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Carlos - one of 2 real Mets outfielders
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by Julie Jacobson- AP
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Rays Longoria & Super-Sub Hinske
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by Steve Nesius -
AP |
As bad as the Mets looked against the
Cards, there are a few
reasons to look forward to the rest of the season. This feeling was
reaffirmed
after a close look at the differences between our locals and the best
team in
baseball right now, the Tampa Bay Rays.
Say
"Rays" and most baseball people in the know will think
"pitching", as Mike Lowell of the Red Sox did the other day when
asked if he thought the Rays will be around for the entire
season. The
Rays' ace, Scott Kazmir, is now 7-3 with a 2.28 ERA . Their
number 2 is
hard-luck James Shields, just 6-5 but with a 3.70 ERA and one hell of a
right
cross. Three, four and five are named Garza, Jackson and
Sonnanstine and
have combined for a 19-13 record with an ERA around 4.00. Just
those 5
guys have fanned 342 batters.
Say "Mets" and most people will think
"mistakes", but their response earlier in the season, at the very
start, would have been "pitching". And Johan Santana has been great
halfway through with a 3.01 ERA but just a 7-7 record. Number 2
starter
Oliver Perez, despite his ups and downs, is 6-5 but with a relatively
high 4.98
ERA. Starters 3, 4 and 5 are currently listed as Martinez, Maine
and Pelfrey. Their combined record is 15-14 and, if Pedro's
currently
anomalous 7.12 ERA isn't included, Maine
and Pelfrey are just a bit above a 4.00 ERA. And those five have
struck
out 328 batters.
The
Mets compare favorably to the Rays on the relief front as well.
Billy
Wagner has an ERA under 2.00 while saving 18. Troy Percival has
one more
save but sports an ERA of 3.54. The Mets main setup guy, if they
can be
said to have one, is Duaner Sanchez. His ERA is just 3.89 thus
far.
The Rays main setup guy has been J.P Howell, who sports a more
respectable 3.00
ERA. The Rays other relievers, Wheeler, Glover, Hammel, Miller
and
Balfour don't outshine the Mets group, statistically at least.
Despite
Aaron Heilman's problems, for example, his ERA is just 4.68. I
would have
expected a much higher number. But Mr Heilman has apparently
thrown a lot
of good innings too. I must admit to not recollecting those quite
as
well. In any event, the Mets have a nice mix of relievers, with
lefties
Feliciano and Schoenweiss and some quality in Joe Smith. All in
all, the
Mets relief staff outshines that of the Rays.
So
the Mets staff compares pretty favorably as a whole with that of the
Rays, on
an overall basis, at the very least. So why are the Rays sporting
the
best record in baseball while the Mets wallow in the muck and mire of
the NL
East?
It's
the outfield. The Mets have only two real live major-league
outfielders. I'm referring to Carlos Beltran and Ryan Church of
course.
Most teams have three, never mind the Rays. Endy Chavez is a
defensive
specialist. He's batting .248 but has just 6 rbi's. That's
ridiculous.
Marlon Anderson is batting .196 with almost no production of any
kind.
There's hope for Fernando Tatis who, after all, can boast of a .283 BA
but his
production has tailed off lately. And then of course there's
Moises Alou,
the Carl Pavano of outfielders.
The Rays not only have three genuine
outfielders, they're
pretty good ones, among the best in the American League. Carl
Crawford,
BJ Upton and the tandem of Gross and Hinske, sometimes supplemented by
Jhonny
Gomes have scored 177 runs and driven in 166. Although Metsies
Beltran
and Church have combined for 93 runs scored and 89 ribbies, Chavez,
Anderson,
Alou and Tatis have combined for just 35 runs scored and 32 runs batted
in.
The Mets picked up Trot Nixon, nice move but he's on the DL
already. The
Mets still need another outfielder desperately, one who can produce
runs, not
just a warm body opposing pitchers can target as a second pitcher in
the
lineup. The situation wouldn't be so critical, maybe, if the Mets
were
stronger at second and behind the plate. But they're not. The
Mets lineup
can definitely be worked, quite easily.
The Mets infielders compare favorably to the Rays from a production
standpoint,
Longoria vs Wright, and certainly Reyes vs the Rays shortstop Bartlett.
At second base, Castillo's
stats are about even with those of Iwamura and at first base, Delgado
surprisingly has better numbers than does Tampa's
Carlos Pena.
The Mets infield defense has been pretty bad though. Third
baseman
Wright's FPCT is just .942. Longoria's is .975. Shortstop
Reyes is
at .966, Bartlett at .972. At second, Castillo has a FPCT of .980
while
his counterpart on the Rays, Iwamura, sports an incredible .997.
Delgado's FPCT isn't really that bad at .988 but Pena's is ten points
higher.
<>So, it comes down to picking up an outfielder, a real
live
outfielder who can produce and who is not named Alou. Or Caspar the
friendly
ghost.
Not a defensive guy who’ll cringe
with runners on base, or a retread from another decade.
I’m talking about a man (or woman) who could
legitimately expect to vie for a starting position on a major league
club.
And the infield defense needs to pick
it up, beginning with
Wright. There is reason to believe that
they will. Wright’s current .942 is 12
points lower than his numbers for the last two years.
Reyes’s .966 is 16 points lower than his .982
from last year.
<>As for Delgado and Castillo, Manager Jerry Manuel has
already outlined a plan to substitute Tatis for Delgado as a defensive
replacement late in close games.
That
change should alleviate the lack of range shown by both men on the
right side.
It seems relatively simple. The Mets need to make a trade for an
outfielder. Maybe they could use one of
those good
relievers as bait. Come on, Omar, make a
few calls
