Question
from Michael Scannell:
Hey Mack,
If I post this question to you it will just be redundant from my last post. I didn't get the feedback I was looking for so I wanted to ask you directly about it.If the prevailing wisdom is that Stanton is going to be on the market, the Mets should obviously pursue him. Also, I'm confident that they'll at least make a play for him as was evident by their pursuit of Justin Upton. I'm wondering what you thought the wisdom would be of stockpiling young talent to make a trade for him.I'm already looking at contending teams that will need pitching at the deadline. For starters, I could see the Cards in the mix for pitching. They have a lot of pitching in the minors but likely not enough at the MLB level. Deadline comes around, Shaun Marcum is pitching well and the Cards want him. Sandy could do what he does and hold out for the best deal. Mets ask for and get Michael Wacha and Kolten Wong. Wacha is expendable as he is their fourth best pitching prospect (Miller, Martinez, and Rosenthal) and while Wong is talented he profiles as not much more than a solid regular. Same goes for Santana and Texas, who will also need pitching. Say the deal brings back Olt and Martin Perez.
I think the inclusion of Olt and Perez might seem like a lot right now, but the Rangers have already let it be known that they realize they’ll need pitching and that they don’t want to be known as ‘the team that used to be good’. As we get closer to the season, there are even rumblings that an Olt/Chamberlain trade is being discussed with the Yanks. If that’s the case, a healthy Santana (likely coupled with a reliever) at the deadline should return Olt +. Perez’s prospect value has dropped lately and a team like the Rangers that is desperate to win could be held hostage.
I’d also like to note that while the Cards and Rangers have been built a lot from within – either through player development or scrapheap signings – both teams have been known to trade multiple prospects in the past for players they felt would make an impact. The Cards made big deals of prospects for Mark Mulder and Matt Holliday and the Rangers recently (2011 deadline) traded both Robbie Erlin (#34 midseason Baseball America when dealt) and Joe Weiland for ONLY reliever Mike Adams.
I also tried to evaluate these moves in terms of what this FO seems to look for in trade. They got Wheeler for a few months of Beltran and d’Arnaud/Syndergaard for a 38 year-old pitcher. Sandy even held out for a top prospect for Hairston last deadline – this is their MO. I see no reason that they couldn’t dangle two very good starters (assuming healthy) at the deadline and pick up multiple prospects for each.
All of a sudden the Mets would have Olt, Wacha, Wong, and Perez to build a deal around for Stanton. The Marlins fill 3B, 2B, and add pitching. The Mets transform their lineup by jettisoning two pitchers who are expected to be here next season.What do you think? Am I out to lunch to think the team should acquire pieces specifically to flip to Miami? Am I overvaluing Santana and Marcum? Neither would be as in demand as Beltran was, but they are pitchers and neither return in question equate to Wheeler.
What’s the worst-case scenario, that the Mets acquire all four and Stanton stays in Miami or goes to another team? That’s still 4 top 100 prospects added to the farm. Maybe they get traded in other moves. Maybe Olt shifts to LF and becomes a power threat for the Mets. Maybe there are two other teams that want pitching and the Mets line up better with them.
I’m just looking ahead to next offseason and I know the Mets need a player like Stanton if he’s available. I think that making deadline deals that increase their flexibility in order to be positioned to deal for him is the prudent way to go. I suppose I’m trying to eat my cake and have it too – putting my eggs in one basket while not really doing so….finding a way to grab the big ticket without having to deplete (or even touch) the current farm system. Do we think it’s bad business to get married to the idea of adding one player and making too many moves to get him when there is no guarantee it will work out?
- Mike
Mack:
Morning, Michael. I'm glad you didn't spend much time on this.
I think you’re
on the right road, though you might be a little aggressive in the return you
have outlined.
Mid-season
trades for last year existing contracts usually mean that the team trading the
old contract will still have to eat a portion of the money owed. There’s no
reason for you and I, or anyone else, to speculate on what percentage that will
be. The Mets can afford to pay up to 100% of that amount since they were going
to have to pay it anyway.
Next, is the
player return, and asking for two quality prospects seems aggressive. The
template here seems to be the Carlos Beltran-Zack
Wheeler trade. This is a perfect example of a good veteran that can help
you win a pennant for a kid that can’t break through and help you right now
anyway.
Being
specific on Mack’s Mets can cost you in the comments section J I didn’t even specifically say Mike Olt (used the term “Olt-like) and the entire
conversation turned in the direction of that player.
I’m not
going to try and figure out what players/teams the Mets would target. Frankly,
we’re half a year away from knowing who’s six games down in the loss column and
in need of a pitcher.
What we do
know is Johan Santana (there will be around
$18mil left to be paid on his contract), John Buck ($3.25mil),
Frank Francisco ($3.25mil), Shaun Marcum ($2mil), and Brandon
Lyon ($375K) will and should be available. Will they all be both
productive and healthy? Probably not, but there will be multiple opportunities to
secure at least two quality outfield AAA/AA prospects that could finish the
2013 season in the minors, be promoted to Queens in September for a look-see,
and brought to camp in 2014 to win a starting slot in the lineup.
My goals
would be simple here… use some combination of these five guys to get me my
outfield.
Now on to Stanton.
The first
think you need to do is make the phone call and ask if this guy is available to
you, a rival team in the same division. If the answer is anything close to yes
(meaning anything other than ‘hell no’) spend the rest of the conversation
trying to find out key positions Miami would be looking for to close a deal for
Stanton. They obviously would want a quality outfielder to replace the loss of
Stanton and that would have to be one of the players you just secured in these
mid-season trades for old contracts.
