Centerfield Old-Timey Member Posted November 6, 2009 Posted November 6, 2009 Anyway, moving on from this fucktardish season...If I'm the GM I do the following:1. Fire Jerry. Hire Bobbby V.2. Bring back Benny Agbayani as strength and conditioning coach. Or head of player development. Something. We need Benny.3. Ask Jeff Wilpon to increase payroll by $40-$50 million. If he says anything but yes (including "I can't make such a decision unilaterally") I go to the press and say Jeff Wilpon is not committed to winning and won't give me the resources I need to build a winner. I'm either immediately fired, or I now have some payroll flexibility.4. I sign Matt Holliday and John Lackey. Sure, they look like the Carlos Lee and Kevin Appier of this year's weak free agent crop, but what the hell...I have extra money.5. Trade Niese, Fartinez, Murphy and Maine for Adrian Gonzalez.6. Two words: Bullpen Car7. Trade Luis Castillo and Jeff Franceour to the Astros for Carlos Lee. I take the Lee contract (which is getting worse and worse by the year) off their hands. I convince them to take Franceour by hiding his statistics and using terms like "toolsy" and "raw ability". Sure, we end up with two awful outfielders, both of whom have no business in the field at all, much less in the cavernous rightfield of Citi, but what the hell. Outfield defense shmoutfield shmeefense.8. Remove the orange dot from the blue hat.9. Sign Orlando Hudson.10. Re-sign JJ Putz to an incentive-laden deal.11. Remove that ridiculous fence and replace it with a uniform, 8 foot tall wall. Get rid of that "Mo's Zone" little alcove thingy. [u:34viur01]Lineup[/u:34viur01]:1. Reyes SS2. Hudson 2B3. Wright 3B4. Gonzalez 1B5. Beltran CF6. Holliday RF7. Lee LF8. Thole/Santos C[u:34viur01]Rotation[/u:34viur01]:SantanaLackeyPelfreyPerezRedding/Nieve/Some scrub[u:34viur01]Bullpen[/u:34viur01]:RodriguezStokesPutzFelicianoMischRedding/Nieve[u:34viur01]Bench[/u:34viur01]:Whoever. I don't care. Not Marlon Anderson
MFS62 Old-Timey Member Posted November 6, 2009 Posted November 6, 2009 Ashie62 wrote: Beyond that Marcus Scaturo is available, albeit off a career yearScutaro has had a career career.We keep looking for the decline,but he has remained pretty good at what he does.Later
MFS62 Old-Timey Member Posted November 18, 2009 Posted November 18, 2009 Jason Marquis wants to be a Met.http://m.nypost.com/ms/p/nyp/nyp/ssFG2yMVxgm9OI7nF8dg6uA/view.m?id=23105&storyid=4.0.1945274983&team=mets&name=MetsWhaddaya' think?I say yes, if the price is right.Later
smg58 Old-Timey Member Posted November 18, 2009 Posted November 18, 2009 Marquis' ERA+ has hung around 100 for most of his career (last year was an outlier, but not by that much). That would correspond to a 4.10 ERA here. Not bad, but not open-your-wallet good either. I think he's worth 2 years and $15M, but I'll be surprised if that gets it done.
ashie62 Old-Timey Member Posted November 18, 2009 Posted November 18, 2009 MFS62 wrote:Jason Marquis wants to be a Met.http://m.nypost.com/ms/p/nyp/nyp/ssFG2yMVxgm9OI7nF8dg6uA/view.m?id=23105&storyid=4.0.1945274983&team=mets&name=MetsWhaddaya' think?I say yes, if the price is right.LaterHe wants roughly 21 for 3..I'll pass...I've soured on all Free Agent pitching signings. I think KFraud sent me over the edge
TransMonk Old-Timey Member Posted November 18, 2009 Posted November 18, 2009 I like Marquis if it's in addition to a legit #2. Hopefully, it would not be Marquis as a #2.Marquis would be the new Traschel...which is great as long as he is not expected to carry the team.
ashie62 Old-Timey Member Posted November 18, 2009 Posted November 18, 2009 Marquis would be 2 unless you see Pelfrey as a 2. So..I guess Lackey would be needed also
TransMonk Old-Timey Member Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 Ashie62 wrote:..I guess Lackey would be needed alsoYup.
ashie62 Old-Timey Member Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 You could go after Marquis and Lackey, lowball LF, and hope the healthy recover...on timeTexas is parting ways with CF Marlon Bryd.Holliday and Bay are looking more like they are staying put.
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 Think hitting, hitting, hitting, and then hitting.
metirish Old-Timey Member Posted November 19, 2009 Author Posted November 19, 2009 I've had time to think about this and as the new GM I am convinced this team needs a top class pitcher like Lackey to pair with Santana.......we have enough middle of the road guys to fill out the rotation.Santana/LackeyLee/Hamels
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 My thinking is that almost every free-agent starting pitcher is middle-of-the-road guy. And thinking that Lackey or some other Benson-buncher is an ace and paying him like one won't make him one.Dude's three years removed from his peak season and it's looking more and more like an outlier. If my confidence in him isn't quite comparable to my confidence in Oliver Perez, it's probably where my confidence in Perez was a year ago.Moreover, I think the Mets think this way, that none of them are gamebreakers any more than the guys they have now. And if the Mets really want one of those, I think they'll be more interested in doing a trade-and-extension deal for Roy Halladay, as they did with Santana.I think we might get the opposite of what the papers are saying. Rather than the Mets going cheap and half-hearted this year, I think we may learn that the Mets and Yankees are the main teams looking to spend money, but maybe not on MLB free agents.I think the international free agents will be possiblities to bolster the rotation. And then they'll look to possible trade-and-sign dealies.I'm not sure why I think this.
MFS62 Old-Timey Member Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 Sign Chone Figgins. He is one of the few players who has increased his OBP dramatically since he's been in the majors - he led the Al in BB last year. He would be the second baseman.Trade Jose Reyes* (that is NOT a misprint), John Maine, Brad Holt and John Neise to Toronto for Roy Halliday and Vernon Wells for left. Toronto is dying to rid themselves of Wells' contract, he fills the need for a righty hitting outfielder, and can play center should Beltran get injured again. If they would take Ollie Perez instead of Maine, that's even better. If they want Murphy so they can unload Overbay's contract, so much the better. Add/subtract other piece parts as needed without losing any key minor leaguers.Bring up minor league SS prospect Tejada. He can field at least as well as, if not better,as any of the FA shortstops available. Resign Tatis.Sign Rod Barajas.See what it would take to get Jeff Keppinger to play short to back up Tejada and /or replace Cora.Make Jason Marquis happy by offering him a 3 yr, $16 million contract. If he balks, go after Randy Wolfe for the same money.Find a doctor who could give Angel Pagan a brain transplant.Then, figure out what to do with Luis Castillo and adding to the bullpen.Later* = I don't care if he would become another Lou Brock - Halliday will be better than Ernie Broglio. This team needs a shakeup.
Guest LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr Guests Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 Edgy DC wrote:My thinking is that almost every free-agent starting pitcher is middle-of-the-road guy. And thinking that Lackey or some other Benson-buncher is an ace and paying him like one won't make him one.Fair enough.Edgy DC wrote:Dude's three years removed from his peak season and it's looking more and more like an outlier. If my confidence in him isn't quite comparable to my confidence in Oliver Perez, it's probably where my confidence in Perez was a year ago.I'm not sure I'm quite THERE with you-- we were having the good-or-terrible argument last year with Perez, where the Lackey dilemma is much more good-or-great. Put another way, Lackey's likely floor-- he seems like a 175-200 innings guy, with a high-3s ERA, 7.2 K/9, 2.5 BB/9 and mid-1.20s WHIP-- seems pretty solid. It ain't the mineshaft Ollie presented.Edgy DC wrote:Moreover, I think the Mets think this way, that none of them are gamebreakers any more than the guys they have now. And if the Mets really want one of those, I think they'll be more interested in doing a trade-and-extension deal for Roy Halladay, as they did with Santana.It would probably be a better bet than the last time we went multi-year on a recently-dominant pitcher in his mid-30s. After all, Halladay's shown no signs of diminishment over the last couple of years.On the other hand, even Johan's shown some signs of breakdown since we got him.Edgy DC wrote:I think we might get the opposite of what the papers are saying. Rather than the Mets going cheap and half-hearted this year, I think we may learn that the Mets and Yankees are the main teams looking to spend money, but maybe not on MLB free agents.I think the international free agents will be possiblities to bolster the rotation. And then they'll look to possible trade-and-sign dealies.I'm not sure why I think this.Yeah, that's curious. They've already disavowed any continuing interest in Chapman... who else were you thinking?
