Archive for May, 2009

Future Hall of Famer Fernando Martinez makes major league debut

May 27, 2009

Fernando Martinez major league debut

Incoherent Ramblings

May 20, 2009

There is that old saying, if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. In the case of baseball, perhaps it should be ‘if you don’t have anything to complain about, there is really nothing to say’.

Last week, the Mets were far too successful to complain about, winning games left, right and centre. And with Marlon gone I couldn’t even document his daily battle with the Mendoza line. ‘Experts’ even stopped suggesting the Mets should trade Wright as he started to hit and hit and hit. So thank god the Mets have started losing again (NB joke). Now we can ‘discuss’ whether the Mets should trade Reyes (No), whether Beltran really provides enough grit for his $17M salary (who needs grit when you are awesome at hitting and fielding) and which crappy washed up veteran the Mets should trade their prospects for to fill in while Delgado is broken (none – keep the kidz).

Although the Mets need a replacement 1B, the last thing the Mets need is to strip the farm system. If Omar was better at building a whole team, this wouldn’t be a problem. But he isn’t, so Murphy had better learn how to play 1B pretty damn quick. Unless the Padres have gone mad and really want to trade Adrian Gonzalez, in which case they can have as much farm system as they want (The idea the Padres would trade Gonzalez makes me doubt Mike Francesa is a baseball expert).

Jerry Manuel has made some strange decisions. In his favour, he isn’t Willie Randolph, but that is starting to wear thin. Similarly, Gary Sheffield isn’t Marlon Anderson, a huge plus. Unfortunately his crappy defense is cancelling out his so-so offense. Seeing as he is being paid the cost of a ‘replacement player’ maybe this doesn’t matter. But the Mets can’t rely on him as a big bat in the line up.

Livan Hernandez sucks and takes too long between pitches making the game long and boring. I’d rather see someone young with upside rather than fat and old fill out the rotation – Niese did not deserve to be sent down after one bad start. And this is the lowest quality Quality Start I’ve ever had the misfortune to witness – it’s luck Livan only had to face the Pirates, not someone good.

It’s the little things that make Omar so infuriating. Omar DFA’d Darren O’Day so Figueroa (rather than Stokes or Parnell) could make a (losing) start then get DFA’d for Casey Fossum who sucked and was DFA’d for 40 year old rookie Ken Takahashi – given his recent perfomances, it looks like the videos of his pitching have finally arrived from Japan. Meanwhile Darren O’Day, claimed by the AL West-leading Rangers has already been worth 0.3 WAR, with 9K/9 and 6K/BB (in 12 IP). Plus he is a side-armer and Rule 5 draft pick, both of which are awesome.

Break up the core….wtf?

May 2, 2009

Not even some, but many, many people seem to be suggesting that the Mets should ‘break up the core’ and that they are not going to win anything with players who lack ‘heart’ and ‘grit’. This ire seems mainly focused on Wright who, just like every year, has had a (relatively poor) April, with many strikeouts and few home runs – but he is still hitting aroun .300 with a .380 OBP. Omar Minaya doesn’t help with these kind of comments – watching the ‘collapse’ last year, no player looked as upset as Wright, and arguably no Mets player had a better September. And did Omar really bring in Cora and Sheffield to make up for the lack of heart of Reyes and Wright? Surely all Cora and Sheffield bring to the team is age and declining skills?

