Addison Reed

deGrom deGrominant, Bullpen Barely Holds Big Lead 

When all hope is lost, the main reason to watch the Mets is Jacob deGrom. He started today, and he delivered. 

While deGrom may not have been as dominant as he has been over this stretch, he was still great. For the first six innings, no Cardinal player reached third base. In fact, the Cardinals only reached second base twice in the game. 

deGrom’s final line was 6.2 innings, seven hits, one run, one earned, one walk, and three strikeouts. 

That one run shouldn’t have scored. Luke Voit had a hard hit ball to the wall Yoenis Cespedes fielded cleanly, and he had Voit dead to rights at second. Only issue is Asdrubal Cabrera didn’t bother to cover second. 

Instead a run scored, deGrom got his ovation, and Paul Sewald got the Mets out of the inning. 

With deGrom going like this, you knew the Mets needed one, maybe two runs to win the game. 

Mets took care of that and then some. This should come as no surprise as the Mets have now averaged 7.4 runs per game over deGrom’s now seven game winning streak.  

In the first, the Mets put three runs on the board and all were with three outs. A Cespedes single scored Cabrera. Lucas Duda doubled home Cespedes, and Wilmer Flores brought him home with an RBI single. 

Flores getting the start was interesting, especially with the right-handed Mike Leake getting the start for the Cardinals. Perhaps it was due to T.J. Rivera making two errors yesterday. Maybe Terry Collins just wanted to give Flores a game after he’s sat for so long. Maybe it’s due to the tumors the Red Sox may have interest in him. 

In any event, Flores had a good game with that RBI single and a nice play in the field:

After the good first inning, the Mets had a better second inning. Michael Conforto got things started with a single, and he moved to third on a Jedd Gyorko error allowing Cabrera to reach. 

Jay Bruce hit an RBI single, and Cespedes followed with an RBI double making it 6-0. After Duda was intentionally walked Jose Reyes singled home Cespedes to make it a 7-0 game.
It should’ve been a laugher. It wasn’t. 

In the eighth, Sewald was pulled by Collins with two on, two out, and back-to-back lefties due up for the Cardinals. Rather than find something out about Sewald in a 7-1 game and rest his bullpen with a noon game tomorrow, Collins couldn’t help himself.  He went to a completely worn down Jerry Blevins

While Blevins has been great most of the year, he has struggled mightily since June 1st. In that time, Blevins has a 5.84 ERA and batters are hitting .269/.367/.423 off of him. 

Left-handed batters Kolten Wong and Magneuris Sierra hit consecutive singles to make it 7-3. With those two singles, Blevins has now allowed 25 inherited runners to score this year, which is the fifth worst in the majors. 
After Blevins walked the pinch hitter, pitcher Adam Wainwright, to load the bases, Collins had to go to Addison Reed for the four out save.

As Reed is really the only remaining reliever who is reliable left in that bullpen, it should be no surprise Reed made quick work of the Cardinals for his 16th save of the season. 

With the 7-6 win, the Mets have an opportunity for the split tomorrow.

Game Notes: Josh Edgin has allowed more inherited runners to score than Blevins with 29. That’s the third worst mark in the majors. 

Where Was The Mets Interest In Doolittle And Madson?

With the Mets being seven games under .500, 8.5 games back of the second Wild Card, and 13 games back of the Washington Nationals in the National League East, no one should be expecting the Mets to be buyers at the trade deadline.  However, that doesn’t mean the Mets shouldn’t be looking for ways to improve the 2018 roster.

Considering the Mets bullpen’s complete state of disrepair, and their best reliever, Addison Reed, being an impending free agent, the Mets should have been actively engaged in obtaining Sean Doolittle and Ryan Madson from the Oakland Athletics.

Doolittle, 30, is having another good year out of the Athletics bullpen.  The left-hander has appeared in 23 games going 1-0 with three saves, a 0.656 WHIP, and a 13.1 K/9.  Left-handed hitters have yet to get a hit off of him, and right-handed hitters are hitting just .226/.255/.415 off of him.  Considering how good a reliever he is, his $4.38 million salary for next year is a bargain as is his two succeeding $6.0 and $6.5 million team options.