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 I don't really know. Maybe Hisanori Takahashi. I just think they do their best not to stick their necks out with pitchers, but realize they have to a little.My thinking is always for more arms, not necessarily more expensive ones.Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold.
smg58 Old-Timey Member Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 Somebody told me that Mike Francesa suggested that the Mets wouldn't have to give up anybody of consequence to get Halladay if they also took Wells. The catch, of course, is that Wells is owed a ridiculous $107M over the next five years and rivals Ollie with his inconsistency.
metirish Old-Timey Member Posted November 19, 2009 Author Posted November 19, 2009 smg58 wrote:Somebody told me that Mike Francesa suggested that the Mets wouldn't have to give up anybody of consequence to get Halladay if they also took Wells. The catch, of course, is that Wells is owed a ridiculous $107M over the next five years and rivals Ollie with his inconsistency.So coupled with an extension for Halladay it would cost $200 to $250 million for that deal......
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 I'm ag'in' the idea of shakeups and the notion that they break those left behind out of an alleged sense of complacency. I think they rather just fulfill an organization or fanbase's desire for retribution.
seawolf17 Old-Timey Member Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 metirish wrote:smg58 wrote:Somebody told me that Mike Francesa suggested that the Mets wouldn't have to give up anybody of consequence to get Halladay if they also took Wells. The catch, of course, is that Wells is owed a ridiculous $107M over the next five years and rivals Ollie with his inconsistency.So coupled with an extension for Halladay it would cost $200 to $250 million for that deal......Which is why you can't give up anything of substance in a Halladay/Wells deal. I'd be very tempted to take Wells back, but that money starting in 2011 is onerous for a guy who kinda sucks now.
Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket Guests Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 Sucks, is a bad fielder, and is frequently injured.There's a possibility I suppose his recent surgery (he had a bad wrist) helps his batting improve again but that's a big chance to take for that much $$.
Guest Vince Coleman Firecracker Guests Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 I should really be working right now, but I like that less than posting on the CPF.My plan assumes the team's payroll is near the threshold of how much the Wilpons are willing to spend. I think finding cheap production should be a priority this season (as opposed to, um, all the seasons it isnt' (?)). Anyhoo:1) Give Reyes a five-year extension. Start around 50 million. Buy low!2) I really think first base can be covered from within the organization. Nick Evans vs the lefties and some combination of Murphy/Carter/Davis vs the righties will most likely get you somewhere within sneezing distance of league average production for first at league minimum salaries. 3) Ramon Castro for catcher. When he gets hurt, let's see Thole. I don't think Santos is a terrible backup.4) Trade for a starting pitcher. He doesn't have to be a world beater. Maybe someone coming off a bad season. Sonnastine? Eveland? Guthrie? Failing that, see if there's a free agent that'll take a reasonable contract. Maybe Davis, maybe Harden... this is going to be the toughest spot to fill, but something can be found that won't break the bank.5) Holliday for left. Save money elsewhere to spend it here.
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 I'm having trouble getting around (3).
Guest Vince Coleman Firecracker Guests Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 Edgy DC wrote:I'm having trouble getting around (3).Well, he'll be cheap and he can hit as well as, say, Pudge Rodriguez.
Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket Guests Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 I don't think the Mets have any faith in Castro being reliable enough to stick out there more than a few times a week, and sure didn't seem like he got along with Jerry, or somebody, so I'd be surprised if he ever came back. Maybe Rod Barajas is our man, I dunno. Maybe Torrealba!My radical twist is to make John Maine the new JJ Putz. Sure making a starter with 4 pitches and swing-and-miss stuff into a reliever seems like a a waste but Maine hasn't been reliable enough health wise to count on and I think he just might adapt to the role. My plan also calls for Pelfrey and Perez to have huge rebound seasons (I think both can do better and should if they're healthy). I am very impressed with what Piniero did last year and not too jazzed about Lackey or Marquis, but I'd also look into trades -- Harang?
ashie62 Old-Timey Member Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 Edgy DC wrote:I'm ag'in' the idea of shakeups and the notion that they break those left behind out of an alleged sense of complacency. I think they rather just fulfill an organization or fanbase's desire for retribution.I see your point, but isn't it ultimately about the fans.I agree with MFS62...I don't think there is a snowballs chance it will happen.I believe we'll sign an outlier SP, LF, C...The 2010 Mets may very well resemble the 2008, 2009 Mets...I could almost stand that if I didn't have to look at Manuel and Minaya
Guest LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr Guests Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 Ashie62 wrote:I see your point, but isn't it ultimately about the fans.You're speaking ironically, of course, right?MFS62 wrote:Sign Chone Figgins. He is one of the few players who has increased his OBP dramatically since he's been in the majors - he led the Al in BB last year. He would be the second baseman.Which he hasn't been that often, and not semi-regularly in 5 years (42 games out of 158). This would be rather Steve Phillipsy of Omar. I don't mean that as a compliment.And how, exactly, would getting an iffy defensive 2B who gets on base a good amount, steals 30 bases a year or so, and has little-to-no power be any sort of significant improvement on Luis Castillo? 'Cause he's slightly younger, and would cost more?Trade Jose Reyes* (that is NOT a misprint)That's unfortunate.... John Maine, Brad Holt and John Neise to Toronto for Roy Halliday and Vernon Wells for left. Toronto is dying to rid themselves of Wells' contract, he fills the need for a righty hitting outfielder, and can play center should Beltran get injured again.As several others below have noted, Wells is owed a lot-- A LOT-- of money, and is not just unworthy of said money but is team-killingly so. During his last two full seasons-- 2008 was 2/3 of one-- he OPS+ed 85 and 88... in essence, a below-average major league starter-- not outfielder, but PLAYER-- with the bat. With the glove, he's arguably worse. Taking on his contract would mean that we are lashed to this mess like Ahab to the Pequod, with similar results.If they would take Ollie Perez instead of Maine, that's even better. If they want Murphy so they can unload Overbay's contract, so much the better. Add/subtract other piece parts as needed without losing any key minor leaguers.And if Toronto wants Reyes for Halladay, you're damn well sure they're taking Ollie. At least.Overbay IS Future Murphy, with worse platoon splits. Also, as you pointed out, he's more expensive.Bring up minor league SS prospect Tejada. He can field at least as well as, if not better,as any of the FA shortstops available.And he hits at least as well as Berroa. I don't mean this as a compliment, either. Resign Tatis.I could see doing this. For very little.Sign Rod Barajas.This, not so much.See what it would take to get Jeff Keppinger to play short to back up Tejada and /or replace Cora.This, I could see.Make Jason Marquis happy by offering him a 3 yr, $16 million contract. If he balks, go after Randy Wolfe for the same money.Marquis MAY be worth this much per year. I'm pretty sure Wolf isn't taking this little. (Wolf's the better pitcher.)Find a doctor who could give Angel Pagan a brain transplant.This could be fun. And, considering the Mets' medical track record, it's guaranteed to go well.Then, figure out what to do with Luis Castillo and adding to the bullpen.Keep him unless you get an offer for something better that