Over his last five games, Val Pascucci is rocking the .467/.619/.800 line. He’s now at .276/.413/.449 for the season. Here’s his bases-clearing double from last night:
Category Archives: Mets
Wilpon says Mets are ‘bleeding cash’
Well that doesn’t sound good. I’ll wait for the rest of the Sports Illustrated story, I suppose. So far I can’t imagine the Mets are all that pleased with the outcome of Fred Wilpon’s media blitz.
Baseball Show with Sam Borden
Talking Subway Series with Sam:
David Wright, superstar
In typically classy fashion, Wright responds to Fred Wilpon’s claims that the Mets’ third baseman is not a superstar.
Wilpon’s curveball
I listened to most of this weekend’s Subway Series while driving. And because my car has terrible AM reception, I suffered through a whole lot of the Yankees’ broadcast on XM radio. I wanted to hear what was happening in the games, but I was instead treated to the mostly uninformed thoughts of John Sterling and Suzyn Waldman on the various complicated decisions facing the Mets in the coming months.
(Is it me – are my ears and brain just not accustomed to their broadcasting style – or do Sterling and Waldman often just ignore what’s actually going on in the baseball game? I felt like they’d often be in the middle of a conversation and Sterling would casually note, “the 2-0 pitch,” without having mentioned the first two pitches in the at-bat or even the name of the batter. How can that happen? They call the game like it’s television and the listener can also see the action. It’s baffling.)
Anyway, I came to the office this morning planning to write again about how, though the opinions of many members of the media – and many of my fellow Mets fans for that matter – can be difficult to bear sometimes, it is easier to ignore all the negativity this season because we can take comfort in the hope that the Mets’ front office, for once, seems to be run by people that understand the nuances of the team’s situation better than the sensationalists writing and reading the New York Post.
I thought I would briefly recount a ridiculous Twitter spat I had on Friday in which someone accused the Mets’ front-office of “cronyism” for selecting Brad Emaus in the Rule 5 Draft – as if 51-year-old executive J.P. Ricciardi and 25-year-old career Minor Leaguer Emaus might be cronies, smoking cigars, drinking scotch, chuckling about all the other obvious second-base options the Mets had coming into the 2011 season. And I’d have tried to explain the screwed-up way in which defending the club that partially owns the TV network that signs my paychecks knifes at my punk-rock soul, the messy self-consciousness I feel doing it even when I’m confident that what I’m writing is correct and, in my best judgment at least, not biased by anything more than the ways I watch and understand baseball.
Then I read “Madoff’s Curveball,” Jeffrey Toobin’s profile of Fred Wilpon for the New Yorker, in which the Mets’ owner declares David Wright “not a superstar,” alludes to Carlos Beltran striking out to end the 2006 NLCS, speaks candidly about Jose Reyes’ contract status and calls the team “shitty” and, worse, “snakebitten.”
Well that doesn’t help anything.
But it’s probably important to put the quotes in context. As Adam Rubin pointed out on Twitter this morning, clearly Wilpon spent lots of time with Toobin for the feature and at some point let his guard down. The profile is otherwise a sympathetic piece about Wilpon’s financial saga, and the game Wilpon was watching with Toobin was the April 20 loss that left the team 5-13 – inarguably the low point of the season.
Does that make it right? Of course not. Understandable? Maybe a little bit.
Still, in a season when it seemed the ship had finally been set back on course, it’s disappointing to hear the owner of the team resort to the same blame-Mighty-Casey rhetoric bandied about by WFAN callers screaming to send Wright packing.
Each one of the quotes can and will be turned inside out and debated, and though it’s tempting to join in, I’m not really eager to do so here. The most troubling one, I think, is “snakebitten.” Though in context – “we’re snakebitten, baby!” – it sounds like Wilpon is being at least a touch sarcastic, it’s the type of purposeless woe-is-me defeatism seemingly so prevalent among Mets fans these days, and something I waste an awful lot of words railing against here. There is no curse in baseball that cannot be overcome with smart management and a little bit of good fortune.
As for the short- and long-term fallout from all this? I don’t know. Seems like people have already determined conclusively that Wilpon’s words will a) create a distraction for the current club and b) make it so future free agents will not want to join the Mets. Both seem possible, but also quite possibly overblown.
Subway Series preview
Important stuff with Alex Belth:
The three fallacies of Jose Reyes
Over at Amazin’ Avenue, Rob Castellano investigates a few of the fallacies perpetuating the nonstop talk that Jose Reyes will inevitably be traded at some point this summer.
I’ve said it before and I’ll probably say it a bunch more times: All the decisions — on all sides — regarding Jose Reyes’ future with the Mets are nuanced ones, and dismissing them by saying, “Oh well he’s X type of player and Sandy Alderson is Y type of general manager” is just silly. Alderson, Reyes, and Reyes’ agents are smart people. They’re going to spend a lot of time with this.
That doesn’t mean he’s certainly back in Queens next year, but it doesn’t mean he’s as good as gone either. It does mean no one should go about moving Reyes to second base to make way for Ruben Tejada just yet. Holy hell.
Wither the Fernanchise?
Martinez is only the first outfielder to get at least 100 plate appearances by his age 20 season and not be qualifying for a batting title by his age 22 season. No hitter regardless of position with at least 100 plate appearances by age 20 has failed to become a big league regular. Most became all-stars.
Fernando Martinez is getting about a plate appearance a day, which doesn’t seem like the pace you want for a 22-year-old prospect.
I suspect he’s the guy to go when Angel Pagan returns. I know a lot of fans are eager to run Willie Harris out of town, but with Chin-Lung Hu gone, David Wright out and the infield stretched thin, Harris’ defensive versatility becomes more valuable to the club. Plus obviously Martinez should be seeing regular playing time somewhere.
We get to see two games’ worth of Martinez’s bat in the lineup this weekend, as he’ll be DHing in the Bronx. Pagan played the last two nights in St. Lucie and the Mets want him to play four nights in a row there, so if all goes according to plan he should rejoin the club Tuesday in Chicago.
Baseball Show asks the important questions
One last thought about prospects
One last thing, and I imagine this point has already been made. I strikes me that it must have been, at some point:
People often discuss which Minor League transition is the biggest jump. In this Scout.com roundtable from a few years ago, most of the experts argued that the biggest jump is from High A to Double-A, and I’ve heard as much elsewhere.
But the biggest jump of all almost has to be from Triple-A to the Majors, no? Is that just common sense? Here’s how I figure:
There’s no talent ceiling in the Majors. Dominant players at every level can advance to the next level, until they reach the big leagues, but dominant players at the big league level have no place else to go.
If in some weird scenario a guy as good as Josh Johnson is in Triple-A — and I mean Josh Johnson now, not when he was in Triple-A — he’s only going to make his way around the International League once, tops. Awesome players stay in the Majors for as long as they’re awesome (and then some).