Madson, 36, has been the reliable reliever he has been his entire career.  In 40 appearances, he is 2-4 with a save, 2.06 ERA, 0.788 WHIP, and an 8.9 K/9.  He is due $7.7 million next year in what is the last year of his deal.  Considering the going rate of late inning relievers, Madson is well worth that money.

If the Mets were able to have two former closers in Doolittle and Madson join Jeurys Familia at the back-end of the Mets bullpen, it would have created six inning games.  Their bullpen would have gone from one of the worst in the majors to one of the best.  It would have been the biggest move the Mets could’ve made towards reshaping the 2018 roster to being one capable of being a World Series contender.

Considering the Mets could have easily matched what the Nationals gave up for the relievers, the Mets could have at least driven up the price the Nationals paid for them.  This would have hindered the Nationals from making deals this season and the next.

Instead, Doolittle and Madson are Nationals without the team having to overpay for the relievers like most teams have to do at the trade deadline.  This should all but solidify a National League East that was never truly in doubt, and it is going to make it all the more difficult for the Mets to compete with the Nationals for the National Leauge East title next year.

If the Mets really have designs on winning the World Series next year, they need to be looking at deals like this at the trade deadline.  The fact the team isn’t should be very disconcerting for everyone.

Cespedes Injury Mars Mets Laugher

Because nothing can ever go easy for the Mets, we got to see Yoenis Cespedes leave the game after this awkward slide in the sixth inning:

Before that play, things could not be going better for the Mets. After yesterday’s 14-2 victory, the Mets quickly went up 8-0 in tonight’s game. 

After Tyler Chatwood issued back-to-back walks to Michael Conforto and Asdrubal Cabrera to begin the top of the first, Jay Bruce would drive them all home:

https://twitter.com/therendermlb/status/886367979788791808

The rally continued, and the Mets would score their fourth run when Travis d’Arnaud would single home T.J. Rivera. Rivera had reached via the walk. After he walked, Chsteood came out of the game due to injury. 

As if four first inning runs weren’t enough, the Mets would pile on three more in the second inning.  

The second inning runs were all unearned as Bruce reached on a two out error by DJ LeMahieu. The Mets did capitalize starting with a Rivera RBI single scoring Cespedes. Bruce and Rivera would score on a Lucas Duda RBI double. 

The Mets eighth run would be provided by Lugo himself:

https://twitter.com/therendermlb/status/886382537244913665

As you can surmise from Bruce, the Mets pulled that old shtick:

Lugo’s first career home run was certainly a high light, but it was not his only highlight of the evening. Lugo went out there, and he dominated the Rockies for five innings. 

The Rockies did get to him for two in the sixth with the help of Cespedes’ aforementioned divot. The double set up second and third with one out. After a Gerardo Parra sacrifice fly and a Raimel Tapia double, the Rockies pulled within 8-2. 

The Rockies tacked on another run in the seventh on a Charlie Blackmon two out RBI triple. At that point, Terry Collins wasn’t taking any chances. He brought in Paul Sewald, who struck out LeMahieu to get out of the inning. That strikeout closed the books on a terrific start for Lugo. 

Lugo’s final line was 6.2 innings, seven hits, three runs, three earned, two walks, and five strikeouts.

He would get the win as Sewald, Jerry Blevins, and Addison Reed would combine to pitch 3.1 scoreless.  

With the scoreless work out of the bullpen, and a Reyes’ eighth inning homer, the Mets would win 9-3. 

With the win, the Mets are now 8.5 games behind the Rockies for the second Wild Card, and the team is six games under .500. The team is beginning to make a run. The question right now if this is too little too late . . . especially with Cespedes having to leave the game. 

Game Notes: Curtis Granderson replaced Cespedes in the sixth. The Mets have now won 

Trading Season Has Begun

The Chicago Cubs and Chicago White Sox unofficially opened trading season with the blockbuster deal sending LHP Jose Quintana to the Cubs for four prospects including top prospects Eloy Jimenez and Dylan Cease.  The trade was another large prospect haul for the White Sox who are masterfully rebuilding their team.  The trade also addressed an area of need for the Cubs.

