A brief quiz:
The Mets today traded 22-year old outfielder and former first round pick Lastings Milledge. The trade involved one of the following four teams:
a) The Oakland A's, keepers of Dan Haren
b) The Minnesota Twins, keepers of Johan Santana
c) The Baltimore Orioles, keepers of Erik Bedard
d) The Washington Nationals, who have acquired Milledge in exchange for...
Brian Schneider and Ryan Church? Not exactly the ace we were looking for.
And by that I mean, our General Manager just made a very shrewd deal that, while "helping to make us better offensively and defensively," (Omar's words) involved sending a 22-year old top young player away to a division rival in exchange for an above average outfielder pushing 30 and a "big on defensive" catcher who can't hit.
Paging Mike DiFelice...you couldn't have kindly reminded Omar Minaya that getting such a catcher wouldn't cost one of our premier trading chips?
Paging Lastings Milledge...it's really a bummer that the chance you'll be given to prove you too can hit .270 over a full season will be granted with a team not named the Mets.
I'm no fan of "win-now" moves, to begin with. I think that winning now and taking the future into account can almost always be compatible. And if you do make a win-now move, it better be for Manny Ramirez, or Barry Zito circa 2006, or Dan Haren last winter, (yeah, we probably could have made that move a year ago) or any of the other players Lastings Milledge's name has been tossed around in connection with. This was a win-now move, and we got, well, Brian Schneider and Ryan Church, for a player who could have produced at an acceptable level this year, and who could have quickly turned into another young anchor for these Mets within the next few years. Now we can watch him turn into a young anchor for the Nats, paying us back 19 times every year alongside Ryan Zimmerman, Nook Logan and the rest of the gang as they move into a new ballpark of their own.
The more optimistic fan right now will suggest that we not view this trade in a vacuum; "Omar's got somethin' up his sleeve! Let him work his magic!"
I will suggest that we stop viewing our General Manager as some bizarre magician wizard person, all-knowing and ready to spin Ryan Church around as the answer to our need for an ace. We don't have that ace right now. We have Ryan Church. When you trade one of your top young players for a couple of so-so 30-year olds, the trade should be viewed in a vacuum unless something better happens. If it does, I'll give credit where credit is due.
The luster's worn off, Omar Minaya. This move just makes no sense. If this was all Lastings Milledge, formerly one of the most coveted young players in the game, could get you right now, in November 2007, why wasn't it worth it to just let him play next season? For the third time, he couldn't have put up Ryan Church-like numbers? If nothing else, he couldn't have played himself into being as a more valuable trading chip for next July? For the third time, Brian Schneider and Ryan Church? You couldn't have demanded a middle reliever out of that deal?
I'm just trying to take away any positives I can find right now. Marty Noble seems to like the trade, which has only made finding a justification for it that much harder.
Right now, there's not a whole lot else to say. Peace up, young Lastings.
Friday, November 30, 2007
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Don't Let The Door Hit You On The Way Out
That's right - I'm talking to you, Tom McCarthy. You were 2006 and 2007's radio play-by-play guy for the Mets, and you're now going back to Philadelphia to call Phillies games again. Peace out, kid. Don't let the door hit you on the way out.
The name Tom McCarthy certainly didn't mean anything to me when in late 2005 the Mets announced the replacement they had selected for Gary Cohen, who at the time was preparing for his first season in the Mets TV booth during what was then going to be SNY's inaugural season. For all the heartbreak, the Mets - Fran Healy and Ted Robinson excluded - have at least always had good broadcasters, so I figured that the team had done it's homework and found an acceptable replacement for Gary Cohen, also known as the God of all things play-by-play.
All the while the Mets TV broadcasts, a weak point in the FSNY/MSG/Matt Laughlin days, have in the past two years been as good as, if not better than, anyone else in the business. Gary, Ron, and Keith have become somewhat of a trademark, and as I've mentioned previously on this blog the Mets are fortunate to have put together such a great TV announcing team.
But the WFAN/Mets relationship is perhaps as significant as that of any radio station/baseball team combo. 660 am WFAN is THE flagship station for New York sports, where WCBS 880 is just another corporate news station, doing games for the corporate Yankees. And it's carried Mets games for the entirety of its 20-year existence. Lets Go Mets! F-A-N! (doo doo doo) Anyone who's ever listened to a Mets game on the radio knows what I'm talking about. Plus they play "Meet the Mets" at the beginning of every broadcast. Mets extra.
Mets baseball on the FAN, most always preceded or followed by the sweet voice of Met fan Steve Somers, has always been a first class production. And for the most part, the broadcasts have always had first class commentators calling the game. Bob Murphy. Bob Murphy and Gary Cohen. Gary Cohen and Eddie Coleman. Gary Cohen and Howie Rose. Howie Rose and Eddie Coleman. Howie Rose and Tom McCarthy? It was just kind of a downer.
Plus Tom McCarthy is a total Phillies fan. He did their games, plus the pre and post-game shows, for the 5 seasons preceding his arrival in the Shea broadcast booth, and now he's going back there, under his own volition. He issued the following statement with regard to his most recent career move:
“I’m excited to be back in Philadelphia. I enjoyed my two years with WFAN and the Mets. Both are first-class, as are the Phillies. I’m looking forward to returning and can’t wait for spring training to get here.” (metsblog, via Phillies team press release)
Personally, I'm of the school of thought that team announcers should be partisan. Incredibly partisan. I want the people calling Mets games for the Mets TV network and the Mets radio network to be passionate Mets fans. Now, it's different for a Joe Buck, or a Tim McCarver, where the former is a Cardinals fan, the latter still has an axe to grind with the Mets, and the two of them make up Fox's - and in turn baseball's - premier announcing duo. National television announcers should at least not be blatantly slanted.
