In football the conventional wisdom is defense wins
championships. Many of the great teams
of the past like the Pittsburgh Steel Curtain, the LT years of the New York
Giants and even the lowly Jets’ Sack Exchange all intimidated the opposition. By preventing points from scoring it made it
that much easier on the offense to win even if they were not quarterbacked by a
Dan Fouts, Dan Marino, Tom Brady, Peyton Manning or Aaron Rodgers.
In this swing-for-the-fences era of launch-angle baseball,
the concept of defense has seem to have taken a back seat to the long ball and
the Earl Weaver church of the three-run homer.
Over the past several years even the often offensively challenged Mets
have employed the long ball skills of folks like Yoenis Cespedes, Curtis
Granderson, Jay Bruce, David Wright and others but didn’t get much for this
approach.
This season the Mets have many capable of the long ball
(besides Pete Alonso). Michael Conforto,
Robinson Cano, Wilson Ramos and (ugh) Todd Frazier should all have 20+ HR
capability. Amed Rosario and Brandon
Nimmo possibly could approach that level as well.
Yet through it all, who is the player you’d most like at the
plate in a crucial situation…why it’s none other than .360 hitting Jeff
McNeil. So swinging for the fences is
not necessarily the only way to win ballgames.
When rumors of Pete Alonso’s promotion to the big leagues
began to surface, the public story being fed by the service-time obsessed
Alderson et al front office was that his defense was so bad that he was not
ready to ascend to the majors. I don’t
know about you, but any guy who won minor league defensive player of the month
honors can’t be all that bad and the eyeball test certainly bears out that he’s
at least average around first base. Not
everyone is Keith Hernandez out there, but then not everyone is Pete Alonso at
the plate either.
Defense was a primary concern with the acquisition of
Robinson Cano, Jed Lowrie and the return of Todd Frazier (kind of sounds like a
horror movie sequel, no?) Everyone
wondered what would become of solid rookie sensation Jeff McNeil. He was told to grab an outfielder’s glove and
everyone shuddered. Surprisingly, not
only has he proven to be adept out there, he’s even made a few highlight reel
type of catches.
Brandon Nimmo we were told was incapable of playing CF but
has been forced there with the newly minted left fielder McNeil and All Star Michael
Conforto in right. While he’s not
necessarily going to win a gold glove, he’s been more than capable there, and
in the recently concluded series in San Diego making one of the great catches by
anyone in all of baseball this 2019 season.
This time the elephant in the room is none other than the
guy with the slick fielding reputation coming up through the system, Amed Rosario. Here you have to ask yourself is his .280 AVG,
baserunning and run production a worthy tradeoff to the suddenly error-prone
shortstop? There was chatter during the
radio broadcast against the Padres about how he’s got the fielder’s equivalent of
a hitch in his setup which is preventing him from getting good jumps on the ball. Infielder coach Gary Di Sarcina has been
working to correct that issue, but then we saw him run with his back to the
infield and miss a seemingly easy pop-up to give Franmil Reyes a lucky
hit.
The surprise promotion of gloveman extraordinaire Adeiny
Hechavarria has many pining for him to get the starting gig, but the drop-off
in speed, power, RBIs and batting average is a mighty tough pill to
swallow.
That position is not the only one where they’ve decided defense
carries more value than offense. Despite
his recent surprising two-hit game against the Padres, Tomas Nido is known far
more for what he does behind the plate than what he does with a bat in his
hands.
The team is blessed/cursed to have redundant backup
centerfielders in Juan Lagares and Keon Broxton who are as good defensively as
anyone in baseball. The problem is that
neither of them can hit a lick and if Broxton’s primary value is his defense,
that makes his recent flub in RF doubly difficult to accept.
During the club’s history the team has had many great
defensive players like Bud Harrelson, Edgardo Alfonso, Keith Hernandez, Doug
Flynn and others. The question is whether
defense is as important in the scheme of things in baseball as it is in
football? Should the club sacrifice its
meager offense to bring in players better supporting their starting pitcher
when he’s on the mound? Or should
defense be damned and play whomever is going to help drive in the most
runs?
3 comments:
This is going to sound like Yoda speak...
Good defense may not win games but bad defense loses them.
You only have 30 shortstops in Major League baseball.
You ought to be able to find someone that plays ++ defense and can hit above .250.
I am offense first, as long as the team is close to average. Last night was a perfect example: pull inept Todd Frazier, insert slugging JD Davis, and the run spigot flows.
Slight correction: Lagares can hit a small lick...Broxton absolutely cannot.
The Mets in 2015 dumped 3 catatonic bums and added Cespedes, Uribe, and Johnson. Hitting ignited, and so did the whole team. Hitting is job 1.
Anybody can score a bunch of runs against the Marlins! No the best example.
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