4/17/23

Reese Kaplan -- Getting Better But Not Yet Good Enough


So the Mets have moved into a winning record with a .600 percentage as of Sunday morning.  If the club continued to play at this level of competency it would result in a final season record of 97 wins which is 4 below their 101 win total of 2022 and consistent with the slight step down I predicted in my preseason forecast.

Yesterday the Mets made some personnel moves which were geared towards maintaining the status quo.  Everyone who watched saw Stephen Nogosek get hit by a batted ball which ended up leaving him bruised and in need of some time to recuperate.  


Then the surprising acquisition of Dennis Santana started off alright with a few good appearances but then he quickly looked overmatched.  

On the former, Nogosek was placed on the IL.  On the latter, Santana has been DFA'd.  If he clears then he'll head to Syracuse.  If not, well, we hardly knew ye.


To replace them on the roster the Mets promoted starting pitcher Jose Butto.  Part of the reasoning was the need for multiple starters with games clustered together on the west coast trip.  Butto has had a decent minor league career but not in the top tier of productivity. During his six years as part of the Mets minor league climb to the majors he has a 3.78 ERA.  His 9 Ks per 9 IP is commendable as is his decent control allowing 2.6 walks over the same span.  

His record overall is below .500 though the control and ERA are generally more indicative of what a potential starter can do as wins and losses depend on his team's ability to score runs.  Look at Jacob deGrom as a good example of that phenomenon.  

Scouts have said that Butto is a workhorse who can get people out but doesn't always succeed in doing so.  The 6'1" Venezuelan is rather skinny and doesn't generate a lot of velocity.  His hits per inning pitched falls well below 1 and with good control you'd expect his end results would be even better.  

He is regarded within the top 25 of Mets prospects which is more about perhaps the thinness of the pool than about the quality Butto delivers.  Last season he had a brief trial in the majors which was eye popping but not in a good way.


Accompanying him to replace Santana is Jimmy Yacabonis, a throwback to Buck Showalter's Baltimore Orioles days.  With the exception of a 2018 minor league trial exclusively as a starting pitcher, he's been a reliever since the very beginning and after that season's 4.26 ERA result.  The big righthander is now 31 years of age and still hasn't really succeeded in clinching a pivital role in a major league bullpen.  

He did turn in commendable work for the Mariners in the 2021 minors and again in 2022 split between the Marlins and Rays.  It's understandable that they would take a chance on him.

In the early going for Syracuse he has done well.  In his four games in AAA he has a perfect 0.00 ERA with no walks and better than a strikeout per inning pitched.  With Santana coming off the 40-man roster it opened a slot for him to get added to it.  No one expects a whole lot given his major league mediocre performance record, but someone needs to hold down the fort in the pen until Nogosek or Tommy Hunter are ready to take the mound again.  

The bigger questions for the Mets seem to be whether or not Francisco Alvarez really is overmatched and not ready for the majors, as well as the early season struggles of third baseman Eduardo Escobar.  With Brett Baty on fire that second positional debate is probably more front and center than catcher.  For now the Mets don't really have other options to cover for Omar Narvaez until he's ready to return.  

Add in the similar hot start for nowhere-to-play Ronny Mauricio and the man I've come to call Claude Rains, the Mets' invisible man, Mark Vientos.  It's good that some of the hitters playing upstate are handling their bats the way folks hoped the crew at home in Citifield would do.  Eventually some of these guys will see Queens while wearing a uniform instead of buying a ticket at the gate.  


Going forwards, however, between the starting pitching uneven performances, the injuries and the hitting slumps it looks like a .600 winning percentage may be what to look for from the big club.  That level won't be enough to win a division but might open up a playoff slot.  

5 comments:

Tom Brennan said...

The vibe is good, Alvarez is getting a baptism by fire, and Baty (and soon Vientos and his 1.109 OPS) are going to transform the team. Max is probably OK, and Verlander could be here soon.

The core (Nimmo, Alonso, Lindor, Marte) have been terrific, and McNeil just got his wake up call and should be joining them.

And the pen has far exceeded my expectations.

So far, so good.

Raw said...

Hi,

Any news as to why Vasil and Tidewell only pitched Two innings yesterday. They both were doing well before being pulled.

bill metsiac said...

The 1st 2 weeks barely qualify as "small samples". Projecting them to the full season makes the Rays by far the winningest team in history, and what does it make our 1Bman, who has a HR/per 2 games rate? Over a full season, that projects to...more than 62?
In the "mini-small-sample" dept, I am encouraged by Alvarez' final 2 PA yesterday, though neither produced a hit.

At important moments, he hit a hard line drive that was caught in a fine play by their LFer. Then in the 10th, he hit a long fly to RF that advanced Esco to 3B, from which he scored the winning run.

Mini-small, but a good sign that he may be settling in after looking bad in virtually all of his previous ML AB since his call-up.

Mack Ade said...

Raw

I asked but got no response.

Could have just been a planned weekend bullpen game.

Raw said...

Hi Mack,

It would seem that maybe they are either coming back from some minor injury, moving slowly with them, or moving them up. I thought it was a little surprising that no other sports writer picked up on that