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]
"It's a new challenge and I'm excited about it," Putz told the Seattle Times. "I'm going to a new team that's going to be very competitive. Frankie's a great closer and with Sean Green going as well, we should have a great bullpen."



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Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


Ah, but you're too young to recall Alain LeDouche. Those were ze days, mon ami.


Posted


]

Mets now have terrific twosome in 'pen

By Jayson Stark
ESPN.com


LAS VEGAS -- The New York Mets of 2008 didn't just have a closer problem. They had a bullpen problem.



The Mets of 2008 didn't just have a ninth-inning problem. They had a how-the-heck-do-we-get-to-the-ninth-inning problem.
Well, not anymore.
Now, after a stunning 12-player, three-team, winter meetings megadeal Wednesday night, the Mets have transformed their bullpen and transformed themselves.
J.J. Putz and Francisco Rodriguez aren't merely an upgrade on Luis Ayala and Duaner Sanchez/Aaron Heilman/Scott Schoeneweis/insert your favorite other Mets setup villain here.
J.J. Putz and K-Rod are an upgrade on everybody's eighth-and-ninth-inning bullpen-assassin combo.


Who beats that tag team? "Nobody," said one longtime talent evaluator Wednesday night. "To me, they're the best. And they're not just a great duo. They're a strikeout duo, too. There won't be many balls in play when those two guys are out there. As big as strikeouts are in the ninth inning, sometimes they're even bigger in the eighth."

True facts: K-Rod averaged 10.14 strikeouts per nine innings this season. Putz, even in a down year, averaged 10.88 whiffs per nine innings. And that was in the American League, where the lineups run nine deep.
Only two National League teams had a closer-setup combo in which each pitcher racked up that high a punch-out rate in 2008 -- the Cubs (Kerry Wood/Carlos Marmol) and the Dodgers (Takashi Saito/Jonathan Broxton/Hong-Chih Kuo). Not coincidentally, those staffs ranked third and first, respectively, in the league in bullpen ERA.
But now Wood is gone in Chicago. Saito is hurt in L.A. And it's the Mets who have assumed the throne.
We asked around Wednesday night in a lobby packed with baseball people. Nobody could come up with an eighth-inning/ninth-inning combo as formidable as the Mets' new twosome.
The reason is simple. As long as these two are healthy, there isn't a better tandem.
"They can play a 21-out game now," the same evaluator said of the Mets. "I give them a lot of credit. They just made a $13 million investment [in K-Rod], and now they've bolstered it with a character guy whose character is so good, he'll be willing to pitch the eighth inning."
Putz, of course, will have to be healthier than he was in 2008, when his 3.88 ERA was nearly triple his 1.38 mark in '07. But if he is, he changes the Mets' whole persona.

Just consider the bullpen disaster that did in this team this season:

The Mets were 13th in the league in ERA from the seventh inning on and 13th in bullpen ERA overall.

They blew 29 saves -- second most in the National League, behind St. Louis.

They gave up 61 home runs from the seventh inning on, tied with the Giants for the most in the league.

And those aren't even the most devastating numbers that defined the Mets' season. Consider these numbers:

If all games had ended after six innings this season, the Mets would have finished the year 11 games ahead of the Phillies (aka, the team that won the World Series).

If all games had ended after seven innings, the Mets would have finished six games ahead of the Phillies.

And if all games had even been just eight innings long instead of nine, the Mets would have finished five games ahead of the Phillies.

But the rules are the rules. And the rules say they had to play all nine. And it was those final innings that crushed the Mets.

The Phillies lost no games they led after eight innings. The Mets lost seven of them -- and lost 13 games they led after seven innings.

That's how seasons slip away. That's how one fatal flaw can undermine everyone and everything. That was the story of the 2008 Mets.

So one miraculous trade later, this doesn't just look like a whole new bullpen. It looks like a whole new team.


Guest Rockin' Doc
Guests
Posted


"If all games had ended after six innings this season, the Mets would have finished the year 11 games ahead of the Phillies (aka, the team that won the World Series).

If all games had ended after seven innings, the Mets would have finished six games ahead of the Phillies.

And if all games had even been just eight innings long instead of nine, the Mets would have finished five games ahead of the Phillies."


Wow, those are pretty telling stats. I knew the bullpen was costly last season, but those facts really point out just how costly the bullpen actually was.


Posted


="Rockin' Doc":2m19qgyh]"If all games had ended after six innings this season, the Mets would have finished the year 11 games ahead of the Phillies (aka, the team that won the World Series).

If all games had ended after seven innings, the Mets would have finished six games ahead of the Phillies.

And if all games had even been just eight innings long instead of nine, the Mets would have finished five games ahead of the Phillies."[/quote:2m19qgyh]

The pen was obviously the biggest culprit in those above scenarios although the offense's habit of scoring more early than late contributed as well. The net effect was to make the pen look even worse than it really was by removing any margin of error and turning every run given up into a disaster.







metirish
Dec 14 2008 02:51 PM


Yet Miniya thinks the offense was fine last season

From the Hot Stove December 11th




]
Minaya on getting more offense.




Quote:


"Before I start moving my dollars to offense, I have to move my dollars to pitching," the GM said."Last year was very simple guys. We had 20 blown saves. We scored the runs."







Edgy DC
Dec 14 2008 05:13 PM


In general, it was fine. It was just disproportionately better in the front end of games, contributing to some of those numbers.







