Staff Optimism From Brave Territory
Chris in GA commented on Metsgeek.com the other day and had some pretty solid insights:
I like the Benson trade and the Seo trade didn’t bother me as much as a lot of others. I like John Maine. I’ve saw a few of his outings last year and I think he could be very solid. His 2005 season kind of reminds me of Heilman’s 2004. Of course Maine has a plus slider as opposed to a plus changeup. Maine needs a confidence boast cause whatever he was doing in Balt., his good control turned into slop. If he gets his control problems fixed (good control in minors), I feel we got a good guy that an organization gave up on.
I am a big Seo fan but I am excited about the two pitchers we got from LAD. Sanchez has made improvements every season in the majors and I would be happy if he could hold lefties below .275. I think Schmoll was rushed a year early to the majors. I watched him pitch a few times against the d backs and I think, with a little more maturity, he will turn into a good 7th reliever.
Trax and Glav will leave next yr and the rotation can be very young once again.
If Glavine puts up a solid season, he will be a Met until he retires. His relationship with the Wilpons and his help with recruiting Billy Wagner will probably hold a lot of weight into retaining Glavine’s services. I also saw an interview the other day on TV here in Ga with Glavine for a charity dinner at Turner field and he basically said he wants to pitch two or three more seasons with the Mets than retire. He also noted that he would like to continue on in some capacity with the Mets after he retires while coaching his sons in hockey.
A few things going on in that one. First, John Maine. Chris is spot on and his control was much better in the Minor Leagues and had a 2.8 w/9 as opposed to an abysmal 5.6 w/9 in the Major Leagues. His h/9 obviously increased from his career Minor League numbers when he hit the Majors, but his h/9 at AAA over 9.00 in 147 innings. That is cause for concern, but he is still only 25 years old and can still be a good pitcher. To backup Chris' scouting report about Maine refining his control to be successful, we have a quote from Jim Callis via DG from my comment section the other day.
Maine, a 24-year-old right-hander, could challenge for a spot in the back of New York's rotation. A sixth-round pick out of UNC Charlotte in 2002, he saw his first extensive time in the majors in 2005, going 2-3, 6.30 in 10 games (eight starts). He had a 24-24 K-BB ratio in 40 innings as opponents hit .248 with eight homers off him. His best attribute is his command of his 90-91 mph fastball, and he also throws a slider, curveball and changeup. He got into trouble in the big leagues when he tried to be too fine with his pitches. He went 6-11, 4.56 in 23 starts at Triple-A Ottawa last year and has a career 30-24, 3.24 record in 86 minor league games (83 starts).
As for Duaner Sanchez, there is no way you can be a reliable set up man if you cannot get out left handers at a reasonable rate. His .310/.383/.484 line against lefties in 2005 was horrendous. Much to my dismay, it was not a small sample size either. He pitched to lefties 155 times and seven time more than righties in total. Chris could not be more dead on and if Sanchez can hold them to his 2004 numbers when he held lefties to a .276/.333/.439 line, life will be good. Though not great, those numbers are hardly bad enough to label him Looper-esque against lefties and good enough for him to become a very reliable set-up man.
That brings us to Steve "I stuck it in the wrong" Schmoll (sorry to the ladies out there, if any are left, but I couldn't resist and if you are still an impressionable kid, I'm talking about bowling balls). He of the 1.48 WHIP for the Dodgers and the 5.69 college ERA. In 2004 in A ball he had a 2.49 w/9. When he moved up later that year to AA, he posted a 3.20 w/9. In 2005 in AAA, he owned a 4.44 w/9. That is what I like to call a negative trend. Schmoll may not have the best control, but he is a sub-mariner that throws 88-90 mph and can touch 93 mph and did progress well as a professional. He will have a place somewhere. Problem is, Chad Bradford already has the funky submarine pitcher slot taken up and between Bradford, Sanchez, and himself, the Mets bullpen may never get a lefty out between them. I cannot see Steve "I stuck it in the wrong" Schmoll contributing much this year.
If Glavine can put up a sub 4.00 ERA in 2006, I agree. He could be a Met until he retires. There will be enough holes and opportunities for young players to be injected even if Glavine stays around for it to make sense. He could be the only lefty there, not that I place a ton of importance on that, and is a great guy to have on the team. I think that he will have a very good year with the Mets in 2006 and not only that, but he will get his 300th win as a Met in 2007. No I'm not drunk.
It may have been none of all-star pitcher Pedro Martinez's business but he spoke up, to unspecified members of the organization, deploring such cruel deflation of the Sunday hero's euphoria. Lauber heard of Martinez's intervention, casually mentioned it in print, and regrettably inspired an online, off-key rabble-rouser to a roughly 100 percent untrue "true story of how Willie Randolph came around."
