After Month-and-a-half,
Mets Need Turnaround
But first to me player analysis …
75. Flame
throwing Josh Hader is up next.
Throw him in there in the eighth and he will get a six-out save. His arsenal of
pitches is lethal to the hitters because he could twirl a curve that would look
outside and then turn in, then throw a cutting slider for a strike, and then
throw his unique fastball to finish off the batter. He hasn’t pitched like the
Josh Hader in his prime with 2 losses with a 2.95 ERA with 6 walks in 18.1
innings and 4 hit by pitches. He has more than a strikeout per inning and gives
up less than a hit an inning. He gave up 6 runs this year in addition to his
control makes him a godsend for the Brewers with an okay bullpen. He strikes
out about 60% of his batters faced and retires 79% of them. I don’t see any
room for improvement for him and the Brewers should just let him grow. I think
he should be in the mid to high 60s.
74. Chris Taylor. From being a bench warmer
(no, that’s not the correct word, more like, bench burner) in Seattle to being
a cornerstone of the Dodgers franchise (the Dodgers are like a Rectangular
Prism, with 8 corners.) He posted a 17-homer season last year with 63 RBI and
85 runs. He’s definitely improving every single year. He needs to work on just
making contact with the ball for hits. His .254 batting average is definitely
not what I expected of him. He is a flexible guy that could play center,
second, short, but he made most of his appearances as second and left this year
with Corey Seager back from injury.
He also needs to work on his batting eye, with 55 walks last year, ranking him
tied for 68th in the season. He’s always been fast, with 37 steals
in his career, I think that he could exceed 17 steals (his season/career high)
this year. I think that he should be in the low 50s.
73. Mike Clevinger is next but he’s not
going to have a great year because he’s on the 60-day DL. He’s just not such a
great pitcher. Last year he went 200 innings, amazing, only 13 pitchers did
that, all of them not what you think of when someone says “elite pitchers.” His
run totals are pretty high, 71 in all. He gave up 21 homers last year, which is
a lot you might think, but last year, that’s actually tied for 54th,
crazy right? He gave up 164 hits last year with 67 walks. The Indians rotation
is good and Mike is really a dark horse. He cruises through innings easily, averaging
more than a strikeout per inning. His ERA is above 3, he retires around 80% of
his batters faced, when you crunch numbers, you find stuff. I think he should
be right where he is.
72. Now it’s Walker Beuhler turn. He’s 4-0 with a
pretty high ERA, but let’s really get into his stats. He’s given up 21 runs in
about 36 innings. He struck out 32 guys, not a big power pitcher. He strikes
out only 22% of his batters faced. He likes to go around and get pop ups and
grounders more. About 72% of the guys he faces, he retires. He’s given up only
4 homers and allowed 31 hits. Beuhler really proved himself in the playoffs
last year where he emerged as a really good pitcher. In 23.2 innings, he struck
out 29, he only gave up 16 hits and gave up only 10 runs, working mostly out of
the bullpen. In the World Series, he started one game and pitched 7 solid
innings giving up only two hits and striking out 7. He got the no decision and
the Dodgers won their only game of the World Series. I think he should be in
the 40s.
71. Up next is Brandon Nimmo. I think he’s a five-tool
player, he just needs to expand on that and grow. His breakout year was last
year, with 17 homers, his RBIs weren’t that great with 47 and 77 runs. He hit 8
triples and stole 9 bases. He walked 80 times with a .404 OBP and got beaned 22
times in 140 games. He hit 53 extra base hits and about 46% of his hits were
extra base hits. He led off for the Mets 65 times last year, you could call him
the leadoff hitter for the Amazins. He’s off to not-the-best start but I think
he has potential this year. His fielding is amazing, he has four errors in his
whole career. He makes great catches almost every night. I think he should be
in the high 40s, low 50s.
The Mets need to
pick it up, lost 5 of their 6, which is not that good. Jed Lowrie will stay in Syracuse for the weekend and then come back
Monday. We’re playing the Marlins, a pretty easy opponent, so maybe here the
Mets can start a winning rally. Albert
Pujols made history and in some amount of style. He bombed a solo shot for
his 2,000th RBI, now, I want to do that. Jackie Bradely Jr. made a beautiful catch literally robbing Trey Mancini of a homer, not the first
one he’s caught like that. Francisco
Lindor is not off to a Francisco-Lindor-type of start to the season, only
four homers, 7 RBIs and 9 runs. He’s stole 2 bags and only 4 extra base hits,
rough start for him. Shohei Ohtani
is back and he got his first hit and RBI of 2019 against the Tigers. Christian Yelich drank some sort of
power drink when he went from Miami to Milwaukee (or maybe it was some good
beer). He is raking it in Milwaukee, with winning MVP last season and hitting
16 homers this year with 37 RBIs. The Red Sox are coming out of the dumpster to
being third place in the AL East at .500. Something really crazy happened, The
St. Louis Cardinals scored 17 against the Pirates, usually, a team who scored
17 runs would’ve hit a home run, but no, they didn’t. Marcell Ozuna, who went 1-4, got 4 RBIs and 2 runs, somehow. Now,
one of the most exciting times for baseball fans in the baseball season, the
MLB Draft, June 3 to June 5, it’s gonna be lit. The Yankees somehow have the 4th
best record in the AL, some players are coming back, no more Wal-Mart baggers,
but no one really good, but JA Happ allowed
only 1 hit in 5 innings, what a pickup for the Yankees.
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