Thursday, December 31, 2009

The New Year


I think we can all agree that 2009 was torture. No matter how hard I tried, I couldn't make sense of this past season. It was an absolute disaster.

2010 seems more promising, though. I don't know if its just that we were so awful in 09 that our team now seems good. Jason Bay joins us at Citi Field this year, I think that's great. Great and smart acquisitions by Omar also came to end 2009 that all could prove to be low risk, high reward such as Kelvim Escobar, Ryota Igarashi, Clint Everts along with a bunch of catchers and minor leaguers.

On behalf of everyone here at Chemetsry, have a happy New Year and here's to 2010! No matter how bad we suck or will be sucking in the future, we'll always be Mets fans. Cheers.

-M

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

A look at Jason Bay and the (current) 2010 Mets


Though not 100% official, the Mets and Jason Bay have reached an agreement of approximately 4 years, $66 mil with a 5th year option. This is all pending physical.

I like this move. He was one of two big name players for left field this off season and we got one of them. Sure you can argue that Matt Holliday is the better of the two, but Bay is a great player. Holliday also has Boras for an agent who will run you dry for your money, so I'm sure Omar felt it easier to deal with Bay. I'm sure that's not the reason, but I'm sure it helped.

Jason Bay will find success at Citi Field due to its big outfield and the ability to hit doubles and triples while Matt Holliday and his homeruns would've taken a hit. I like this move a lot.

Current line up:

Reyes
Castillo
Wright
Beltran
Bay
Murphy
Franceour
(catcher)
(pitcher)

That looks great. Pending the health of everyone, we have a pretty nice line-up.

Now for the rotation:

Santana
Pelfrey
Maine
Perez
Niese

We need extra firepower. My ideal pitcher would be Carlos Zambrano but I don't know how likely that will be. He'd be a fantastic #2 though. Another pitcher I think would fit is Ben Sheets. You can read more on the rotation in my recent post here.

For the bullpen:

Escobar
Igarashi
Stokes
Green
Parnell
Feliciano
K-Rod

I like that bullpen. Escobar and Igarashi can prove to be huge commodities. We know what to expect from Stokes, Parnell and Green and hope for them to improve. Feliciano has been great and we need for him to stay that way. K-Rod will get more save opportunities, hopefully, and get back to closing exciting games.

As for the set-up job, I assume Igarashi, Escobar, and possibly Parnell will be competing for it in spring training so who knows.

I like this team. They have a good core and a young bullpen. Though the rotation needs to be worked on, this team has good talent otherwise. The Mets are apparently off this week and away from office, so the Bay press conference and other moves will be made no earlier then next week.

Monday, December 28, 2009

Addressing the rotation


Over the course of this off season so far, no moves have been made to resolve the black void of a rotation behind staff ace Johan Santana. Little moves have been made to improve the bullpen. Having a bullpen of Igarashi, Escobar, Stokes, Parnell, Green, and K-Rod surely can be argued as a decently strong bullpen.

Now on the rotation.

The rotation in 2009 was just awful. Between the injuries, we had no-names fill in and attempt to give it their all, which wasn't a lot. What will the rotation be in 2010 and how will it be addressed this off season? The following are possibilities, starting with what we have and going on to what we can get through the free agent market.

Johan Santana
He is the clear staff ace and a natural leader. We all expect a lot from him in 2010, and as usual he'll deliver.

Mike Pelfrey
Huge potential, huge head case. In 2008, his first full season as a starter, he put up a 3.70 ERA which was supposed to be the first step to becoming a dominate pitcher as he was speculated on being. Predicting this step forward, he was placed in the #2 slot. This step forward actually became two steps backwards as he put up a 5.03 ERA this season. Yes, he did show signs of dominance and it was exciting. When he's on, he's definitely on. I don't want to see him traded because I can see his potential. He has fantastic stuff but I feel needs more experience and more maturity. I want to see him be a steady pitcher in 2010 so he can be a solid #3 and maybe eventually fill that #2 spot.

John Maine
Maine's first year as a Met was fantastic, putting up a 3.60 ERA in 2006. The following years he put up 3.91, 4.18, and then 4.43 in 2009. I always envisioned Maine as a great reliever due to the fact he cannot last long in games. Given we get a starter, I feel Maine would be the first one shipped from the rotation to the pen.