With the Cubs addressing a real area of need, it makes the Mets pipe-dream of acquiring the second Wild Card all that more improbable.  It could also mean the Cubs could likely be out on the Mets biggest trade assets in Addison Reed and Jerry Blevins.  With the Cubs getting that much better, it also makes you question how many of the National League teams within shouting distance of a postseason spot would be willing to now swing a deal with the Mets.

On the bright side, this is the second year in a row prices at the trade deadline have been high.  The Yankees completely turned around their farm system with the Aroldis Chapman and Andrew Miller trades.  The White Sox have just added two more big prospects.  Considering Sandy Alderson was able to get Noah Syndergaard and Travis d’Arnaud for R.A. Dickey, you can only imagine what the Mets are going to get for Reed, Blevins, Jay Bruce, Lucas Duda, and Curtis Granderson.

It appears the time to make a deal is now.  It’s time for teams like the Brewers to make a big deal to try to solidy their spot atop the Central.  The Diamondbacks and Rockies need to deal to fend off the Cubs as well.  The Dodgers need another piece to try to make themselves a proverbial super team.  As we know the Nationals need an entire bullpen.  Throw in a wide open American League, and the Mets have an opportunity.

The time is now for the Mets to sell.  Hopefully, they can take advantage of the this opportunity and bring back pieces that can help the Mets win in 2018.

Mets Second Half Will Be Interesting

Now that the first half of the baseball season has ceremoniously ended with the American League beating the National League in the All Star Game, it is time to see what the second half of the season looks like for the Mets.

At the moment, the Mets currently sit at fourth place in the National League East with a 39-47 record.  They are 12 games behind the Nationals in the Division, and they are 10.5 games behind the Colorado Rockies for the second Wild Card.  In addition to the Rockies, the Mets also trail the Cubs, Cardinals, Braves, Pirates, and Marlins.

In the second half of the season, the Mets have 68 games remaining with them split-up evenly between the home and road.  At home, the Mets opponents have a combined .511 winning percentage.  Their road opponents have a .499 winning percentage.  The combined winning percentage of all of their opponents is .505.

The respective winning percentages are skewed by the Mets having a home series against the Dodgers and the Mets having a road series against the Astros.  Taking those two series out of the equation, the respective winning percentages fall to .494 at home, .481 on the road, and .488 combined.  More to the point, if the Mets can just hold their own in those six games, the Mets have a slate of winnable games in front of them.

The question is whether the Mets will have enough to win those winnable games.  At the moment, the Mets are planning to sell.  If there are takers, the Mets will likely part ways with Jay BruceAsdrubal Cabrera, Lucas Duda, Curtis Granderson, and Addison Reed.  If any one of these players are moved, the Mets chances of winning games will likely take a hit.  That goes double for Reed, who right now is the only reliable arm in the bullpen.

But maybe the Mets don’t sell.

Right out of the break, the Mets host the Rockies and the Cardinals.  The Rockies are in the middle of a stretch that has seen them lost 13 of their last 17 games.  It’s not exactly like the Rockies lost just against the best teams in baseball either.  They were swept by the Giants, and they split a series with the Reds.

The Mets did just play a close series against the Cardinals.  There is a legitimate reason to believe that with a different setting in Citi Field, the Mets could flip the script.  That becomes more feasible when you consider the Cardinals are a dismal road team.

After that, Mets get to face the Athletics and Padres who are two of the worst teams in baseball.  At that point, it is certainly possible the Mets could be in a different position come trade deadline time. Maybe the Mets will be in a position to add to the bullpen rather than decimate it with a Reed trade.  As we see, they certainly have some pieces to trade to do that.

Ultimately, that has been the frustrating part of this season.  The door has been open the whole time, and the Mets have yet to truly enter into a race for the postseason.  The good news is there are about two weeks until the trade deadline.  At that point, the Mets will have a clear direction.

They will be either gearing up for another improbable run to the postseason, or they will have a youth movement with the Mets finally giving a chance to Amed Rosario, Dominic Smith, and Gavin Cecchini.

To that end, no matter what happens over the next couple of weeks, the fans will have reason to watch in August and September.  You will either have a team racing for the postseason supplemented by players coming back from injury, or they will have some young players beginning to make their mark on the league.

