Scouting Don Wakamatsu with Jeff Sullivan from Lookout Landing.
Category Archives: Mets
A potential fit?
I saw this post on MLB Trade Rumors, about how Edgar Renteria would be willing to move to second base, and it got me thinking.
The Mets would be wise to sign a middle infielder of some sort this offseason. We know this. None of the various in-house options at second base — Ruben Tejada, Daniel Murphy, Justin Turner, Reese Havens, and, lest we forget, Luis Castillo — is yet appealing enough to merit a place in the Opening Day lineup.
And not only will they need to find someone who is, they’ll also need to make sure they’ve got a solid backup to Jose Reyes at shortstop.
So I got to thinking maybe Renteria could fill both the team’s needs. He could open the season at second base and be the backup shortstop, provided Murphy is on the Major League roster somewhere and deemed capable of filling in at second.
Renteria got $10 million dollars for his efforts in San Francisco in 2010, a sum befitting a postseason hero but hardly appropriate for an injury-plagued middle infielder who played in only 72 games. I have no idea what Renteria will cost moving forward, though I’m near-certain it’ll be way, way less than $10 million.
Renteria is hardly a good hitter at this point, but he’s not terrible for a middle infielder, either. His .707 OPS in 2010 fell just shy of the league average for second basemen, though it marked his best season in three.
He would likely make up for his hitting at least a bit with his defense. He can still capably cover shortstop, the toughest position on the field, so presumably he could more than handle second base.
The ideal fit for the Mets would be a guy that would be willing and able to assume a full-time bench role if and when one of the young internal candidates proves worthy of playing every day. I don’t know Edgar Renteria personally so I have no idea if he fits that description, but I know he has a reputation as a great clubhouse guy and that he considered retiring after the 2010 campaign due to his various aches and pains.
So if the cost isn’t prohibitive, Renteria might make a nice option for the Mets’ 2010 middle infield.
Incidentally, Renteria is indisputably the all-time best of the nine Major League players to ever hail from Colombia. It’s sort of amazing how Renteria is just a bit better than fellow Colombian shortstop Orlando Cabrera in just about every category: Renteria has a .287/.344/.400 career line, Cabrera’s is .274/.320/.395; Renteria has 2252 hits, 135 home runs, 887 RBIs and 290 steals, Cabrera has 1948, 118, 803 and 208; and now Renteria has played for two World Series winners, Cabrera only one.
But perhaps Cabrera takes solace in his dominance in the sacrifice-fly category. Oddly, Cabrera has been in the top 10 of his league in sacrifice flies in each of the last five seasons, and led the American League in the category in 2006, 2007 and 2009.
Oddly mesmerizing high-school Spanish project
Hat tip to Mets Police for pointing out this high-school Spanish project puppet show, featuring a Mike Piazza bobblehead as the narrator.
Oddly, in my junior year of high school, two friends and I also videotaped a puppet show for Spanish class using paper-bag puppets. It was an alternate ending to a short story we read called “El Arbol De Oro,” and all I’ll say is that our teacher deemed it “muy pornografico.”
Is this really happening?
Baseball is a results business.
So is just about every other business, incidentally. I think the term “results business” might even be redundant. Is there any business that’s not a results business? Like can I find a paying job somewhere where my boss won’t care about my performance or the bottom line, but about how much fun I have or how much I learn from the experience?
For what it’s worth, if you Google “is not a results business” — in quotes like that — you only get five results, and they’re all about soccer.
But that’s not the point. What I’m trying to say is that I should temper my enthusiasm, since the Mets’ new front office hasn’t won anything yet. Hell, as a team, Sandy Alderson, J.P. Ricciardi and Paul DePodesta haven’t even done anything yet outside of letting Hisanori Takahashi walk.
Still, after six seasons of Omar Minaya — and Steve Phillips and Jim Duquette before him — it’s hard not to get excited for a front office that appears primed to evaluate players objectively and work to build a sustainable winner from within. These are the things I’ve been bleating about since I started writing for SNY.tv in 2006.
And now, it seems, it’s really happening. Is this really happening?
I’m getting ahead of myself. And despite all my attempts at rationality, the perpetual reminders here that the Mets are not cursed or jinxed or otherwise damned mostly aim to quiet my own ingrained Mets-fan dread. This must go wrong. Right?
I know that’s not true. I know that, in the right hands, it shouldn’t be too difficult to create a regular winner on a $130 million payroll.
But, you know, results business and all. So I will proceed with cautious optimism.
Paul DePodesta in his own words
Good work by Sam Page at Amazin’ Avenue rounding up relevant quotes from Paul DePodesta’s blog.
Bob Melvin: Reasonable candidate, or total melvin?
Scouting the D-backs former skipper with Nick Piecoro from AZCentral.com.
It’s like Ocean’s 11, except instead of robbing casinos, they’re building a farm system
Sorry but I’m trying to avoid the ubiquitous “getting the band back together” reference, even though Blues Brothers is a much better movie. Anyway:
The Mets hired Paul DePodesta today to be their Vice President of Player Development and Amateur Scouting. Cool.
The press release says this:
“Paul has one of the top analytical minds in the game and also has a strong background in more traditional aspects of player development and amateur scouting,” said Alderson. “He will help establish direction, standards and continuity in all areas of our player development domestically and internationally. Paul -– working together with J.P. Ricciardi and John Ricco -– also will advise me generally on other matters related to baseball operations.”
Alderson and DePodesta worked together in San Diego for two-and-a-half years. DePodesta joined the Padres in July 2006 as a Special Assistant for Baseball Operations before being promoted to Executive Vice President in November 2008.
