Before Brooklyn took on the Hudson Valley Renegades on August
7th, I got a chance to talk to Cyclones’ Manager Ed Blankmeyer. Ed, the former Head Coach at St. John’s University
is in his first year as the Brooklyn Manager.
JFA: So far, how do you
like it here in Brooklyn.
Ed Blankmeyer: Brooklyn is great. The Fans are great. Atmosphere is great. A Great experience, not
just for me and the coaching staff. It’s
been a great experience for the young Mets.
JFA: What is the biggest difference between here and
college?
Ed Blankmeyer: There’s a couple differences, one is
obviously the [college] season is much shorter. A 56-regular season versus a 120-game
season, it’s not how you start, it’s how you finish…that’s one thing. From a
development perspective – in collegiate baseball – you are looking to win
baseball games and get into a conference tournament. That’s the highlight of the season. In professional ball at the lower levels,
minor league ball, it’s about the development of players. We are not putting winning behind us but the
priority is development and getting players the opportunity to be evaluated, to
make a determination of who advances, and who could be a major league
player.
JFA: What are the types of things do you try to instill
in your players to try and develop them?
Ed Blankmeyer: First of all, how to play the game the
right way. How to be a fundamentally
sound baseball player. The players that
have advanced, have the skill sets to advance but they achieved success at a
level and they have shown consistency - that’s the major key – you want to see
them make the necessary changes – you want to see some consistency in their
approach…but the bottom line as a manager is to teach them to play the game the
right way. To teach them how to be a
professional baseball player. That’s
just not on the field. That’s off the
field as well.
JFA: Is there an overall philosophy that the
organizations tried to instill to all the minor league teams?
Ed Blankmeyer: Obviously, the organization is looking
at the different data that is out there - you’re taking a player’s strengths – you’re
evaluating what they need to improve on based on the data that is provided. Everybody
gets caught up in some of the data – sometimes it gets misinterpreted. But you take a look at a player – you see
what he brings to the table – you see if you can enhance that ability with the
data that is provided that – from a pitching perspective – from a hitting
perspective - every player has a plan – how they execute that plan – their development
plan - is going to determine where they go –
JFA: What has been the biggest challenge this year
for you and the team?
Ed Blankmeyer: My challenge and organizational challenge is keeping players healthy, getting a fair evaluation of the players and hopefully preparing them for a regular baseball season next year. This is not the typical baseball season. Minor league season started late. It’s condensed. These guys haven’t played in over a year and a half. So, you have to monitor the work, you want to make sure they are healthy, and you want to make sure they are progressing and getting a good evaluation of the talent you have in the organization moving forward.
JFA: One of the things you mentioned that has got to be a
big challenge – making sure everyone gets enough opportunities – especially this
year with two less farm teams – it seems like all the rosters are very packed -
how do you try to give everyone an opportunity?
Ed Blankmeyer: You try to be as fair as possible. The
players that don’t get as many opportunities as other players have to take
advantage when they get the opportunity.
JFA: This is a very tough park to score runs in because
of the ocean being so close – is there anything you do to counteract that? Maybe have players hit the other way?
Ed Blankmeyer: You don’t want to change their swing.
It’s more of a pitcher’s ballpark.
Ronnie’s ball the other night was a missile. In order to hit a ball out, you better hit a
low line drive with a little heat on it.
It’s a tough ballpark to hit in and we take that into account. Sometimes
it can become psychological when you hit balls and don’t get rewarded for it.
JFA: I’d like to ask you about your impressions about
cert players and what they need to do to get to the next level – starting with
Ronnie Mauricio –
Ed Blankmeyer: Ronnie is a special talent – tremendous
upside – he’s become a special defensive player – sometimes he tried to do too
much. Offensively – great upside with
the bat – like everyone else he has to learn the strike zone – as a switch
hitter – that might take longer. But
very, very, special player.
JFA: You talked about his defense and sometimes he
tried to do too much – do you see him staying at Shortstop?
Ed Blankmeyer: Yes I do. He’s a shortstop. His range is very good. His arm is a plus. Very good hands. The way you evaluate a
shortstop – can he go in the hole and throw someone out – the answer is clearly
yes – the world is his oyster –
JFA: What about Francisco Alvarez?
Ed Blankmeyer: The Baby Bull? He’s a young guy that obviously
has not yet played a played a full season.
He’s passionate - high energy guy. He is wired differently in a good way – he’s
100 Miles per hour – all the time – I use the word pacing with him – not in a negative
way – sometimes he has to back down a little bit – he’s a fire cracker- he’s
ready to explode all the time – typical of a young guy – catching is a prime position
– he no doubt has the skills – it’s learning his trade behind the plate – learning
how to call a game which he is becoming a better game caller – his receiving
has improved – his blocking has improved – his throwing – he has a good arm –
but again he has to work at it. Now his
bat – like Ronnie – the ball comes off his bat special – like anything else –
as you move up the levels – you have to learn how to hit – when people make
mistakes and it’s in the zone – he can do damage – he has a lot of home runs
this year and he’s playing a prime position.
