Outbid By Small Market?

I can’t help myself from regurgitating this question originally posted on ESPN-NY, in regard to the possibility of Jose Reyes being signed by the Miami Marlins:

Mets fans, how do you feel about the prospect of seeing Reyes come back to Queens in a garish Miami uniform? Can a New York team ever justify losing a star player to a team from a smaller market, and what, if anything, should be done about it?

Emphasis mine.

OK, that question has made me a little verklempt … so, discuss amongst yourselves in the comments …

Posted in 11-12 Offseason | 23 Comments

2011 Analysis: Mike Pelfrey

There’s an old phrase that goes, “sometimes you have to take two steps back in order to take one step forward”. If that’s true, Mike Pelfrey is on step back number three — so when are we going to see that one step forward? Continue reading

Posted in 11-12 Offseason, 2011 Mets Evaluations | Tagged , | 27 Comments

Spilled Milk Pt 3: The Wright Time for a Facelift

See if you can guess who I am talking about: This is the story of a good player on a bad Mets team. And this team is really, really bad—embarrassingly out-of-touch ownership, ridiculously lopsided trades, a weak farm system, an alienated fan base, second-class citizenship in the hometown (Yankees) and regional (Phillies and Red Sox) markets, and a total aversion to signing a big-ticket free agent — not that one of them would want to come here anyway. In other words, the perfect storm of dreadfulness that buried this once proud team in the second division with little hope, outside of a miracle, for any turnaround soon.

The player, however, is another story: a former first-round draft pick, he lives in the city, is always accessible to the media, plays in a style that is a throwback to an earlier era, has had his share of big hits, including a homerun in an All-Star game. He appeals to everyone: the press likes him, women think he’s cute, and kids wear his jersey. Unlike other former and current teammates, he actually likes playing here. He is coming off of an injury-riddled season that cut his games played and production to all-time lows, but a clean bill of health and some changes to the home stadium promise a return to past glory. The team is expected to be awful again next year, but there is hope: a new front office has been assembled, one with a long track record of success in the American League. Regardless, he’ll be out there, giving it his all, thrilling the fans with both his glove and his bat. After all, he is “The Face of The Franchise.”

That’s too easy, you’re probably thinking right now. He’s talking about David Wright.

Nope. The player in question is Continue reading

Posted in 11-12 Offseason | Tagged | 6 Comments

Mike Matheny New Cardinals Manager

In case you hadn’t heard, the Cardinals chose Mike Matheny as their new manager, replacing the legendary Tony LaRussa.

Matheny makes the second managerial hiring this fall of someone with zero managerial experience; he joins former Met Robin Ventura, who was hired by the White Sox.

About a year ago, when the Mets were considering managerial candidates, the team passed on both Tim Teufel and Wally Backman — and many in the blogosphere pointed out inexperience as a major reason why the former platoon partners were unsuited for the Major League dugout.

I’m curious — what is your take on the value of MLB (or any) managerial experience? (Mine is here: Managerial Experience: Does it Matter?.) Do you think it’s vital for someone to have experience in a dugout before managing a big-league team? What’s your thought on the hirings of Ventura and Matheny? How can a reigning World Series champion get away with hiring a neophyte?

Post your thoughts in the comments.

Posted in 11-12 Offseason | 2 Comments

Mets and Buffalo May Part Ways

Adam Rubin at ESPN-NY is hearing that Buffalo May Boot the Mets when their AAA agreement ends after the 2012 season.

According to Rubin:

…dissatisfaction with the product the Mets are supplying has the Bisons leaning toward switching affiliations when the current agreement expires, according to industry sources.

Can’t really blame Buffalo — the Mets have stocked their AAA club with absolute garbage for the past three seasons. If indeed the Mets get booted from Buffalo, where will their top-level minor league club wind up next? And after being booted for providing a subpar product, what city will be clamoring to host the Mets’ very minor leaguers?

The next question is, how long before Flushing boots the big league club?