But Bob Murphy (RIP), Gary Cohen, Howie Rose - these guys all love(d) the Mets. They're not unreasonable, and they're fair in their commentary - unlike John Sterling, or anyone else who's ever called a Yankee game - but at the same time you can hear that extra note of excitement in their voice when something good is happening for the Mets. And when any one game gets out of hand you can usually catch a few old Mets fan-related anecdotes from these guys about their longstanding allegiance to the orange and blue.
Some commenter on metsblog said Tom McCarthy grew up a Mets fan. BS. If that were the case he would not have had the stones to turn around and do Phillies games for 5 years before finally getting his Mets gig. I understand that broadcasting jobs are hard to come by, but I would consider that an irreconcilable difference.
The point is that Tom McCarthy shouldn't have been with the Mets, and the Mets shouldn't have gone for Tom McCarthy. He did a decent job, but he certainly wasn't good enough for the Mets to have given a former Phillies broadcaster, who at the very least had just compromised his Mets fanhood for the previous 5 years, their top radio broadcasting spot.
So peace out, Tom. Take your generic video-game voice with you back down to Philly and enjoy yourself. Hopefully the Mets and WFAN can find a first class replacement for a second class announcer.
(Pictures courtesy mets.com, sports.gearlive.com)
Wednesday, November 21, 2007
Omar Minaya Makes Lemonade
This hot stove season, young as it may be, has already been frustrating for us Mets fans.
I think that may just come with the territory of cheering for a team that, traditionally down on it's luck, blew a 7 game lead in the last month of a season in which they were supposed to go to the World Series, but what do I know? I'm only speculating here.
My point is that we want to see something. We're irrational. We want results - now. Where's Johan Santana? Weren't we supposed to get A Rod? And Miguel Cabrera? Why didn't we trade for Brad Lidge?
And we forget that the free agent signing period is only 8 days old, and that the World Series has only been over for three weeks, and we're hard on Omar Minaya because we all placed varying degrees of blame on him for the debacle that was 2007, and he almost gave Yorvit Torrealba 15 million dollars, and he treated Paul Lo Duca like crap.
And we forget that it's not as simple as just "getting" Johan, or Eric Bedard, or Scott Kazmir. We forget that signing A Rod might not have been the best idea (I still think giving a 32 year-old a 10-year contract is unwise. While the treatment of Paul Lo Duca has certainly been shameful, in making Paulie Walnuts a martyr we conveniently ignore the fact that a 36-year old catcher made an initial contract demand of 3 years and upwards of $20 million. He can say all he wants how badly he wanted to stay, but a reasonable deal for Paul Lo Duca would have taken an awful lot of downward negotiation to actually work out. The man was slimed, but from a baseball standpoint it might have made good sense in the end to say "thanks for the memories, Paulie."
After the Torrealba deal did fall through, though, we were left in a bit of a catching quandary, to say the least. Despite the signings of Ramon Castro and Luis Castillo, taking care of two of our immediate priorities, we still had a need that had to be filled and could have potentially detracted from the all-important search for pitching. Who wants Michael Barrett? Jason Kendall? Gerald Laird? Whoopee! Ramon Hernandez and Bengie Molina are going to be hard to pry away from their respective teams, methinks.
So instead Omar made a very shrewd deal, getting another serviceable, mid-range talent catcher in Johnny Estrada (who we didn't have to sign for 3 years and $15 million, and who can be non-tendered in December if something better comes along) for...
Guillermo Mota! That's right, I didn't misspeak and mean to say Carlos Gomez. Or Phil Humber, or Kevin Mulvey. Guillermo Mota - the late lead-blowing former steroid user and weakest link from last year's atrocious bullpen. Not a top prospect. Not anything remotely valuable. Omar traded Guillermo Mota, and swindled the Brewers into giving us an acceptable, switch-hitting catching option to platoon with Ramon Castro when they could have held firm and parted with nothing more than a bag of balls, which quite frankly many Mets fans probably would have been okay with.
Yeah, we all want an ace. We want to see marked improvement in our Metsies before '08 begins. But give it time. You don't think our GM with a zeal for flair and pulling off the big deal isn't trying to make that happen, if not for the sake of the team, then certainly for his own self-preservation?
We often lose sight of the fact that we no longer have a complete moron as our GM. We forget that having a GM who understands the value of not making a move just for the sake of making a move is a very good thing, and a fresh departure from years past. In our own passion for winning, and outrage at the way this season ended, we forget how lucky we are for a change to have some very good, or at least remotely able, minds at the top of our organization.
Omar was able to bend the book on conventional wisdom, and dealt from a weakness to fill a need - that is brilliant, and so un-Steve Phillips it's got to put a smile on your face.
The jury's still out on just how good a hot stove season this will end up being, but give credit where credit is due. You're pretty happy right now. This small move was enormously encouraging.
(Photos courtesy images.orblogs.com, thefeed.blogs.com)
I think that may just come with the territory of cheering for a team that, traditionally down on it's luck, blew a 7 game lead in the last month of a season in which they were supposed to go to the World Series, but what do I know? I'm only speculating here.
My point is that we want to see something. We're irrational. We want results - now. Where's Johan Santana? Weren't we supposed to get A Rod? And Miguel Cabrera? Why didn't we trade for Brad Lidge?
And we forget that the free agent signing period is only 8 days old, and that the World Series has only been over for three weeks, and we're hard on Omar Minaya because we all placed varying degrees of blame on him for the debacle that was 2007, and he almost gave Yorvit Torrealba 15 million dollars, and he treated Paul Lo Duca like crap.
And we forget that it's not as simple as just "getting" Johan, or Eric Bedard, or Scott Kazmir. We forget that signing A Rod might not have been the best idea (I still think giving a 32 year-old a 10-year contract is unwise. While the treatment of Paul Lo Duca has certainly been shameful, in making Paulie Walnuts a martyr we conveniently ignore the fact that a 36-year old catcher made an initial contract demand of 3 years and upwards of $20 million. He can say all he wants how badly he wanted to stay, but a reasonable deal for Paul Lo Duca would have taken an awful lot of downward negotiation to actually work out. The man was slimed, but from a baseball standpoint it might have made good sense in the end to say "thanks for the memories, Paulie."
After the Torrealba deal did fall through, though, we were left in a bit of a catching quandary, to say the least. Despite the signings of Ramon Castro and Luis Castillo, taking care of two of our immediate priorities, we still had a need that had to be filled and could have potentially detracted from the all-important search for pitching. Who wants Michael Barrett? Jason Kendall? Gerald Laird? Whoopee! Ramon Hernandez and Bengie Molina are going to be hard to pry away from their respective teams, methinks.
So instead Omar made a very shrewd deal, getting another serviceable, mid-range talent catcher in Johnny Estrada (who we didn't have to sign for 3 years and $15 million, and who can be non-tendered in December if something better comes along) for...
Guillermo Mota! That's right, I didn't misspeak and mean to say Carlos Gomez. Or Phil Humber, or Kevin Mulvey. Guillermo Mota - the late lead-blowing former steroid user and weakest link from last year's atrocious bullpen. Not a top prospect. Not anything remotely valuable. Omar traded Guillermo Mota, and swindled the Brewers into giving us an acceptable, switch-hitting catching option to platoon with Ramon Castro when they could have held firm and parted with nothing more than a bag of balls, which quite frankly many Mets fans probably would have been okay with.
Yeah, we all want an ace. We want to see marked improvement in our Metsies before '08 begins. But give it time. You don't think our GM with a zeal for flair and pulling off the big deal isn't trying to make that happen, if not for the sake of the team, then certainly for his own self-preservation?
We often lose sight of the fact that we no longer have a complete moron as our GM. We forget that having a GM who understands the value of not making a move just for the sake of making a move is a very good thing, and a fresh departure from years past. In our own passion for winning, and outrage at the way this season ended, we forget how lucky we are for a change to have some very good, or at least remotely able, minds at the top of our organization.
Omar was able to bend the book on conventional wisdom, and dealt from a weakness to fill a need - that is brilliant, and so un-Steve Phillips it's got to put a smile on your face.
The jury's still out on just how good a hot stove season this will end up being, but give credit where credit is due. You're pretty happy right now. This small move was enormously encouraging.
(Photos courtesy images.orblogs.com, thefeed.blogs.com)
Sunday, November 18, 2007
Yorvit Torre-Not Gonna Play For the Mets Next Year
The Mets flirted with Yorvit Torrealba, took him out for a second date, asked him to marry them, and were all set to walk down the aisle, while jealous and heartbroken ex-girlfriend Paul Lo Duca sat on the sidelines, watching it all unfold in front of his sad, tear-soaked face. Ramon Castro was the bridesmaid, and there was a good chance he might just get in on a little bit of the post-wedding reception, no-longer-premarital action.
But before Yorvit could make it to the altar, the Mets entertained some serious second thoughts. They wanted true love. They feared a short-lived, tumultuous marriage, even though they longed for someone to grow old with. They took a gander towards the wedding party and saw Yorvit's mother, who time had not been kind to.
In the end, they just couldn't go through with it. Before you could say ".250 career hitter," they were out of there.
Outside the world of metaphors, the Mets did get cold feet with regard to Yorvit Torrealba this weekend, and the free agent catcher will not be playing in Queens for 3 years and $14.4 million of the Wilpon family fortune. As I indicated at the end of my last post, while I still favored bringing back Lo Duca, I had come to terms with the deal, and even supported it a little bit. Metsblog dug up more positive commentary from Rockies fans toward the end of last week about the uniquely-named backstop, and a little Torrealba/Castro platoon was looking okay. The support, though, never left the "I'm cool with this because it's going to happen either way and I'm going to convince myself it's okay because there's nothing I can do about it" realm.
So I'm not too disappointed - my emotions, to be sure, are not in as poor shape as the Mets catching situation. What do we do now? Paulie may have really wanted us, but you've got to think he's a little too proud to let us go crawling back to him at this point.
Because apparently every single Mets failure over the last 2 years was completely the fault of Paul Lo Duca. Metstradamus sums this up pretty well, so there's no need to say the same thing twice, but Lo Duca is being made a total scapegoat. It's clear that he was never Omar Minaya's first choice, and apparently he didn't come around enough to Salsa music over the course of the last two years to make Omar, Tony Bernazard and co. view him in a more positive light.
Look, I like Omar Minaya, but he absolutely wins d-bag of the month of November for this one. Say you're not interested in bringing back Paul Lo Duca because he's a 36 year old catcher and could break down over the life of his new deal. Come up with some other excuse. Or just do as your grandmother always said and don't say anything, if you don't have anything nice to say. But instead the Met front office just threw Lo Duca under the bus so they could to justify giving a career .250 hitter three years and $15 million.
And now, because Torrealba failed a physical, or was part of the Mitchell investigation, or whatever, we have no catcher. And we don't even deserve a 36 year old catcher who could break down over the life of his next contract, and won't get him, although it now really looks like he's the best option at this point.
Because we need to use our trading chips for pitching, and the free agent market is now officially void of viable regular catching options. My vote is to let Ramon Castro, who's deal didn't collapse - if you will - start and pray it works. Find him a decent backup and hope he and Castro outperform the Alberto Castillo/Tim Spehr pre-Mike Piazza platoon from 1998.
We're going on three years since the start of the Pedro/Beltran era, two since Billy Wagner and Carlos Delgado joined the party. New Yorkers have short memories and an even smaller degree of collective patience. Go get some good pitching, Omar, and prove you're still worth anything.
(Pics courtesy angrychicken.typepad.com, superbweddings.com)
But before Yorvit could make it to the altar, the Mets entertained some serious second thoughts. They wanted true love. They feared a short-lived, tumultuous marriage, even though they longed for someone to grow old with. They took a gander towards the wedding party and saw Yorvit's mother, who time had not been kind to.
In the end, they just couldn't go through with it. Before you could say ".250 career hitter," they were out of there.
Outside the world of metaphors, the Mets did get cold feet with regard to Yorvit Torrealba this weekend, and the free agent catcher will not be playing in Queens for 3 years and $14.4 million of the Wilpon family fortune. As I indicated at the end of my last post, while I still favored bringing back Lo Duca, I had come to terms with the deal, and even supported it a little bit. Metsblog dug up more positive commentary from Rockies fans toward the end of last week about the uniquely-named backstop, and a little Torrealba/Castro platoon was looking okay. The support, though, never left the "I'm cool with this because it's going to happen either way and I'm going to convince myself it's okay because there's nothing I can do about it" realm.
So I'm not too disappointed - my emotions, to be sure, are not in as poor shape as the Mets catching situation. What do we do now? Paulie may have really wanted us, but you've got to think he's a little too proud to let us go crawling back to him at this point.
Because apparently every single Mets failure over the last 2 years was completely the fault of Paul Lo Duca. Metstradamus sums this up pretty well, so there's no need to say the same thing twice, but Lo Duca is being made a total scapegoat. It's clear that he was never Omar Minaya's first choice, and apparently he didn't come around enough to Salsa music over the course of the last two years to make Omar, Tony Bernazard and co. view him in a more positive light.
Look, I like Omar Minaya, but he absolutely wins d-bag of the month of November for this one. Say you're not interested in bringing back Paul Lo Duca because he's a 36 year old catcher and could break down over the life of his new deal. Come up with some other excuse. Or just do as your grandmother always said and don't say anything, if you don't have anything nice to say. But instead the Met front office just threw Lo Duca under the bus so they could to justify giving a career .250 hitter three years and $15 million.
And now, because Torrealba failed a physical, or was part of the Mitchell investigation, or whatever, we have no catcher. And we don't even deserve a 36 year old catcher who could break down over the life of his next contract, and won't get him, although it now really looks like he's the best option at this point.
Because we need to use our trading chips for pitching, and the free agent market is now officially void of viable regular catching options. My vote is to let Ramon Castro, who's deal didn't collapse - if you will - start and pray it works. Find him a decent backup and hope he and Castro outperform the Alberto Castillo/Tim Spehr pre-Mike Piazza platoon from 1998.
We're going on three years since the start of the Pedro/Beltran era, two since Billy Wagner and Carlos Delgado joined the party. New Yorkers have short memories and an even smaller degree of collective patience. Go get some good pitching, Omar, and prove you're still worth anything.
(Pics courtesy angrychicken.typepad.com, superbweddings.com)
Wednesday, November 14, 2007
Not Such a Head-Scratcher?
Reports from metsblog, which is good enough for me, but which apparently originated through David Lennon and Ken Davidoff in Newsday, seem to be matching the Mets with free agent catcher Yorvit Torrealba. My first reaction?
Omar, what the hell are you thinking?!?
To begin with, the rumors have the Mets signing Torrealba at 3 years and $15 million. This is 1 year and $9 million more than the Rockies (who Torrealba played for this year) offered, which for one seems unnecessary. That's New York Knicks right there. Allan Houston. Tim Thomas. Overpay for marginal talent.
Last year, Yorvit (he does have a cool first name) hit .251 with 8 homers and 47 RBI in what was considered a "career year," but away from Coors Field that came out to just .212 with 2 home runs. Torrealba is apparently solid behind the plate, but threw out just 19% of baserunners, so as far as throwing out base stealers, he wouldn't be too much of an upgrade over Paul Lo Duca and his 23% rate. The move really doesn't seem to make sense because even while paying no attention to Yorvit's ridiculous Coors Field/road ballpark splits, Lo Duca, on a down year, still outperformed him in nearly every major offensive category (.272/9/54).
So what's up here? Apparently the Mets are tepid about resigning Lo Duca, especially on his agent's terms, which are reportedly higher than what the Mets would like to offer. Despite the energy and leadership Lo Duca brings to the team, Omar Minaya seems to see Paulie Walnuts and his Italian temper in a different, "Lo Duca's a nuisance and I don't want him back"-type light.
And thus, we move in a different direction. Minaya doesn't want to get a Gerald Laird, Ronny Paulino (Ramon Castro, v. 2.0 - not as good as the original), or Ramon Hernandez because they would all have to be acquired via trade. Such a trade would have probably involved one of the Mets few valuable prospects, which we obviously need if we're going to make any meaningful adjustments to the pitching staff beyond Carlos Silva or Livan Hernandez. As far as free agent catchers go, we lost out on giving 37 year-old Jorge Posada a 5 year deal (sweet Jesus, thank you God) so it's not too difficult to see how Omar came to the conclusion that Yorvit Torrealba was our best option.
Process of elimination, baby. Apparently Torrealba won't be signed to serve in the same capacity Lo Duca would have; who knows who will start on Opening Day, but with Ramon Castro working out a deal as well the plan is supposedly for Castro and Torrealba to split time behind the plate next season.
Which is odd, again, because reports have us going 3 and $15 million for a part-time player. Castro's contract is supposed to be somewhere in the range of 2 years and $4 million.
So, on the face of it, Omar Minaya has certainly taken a turn toward trying to lose his job. Until you consider what lies beneath, if you will. From Troy Renck of the Denver Post:
Renck goes on to add, regarding Yorvit's media-savviness:
So a reporter from Torrealba's hometown paper paints him as a solid teammate who's passionate, is good with the media, can lead, works well with pitchers despite his struggles throwing runners out, and relishes the postseason stage. Sounds good to me.
