s A+ record now is 1-1, 5.00… combined A+/AA: 2-6, 9.00. Far from
prospect material.
7-17-10: - look, it’s not every day
that you get a chance to write something good about a Brad Holt outing. The
young man did good last night, going: 5.0-IP. 1-ER, 7-K, 3-BB… forget the
yearly stats; we’ll take one good outing and take it from there. BTW… the word
from the Mets pitching coaches is there really isn’t anything wrong with the
kid’s velocity, or mechanics. He simply is pitching like shit this year.
Regarding last night, we’ll take it.
8-4-10: - Holt got off to a decent
start last night, but, in the end, this was just another bad outing in a series
of many this season. 4.2-IP, 5-R, 4-ER, 2-BB, 2-HBP. He’s started 10 games for
the B-Mets (1-5, 10.20) and now he’s 2-5, 5.85 for St. Lucie… add to that a
6.21 ERA last year for Binghamton, and one must now question whey he remains in
the rotation. Everyone around him says that Holt’s velocity remains high, but
this is a one pitch pitcher that tends to be dominate in the first two inning
pitched. They call this… a reliever.
8-21-10: - Stock Down: - SP Brad Holt pitched again Friday night for St.
Lucie and didn’t fair well: 5.1-IP, 5-H, 3-ER, 6-K, 5-BB, 3-WP. Holt’s A+ stats this year are 2-7, 6.26,
1.79. These look great compared to his AA stats ( 1-5, 10.20). It’s late in the
season and there shouldn’t be much movement in players anymore, so it’s safe to
assume that Holt will finish this season as a rotational pitcher for Lucy. The
ex-suppliment 1st rounder has been around long enough now to have developed
something other than his fastball, which is obviously being sat on. The three
wild pitches are simply embarrassing at this point. Mets minor league pitching
coach guru has said numerous times that there is nothing mechanically wrong
with Holt’s delivery, so one tends to start realizing that this looks to be
another wasted high round pick. I’m sure the Mets will move him to the pen next
year, especially since he’s not ready for AA, and there are plenty of more
successful starters in Savannah and Brooklyn that deserve their shot. Shame. I
thought this was a live one.
1-7-11: - -word seems to be that
Brad Holt is going to be given another shot at an SP slot in 2001, probably at
the AA level, The problem is, there already is five guys slotted there, with
five more backed up at St. Lucie. Details at 11. Still, Holt easily has the God
given talent to be more successful than most of the guys in the AAA/AA
rotations. You can’t teach tools and Holt has them. He has pro-like velo and
movement to boot. Let’s keep a candle lit.
4-9-11: - In Binghamton, Brad Holt
got the nod as the starter. Frankly, we weren’t sure he would get another
chance in a Mets rotation. I spent a lot of time watching this guy pitch and,
I’m telling you, there is nothing wrong with his ability. I stand by my opinion
that the Mets just kept screwing with his mechanics to a point that Brad lost
confidence on the mound. Well, Holt past the test. He pitched 5.0 innings, did
not give up a run, struck out three, but did walk two. He also only gave up
three hits. This, like Jeurys Familia the night before, is great news from a
starter that has had control problems
4-21-11: - You know what I think
about this roster. That saying, Brad Holt is an important part of the Mets
future and it’s vitally important (to his head) that he keeps pitching well
this season. He kept it up tonight
posting: 6.0-IP, 2-H, 1-ER, 6-K, 2-BB. ERA “soars” to 0.50. Only three stats,
but could he be back?
5-7-11: - Interesting outing by
Brad Holt. He obviously had a control problem, giving up five walks in four
innings. His pitch count was killed early, but the good news: 0-R and only 2-H.
Season ERA: 2.59. They’re letting him pitch this year, but he has given up 9-BB
in his last 6.1-IP... 17 walks/22 Ks. We
don’t know what the coaches told him to throw so we have no idea how bad of any
outing this was. Remember, in the minors, a pitcher could be told to pitch 25%
of his pitching in a particular outing (just like Greg Peavey was told to do
last Sunday for Savannah) using his weakest pitch. That’s how they learn.
5-14-11: - Those of us that do this
for a living were quite excited when SP Brad Holt got off to a great start this
year, but that might be coming to an end. He has now pitched seven games
(34.2-IP) and has almost as many walks (20) as strikeouts (24). This includes
10 in his last two outings. I can’t see the Mets moving him out of the rotation
yet, but, if this continues, he will be re-targeted to the pen and, hopefully,
make Queens someday that way.
5-19-11: - You may remember how
wonderful it was early this season to see SP Brad Holt eliminate the control
problems he suffered from last year. No one has ever questioned his talent. It
was just that fact that he couldn’t hit the barn that concerned a few of us.
Well, last year’s Brad is an understatement compared to what we saw on Thursday
in New Hampshire. Holt went into this
game with 10 walks in the past two starts. No big deal. He had eight in 4.0-IP
for this game. That’s 18-BB in 11.1-IP. I’m sure he’ll stay in the rotation
because the Mets are determined not to rush any of the prospects kids below
this level. Jeurys Familia has already arrived and Matt Harvey will stay where
he is during the first half of the St. Lucie season.