We have to monitor him, he’s a young guy, first full season, again big
prospect at a premium position - -
JFA: Justin Lasko –
Ed Blankmeyer: He knows how to pitch – work effort
and preparation is spot on – he knows how to execute – he knows how to attack weaknesses with his strengths and
he’s a competitor – he’s a bull dog – I think he showed that he is no doubt a
quality started in High A – he’s another guy that is ready to move to another
level – (Note: Justin Lasko was promoted to AA shortly after this interview)
A lot of credit goes to Ricky Meinhold our pitching
coordinator and Royce Ring has done a nice job with a lot of our guys because
he’s here on a day to day basis.
As a manager you don’t want to lose guys but it’s about the
player getting an opportunity to advance.
JFA: Brian Metoyer –
Ed Blankmeyer: Brian has come off an injury. He’s been electric and everything is spot on. We are just cautious with him and making sure
he gets the proper rest but he’s performed extremely well – just a little more trust
in his off speed stuff and I think he can be a special talent.
JFA: Bryce Montes de Oca –
Ed Blankmeyer: What can you say about him. You have two guys on the same team that can
throw over 100 miles per hour. I don’t
think many organizations have that and we have a minor league team with
two. Both those guys – it is fastball
command – once the achieve that and the consistency of the breaking ball – both
those guys get back in the count with the breaking ball. If they can put both together – then you have
something special and I think it is there.
JFA: Lots of great information. Anything you’d like to add?
Ed Blankmeyer: Just understand for our Mets fan base, that we have good young men here. They’re working hard, hang with us a little bit, the bottom line is that we want to provide resources for the big club.
15 comments:
GREAT INTERVIEW, JOHN.
The one guy I wish you had added in? Jose Peroza.
I did not know Metoyer was 100 MPH. Mind-boggling that they got that in the 40th round. More and more, I do think he can be special. If he stays healthy, maybe he arrives in Queens in mid-2022.
Great interview.
I hope the readers go away realizing one thing here..
It's not stat lines in the minors.
It's making them into better ballplayers.
The one question I always wonder about is whether or not someone has surprised him in a good way and someone who has disappointed. The earlier one is easy to answer as it heaps praise on a heretofore unknown or underappreciated prospect. The latter is a tough one because you are naming a player in a negative way. It could be done as a way to try to motivate the person or it could be honest feedback. Still, as Mack said the role here is build people up more so than to win games.
Can't ask who is playing bad.
They will never answer that.
Great, great interview, John. It’s obvious that Ed is a bright guy with a lot to say, but it takes an excellent interviewer like yourself to create a comfortable conversation between “friends “ - and now it feels like we were there with you. I would still love to know what if anything they did differently with their game planning or physical fitness or mental exercises to help everybody adapt to the lungs schedule after the downtime that was 2020. And as Reese said, it would be interesting to find out which players did not perform up to expectations but of course it would potentially come off the wrong way so it’s not likely some thing that we will learn. What he said also makes me wonder if they are going to look to change any of the dimensions in Brooklyn in order to make it potentially what congruous to CitiField play. Lots & lots for Cohen & Company to look into & change, but here’s hoping that Ed will be leading the charge in Brooklyn for many years to come.
Long not lungs - lol
More congruous not what
Damn autocorrect
Thanks Tom, Dave, Mack, and Reese. I asked the "surprise" question to the Syracuse Pitching coach when I interviewed him last weekend. I hope to have that typed up in a few days.
Tom - at time of interview, Peroza had just arrived in Brooklyn. I will ask about him next time.
Well done!
Good on future Peroza follow up. His offensive #'s in 2021, not to be persnickety, are superior to those of Ronny Mo. Especially OBP.
It would be good to see if he feels he will be a future MLB utility player or starting position player (and if so, what position). I also focus on Peroza's offense, so I would be curious as to his take on Jose's defense.
I have seen Vientos, Peroza, and Baty all play 3rd. IMO - Peroza - 1; Baty - 2; Vientos - 3. Plan on seeing more before end of year. Peroza also plays 2B.
Great job, John!
Great on Peroza, John. He is not a glamor prospect - but neither were Lugo, McNeil, Megill etc. Until they forced their way into the conversation. Peroza is in the process of forcing his way into the conversation.
John, also my applause for a great interview with someone who can explain to us fans what the thinking is in Brooklyn. I was most surprised that Ed wasn’t a little more diplomatic or open to Mauricio switching to another position but rather was adamant that Mauricio stay at shortstop.
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