Results tagged ‘ Carlos Beltran ’
Is It Time For Sleep?
Right now the Mets have countless injuries to key players like Calros Beltran, Jose Reyes, J.J. Putz, Billy Wagner, John Maine, and Carlos Delgado. This is arguably the worst thing that can happen to any team. It has hampered the Mets so far, putting them below .500. Could this turn out to be blessing in disguise?
The good thing about all of this is that the Mets get to see some of there prospects in the majors. Guys like Fernando Martinez, Nick Evans, and Argenis Reyes would not be in the majors if not for the injuries. The question though is, is it good to see how they can do and to see if they are ready, or is this really just hurting there self-esteem? Sometimes young players excel when they first get called up, like Fernando Valenzuela and Mark Fydrich. Other times, the news can over-excite them and mess up there mechanics, which is what happens to players tabbed as “AAAA” players.
Towards August when guys start to come back from the DL, we will definitely see these replacements sent down. One by one, they will go back to the minors and either continue to learn and get better in preparation for a return to the bigs, or see there batting averages funnel down into nothing as their baseball career comes to an end. Now we start to wonder, whose fault is this?
Is it the player’s fault for not being good enough, or is it the general manager, Omar Minaya’s fault for expecting too much of his aspiring stars? Could he be jumping the gun too early?
Let’s look at baseball’s best left handed pitcher, Johan Santana. He was left off the Houston Astros 40 man roster in 1999 and was selected by the Marlins in the Rule 5 Draft. They later traded him to the Marlins, who would still have all the strings attached for that year. One of the rules was that Santana must be on the Major League roster for the entire 2000 season, or else he must be offered back to the Astros. Well that year he put up a 6.49 ERA, but the Twins realized he was a great pitcher, so they kept him up. The next year he had a 4.74 ERA. Getting better, but still not that great for someone who was a top prospect. In 2002 he was sent down to the minors for about two months. When he came back, he was terrific. That year Johan Santana posted a 2.99 ERA. And from 2003 onward, he had a WHIP of 1.15 or less. And in case you are unfamilar with that stat (Walks and Hits per Innings Pitched) let me say that having a WHIP under 1.00 is like having an ERA under 3.00. Very good. So it turns out that Johan Santana was put into the majors a little premature, but a nice lengthy trip to the minors was all that it took to put a top prospect over the top to become a Cy Young Winner.
Now let’s look at another pitcher, Mark Prior. He was the top talent in the 2001 First Year Player Draft, and was getting the same the same kind of hype Stephen Strasburg is getting. He made his major league debut in 2002, the very next year. Obviously, this is pretty early and another year or two in the minors couldn’t hurt. But perhaps when he did come up, regardless of whether it was too early or not, the Cubs loved him, and they pretty much overworked him before his arm could develop enough to pitch in a 162 game season. Since his debut, he has had seven injuries involving his arm, elbow or shoulder (it was really eight but one was because he was hit by a line drive and that really cannot be prevented and was just a total coincidence). Now Mark Prior is pretty much out of baseball.
So what I am trying to say here is, instead of overworking our young prospects and essentially relying on them to carry the major league team until others come back from injuries, why don’t we leave them in the minors and sign some washed up old veterans for the league minimum and called up some no-hope minor leaguers who would never make the Majors anyway? This way the players we care about can continue to develop and who knows, maybe we will find a diamond in the rough among all the new guys.
I don’t think Omar Minaya should trade the farmsyetem for somebody like Adam Dunn or Aubrey Huff. I think it is time to realize that the Mets will not make the postseason this year, and they should not try to make it for at least two or three more years. They have to take the pressure off of top prospects to make it to the bigs, and I think perhaps a rebuild has to at least be an option. Trade Carlos Beltran for prospects, someone like Justin Smoak of the Texas Rangers would be a nice fit as the Mets do not really have a first baseman in line. Trade Jose Reyes, you could acquire three top prospects for him, one would definitely be of Alcides Escobar value. If you want to hold onto Johan Santana I can understand, but I seriously think that you can bring in a boatload for him. He has about six years left on his contract I think, and he will definitely be among the top pitchers in baseball for years to come. He would bring in more than the normal yield. In fact you might be able to get six or seven prospects for him (I know that no team has six or seven TOP prospects but maybe you can get two or three along with four mid-level prospects). And in the mid-2010s when all these players have developed the New York Mets could become a dynasty similar to that of the 1990s Yankees.
Of course, none of this will happen because Omar Minaya even attempts this he would be fired in seconds.
Half the Prediction is True
If you remember correctly, on October 21 I blogged about Josh Hamilton and Albert Pujols winning the MVP awards. I later found out and blogged about two days later that it was not the MVP, instead the Most Outstanding Player award, something completely different. But I made a note that they could still very well be the MVPs, and perhaps I discovered a possible leak that the players knew about when they voted. I guess it wasn’t a leak, as MLB.com wrote stories about it (Pujols, Hamilton), but I know that it could still happen that they both win MVPs. The first half of my prediction came true today as Albert Pujols took the NL Award. I want to congradgulate him for a job well done. I thought he should have won, just for keeping his low expected Cardinals in contention for the Wild Card for so long.