5-24-11: - Mets Minor League
Pitching Coordinator Rick Tomlin to Matt Eddy/BA on Holt: - “The stuff is
there. The ability is there. With some guys, their mechanics need to be
straightened out. …. And for some (like Holt), it’s all about how they handle
the mental side of pitching.”
5-31-11: - In the past four starts
RHP Brad Holt has posted: 18.2-IP, 13-H, 16-BB, 15-R. It’s not easy to find a
pitcher that gives up more walks than hits. This is the same Brad Holt who’s
first 18 innings this year yielded 9-H, 2-R, and 5-BB.
7-13-11: - http://bleacherreport.com/articles/765098-new-york-mets-dillon-gee-and-the-mets-top-10-young-pitching-prospects#/articles/765098-new-york-mets-dillon-gee-and-the-mets-top-10-young-pitching-prospects/page/2 In his first season with the Brooklyn
Cyclones, he broke the minor league team franchise record with 96 strikeouts
(including 14 in one six-inning performance). His fastball now reaches 93-95
mph, and he has been clocked at 97 mph after reaching back. He has good command
for the pitch, and has developed a deep endurance that ensures his fastball
maintain the same velocity late in the game. Holt is described as having the
ideal built for a pitching prospect, and has been compared to Randy Johnson. At
this point, however, Holt is 24 years old and pitching for the Binghamton AA
team. He hasn’t had a winning record since getting the call-up to AA ball in
2009, and his ERA has been very high. He has been unable to develop an
efficient secondary pitcher, and many worry whether or not Bradley Holt only
smells like success because he looks (and sounds) like a professional player.
7-17-11: - http://bleacherreport.com/articles/769428-mlb-trade-rumors-ranking-each-teams-best-minor-league-trade-asset#/articles/769428-mlb-trade-rumors-ranking-each-teams-best-minor-league-trade-asset/page/19
- The Mets thought they were getting a pitcher who could get to the Majors
pretty quickly when they tabbed Holt as their first-round pick (33rd-overall)
back in 2008. He impressed greatly during his debut season, reaching Double-A
just 24 starts into his career. Unfortunately, that's where his career has
stalled. In fact, since his promotion in 2009, Holt hasn't posted an ERA under
5.00 at any level, including a demotion to High-A ball during last season. He
finished 2010 with a 3-14 record, and an ERA of 8.34.
7-26-11: - http://www.amazinavenue.com/2011/7/26/2287253/mets-mid-term-farm-system-review-2011-binghamton#storyjump
- RHP Brad Holt - STOCK DOWN - So those of us holding onto hope for Holt coming
into 2011 look pretty stupid now huh? I will say that keeping him in my top 20
(#19) isn't as bad as BA listing him at #10 overall. 2011 has basically just
become an extension of 2010 as he's continued to have serious issues throwing
strikes. And finally the inevitable happened as he was shifted to the bullpen
in what has pretty much become a salvage job. It's sad to say but if he has any
impact on the major league club at this point it will be considered a success.
I will say that there are some positives here. For one, he's FAR less hittable
this year than last (2011 AVG: .219 | 2010 AVG: .336). Two, his stuff is
definitely playing up in relief. Reports have him hitting 94mph with the heater
much more consistently and he's struck out 20 guys over his 15.1 relief
innings. And finally, a relief role seems to have had the desired effect on his
control as he has not walked a man in his last six appearances. Nothing to
write home about but there is still a glimmer of hope that maybe he can settle
into a nice 7-8th inning role with the big club.
7-30-11: - Holt’s been trying to
make the conversion from starter to pen and, frankly, he started out as inconsistent
as a reliever as he’s been in the rotation. Last night; however, was his third
plus outing, throwing 2.0 scoreless innings. That’s five scoreless innings in
his past three outings. Boy, wouldn’t it be great if this worked out.
8-11-11: - http://metsmerizedonline.com/2011/08/baseball-americas-mets-top-10-list-prior-to-2011-where-are-they-now.html
- SP – Brad Holt: Lost his starting job because he could not find the strike
zone. He was great in his first few starts, but then came the wildness. He totally
lost command of the strike zone and never found it again. He was relegated to
the bullpen where he has been much better. It doesn’t look like this former
first round pick will ever be more than a reliever at this point. - Started
2011: Double-A Currently: Double-A
9-3-11: - http://metsmerizedonline.com/2011/09/prospect-pulse-buffalo-2012-help-on-the-way.html
- RP: Brad Holt - The enigmatic 6’4″
right-hander with the “perfect pitchers body” and the power fastball, has been
a real head-scratcher so far. After breaking out of the box like a runaway
train for Brooklyn, as a starter, making his professional debut in 2008, Holt
ran into a brick wall the following season. For 9 games in 2009 he did fine for
St Lucie, but then when called up to Bingo, all-hell-broke-loose. He suddenly
couldn’t get anybody out. The remainder of ’09 he pitched to a record of 3-6
with a 6.21 ERA. In 2010, after starting out in AA going 1-5 with an alarming
10.20 ERA, he was demoted to St Lucie where he didn’t do much better, going
2-9, 7.48 ERA. 2011 hasn’t been eye-popping, but he is definitely making
progress. His overall numbers this year are average, 8-7 with a 4.67 ERA, but
most of the runs he gave up were in the first half when he was being utilized
as a starter. Since being converted to a relief pitcher full-time, he has been
quietly doing a superb job in one and two inning stints. In his last ten games
out of the pen Holt is: 4-0 with a 3.07 ERA, and opponents are hitting .179 off
him. The biggest improvement Holt has made is in his increased command, which
has resulted in fewer walks, and that was crucial for him. If he can keep
moving forward, and make the necessary adjustments to the higher caliber of
play at AAA, he could emerge as a “relief ace” for Buffalo, a real lock down,
8th inning guy, which is exactly what the Mets see him as in the bigs. Will he
be a help to the Mets at sometime in 2012 as a bullpen option? Why the heck
not? He’s got the talent, hopefully his mechanics will fall into line.