 

Trade Addison Reed To The Team With The Best Offer

In a report by Nick Cafardo of the Boston Globe, the Washington Nationals are interested in obtaining Addison Reed from the New York Mets at the trade deadline.  However, Cafardo also notes the Mets may not be inclined to trade Reed to the Nationals.

If true, this makes little sense.

Reed is a pending free agent.  If the Mets do not trade him at the trade dealine, the best they can recoup for him is a second round draft pick, and that is only if the Mets were inclined to extend him a qualifying offer.  When you consider the qualifying offer for last year was set at $16.7 million, it seems like the amount will be too high for the Mets taste.  As a result, the Mets will likely lose Reed as a free agent with nothing in return if they do not move him at the trade deadline.

If the Mets are indeed trading him because the team is selling, there should be one and only one guiding principle in making a trade – Make the best trade possible.  It should not matter if that team is the Yankees or the Nationals.

In fact, the Mets have already benefited from making a trade with the Nationals.  On the eve of the 2015 season, the Mets traded outfielder Matt den Dekker for LOOGY Jerry Blevins.  For his part, Blevins was lights out for the Mets that season before breaking his arm.  With a good relationship already established, the Mets and Blevins have agreed to two different one year deals since.  In Blevins time with the Mets, he is 9-2 with two saves, a 2.76 ERA, 1.187 WHIP, and a 11.4 K/9.

Where would the Mets have been if they refused to make an intra-division trade back then?

Speaking of the 2015 season, the Mets moved prospects John Gant and Robert Whalen for Juan Uribe and Kelly Johnson.  Uribe and KJ were both important members of the 2015 team.  Again in 2016, the Mets acquired KJ from the Braves.  Again, KJ was an extremely important part of a Mets team that made the postseason.

In 2015, the Mets made two trades with division rivals, and those two trades helped them win the pennant.  Now that they are selling, they should once again be willing to trade with teams in the division.  The only guiding principle in making a move is to judge whether the trade is the best return the Mets can get for a particular player.

Will seeing the Nationals win the World Series with Daniel Murphy, Reed, or anyone else the Nationals may acquire from the Mets?  Absolutely.  However, wouldn’t getting a top prospect like Victor Robles patrolling center field for a World Series winning Mets teams more than ease that pain?  Again, absolutely.

Now, can the Mets get Robles for Reed?  Probably not.  Then again, seeing the prospects got in exchange for Andrew Miller and Aroldis Chapman last year, it’s possible.  That being said, if the Nationals won’t give up a prospect of the caliber of Robles, someone may very well do so.  Again, the overriding point here is the Mets need to make the best trade possible . . . even if that trade is with the Nationals.

Trivia Friday – Sandy Alderson Intra-Division Trades

Recent reports indicate the Mets are not willing to trade Addison Reed or the Mets other trade chips to the Nationals.  This is a truly odd decision because the Mets lone goal should be to acquire the best possible assets they can in a deal, especially for those players who are pending free agents.

The decision is also odd because Sandy Alderson has previously made trades with other National League East teams.  In each of those trades, the Mets have fared well, which would make you believe Alderson would be willing to deal in the division again.  Can you name the players the Mets have traded away in those deals?  Good luck!


Matt den Dekker Jerry Blevins John Gant Robert Whalen Juan Uribe Kelly Johnson Eric Young Akeel Morris

Time To Move On From Terry Collins

If the Mets are really looking to sell, it is time to get rid of everyone that doesn’t have a contract beyond this season.  This means the Mets should part ways with Jay Bruce, Lucas Duda, Curtis Granderson, Addison Reed, and Rene Rivera.  Once Neil Walker is healthy enough to play, the Mets should trade him as well.  With the Mets having team options on both Jerry Blevins and Asdrubal Cabrera, they should also get moved in the right trade.

But it’s not just the players.  The Mets should also part ways with Terry Collins.

When Collins signed his two year contract in the wake of the 2015 World Series, Collins had indicated it could very well be his last.  Even if Collins relented from that position, with each game, it becomes clearer and clearer that Collins will no longer be in the dugout for the Mets in 2018.  If that is the case, the Mets should part ways with Collins sooner rather than later.

