When I last wrote in this space 8 days ago, the New York Mets were floundering but still in first place. It's been pretty much all downhill since that point. As I finished my piece last Monday, the Mets were in the process of dropping a game to the last-place Marlins. They would lose 3 of 4 to Miami, then get swept in their 3-game set in Philadelphia. If you were somehow transported forward in time, basing your opinion on the 2021 Mets strictly on the games they played over the last 10 days, you'd probably think you were watching a last-place team in the midst of a rebuild.
The story recently, as it's been pretty much the entire season, has been the offense. In their last 11 games, the Mets have scored 30 runs. That's less than 3 runs per game. 10 of those runs came in the 2 games they managed to win over that stretch. That leaves 20 runs in those 9 losses, just barely over two runs a game.
Pete Alonso wants all of us Mets fans to keep believing in the team. Luis Rojas still believes in the team. Hitting coach Hugh Quattlebaum still believes in his hitters. Nothing wrong with any of that. You wouldn't want any of these guys to quit on the season.
The problem, of course, is that these offensive woes have been ongoing since the beginning of the season. The struggles with leaving men on base go back even further. The 2020 Mets were a better offensive team than this iteration. Still, they had troubles driving in runners, too — their pitching was just so bad last year that failing to capitalize on base runners didn't stand out as egregiously in games they were losing big.
The Mets managed to get to 10 games over .500 in mid-June and look very much like a potential Division winner because their pitching carried them. It seemed inevitable that the pitching would come back to earth at some point, and the offense would have to take up a fair share of the load. That never really happened. Meanwhile, effective pitchers were dropping like flies, and Jacob deGrom has only managed to make 15 starts.
For all of that, including the recent misery, the Mets are still a game over .500 and 2.5 games out of first place. They've had a lot of things go wrong for them this season. If the breaks even out a little, the Mets can still contend for the Division.
Of course, I've been waiting all season for the breaks to even out. I've lived long enough to understand that there's no guaranty of that happening. You could flip a coin a dozen times in a row and have it come up tails. You might think that it's really due to come up heads next time, but mathematical probability still dictates that there's a 50-50 chance of getting tails again. Unfortunately, the bad breaks may very well continue to outweigh the good ones for the Mets over the next month-and-a-half.
At some point, if things don't turn around, you wonder what comes next for this club. When the Mets dropped out of contention in previous years, you could hope for prospects to be promoted to provide some missing late-season energy. However, there are no exciting Minor League prospects even close to Major League ready in the organization. Their best kids are in Double-A and Single-A. I guess you can hope for a sleeper like Jeff McNeil was when he was first called up in 2018. It's not very likely to happen.
The Mets might decide to take another look at Khalil Lee, the young outfielder they traded for this past winter. He looked very much overmatched early in the season during an emergency call-up, but Khalil has put up a solid .271/.447/.447 in Triple-A Syracuse this year. He has the look to my admittedly untrained eye of more of a potential fourth outfielder than a starter, but he's the one Mets prospect that might be called up for a look if the season continues to go south.
2 comments:
4 starters on LAD and SFG are 45-15, and that doesn’t include Scherzer. Good luck fellas.
Khalil Lee homered off Brennan today. Some nerve LOL
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