Mets sign John Paul Bonser

Make no mistake: The most notable thing about Boof Bonser is that his name is “Boof Bonser.” Technically his name is John Paul Bonser, but that name sucks compared to Boof Bonser and so we will never refer to him as such again.

The second most notable thing about Boof Bonser is that he was once traded with Joe Nathan and Francisco Liriano for A.J. Pierzynski.

The Boof was a pretty solid prospect for the Twins as recently as a few years ago, and enjoyed an unspectacular season and a half in Minnesota’s rotation in 2007 and the first half of 2008.

He was demoted to the bullpen for the second half of 2008, then spent all but one inning of the 2009 campaign recovering from labrum and rotator cuff surgery.

Bonser returned in 2010 and was pretty terrible both in Triple-A and in 25 spotty innings of relief work in the Majors.

The upside to Bonser’s 2010 season is that his fastball velocity was not far off where it was before his surgery, providing at least some hope he could bounce back. Of course, Bonser has never really been all that good in the pros, and reclaiming his 2007 form would not necessarily make him any better than Dillon Gee.

Still, since Bonser was once a prospect, showed promise early in his career and appears to be healthy at least for the time being, he’s a solid no-risk pickup on a Minor League deal for the Mets. At 29, he’s young enough that it’s still not too late to hope for some moderate resurgence, either out of the rotation or bullpen.

Also, he will be easy to root for, since his name is Boof. And as an added bonus, if he’s an optimist he might be able to convince himself he’s being vocally carried through his rough times whenever he’s booed mercilessly by the Citi crowd.

I was saying boo-oof.

Anyway, good topic of conversation came up in the office: Which baseball player has the best combination of awesome name and actual baseball skill? Oil Can Boyd is a more awesome name than Catfish Hunter, but Hunter was the better pitcher. How do you weight skill versus awesomeness of name when selecting baseball’s all-time best name guy. Should Bonser, Boyd and Hunter be docked points for using nicknames as compared to, say, our own Burleigh Grimes or Van Lingle Mungo?

Chocolate covered bacon falls short of absurd expectations

Last Christmas, my wife got me some incredible buttercrunch from an excellent candy shop downtown. While she was there, she noticed they were selling chocolate-covered bacon, so she bought me some of that too. Because hey, chocolate-covered bacon.

I mean, think of the possibilities! I’ve baconed-up so many things, but until then I never considered it might be covered in chocolate. Pure indulgence, essentially. I figured it could really help me strip out all the filler in my diet. Bacon and chocolate, that’s all. I could live on that (if only for a very short time).

But we were disappointed by the treat. While it wasn’t downright terrible, there’s something about the combination that doesn’t quite work. I’m all about the Bacon Mania trend, and I hope people continue to incorporate or pair bacon with every conceivable type of food because it’s always worth a shot and it usually works out. In this case, though, it didn’t.

And reader Justin recently emailed to report a similar disappointment in chocolate-covered bacon. He and his wife Christa purchased some from the Rocky Mountain Chocolate Company and found it underwhelming. While the version I tried was in small pieces, theirs was a full strip of chocolate-covered bacon:

Sad, really. I guess there’s just no way anything could ever match the expectations our brains set when we hear the phrase “chocolate-covered bacon.”

Ronny Paulino stuff

I feel like Ronny Paulino has been “close” to signing with the Mets like 15 times before. Paulino has a rep as a solid defensive catcher and fared well in Beyond the Boxscore’s catcher-defense rankings. He is not a great hitter, though his career .273/.328/.383 line is pretty similar to the 2010 National League average for catchers — .253/.326/.388.

Perhaps most importantly, the righty-hitting Paulino has, for his career, a marked platoon split. He’s got a measly .635 OPS against righties but an .881 mark against lefties, essentially the Matt Diaz of catchers. Assuming he doesn’t cost multiple years or numerous millions, he would be a great choice to spell Josh Thole against tough southpaws, or even in a straight platoon — since catchers need time off anyway. Combined, they’d give the Mets excellent offense from behind the plate.

Me, here, yesterday.

