12/6/20

Mike's Mets - Free Agents, Post-Coronavirus Baseball and the Weight of Expectations

 


By Mike Steffanos December 5, 2020 

Joel Sherman had an article in the New York Post yesterday about the Mets' reported pursuit of pitcher Jake Odorizzi. According to Sherman, the Mets seem to be viewing Odorizzi as more of a fallback, depending on how the free agent dominoes fall this winter.  Which makes sense. They're probably not going to sign Trevor Bauer and Odorizzi unless they strike out completely on position players and settle for cheaper options there. It might go the other way, too. They might lose out on both Bauer and Odorizzi and look elsewhere for starting pitching. You never know how the free agents will start to fall. Remember, in 2005 the Mets were never looked at as the frontrunners for Pedro Martinez or Carlos Beltran. Sure, Omar Minaya was aggressive, but some of it was beyond the Mets' control. If the Red Sox wanted to keep Pedro and the Yankees were more interested in Beltran, neither one of them would have wound up as Mets.

It's part of what  makes the hot stove season so intriguing and somewhat nerve-wracking for fans. If there's an impact player on the market, your team is not going to be the only team in on him — even in a year like this one where much of the league is crying poverty. Bauer, Springer, RealmutoJames McCann, Jake Odorizzi — all of them are talking with multiple teams. It makes sense for a club like the Mets to be engaged with any of the players that interest them. In the end, the Mets can only hope to upgrade their roster with players they want, at a price and contract length they can live with.

As it stands right now, the Mets starting rotation consists of Jacob de Grom, Marcus Stroman and a bunch of questions. If Noah Syndergaard can come back around mid-season with effectiveness that would obviously be huge. David Peterson has definitely earned his way into the mix but, as I've pointed out more than once, it's not realistic to expect him to jump to 30 starts next year. If he can, great, but I see him more likely for 20. Steven Matz is nothing but depth at this point, and he'd really have to show something to change that. So yeah, there would be room for both Bauer and Odorizzi on this team, but the economics don't really make sense.

Odorizzi would be cheaper than Bauer, but certainly not cheap. I find it hard to believe that even a Steve Cohen budget would allow for both of those guys and a Springer or Realmuto addition. That's a lot, and the Mets would still need to fill in with some other additions and at least attempt to extend Michael Conforto. And that's the thing, these moves don't happen in a vacuum. How one piece falls has an effect on the overall strategy.

It's why I temper my enthusiasm when I hear that the Mets are in discussions with James McCann, Jake Odorizzi or anyone else. If Sandy Alderson wants to give me a call to discuss their priorities and strategies this winter, I'd definitely be up for it, but I'm pretty sure that will never happen. But he's not calling Joel Sherman, Andy Martino or anyone else in the media, either. We're all trying to guess the strategy from whatever facts are available. I have no doubts that the Mets are indeed talking with the reported players, because it absolutely makes sense to determine parameters on all of the free agents in whom they might have interest. Nobody knows at this point exactly how everything will play out, and the Mets can't afford to have all of their eggs in any one basket.

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I remember when MLB first shut down spring training back in March, I felt pretty confident that they would be playing major league baseball before Memorial Day. Looking back, it seems almost laughingly naïve on my part, but I really didn't have a handle on how much COVID-19 was going to affect everything until a couple of months down the road. My mind craved the normal routine of a six decade lifetime, and was slow to allow the concept of how much disruption lay ahead to penetrate.

Looking ahead to next year, the imminent release of some vaccines against the virus makes me really want to believe that life in 2021 will be normal, or at least very close to what I recognize as normal. I know that it won't happen in January, as the vaccines still won't be in any sort of wide distribution by then, but I can't help but want "normal" to return as soon as possible.

In The Athletic yesterday, Peter Gammons offered up a somewhat sobering outlook for the return of baseball in 2021. With optimistic projections of a widespread distribution of vaccines by Memorial Day, that still leads to some deviation from the much craved for return of normal:

"I'm optimistic spring training will only start a month late," one executive predicted this weekend. "And by August the stands are 40 percent full, we end up playing 130-140 games and it seems like baseball again."

Everything in that quote would represent a huge upgrade from 2020 baseball, but it still depresses the hell out of me. All of it still seems a hell of a long way from normal.

February without spring training camps open? What's going to offer me the hope of spring while winter stubbornly persists here in the northeast? Stands 40% full? I would have hoped for no attendance restrictions by August. 130-140 games? I might finally have a Mets team that's really worth watching again, I want my 162. All of this feels like a gyp to me.

And yet, despite the optimism surrounding the imminent availability of multiple covid vaccines, there's no guarantee at all that everything will go perfectly. It could well prove that the optimism expressed by the executive Gammons quoted was overly rosy. Maybe 2021 baseball is even further from "normal" than those projections. Suddenly they look a whole hell of a lot better to me. I guess everything is relative.

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