Oliver Perez
Where do I even begin? In his seven years in the bigs, he's only had three good seasons, posting a 3.50 ERA in 2002 with the Padres, 2.98 in 2004 with the Pirates and 3.56 in 2007 with the Mets. I like his stuff but he seems to not be all there. Omir Santos said in an interview that Perez talks to himself on the mound all the time. Sometimes Omir thinks he's talking to him so he goes up to the mound to see what's up, then is told that he wasn't talking to him. Due to Ollie's big contract, he'll most likely be in the rotation for 2010. He has to step it up though. I like that this off season he's been working really hard in rehab to get himself in shape and completely ready for 2010.

Jon Niese
I like Niese. He's a young kid who is clearly an organization favorite. Though is fastball is pedestrian, his is curveball is fantastic. I remember Chris Carlin once called him Captain Hook one postgame due to this. I'd love to see him in the #5 spot in 2010, so hopefully he has a successful recovery. His injury was awful to watch and just a huge downer to me. A new face with a lot of potential gets the spot start and is eventually hurt and needs season ending surgery. I can't wait to hear about his progress and how he's doing in Sprig Training in competition for that 5th starter spot.

Now for a free agent...

Ben Sheets
Ben Sheets excites me. He'd be a great #2 behind Santana. When healthy, he's basically a Santana carbon-copy and an ace. I'd completely be all for Sheets, he's asking for $12 mil for one year deal and I might give it to him now. It might be pricey due to his injury given history, but at this point in time I'd be for it. Erik Bedard is another one to think of, but I like Sheets as our best opportunity. I feel he has the better arm and can give us more if healthy.

The 2010 rotation would look like Santana-Sheets-Pelfrey-Perez-Niese. If Sheets is healthy and his stuff is on, it can rival that of Santana's. The Santana/Sheets 1-2 is deadly and powerful. Pelfrey and Perez, given maturity and experience, would give you solid starts. I like Niese as our #5 because I feel Maine would be awesome in the bullpen. Niese can work out any kinks he has and show us what he's all about.

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Mets' inactions are hurting them

What big free agents have signed this off-season? Jason Marquis, Garrett Adkins, Mike Gonzalez, John Lackey, Latroy Hawkins, Mike Cameron, etc. You get the point.
How many of those guys went to the Mets? None.
Who has the Omar Minaya signed? Let me think... Chris Coste, Henry Blanco, Mike Hessman, Clint Everts, Ryota Igarashi, and Elmer Dessens. None really what you would call big free agents.

In past off-seasons Omar Minaya has made a big move or two to acquire top talent. This year, he has not signed or traded for a top of the line player. I don't understand how move can be made all around the Mets, and Omar Minaya has done absolutely nothing! Ok, Matt Holliday and Jason Bay are still on the Market, but how has he not signed a starting pitcher, or a starting catcher? John Lackey, Randy Wolf, and Jason Marquis are on the Red Sox, Brewers, and Nationals respectively.
Speaking of the a Natinals, they have signed Ivan Rodriguez, and traded for Brian Bruney, along with the signing of Marquis. Now when the Nationals are making more major moves than you, there is something very wrong!

The Brewers signed Randy Wolf, and Latroy Hawkins on the same day! How did Omar not even factor into their decisions to go there? Shouldn't he want a starter and reliever? Couldn't Omar have signed them too? I would assume so, given that the brewers are a small market team. He could have out-bidded them.
from all of the reports that circulated John Lackey, none said that the Mets had even offered him a contract. How is that possible when you need a #2 starter? Ben Sheets anyone?

According to many sources, R.A. Dickey is close to signing a minor league deal with the Mets... I know it's a minor league deal, but still Omar needs to step up his game, or else he is out.

For more on this subject see Ed Prices' AOL Fanhouse article.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Pedro Martinez, on the Mets' radar?


Pedro? Really?

I'm not sure what Omar is thinking about right now, but it shouldn't be Pedro. Does he really think Pedro Martinez, at age 38, is a good idea at this point in time? Why go through his desperate measure when there are still options out there: Sheets, Bedard, even Garland and Doug Davis.

Pedro hasn't been stellar in a while, let alone satisfactory, and probably shouldn't be entertained with the idea of him landing a spot on our roster. Sure, if the Nationals or the Royals needs a guy for their rotation, sign Pedro for a year. How could he fit into the Mets once again when we know he has no more gas left?

Sure, during the playoffs his change-up was very good at times. But how about the other times when it was crushed? Pedro posted a 3.63 ERA in 44.2 IP with the Phillies this past year, while striking out 37.