9-17-11: - Brad Holt (Mets
supplemental first-round pick in 2008): The right-hander from UNC-Wilmington
rocketed through the minors for the first year of his pro career. But after
reaching Binghamton in June 2009, his career has come to a dead stop. After back-to-back
rough seasons in Double-A, it wouldn’t be surprising to see the Mets take a
chance and leave him unprotected. Read more: http://www.nypost.com/p/sports/mets/yankees_mets_must_make_key_decisions_5aKoxsOfZQzXf4dhd226oK#ixzz1YEru7IJn
This
one will always be on ex-Mets pitching coach Rick Waits. Waits tried to change
the mechanics of a good pitcher into basically a mess that never recovered both
mentally and physically. This shit happens sometimes when one is trying to
develop a major league starter, rather than a college kid or minor
leaguer that can live with two pitches. This one was and remains a real shame.
Nice kid too.
P Danny Herrera:
9-1-11: - Press Release from The
Mets: - The New York Mets today announced the team acquired lefthanded pitcher
Daniel Herrera from the Milwaukee Brewers to complete the trade that sent
righthanded pitcher Francisco Rodriguez and cash considerations to the Brewers
on July 12. Herrera, 26, appeared in two games with the Brewers this season
after he was claimed off waivers from the Cincinnati Reds on May 23, 2011. He
was 1-4 with a 2.20 ERA (15 earned runs/61.1 innings) three saves and 54
strikeouts in 46 combined games this season between Louisville (AAA) of the
International League and Nashville (AAA) of the Pacific Coast League. The 5-6,
165-pounder went 1-3 with a 3.91 ERA (10 earned runs/23.0 innings) in 36 games
with the Reds in 2010. The Odessa, TX native appeared in 70 games as a rookie
with the Reds in 2009, going 4-4 with a 3.06 ERA (21 earned runs/61.2 innings).
Herrera is 5-7 with a 3.94 ERA (41 earned runs/93.2 innings) in 115 major
league games with the Reds and Brewers. He has allowed 110 hits, issued 34
walks and notched 66 strikeouts.
P Craig Hansen:
OF Mike Wilson:
OF Corey Patterson:
OF Pedro Zapata:
Zapata’s 2007 pro debut with the
DSL Mets was an impressive one…
.325/.382/.425 in 160 at bats. He also had 23 stolen bases and an OPS of
.807.
Zapata was named the winner of the
Sterling Award for the Mets MVP for the
DSL Mets in 2007.
He had a disappointing year in 2008
with Kingsport, hitting only .221 in 226 at bats.
4-23-11 – Up: - OF –
Pedro Zapata – No one has ever placed a prospect tag on Pedro, which is fine
with him. He just goes out and hits the ball, which he really is doing this
year. His seasonal stats so far this season are .421/.450/.447/.897, which
includes a .429 BA over his past 10 games. I look for him to be the first Lucy
promotion to the B-Mets sometime next month.
5-22-11: - St. Lucie LF Pedro
Zapata basically gets no press due to the fact that plays with Matt den Dekker
and Cesar Puello in the outfield. That being said, no one on the team is having
a better season than he is. Seasonally, he is hitting .355, which includes
going 5-6 on Saturday and hitting at a .382 clip for the past ten games. It’s
no secret how bad the current Binghamton outfield is hitting and this would be
a perfect time for the 23-year old to be considered for a bump up.
9-3-11: - 67 – OF Pedro Zapata – Zapata is a no-pop speedster
that plays the outfield. He’s had a very nice season (.293/.330/.391/.721) for
St. Lucie and there’s a slot waiting for him in Binghamton next spring. I
especially like the 34 stolen bases and only six errors all season. Most of the
outfield talent in the sytem is either at his level or below, so his fate is in
his own hands. ETA: Utility 2014
photo by NYFS |
IF Brandon Brown:
7-22-11: - It sure looks like we
need to keep an eye out on this guy. He’s currently ranked 9th in the NY-Penn
league with a .323 batting average, plus tied for 4th in the league with five
home runs. Brown was a 22nd round pick in 2010 that hit only .209 last year of
Kingsport. His slugging percentage alone has gone from .288 to .500 this year.
He is a 24-year old shortstop.
No comments:
Post a Comment