“I am thrilled to reunite with Sandy during this exciting time for the Mets,” said the 37-year-old DePodesta. “I know first-hand the type of vision and leadership he brings to a franchise. This is a tremendous opportunity to help develop a winning culture for the Mets and our fans.”
Nearly everybody has a really strong opinion on the Mets’ managerial search
I’m getting a lot of email and reading a lot of blog posts telling me exactly what direction the Mets’ should go with their managerial search, but I’m struggling to muster up much passion on the subject. I already endorsed Tim Bogar. Doesn’t sound like that’s happening.
Here’s the thing: If we accept that 1) A Major League manager’s success has a lot more to do with the talent on his roster than his actual in-game managing and 2) Different leadership styles resonate in different ways with different people, then it’s difficult to eliminate any candidate just based on his past performance.
Bobby Valentine could hardly get out of third place when he managed the Rangers in the late 80s and early 90s, and Joe Torre entered his tenure with the Yankees with a career managerial record of 894-1003. Did they learn something from those stints that helped them in New York? It’s certainly possible. Or maybe they just had better teams and/or players more open to their motivation.
Who knows what the Mets will need for 2011 and beyond? Perhaps they’d respond to the fiery buntsmanship of Wally Backman or the calm prodding of Bob Melvin. Most likely the difference wouldn’t make a difference of more than a win or two in any case, since most Major Leaguers tend to be pretty apt self-motivators, what with making the Major Leagues and all.
What I’m certain of is that associating candidates with former bosses is a blisteringly bad way to evaluate them. So Terry Collins worked for Omar Minaya. So Chip Hale worked for Jerry Manuel. Who cares? George Washington worked for someone named Robert Dinwiddie once. Did the Continental Congress hesitate to name him Commander-in-Chief because they didn’t want “another Dinwiddie guy”?
Also, just because someone has one quality in common with a former Mets manager does not necessarily make him a bad choice to manage the current Mets.
Though it’s not at all surprising, it’s still kind of amazing the way the media and blogosphere work. Like three weeks ago, everyone seemed certain Sandy Alderson was the right choice for the Mets’ GM spot. Now that he’s faced with his first big decisions, all the same people want to doubt him and assume he’s moving in the wrong direction. Huh?
I mean, it strikes me that the best way to determine the best possible manager from the available candidates would be to sit down and talk with them all a bit: See who’s on board with the organizational philosophy and whose personality seems like it would appeal to the players and media.You know, some sort of interview process.
So you’ll have to excuse me if I don’t get all huffy about the Mets’ new manager, whoever it may be. I’ll wait until June for that, when I have a much better sense of exactly how he’ll be pissing us off. Until then, I’m going to try out having faith in the Mets’ front office for the first time this millenium, and just sort of assume that Alderson is doing a more thorough vetting of the potential candidates than anyone else will.
That explains that
Mets clubhouse manager Charlie Samuels is under investigation by the NYPD and the Queens District Attorney’s office for allegedly betting on baseball and other sports as part of an organized gambling ring, providing inside information and tips for friends who also placed bets on games and for using his Mets accounts to cover gambling debts, according to law-enforcement sources close to the probe into the longtime Mets employee….
Samuels, who has not been arrested, is believed to have told Major League Baseball that he bet on baseball games, a strict violation of baseball rules. Samuels, the Mets’ clubhouse manager for 27 seasons, was described by a source as a “spider who sat in the middle of a money web,” a man who earned about $80,000 a year from the Mets but whose tax returns showed about $600,000 to $700,000 in income. He has homes in Huntington, L.I., and Port St. Lucie.
If you’re looking for a way to get canned from your job in Major League Baseball right quick, bet on some baseball games. The league and its teams take gambling very, very seriously, and for good reason: Any threat of a fixed outcome would severely jeopardize the integrity of the sport, which is predicated on the notion that both teams are always trying to win. I’ve written before that gambling in sports is potentially worse than steroids, since for all the bluster about performance-enhancing drugs, they’re used in the effort to better the player and help the team win.
No one has suggested that Samuels tried to fix any games or anything like that, but it’s impossible to fault the Mets for not taking chances (and I don’t think anyone has). No one with that much access to the players should ever be so caught up in high-stakes gambling, and Major League Baseball is vigilant about it. This is why I have no sympathy for Pete Rose: It is made abundantly clear to all players, coaches and managers that you do not bet on baseball games.
Gambling problems are a sad and terrifying thing, and if Samuels is addicted, I hope he finds help. But he probably should not be allowed back into a Major League clubhouse anytime soon.
One note, though — the Daily News story makes it sound vaguely like Samuels is raking in $520,000 to $620,000 a year through gambling, and that’s almost certainly not the case. Clubhouse personnel earn the large part of their wages through tips at the end of each season, and a figure as popular and important to the team as Samuels probably gets a ton of them.
Somehow, Omir Santos clears waivers
That’s right, the Mets did a bit of roster housekeeping today and dispatched Extra-Base Omir, Eddie Kunz, Jesus Feliciano, Raul Valdes and Mike Hessman from their 40-man roster.
All have been assigned to Triple-A Buffalo. Presumably Hessman has long since been institutionalized in Triple-A — like the characters in Shawshank Redemption — and hit so poorly in his 55 at-bat stint with the Mets on purpose so he could get back to the familiar confines of the International League, where he has starred since 2002.
I still think Raul Valdes might make for a passable bullpen arm. His ERA and struggles with Major League lefties seem to suggest otherwise.
Predictably, Joaquin Arias was claimed off waivers by the Royals, meaning the Joaquin Arias Era in Flushing is over. Long Live Joaquin Arias!
The Mets now have 34 players on their 40-man roster, which gives them flexibility to add any additional Minor Leaguers they feel need protection from the Rule 5 draft.