All I know is that it would be a horrible idea for Omar to resign Pedro. If they wouldn't resign him in 09... why would they decide to in 2010? With other viable options and decent pitchers still lurking the market, why settle with Pedro Martinez?

I'm just really confused.

Why the Mets may be better off with Jason Bay

The Mets need a left fielder. There is no question about that. They had Gary Sheffield, Angel Pagan, Fernando Martinez, Fernando Tatis, and Cory Sullivan playing left for them last year. Not good.

The Mets need a guy who can replace Carlos Delgado in the clean-up or #5 spot. They need thump in the lineup. That thump was obviously missing last year given that they finished last in the MLB in homers. Bay hit 36 homers last year. That is the kind of power the Mets need in the lineup.

Matt Holliday may have a higher average; but per hit, Jason Bay has more extra base hits (Click here for more on this stat). That tells me that he has higher power potential, and that he is more suited to be in the #4 or #5 spot in the lineup.

The Mets also need someone to drive in all the runners they have in scoring position. They had the 7th most at-bats with RISP (1433), and the 6th highest average (.276) in that situation, BUT they had the 15th most RBIs (526). There is something wrong there. They had a 1 to 1 ground ball to fly ball ratio with RISP; the league average was 0.85 to 1 last year, that 0.15 difference makes a huge impact! The Mets can't hit the ball out of the infield! Jason Bay's ratio is 0.51. Holliday, 0.79. I would rather go with Bay there.

Holliday may be a better fielder and strikeout less, but Jason Bay has more power potential, get on base just as much, and gets more RBIs.

That's my case for Bay, what's yours?

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Aroldis Chapman for New York


"I want to be the best pitcher in the world. That's my objective."

The 22 year old Cuban phenom hasn't made a decision yet where to sign, and I believe the Mets should look into him heavily. Chapman is young, full of talent, and could be the Mets' project over the next few years in the minors.

Since the Mets are clearly not spending on top pitching this off season, this would be a good investment. In a post in October here, I said that the Mets had too many holes to fill to pay him the money he seeks and that its not worth it. Now seeing this off season was a bust for pitching for the organization, he would be a great asset.

Chapman has been labeled as "one of three greatest pitchers not in the majors" along with LHP Stephen Strasburg and Japanese RHP Yu Darvish. He is a workhorse and bound to be a star.

Aroldis has a great build and has been labeled as "mature, limber and powerful." His electric fastball sits at 93-95 while hitting 100 and not uncommon for him to hit 97 regularly. He's been clocked at 102 in the first inning and has hit 102 later on in the game as well. His 2-seam sits at 91-92 and also throws a hard, plus-slider at 81 and a plus-curveball at 75.

If the Mets want to start rebuilding for the future and get serious about contending, Chapman is their guy. By signing him, we'd get major coverage and attention as he climbs the ranks in the minors.

He's exactly what we're looking for to shake up this organization. He's young, promising, and full of energy and upside projection. Chapman would be more than welcomed in New York by me. What do you think?

To learn a little more about Aroldis Chapman, watch this video.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Clint Everts


The Mets just signed 25-year-old RHP Clint Everts to a one year, major league deal. In 2002, Everts was the fifth overall pick in the draft and headed to the Nationals (Expos at that time). Last season he went 8-1 with a 1.65 ERA (with six saves), all combined from his 09 stints in A+, AA, and AAA.

His minor league career numbers are 32-39 with a 3.98 ERA in 76 starts and 115 relief appearances.

My question is why didn't the National ever bring him up? Its not like their bullpen was anything to brag about anyways. Regardless, I'm excited. I feel that this was such a good move by Omar. This kid has so much talent with major upside. It sounds promising to sign a fifth overall pick, no matter how long ago it was. He was picked fifth for a reason, now its time to show it.

Other notable players from that draft are BJ Upton, Zack Greinke, Prince Fielder, Joe Saunders, Scott Kazmir, Cole Hamels and Matt Cain. Here's a fun fact, all these players (except Upton) listed above were all picked after Clint Everts was, so I guess that shows something.

Lets see if he can be a valuable commodity to the Mets organization. I sure hope so.

Saturday, December 5, 2009

The future of the infield


CATCHER
After hearing of the Henry Blanco signing, it got me thinking about the catcher situation. Say we sign Bengie Molina to a one year deal, our catchers for the 2010 season would be Molina and Blanco. This would give Josh Thole a chance to further develop in Triple A. Pending defensive improvement, he'll be rewarded with a September call up to get his feet wet again in preparation for a spot on the 2011 team.


