Saturday, December 19, 2009
Move on From Baywatch - sign DeRosa
Saturday, November 28, 2009
How About Juan Pierre?
"The Dodgers have their own outfielder with an oversized contract: Juan Pierre. The team might try to trade Pierre for an equally overpriced back-of-the-rotation pitcher."
How would Pierre fit in with the Mets? The team has talked about playing to CitiField, athletic and fast. He fits that mold and would add a dynamic element to the lineup. If given 500 AB, Pierre would bat close to .300 and steal about 50 bases. He would be a good fit batting in the number 2 hole. Reyes, Pierre, Beltran, Wright is a good way to start off.
The trade for him could be either Oliver Perez with the Mets eating the difference of about 5.5 million or how about Castillo and the Dodgers chipping in to resolve the difference in salary. Either way, it is addition by subtraction. The Mets get rid of a headache and fill the LF spot.
If it was Perez that went, then the Mets would be in position to go after Lackey, or two of the 2nd tier pitchers. Maybe Pinero and Wolf could both be added. Something to think about.
Friday, July 24, 2009
Be Bad, Be Very Bad
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Enough is Enough
Sunday, July 5, 2009
Holliday Trade in the Works?
Of course, it could be Atlanta making a play for Holliday. They are right back in it and they have the prospects to throw around. How bad would that be for the Amazin's fan base to see Holliday go to the Braves. Stay tuned.
Saturday, June 13, 2009
It will make me stronger
Sunday, June 7, 2009
Don't Panic but Make a Dunn Deal
1. Don't go get another shortstop. Let the current guys led by Alex Cora get the job done until Jose is back, even if it takes a couple of months.
2. Let Ollie work himself out and be that starter we trade for. There was a reason that he received a $36 million contract. Patience is difficult with him, but lets give it a try.
3. Big Splash: go try to get Adam Dunn. He is exactly what the team needs, a banger with a manageable contract. The Mets need a power hitter but cannot clog up 1B in case Delgado comes back. Dunn can play some first, play left, and be a DH in all the American League parks. His stats are incredible. He has consistently compiled a plus .900 OPS and always hits 40 HRs. Maybe he is not the best fielder but with Beltran and Church there is room for him to hack around in left. Plus he can play some 1B to help out.
There's the plan! Go get it done, hang around until August and make a move on first.
Saturday, May 2, 2009
Now What Ollie?
1. Don't over pay the way the Braves did for Derek Lowe. Maybe good advice 2 years from now but I sure wish he was the Number 2 behind Santana.
2. Go get Sheets and Garcia. At least I gave myself the caveat that I did not know their medical histories and that turned out to be crucial info. Signing Garcia was a relatively inexpensive shot in the dark, not signing Sheets was smart.
3. Add Randy Wolf - now this would have been a good move compared to the Ollie signing.
4. Which brings me to Oliver Perez: I was kind of circumspect on this one, get him at a reasonable price. Well the Mets did and it has been a disaster. I still think he will find his way but there is always going to be that feeling of impending doom hanging over his starts. Maybe he should go visit Scott Boras's training facility to get straightened out.
5. Cut ties with Luis Castillo. I have to admit that I have been rooting for him after he came into camp in very good shape. Nice to see a well paid athlete want to prove himself. So far, so good and I hope Luis keeps it up.
So now what to do with Ollie? There doesn't seem to be a lot of internal solutions for this problem. It seems too early for a trade so what do the Mets do? First, they need more quality starts from Pelf, Maine and Hernandez. If Ollie is the only one of the starter's struggling then it is much easier to deal with. Second, keep an eye on the trade market. Not many teams are looking to take on salary so a trade might pop up. Finally, succeed in the other aspects of the game. Hit with RISP, hold leads, and play good fundamental baseball. If Ollie becomes the only problem then we can deal with it.