It turns out Paulino cost $1.3 million for one season, which seems a reasonable investment. Based on a quick survey of Cot’s, that seems around the going rate for free-agent backup catchers — Brian Schneider got about $2.8 million over two seasons last winter from the Phils, Miguel Olivo signed with the Rockies for $2 million for one season to back up Chris Iannetta (which didn’t end up happening).

Paulino gives the Mets essentially exactly what I hoped they’d find: a right-handed hitting backup and contingency plan for Josh Thole who is young and healthy enough to hold up for the long haul. There are questions about his work ethic and he’ll start the season on the last eight games of a 50-game suspension for PED use, but if it weren’t for all that he’d probably cost more.

Assuming he’s enjoying a happy, healthy and drug-free campaign in New York, Paulino will provide the Mets a good righty bat for tough lefties and a defensively solid backup catcher. And considering that Rod Barajas somehow got $3.25 million and Paulino is younger and probably better, it seems like a good deal for the Mets.

Mets sign D.J. Carrasco

Two things stand out on the positive side of the ledger for Carrasco. The first is his tendency to keep the ball on the ground and, by extension, in the ballpark. Merely decent strikeout and walk rates coupled with an above average home run rate can add up to a pretty solid reliever. Ground ball pitchers limit not only home runs in particular but also extra-base hits in general–grounders are less likely to find gaps than their airborne brethren. Too, more ground balls usually mean more double plays, so that’s another bonus.

The second point in Carrasco’s favor, albeit an ethereal one, is that he was pretty effective against lefties in 2010, which is exceedingly rare for right-handed pitchers. Unfortunately, Carrasco hasn’t historically been very good against left-handed hitters, and was awful against them in 2009 (.317/.392/.463). He did throw far more curveballs last season than ever before, but it’s not clear how that would have served him well against lefties.

Eric Simon, Amazin’ Avenue.

I was down on the idea of signing Carrasco just yesterday, but I figured he’d cost more than the two years and $2.5 million he reportedly received.

At that rate, he hardly seems like an awful signing (consider that it took over a million to lock down Kelvim Escobar for 2010). As Simon points out, he yields a decent amount of ground balls and is decently, if not spectacularly, effective.

I wouldn’t get too excited over his ability to retire lefties — across his career he hasn’t been great, and I suspect his success in 2010 might be a small-sample size hiccup.

Also, one thing Simon doesn’t point out: Carrasco has demonstrated the ability to throw a good number of innings in relief in the past two seasons, chalking up 89 frames in 2009 and 78 1/3 in 2010. The Mets haven’t had a reliever throw that many innings since Aaron Heilman totaled 86 in 2007, though I imagine that has as much to do with Jerry Manuel’s quick-trigger bullpen management as anything else.

Hmm

Look, I don’t have any understanding about what the payroll will be or can’t be going forward. Let’s say arguably we have $50 million or $60 million coming off next year. Do I think it would even be prudent to invest that full $50 million or $60 million again in a situation which binds us going forward so that we’re only in the market every three years when this lump sum comes off our books? No.

Sandy Alderson.

This is interesting, and something I hadn’t really considered.

If the Mets don’t throw all of the $50-60 million that comes off the books after this season back into the team’s payroll in the offseason, of course, fans will revolt. They’ll accuse small-market Sandy of being cheap, and argue that a big-market team should never cut payroll from season to season.

But if you think about it, what Alderson’s saying here is smart. Ideally, a team should always have financial flexibility in the offseason — enough to fill any pressing needs via free agency or take on big contracts via trade.

So, looking down the road, it would behoove the Mets to either maintain a little flexibility next offseason or to stagger contract lengths to ensure that a certain amount of is freed up after every season.

That way, whenever you hit the point when it seems like you really are just one player away from a certain playoff bid — a spot where overpaying for free agents is excusable — you know you will always have the requisite payroll to lock him down.

Water balloon stuff

As far as I understand it, the bulk of the knowledge you gain from going away to college is not from the classroom, but from interacting with new people from different places and various backgrounds. Not that you can’t gain the same knowledge elsewhere or otherwise or whatever, just that college sort of expedites the process and allows you to do it all in a reasonably safe place while getting drunk with some frequency.