Past that,
this screams to be a 5-1 deal, which is fine for me. The Mets have a ton of
quality young pitching that will never get an opportunity to play in the Mets
rotation. They also have players like Wilmer Flores, Jenrry
Mejia, Jeurys Familia, Cory Mazzoni, Wilfredo Tovar, Juan Centeno and Aderlin Rodriguez that are close to being ready for
the majors.
The pitcher
pool in this transaction could be Domingo Tapia, Jake
deGrom, Tyler Pill, Chase Huchington, Logan Verrett, Hansel Robles, Luis Tapia,
Gabriel Ynoa, Rainy Lara, Luis Cessa, Miller Diaz, and Julian Hilario.
In closing,
your only chance of pulling off a trade of minor leaguers for a quality player
like Stanton is finding someone on that team that is both nuts and has the
power to do it J
9 comments:
I like Mikes thinking, but believe he's reaching to think the Mets could get these prospects for the players he's giving up.
At this point, Santana and Marcum are both 40 million dollars worth of dead arms. Until they prove healthy AND pitch REALLY GOOD there's just zero reasoning behind these trades.
If Texas is really thinking about giving up Olt for Joba, then I'm getting on the horn real quick and trying to get Olt for a package involving Parnell. Perhaps Parnell and Gotski could get it done. Lets face it, 2013 is quickly looking horrible because our best strength, the starting pitching, is drowning with injury. So, IMO, Parnell is extremely expendable with the emergence of the Mets other power arms that have been looking good.
Familia, Mejia, and Ramirez all have the ability to fill in to Parnell's shoes come 2014. That's the year that counts now. Olt would be a major upgrade in the outfield immediately and a cheap player for years to come.
Trade the necessary arms it takes to get this guy, knowing they could be replaced from their own, very deep system in terms of pitching. Let the 2013 team be used as a sacrificial lamb in finding out who sticks for 2014; while also getting a top 5 pick in the 2014 draft.
Thanks fellas.
Mack, you're right, asking for two quality prospects is aggressive. I just felt that none of the prospects mentioned were of Wheeler's stature. I also looked at the aforementioned Erlin trade as well as what Dickey returned from Toronto. Even though he signed a extension, making it a different situation, I felt that maybe the desperation of a playoff hunting deadline deal might yield more. Also, it depends on how the individual teams view these prospects themselves. If Texas views Olt as only being worth a so-so reliever they might be open to dealing him as part of a trade package for a starter. Same with Wacha, as he is talented but buried on the depth chart.
It is too early to project specific players, I was just trying to build examples. I would also be alright with a5-1 deal as the pieces going over will likely be non-essential to the Mets plans. Of course, to get quality talent back for our vets, they'll likely have to pay most if not all of the contracts, but as you mentioned these are sunk costs and should not be an impediment to bringing more young talent in.
Charles -You're absolutely right on Santana and Marcum....this trade jujitsu is predicated on their health and performance....the same way the Mets might have lost out on trading forMikeTrout because of Reyes's bum wheel.
If I could get Olt now I'd do it. He'd immediately become a RH power threat on the bench and I believe he could handle LF if needed. There's nothing stopping the Mets from swapping him in a year either, should they decide that.
You and I agree on the point of 2013...use it as a chance to make moves that benefit 2014 and beyond.
In looking at the Mets five tradable commodities, conventional wisdom would have them returning five prospects....lets label them A,B,C,D, and E. That would mean the Mets could go into the offseason with:
A
B
C
D
E
Familia
Mejia
Valdespin
Murphy
Fulmer
Montero
Gee
Flores
To make deals from. That list doesn't even include some of the younger talents who might be seasoned enough to be attractive to other teams.
...oh and Duda as well.
Michael, the Mets need 3 outfielders, a better second baseman, a lot of depth, and two more quality relievers.
One of the relievers should come from the organization (Jack Leathersich).
One of the outfielders might be Duda.
Another might be developing (dD)
The team, baring injury, is remarkingly close.
For the OF I want as many established major leaguers as we can get. I like Duda's hitting potential but I think he'd be more attractive to an AL team looking for DH/1B..he just isn't an OF. He might even figure into a deal for an established player. I'm far from sold on MDD but I'm willing to wait to see how this year goes for him.
They are close. Of the core 13 (lineup and rotation) the team has 8 locked down for the long haul. Wright, Davis, d'Arnaud, Tejada, Harvey, Wheeler, Niese, and Syndergaard should all be in ink for the future club. Anyone not on that list should be viewed as expendable. That's why I hope they're aggressive at the deadline, they need to expand the pool of expendable players.
I may have mentioned this in another post but I think most of the bullpen will also be built from within the organization. Parnell, Edgin, Mazzoni, Gorski, Carson, Mateo, Tapia, deGrom, Leathersich and many others could figure into the pen.
The FO has done a good job in laying the groundwork, now is the time to make sure their endgame is top notch.
my guess is Tapia (100 mph FB, 7 mph slider) will be your 2015 closer and Leathersich will be the 8th inning guy.
also, tie-down Montero and Syndergaard for your rotation
Niese, Harvey, Wheeler, Montero, and Synder will be hard to beat
I see Montero and Fulmer as trade center pieces . Call me greedy, but if the Mets are paying 4/5 of their rotation less than $10M, I'd like to see those savings spent on another TOR pitcher, an established ace. Build a juggernaut while we have the chance and steamroll the league.
Verlander
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