Thursday, February 12, 2009
Castillo Experiment Over
The Mets have to pay him anyway so why not go sign Orlando Hudson to a back loaded deal that will be easier to swallow in later years. Adds another switch hitter, better glove, protection in the #2 hole, and reportedly a great clubhouse guy. What's not to like, make the move Omar.
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Steroid Proposal
The stats are the players legacy. The stats are also a way to hurt these cheaters. A method to extract a pound of flesh for the damage they have inflicted on the game. So how do we do it? Simple, if there is any evidence linking a player to a performance enhancing drug his stats are vacated for that season plus the season before and after unless the player comes clean. Then, only the seasons in question are effected. Alex Rodriguez confessed to 2001-2003 so only those seasons are effected. He loses all of his stats for those years - 150 plus HRs gone from the books. If Bonds is linked to 2001, then he loses 2000, 2001, 2002 and 168 HRs are wiped from the books. He still would have 594 official HRs, probably enough to get into the Hall of Fame but he would no longer be the All-time HR king. Justice served. Palmeiro, no longer a 3000 hit major leaguer.
Would it be fair? Maybe, maybe not but being fair is not what these guys are all about. The players affected could actually use this system to atone for their transgressions in a way that we could accept. This gives them a way to sho some remorse, suffer some pain, but be able to come "clean" in a way that we might actually forgive them. We are a forgiving society, but only if we feel the person has paid a price. This is a baseball solution to get steroid users to pay their debt.
Friday, February 6, 2009
How About a Trade for Hudson
Thursday, February 5, 2009
Ollie was the right move
However for now, it looks like Omar has been right on target with this off-season.
1. He moved quickly to get K-Rod and Putz. These two moves can not be overstated. The bullpen sucked last year and the year before. The current bullpen is light years ahead of what was trotted out in 2008. Imagine if Wagner comes back in August.
2. He signed Tim Redding as insurance and a very servicable 5th starter or long reliever.
3. He did not overpay for Lowe, but let the Braves dive in for $24M more than the Mets paid for Ollie. That move is going to pay long term dividends. Lowe would have been a great acquisition, but not at $15M per season.
4. He picked up Freddy Garcia as a reasonable gamble. I pushed this idea and really like the potential upside.
5. He sat on Perez and paid a reasonable (in sports dollars) price for a young, talented, erratic lefty. The starting rotation looks much deeper than last year and is also relatively young.
6. He has signed a bunch of other parts and pieces in the hope that one or two click at the major league level.
7. He has not overspent on a bat. The Mets scored the second most runs in the NL last year without Moises Alou contributing, no production from Castillo, a hurt Ryan Church for most of the year and a Carlos Delgado who very well could have been still recovering from wrist surgery in the first half.
Omar has filled the holes. Do the Mets need another bat? Hard to say without seeing what young Mr. Murphy can do over the course of a season. Give the young guy a chance. Would I complain if the Mets signed Manny or more realistically Orlando Hudson, of course not. But as of now, I am very excited to get going with the team that has been assembled.
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Manny Dollars and Cents
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Solid but not Wow
I have read some old posts, literally just days ago and realized that Omar is much more patient than I am. In the course of a few days, I have gone from excited about Lowe, glad the Mets passed, sold on Ollie, infatuated with Sheets, thought about wolf or Garland and now back to Perez. Passing on Lowe at $15M per season was a sound, financial move. Assuming the Mets land Perez in the $10M range, the Mets will have done a 2 for 1 with Ollie and Garcia. If that pans out, then good work by Omar for staying within his budget and getting two potentially very strong arms for the rotation. A group that goes Santana, Perez, Pelfrey, Maine, Garcia or Redding, with Niese and Parnell as fall back options is much better than last year's group based on better depth. The Ben Sheets idea is still very intriguing but with no medical knowledge it is very understandable why the Mets (and others) are hesitant to sign him. So we hopefully have Ollie in hand by the end of the weekend. And then we can dream about that Wow present, spelled Manny.
Sunday, January 25, 2009
Trade Church?