fits the team needs?I like the overall gumption, MFS, but... yoy. And minus a few healthy years, Reyes-- a SS with about 5 times the power that LF Lou Brock ever had-- is already close to as valuable as Brock ever was.Ashie62 Nov 19 2009 04:46 PMRe: You're The General Manager Lou Brock is in the hall of Fame...Jose Reyes is a pimple on his ass for nowEdgy DC Nov 19 2009 06:42 PMRe: You're The General Manager Ashie62 wrote:I see your point, but isn't it ultimately about the fans.It's not about giving them blood nor instant gratification. A five-game winning streak and they'll get over the bloodlust.It's ultimately about putting on a good successful performance. There's always a market for that.Edgy DC Nov 19 2009 08:18 PMRe: You're The General Manager Ashie62 wrote:Lou Brock is in the hall of Fame...Jose Reyes is a pimple on his ass for nowLou Brock is also 70. (Holy shit! 70!) I don't think he's going to win that one.I don't know what makes Reyes a pimple, but I've got to wonder why you so often want to get rid of everyone.Ashie62 Nov 19 2009 09:04 PMRe: You're The General Manager LWFS Says Reyes is as valuable as Brock was ? Is that a joke.Right now Brock could take him in the 40As far as getting rid of people I did post the 2010 Mets will likely resemble the 2008-2009 team.Yes, I would like to see Manuel & Minaya gone based on performance...RealityChuck Nov 19 2009 09:12 PMRe: You're The General Manager MFS62 wrote:* = I don't care if he would become another Lou Brock - Halliday will be better than Ernie Broglio. This team needs a shakeup.People always seem to think the trade was a bad idea, but really, the Cubs were correct in trading Brock. People forget Brock was a terrible fielder (you can argue the importance of fielding average, but I don't think anyone would argue that an outfielder like Brock who fielded .959 is a good fielder -- and other fielding statistics confirm this). The only position he was able to play was LF -- and the Cubs had arguably a better player there (lifetime .OPS 100 points better; OPS+ of 133 vs. Brock's 109). Brock was traded mostly because there was no place to play him, not because he was great (or even potentially great) at his position.Broglio OTOH won 18 games the year before the trade and had a lifetime ERA+ up to that point of 120. No way anyone would have predicted he'd fall apart in Chicago.The moral: a perfectly reasonable trade (like the ones people are suggesting here) can look pretty terrible years later. If we were Cubs fans back in 1963, we'd be thinking that this was a steal.LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr Nov 19 2009 11:04 PMRe: You're The General Manager Ashie62 wrote:LWFS Says Reyes is as valuable as Brock was ? Is that a joke.Brock was a mildly-overrated offensive player-- the speed and baserunning ability were superlative, but he didn't hit much, get on that much and appears from all sides-- see RealityChuck's bit-- to have been a terrible defender, speed inclusive.And this has been covered elsewhere much better, but the Hall gatesmen haven't always done the best job sifting "great" from "pretty good for a while." Even leaving out the VC choices-- chock full of Rizzutos and Schoendiensts and Everses and Maranvilles-- you've got Aparicios and Suttons and Perezes to deal with.Edgy DC Nov 20 2009 07:04 AMRe: You're The General Manager Brock stayed healthy, played a long time, got 3,000 hits, and retired (and came before the Hall of Fame) with two high-profile records. It's a shame that his thread is becoming about him, because whether or not Reyes is traded shouldn't really be a based on whether or not he is better 'n' Lou Brock. We're going to fall into tangents on peak value and career value and league context and how many different contexts Lou's career spanned and whatnot.A healthy Reyes is a valuable thing --- not to mention signed through 2011 --- and not something to be dealt lightly. I'd be particularly wary of trading him after an injury-shattered year.If his legs come out healthy during the first half, I might get to work on an extension. I'd really like to see him dropped a bit in the order, because he has to look seriously at embracing the point in his career where his legs are not his bread and butter, but his skillz.batmagadanleadoff Nov 20 2009 08:28 AMRe: You're The General Manager Lou Brock is a deserving Hall of Famer � but an overrated Hall of Famer. And more than mildly so. In fact, if Lou Brock were active today, and the same age as Jose Reyes, I�d rather have Reyes on my team instead of Brock if forced to choose between one of the two without the benefit of knowing Brock�s future performance beyond Reyes� present chronological age, but mainly because Brock ain�t no shortstop.And speaking of Reyes and leadoff-hitters, I might as well segue into the theme of this thread with my one move, which would be to keep Luis Castillo and move him into the leadoff spot in the batting order. Castillo, as flawed as he is, is still the best damn leadoff hitter the Mets have had in the last ten years ever since Rickey Henderson�s 1999 season: he�s certainly a more qualified leadoff hitter than Reyes. Reyes,�my proposed number two hitter who draws less walks than Castillo but drives the ball better than Luis - would be able to move Castillo around the bases far more efficiently than Castillo ever advanced Reyes. I have zero expectations of the Mets ever making this move even though, to my thinking, it�s unquestionably the right move. I�m becoming resigned to the fact that the Mets are run by a bunch off nincompoops who probably care more about the marketing of Jose Reyes and his image as a stolen base guy than actual production and that those two reasons alone will keep Reyes in the leadoff spot.Plus, one added benefit of having Castillo bat leadoff is that you�ll almost never ever see Castillo squaring around to bunt about 45 seconds before the pitcher goes into his windup anymore. I suppose that nobody, not even the Mets, not even Wee Willie Small Ball�s Mets would ask their leadoff hitter to sac bunt with nobody out and nobody on base.metirish Nov 20 2009 08:30 AMRe: You're The General Manager Jesus , Mary and Chirst look what the cat dragged in.Frayed Knot Nov 20 2009 08:34 AMRe: You're The General Manager And speaking of Reyes and leadoff-hitters, I might as well segue into the theme of this thread with my one move, which would be to keep Luis Castillo and move him into the leadoff spot in the batting order. Castillo, as flawed as he is, is still the best damn leadoff hitter the Mets have had in the last ten years ever since Rickey Henderson�s 1999 season: he�s certainly a more qualified leadoff hitter than Reyes. Reyes,�my proposed number two hitter who draws less walks than Castillo but drives the ball better than Luis - would be able to move Castillo around the bases far more efficiently than Castillo ever advanced Reyes. I have zero expectations of the Mets ever making this move even though, to my thinking, it�s unquestionably the right move. I�m becoming resigned to the fact that the Mets are run by a bunch off nincompoops who probably care more about the marketing of Jose Reyes and his image as a stolen base guy than actual production and that those two reasons alone will keep Reyes in the leadoff spot.Plus, one added benefit of having Castillo bat leadoff is that you�ll almost never ever see Castillo squaring around to bunt about 45 seconds before the pitcher goes into his windup anymore. I suppose that nobody, not even the Mets, not even Wee Willie Small Ball�s Mets would ask their leadoff hitter to sac bunt with nobody out and nobody on base.All that, of course, is on the manager and not the general manager.One of the saddest episodes of last season was that after Jerry openly toyed with the idea of batting Castillo leadoff during ST (to the howls of the closed-minded everywhere) he not only turned away from the idea but did so even after Reyes went down.John Cougar Lunchbucket Nov 20 2009 08:48 AMRe: You're The General Manager Yes, that was a shame, and I do believe it has much to do with the Mets making an effort to build an identity around the idea of Reyes as their leadoff hitter. I have to say, as abhorrent as I find the MFYs and their marketing, their strategy of using the organization itself as the selling point -- and not necessarily the individuals comprising it -- probably holds less downside. For the Mets I think this effort has tended to interfere with strategic decisions (like shifting Reyes in the order) and to an extent dictating the moves of the front office (the mets as a "superstar" driven team, cannot almost by definition shop for a relief pitcher without being obligated to pay top retail for the biggest name with the most saves, for example). It handicaps them.Edgy DC Nov 20 2009 08:50 AMRe: You're The General Manager Welcome backman, BML.LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr Nov 20 2009 09:26 AMRe: You're The General Manager Edgy DC wrote:It's a shame that his thread is becoming about him, because whether or not Reyes is traded shouldn't really be a based on whether or not he is better 'n' Lou Brock.They started it.Now... are we gonna move Murphy or not? He's living on borrowed time over at 1B, seems better suited for a league with a DH option, and Lord knows he's not turning into Tony Perez any time soon.