The perfect time would be as the Mets head into the All Star Break.  This could allow the Mets to re-calibrate the coaching staff.  Internally, the Mets have some managerial candidates.

First base coach Tom Goodwin was given the opportunity to manage in the Arizona Fall Leauge this past offseason.  While he was removed from the Mets coaching staff in the offseason, Tim Teufel has remained with the organization.  Both are certainly candidates for the managerial job should it ever open, and both should provide the Mets with as smooth a transition as possible.

There are also minor league managers Luis Rojas and Pedro Lopez.  With the Mets likely turning to young players like Gavin CecchiniBrandon Nimmo, Amed Rosario, and Dominic Smith, it would be helpful to have a manager with whom they are familiar to ease their transition as everyday players in the majors.

It would also serve as an opportunity to see how any of the aforementioned would serve as a manager at the major league level.  If you like what you see with the replacement, you have your answer as to who should be the Mets manager in the future.  If that person doesn’t perform well, you at least know you need to move on from that manager and look in a different direction.

Point is if the Mets aren’t going anywhere, they should best utilize that time.  That means giving young players an opportunity to establish themselves as everyday players at the major league level.  That should also mean finding out who the manager should be in 2018.

It’s time for the Mets to thank Collins for his service as the Mets manager, and possibly find a role for him in the organization.  It’s time to close the chapter on his Mets managerial career, and it is time to usher in a new era of Mets baseball.

At Least Addison Reed Will Be Rested

The problem with pitchers’ duels in the modern game is that eventually end due to pitch count and managerial decision. We’ll never again see Juan Marichal and Warren Spahn dueling for 16 innings. Instead, we eventually get a battle of the bullpens. 

That battle makes both Mets fans and Nationals fans uneasy because both teams have terrible bullpens. 

Steven Matz and Stephen Strasburg were both terrific matching zeros through seven innings. Matz allowed for hits while walking two while striking out four. Strasburg gave up two hits while walking three and striking out six. 
The relievers that followed were nowhere near as good. Accordingly, Dusty Baker and Terry Collins were mixing and matching and failing. 

The Mets got the first crack at the bullpen in the eighth, and they are going to want this inning back. 

After a lead-off single off Nationals reliever Matt Grace, Matz stayed in the game for the sole purpose of bunting Brandon Nimmo to second. Jose Reyes, who was batting lead-off for some inexplicable reason, singled to left. Despite Nimmo initially stumbling and Brian Goodwin charging in hard on the ball, Glenn Shetlock sent Nimmo anyway:

https://twitter.com/mlbreplays/status/882037467959963649

Nimmo was out by a pretty good margin. Maybe a better slide, and Nimmo is safe. Possibly, Asdrubal Cabrera being in position to direct Nimmo could’ve made a difference. A different replay official, and the call reasonably could’ve been overturned. Instead, the call stood. 

The send was bad on so many levels. Most importantly, there was only one out, and the middle of the lineup was coming up against a terrible Nationals bullpen. 

Cabrera would walk, and the Mets would send Yoenis Cespedes to the plate. He would come up short in a big spot. It wouldn’t be the last time. 

The Nationals wouldn’t waste their chance. 

With the pitcher’s spot due up and the top of the Nationals line-up due up, Collins went to Jerry Blevins, and he kept him in with all the right-handed hitters the Nationals brought to the plate. It was a bad strategy:

Ryan Raburn hit a pinch hit single, and Michael Taylor followed with a two run homer giving the Nationals a 2-0 lead. 
But the game wasn’t over because the Nationals bullpen is terrible too. 

Sammy Solis allowed a one out single to T.J. Rivera, and he got a gift strike call on Lucas Duda:

Baker brought in Matt Albers, and Collins countered by pinch hitting Curtis Granderson for Travis d’Arnaud. The Nationals were one strike away from winning, and Granderson tied the game:

https://twitter.com/therendermlb/status/882044191727124480

This is when critical decisions are made. Addison Reed was warming up, but with the game tied, Collins wasn’t going to bring in his closer on the road unless it was a save situation. This was the Buck ShowalterZach Britton decision all over again, and Collins showed he learned nothing. 

He initially stuck with Paul Sewald, who bailed the Mets out if the eighth. 

