Showing posts with label New York Mets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York Mets. Show all posts

Sunday, April 2, 2017

2017 Baseball Predictions

2017 MLB PREDICTIONS:


NL MVP - Bryce Harper WAS OF
NL CY YOUNG - Jacob deGrom NYM SP
NL Rookie of the Year - Dansby Swanson ATL SS


AL MVP - Mookie Betts BOS OF
AL Cy Young - Andrew Miller CLE RP
AL Rookie of the Year - Andrew Benintendi BOS OF


NL East - Washington Nationals
NL Central - Chicago Cubs
NL West - Los Angeles Dodgers


NL WC1 - New York Mets
NL WC2 - Arizona Diamondbacks


AL East - Boston Red Sox
AL Central - Cleveland Indians
AL West - Houston Astros


AL WC 1 - Seattle Mariners
AL WC 2 - Toronto Blue Jays


PLAYOFFS:


NYM over ARI


WAS over LAD
NYM over CHI


NYM over WAS


SEA over TOR


HOU over SEA
BOS over CLE


HOU over BOS


WORLD SERIES PREDICTION:

New York Mets over Houston Astros

Thursday, March 30, 2017

2017 NL East Preview

  1. Washington Nationals - From the reigning Cy Young award winner to one of the best young sluggers in the game and perhaps another exciting young shortstop to join a plethora of them across baseball, the Nationals have the look of one of the best teams in baseball. I look for a huge bounce back year from Bryce Harper. The Nationals don't have a very complete lineup but it's exceptional in a lot of places making it very tough.

Bold prediction: Bryce Harper will hit 60 HRs.

Breakout player(s): Trea Turner SS/Joe Ross SP/Koda Glover RP

  1. New York Mets - Here's my theory: The 2017 New York Mets will win the world series. Lucas Duda is playing for likely the only payday of his career. Neil Walker is playing for probably his last payday of his career. Same for Jose Reyes and Jay Bruce. It's time for Matt Harvey to start putting together some consistency before he hits the free agent market in a few years. Jacob deGrom looks good in the spring. Steven Matz and Zack Wheeler have a lot to prove. I think there's all the makings of a big season from a lot of Mets and if there's one thing I know, you can bank on guys playing for more money (see what I did there?).

Bold prediction: Was them winning the World Series not bold enough? Here's one - The Mets have three pitchers in the top 5 of the Cy Young award voting.

Breakout player: Bob Gsellman SP

  1. Atlanta Braves - I'm not going to lie, I still have no idea what the Braves are doing but good grief do they have an impressive collection of young arms and Bartolo Colon. It's not the flashiest lineup but it should be good enough to give the Nationals and Mets a run for their money atop the division.

Bold prediction: The Braves keep themselves in the pennant race enough to make a few deadline moves. For fun I'm going to predict they add Evan Longoria near the deadline.

  1. Miami Marlins - If you don't feel for the Marlins and what happened to them with Jose Fernandez, you're just cold blooded. It'll be hard not to root for the Fish this year and while they have some great players, I just don't think the Fish have enough pitching to keep up in the pitching rich NL East. I think people finally saw how good Christian Yelich is during the WBC.

Bold prediction: Giancarlo Stanton engages Bryce Harper in a Mark McGwire/Sammy Sosa like home run showdown.

Breakout player: JT Realmuto C

  1. Philadelphia Phillies - The Phillies, like the Braves have a really good collection of young pitchers. I don't think it's out of the realm of possibility the Braves, Marlins and Phillies each finish at .500 or close to it. Philadelphia has something special brewing and if their collection of young arms start to contribute, the bandwagon is going to start to fill up fast.

Bold prediction: Philadelphia will get the nod to host the 2019 All Star 🌟 game, making the NL the host for the fifth time in six years.

Breakout player: Odubel Herrera OF

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Yasiel Puig, Cubs Lineup, and Why MLB Needs To Adjust Their Scheduling Early in the Season

Before I begin, let’s not get crazy with our reactions. About six days ago, the sky was falling because the Cardinals were 0-3 and couldn’t score a run to save their lives. Since then, all I hear about is how many runs the Cardinals have scored compared to the Cubs.


Now Mets pitchers are all of a sudden struggling and the “Metsees” (as Keith Hernandez would say) are winless in their last three or whatever and Matt Harvey’s strikeouts are down, Jacob deGrom is dealing with a back issue and Steven Matz was just shelled by a right-handed heavy Marlins lineup.