(And holy hell, BML... good to "see" you.)batmagadanleadoff Nov 20 2009 09:31 AMRe: You're The General Manager Frayed Knot wrote:All that, of course, is on the manager and not the general manager..I'm not so sure. After reading Moneyball, I'm convinced that Billy Beane might've fired Willie Randolph on the spot right in the middle of a game after watching some of his shenanigans ... like, as one example, sac bunting in the first inning of a game being played in Denver, Colorado where Reyes had already reached second base before the first out was ever made and Wright, Beltran, and Delgado due up and poised to bring in the big innning. If nothing else, Moneyball illustrates that the GM does have a say into field strategy. And given the consistently questionable field strategy of the New SNY Mets, I wonder if Minaya is as much to blame, if not more so, than the field managers.If I was the GM, I'd ring the top of Citi Field with S.W.A.T. sharpshooters trained to shoot any Met between the eyeballs if that batter so much as half- squared around to bunt in the first inning of any game. Second inning, too.LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr Nov 20 2009 09:39 AMRe: You're The General Manager batmagadanleadoff wrote:If nothing else, Moneyball illustrates that the GM does have a say into field strategy. And given the consistently questionable field strategy of the New SNY Mets, I wonder if Minaya is as much to blame, if not more so, than the field managers.This is a conversation unto itself. Let's just say that this seems to vary widely-- WIDELY-- from clubhouse to clubhouse. The manager's primary JOB is organizing field strategy, and very few successfully-run businesses I know-- sports-related or otherwise-- opt for management doing the jobs of their subordinates.batmagadanleadoff wrote:If I was the GM, I'd ring the top of Citi Field with S.W.A.T. sharpshooters trained to shoot any Met between the eyeballs if that batter so much as half- squared around to bunt in the first inning of any game. Second inning, too. You training them to distinguish between drag and sac bunts?Edgy DC Nov 20 2009 09:43 AMRe: You're The General Manager Watch them make the fans pay for the sharpshooters.LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr Nov 20 2009 09:49 AMRe: You're The General Manager Mets spokesman David Howard said, "It's very consistent with what we said in the beginning. Obviously, the 'average' means there is some people paying a higher 'security tax' and some lower, but the average sharpshooter fee is no more than 5 percent. For most. We haven't heard any outrage about this, and that has nothing to do with the fact that the snipers calibrate their sights by training their rifles on the crowd."Frayed Knot Nov 20 2009 10:39 AMRe: You're The General Manager John Cougar Lunchbucket wrote:Yes, that was a shame, and I do believe it has much to do with the Mets making an effort to build an identity around the idea of Reyes as their leadoff hitter. I have to say, as abhorrent as I find the MFYs and their marketing, their strategy of using the organization itself as the selling point -- and not necessarily the individuals comprising it -- probably holds less downside. For the Mets I think this effort has tended to interfere with strategic decisions (like shifting Reyes in the order) and to an extent dictating the moves of the front office (the mets as a "superstar" driven team, cannot almost by definition shop for a relief pitcher without being obligated to pay top retail for the biggest name with the most saves, for example). It handicaps them.Partly illustrated by the (IMO) over-the-top on-field celebrations for Franco's 400th save and Lenny Harris's PH record.Not that those were mgmt-directed necessarily or mattered in the outcome of a game or season, but both (and other examples) could be seen as the result of a climate that prefers to trumpet certain individuals or accomplishments rather than the overall brand.Frayed Knot Nov 20 2009 10:55 AMRe: You're The General Manager batmagadanleadoff wrote:Frayed Knot wrote:All that, of course, is on the manager and not the general manager..I'm not so sure. After reading Moneyball, I'm convinced that Billy Beane might've fired Willie Randolph on the spot right in the middle of a game after watching some of his shenanigans ... like, as one example, sac bunting in the first inning of a game being played in Denver, Colorado where Reyes had already reached second base before the first out was ever made and Wright, Beltran, and Delgado due up and poised to bring in the big innning. If nothing else, Moneyball illustrates that the GM does have a say into field strategy. And given the consistently questionable field strategy of the New SNY Mets, I wonder if Minaya is as much to blame, if not more so, than the field managers.GMs have a say in strategy to the extent that they should be hiring folks who have a philosophy that they agree with.So, no, I don't think Minaya et al are upstairs calling for specific in-game strategies; I suspect it's probably more a case where the front office is more or less indifferent (or at least neutral) to the idea that one concept is so much better than the other to the point where they're also not insisting on the converse. But I've seen Oakland teams do enough 'non-Moneyball' things also and Beane, to my knowledge, has never replaced a manager in-season or at anytime other than at the end of contract time. Maybe that's as much a case of not being able to eat the dollars as anything else but it also shows he's not dictating in-game decisions.In the end, the batting order and dugout calls are up to Jerry.Ashie62 Nov 20 2009 11:53 AMRe: You're The General Manager Edgy DC wrote:Watch them make the fans pay for the sharpshooters.I'm available..Ashie62 Nov 20 2009 11:59 AMRe: You're The General Manager LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr wrote:Ashie62 wrote:LWFS Says Reyes is as valuable as Brock was ? Is that a joke.Brock was a mildly-overrated offensive player-- the speed and baserunning ability were superlative, but he didn't hit much, get on that much and appears from all sides-- see RealityChuck's bit-- to have been a terrible defender, speed inclusive.And this has been covered elsewhere much better, but the Hall gatesmen haven't always done the best job sifting "great" from "pretty good for a while." Even leaving out the VC choices-- chock full of Rizzutos and Schoendiensts and Everses and Maranvilles-- you've got Aparicios and Suttons and Perezes to deal with.When Reyes gets to 1000 hits let me know. I still believe comparing Reyes to Brock is a true slap to Brock and thats all I've got.The greater issue of healthy Reyes legs early next year?....I would trade him.Murphy..He will be the 1B in 2010 barring a Carlos Delgado Festivus miracleEdgy DC Nov 20 2009 12:23 PMRe: You're The General Manager LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr wrote:Now... are we gonna move Murphy or not? He's living on borrowed time over at 1B, seems better suited for a league with a DH option, and Lord knows he's not turning into Tony Perez any time soon.But he certainly could still turn into Dave Magadan, and that's not a bad thing to be (bat him leadoff!). He's survived a year of adversity, finished kinda strong, did well at first, and probably should've been in AAA.Frayed Knot Nov 20 2009 02:23 PMRe: You're The General Manager Ashie62 wrote:When Reyes gets to 1000 hits let me know. I still believe comparing Reyes to Brock is a true slap to Brock and thats all I've got.You do realize the ridiculousness