FIRST BASE
I would do the same thing at first base. I'd keep Murphy at first for the time being and give Ike Davis a September call-up, all in preparation for the starting first base spot for 2011.


SECOND BASE
Hopefully, the Mets can rid themselves of Luis Castillo and receive a solid second baseman. They have their eyes on Orlando Hudson which is awesome. He would be a major upgrade from Castillo and fit real nicely in the line-up.


SHORT STOP
A healthy Jose Reyes is needed. A fantastic contributor to the line-up, if Reyes learns to mature a little more and really focus, it can impact the team greatly.


THIRD BASE
David Wright had a down of a season in 2009, but I'm not worried. A four-time consecutive All-Star, Wright is the face of the organization and needs to continue to lead and inspire his teammates.


Since we have strong prospects at catcher and first base, it should make this off season and next off season very specific in what Omar should focus on to get us back to a contending team, specifically left field and the starting rotation. Hopefully all goes well and the Mets will become a threat to the competition in the near future.

Let's hope!

Saturday, November 28, 2009

An ace from the farm


Every team (mostly) has a young farmhand who has tremendous potential on the mound. They are brought up from the minors and either dominate MLB hitters or have shown great flashes of greatness in doing so.

The Yankees have Phil Hughes, Red Sox have Clay Buchholz, Dodgers have Clayton Kershaw, A's have Andrew Bailey, Phillies have JA Happ, Tigers have Rick Porcello, and the Braves have Jair Jurrjens and Tommy Hanson.

Who will the Mets get? Eventually a pitcher will arise from the depths of the Mets' farm. Who will it be? Will it be the praised prospects such as Holt or Mejia? Will it be Niese, Moviel, Familia, or Urbina who step up?

Or, can it be Pelfrey? Having a few seasons under his belt and still not showing signs of dominance, I doubt it. Someone in the farm has to be one of these pitchers. At least one of the pitchers in the Mets farm is destined to fill these shoes. Who will it be?

Thoughts?

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Michael Antonini


In a recent post on MetsBlog, Matt Cerrone writes about the very possible re-signing of RHP Elmer Dessens. When talking about another lefty for 2010, he wonders if LHP Michael Antonini will be in "the mix" and called up from AA.

Antonini has a five pitch arsenal which consists of, thanks to Mets Prospect Hub, a two seam fastball, four seam fastball, slider, change up and curveball. They label Antonini as a "ballsy" and "tough kid" who is a solid strike zone pitcher.

Thanks to Toby Hyde's Mets Minor League Blog, Antonini's stats are:

A: 2.71 ERA, 73 IP, 63 H, 22 ER, 61 Ks
A+: 1.84 ERA, 44 IP, 34 H, 9 ER, 33 Ks
AA: 3.74 ERA, 45.2 IP, 43 H, 19 ER, 32 Ks

If he joins the team, I'm curious about how he'll do. Probably not too bright considering we haven't had much success with minor leaguers in the majors, such as F-Mart, Parnell, and Niese, who are all ranked higher than Antonini on Toby Hyde's Top 41 prospects list.

Whatever the case may be, it'll be nice to see a fresh face and new blood in the organization.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Halladay and the Yankees


In a recent post on Matt Cerrone's MetsBlog, I read that the Yankees are inquiring about Halladay. I also read that Halladay's top suiters will be the Yankees and the Red Sox. In another post, I read that the Red Sox like John Lackey in their 2010 rotation, leaving the Yankees with Halladay.

Does anybody get frustrated by this? The Yankees acquiring Roy Halladay will be the nail in the coffin. With Sabathia, Halladay, and Burnett, their 1-2-3 combo will be just too much to handle. The Yankees are just unfair.

Now, I shouldn't be complaining because the Mets don't have a low payroll, but its not close to the Yankees. What do teams like the Tigers or the Astros think? They are numbered 5th and 8th respectively in highest payroll, yet its no where near the Yankees'.

Whoever the Yankees want, they get. This was made clear over the years, not the mention last off season which was ridiculous.

Monday, November 16, 2009

If things would've been different in 2003

In 2003, the New York Mets drafted CF Lastings Milledge as their first pick which was the 12th in the first round. Going 13th right after him, the Blue Jays drafted then SS Aaron Hill. What would of happened if the Mets drafted Aaron Hill instead of Lastings Millege?

In five seasons with the Blue Jays, Hill has an average of .285, .337 on base percentage, and .434 slugging. In 2009, Hill hit 36 HR, 108 RBIs, drove in 103 runs, batted .286 and was an All-Star.