Maybe, just maybe, it’s too soon to hit the panic button in some of these scenarios.


I want to start today though with the scheduling of Major League Baseball.


I sat last night, watching the Mets and Marlins play at a very cold Citi Field. I sat Sunday watching the Mets host the Phillies at a frigid Citi Field, and I watched Saturday night watching players and umpires do anything they could to keep any part of their bodies warm.


This is ridiculous. The worst thing is, that’s not the only baseball that I have seen in the cold weather this year or the last, well 20-whatever I’ve been watching.


Here’s the deal MLB: I know you want teams to get home games in the early part of the schedule. I understand that. I really do. But a warm-weather Marlins club playing the New York Mets in the first weeks of the season in the northeast, notoriously cold, is just ludicrous.



And yes, I do understand you can’t load up a warm or dome team’s schedule with all home games in the first few weeks of the season, I totally get that too.


And I’m not saying the Mets or Phillies or Twins or Tigers should play their first home game in mid-to-late April, but can we do a better job of scheduling?


Why are we playing so many night games when the temperature across the midwest and northeast drops almost 15-20 degrees once the sun sets at quarter to eight?


While these teams need home games, they also need fan support to make money at these events, and if you watched any baseball at all, section after section at stadium after stadium are empty, because who wants to go out and sit and watch a baseball game when game time temperatures are 45-degrees at best, and will only drop as the evening moves along?


Hell, who wants to even play in that? I used to and it totally sucks.


This is what baseball needs to to.


First, the first week of the season, there’s no reason the Texas Rangers and Houston Astros should be playing anywhere but their home parks, against teams like Minnesota or Detroit.


Second, the first almost three weeks of the season, games in cold weather cities (obviously excluding Milwaukee, Toronto and Seattle, who play in domes) need to be day games.


Why? Because the day time temperatures in these locations are significantly warmer than evening and night temperatures, drawing more fans, making the game better to be a part of for the players and more watchable for the fan in the stands and at home.


Additionally, day games need to be scheduled in case rain and inclement weather pushes the start times back.


But finally, warm weather games need to be scheduled because teams probably aren’t bringing in the money the normally do during a fair-to-good weather day at the ballpark.


Just taking a stab in the dark judging by the empty seats you see all over the place at these early season games.


And, again, I do realize a lot of these seats are probably empty because people aren’t inclined to take work off early in the year, especially with kids in school still, to go to the ballpark, but the junk weather is making that decision to stay in so much easier.


This is something that has bothered me for a long time and watching a warm weather Miami Marlins team play in New York last night was really annoying to watch. 

Other notes: 



  • Don’t look now, but the lightning rod that is Yasiel Puig is off to a roaring start in 2016. So far, Puig has a home run, 4 RBIs and a 5:4 BB:K ratio.



  • The Chicago Cubs overcame a 3-run deficit and were no-hit through almost seven innings and still won Monday night proving just how difficult it will be to not only shut this offense out, but hold them down an entire game. I’m setting the over/under at 3 for shutouts of this offense this season.




  • Speaking of being shut out, the Tampa Bay Rays offense continues to slide early in the year. I’ve said it over and over and over, but the Rays have the pitching to beat any offense on any night, will their bats give them enough support to get past that three-run threshold that I think is going to be the key number for this team this year? It’s a rock fight every night you play Tampa and the first to three is usually going to be the winner.



  • We got our first glimpse of the future outfield in Texas a few years ago, when Joey Gallo, then a third basemen, made his big league debut. Now Nomar Mazara is the latest Rangers phenom to break into the big leagues and has done so in amazing fashion (5-for-8 with a HR, 2 RBIs). The Rangers have a special player in Mazara with another one in Lewis Brinson right behind him. I said it earlier this weekend, that outfield in Texas is going to be the best in baseball as soon as next summer. I would not want to be a pitcher in the American League West in the near future.



  • Speaking of the AL West, they’re the only league without a team above .500 thus far (as of Tuesday’s games). I picked the A’s to win the division, and if their pitching staff finds health and consistency, that’s not a team that you want to get down in the mud and play in July, August or September. Billy Beane put together a really good team this year. As Brad Pitt said in Moneyball, “You may not look like a winning team, but you are one.” 2016 totally epitomizes the moneyball mentality of the Oakland A’s.