of comparing the totality of Brock's career to Reyes thru age 26, right?Brock's most similar player thru age 26 = Coco CrispEdgy DC Nov 20 2009 02:36 PMRe: You're The General Manager And Reyes' most similar batter is Ryne Sandberg, MVP, Hall of Famer.Followed by 2. Jimmy Rollins, MVP3. Larry Doyle, MVP4. Paul Molitor, Hall of Famer5. Alan Trammell, six-time All-Starmetsmarathon Nov 20 2009 02:44 PMRe: You're The General Manager brock's most similar batters after coco crisp, defiinitely not a hall of famer....2. george wood, neither mvp nor hofer, he predated any manner of all star game by decades, but did lead the NL in saves in 1888 with two!3. jimmy welsh, still not an all star4. bernie williams, five-time all-star, fringe mvp candidate (0.51 mvp-shares in his career), and just shy of the hall of fame unless you're talking to a yldb5. marquis grissom, two time all-star, fringe mvp candidate (0.45 mvp-shares in his career, and surely not a hall of famer.i should point out unless doc is lurking out there somewhere, that similarity scores do not allow for projecting a players' future endeavors, but are handy in providing comparative context for their past accomplishments.Edgy DC Nov 20 2009 04:55 PMRe: You're The General Manager I wish similarity scores were calculated on an era-neutral basis.Edgy DC Nov 20 2009 05:03 PMRe: You're The General Manager By the way, checking out Lube Rock, I looked at 1974 MVP voting. What a bunch of crap. Bench, Mike Marshall, Schmidt, the Toy Cannon, Joe Morgan. How are these guys (maybe more) not more valuable than Steve Garvey? Was square-jawiness a legitimate voting criterion then?Ashie62 Nov 20 2009 05:40 PMRe: You're The General Manager Frayed Knot wrote:Ashie62 wrote:When Reyes gets to 1000 hits let me know. I still believe comparing Reyes to Brock is a true slap to Brock and thats all I've got.You do realize the ridiculousness of comparing the totality of Brock's career to Reyes thru age 26, right?Brock's most similar player thru age 26 = Coco CrispDo you realize the ridiculousness of comparing a player known mostly for getting hurt and choking in September to someone who had 3000 hits. We may not agree some some in the HOF but it is for the very very great, not the very very good. Will Jose Reyes get there? He's not even on the pathYes, this won't be played out for quite some time but lay off the Reyes-Kool-AidBenjamin Grimm Nov 20 2009 06:25 PMRe: You're The General Manager Calling Reyes a future Hall of Famer is certainly very premature.But calling him a pimple is the other extreme. He's been a very good player, one of the best non-pitchers the Mets have ever had.Ashie62 Nov 20 2009 06:33 PMRe: You're The General Manager Benjamin Grimm wrote:Calling Reyes a future Hall of Famer is certainly very premature.But calling him a pimple is the other extreme. He's been a very good player, one of the best non-pitchers the Mets have ever had.agreedEdgy DC Nov 20 2009 08:45 PMRe: You're The General Manager Reyes is not "known mostly for getting hurt and choking in September."And he's not comparing them. MFS62 was.Frayed Knot Nov 21 2009 05:54 AMRe: You're The General Manager Ashie62 wrote:Ashie62 wrote:When Reyes gets to 1000 hits let me know. I still believe comparing Reyes to Brock is a true slap to Brock and thats all I've got.You do realize the ridiculousness of comparing the totality of Brock's career to Reyes thru age 26, right?Brock's most similar player thru age 26 = Coco CrispDo you realize the ridiculousness of comparing a player known mostly for getting hurt and choking in September to someone who had 3000 hits. We may not agree some some in the HOF but it is for the very very great, not the very very good. Will Jose Reyes get there? He's not even on the pathYes, this won't be played out for quite some time but lay off the Reyes-Kool-AidAt this point I've started to lose track of how and why this comparison even started, but it seems to me that YOU are the only one comparing the accomplishments of a still-young player to the entirety of another player's career and acting as if you've found something profound when the two don't match.And you might want to check on the comparisons at similar points in their respective careers before you decide that he's "not even on the path". Reyes compares favorably across the board - including being significantly better in both SBs & SB%. Yes the different eras skews things in Jose's favor but one of those guys is a good SS while the other a below-average LFer.batmagadanleadoff Nov 21 2009 07:50 AMRe: You're The General Manager metirish wrote:Jesus , Mary and Chirst look what the cat dragged in.Must be the same cat that�s had my tongue for the past few months.Meow.Edgy DC wrote:Welcome backman, BML.(And holy hell, BML... good to "see" you.)Thanks, guys.If nothing else, Moneyball illustrates that the GM does have a say into field strategy. And given the consistently questionable field strategy of the New SNY Mets, I wonder if Minaya is as much to blame, if not more so, than the field managers.This is a conversation unto itself. Let's just say that this seems to vary widely-- WIDELY-- from clubhouse to clubhouse. The manager's primary JOB is organizing field strategy, and very few successfully-run businesses I know-- sports-related or otherwise-- opt for management doing the jobs of their subordinates.And most businesses --sports related or otherwise�fail when lower management can�t do its� job. What�s good for Billy Beane should be good for the Mets.[You training them to distinguish between drag and sac bunts?Let�s just say that the bunter better be safe at first.Edgy DC wrote:But [Daniel Murphy] certainly could still turn into Dave Magadan, and that's not a bad thing to be (bat him leadoff!). Hey! I thought that David Wright is now the new David Magadan.batmagadanleadoff Nov 21 2009 07:59 AMRe: You're The General Manager By the way, checking out Lube Rock, I looked at 1974 MVP voting. What a bunch of crap. Bench, Mike Marshall, Schmidt, the Toy Cannon, Joe Morgan. How are these guys (maybe more) not more valuable than Steve Garvey? Was square-jawiness a legitimate voting criterion then?The 1974 NL MVP is one of my least favorites. In a perfect world, 1974 NL MVP Steve Garvey wouldn't have received a single vote: the voters can only select their top 10 candidates and in 1974, there were at least 15 NL'ers who had a better season than Garvey. Therefore, if Garvey wasn't one of the leagues 10 best players, he shouldn't have appeared on any voter's ballot. Garvey wasn't even the best player on his own team in 1974. The Dodgers best player that season was 1974 SI cover boy and the perenially screwed over in MVP voting guy -- Jimmy Wynn.I would have given the '74 MVP to Joe ("how can such a smart baseball player be so stupid otherwise?") Morgan, thus eventually giving Morgan a run of three consecutive MVP's.Edgy DC Nov 21 2009 08:32 AMRe: You're The General Manager Mike Marshall, though, with 200 innings out of the pen... hard to pass up.batmagadanleadoff Nov 21 2009 08:54 AMRe: You're The General Manager That would render Garvey no better than the third best 1974 Dodger. Did we miss any other '74 Dodgers better than Garvey? (covering a copy of SI in 1974 not required)Ashie62 Nov 21 2009 09:10 AMRe: You're The General Manager Edgy DC wrote:Reyes is not "known mostly for getting hurt and choking in September."And he's not comparing them. MFS62 was.Reyes is not mostly known for getting hurt and choking in September?Do you watch the games?Do you live to be "correct" to validate yourself or do you just take special pleasure in busting my azzHahnSolo Nov 21 2009 09:29 AMRe: You're The General Manager Andy Messersmith: 20-6, 2.59 (132 ERA+), 292 IP (!), 1.09 WHIP, 13 CG, 221 Ks.Ashie62 Nov 21 2009 09:53 AMRe: You're The General Manager It's official Shelly Duncan is an FA....LF option? just kiddingOn the not kidding front the Dodgers are in the Halladay derbyVince Coleman Firecracker Nov 21 2009 10:54 AMRe: You're The General Manager Ashie62 wrote:Reyes is not mostly known for getting hurt and choking in September?No, he's not. He's mostly known for being an absolute stud shortstop, probably the second best in the league over the course of his young career. And while it's premature to put him in the HoF, it's not premature to look at him and realize that if he keeps up what he's doing for long enough, he will be a hall of famer. According to B-R's HoF stats, he's about a third of the way there already. 