Ashie62
Dec 14 2008 06:27 PM


I remeber several years ago the Mets were dumoing on the Rockies Mike DeJean and McCarver said "well this inning is in De Jean"







TransMonk
Dec 18 2008 12:40 PM


I have to say, the more I hear from J.J., the more I like him.

And, I was pretty impressed to begin with.







Frayed Knot
Dec 19 2008 12:16 PM


Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Dec 19 2008 12:30 PM




How do you solve a problem like Putz?

John Branch (never heard of him) at the NYTimes looks into the origin, Hungarian; proper pronunciation, 'Puts'; and the potential pitfalls for headline writers concerning the new set-up man.

The Mets solved the problem of his introduction by boldly printing on the scoreboard: 'Mets Welcome J.J.'







metirish
Dec 19 2008 12:24 PM


Putz said yesterday that he might ask Hojo for #20.







metirish
Dec 19 2008 12:59 PM


="Frayed Knot"]How do you solve a problem like Putz?

John Branch (never heard of him) at the NYTimes looks into the origin, Hungarian; proper pronunciation, 'Puts'; and the potential pitfalls for headline writers concerning the new set-up man.

The Mets solved the problem of his introduction by boldly printing on the scoreboard: 'Mets Welcome J.J.'


Interesting that Bill Sweeney the headline writer over at the Snooze is not looking at Putz as a headline opportunity.







metsguyinmichigan
Dec 19 2008 01:17 PM


They're probably not going to sell too many t-shirts with "Putz" on the back.

And I don't like the wide soul patch.

But I have to tell you, dude is saying all the right things. This might up being Omar's best move of the off-season.







John Cougar Lunchbucket
Dec 19 2008 01:31 PM


What's encouraging is to hear some good things about Sean Green who came along with Putzy in the deal.

Putz in the Snooze today called Green "a machine" and sincerely sounded like a strong endorsement, and Keith Law of ESPN called him the 4th most important acquisition of the winter in all of bb (behind CC, K-Rod and JJ, saying he'd be to the Mets as valuable as Bradford in 06.







Benjamin Grimm
Dec 19 2008 02:06 PM


That would be good if Sean Green ends up being a solid bullpenner.

I am glad the Mets got Putz, but I do regret losing Joe Smith for one year of Putz. So I do hope Green can contribute in 2010 and beyond.







A Boy Named Seo
Dec 19 2008 02:38 PM


That 70/30 talk seemed kind of unecessary. Like a bone that didn't need to be thrown Putz's way. But now it's out there and expectations are kind of attached to it. Hope it doesn't bite Jerry's arse down the road.







smg58
Dec 19 2008 03:02 PM


If the Mets get 100 save opportunities, a 70/30 split will work out to everybody's satisfaction.

Green was terrific for the first four months last year, but 58 innings in four months was more than he could handle and he imploded in August and September. If his arm has recovered and they pace him for 65 or so innings, he could have a really good year.







A Boy Named Seo
Dec 19 2008 03:33 PM


If we get 100 save opps, we're winning like 115 games anyway, so none of this will matter.



Posted


Yet Miniya thinks the offense was fine last season

From the Hot Stove December 11th




]
Minaya on getting more offense.




Quote:


"Before I start moving my dollars to offense, I have to move my dollars to pitching," the GM said."Last year was very simple guys. We had 20 blown saves. We scored the runs."


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


In general, it was fine. It was just disproportionately better in the front end of games, contributing to some of those numbers.


Posted (edited)


How do you solve a problem like Putz?

John Branch (never heard of him) at the NYTimes looks into the origin, Hungarian; proper pronunciation, 'Puts'; and the potential pitfalls for headline writers concerning the new set-up man.

The Mets solved the problem of his introduction by boldly printing on the scoreboard: 'Mets Welcome J.J.'


Edited by Guest
Posted


="Frayed Knot"]How do you solve a problem like Putz?

John Branch (never heard of him) at the NYTimes looks into the origin, Hungarian; proper pronunciation, 'Puts'; and the potential pitfalls for headline writers concerning the new set-up man.

The Mets solved the problem of his introduction by boldly printing on the scoreboard: 'Mets Welcome J.J.'


Interesting that Bill Sweeney the headline writer over at the Snooze is not looking at Putz as a headline opportunity.


Guest metsguyinmichigan
Guests
Posted


They're probably not going to sell too many t-shirts with "Putz" on the back.

And I don't like the wide soul patch.

But I have to tell you, dude is saying all the right things. This might up being Omar's best move of the off-season.


Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
Guests
Posted


What's encouraging is to hear some good things about Sean Green who came along with Putzy in the deal.

Putz in the Snooze today called Green "a machine" and sincerely sounded like a strong endorsement, and Keith Law of ESPN called him the 4th most important acquisition of the winter in all of bb (behind CC, K-Rod and JJ, saying he'd be to the Mets as valuable as Bradford in 06.


Posted


That would be good if Sean Green ends up being a solid bullpenner.

I am glad the Mets got Putz, but I do regret losing Joe Smith for one year of Putz. So I do hope Green can contribute in 2010 and beyond.


Posted


That 70/30 talk seemed kind of unecessary. Like a bone that didn't need to be thrown Putz's way. But now it's out there and expectations are kind of attached to it. Hope it doesn't bite Jerry's arse down the road.


Posted


If the Mets get 100 save opportunities, a 70/30 split will work out to everybody's satisfaction.

Green was terrific for the first four months last year, but 58 innings in four months was more than he could handle and he imploded in August and September. If his arm has recovered and they pace him for 65 or so innings, he could have a really good year.


Guest
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