Reyes
Beltran
Manny
Wright
Delgado
Pudge
Murphy
Castillo
The budget would be at about $145 M of someone else's dollars. No Ollie or Lowe, but a solid rotation with a very good bullpen. Are the Mets just hiding in the weeds to see if they can steal Manny the way they stole Santana? Something to think about.
Saturday, January 24, 2009
Pitching Comparison NYM vs Philly
GP GS W L IP H ER HR BB SO K/9 P/GS WHIP ERA
Starting Pitching
Mets Totals 162 162 61 45 971.0 928 429 105 388 771 7.15 100.7 1.36 3.98
Phi Totals 162 162 59 47 966.2 988 454 123 322 670 6.24 96.0 1.36 4.23
GP W L Sv Hld BS IP H ER HR BB SO K/9 WHIP ERA
Relief Pitching
Mets Totals 157 28 28 43 99 29 493.1 487 234 58 202 410 7.48 1.40 4.27
Phi Totals 158 33 23 47 80 15 483.0 456 173 37 211 411 7.66 1.38 3.22
The starting stats are remarkably similar but the relief stats tell the difference. Besides blown saves, the Mets relievers had an ERA of over 1 run per game higher. A major contributor was the extra 21 HRs allowed by Mets relievers despite playing in Shea vs the bandbox. The conclusion would seem to be; fix the bullpen, which the Mets have done. A further review of the top 4 starters on each team as currently set reveals another set of similar stats even without Derek Lowe or Ollie Perez.
Name Team G GS W L CG SHO IP H R ER HR BB K ERA WHIP BAA
Johan Santana NYM 34 34 16 7 3 2 234.1 206 74 66 23 63 206 2.53 1.15 .232
Cole Hamels PHI 33 33 14 10 2 2 227.1 193 89 78 28 53 196 3.09 1.08 .227
Jamie Moyer PHI 33 33 16 7 0 0 196.1 199 85 81 20 62 123 3.71 1.33 .262
Mike Pelfrey NYM 32 32 13 11 2 0 200.2 209 86 83 12 64 110 3.72 1.36 .276
John Maine NYM 25 25 10 8 0 0 140.0 122 70 65 16 67 122 4.18 1.35 .234
Brett Myers PHI 30 30 10 13 2 1 190.0 197 103 96 29 65 163 4.55 1.38 .267
Joe Blanton PHI 33 33 9 12 0 0 197.2 211 110 103 22 66 111 4.69 1.40 .271
Tim Redding NYM 33 33 10 11 1 0 182.0 195 110 100 27 65 120 4.95 1.43 .275
Check out each starter compared to their counterpart and there is not much difference head to head. If the Mets did not add another starter and plugged in Garcia or Niese to the # 5 versus Adam Eaton or Kyle Kendrick the staffs would match up very evenly.
Conclusion: A Perez signing would have to give the Mets an edge in starting pitching. As would a Sheets signing or even Wolf, Garland, or Looper. Any of these pitchers would provide the Mets with a statistical edge going into the season at starting pitching. Do the Mets need to spend another $10 M on Ollie when a lower cost alternative might be as effective? How about one of these $5 - 7 million guys and save some money for a another purchase? I have one in mind, that coupled with some other roster adjustments might just give the Mets a very attractive advantage over the Phillies. Stay tuned for the Manny solution.
Wednesday, January 21, 2009
Sheets Minus Perez = quality plus picks
Saturday, January 17, 2009
Life Without Ollie


Its time to up the ante for Mr. Boras. The entire Derek Lowe scenario showed that eventually a Boras client will get closer to his number than the team's. I don't think the Mets were getting Lowe at $12 or 13 M per year even if that was the initial offer. Boras was looking to be in the $15 M annual range and he accomplished that goal. Were the Mets ever prepared to go that high, probably not and rightfully so. Lowe is not a No. 1 and the back end of that deal could hang like an albatross around the Braves neck. Of course that is ancient history for Mets fans, or it should be. The team still has at least one hole in the rotation and could use two more arms.