Posted in 11-12 Offseason | 3 Comments

Capuano May Follow the Swallows

The swallows of Capistrano headed out of San Juan in late October, and similarly, it appears that Chris Capuano will be fleeing from Flushing. Continue reading

Posted in 11-12 Offseason | Tagged , | 9 Comments

Blog Roundup: Reyesmania!

The rumors, facts, innuendo, speculation, hand-wringing, and anxiety about Jose Reyes are at a peak.  It seems like every day some “reporter” quotes some “source” as saying Reyes has become a Miami Marlin.  However, he remains a free agent as of this posting.  Fan reaction runs the gamut from hysteria to anger to acceptance – and nothing’s actually happened yet.

The opinions of the Blogs also runs the gamut:

  • Paul Lebowitz says the Reyes to Marlins “report” that leaked on Sunday was a lie.
  • Metsblog says the Sandy Alderson and the mets have had discussions with Reyes’s agent.
  • Metszilla reports that the Milwaukee Brewers had a conversation with Reyes as well.
  • Amazin’ Avenue examines the opinion that the Mets should have traded Reyes at the deadline this year.
  • Rising Apple thinks the Mets could offer Reyes a back-loaded contract.
  • Real Dirty wants the Mets to level with the fans: Is this a full-blown rebuild?

The Reyes saga continues.  Follow it on Mets Today.

Posted in 11-12 Offseason, Around the Blogs | Tagged , | 1 Comment

2011 Analysis: Bobby Parnell

Remember when Bobby Parnell was a young fireballer who looked like he might be the Mets’ closer of the future? We figured he’d take a career path similar to that of J.J. Putz, Brad Lidge, or Jonathan Broxton: he’d eventually harness that heat, spend a year or two as a lights-out setup man, then step in as a 35-40-save fireman.

Unfortunately, Parnell has yet to evolve into a reliable setup man; in fact, it’s still questionable whether he can be relied upon to protect a close lead as a middle reliever.

Sure, he has that eye-popping 9.7 Ks per nine innings, and he frequently flirts with triple digits on the radar gun. But pitchers who throw 100 MPH shouldn’t be allowing more than a hit per inning, and Parnell’s walk rate nearly doubled from 2010 to 2011 — jumping from 2.1 BB/9 to 4.1. A late-inning reliever expected to protect a slim lead simply cannot allow that many baserunners.

Though Parnell did show flashes of brilliance as a setup man, and he did convert 6 saves in his brief audition as closer, the jury is still out as to whether he can sustain success over a 162-game season. His lapses in command are maddening, and he has yet to develop a reliable secondary pitch. At times, his slider has that vintage Lidge look, but those times are few and far between; usually, Parnell chokes the pitch and buries in the dirt far from the plate — or, he releases it too early, leaving it in the middle of the strike zone while “speeding up” the hitter’s swing.

Maybe I’m evaluating Parnell too harshly, but whit his velocity and ability to get the ball into the strike zone, it is agonizing to see him take a step back at time in his career when he should be taking steps forward.

2012 Projection

Parnell failed his closer audition — and in fact, fell below Manny Acosta on the totem pole by season’s end. If that’s not a wake-up call I’m not sure what is.

Guess what, folks: Bobby Parnell is no longer a young phenom — he turned 27 in September and will be 28 by the end of 2012. Sure, some pitchers are “late bloomers” but generally speaking, if a guy throws 100 MPH and doesn’t figure it out by now, he’s not likely to figure it out. For one, velocity tends to start reducing as a pitcher inches toward and passes age 30 — and once Parnell loses his other-worldly fastball speed he has nothing else to offer. That’s not to say it’s too late for him to “figure it out”, nor that the Mets should give up on him. On the contrary, if Parnell can simply command his slider 7 out of every 10 times (instead of 4 or 5 times) he takes the mound, he’ll immediately become a decent closer for a second-division team (such as the 2012 Mets). Will that happen? Hard to say — it all depends on whether he can find the correct timing of his release, and that’s easier said than done.


2010 Analysis of Bobby Parnell

Posted in 11-12 Offseason, 2011 Mets Evaluations | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment