The Wright move?

Since Reyes is having an MVP-like year, I started thinking about the future makeup of the team. Nowadays, scoring is down and pitching is once again king. I believe that the Mets should keep Reyes and make him the centerpiece of the franchise. Build the Mets like the way the old Cardinals of the 1980s – pitching, defense and speed. Trade David Wright to get either pitching or position players who fits the mold. Build the team to take advantage of Citi Field’s dimensions. You probably need just one very good slugger to complement the offense. What do you think about this idea?

Willie, via email.

Well here’s the first part: I’m still not convinced the Mets need to choose between David Wright and Jose Reyes. So if you’re suggesting the Mets trade David Wright to clear salary to re-sign Reyes, I’m not sure it’s necessary. If you’re saying trade David Wright for pitching and/or players who fit a certain mold, to that I’d say this:

There are many ways to construct winning baseball teams. Certainly offense is down around baseball, but I’m not sure that means teams should go about trading good offensive players — in fact, it might mean exactly the opposite. If runs are at a premium, so are the players who produce them, no?

Right now, our perception of David Wright is tainted by his rough start to the year. Though logically we know how good Wright can be, our most recent memories of Wright show an injured, struggling player, so it’s easy to start hammering out trade proposals dispatching the third baseman.

But with Wright hurt and coming off the two worst seasons of his career, his value has likely never been lower. Plus, the team option on Wright’s contract for 2013 belongs solely to the Mets, meaning any potential trade partner would only have Wright locked up through 2012.

That makes Wright way more valuable to the Mets than to any other team. In other words, it seems unlikely that any competing club will offer the Mets enough for one year of Wright for it to be worth them giving up two years of Wright.

As for building a club to the park: I’m on the (very deep, asymmetric) fence. What’s the best way to tailor a team to Citi Field? Certainly you want good defenders in the spacious outfield.

Beyond that, what do you do? Do you stock up on pitching, or do you amount that opponents aren’t going to score many runs against you and focus on finding players that will produce in a tough run-scoring environment? Do you look for fly-ball pitchers? If so, what about all those road games they’ll have to pitch? Do you entirely eschew the home run, find line-drive hitters with speed and hope for rallies, or do you seek dead-pull sluggers since it appears the park is a bit more favorable to them? How many of these assessments do you base on eyeball estimations, and how many on data? And which data?

There’s a lot to it, and if I had to bet, I’d imagine when you work it all out it’s going to turn out that you want to put the best nine players you can find on the field. And I find it difficult to envision many scenarios in which Wright is not among the best nine players the Mets can find. I get that some of the crannies of Citi Field’s fence don’t suit his opposite-field power and that many believe the park has gotten into his head, but Wright — even the lesser Wright we watched in 2009 and 2010 — is still really, really good at baseball.

And from 2005-2008, Wright was a full-blown superstar. The troubles he has endured the past few seasons have been for the most part more nebulous than the ones Jose Reyes faced in 2009 and 2010. But in Reyes we now see a pitch-perfect example of how quickly and how emphatically a talented player in his late 20s can turn things around, given full health and the right situation.

Wright can do the same. It’s going to take more than a big park and a couple of rough years to convince me otherwise.

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