To summarize the 2 1/2-page blog: "Don Pedro" sends henchman Jose Reyes to the manager's dinner table with an empty lineup card, requesting the favor of Jacobs' name being on it, pronto: "Pedro doesn't ask a second favor once he's been refused the first. Understood?" Randolph refuses, adding that if DiFelice fails, he will sign journeyman Alberto Castillo (of the championship 1994 B-Mets) as his catcher/first baseman. Exit Reyes, by command.
Be forewarned, the gothic blog becomes R-rated:
"The Next Day. Randolph awakens ... kicks the sheets off and finds Alberto Castillo's severed head in his bed. 'Ahhh! Ahhhhhh!' "
Of course you can find the original blog here....I laughed. I cried. It was an instant classic.
Whether or not you think she is hot, those pics are nicey nice. Thanks to Ed for the link.
"He still thinks he can catch 70 to 80 games," Towers said of Piazza. "We can probably carry three catchers."
Carrying three catchers on the roster in the National League is pure lunacy, but you do what you have to do when your present options are not very good. The Mets have done it before to accommodate having Piazza and the Padres are interested in doing it.
Dodgers assistant GM Kim Ng and scouting director Logan White are believed to be on a preliminary list of about two dozen names the Cincinnati Reds are considering for their GM vacancy, which was created when new owner Bob Castellini fired Dan O'Brien on Monday. The Reds, who plan to interview Minnesota assistant GM Wayne Krivsky next week, haven't contacted the Dodgers for permission to interview either Ng or White.
That would certainly be huge if Kim Ng could land the job and I still cannot help but think of Bill Singer every time I read her name.
Singer: "What are you doing here?"
Ng: "I'm working."
Singer: "What are you doing here?"
Ng: "I'm working. I'm the Dodger assistant general manager."
Singer: "Where are you from?"
Ng: "I was born in Indiana and grew up in New York."
Singer: "Where are you from?"
Ng: "My family's from China."
Singer: Nonsensically mock Chinese, then "What country in China?"
Mets GM Omar Minaya said yesterday it is a "50-50" proposition as to whether Pedro Martinez's troublesome right big toe will allow him to participate in the World Baseball Classic.
"Soler is one of those guys, for not too much experience in professional baseball, he knows how to pitch," Valentin said. "He doesn't throw hard - he's 90-plus mph - but he has great control. The guy knows what to do on the mound. He's going to be a good pitcher for this organization."
Huh?
"We played on the same team for about eight years. He throws 95-96 mph and he is a good pitcher," Contreras said in Cleveland through a translator.
I guess Jose was a bit overzealous.
My favorites...
1. Were you as outraged about the composition of the 2005 NL champion Astros, whose clubhouse was more Caucasian than a Neil Diamond audience? Houston had no black players on its postseason roster, 19 whites and just one Latino (Willy Tavares), who played a seminal role on the team.
Huh? Where are your complaints at for that one whitey?
6. Have you noticed that an allure of the World Baseball Classic is that it will not be a lay-up for the United States? Teams from the Dominican, Venezuela, Puerto Rico and Mexico, in particular, will be strong. In other words, the Mets are not exactly making up about half their roster with players from Yemen. These are players from baseball hotbeds.
Now batting for the New York Mets, Abdul Mohammed. Seriously, a roster full of players from Minerva would clearly be bizarre. There are a lot of players coming out of these countries and just happen to be good at baseball. Coincidence? Or global C-O-N-spiracy? Hmmmm.....
And if Martinez wins the decisive game in October this year after a go-ahead hit by Delgado that scores Beltran, will you go to a confetti-strewn Mets parade and feel anything but joy? Maybe on that day the Canyon of Heroes will be, of all things, Glory Road.
"I'm not the type of person who is going to think about how many Catholic guys we have, how many Jewish guys we have. I just don't think about it," Minaya said. "What surprises me is that in the year 2006 we are even talking about this."
Let's review. Last off season. Top three players; 1) Pedro Martinez 2) Carlos Beltran 3) Carlos Delgado. You cannot argue that. That's a case even Johnnie Cochran cannot win. The best closer this year? Billy Wagner. If Omar was passing up better African American, White, or Japanese players, then you can cry foul. But in the end, Omar is choosing the best players. Just to further prove the point, he signed Brett fucking Boone.
Maybe the Mets think Nady will go back to hitting like he did the first half of 2005, but this is more likely a salary dump for them. It seems unrealistic to expect Nady to take a big leap forward as a 27 year old with over 800 major league plate appearances.
They also think that Kris Benson was a good pickup for them and I think he was too.
"I am determined to do more than I have done," Matsui said through an interpreter Noz Matsumoto.
That's not exactly hard.