There’s just a few early thoughts of mine as we get into the 2016 MLB season, I’m going to work on a prospect piece for you. Some guys to keep an eye on in the minors this summer.

Check out my Facebook Page, Seth’s Sports Talk or follow me on Twitter, @seth_sportstalk. Always active and up for good sports discussion.

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

The Offseason of the New York Mets

You know guys, I was thinking about this.... It's been the offseason of the New York Mets.

It's crazy. Even though the Royals won the World Series and the Cubs had the headlines early with adding Jason Heyward and Ben Zobrist, but the buzz is all about those pitchers - then Mike Piazza gets voted to the Hall of Fame.

Then they swoop in and resign Yoenis Cespedes - stunning everyone.

Now they announce Piazza is gonna get his number retired this summer.

I know a lot of teams are getting better too, but the Mets are winning the offseason with the headlines.

Now they gotta do it on the field.

It's a good time to be a Mets fan.

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Seth's Spiel: Winter Meetings Day 2 Reaction

Have I ever said how much I love the Winter Meetings?
I was ready to Tweet and react to my heart’s content yesterday throughout the day but then nothing happened. I get home from work and I have to go back and all hell breaks loose and everybody decides to lose their minds.
Diamondbacks/Braves Blockbuster
Here’s my biggest takeaway from Day 2 of the Winter Meetings: No matter who’s in charge, no matter how much progress you think they are making, the Arizona Diamondbacks are going to continue do boneheaded things.
Everyone talks about how improved this rotation is and how the National League West is now on notice.
Friends, I buy it a little bit. But let’s not ignore the fact they just mortgaged the future to incrementally make themselves better. They paid paid for Park Avenue but are getting Prospect Heights.
Yes, Shelby Miller is coming off his best season as a pro and is only 25 but if we go back to his minor league days, Miller has always struggled with control.
He’s had a great pro career but his walk to strikeout ratio is a hair-above 2-to-1. His WHIP is OK, 1.24 for his career, and his 3.22 ERA is pretty good.
Is Miller a good add for Arizona, yes, he is. But what get’s me about the Dbacks is they gave up too much. 
Too much.
Dansby Swanson was the number one overall pick last year for a reason. If he has a good, not great or stellar, but good year in the minor leagues, he could be in the big leagues this fall.
I’ve always liked Aaron Blair. I thought he was as close as any prospect to the big leagues and as promising a prospect as Arizona had other than maybe Archie Bradley.
I personally think Blair alone, is going to end up better than Miller. But the Diamondbacks totally went over the deep end and added their future shortstop to the mix.
Not to mention, giving up Ender Inciarte, who finished fifth in the Rookie of the Year voting in 2014, then followed that performance up with an even better one in 2015.
I just cannot fathom Arizona once again, proving how absolutely inept they are at running a franchise. It is just astounding. If I was a Dbacks fan, I would hate this trade.
Ownership has put their fanbase in a tough spot, because this team has promise. They could have stood pat this winter and been an arguable favorite in the west.
I actually would like to redact what I said that this deal actually makes the Diamondbacks WORSE. Worse in the long run.
They gave up a franchise shortstop with no reasonable options at the position for the long term. They gave up a guy with the ceiling of a one or two starter and a very solid outfielder that would have been a huge part of an already stellar offense.
I just do not understand this team, it’s management, or what they are trying to accomplish.
If they wanted a starting pitcher and they were hell bent on using that particular set of players to get one, personally, I think they could have done a helluva lot better than Shelby Miller.
But that’s my opinion.

That said, how much pitching do the Atlanta Braves need?
I’ve tweeted time and again, the Atlanta Braves are going to have a record ERA in a few years, however, they’re going to have an absolutely inept offense.
John Hart and his staff has completely revamped the Braves pitching rotation for the future. There is no question. This rotation is going to be beyond scaring, it’ll be frightening, especially if a handful of the dozens of talents they have pan out.
But where are they going to get runs from?
There is always the possibility they trade their arms for a bat or two, and that could likely happen, but the way this future lineup is constructed, there is next to no firepower, especially if they are still set on trading Freddie Freeman.
Dansby Swanson is now the obvious replacement for Andrelton Simmons. It scares me to have Swanson now in the NL East, but good for the Braves.
Other than him, where are the Braves going to find any offense? Of their top ten prospects, just two are hitters (Swanson) and the other is a low-level shortstop.
I don’t know where the Braves want to go with all this, and I don’t know that they know where they want to go with all this, but it is looking mighty good to be a Braves fan right now.
Eventually, they are going to have to put runs on the board to support these arms and get some victories.
We’ll see if Johnny Hart has some more tricks up his sleeve as we go forward. He’s basically robbed everybody out west of their young talent to this point.

