Twitter Q&A: The randos

It depends. Many people believe there’s a utopian afterlife in store for us after our earthly existence, in which case, presumably, there will be infinite BLT tacos available. But some people believe those who do not lead virtuous lives are doomed to an afterlife spent in a torturous netherworld where there are likely no Taco Bells whatsoever.

I’ve never been dead, so I can’t confirm or deny the existence of an afterlife with BLT Tacos. And it is not my place to speculate. On this plane, the best method I can think of for returning the BLT Taco and the entire Sizzlin’ Bacon Menu to Taco Bell menuboards is to bombard your local congressional representative with letters and emails. Show ’em this:

That’s a good question. I suspect it’s a combination of factors, including — from most to least accessible:

1) It’s really hard. I watched Rob Johnson and Lucas May throw knuckleballs to each other while warming up in Buffalo on Tuesday. They both actually broke off a couple of pretty good ones among a plethora of wild and/or spinning ones. To succeed as a knuckleballer, you need to be able to control it well enough to get it over the plate at least half the time (ideally more), and you have an extremely narrow margin for error. If your knuckleball spins just a little bit, you just threw a straight, slow pitch to a Major League hitter, and he’s going to crush it. Patrick Flood covered this a couple weeks ago.

2) It’s stigmatized. Baseball is full of silly unwritten rules oft followed and enforced by players purporting to be acting to maintain the game’s integrity and old-school-ness. Stealing signs while you’re on second base is clearly a smart strategy that can give your team a competitive advantage, but if you are caught or suspected of doing so you will likely be drilled with a baseball. It’s silly, especially since every catcher takes measures to obscure the signs when there’s a runner on second.

And I think it’s that same nonsensical mentality that leads some players and ex-player analysts to dismiss the pitch (and those who endeavor it) as a gimmick, or worse, as something almost cowardly. Meanwhile, it takes a hell of a lot of guts to become a Major League knuckleballer, what with how hard it is to do and how much faith you need to have in the knuckleball actually behaving like a knuckleball once you release it.

3) This one’s a bit harder to grasp, but I wonder if the scarcity of knuckleballers contributes to their success. Presumably if every team had a knuckleballer, hitters would get a better sense of how to approach the pitch. But then knuckleballers have been scarce for a while, and if it were true that hitters’ exposure to more knuckleballers made all knuckleballers less effective, it seems like the number of knuckleballers in the league would be more cyclical. Plus the 1945 Senators had four knuckleballers on the same staff and they did alright. So forget this one.

I’m guessing it’s mostly that it’s really hard. Not that hard to throw one good knuckleball, but really hard to throw something like 99% good knuckleballs.

Someday soon I hope. I can’t stop thinking about the sandwich and I’m looking forward to reliving the glory that was eating that sandwich.

 

Twitter Q&A: Mets stuff

I’m going to guess false. Bay has a couple of things working to his advantage, assuming staying on the Mets is an advantage: His contract and his handedness.

Bay is owed $19 million after this season. In Oliver Perez and Luis Castillo, Sandy Alderson showed a willingness to part ways with highly priced veterans who didn’t appear apt to help the club. But if Bay can’t turn it around in 2012 and doesn’t look likely to help the Mets in 2013, it shouldn’t matter how much he’s owed. It might be tough for the club to stomach swallowing that much sunk cost, but if they can find a guy at or slightly above the league minimum they think can outproduce Bay — which doesn’t seem unreasonable — then, you know, peace out.

Bay does hit right-handed, which is valuable to the Mets because of their glut of lefty-hitting outfielders. With Lucas Duda, Kirk Nieuwenhuis and Mike Baxter in the fold and Matt den Dekker coming up the pike, Bay could balance out the mix a little. Again, though, it doesn’t seem crazy to imagine the Mets finding a righty-hitting outfielder that can outproduce Bay against lefties on the cheap. Scott Hairston, for example.