What to make of this? Personally, I'd like to see the Mets just bite the bullet and bring Lo Duca back. I've always liked the guy; I wrote this in his defense over the summer when he was taking some heat. While his stock has certainly dropped since then, and I no longer think it would be a "grave mistake" or whatever it was I said at the time to let him go, why not take advantage of the fact that he really wants to keep playing with us, negotiate him down, and give him like 2 more years? His numbers weren't so hot this past year, but for Christ's sake he's a frigging catcher. He's cool, he's kind of a throwback, there to be gritty and provide leadership, mainly, which he certainly is and which he certainly does.
But it sounds like Torrealba does the same things. At the same time you don't really lose all that much production-wise, he's 7 years younger, and this move allows Ramon Castro to move into an expanded role, something many fans were clamoring for this past year.
If we're over-paying for Yorvit Torrealba I hate to think what we'd offer A-Rod if we wanted him and he wasn't on the verge of going back to the Yankees (c'est tres bizarre, that whole saga). Still, I guess the bottom line here is that we're not bringing Paul Lo Duca back, which is sad but not criminal, and this turnaround move makes the most sense for a variety of reasons. I'm warming up to it.
In an interesting twist, the Rockies are supposedly one of the teams looking to bring in Lo Duca if the Mets don't retain him (metsblog). If nothing else, how gambling, 18 year-old girl chasing Paul Lo Duca fits into the Christian Coalition's good character clubhouse next season should be an entertaining storyline to keep an eye on.
(Photos courtesy mlb.com, cnn.com)
Omar, what the hell are you thinking?!?
To begin with, the rumors have the Mets signing Torrealba at 3 years and $15 million. This is 1 year and $9 million more than the Rockies (who Torrealba played for this year) offered, which for one seems unnecessary. That's New York Knicks right there. Allan Houston. Tim Thomas. Overpay for marginal talent.
Last year, Yorvit (he does have a cool first name) hit .251 with 8 homers and 47 RBI in what was considered a "career year," but away from Coors Field that came out to just .212 with 2 home runs. Torrealba is apparently solid behind the plate, but threw out just 19% of baserunners, so as far as throwing out base stealers, he wouldn't be too much of an upgrade over Paul Lo Duca and his 23% rate. The move really doesn't seem to make sense because even while paying no attention to Yorvit's ridiculous Coors Field/road ballpark splits, Lo Duca, on a down year, still outperformed him in nearly every major offensive category (.272/9/54).
So what's up here? Apparently the Mets are tepid about resigning Lo Duca, especially on his agent's terms, which are reportedly higher than what the Mets would like to offer. Despite the energy and leadership Lo Duca brings to the team, Omar Minaya seems to see Paulie Walnuts and his Italian temper in a different, "Lo Duca's a nuisance and I don't want him back"-type light.
And thus, we move in a different direction. Minaya doesn't want to get a Gerald Laird, Ronny Paulino (Ramon Castro, v. 2.0 - not as good as the original), or Ramon Hernandez because they would all have to be acquired via trade. Such a trade would have probably involved one of the Mets few valuable prospects, which we obviously need if we're going to make any meaningful adjustments to the pitching staff beyond Carlos Silva or Livan Hernandez. As far as free agent catchers go, we lost out on giving 37 year-old Jorge Posada a 5 year deal (sweet Jesus, thank you God) so it's not too difficult to see how Omar came to the conclusion that Yorvit Torrealba was our best option.
Process of elimination, baby. Apparently Torrealba won't be signed to serve in the same capacity Lo Duca would have; who knows who will start on Opening Day, but with Ramon Castro working out a deal as well the plan is supposedly for Castro and Torrealba to split time behind the plate next season.
Which is odd, again, because reports have us going 3 and $15 million for a part-time player. Castro's contract is supposed to be somewhere in the range of 2 years and $4 million.
So, on the face of it, Omar Minaya has certainly taken a turn toward trying to lose his job. Until you consider what lies beneath, if you will. From Troy Renck of the Denver Post:
“Torrealba’s main value is that he has passion, he has leadership qualities and he worked wonders with their pitchers. He knew when to give them a pat on the back or a kick in the butt…"
Renck goes on to add, regarding Yorvit's media-savviness:
“He was very accessible to me, I had a great relationship with him and I found him to be very open, very candid and very insightful. He didn’t try to butter everything up. When a guy pitched poorly he explained to me why he pitched poorly without ripping him. If he felt like he called the wrong pitches he took credit for that…
In the playoffs he loved the attention, he gravitated towards the spotlight. He held court at his locker at several times…Now, how he’ll deal with 10 or 15 reporters, during like what the Mets went through last year, that I don’t know. I mean, he can be a little moody, but, to me, it’s a by-product of his passion…
He cares deeply about winning. So, sometimes when he gets upset, it’s not to be a jerk, it’s because he is genuinely upset and he doesn’t want to say the wrong thing, because he cares so much about winning – and I think that’s what his teammates respond so much to.”
So a reporter from Torrealba's hometown paper paints him as a solid teammate who's passionate, is good with the media, can lead, works well with pitchers despite his struggles throwing runners out, and relishes the postseason stage. Sounds good to me.
What to make of this? Personally, I'd like to see the Mets just bite the bullet and bring Lo Duca back. I've always liked the guy; I wrote this in his defense over the summer when he was taking some heat. While his stock has certainly dropped since then, and I no longer think it would be a "grave mistake" or whatever it was I said at the time to let him go, why not take advantage of the fact that he really wants to keep playing with us, negotiate him down, and give him like 2 more years? His numbers weren't so hot this past year, but for Christ's sake he's a frigging catcher. He's cool, he's kind of a throwback, there to be gritty and provide leadership, mainly, which he certainly is and which he certainly does.
But it sounds like Torrealba does the same things. At the same time you don't really lose all that much production-wise, he's 7 years younger, and this move allows Ramon Castro to move into an expanded role, something many fans were clamoring for this past year.
If we're over-paying for Yorvit Torrealba I hate to think what we'd offer A-Rod if we wanted him and he wasn't on the verge of going back to the Yankees (c'est tres bizarre, that whole saga). Still, I guess the bottom line here is that we're not bringing Paul Lo Duca back, which is sad but not criminal, and this turnaround move makes the most sense for a variety of reasons. I'm warming up to it.
In an interesting twist, the Rockies are supposedly one of the teams looking to bring in Lo Duca if the Mets don't retain him (metsblog). If nothing else, how gambling, 18 year-old girl chasing Paul Lo Duca fits into the Christian Coalition's good character clubhouse next season should be an entertaining storyline to keep an eye on.
(Photos courtesy mlb.com, cnn.com)
Thursday, November 8, 2007
Time To Get Creative
I have no idea what to think about this offseason. I certainly don't know what the Mets are going to do. I don't have much of a read on what's possible, beyond what metsblog tells me at least, and I'm really not quite sure what I think should be done.
The Mets are in an interesting spot. I don't agree with the alarmists who predict a 4th-place finish next year and a near future full of mediocrity; some people are stupid, and with no moves we return a very good team next year, which will hopefully be pretty pissed about what happened at the end of this year. We've got a solid foundation.
Let us not be mistaken, however: that doesn't mean we don't need to make moves. Once again, Atlanta's always in the rear-view and Philly will be formidable; nothing will be easy in '08. And I think it's definitely true in this day and age that part of getting a team to play with fire is generating the right buzz to spark that fire. A lot of the right buzz can be generated with the right offseason moves - look no further than the 2006 season, where the Mets came in hungry after adding Billy Wagner, Carlos Delgado, and Duaner Sanchez to a team that had won 83 games the year before.
So, it's on you Omar. Know what I'm sayin'? Time to get creative.
Johan Santana might be out of our reach, or is he? Word on the street is the Twins need hitting and are willing to part with pitching. We might not have the prospects to get it done, but what if we send our three best prospects (Milledge, Humber, Pelfrey...apparently the Twins have some interest in Carlos Gomez as well) along with Carlos Delgado - of whose salary we would pay a significant chunk - in exchange for Santana?
Is it likely? Probably not. Could it happen? Sure. Carlos Delgado looks a lot better on an AL team right now, maybe he pushes that deal over the top.
Supposedly the Padres are willing to trade Jake Peavy. God knows why they'd shop a cheap ace in the middle of his contract, but hey, that's their problem. The Yankees offered Melky Cabrera and Phil Hughes, which is laughable considering the fact that L Millz, RBIs aside, posted similar numbers in just 59 games (7 HR, 29 RBI, .272 avg. versus 8, 73, .273 for Cabrera) to what the Melk man put up for the full year.
Phil Hughes might be more highly regarded than Mike Pelfrey, but the extent of his big league work has so far been just as disappointing without being much more, well, extensive. And how would San Diego feel about getting two pitchers who may be a notch below Hughes (Humber/Pelfrey) but still have similar upside in addition to Milledge and a proven major leaguer. Heilman? I'm just speculating here.
We can trade with the Twins and not get Santana. Like I said, the Twins like Carlos Gomez, and apparently stud youngsters Kevin Slowey and Matt Garza are available. The Indians are open to trading embattled lefty with good stuff Cliff Lee (hmmm...where has that idea worked out before), while embattled righty with good stuff (5-15 with a 5.72 ERA last year, but he's highly regarded for a reason I guess) Edwin Jackson is also apparently available from the Devil Rays...sorry, the Rays. Speaking of the Rays, maybe, in looking for some semblance of buzz in the Tropicana Dome, they want an all expenses paid two years of Carlos Delgado, plus prospects, for, well, you know who I'm talking about. And, mystifyingly, apparently he's available too.
Or we could always just re-up Lo Duca and Castillo, grab a couple of arms for the bullpen, (the Nats like Kevin Mulvey and I like Jon Rauch) sign Carlos Silva, Livan Hernandez, or someone else to throw 200 innings out of the rotation, and go to work. I'd be okay with that. David Wright is going to hit at least one big home run off of Brad Lidge next year, so screw you Phillies fans.
We shouldn't sign A Rod. There, I said it. We don't need him and we can not only succeed but get much better without him. Let's forget about moving David Wright, committing $300 million, and get on with it. There are other battles we can fight, and don't come at me with that "losing attitude" crap. We don't need A Rod.
There's an offseason full of other potential options on the table, though. Time to get creative.
(Images courtesy blog.nj.com, thecrockedpot.com, tampabay.rays.mlb.com)
The Mets are in an interesting spot. I don't agree with the alarmists who predict a 4th-place finish next year and a near future full of mediocrity; some people are stupid, and with no moves we return a very good team next year, which will hopefully be pretty pissed about what happened at the end of this year. We've got a solid foundation.
Let us not be mistaken, however: that doesn't mean we don't need to make moves. Once again, Atlanta's always in the rear-view and Philly will be formidable; nothing will be easy in '08. And I think it's definitely true in this day and age that part of getting a team to play with fire is generating the right buzz to spark that fire. A lot of the right buzz can be generated with the right offseason moves - look no further than the 2006 season, where the Mets came in hungry after adding Billy Wagner, Carlos Delgado, and Duaner Sanchez to a team that had won 83 games the year before.
So, it's on you Omar. Know what I'm sayin'? Time to get creative.
Johan Santana might be out of our reach, or is he? Word on the street is the Twins need hitting and are willing to part with pitching. We might not have the prospects to get it done, but what if we send our three best prospects (Milledge, Humber, Pelfrey...apparently the Twins have some interest in Carlos Gomez as well) along with Carlos Delgado - of whose salary we would pay a significant chunk - in exchange for Santana?
Is it likely? Probably not. Could it happen? Sure. Carlos Delgado looks a lot better on an AL team right now, maybe he pushes that deal over the top.
Supposedly the Padres are willing to trade Jake Peavy. God knows why they'd shop a cheap ace in the middle of his contract, but hey, that's their problem. The Yankees offered Melky Cabrera and Phil Hughes, which is laughable considering the fact that L Millz, RBIs aside, posted similar numbers in just 59 games (7 HR, 29 RBI, .272 avg. versus 8, 73, .273 for Cabrera) to what the Melk man put up for the full year.
Lastings Milledge already has a few cool nicknames. And a rap album. Melky Cabrera has a stupid first name, and an even dumber nickname. With no rap album. Suck on that, John Sterling.
Phil Hughes might be more highly regarded than Mike Pelfrey, but the extent of his big league work has so far been just as disappointing without being much more, well, extensive. And how would San Diego feel about getting two pitchers who may be a notch below Hughes (Humber/Pelfrey) but still have similar upside in addition to Milledge and a proven major leaguer. Heilman? I'm just speculating here.
We can trade with the Twins and not get Santana. Like I said, the Twins like Carlos Gomez, and apparently stud youngsters Kevin Slowey and Matt Garza are available. The Indians are open to trading embattled lefty with good stuff Cliff Lee (hmmm...where has that idea worked out before), while embattled righty with good stuff (5-15 with a 5.72 ERA last year, but he's highly regarded for a reason I guess) Edwin Jackson is also apparently available from the Devil Rays...sorry, the Rays. Speaking of the Rays, maybe, in looking for some semblance of buzz in the Tropicana Dome, they want an all expenses paid two years of Carlos Delgado, plus prospects, for, well, you know who I'm talking about. And, mystifyingly, apparently he's available too.
This guy - you might remember him - who we included in a stupid trade a few years back, but could apparently have back for the right price.
Or we could always just re-up Lo Duca and Castillo, grab a couple of arms for the bullpen, (the Nats like Kevin Mulvey and I like Jon Rauch) sign Carlos Silva, Livan Hernandez, or someone else to throw 200 innings out of the rotation, and go to work. I'd be okay with that. David Wright is going to hit at least one big home run off of Brad Lidge next year, so screw you Phillies fans.
We shouldn't sign A Rod. There, I said it. We don't need him and we can not only succeed but get much better without him. Let's forget about moving David Wright, committing $300 million, and get on with it. There are other battles we can fight, and don't come at me with that "losing attitude" crap. We don't need A Rod.
There's an offseason full of other potential options on the table, though. Time to get creative.
(Images courtesy blog.nj.com, thecrockedpot.com, tampabay.rays.mlb.com)
Tuesday, November 6, 2007
Shea-Rod?
Rampant speculation, entirely baseless rumors. Outlandish trade and free agent proposals aplenty, from every armchair GM calling into WFAN or writing their own blog. Welcome to the hot stove - it's only one month until the Winter Meetings.
A Rod talk has been widespread and deafening, and its only been a week since his untimely opt-out announcement. Of course, the Mets already have a third baseman, and a shortstop for that matter, but that hasn't stopped fans, baseball pundits, anyone really, from counting the Mets as a legitimate part of the Rodriguez mix. My own most recent post before this one considers the possibility of one big A Rod-related move the Mets could make this winter.
And make no mistake, readers of Warning Track Power, few and far between as you may be: I'm an idiot. There is no way the Mets should trade Jose Reyes. Even for Johan Santana, even if Alex Rodriguez would be his replacement. He is one of two Met players on the current left side of the infield that make up a star fundamental and homegrown core to be built upon, not leveraged...you've heard the argument, but that doesn't make it any less valid. If the Mets are indeed going to pursue Santana, it should be with their current prospects, i.e. Gomez/Milledge/Humber/Pelfrey, or they should just hope he makes it to free agency next winter. If not, we should find a way to win without him (Santana); I'm sure it can be done.
As for A Rod, I also said I wouldn't favor an acquisition of this year's presumptive MVP if it didn't in turn mean Reyes for Santana. Once again, I lied. If the Mets do go after A Rod, it should and should only be with a three-way commitment to him, David Wright, and Jose Reyes. This would require a position switch for one of David or Jose, but if it's feasible to move Wright to first and trade Carlos "I'm bored" Delgado, (the only position switch that should possibly accommodate an A Rod signing) going after Rodriguez under these terms at least seems worthy of consideration.
There are several reasons for going either way on this. At the end of the day, I have no gut feeling. I'm torn. Consider that:
An infield with Wright, Reyes, and A Rod would be monstrous. Wright might be better suited for first base anyway, that infield would put up absurd offensive numbers. Reyes, Wright, A Rod, and Carlos Beltran in 4 of the first 5 spots in the batting order would be a pretty sweet offensive core for the next several years. A Rod would break several MLB records in a Mets uniform and there would be a good chance that one of the greatest players in the history of the game would go into the Hall of Fame wearing a Mets hat. I've never liked A Rod, but this all might just be a manifestation of the really-hot-girl-who-you-don't-like effect. She starts to seem a lot more likeable when you find out you might have a chance with her.
On the flipside: 10 years, $300 million. We can afford it sure, but A Rod is 32 right now. That means he will be between the ages of 37-42 for entire second half of his contract. 42 is old. That's the downside of his career. $150 million would be going to a player on the downside of his career putting up declining numbers.
This deal would look really good for a few years, but what about after that? A Rod would probably break the home run record in our uniform, while also passing Pete Rose's career hits mark in those last 5 years. Is that worth $150 million? That's the $300 million question.