2006, 2007 and 2008 are three hall-caliber seasons. Will he need five or six more? Sure, but he's only going into his age-27 season; and while no one can accurately project any player ten years ahead, I think there's more than an outside chance that when you watch Reyes play, you're watching a future hall of famer entering his peak.Edgy DC Nov 21 2009 12:37 PMRe: You're The General Manager Ashie62 wrote:Edgy DC wrote:Reyes is not "known mostly for getting hurt and choking in September."And he's not comparing them. MFS62 was.Reyes is not mostly known for getting hurt and choking in September?Do you watch the games?Do you live to be "correct" to validate yourself or do you just take special pleasure in busting my azzYeah, I watch the games. Let's deal with the facts instead of my issues. Reyes is not known mostly for getting hurt and choking in September.metsmarathon Nov 21 2009 01:40 PMRe: You're The General Manager Edgy DC wrote:Edgy DC wrote:Reyes is not "known mostly for getting hurt and choking in September."And he's not comparing them. MFS62 was.Reyes is not mostly known for getting hurt and choking in September?Do you watch the games?Do you live to be "correct" to validate yourself or do you just take special pleasure in busting my azzYeah, I watch the games. Let's deal with the facts instead of my issues. Reyes is not known mostly for getting hurt and choking in September.i think right now, he's known for being hurt. but until this year, he was known for handshakes, dances, and being one of the most electrifying and exciting players in the league.Ashie62 Nov 21 2009 09:51 PMRe: You're The General Manager Reyes is most recently known for being injured and choking in September 2007 & 2008I disagree with you 100 percent. Nice we live in a semi-free countryEdgy DC Nov 22 2009 05:52 AMRe: You're The General Manager Yeah, nice to blow everything out of proportion and insinutate that to disagree with you is to somehow oppress you.First it's that I have issues, now you're decrying impositions on your freedom. Is this how you intend to press your point?metsmarathon Nov 22 2009 09:11 AMRe: You're The General Manager if you think living in a free country means that nobody will argue with you when you're wrong wrong wrong, you've gotta get a new dictionary.MFS62 Nov 23 2009 06:55 AMRe: You're The General Manager Russell Martin, C, Dodgers: With nine arb-eligible players, plus an owner embroiled in a messy divorce, LA is looking to cut costs. Though Martin is only 26, his stats have been trending downward for two seasons. He made $3.9 million this year and had just 26 extra-base hits, so his 2010 salary could outweigh his production. That's from Buster Olney's blog this weekend. I'd definitely jump on getting him even if it means he'll be making about $6 million. If we're spending that much on a catcher, rather it be on him than Molina. Like Buster said, he's 26 and I just think he had a down year. And this opens up a spot for Figgins (see my post).So, add Castillo for Martin to my GM moves. And delete signing Barajas.LaterEdgy DC Nov 23 2009 07:26 AMRe: You're The General Manager Yes. It's disgraceful how long it's been since the Mets have suited up a Canadian. The last one, if my history is correct, was punchless third-string shortstop Brian Ostrosser in 1973.It's strange. The Mets always seem to have their share of Canadian prospects, but none of them ever seem to blossom.We can sit around forever waiting for Jean-Luc Blaquiere (.238 in Savannah this year) or we can be pro-active and correct this injustice.metirish Nov 23 2009 07:36 AMRe: You're The General Manager Hold on while I go and look for MFS62's previous posts.......you're asking alot there mate metirish Nov 23 2009 08:13 AMRe: You're The General Manager Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Nov 23 2009 08:24 AMBill Jmaes rates Martin as one of the players that will do better next season in his Strong Seasons Leading Index with a score of 24....A score of 24 or higher indicates a better-than 50% chance the player will sustain or improve the following seasonhttp://waswatching.com/2009/11/20/thtjames-posada-not-to-match-09-in-10/I got this form a Davidoff article so thanks KenStrong Seasons Leading Index It incorporates 1) age, 2) 2009 OPS compared to career OPS; 3) something he calls "Adjusted Ball in Play average," which is like BABIP but gives extra credit to power hitters (since they hit the ball harder, their BABIP is less likely to vary - a pretty cool tweak); 4) comparing a player's 2009 runs scored and RBI to the '08 totals; 5) a player's strikeout/walk ratio in '09; 6) speed, utilizing a formula he designed; and 7) a basic premise that all players' numbers gravitate toward the league average.Benjamin Grimm Nov 23 2009 08:23 AMRe: You're The General Manager I see that the Mets don't anyone in either category, most likely to improve or least likely to improve. (I was afraid we'd see David Wright in that latter category.)MFS62 Nov 24 2009 10:16 AMRe: You're The General Manager Benjamin Grimm wrote:I see that the Mets don't anyone in either category, most likely to improve or least likely to improve. (I was afraid we'd see David Wright in that latter category.)Speaking of improvement, check out some of the similar players baseball-reference lists for Daniel Murphy:http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/m/murphda08.shtmlAdam Lind and Lee May.(and even Norm Siebern)The guy had 54 XB hits last year.I think playing the outfield messed with his head. After moving to first base permanently, he settled down, and so did his swing.I don't understand the crying need (callers and hosts on NY sportstalk radio) for an upgrade there as opposed to addressing other needs first.Just sayin'.LaterAshie62 Nov 24 2009 10:23 AMRe: You're The General Manager metsmarathon wrote:if you think living in a free country means that nobody will argue with you when you're wrong wrong wrong, you've gotta get a new dictionary.I don't believe I'm wrong, I was ending my participation in the discussion.Ashie62 Nov 25 2009 01:34 PMRe: You're The General Manager And Adam Rubin has Fernando Martinez on the waiting to be traded lineIf true, I'm thinking established corner outfieldersmg58 Nov 25 2009 02:01 PMRe: You're The General Manager He's capable of helping next year's team, and I'm worried that because he had a bad first month in the majors and then got hurt we'd be selling low. I'd be careful with him.Ashie62 Nov 28 2009 03:12 PMRe: You're The General Manager Ashie62 wrote:And Adam Rubin has Fernando Martinez on the waiting to be traded lineIf true, I'm thinking established corner outfielderor maybe Josh Johnson?batmagadanleadoff Aug 02 2010 12:54 AMRe: You're The General Manager That would render Garvey no better than the third best 1974 Dodger. Did we miss any other '74 Dodgers better than Garvey? (covering a copy of SI in 1974 not required)Apropos to last Fall's discussion of the wretched 1974 MVP ballot won by Steve Garvey, here are the Baseball Reference WAR ratings for the top 10 ranking 1974 Dodgers. According to the BR notes for its WAR formula, a score of 8 or higher is indicative of an MVP caliber season; a score of 5 or more is all-star quality.1. Jimmy Wynn -------8.62. Andy Messersmith--6.63. Ron Cey ------------5.24. Steve Garvey-------5.1------NL MVP5. Willie Crawford ----4.16. Davey Lopes ------4.07. Joe Ferguson -----3.98. Bill Buckner--------3.79. Bill Russell ---------3.210. Mike Marshall-----3.1 -----NL CY YOUNG AWARD WINNERI was reminded of this old thread while reviewing Jon Matlack�s 1974 season. Matlack�s '74 W-L record was a disappointing 13-15 mark that did not reflect his pitching excellence that season. It would be expecting too much from a mid-�70�s voting pool to look beyond Matlack�s subpar won-loss record in order to account for the awful run support that plagued Matlack all season long .... especially a voting pool with the collective mindset to award the 20th or so best player in the league with the MVP. Not surprisingly, Matlack didn�t receive a single vote in that season�s Cy Young Award balloting. He should have. Matlack might�ve been the NL�s best pitcher that season. He wasn�t any worse than third or fourth, and unquestionably superior to CY winner Mike Marshall. Here are some selected 1974 stats for Matlack:WAR---------------8.6(MVP RANGE)-----------------1st among NL pitchersERA----------------2.41------------------------------------3RDADJ ERA----------149-------------------------------------3RDK�s------------------195--------------------------------------4TH (TIE)SHUTOUTS------7------------------------------------------1stWHIP---------------1.12--------------------------------------3rd (The top 3 pitchers were separated by 2/100 of a point)ADJ PITCHING WINS ------3.9---------------------------2ndEdgy DC Aug 02 2010 05:31 AMRe: You're The General Manager Not to disagree, but a lot of value scoring systems convert runs (created of saved) into wins, which is grossly unfair to top relief pitchers, because the runs they save tend to be difference-makers.batmagadanleadoff Aug 02 2010 09:46 AMRe: You're The General Manager Edgy DC wrote:Not to disagree, but a lot of value scoring systems convert runs (created of saved) into wins, which is grossly unfair to top relief pitchers, because the runs they save tend to be difference-makers.You can disagree. Disagreeing is more fun than agreeing. So was it fair to Matlack when he gave up one earned run in a 10 inning complete game outing on closing day and took the loss?http://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/NYN/NYN197410020.shtmlOr when he limited the division winning Pirates to two runs in eight innings in his previous start, but took the loss because the Mets scored just one?http://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/NYN/NYN197409270.shtmlOr a 7 inn/1 run no decision on 4/14/74?Or 8 inn/2 runs against the World Champ Dodgers featuring MVP Steve Garvey, the 25th best player in the league on 6/14/74?Edgy DC Aug 02 2010 11:16 AMRe: You're The General Manager Oh, I really don't disagreee. I just think Marshall was better relative to his teammates than he appears in that list. I'm not sure how win shares are calculated by BB-R.com, but I find relievers to be disproportionately scrod in many "win shares" systems.To review: Marshall was more valuable than Bill Buckner, to my thinking, but not Matlack.metsmarathon Aug 02 2010 11:23 AMRe: You're The General Manager baseballreference has mike marshall at a 0.3 WPA for 1974. he went 21-12 in save opps, with 9 holds. so, basically, with the game on the line and a small lead, he went 30-12, a horrible success rate if you relate it to relievers of today. sure, there were prolly a lot more 1-run save and hold opportunities than we see today, but still, that's not terribly good. also, given 75 inherited runners, he allowed 31 to score, a 41% IS rate. (league average in 74 was 37%; in 2010, league average is 32%)batmagadanleadoff Aug 04 2010 10:38 PMRe: You're The General Manager The top 20 WAR's for NL pitchers (1970-present)Matlack has the highest rated WAR season for a pitcher with a losing record. He deserved to win at least 20 games in '74. Wherever a pitcher scored the highest WAR in a particular season but did not win the Cy Young Award, the actual winner is noted.1. Steve Carlton/PHI ---------12.2--19722. Dwight Gooden/NYM-------11.7--19853. Tom Seaver/NYM------------9.5--19734. Steve Carlton/PHI-----------9.4--19805. Fergie Jenkins/CHI----------9.2--19716. Tom Seaver/NYM------------9.2--19717. Phil Niekro/ATL--------------9.1--1978---(Gaylord Perry/SD 4.7 WAR -- failed to crack top 10 -- ERA champ Craig Swan ranked 4th)8. Randy Johnson/ARI---------8.8--20029. Greg Maddux/ATL-----------8.8--199510. Rick Reuschel/CHI----------8.7--1977---(Steve Carlton/PHI 5.8 WAR, 6th)11. Bob Gibson/STL-------------8.7--197012. Jose Rijo/CIN----------------8.6--1993---(Greg Maddux/ATL 6.2 WAR, 2nd place)13. Jon Matlack/NYM------------8.6--1974---(Mike Marshall/LA 3.1 WAR)-------(WL 13-15)14. Phil Niekro/ATL--------------8.5--1977-------(WL 16-20)15. Dave Roberts/SD------------8.5--1971-------(WL 14-17)16. Randy Johnson/ARI---------8.4--200117. Kevin Brown/SD-------------8.4--1998---(Tom Glavine/ATL 5.6 WAR 5th)18. Greg Maddux/CHI-----------8.4--199219. Steve Rogers/MON----------8.4--1982---(Steve Carlton/PHI 5.7 WAR, 5th)20. Randy Johnson/ARI---------8.2--1999Edgy DC Aug 05 2010 07:18 AMRe: You're The General Manager metsmarathon wrote:baseballreference has mike marshall at a 0.3 WPA for 1974. he went 21-12 in save opps, with 9 holds. so, basically, with the game on the line and a small lead, he went 30-12, a horrible success rate if you relate it to relievers of today. sure, there were prolly a lot more 1-run save and hold opportunities than we see today, but still, that's not terribly good. also, given 75 inherited runners, he allowed 31 to score, a 41% IS rate. (league average in 74 was 37%; in 2010, league average is 32%)I'm just going to go with the guess that he was put in a lot more difficult situation with less of a net.It's very usage-dependent. In 2010, If a guy comes in with one out and a runner on first, he may get one out but allow the runner to third, before getting replaced and the next releiver, who allows that runner to score.If Mike Marshall comes in with the same situation, he stays in for the duration of the inning with the same events transipiring. He has yielded 100% of his runners to score while the 2010 pair of guys have yeilded only 50%, because one of the guys got out of there without coughing up a run. Right?As for saves, well, yeah, failing in 28.6% of your save situations is bad, but he's a guy pitching 1.96 innings per appearance (and perhaps more in his save and hold situations) while Mariano Rivera 2010 pitched 0.99 innings. And of course, we're talking about carrying almost three times as many innings for your team.batmagadanleadoff Aug 05 2010 11:21 AMRe: You're The General Manager Here are the 1974 NL pitching leaders for WPA.If Mike Marshall comes in with the same situation, he stays in for the duration of the inning with the same events transipiring. He has yielded 100% of his runners to score while the 2010 pair of guys have yeilded only 50%, because one of the guys got out of there without coughing up a run. Right?How does WPA account for inherited runners? If Marshall enters with an inherited runner on second base and two outs, and then immediately gives up a run scoring double, is Marshall debited with the entire run scoring event ... or is the prior reliever also charged with a portion of the run scoring event? Whatever it is, I'm guessing that the disparity between Marshall's 0.3 and the leaders' scores is too large to rack it up to unfairness.batmagadanleadoff Aug 05 2010 11:36 AMRe: You're The General Manager batmagadanleadoff wrote:Here are the 1974 NL pitching leaders for WPA.If Mike Marshall comes in with the same situation, he stays in for the duration of the inning with the same events transipiring. He has yielded 100% of his runners to score while the 2010 pair of guys have yeilded only 50%, because one of the guys got out of there without coughing up a run. Right?How does WPA account for inherited runners? If Marshall enters with an inherited runner on second base and two outs, and then immediately gives up a run scoring double, is Marshall debited with the entire run scoring event ... or is the prior reliever also charged with a portion of the run scoring event? Whatever it is, I'm guessing that the disparity between Marshall's 0.3 and the leaders' scores is too large to rack it up to unfairness.I haven't bothered to look to see how BR calculates WPA, and how the formula accounts for inherited runners. But I'm wondering if defending Marshall's WPA on the supposed unfairness of a reliever entering mid-inning to strand some other pitcher's runners is much ado about nothing. Even if the WPA penalizes a reliever who allows inherited runners to score, this should be offset by the higher score a reliever will earn when he does strand inherited runners.Edgy DC Aug 05 2010 11:52 AMRe: You're The General Manager Well, I was defending it only because that was brought up.I mostly defend relievers based on the tendency to turn runs (and runs prevented) into wins, based on the notion that X Runs = 1 win. I don't think that's fair to releivers, because they are brought in to prevent specific runs based on the leverage those runs mean toward the game.Basically you don't have to believe in and reward batters and pitchers for an ability to perform in the clutch, but when relievers (and pinch hitters) have nearly 100% of their success (and failure) occur in the clutch, I think that performance should be appropriately wieghted and measured as such.Niekro has be one of the most screwed pithers in terms of Cy Young support.batmagadanleadoff Aug 05 2010 12:26 PMRe: You're The General Manager