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Reyes
only recently has played like the Reyes of old
........................while Pagan and Ike Davis (above) have helped
carry the load
Photo by Al Bello-
Getty
Photo by Al Bello-
Getty |
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A day of rest, that’s just what the
Mets needed, and that
goes for their fans too. I know I surely
needed one. That last loss to the Padres
was excruciating. One strike away from
the win they were, and just little David Eckstine at the plate. Oh well.
I won’t be picking on anybody today,
not even Ollie
Perez. I’ll try to stay away from Gary
Matthews too. The fact is that they’re
just a .500 team, one among many it seems in a league that’s showing a
lot of
parity this year. Once you accept that simple truism, the team is a
really
interesting one to watch, even when Keith (Hernandez, the 3rd
guy in
the booth) takes still another day off.
I mean….what other team has every
player on it being almost
psychotically streaky . Name me one
everyday player who shows any consistency. Bay? Certainly not. Reyes?
Oh please. Wright? I don’t think so. When
Barajas, the catcher, leads the
team in rbi’s, that’s pathetic, I’m sorry, even if the total number is
pretty
high.
Yeah, I guess Castillo and Ike Davis
have been consistent,
but even as good as they’ve been, their total potential impact just
isn’t that
great (although Ike has won a few games for them, come to think of it).
Right now, for example, Reyes is hot. Francoeur is hot too but those two are five
spots
apart in the batting order. Even Reyes
doesn’t steal home that often. He may
have stolen 2nd and 3rd and induced a balk to get
home
once or twice, but it’s a 162-game season. They
just, as a team, don’t score that many
runs(17th), especially when
Santana’s on the mound.
A typical batting sequence might have
Reyes getting on,
Castillo moving him over, Bay striking out and Wright popping up. They just don’t put things together that
often. And they don’t get big hits. But when the pitching is good, as very often
it has been, the whole team plays a lot better, not at the plate
certainly but
in every other aspect.
Their core players are just not
getting it done, or, I
should say, haven’t got it done so far this year.
Bay, for
example, is
hitting a respectable .295 right now and leads the team in runs scored
but his
OPS is just .829 while his average career OPS is .892.
He’s the type of hitter that hits a lot of
long balls that get caught. When they’re
not caught, it’ll be a double. He just
hasn’t been able to get that ball over the wall this year.
I hate to say he’s got “warning track power”
but that’s been his story this year.
David Wright is hitting .267. He’s got a marginally better OPS than Bay,
and 9 home runs, which is probably better than many fans expected, but
he just
hasn’t produced as often as you’d expect. If
he were better in big spots, the low batting
average wouldn’t make as
much of a difference, but alas, he’s been the guy who strikes out, the
guy who
pops up, the guy who makes that final out.
Reyes’s numbers are very revealing. He’s batting a paltry .248.
And, even with 30 runs scored, that’s just
not enough from a player such as Reyes has been. It
surprised me to discover that Reyes’s
career average OPS is .764, pretty impressive for a shortstop, but his
current
OPS is a ridiculously poor .638. That’s
150
points off his average.
That’s the real story of the Mets
season thus far. That’s not what you’ll
read in the news
stories though. You’ll hear about Perez
refusing to get sent down and Francoeur fixing his swing, even though
he’s
always fixing his swing. You’ll see
stories about Pelfrey, who has been a great revelation this year, or
Takahashi,
who has generally been good wherever they’ve put him in the rotation.
You’ll
see stories about the need for another starter, arguably the biggest
Mets story
of the year.
But it’s all baloney.
The Mets are currently 12th in ERA in
both leagues, just two
spots down from the Yankees, who can boast of possessing Sabathia and
Burnett
and Pettitte and Hughes. And that nice
ERA number has been achieved despite the woes of John Maine and Oliver
Perez,
both who have been predictably horrible.
The pitching staff deserves kudos for
their resiliency, at
the very least. A big reason for that is
the fact that the Japanese duo of Takahashi and Igarashi have been
great,
although Igarashi obviously returned to active duty too soon after his
injury. Recently
R.A. Dickey, the knuckleballer from
the minors, has been great. Niese,
before he got hurt, had been a pleasant surprise.
The Mets now have a rotation of
Santana, Pelfrey, Niese,
Takahashi and Dickey. That’s not too
shabby. On the relief side there are
K-Rod and Feliciano, and Igarashi, who should return to form soon. Then take your pick of Nieve or Mejia or even
Dessens. Valdez has been a disappointment,
but, in the grand scheme , it’s
been a small thing.
Another huge distraction has been
Carlos Beltran’s continued
absence from the lineup. But Angel Pagan has done a great job in
centerfield. He’s also been pretty
damned good at the plate, presently sporting a .784 OPS.
I consider him a mini-5-tool-guy.
The guy does everything pretty darned well.
So I don’t pay too much attention to
the stories. The real problem has been the
core, or what’s
left of it, after the loss of Beltran and Delgado.
I’ll ignore the melodrama surrounding the
return of Niese and who’ll get dropped from the roster as a result. It just isn’t that significant.
Gee, maybe they’ll drop Matthews, who’s
deserved a much worse fate than he has thus far experienced.
Reyes has to
keep his
recent hot streak going. Bay
has to start hitting the ball with
authority. Wright has to hit the ball
more often.
It’s the core,
stupid!

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