To me, it's also the only serious reason why signing A Rod would be a bad idea. Make no mistake, it's a big consideration, but as far as moving David Wright, I don't think it's such a bad plan. Kevin Youkilis, Albert Pujols, and Craig Biggio all serve as counterpoints to any arguments about position switches and their negative impacts. And for all the fuss about A Rod's ego, potential to be a cancer in the clubhouse, and postseason failures, I have a feeling a lot of the problems with him are going to go away with him leaving the Yankees. I think the financial question will be a huge question for whoever A Rod's next team ends up being, but as far as the other "issues" go, I really don't think they're that big of a deal and I think they were exacerbated by the competing arrogance and total lack of support that met A Rod's arrival in the Bronx.
In the end, though, I guess I would rather spend that $30 million per season elsewhere. A Rod would be the big splash move that's not going to come regarding the pitching staff this offseason, because our prospects aren't good enough to get Johan Santana - even Scott Kazmir - and, well, we've been through the other scenario and why it should never happen. Omar Minaya might be feeling pressure to make that big splash, but I'm just not sure it's worth that amount of money. We have a left side of the infield. David Wright just won a gold glove. We need pitching.
But oh that tricky catch-22: there's not any non-overpriced, better-than-mediocre pitching out there that's legitimately available to us this offseason. Should we do what we can and save the money for the impressive crop of free agent pitchers hitting the market next year? Maybe we can get any of those overpriced, mediocre pitchers we need while also signing A Rod. I don't know.
I know I could still end up going either way on this, which is good, because it's going to take forever to play out. Screw you, Scott Boras.
(Pictures courtesy usatoday.com, celebopedia.com)
A Rod talk has been widespread and deafening, and its only been a week since his untimely opt-out announcement. Of course, the Mets already have a third baseman, and a shortstop for that matter, but that hasn't stopped fans, baseball pundits, anyone really, from counting the Mets as a legitimate part of the Rodriguez mix. My own most recent post before this one considers the possibility of one big A Rod-related move the Mets could make this winter.
And make no mistake, readers of Warning Track Power, few and far between as you may be: I'm an idiot. There is no way the Mets should trade Jose Reyes. Even for Johan Santana, even if Alex Rodriguez would be his replacement. He is one of two Met players on the current left side of the infield that make up a star fundamental and homegrown core to be built upon, not leveraged...you've heard the argument, but that doesn't make it any less valid. If the Mets are indeed going to pursue Santana, it should be with their current prospects, i.e. Gomez/Milledge/Humber/Pelfrey, or they should just hope he makes it to free agency next winter. If not, we should find a way to win without him (Santana); I'm sure it can be done.
As for A Rod, I also said I wouldn't favor an acquisition of this year's presumptive MVP if it didn't in turn mean Reyes for Santana. Once again, I lied. If the Mets do go after A Rod, it should and should only be with a three-way commitment to him, David Wright, and Jose Reyes. This would require a position switch for one of David or Jose, but if it's feasible to move Wright to first and trade Carlos "I'm bored" Delgado, (the only position switch that should possibly accommodate an A Rod signing) going after Rodriguez under these terms at least seems worthy of consideration.
There are several reasons for going either way on this. At the end of the day, I have no gut feeling. I'm torn. Consider that:
An infield with Wright, Reyes, and A Rod would be monstrous. Wright might be better suited for first base anyway, that infield would put up absurd offensive numbers. Reyes, Wright, A Rod, and Carlos Beltran in 4 of the first 5 spots in the batting order would be a pretty sweet offensive core for the next several years. A Rod would break several MLB records in a Mets uniform and there would be a good chance that one of the greatest players in the history of the game would go into the Hall of Fame wearing a Mets hat. I've never liked A Rod, but this all might just be a manifestation of the really-hot-girl-who-you-don't-like effect. She starts to seem a lot more likeable when you find out you might have a chance with her.
On the flipside: 10 years, $300 million. We can afford it sure, but A Rod is 32 right now. That means he will be between the ages of 37-42 for entire second half of his contract. 42 is old. That's the downside of his career. $150 million would be going to a player on the downside of his career putting up declining numbers.
This deal would look really good for a few years, but what about after that? A Rod would probably break the home run record in our uniform, while also passing Pete Rose's career hits mark in those last 5 years. Is that worth $150 million? That's the $300 million question.
To me, it's also the only serious reason why signing A Rod would be a bad idea. Make no mistake, it's a big consideration, but as far as moving David Wright, I don't think it's such a bad plan. Kevin Youkilis, Albert Pujols, and Craig Biggio all serve as counterpoints to any arguments about position switches and their negative impacts. And for all the fuss about A Rod's ego, potential to be a cancer in the clubhouse, and postseason failures, I have a feeling a lot of the problems with him are going to go away with him leaving the Yankees. I think the financial question will be a huge question for whoever A Rod's next team ends up being, but as far as the other "issues" go, I really don't think they're that big of a deal and I think they were exacerbated by the competing arrogance and total lack of support that met A Rod's arrival in the Bronx.
In the end, though, I guess I would rather spend that $30 million per season elsewhere. A Rod would be the big splash move that's not going to come regarding the pitching staff this offseason, because our prospects aren't good enough to get Johan Santana - even Scott Kazmir - and, well, we've been through the other scenario and why it should never happen. Omar Minaya might be feeling pressure to make that big splash, but I'm just not sure it's worth that amount of money. We have a left side of the infield. David Wright just won a gold glove. We need pitching.
But oh that tricky catch-22: there's not any non-overpriced, better-than-mediocre pitching out there that's legitimately available to us this offseason. Should we do what we can and save the money for the impressive crop of free agent pitchers hitting the market next year? Maybe we can get any of those overpriced, mediocre pitchers we need while also signing A Rod. I don't know.
I know I could still end up going either way on this, which is good, because it's going to take forever to play out. Screw you, Scott Boras.
(Pictures courtesy usatoday.com, celebopedia.com)
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