The Mets will and should give Bay every chance to make good on his contract. Since it hasn’t happened yet, and with the injuries piling up, it doesn’t seem likely to happen. And this front office doesn’t seem prone to carrying players that can’t pull their weight just because they’re paying them. I’d guess Bay comes to Spring Training, we read a couple stories about how he’s in the best shape of his life, and the Mets keep him around while the roster picture clears up. If no one gets hurt and he isn’t 2009 (or even 2010) Jason Bay again, they cut him loose late or send him packing in a Gary Matthews Jr.-style deal, provided he’s willing to waive his no-trade clause.

But trying to predict things in baseball is often a fool’s errand.

There were a bunch of questions similar to this one. As Rob suggests, the Mets should be reluctant to trade prospects for bullpen help. Trading for relievers at the deadline is generally a really bad way to get good value for your young players. And that seems especially likely this season, with more teams in the Wild Card hunt and the price of rental players (presumably) inflated. Flags fly forever and prospects are no safe bet to pan out, so if there was some way the Mets could guarantee that trading a prospect would net them a World Series win, it’d be worth it. Since there isn’t, hanging on to the young guys seems like the best way to win a championship. It doesn’t help or hurt the team’s chances this year, and it doesn’t hinder them for years to come either.

That said: The Mets could use some bullpen help. I suspect their biggest help will come from regression to the mean — bullpen performances are fickle and exist only in small sample sizes, and Frank Francisco, Ramon Ramirez and Jon Rauch are all probably better than they have been this year.

An extra quality arm would sure be nice, though. Justin Hampson earned the first crack at being the second lefty in the bullpen. If he can’t cut it, maybe Edgin will get a look. The Triple-A relievers that appear most likely to help the 2012 Mets’ bullpen are a couple of familiar ones, though: Manny Acosta and Pedro Beato.

Acosta has been lights-out in a small sample since returning to the Bisons, posting a 1.32 ERA with 15 strikeouts and no walks in 13 2/3 innings. He was almost unfathomably bad in the early part of the year with the Mets, but pretty good for the big club in 2010 and 2011. If whatever was wrong is better now, Acosta could again provide some quality innings out of the bullpen down the stretch. The ERA will be ugly all year.

Beato has also pitched well in Buffalo, striking out 16 and walking eight (three of them intentionally) while yielding a 1.35 ERA in 20 innings. He’s throwing in the low-to-mid-90s again and says he feels fully healthy after shoulder soreness sidelined him for the early part of the season.

Mejia to the Bullpen version 2.0 looks like it’s somehow going even worse than it did the first time around. Maybe something clicks for him and he figures out how to throw strikes in a relief role, but right now he doesn’t look anywhere near ready to help the big club there.

My first instinct was to assume confirmation bias, but I went to the gamelog. The Mets are 6-12 in their first games after traveling this year and have been outscored 106-82 in them.

But 18 games, you know, is a small sample size. And I don’t think it’s enough to rule out randomness. One of those rough losses came with Chris Schwinden on the mound in Colorado and another was Johan Santana’s oddly scheduled return after the no-hitter. It’s something worth keeping an eye on, I suppose, but it’s too soon to rule out noise. The Mets have, at times, played some pretty bad baseball in the middle of homestands and at the end of road trips too. And they’ve had some pretty strong games the first day after traveling that get swept under the rug a bit when we’re trying to identify a trend.

Updated Hairston ranks

Italics denote preeminent Hairston status.

Hairston Years active Games Hits HR OPS+ WAR Cycles Grand Slams
Sam* 1951 4 2 0 219 0.1 0 0
Jerry Sr. 1973-1989 859 438 30 102 5.4 0 1
John 1969 3 1 0 34 -0.1 0 0
Jerry Jr. 1998-current 1317 1064 66 87 12.4 0 3
Scott 2004-current 705 485 85 99 7 1 2

*- Though Hairston patriarch Sam Hairston only played four games in the Major Leagues, he played parts of four seasons in the Negro Leagues in the late 1940s. Per the stats on baseball-reference, he never homered, but it’s worth noting that across the four seasons, his teammates on the Indianapolis Clowns combined for only three homers. Presumably that’s either due to some absurd ballpark or an incomplete record of stats. Also, the first two Hairstons to play in the Majors — Sam and John — were both catchers. None of Jerry Sr., Jerry Jr. or Scott has spent an inning behind the plate in the Majors or Minors.