Anyway, every student brings something to the exchange: unique perspectives, diverse interests — all that stuff they probably brag about in the student handbook, if there is such a thing.

I brought water balloons. That was my contribution to the Georgetown University campus community from the fall of 1999 to the spring of 2003.

At home on Long Island, my friends and I owned one of those water-balloon slingshots. It was amazing. Also, for some unclear reason, Rockville Centre is like the nightlife capital of Southern Long Island, providing a group of very bored young men with a bevy of unknowing potential targets for water-balloon fire.

Drunk people get so mad when they’re nailed with water balloons. And the hilarious thing about using the slingshot is that the victim never even considers that it might have come from like 100 yards away. A balloon shot from that distance always explodes on impact so it doesn’t really hurt as much as you’d expect. So the natural reaction is only to check your immediate surroundings for the perp. Little do you know he’s comfortably hidden across the parking lot, giggling his ass off.

Actually, thanks to Google Maps, I can show you. The A flag on this one is R.J. Daniels, one of the town’s bars — though it wasn’t called R.J. Daniels then. That red awning behind it is the outdoor-patio area of the bar, which got pretty crowded in the summers and extended out into that tiny patch beyond the awning. Ground Zero, essentially. We set up either on the train trestle (the red arrow on the left) or the parking lot behind the gym, past the elevated train tracks and across the street.

The distance, you will note, provided us ample time to run like hell in the rare instance a posse of angry drunk dudes would figure out that the balloons were launched remotely and come storming out of the bar thirsty for blood.

Once I felt comfortable enough in college to unleash my hobby upon the campus, my friends and I found a great spot. Check it out — the arrow in the map below points to a little-known but easily accessible perch above the main entrance to the campus’ student center. From it, you had a clear but well-covered shot at anyone coming out of the Henle dorms to the north or walking along the main campus paths, seen here in white.

Get a case of beer and a cooler full of water balloons and you’ve got yourself a pretty solid evening out. (Lord, we were losers.) One time we put a balloon between a guy playing guitar and the girl he was trying to impress. Another time, a well-placed shot in the middle of two passing groups prompted a minor scuffle. We knocked a drunk guy over once with a direct hit. That one we felt a little bad about, after we stopped giggling.

For safety reasons we tried to avoid cars. But once, from a different location, we hit a slow-moving black town car heading to a campus function, and then the angry driver when he got out and started yelling. We were told later that the passenger was a certain Senator Biden from Delaware.

Anyway, my sophomore year I caught a case of mono that forced most of my water balloon exploits indoors. Desperate times. I wound up in a pretty serious and ongoing water-balloon battle with my neighbors downstairs which meant I kept filled balloons on hand in our bathroom at most times.

One of those times, some loud and liquored-up students were standing outside in the courtyard, three floors below my bedroom window. Maybe I was jealous that they could still enjoy parties while I was stuck inside sick.

Anyway, I figured nothing all that bad could come of it, so I dropped a balloon quick and ducked inside. This is a close-range shot we’re talking about, much riskier than when we normally targeted strangers. The arrow on the left is the approximate location of my window, and the arrow on the right is about where these people were standing.

I didn’t imagine all that much that could go wrong if I just tossed one out the window into the group. My door was locked, plus most people who go to Georgetown are total weenies.

Only not the particular guy I hit. He was a 270-some pound lineman on the football team, and he and two of his football buddies lumbered upstairs and kicked open my door.

I took the R. Kelly approach: deny everything. The drenched dude asked me if I was throwing water balloons, I said no. He asked me why my window was open, I said it was for fresh air. Then one of his friends made his way into the bathroom and came out asking why I had all those water balloons in the bathroom if I wasn’t throwing water balloons. I said they weren’t mine.

They stared me down for a few anxious seconds, then one turned to the other two:

“OK, this guy’s cool.”

It gets better: Apparently all the commotion prompted someone in my stairwell to call the cops. Before they showed up, the drunk guys went back outside, all fired up and looking for trouble. They found it in the form of one member of the basketball team and two of his high-school friends from D.C.

I don’t know what prompted it, but from my window I watched as one of the D.C. locals stepped to the football guy, punched him in the face and knocked him to the ground. Then he took one step to his right, punched the next guy in the face and knocked him to the ground. Then he took another step and reared back to punch the third guy, only the third guy just sort of ducked out of the way and stumbled to the ground on his own.

When the cops arrived, they found three drunk, drenched, dazed meatheads practically waiting to be arrested.

The postscript is that some of my oldest friends from college were also on the football team, and I told them the whole story a couple days later. Turns out they also didn’t like the meathead in question, and used the story of his ignominious ass-kicking as fodder for harassment for the remainder of their time in college.

Winter Meetings rumors that are supposedly happening (and probably won’t)

It’s the Winter Meetings, dammit! Here’s a post where I round up all the Mets-related rumors I’ve seen on MetsBlog and spew my opinions on them. SPOILER ALERT: Just about everything I say will include “depending on the price.”

Mets interested in Fred Lewis: Well that’s cool — depending on the price, of course. Lewis would make a fine fourth outfielder, and a legitimate contingency plan for the three penciled-in starters — all of whom have struggled with injuries recently or historically. He can play the corners and fill in at center field in a pinch.

And while Lewis won’t make anyone in New York forget Mickey Mantle, he can hit a bit too — especially against right-handed pitchers. For his career, the lefty-hitting Lewis has a solid .280/.354/.442 line against righties.

Mets close to signing Ronny Paulino: I feel like Ronny Paulino has been “close” to signing with the Mets like 15 times before. Paulino has a rep as a solid defensive catcher and fared well in Beyond the Boxscore’s catcher-defense rankings. He is not a great hitter, though his career .273/.328/.383 line is pretty similar to the 2010 National League average for catchers — .253/.326/.388.

Perhaps most importantly, the righty-hitting Paulino has, for his career, a marked platoon split. He’s got a measly .635 OPS against righties but an .881 mark against lefties, essentially the Matt Diaz of catchers. Assuming he doesn’t cost multiple years or numerous millions, he would be a great choice to spell Josh Thole against tough southpaws, or even in a straight platoon — since catchers need time off anyway. Combined, they’d give the Mets excellent offense from behind the plate.

Mets “in contact” with Russell Martin: Martin would also make a nice righty-hitting complement to Thole, but I don’t see this one happening. Martin reportedly rejected a one-year, $4.2 million deal from the Dodgers, so the only way I imagine the Mets getting seriously involved in his pursuit would be if he’s still a free agent later this winter.

The one interesting thing about Martin is that he has said he’s open to playing first, second and third next year if some team wants him for a super-utility role. But since the Mets have Thole in house, they could probably find better ways to spend $5 million.

Mets among 6-8 teams interested in D.J. Carrasco: How interested, though? Because if there are 5-7 other teams bidding on Carrasco I imagine he’s going to require a decent chunk of change, and he’s really not all that spectacular. If the Mets are trying to save money they should probably be searching the scrap heap or converting starters to fill out their pen, not signing free-agents. I’d pass on this one.

We should keep Jerry Hairston Jr.’s name in mind: I have no idea what that means, but I will do just that. I am a fan of Old Man Hairston’s kid. Plays every position pretty well, gives a team a lot of flexibility. Also, good guy.

Mets interested in every living unspectacular or recently injured free-agent starting pitcher: I mean, someone’s going to need to pitch. Maybe it’ll be Freddy Garcia or Chris Young or Jeff Francis. This one is almost entirely based on information I do not have access to: The cost and reports the pitcher’s health. Hard to speculate on which one of these guys would be best if I don’t know who seems most likely to hold up for a season.

Mets willing to take calls on every player, unlikely to deal stars: This seems like it’s probably true every year, right?

Mets might hire Moises Alou as first-base coach: Not a chance he stays healthy for the full season.

What’d I miss?