Would things of been different if we drafted Aaron Hill instead of Lastings Milledge? Yup. Hill would've been the short stop we're in need of. Sure, we wouldn't of gotten Ryan Church and Brian Schneider in the Milledge trade but that doesn't bother me.

Just another woulda/coulda/shoulda.

Friday, November 13, 2009

A different take on the off season


So, we at CheMETSry were thinking last night about the possible off season acquisitions. We debated much and believe to have come up with an idea that might work. Here we go:

1. Sign Matt Holliday for left field.

2. Make a serious run at Roy Halladay. If nothing comes from it, sign Joel Pineiro and Randy Wolf to make a Santana/Wolf/Pineiro/Maine/Pelfrey rotation. I'd move Perez to the bullpen as either a reliever or a long reliever. If he starts showing signs of consistency, then throw him back in the rotation.

3. Sign Carlos Delgado for a year. He'll give you the power and be nice alongside Wright, Beltran, and Holliday. Bringing Delgado back would be a cheap bridge to Ike Davis for 2011. Bringing back Delgado for a year then having Davis for 2011 would save a huge amount of money that could go to this off season.

4. Trade Castillo and bring in Orlando Hudson. I believe this transaction is way overdue and would be a super upgrade at second base.

5. With the money being saved on a cheap and temporary first base option, sign Bengie Molina as catcher.

This is what the 2010 Mets would look like:

C. Bengie Molina
1B. Carlos Delgado
2B. Orlando Hudson
SS. Jose Reyes
3B. David Wright
LF. Matt Holliday
CF. Carlos Beltran
RF. Jeff Francoeur


(All ERA's for the 09 season)

1. Johan Santana, 3.13 ERA
2. Randy Wolf, 3.23 ERA
3. Joel Pineiro, 3.49 ERA
4. John Maine, 4.43 ERA
5. Mike Pelfrey, 5.03 ERA

What do you guys think? I think that the line-up has great depth, and the rotation is pretty strong. This looks like a winning team.

Friday, November 6, 2009

Thursday, November 5, 2009

What makes a fan?


Before I go off on this rant, I'd like to go on and congratulate the Yankees on their 27th world championship. But I'm going to say that "Yankee Fans" and Yankee FANS need to be established. I am sick of this crap of hearing it from Yankee fans who watch a couple playoff games and consider themselves fans. To me a fan is one who lives and dies with their team. One who even if half the roster is injured (shout out to 2009 Met fans) will continue to look for the best in next year. A fan who is someone who can name at least the starting line up for the team. A fan isn't someone who wears a flat brim hat to look cool.

So basically what I am saying is that for the Yankee fans who have "suffered" (if you can call it that) through the last 9 years of disappointment, I congratulate you. But for the guy/girl who is celebrating just because they wear their hat and watched the playoffs or like them because it's the cool thing to do, I think you need to just treat this like another win and get real.

Secondly, how does a position player who only plays 3 games win World Series MVP?

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

What's the big deal about F-Mart?


I recently was thinking about the Mets prospect's in potential deals for other players and did an investigation on one prospect the Mets are very high on, Fernando Martinez.

The 21 year old prospect that the Mets generally feel is one of their best is not as stellar as everyone thinks. In his minor league career he has played 274 games hitting .282 with 30 homers and 132 RBI's. But what concerns me in the 274 games he has played he has struck out 226 times.

Now I know it's a stretch but I went back to some well known players and checked out their stats at his age. In 1996 at age 20 Alex Rodriguez hit .358 with 36 homers and 123 RBI's in 146 games. Jeter in his few years in the minors was a .308 hitter from age 18-21.

So after reviewing the stats not to mention his very sub par performance this year in the majors. I think it's time for Met fans to stop shouting from the roof tops that Fernando Martinez is the next messiah for the Mets, and realize that right now he's on pace to be a middle of the road everyday player. He may never live up to the young stars who have been hyped up by their team before him and may never become the incredible pro that we think he will become.

Jenrry Mejia and the AFL, 2010 Mets


Jenrry Mejia has been struggling in the Arizona Fall League starting rotation. According to Toby Hyde's Mets Minor League Blog, Mejia has posted a 12.91 ERA for a combined 7.3 innings pitched with 14 hits and 9 walks.

Should we be worried? No. He's 20 years old. He still needs a couple more years of maturing in the minors before he fulfills his projection of being a top-notch starter.

