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Batting
the mercurial Jose Reyes third makes almost no sense...
Unless it's just a Manuel ploy to make Jose better
File Photo by Jim McIsaac -
Getty -AP
Photo
by Jim McIsaac - Getty Images |
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Jose Reyes batting third?
My first thought is that it takes his legs away, his
biggest
asset. So no matter what else may be
good about it, it’s a bad idea. Sure, he
might be able to hit .300 in a good year. And
yes, he could probably hit for power a bit. And
he had no problem driving in runs from
the leadoff spot when he had the chance. And
it’s true that he doesn’t walk very much so his
on-base average
suffers. And even Jose Reyes can’t score
if he doesn’t get on base.
What that means to me is that
he’s
only a good leadoff
hitter, not a great one. He only played
sparingly before 2005 and after 2008. From 2005 to 2008 though, he
scored 99,
122, 119 and 113 runs. .
So how mediocre is that? Not
very. Could he have scored more if he
walked more often? Absolutely. But he averaged mid-sixties in the RBI’s
department
for those years from
the leadoff spot. How might that number
be reduced if he were not such a free swinger?
Reyes also stole a lot of bases
in
those years, averaging
about 65 per year. Although runs scored
is the most obvious stat affected by stolen bases, the stolen base also
has
residual effects not necessarily so obvious in the box score, all of
which have
to do with the underlying asset that makes the stolen base possible. That is speed.
Speed drives the opposing pitcher
crazy, putting added
pressure on him to keep the runner close. It
also makes him throw more fastballs, making it
easier for the next
batter to hit. I can’t quantify it as
those stats aren’t even kept (it would be impossible to determine it,
what
would the next batter have hit without Reyes on base in front of him)
but his
speed adds to the number of runs produced and scored by those following
him in
the order, not just the next batter but every batter who steps to the
plate
while Reyes is on base before him.
So Reyes is one hell of a leadoff
hitter because he has
speed, not just as determined by his on base percentage.
Batting third, many times there will be
somebody on base in front of him. Reyes
will still have his legs, of course, but it won’t matter…he won’t be
able to
use them.
In exchange for the loss of all
this
chaos on the bases and turbulence
in the pitcher’s psyche, we get a number 3 guy whose batting averages
over
those same 2005-2008 seasons were .273, .300, .280 and .297, marginal
at best
for a number 3 guy. So we’re trading a
good to great leadoff hitter for a poor number 3 hitter.
None of the above takes into
account
the enjoyment that
Reyes’s type of game has on the fans. Games
will only be almost as enjoyable. Instead
of leading off the game with a ball of fire,
we lead off with…..whom? Luis Castillo? Angel Pagan? Somebody
please get me a bag; I’m going to be sick.
This faulty thinking is really
the
first time I can recall
thinking that Jerry Manuel over-manages. Even
when he was changing relief pitchers every
third of an inning, I
figured he had good reason. He had all
these
situational pitchers and nobody who could get guys out from either side. Even when he put such an emphasis on hitting
to the opposite field last year, a move that may have screwed up some
successful swings (see David Wright), I figured his approach really
couldn’t
cause much harm. (I think it actually
was helping Beltran before he went down with his injury).
But this move is just not well
thought
out, which really isn’t
like Manuel at all. My hope is that it’s
just a ploy…the old “if you don’t walk more, I’m going to bat you
third”
ploy. Whether this will have any
influence on the oblivious Reyes at all is highly questionable. I think Jose is really untouchable as far as
being influenced too much by anything, much to the dismay of Mets fans
sometimes.
What the possibility of this move
does
do though is dampen
my enthusiasm for both the season in general and the Mets in particular. I used to be a Minaya-Manuel guy.
I’m not so sure of that anymore.

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