That sucked

I don’t have much to say about last night’s Jets-Patriots bloodbath except that it sucked. It sucked to watch, it probably sucked to play, and it especially sucked that I sat there pathetically holding out hope that the Jets could pull off some miracle comeback, up until the point where their defense stopped bothering. The broadcast sucked, the coaching sucked, Tom Brady’s stupid hair sucked.

It all sucked, except possibly Santonio Holmes and my buffalo wings.

All I can offer to Jets fans is that it’s only one game. And as much as it feels like the wind has been knocked out of the team — nay, it feels like their ribs have been broken and have punctured their lungs — it ultimately counts for one game in the standings.

Yes, it makes their path to taking the division and a first-round bye more difficult, but hardly impossible. The fact that we’re even hoping for playoff byes and home-field advantage at this point in the season speaks to how far the Jets have come in the last couple years.

F@#$. Whatever. Whatever, whatever. Tom Brady wears man-UGGs.

Sad Mark Sanchez:

Taxi stuff

There’s little demand for wheelchair-accessible cabs, according to a controversial draft report that could affect which model taxi is picked for the entire fleet.

Wheelchair users took 5,800 trips during a two-year pilot program that allowed disabled passengers to telephone for cabs, according to the Taxi and Limousine Commission report.

The TLC spent $1 million in City Council funds on equipment and other expenses for the program – meaning each trip cost $172.

Pete Donohue, N.Y. Daily News

So this report is saying that since not many wheelchair users call this number so they can then wait for a cab, we know wheelchair users do not need cabs. That doesn’t seem like a reasonable conclusion, does it?

Strikes me that one of the most convenient aspects of taxicab travel for most of us is that you never have to wait for a cab; you just flail your arms in the air long enough at any intersection and eventually one will pull over. I imagine, then, that cab use by wheelchair-bound people would rapidly increase if all cabs were accessible, and no one had to call and wait for one of the city’s 240 accommodating cabs.

The city is using the study to help pick the winner among three bids to build the next standard taxi model. And it’s worth noting that the one fully wheelchair-accessible model — designed by Turkish manufacturer Karsan — is by far the coolest.

Check it out. Not only does it boast WiFi and Internet access and tons of legroom, but it’s got an all-glass roof so passengers can look up at the tall buildings. Great for tourists, and a good way for a grizzled New Yorker to appreciate all the awesome skyscrapers without looking like a rube.

Look at this thing. It’d be sweet if a few thousand of these were cruising Manhattan in a few years:

Dusty Ryan > Omir Santos

The Mets signed catcher Dusty Ryan to a Minor League deal today and invited him to Spring Training.

It’s certainly not a high-impact move or a big Winter Meetings splash. I imagine it won’t preclude the Mets from signing a more experienced right-handed complement/backup to Josh Thole, and I would guess that if Dusty Ryan ends up on the Major League Mets in 2011 it means someone is either hurt or woefully underperforming.

But Ryan — unlike so many of the guys signed by the Mets to be Minor League roster filler in recent years — actually has some upside. He is 26, for one thing. For another, he actually has some mild history of offensive production in the Minors.

Ryan does not make a ton of contact — he hit .199 in Triple-A in 2010. But he has demonstrated a decent batting eye at the level, and can boast a decent-for-a-catcher .237/.348/.416 line in 631 plate appearances in Triple-A. (As a point of reference, Omir Santos’ career Triple-A line is .251/.305/.324.) There is some chance Ryan can improve or enjoy a career year and actually contribute something positive to the Mets at the Major League level.

Right around this time last year, I wrote:

What neither Coste nor Cora will provide is upside. Upside is the chance a player can actually provide more to his team than he’s being paid to provide. Upside is something the Mets should be searching for among the potential Rule 5 Draft picks and non-tendered free agents. Upside is something worth committing money to when a team is operating with a finite budget.

Maybe I’m again reading to deeply into a minor move, or maybe the acquisition is yet another sign that things are looking up for the Mets. Point is there’ll be someone behind the plate in Triple-A that might actually outperform expectations and that’s, you know, cool.