Jerry Manuel and friends watched Mejia pitch in the AFL to see if he can help the Mets bullpen in 2010. Why would they do such a thing? Though he has a minor league career ERA of 2.91, he has posted a 4.47 ERA in AA. If he went from dominating the A+ league with a 1.97 ERA to struggling in AA with a 4.47, what makes you think he's major league ready? I think this would be a huge mistake, especially at such a young age. He needs to develop his pitches more and get more experience before he gets a chance in the majors.

Friday, October 30, 2009

Bobby Parnell, starter or reliever?


Bobby Parnell got the call up in early September to join the Mets 2010 roster. He probably wasn't even ready, but everyone saw his bullet of a fastball and decided to stick him in the pen. I wonder, though, if the Mets would've let him matured in Triple A and practice his secondary pitches (like that splitter), would he of been an effective starter?

He's got the look of one. He's always poised, and always seems focused. Unlike Pelfrey, he doesn't spill his emotions out when someone hits a home run or scores against him. He stays concentrated from start to finish. He doesn't even smile.

Can Parnell be an effective starter? His scouting report includes a hard sinker, high 90s fastball, mid-80s slider which is his strikeout pitch, a developing splitter and a below MLB quality change up. If Parnell would of still of been in Triple A, would he of developed his pitches more efficiently like other young and talented pitchers, such as the Braves' RHP Tommy Hanson and be ready for the 2010 season?

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Jon Niese


I enjoyed watching Niese pitch (the two games he was recalled for after his not so good run in the beginning of the season) until he got hurt. I'd like to see him in the rotation for 2010. If he doesn't work out, he doesn't work out. Worst that can happen is that you send him back to the minors. On the upside, he gets serious MLB playing time in a hopefully healthy team that can back him up offensively and defensively.

If Niese pans out to be a solid pitcher, that would go wonderful with Brad Holt and Jenrry Mejia in a couple of years. If Holt and Mejia are major league ready and able to prove to us the reason why they're our best pitching prospects, that could get dangerous. Assuming Pelfrey finds his groove, that is one dirty rotation. But still, that is years away from happening.

Prospects excite me. So much talent yet a lot of it is just hype. The majors and the minors are day and night so you really don't have any idea. I'm just hoping for the best. Us Mets fans can use a little exciting news to look forward to, right?

Monday, October 26, 2009

The World Series


So as the Yankees officially clinch the pennant, we as Met fans are faced with possibly the worst situation possible! The cross town rival Yankees with perhaps the worst fans in sports versus the Phillies.... I don't even have to comment on the Phillies, do I?

So fellow Met fans in New York and nation wide get ready for those annoying Yankee fans to continue their chest pounding for yet another series. Oh Great.

Saturday, October 24, 2009

2010 Line Up


This is the 2010 Mets team I'd like to see happen. It's both reasonable and a little bit of a stretch, but definitely not far fetched.

C. Molina/Santos
1B. Murphy
2B. Castillo
SS. Reyes
3B. Wright
LF. Holliday
CF. Beltran
RF. Francouer

Rotation:
1. Santana
2. Halladay (If not, then Lackey)
3. Pelfrey
4. Maine
5. Perez

Reasonable, right? If everyone stays healthy, this is a very good line up. Let's hope.

Aroldis Chapman


Cuban LHP phenom? Yes. Worth $40 - $60 million? I don't think so. Who knows what he'll turn out to be and how healthy he's going to be. Way too much money for a huge risk such as that. Save that money for this off season and shape the Mets into the championship caliber team it was meant to be.

Sure, he can throw 100 and has been clocked to throw 102, but our farm system will not vastly improve just by having him there. Sure, it would be awesome signing him and having him develop as a Met but with all the holes we have in our Major League roster, we can't devote all that money to the minors.

It would be pretty sweet though.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Bring Halladay to New York

Halladay needs to be here. After everything that has happened this year, fans deserve something to look forward to going on to next season. Some say we're out of the Halladay sweepstakes because we lack the prospects/aren't willing to give the ones we have away. The Mets have the money to spend on Halladay, especially when Wilpon said they won't be cutting spending this off season.

With the Yankees not looking for pitching this off season, I'd say we have a decent chance to get Halladay. It might be a stretch, but we did score Johan. Plus, why wouldn't Halladay want to play in New York? He'll get the money, the spotlight, and (hopefully) a good chance to win.

Santana/Halladay would also be very deadly as our 1-2 punch. Sounds good to me, what about you Omar?