The Mets clearly have some problems, or else they wouldn’t have a 10-12 record. But these problems are not the core (Wright, Reyes, Beltran, Santana) but many of the other 21 players on the roster. Consider this: While 2007 was a collapse, in 2008 the Mets arguably overachieved. Remember, this is a team that missed out on the playoffs by one game, and finished 2 games behind the World Series Champions, and did this while having half a season of Willie Randolph’s mismanagement, half a season of a useless Delgado (and half a season of a good one), no regular RF after Church was concussed, an underperforming Castillo, John Maine on the DL and four of Omars aging veterans, who were supposed to form 2/5 of the rotation and the starting LF (El Duque, Pedro, Alou and Marlon Anderson) sucking because they were too old. And still, if Wagner hadn’t broken down, the Mets would surely have blown one less save, and made the playoffs. This suggests to me that either the Mets were extremely lucky in 2007, or the core is really, really good. I’d go for the latter – Wright is second only to A-Rod at 3B, but is considerably younger, Beltran is the best CF in the game (toss-up with Sizemore), Reyes is second to Hanley Ramirez at SS, but may be able to stick at the position longer, and Santana is the best SP in baseball. So on a day when Santana is starting, 4 out of the 9 positions in baseball are filled by pretty much the best player possible – I don’t think any other team in baseball can claim that, and therefore this should not be a team that struggles, but should be a lock in for the playoffs every year.

But, if the Mets overachieved in 2008, they clearly had problems that needed to be addressed in the off season. The bullpen, the most glaring problem, has been upgraded, and looks significantly better. However, one of the reasons the bullpen was so bad last year was because it was so overused (Feliciano appeared in 82 games last year, the most of any pitcher, Heilman wasn’t far behind). One of the reasons for this was because aside from Santana and Pelfrey, no Mets pitcher could go with any regularity into or beyond the 6th inning, and relievers were often pitching more than 3 innings in a game. Bringing back the same rotation as 2008, with Livan Hernandez replacing Pedro Martinez, and expecting an improvement was not a good plan – this required Pelfrey to continue to be as good as the latter part of 2008, and Maine and Perez to improve. This is why resigning Perez was a mistake – even if he was as ‘good’ as in 2008 (when he was exactly league average), his inability to pitch deep into games would still wear out the bullpen and hurt the Mets. Unfortunately Omar’s neglect of/inability to build a farm system leaves the Mets with no ready in house solutions (Niese, Gee and Holt may be ready someday). In the off season Lowe, Sabathia and Burnett would’ve been an improvement over Perez, while the likes of Randy Wolf, Randy Johnson and Jon Garland could have been as average as Perez for less money.

The other problem seems to be the large number of runners left in scoring position; I think this may mainly be a case of small sample size and bad luck – Wright, Reyes, Beltran, Church and Murphy have decent averages, so are getting the hits. However, it may also be that the Mets are not getting the ‘big hits’ – singles and ‘productive outs’ are moving the runners, but without extra base hits, the Mets are not getting the runners home before they run out of outs. They need another big hitter – if Delgado, Wright and Reyes aren’t getting these big hits, they struggle. The power hitters in a team are usually hidden in the outfield where any defensive liability is hidden. The Mets have a CF who has much more power than your average CF, but Murphy (2 Hr in 2008, 2 Hr in 2009) doesn’t have the power to be a LF, while Church in RF has 1 Hr so far, and doesn’t seem to have rediscovered the pop that made him the Mets most productive player before his concussion. With Castillo and Schneider completing the line-up, no wonder the Mets don’t score runs.

So what should the Mets do now? Sign Ben Sheets once/if he is healthy. Look to pick up some pitchers who have fallen out of favour (like Perez and Maine when they originally came to the Mets). And clutch at straws and hope Perez improves (he can hardly get worse), or that Redding and Niese come up and can pitch deep into games. Tatis should probably play more, Sheffield should pinch hit rather than actually play in the outfield. And the Mets should also consider trading Murphy. As a 3B he has no place on the team, while he lacks the power to be a LF (although given a chance he could be valuable as a 2B). If the Mets carry on playing as they are, and are close to .500 at the trade deadline, what they absoultely should not do is decide they are in contention and trade their farm system for a rental to get them into the playoffs. Instead they should become sellers, and offload any of the old guys they can – Delgado, Feliciano, Schneider, Castillo, Sheffield, Cora, Perez(!), Tatis, Castro etc, giving up on 2009 to be ready for 2010 and beyond.