Monday, December 24, 2012

All the Wright Moves

I have been calling for a total dismantling of the New York Mets since around 2009. I have blamed the Mets fans and their desire to keep up with their obnoxious neighbors for preventing the Mets from doing what they need to do to win a World Series.
Here is how you compete in baseball today: draft well, develop those draftees, sign the ones that show the most promise early in their major league careers to long-term deals to lock them up until at least their age 30 seasons. Something the Mets can afford to do, given their market size and revenues. And once you've done all that, and you have 5-6 really good players locked up to cost-effective contracts, then you sign a couple veterans to short deals, 1 or 2 years, 3 at the most.
The Mets are finally embracing that philosophy and it's promising to pay dividends, probably not in 2013, maybe not in 2014, but by 2015 the Mets should be on the road to contention. And trading R.A. Dickey was a huge part of it. I love R.A. Dickey. What a nice man, a class act and a great pitcher, but he had to go.
Even if the Mets were in position to be competitive this season, I still would favor this trade. Dickey is old (entering his age 38 season). He throws a knuckleball, which may mitigate some of the expected decline of aging, but can also be a fickle mistress, meaning his magic could fade quickly. Speaking of magic, let's take a brief interlude to appreciate just how awesome, Dickey's knuckleball is.



Plus, he's coming off a Cy Young season, even if the Mets were on the verge of contention, selling high on Dickey would be the right thing to do.
But the Mets aren't good. And Dickey was seeking a 2-year extension for $25 million, through his age 40 season. And the Mets got two very good prospects for him, Travis D'Arnaud who could be a solid hitting catcher for a long time for the Mets. And a hard-throwing righty Noah Syndergaard who will fit in the nicely with the young arms the Mets are already developing. Add that to Zack Wheeler, Matt Harvey and Jon Niese and the Mets have a promising young rotation.

The lineup is another matter which is why I like resigning Daving Wright. The Mets lineup is very weak, and doesn't have the youthful reinforcements the way the pitching staff does. Wright is an excellent player at a very important position. His presence will likely help the development of younger players like Davis and Duda (who I think still has potential and should be given fielding lessons and the everyday left field job).

I'm also a pragmatist. I understand this is a business. Wright has marquee value and even though the fans are idiots, the Mets need those idiots to buy tickets and jerseys and to watch SNY so keeping Wright was a very important gesture to keep those fans. Sure, I would have liked the slew of prospects a trade for Wright could have brought in return, but I understand his value to the team goes beyond his contributions on the field.

And Wright is entering his age 28 season which means, when the team Sandy Alderson has expertly crafted is ready to compete, Wright should still be performing at a high level, hopefully high enough to return the Mets to the World Series.

6 comments:

focks said...

I agree completely

Paul said...

Glad we could have such accord on this topic, that's rare. But I think even the most stubborn of Mets fans (not including Focks in this group) has come to realize that signing expensive veterans players has backfired many times and the only way to recover is to build a farm system.

Reissberg said...

Selling high on Beltran and Dickey = no brainers.
Now we need to figure out a way to use the money from Jason Bay's release to get a real outfielder.

Damino said...

I agree with this entire post and have been riding the "plan for the future" train with Paul for years.

Paul said...

The Mets saved no money by releasing Bay, they just deferred some of it. They should not spend any money on a "real outfielder." Play Duda everyday in left, Nieuwenhuis in center and give Baxter/Valdespin a chance in right, maybe resign Hairston to hit lefties.

jleary said...

I have been right there saying they need to rebuilt, and i thought they should have traded Wright as well. Though like you i understand why they didn't. They need a right-hander in the OF or the line-up is way too lefty dominate. Whether that is hairston or not i don't know but certainly not if he wants 2/12 which i heard. Trade for Stanton...i know it won't happen, but i like to imagine