Cubs
Here’s where I come out with this Cubs adding Zobrist and moving Castro.
I think the move is great.
First of all, thank you Theo and Jed for taking Zobrist away from the Mets. I had no interest in that guy coming to New York.
Not because I don’t like Zobrist, but let’s consider the Mets roster construction. Strong young pitching. But if you add Zobrist, you have three 35-plus year old players on your roster at some point next season that need playing time because of their salaries.
Additionally, you’re pretty much at the corner spots with Duda and Wright, and let’s not kid ourselves, David Wright is a shell of his former self.
So all in all, I’m OK with Chicago “stealing” Zobrist from the Mets.
I think he adds another great bat to their lineup. I think he gives them tremendous flexibility if or when, the Cubs need. And I think he’s just a downright, solid, hard working baseball player that is going to be a great mentor to some of the young players they’re developing.
As for Castro, I know the Cubs sold very low on him.
His trade value has never been tremendous and most Cubs fans and baseball people would probably admit he was always going to be the odd man out there.
I know the Cubs liked Adam Warren, and that’s fine. But I thought they could have done better. I think they caught themselves in the midst of the Zobrist negotiations and realized they had to do something with their middle infield, and found the first suitor that would take Castro.
From the Yankees end of things, I think it's a great move. Castro is likely to place second base from everything I saw, and I think he is going to thrive in that ballpark.
Reactionary move if you ask me.

A couple other things from Day 2:

  • As a Mets fan, I really think they need to bring Cespedes back. This is a middle of the pack lineup as constructed without him. If they go into 2015 without Daniel Murphy and Yoenis Cespedes with no upgrades anywhere else on the field, except to play Michael Conforto regularly, then I can’t live with that and as a fan, I’ll be livid. I know there’s already too many outfielders on this roster, but guess what? There were already too many outfielders on the roster when he was added back in July. Terry and company can figure it out or they can easily trade someone to make room (Maybe Granderson who will be 35 on Opening Day and I can’t say I count on him repeating his 2015 performance, which was way better than I ever thought he could do). I need firepower and someone in the lineup that makes it respectable, and Cespedes is the guy. I don’t want to hear about his defense and his unwillingness to play centerfield or right field or whatever. It can be done because it already has. The Mets clearly don’t care about defense because Wilmer Flores and Daniel Murphy was their Opening Day middle infield and Travis d’Arnaud is our catcher.

  • I sat and blasted the Diamondbacks for their ineptitude, it’s time I do the same to the Marlins for even considering moving the best arm they’ve maybe ever had to come through their system.
    This is so typical Marlins. Rob Manfred and the powers that be aren’t going to tell Miami they can’t move Fernandez, but if this trade happens, baseball has to address Jeffry Loria and his ownership of that franchise and do a comprehensive top to bottom analysis of what’s best for them and the city. It’s beyond disgraceful the way things are handled year to year in Miami, not to mention they have a state of the art, brand new stadium that has yet to have a winner on the field and at the same time is being financed by the taxpayers. Miami not only deserves a winner, there is absolutely no reason under their perpetual sun they can’t have one. It’s a terrific market with a lot of money and diversity and city that actually wants a baseball team. Disgraceful.

Sunday, March 1, 2015

2015 MLB Power Rankings

Alright ladies and gentlemen, we are 5 weeks from Opening Night, and it is my favorite time of the year! When I put together my annual Power Rankings list and get a lot opinions.


As the Joker says: Here! We! Go!

Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Breakout Candidate Profile: Travis d'Arnaud

Readers, believe it or not, we are literally days away from pitchers and catchers reporting. I don’t get excited like the overzealous baseball fan does because honestly 9 weeks of over analzying and over-discussing everything just gets tiresome, not to mention there’s a perfectly awesome college basketball season and NHL campaign going on that should more than hold the sports fan’s attention for at least another month.


But that said, it is never too early to start thinking fantasy baseball. I don’t know how deep some of you play, but I’m in a league that goes almost year ‘round. (We take a break for about two weeks after the World Series and every body is in full fledge get better mode)