Going into the 2018 season there are a great many holes to
fill. The defense is porous. The starting rotation is still limping
along. The bullpen is unsettled. There’s no speed other than Amed Rosario
guaranteed a role on the team. David
Wright is still hampering the Mets from moving forward by threatening to play
again.
One surprising area for the Mets going into the new season
is one that resulted in a .243 batting average (not great, for sure), but
delivered an impressive 27 HRs and 93 RBIs to go along with 30 doubles and a
pair of triples.
What? You didn’t
notice anyone posting that kind of production?
Well, apparently you were too busy bashing the Mets catchers
to notice how much they contributed to the offense. Those numbers cited above are the aggregate
of Travis d’Arnaud, Rene Rivera and Kevin Plawecki.
Now ask yourself a question…would an upgrade at this
position be significantly better and be a good expenditure of frustratingly
limited salary dollars? I sure don’t
think so. Granted, neither Travis d’Arnaud
nor Kevin Plawecki are going to make anyone forget the defense of Charlie O’Brien,
but in this case (like Mike Piazza before them) perhaps the offense is enough
to compensate for lackluster defense.
Another Mets blog recently included in an assessment of the
Mets catching situation that it was time to declare the Travis d’Arnaud
experiment as over. They cited his
fragility and lack of production as the justification for this conclusion.
Did I miss something?
It seems to me that d’Arnaud was a veritable ironman this past season
(by d’Arnaud standards anyway). He
missed three weeks in May when he developed a bone bruise having hit the bat
with his arm on a throw to second. After
trying to play through it, he eventually went on the DL and likely spent some
time adjusting to the pain upon his return.
Despite this injury, he still hit 16 HRs and drove in 57 in 336 ABs. Extrapolated over a full season on his own
that would be All-Star level of production for a catcher. A year ago he hit only 4 HRs and drove in 15
over 252 ABs. How about some kudos for a
major step forward?
Baseballreference.com suggests over a 162 game season d’Arnaud would
deliver .245/19/66. Wouldn’t you sign up
for that right now?
Now that Rene Rivera is no longer a part of the equation, we
are left with Kevin Plawecki who, after a few years of sinus problems finally
showed the kind of offense in AAA that had been expected of him. He finished the year in Las Vegas with a .328
AVG over 247 ABs with 9 HRs and 45 RBIs.
Extrapolated over a full season that’s a 20 HR/100 RBI type of
season. When he came up to the Mets at
the end of the season he looked like a totally different hitter. For sure, the numbers dipped adjusting both
to the environment outside of Las Vegas and the MLB caliber pitching, but he
hit .260 and didn’t seem overmatched at all.
Going into 2018 I am fully confident that the Mets have a
catching tandem that would rank offensively among the game’s best. As points of comparison Salvador Perez of the
Royals delivered 27/80, Gary Sanchez of the Yankees provided 33/90, Buster
Posey was 12/67 and old man Yadier Molina contributed 18/82. Again, the Mets got 27/93. I think they’ll be just fine.
5 comments:
Morning Reese -
I am a convert to the two-headed catching monster that the Mets now play. I can easily project their combined 2018 stats in the 25/85 range.
We have much bigger problems on the 2018 team to deal with.
On another matter, I finally watched a playoff baseball game last night (I had spend 3 weeks without a television). Everyone keeps talking about the Dodgers depth. Was the catcher they used part of that?
Both Mets catchers finished on fire. I like to see how young guys finished...are they getting over the hump?
I'd be very excited by Plawecki...after hitting .339 in his last 131 at bats in AAA, with a .390 OBP, he got up 89 times as a Met, hit .303 with a .438 OBP, and fanned only 13 times. I am very high on him for 2018.
Travis had 6 homers and 19 RBIs in Sept, going .297/.343/.656 in 20 games.
Catching may indeed be a strength for the Mets in 2018.
I like our 2-headed monster, and it seems that Sherlock deserves a lot of credit for their development. A word of caution, though---the very valid adage that we should never place too much emphasis on stats from March or September.
I wish we had someone on our bench who could serve as emergency 3rd Catcher, so that we could use Travis or KP to PH. Maybe Sherlock can develop one in the off-season or ST.
Well, Wilmer Flores can't seem to field anywhere that requires foot speed. Catchers are notoriously slow anyway. It would be a way to ensure some more ABs and keep his potent bat active.
I dunno, Reese - Wilmer and home plate collisions don't seem to agree with one another.
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