Notable members of the Buffalo Bisons’ Hall of Fame

Rick Reed:

Some people liked to call Rick Reed “the poor man’s Greg Maddux” but I’ve always thought of him as the rich man’s Wally Whitehurst.

“Mayo” Smith: 

Without knowing anything about him, I assume this guy was a threat on the basepaths because nobody ever wanted to hold the Mayo. Get it, guys?

Terry Lee Collins:

In his days as a Minor League manager and conceptual artist, Terry Collins went by Terry Lee Collins. Most of his work was bear-themed.

Joe De Sa:

That jersey. That mustache.

Luscious Easter:

Hey have a great St. Patrick’s Day, and if I don’t see you before then, have a Luscious Easter.

 

More from Buffalo

The Bisons’ bats came out to support Garrett Olson on Wednesday in a 9-4 win for the good guys. Some notes:

– Valentino Pascucci celebrated his Triple-A All-Star nod with three doubles, a walk and five RBI. Pascucci’s been slumping pretty hard and, by his account, enduring some of the worst luck he’s ever had in his career — hitting a bunch of line drives right at people. All the doubles today were crushed, one to right-center, one down the left-field line, the third over the left-fielder’s head. With Vinny Rottino getting claimed by the Indians today and the Mets still in need of some right-handed pop… could this finally happen? Is Jason Bay’s return the biggest impediment to Pascucci glory in Queens?

– If Josh Satin stays this hot, someone’s going to consider harnessing him as an alternative energy source. He has 14 hits in his last 23 at-bats with a double, two homers and four walks.

– Left fielder Fred Lewis went 2-for-3 with two walks and a double. In his last five games, Lewis is 10-for-19 with two doubles, two homers and four walks. Lewis, 31, is a longtime TedQuarters favorite who would probably have seen time with the big club by now if he didn’t hit left-handed. He’s not on the 40-man, but in an ideal world he’d probably be a better fit for the Mets’ current roster than one of the excess middle infielders. Lewis also made this play in Tuesday night’s game:

– Duff’s, the wings place recommended by Catsmeat and plenty others, was closed by the time we finished up last night. We instead tried Gabriel’s Gate, as suggested by multiple Twitterers. The wings were delicious. I can’t say they’re the best I’ve ever had or that they’re better than anything I’ve had in New York City. But for all its sports bars, the Upper East Side seems to lack a great wing joint, so these were much appreciated. Freshly fried and crispy, good Buffalo flavor and the right amount of spice to make ’em burn but not hurt.

– Pedro Beato came on to relieve Olson with one on and one out in the top of the 7th. He got out of the inning unscathed, then yielded an unearned run in the 8th after a Jordany Valdespin error, a balk and a double. Beato’s fastball sat around 93-94 on the stadium gun here, and, though he walked two batters, he threw 16 of 24 pitches for strikes. Beato has pitched effectively for the Bisons. I imagine if his velocity is routinely in the low-to-mid-90s — it had been down a bit, apparently, upon his return from the disabled list — he’s the next call for the big-league team’s bullpen.

– The on-field character race here features two types of Buffalo wing and a ramekin of bleu cheese. There’s also a celery stalk, but the celery stalk has not raced in either game we’ve seen. Rumors around the press box say that the celery stalk has a pulled hamstring and/or is abstaining from racing for philosophical reasons.

– Jordany Valdespin singled, tripled, turned two double plays and booted an easy grounder.

– I had another beef on weck.

– If you care, Wikipedia Wednesday is Thursday this week. I hope.