Ollie would fill one but is he the answer and are the Mets going to be able to get him at a number they feel comfortable with? I am guessing it takes 4 years at $12 with a 5th year option to get it done long term. Otherwise, Boras may very well direct Perez to take a one year offer on the West Coast and go back into the pool next year. If that happens what should the Mets do?
Option 1: sign Ben Sheets and take a medical chance. Without being able to look at or understand his records I can't make an educated guess. However, since this is just a blog I say give it a try if there is a reasonable chance of getting 20-25 starts out of him.
Option 2: sign Randy Wolf but again take a medical chance. He never has done that much for me except he is a lefty. If the Mets could get Wolf and Sheets and be guaranteed 40 starts that would be an option to consider.
Option 3: sign Andy Pettite and make the Yankees extremely unhappy. So unhappy, that they would probably sign Perez and have him blossom in pinstripes. Seems unlikely that Pettite would sign with the Mets.
Option 4: Jon Garland get a pitcher who pitches to contact. Interesting way to describe a pitcher but still seems to be overpriced.
Option 5: Freddy Garcia and another medical case. He has to be worth 10-15 starts, maybe more. What would you expect for the contract he is probably going to sign for.
Option 6: Trade for Jake Peavy, of course it will cost F-Mart plus and that is not going to happen.
So what should Omar do? Budget $12 M for the balance of the rotation, sign Sheets and Garcia on one year incentive deals. Probably less than $10 M between the two. Take the balance and follow the advice of Mets Fever, sign Orlando Hudson to a one year deal with options. He gives the Mets a #2 hitter and another switch hitter. Rotation would be Santana, Sheets, Pelfrey, Maine, Garcia, Redding, Niese. Plenty of arms to get 162 starts out of and potentially a dominating staff. The Mets would stay within budget and be the infamous "team to beat".
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
The Red Sox Do It
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
Omar Has a Plan (I think)

Obviously, Omar did not have his heart set on Derek Lowe. Every other major free agent has been given the full blown tour of NYC and the surrounding area. We don't even hear about any of the Mets players calling Lowe with the sales pitch to come to CitiField. Why? Lowe had a 4.42 ERA on the road last year so lets see how he fares when he is playing the Phillies, Mets, and Marlins regularly rather than the Padres, Diamondbacks, and Giants. Lowe is a very good pitcher and would have looked good as a Met in 2009, but how about the other 3 years. I am going to trust that Omar had a reason for not pushing hard for him. Maybe it was a little gamesmanship to have the Braves or Phillies jump in with a big, fat contract.
Let's look at what the Braves have done because it sounds like panic moves that could easily saddle them with financial inflexibility for years to come. First, they sign Javier Vasquez, a great talent (allegedly) who has not been great in a few years. Next, they sign an unknown, 33 year old Japanese pitcher right out from under the nose of the Orioles. The Freakin Orioles were the only other team in on this guy. How did he fly under the radar? No posting fee, no Red Sox interest, but he is now going to be a star in Atlanta. Finally, they sign Derek Lowe for $60M over 4 years. They will be paying him $15M when he is 40. Does that seem financially sound? Anytime the Yankees and Red Sox don't seem interested makes me wonder about the player.
OK, now what. Oliver is on deck and I am holding out hope that Ben Sheets gets a little run as a potential Met. Look at the Phillies staff. Cole Hamels, arrogant stud. But then you get Brett Myers, Jamie Moyer, Adam Eaton, and Kyle Kendrick. After Hamels, there are not any $60M guys on that staff. Just a lights out pen that forces teams to squeeze a little tighter early in the game knowing they do not want to have to face Madson, Lidge and company. Let's give Omar a little more time with the financial flexibility he has retained before going crazy with the sky is falling sentiment.
