Thursday, October 27, 2011

Cutnpaste: - Jason Bay, Brian Bannister, Taylor Buchhotz, Juan Carlos Gamboa, Juan Lagares


Jason Bay: You must be joking. People are saying all the time that the Mets should trade Bay. What planet are they on? Bay has not played well since signing as a Met; he’s been injured and has a hefty contract. Can you see the line forming now? The Mets have two hopes for him: 1) he stays healthy and meets expectations to salvage the final two years, or 2) if that doesn’t happen, then he doesn’t get the necessary at-bats and games for his option to kick in. Two more years. http://www.newyorkmetsreport.com/2011/10/25/mets-have-precious-few-pieces-to-trade

11) Brian Bannister -  His fastball hovered in the upper-80s and he lacked a killer out pitch, but Brian Bannister parlayed an arsenal of average stuff into an eight-year pro career which paid him nearly $5 million. He not only understood advanced statistical metrics, but he applied them on the field, developing a cutter, revamping his curveball, and generally using numbers to try to stay one step ahead of his competition. But ultimately, a propensity to give up the long ball and an inability to get strikeouts brought Bannister’s feel-good story to an end. —Jeff Euston  http://www.baseballprospectus.com/article.php?articleid=15364

found it interesting that the Mets activated Taylor Buchholz from the 60 day disabled list.  After losing almost the entire season to depression the team could have easily justified out-righting him and hoping to resign  on a minor league deal or even moving on altogether.  The 29 y/o right hander will cost the team under 1M to keep and maybe showing him the support they have, will help him on his road to recovery.  Not only is it decent move, morally but it may also turn out to be beneficial to the club.  In 2009 Buchholz was a dominant set-up man for the Rockies posting a 2.17 ERA in 63 games  ( 2010 mostly lost to injuries) and last year he posted a 3.12 ERA with 8 game finishes in 32 appearances.  I've linked this article before but I wanted to again, to remind us all of Taylor's struggles and the rapport he has with the Mets... http://www.metsfever.com/2011/10/more-on-buchholz-and-mets.html

10-26-11: - http://www.metstoday.com/7132/mets-minors/a-look-into-the-future-top-shortstop-prospects   -  Juan Carlos Gamboa DOB: 4/18/1991  Birthplace: Los Mochis, Sinaloa, Mexico  Height: 5’7”  Weight: 152  L/R - Gamboa was not on anyone’s radar prior to this season and he is still not on anyone’s radar. He’s your “little engine that could” story. The first thing that jumps out is his height: 5’7”. Right away, you might think of Jose Altuve, the dynamic second basemen for the Houston Astros who proved everyone wrong this season. But this is Gamboa’s first real season. He’s got a ways ahead of him. With his height, you cannot project power. He jumped between 4 leagues this season, starting out in Mexico (no idea there was a team there), to Gulf Coast, to Kingsport, to Savannah. In a combined 61 games, Gamboa hit .293 with 5 homeruns, while driving in 25 runs. He struck out 41 times in 191 at-bats, which is worrisome, but he’s only 20 years old.

 10-26-11: - http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2011/10/26/colemans-corner-mets-position-players-shining-in-arizona-sun   - We’ll start with Juan Lagares, a gap hitter and likely corner outfielder. Lagares split time between Single A St. Lucie and Double AA Binghamton this past season. At St. Lucie he hit .338 – which led the Florida State League when he was promoted – with 7 HR and 49 RBI in 82 games, but at Binghamton he performed even better – in 38 games, Lagares batted .370 with 2 HR and 22 RBI while also stealing 10 bases. His combined average of .349 was the 4th best overall in the entire minor leagues. And Lagares has not disappointed thus far in Arizona. He’s hitting .393 with 2 HR and 9 RBI and an OPS of 1.128. Last Saturday, he went 3-5 with a HR, triple and 4 RBI. That extended his hitting streak to 6 games and his RBI streak to 4 games. Lagares also has 4 multi-hit games out of 6 games and ironically, a righty hitter, he’s batting .500 (11-22) vs. righthanders and is 0-6 vs. lefties.

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