One of the things I found most frustrating about the Sandy
Alderson regime was the pigheadedness with which he sought to build a
roster. Every year he would seek out
all-or-nothing hitters who would generate a lot of power while simultaneously
racking up prodigious strikeout totals.
OBP was perceived to be a good thing even if making contact was rendered
irrelevant. Think Curtis Granderson,
Todd Frazier and players of that ilk who struggle to stay respectably over the
Mendoza line.
Fast forward to the post-Sandy Alderson era towards the end
of 2018 when instead the Mets brought up a contact hitter you might have heard
of named Jeff McNeil. He took quality
ABs, made hard contact successfully, and pretty soon had people saying, “Asdrubal
who?”
Similarly Brandon Nimmo went through a tale of two seasons
in which he was very, very good and then there was a stretch during which he
proved to be a strikeout machine.
However, the hope is that he can transform the good portion into
sustainable success. Again, in a tough
situation you probably wanted him to be at the plate because everything was on
the table – base hits, home runs, walks and HBP.
Brodie Van Wagenen is saddled with many of the talent
miscues promoted by Alderson and signed off by the Wilpons. In addition to Frazier, there’s Jay Bruce and
the currently injured duo of Yoenis Cespedes and Juan Lagares. I’ll leave the latter two out of the equation
for the moment but instead focus on Mssr. Frazier and Bruce.
In Todd Frazier the Mets have the classic Alderson hitter. The last time Frazier had a respectable
batting average was back in 2015. You
remember that year – despite Terry Collins the Mets made it to the World Series
on the back of Yoenis Cespedes. It seems
like forever ago, no? Anyway, that year
he hit .255, but since then has offered up .225 in 2016, a combined .213 in
2017 and again .213 in 2018. One year
might be a fluke. A three-year run of
mediocrity is a trend. Even more
disturbing is you can’t justify the average with power as that’s been trending
downward as well, from a high water mark of 40 HRs in 2016 to just 18 last
season. (For what it’s worth, the
aforementioned Brandon Nimmo hit 17 in 39 fewer ABs without being considered a
power hitter).
Jay Bruce is a tale of three hitters. The first one who arrived in the summer of
2016 to try to help the anemic offense at a cost of former prospect Dilson
Herrera was flat-out awful. He finally
started putting it together in mid-September, but by then the season ran out on
him. He returned in 2017 and was more
the type of player they thought he was when they acquired him. He was, in fact, leading the league in RBIs
at the time he was dispatched to Mickey Callaway’s Cleveland Indians for Ryder
Ryan, a so-called relief prospect who, after a spectacular 2018 got his career
ERA down to a pedestrian 3.71. (Yeah,
Sandy knew how to pick ‘em, alright!)
Then, when no one was appearing to show any interest in Bruce, the Mets
bid against themselves and extended him the same AAV of $13 million not for
one, not for two, but for three more years.
2018 was pretty much a lost cause due to issues with plantar fasciitis,
and his year-end numbers were fugly as a result.
There’s been a lot of whining about bringing in someone like
Manny Machado to play SS or 3B, rendering Todd Frazier into pop off the
bench. While that would indeed transform
the lineup into a powerful one, please remember it’s the Wilpons we’re talking
about and long term, high ticket contracts are not their modus operandi.
Similarly, there were others advocating a short-term deal
for Josh Donaldson in a pillow contract to allow him to reestablish his value
after a 2018 lost to injury. That’s
exactly what the Braves extended to him, though the $23 million price probably
caught most everyone by surprise.
PC - Ed Delany |
Instead, one element greatly missing from the Mets attack
over the past several years has been speed.
We saw some flashes of it from Rosario late in the year when not
coincidentally they were playing their best prolonged stretch of ball. Perhaps when looking to replace Frazier
and/or Bruce they should be targeting base stealers instead of sluggers.
One name bandied about as being readily available on the
trading block is Dee Gordon. The Gold
Glove winning infielder has twice had 200 hit seasons and stolen as many as 60
bases in a season. Last year the
Mariners played him in the OF until Robinson Cano’s PED hiatus forced him back
to the infield. He’s not cheap -- $13
million plus in 2019 and 2020, with a 2021 option of $14 million or a $1
million buyout. In other words, he’s
going to cost about $28 million at minimum. Guess who also makes $28 million over the next
two years – none other than Jay Bruce.
PC - Mack |
Others who have enviable stolen base totals are the Royals’
Whit Merrifield and the Orioles Jonathan Villar. In these cases I would simply shift McNeil to
3B and open up 2B to one of the speed demons.
The Pirates’ Sterling Marte and the Mariners' Mallex Smith both play CF, a
position of need given Juan Lagares’ inability to stay on the field and Jay
Bruce’s inconsistency.
Having guys who can not only get on base but disrupt the
pitchers, making them focus less on getting out the subsequent hitters than on
preventing the runners from advancing could have a major ripple effect on the
thus far moribund offense.
With the manner in which the Mets have struggled to hit ever
since Sandy Alderson was steering the ship, I’d say it’s time to try a new
course.
8 comments:
Speed is a perishable commodity. I am not saying Hamilton is losing much speed, but he stole "only" 34 of 44 in roughly 550 PAs, but stole 57 of 65 in 2015 and 58 of 66 in 2016, so his frequency is down, and his success % is down from 88% in 2015/16 to 77% in 2018. He also never learned to walk much and has a career .298 OBP, scary if he loses a step, considering he must beat out a lot of IF grounders. Slow a little and those bang-bang plays will go against him.Brett Butler he is not.
Dee Gordon had a drop off season in 2018, and at age 31 next year, could be slowing. His OBP was just .288 last year.
No perfect choices, unless we sign Machado.
Jeff McNeil stole 13 of 14 last year...he can do it all, dudes.
Hey Reese you may get your wish and get Makkah Smith since he is on the Mariners now and may be involved in the Cano trade?
I can’t agree with you more. Having speed at the top of the lineup (circa 86 Mets or 84-87 Cardinals) is my preferred way of constructing one. IMO if you have fast guys on base they will concentrate less on your 3-5 hitters in the order and will make more mistakes to your best hitters. Also yes it great having high OBP guys but when your slow as $hit and go base to base your just clogging the bases up.
So hopefully we do pull out a rumored Cano deal.
I would want Cano, Diaz, Smith and Lewis/Bishop
And we trade Bruce, Smith, Frazier, Vargas, Giminez and Dunn.
If they want to give us some money as well that would be fine, but to me taking Frazier, Bruce and Vargas’s contract is enough for me.
Speed doesn't have to be of the base stealing variety.
As long as the players have avg to above avg speed, there is pressure created by the base runner when contact is made.
This reinforces the need for higher batting averages and contact vs walks and strikeouts.
Speed and power aren't always stolen bases and home runs.
Speed is running down the line on a slow grounder.
Speed is stretching a single into a double.
Speed is getting to a ball hit in the gap or between infielders.
Power is sending a ball screaming down the line for an extra base hit
Power is hitting the gap for a double
Power AND speed is hitting the gap for a triple
How many triples do you recall seeing lately?
Reese -
Tied for 7th IN THE LEAGUE with 34
There is more then one way to skin a cat (a very odd saying)..........I look at what Boston did this past year. Good situational hitting (two outs, runners in scoring position), good base running (speed) and some power sprinkled in.
Speed and contact hitting are much more reliable then power, IMO. Having both is great (see Mike Trout), but I prefer a consistent offense over a team that scores 10 runs one day and then gets shut out the next two.
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