David Wright finished 7th, Carlos Delgado finished 9th, Johan Santana finished 14th, Carlos Beltran finished 22nd, and Jose Reyes finished 24th.
Now Is When It All Sinks In
No, I don’t mean for the Phillies that they won the World Series. I mean for the fans, it sinks in that the season is over. Over the past week and a half, I’ve been bored sick. I have had absolutely nothing to do. I’ve been scouring baseball websites for hours and hours at a time, only to find myself reading the same article 20 different times. When somebody asks me if anything good is on TV tonight, the answer is always the same: No, and there won’t be until April. I turn on ESPN or SNY or even YES, and all I get is football, or basketball, or hockey, or NASCAR. But no baseball. I can’t wait until January 1, 2009, the day the MLB Network comes out. When asked what I want for Christmas, this is the only thing I ever say, but I just realized it doesn’t come out until next year. I hate to say it, but baseball this year is over.
I would also like to congradgulate David Wright and Carlos Beltran on the Gold Glove awards, they certainly deserved it. I am not surpised that Jose Reyes didn’t get one, they said he would this year but I just saw too many errors. Maybe next year. But I want to see Reyes blossom as a hitter. He has shown signs of power, but after his 19 homers in 2006, the past two years that number has dropped to 12 and 16, respectively. I want him to just explode and go on a tear, I want him to prove that he is better than Hanley Ramirez.
And I don’t want the Mets to trade Carlos Delgado. I love watching his home run swing too much.
Do Not Trade Beltran
There have been some rumors popping up over the Internet that the Mets are considering trading Carlos Beltran. One rumor is him to the Yankees for Robinson Cano and two pitching prospects, one of them probably Ian Kennedy.
But as far as I am concerned, Carlos Beltran is the best defensive outfielder in all of the Majors and he is in the top 10 offensive outfielders. As much as people want the Mets to make a trade and as much as you could get for Beltran trading him is not the answer. There are already enough outfield problems as there is and trading Beltran not only would open up another hole out there but it would lose an outfield mentor for Daniel Murphy. With Church injury prone and Murphy/Evans inexperienced and Moises Alou (if he can come back) is not going to be a good defender at all.
People are saying that there is not enough power at the bottom of the lineup. Well trading Beltran would remove power from the top of the lineup too. And Beltran is a quiet leader. In the dugout and the clubhouse he is a guy younger players look up too and he can get real fiery in a competitive spirit. Remember when Jimmy Rollins said last year the Phillies were the team to beat? At the beginnning of this year Beltran said at the end of an interview, “and to Jimmy Rollins this year the Mets are the team to beat”. This sparked a fire between the Phillies and Mets and there were rumors that the two teams would have a brawl on April 9 (the Mets home opener). There was no brawl (I was looking forward to it and Chase Utley breaking his neck and missing the season!) but teammates never looked at Carlos the same way.
Carlos Beltran is important to this team. You can’t trade him. You need to stick with what you have and don’t trade anybody. Release guys like Heilman and Luis Castillo and build from the ground up with your prospects like Eddie Kunz and Bobby Parnell.
I guess whoever sparked this rumor also has too much time on there hands (see previous post).
Mets Need to Make a Really Big Move
Over the past few days the Mets have made quite a few moves, placing Marlon Anderson and John Maine on the DL and calling up Dan Murphy and Eddie Kunz. Looking at possible waiver acquisitions like Rich Aurilia, and also scouting out Free Agent Freddy Garcia. The Mets did a lot of things over the weeked in order to improve the club and make a stretch for October. But they did forget one little detail. Getting swept by the Houston Astros is against the rules.
The Mets are not hesitating to call up prospects from the minors, and they are certainly being very bold in that they have no idea how these guys will perform. But you know what? It doesn’t matter how well Nick Evans or Dan Murphy hits, it doesn’t matter how well Eddie Kunz or Jon Niese pitches. It doesn’t matter who you call up from the minors at all. What the Mets need is veteran production. Guys like Brian Schenider need to start hitting. Sure, they were doing great in that 10 game winning streak, but then the All-Star break came and went and they cooled down. The Mets have now lost 5 of their last 6 games. Carlos Beltran seriously needs to pick up the slack. He needs to carry the team on his shoulders. Beltran is a leader on this ballclub, and needs to play like one. Remember back in ’05, Beltran’s first year as a Met? He hit 16 homers. Then he hit something like 25 and then last year the team record, 42. Now he is having a slump year. What will happen next year? Another 25 homer season? Carlos Beltran is way too inconsistant, and he is overrated. Don’t get me wrong, I really like Beltran, but he is just too expensive for this kind of production. I say he needs to be traded. Just think of the players the Mets could rake in, they could get a pitcher or a proven vet, maybe a even a mini-star in his prime, like Jason Bay, and it wouldn’t even cost them any prospects.
This teams needs a change. A really big change. And if they have any hope of making the postseason, that change needs to come now. Minaya made a gigantic mistake not trading at the deadline, now he will need to take advantage of the waiver wire. And let me say this. If the Mets make another collapse like last year, and they don’t make the postseason, Omar Minaya won’t have another chance to win it all. Lets just say he couldn’t take the heat of the kitchen but stuck around for one more cookie anyway.
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