Sewald walked Matt Wieters to start the inning, but he struck Wilmer Difo out, who was trying to get the bunt down. At that point, the Mets had a sinker baller on the mound and needed a double play to get out of the inning. 

Collins would’ve stick with Sewald, nor would he go to Reed in the spot. Instead, he went to Josh Edgin when Stephen Drew was announced as a pinch hitter. Edgin walked Drew pushing the winning run into scoring position. Adam Lind flied out setting up first and second with two outs, and Ryan Raburn coming to the plate. 

Still, Collins would not go to Reed. No, he went to Fernando Salas and his 6.31 ERA. Raburn hit a ball to left field that dropped in front of a sliding Yoenis Cespedes. To add insult to injury, Cespedes pulled up lame on the play, and he won’t be playing tomorrow. 

Bad managing and a bad bullpen led to a loss. It’s been all too redundant this year. 

Game Notes: Daniel Murphy grounded out in a pinch hitting appearance in the eighth marking the first time in 30 games against the Mets he did not reach base. 

Should Michael Conforto Be The Mets Lone All Star?

 

Considering how the season has progressed, and the ebbs and flows of the season, when the All Star rosters are announced, it should come as no surprise that the Mets will likely have just one representative on the National League roster. In some ways that is quite odd as the Mets do have some strong candidates to be a representative on the All Star Game roster.

The natural choice for the selection has long been Michael Conforto. Conforto jumped out of the gate to start the season, and for much of the season, he was the second best outfielder in the National League. However, he has slumped in the Month of June. His slump has coincided with a back issue, and now, he is on the Disabled List with a bone bruise on his hand. His numbers are still terrific with him hitting .285/.405/.548 with 14 homers and 41 RBI, but the struggles have opened the door for someone else to be considered.

The other Mets player that has been outstanding from the beginning has been Jerry Blevins. No one baseball has made more appearances than Blevins this year. In his 42 appearances, Blevins is 4-0 with a 2.60 ERA, 1.265 WHIP, and a 12.7 K/9. In what has mostly been a horrendous Mets bullpen, Terry Collins has been able to go to him time and again to get the big outs. With his stats, and the fact he’s done it more than any other reliever in all of baseball, he should naturally be an All Star. However, LOOGYs rarely make the roster leaving the door open for someone else.

Fellow bullpen arm, Addison Reed is having another outstanding season for the Mets. Bounced between set-up man and closer, Reed has done everything the Mets have asked him to do. Through it all, Reed has made 40 appearances, more than any other closer in baseball, and he is 0-2 with a 2.59 ERA, 14 saves, a 1.104 WHIP, and a 9.1 K/9. Few teams have as consistently dominating an arm in the bullpen, and Reed should be awarded with an All Star appearances.

Another outstanding and consistent arm that deserves to be an All Star is Jacob deGrom. For those of us that forget, deGrom was the story of the 2015 All Star Game, and he would have been an All Star last year if he did not step aside for his teammate Bartolo Colon. It’s time they now find time for him. Since working and figuring things out with John Smoltz, deGrom has been the most dominating pitcher in baseball. Over his past four starts, he is 4-0 with a complete game, 0.84 ERA, 0.719 WHIP, and an 8.7 K/9.

More than that, deGrom’s 125 strikeouts are fourth in the National League, and his 10.8 K/9 is the third best. What will likely hold him back is the poor May deGrom had. Overall, the ace is “just” 8-3 with a 3.55 ERA, 1.221 WHIP, and a 10.8 K/9. That May will likely open the door for another Mets player to be named an All Star.

That brings us the second most likely selection in Jay Bruce. Right now, Bruce is on pace for a 40 HR, 100 RBI season. The slugger is having a career year hitting .264/.335/.524 with 20 homers and 55 RBI. For what it is worth, those are better numbers than what Bruce put up last year when he was named an All Star.

Overall, with the Mets playing much better of late, the team has much more viable All Star candidates than initially presumed. And that is even before we discuss Curtis Granderson having been the best hitter in the National League in the Month of June and his outstanding stats since May 1st.

At the moment, it appears like Conforto is the likely nominee, and he is well deserving. However, he should be joined by one or two of his teammates on this roster.