Saturday, January 10, 2009
Go Get Sheets

Why is Ben Sheets never in the conversation as a possible Mets starter? Health, that's why. He could be the best pitcher available based on "stuff" but he has lingering health issues. He was hurt last year, but he still threw 198 innings with a 3.09 ERA, 1.15 WHIP, 158 K's and only 47 walks. He had 5 complete games which would be a huge bonus to the revamped Mets bullpen. Of course his medical records are the key to determining if Sheets is going to come back strong. If they were positive why not try to sign him to a 2 year incentive laden deal. Maybe $6 M guaranteed per year with another $6M of incentives based on innings pitched. Throw in a vesting option for years 3-4 and the Mets could have a steal. Sheets is only 30 and can be dominating.
"Ben Sheets, SP: Sure, he hasn’t made his full complement of starts since 2004. But if healthy, he’s better than Burnett and nearly Sabathia’s equivalent.
Jeff Passan, yahoosports.com
If the Mets could sign Sheets to an incentive based contract, add Pedro or Freddy Garcia to go with Tim Redding they would have the makings of a deep, potentially dominating staff plus still have some payroll flexibility.
Thursday, January 8, 2009
Why not Nomar?



Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Any Other Boras Clients of Interest
A list of Boras clients reveals some of the usual supsects but also some intriguing names as well. Manny is at the top of many Mets fans wish list, so his name had to be discussed. There is a small chance that if the Mets wait long enough, he might fall to them at a price that the Wilpons will accept. Alex Cora seems to be on the Mets wish list as a utility player and he could surface as an addition to the bench. How about Garret Anderson? He bats lefty, but puts up good numbers and might make a nice caretaker in left to help complete the outfield equation. Then we have the catchers most prominently thrown around in Mets rumors, Jason Varitek and Pudge Rodriguez. I find it hard to believe that the Mets would sign Varitek as a Type A free agent. How about an NBA style sign and trade with the Red Sox? They sign him and send him to the Mets for Schneider. Pudge is a type B, but of course that would also mean shipping Schneinder out to parts unknown. Brad Wilkerson is one of those old Minaya hands with the Expos that he loves to claim off the scrap heap and revitalize.
Finally, look who is a Boras client, Xavier Nady. He is back in the news as a potential trade target and the Mets are always linked with him. Boras is an accomplished trade facilitator. He just attended a news conference at Yankee Stadium where his bank breaking client made the X man available. Why not try to bridge that difficult trade distance from Citi to Yankee Stadium with Nady? He only has one year left, can play either corner outfield plus 1B, hits with pop, and is a huge fan favorite. A Mets - Yankees trade would have to be intriguing for Mr. Boras to try to pull off. I would be very satisfied if this lunch today served Lowe as the entry and Nady as the dessert.
Sunday, January 4, 2009
Should the Mets up the Ante on Lowe?
What does this have to do with Derek Lowe? The Mets have entered the Boras dance floor and have yet to blink. The Phillies and Braves have been mentioned as potential suitors that may have surpassed the Mets bid of $12M for 3 years. Of course there is some mystery team that may turn out to be the Mets as a Boras negotiating ploy. Omar has stood pat on the surface. We fans have no idea what is going on behind the scenes but an educated guess seems to be that $14 M over 3 with some kind of option might get it done. The question is how bad does Omar want Lowe? There seemed to be a split verdict over pursuing Lowe or Ollie. Maybe the Mets have decided to try to get Lowe at bargain and if that does not work then move on Perez.
I have no idea what the Wilpons financial situation is but they seem pretty intent on staying around the $135-140 million level. Which by the way puts the Mets in pretty elite spending company. Personally, I am split on the Lowe - Perez quandry. If you could guarantee one of the two at a reasonable rate with some money left to do some more shopping then I would take either one. However, I think this will start to come to a conclusion fairly quickly, maybe in the next couple of days. Boras seems to wrap negotiations up fast after he has exhausted the market options for a player and move on to the next dance. I think next Sunday we will be talking about another roster spot.