Edgy DC wrote:Niekro has be one of the most screwed pithers in terms of Cy Young support.For sure. His peak years were the mid-70's, when the Braves sucked and 80% of the typical voter's effort consisted of looking at a pitcher's W-L record. He was quite the dominant pitcher for a while.batmagadanleadoff Aug 05 2010 12:36 PMRe: You're The General Manager batmagadanleadoff wrote:Edgy DC wrote:Niekro has be one of the most screwed pithers in terms of Cy Young support.For sure. His peak years were the mid-70's, when the Braves sucked and 80% of the typical voter's effort consisted of looking at a pitcher's W-L record. He was quite the dominant pitcher for a while.Niekro also led the NL in ERA in '67, but didn't get a single vote in the CY voting.batmagadanleadoff Aug 05 2010 09:52 PMRe: You're The General Manager The top 25 WAR seasons for NL pitchers over the last 50 years. Matlack's '74 (ranked 23rd) doesn't get bumped off. This means that a season as good as Matlack's comes along less than once every two years. According to WAR, anyways. Three seasons from 1969 make the list: but not The Franchise's '69.RankPitcher/TeamWARYEARCy Young Award Winner/WAR Rank1Steve Carlton/PHI12.21972 2Bob Gibson/STL11.91968 3Dwight Gooden/NYM11.71985 4Bob Gibson/STL11.01969 Tom Seaver/NYM/7.6/6th5Sandy Koufax/LA10.81966 6Sandy Koufax/LA10.81963 7Dick Ellsworth/CHI10.31963 8Tom Seaver/NYM9.51973 9Steve Carlton/PHI9.41980 10Fergie Jenkins/CHI9.21971 11Tom Seaver/NYM9.21971 12Juan Marichal/SF9.21965 Sandy Koufax/LA/8.2/3rd13Phil Niekro/ATL9.11978 Gaylord Perry/SD/4.7/11th14Larry Dierker/HOU9.01969 15Juan Marichal/SF9.01966 16Randy Johnson/ARI8.82002 17Greg Maddux/ATL8.81995 18Bill Hands/CHI8.81969 19Rick Reuschel/CHI8.71977 Steve Carlton/PHI/5.8/6th20Bob Gibson/STL8.71970 21Jim Bunning/PHI8.71966 22Jose Rijo/CIN8.61993 Greg Maddux/ATL/6.2/2nd23Jon Matlack/NYM8.61974 Mike Marshall/LA/3.1/19th24Phil Niekro/ATL8.51977 25Dave Roberts/SD8.51971 batmagadanleadoff Aug 06 2010 10:51 AMRe: You're The General Manager Some more WAR mongering:Trivia: Seven pitchers account for the Mets all time top 15 WAR for pitcher seasons. Name them.Rules: You must name all seven pitchers in one post. I will post the list of top Mets pitcher WAR seasons as soon as someone correctly posts all seven pitchers or at the beginning of tonight's game -- whichever comes first. I'm not going to give hints or point out which portion of someone's guess is wrong and which portion is right. Ready? Set?Go.DocTee Aug 06 2010 10:55 AMRe: You're The General Manager Koosman.GoodenSeaverDarlingFernandezConeSantanaBenjamin Grimm Aug 06 2010 10:56 AMRe: You're The General Manager Seaver, Koosman, Gooden, Cone, Viola, Santana, MatlackEdgy DC Aug 06 2010 11:02 AMRe: You're The General Manager Seaver Gooden Koosman [crossout:2cndi9v4]Saberhagen[/crossout:2cndi9v4]Cone Leiter MatlackSabe's best steason was strike-shortened. And since this is a cumulative figure, I'll say Swan instead.batmagadanleadoff Aug 06 2010 11:03 AMRe: You're The General Manager No winners yet. Doc hasn't been paying attention to some stuff.John Cougar Lunchbucket Aug 06 2010 11:08 AMRe: You're The General Manager Seaver, Gooden, Martinez, Cone, Matlack, Leiter, Koosmanbatmagadanleadoff Aug 06 2010 11:11 AMRe: You're The General Manager Still no winners.batmagadanleadoff Aug 06 2010 11:15 AMRe: You're The General Manager OK. Here's a hint that I promised I wouldn't give. One poster almost got it right. His one mistake was picking a Met whose best WAR season was the team's 16th all-time best.LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr Aug 06 2010 11:17 AMRe: You're The General Manager Seaver, Gooden, Koosman, Matlack, Cone, Viola, FernandezJohn Cougar Lunchbucket Aug 06 2010 11:25 AMRe: You're The General Manager Seaver, Gooden, Martinez, Cone, Matlack, [crossout:rsansxoo]Leiter[/crossout:rsansxoo], Koosman, Santanabatmagadanleadoff Aug 06 2010 11:29 AMRe: You're The General Manager Still no winners. For extra credit, only one Casey Stengel managed pitcher/season cracked the Mets top 50 for WAR. Name the pitcher and year.John Cougar Lunchbucket Aug 06 2010 11:30 AMRe: You're The General Manager Edit never mindbatmagadanleadoff Aug 06 2010 11:33 AMRe: You're The General Manager In other words, which Casey Stengel managed Met had the highest pitcher WAR season? (Pitcher and year, please)DocTee Aug 06 2010 11:44 AMRe: You're The General Manager MatlackSeaverGoodenConeFernandezDarlingSantanabatmagadanleadoff Aug 06 2010 11:49 AMRe: You're The General Manager Still no winners.Hint: Only one poster got six out of seven correct pitchers.LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr Aug 06 2010 11:52 AMRe: You're The General Manager Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Aug 06 2010 11:54 AMSeaver, Gooden, Koosman, Matlack, Cone, Viola,[crossout:3v0uduax]Fernandez[/crossout:3v0uduax] SantanaOE: Just peeked. I'm out. And this ain't it. (I don't think.)batmagadanleadoff Aug 06 2010 11:53 AMRe: You're The General Manager LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr wrote:Seaver, Gooden, Koosman, Matlack, Cone, Viola,[crossout]Fernandez[/crossout] SantanaThis list can't be right because it's the same seven pitchers that Grimm guessed.batmagadanleadoff Aug 06 2010 12:55 PMRe: You're The General Manager Last call. I said I'd post the answers at the start of tonight's game but something suddenly came up and so I'll post 'em in 5 minutes.Thanks for playing.Ashie62 Aug 06 2010 01:04 PMRe: You're The General Manager Carl Wiley 1963batmagadanleadoff Aug 06 2010 01:08 PMRe: You're The General Manager The seven Mets pitchers are Seaver, Gooden, Matlack, Koosman, Leiter, Santana and Viola. David Cone, whose best Met WAR season, ranked 16th all-time, was the pitcher that threw everyone off. Grimm, and then LWFS, came the closest, guessing 6 out of 7, but incorrectly guessing Cone instead of Leiter. Below is a chart of the top 25 Mets WAR pitcher seasons. Seaver's first 10 seasons(1967-1976) are all on the list. The fabulous and tragic Carlton Willey, who pitched four complete game shutouts for Casey's '63 squad is the extra credit answer. Why is there so much space between this paragraph and the chart that follows?RankPitcherWARYEAR1Dwight Gooden11.719852Tom Seaver9.519733Tom Seaver9.219714Jon Matlack8.619745Tom Seaver7.719756Tom Seaver7.619697Tom Seaver7.519688Jerry Koosman6.819689Jon Matlack6.7197210Jerry Koosman6.7196911Al Leiter6.5199812Johan Santana6.4200813Tom Seaver6.4196714Frank Viola6.3199015Tom Seaver6.0197016David Cone5.8198817Tom Seaver5.8197218Craig Swan5.7197819Tom Seaver5.7197620Tom Seaver5.7197421Jerry Koosman5.7197322Pedro Martinez5.5200523Sid Fernandez5.5199224Dwight Gooden5.4198425Bret Saberhagen5.21994Edgy DC Aug 06 2010 01:21 PMRe: You're The General Manager Fixed.I feel good about being the first to come up with Leiter '98, anyhow.LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr Aug 06 2010 01:22 PMRe: You're The General Manager Sabes really was in line for one of the all-time great Met pitching seasons, wasn't he?He and the 'spos should form a support group.Benjamin Grimm Aug 06 2010 01:28 PMRe: You're The General Manager batmagadanleadoff wrote:OK. Here's a hint that I promised I wouldn't give. One poster almost got it right. His one mistake was picking a Met whose best WAR season was the team's 16th all-time best.It looks like that was me! (I had Viola instead of Leiter.) I'll take that as a moral victory.That Marcia Brady sure was groovy, wasn't she? I think she was the grooviest girl in the whole school!Ashie62 Aug 06 2010 07:00 PMRe: You're The General Manager Benjamin Grimm wrote:batmagadanleadoff wrote:OK. Here's a hint that I promised I wouldn't give. One poster almost got it right. His one mistake was picking a Met whose best WAR season was the team's 16th all-time best.It looks like that was me! (I had Viola instead of Leiter.) I'll take that as a moral victory.That Marcia Brady sure was groovy, wasn't she? I think she was the grooviest girl in the whole school!And Johnny Bravo was the coolest guy.batmagadanleadoff Aug 07 2010 03:33 AMRe: You're The General Manager Edited 3 time(s), most recently on Aug 08 2010 10:22 PMBest Mets Pitching WAR seasons #26-50:(But first ... lotsa blank lines that appear before my chart for reasons that I don't know why)RankPitcher/TeamWARYEAR26Jerry Koosman5.1197427Al Leiter4.7200028Bob Ojeda4.7198629Mike Hampton4.6200030Ron Darling4.6198631Craig Swan4.6197932Jerry Koosman4.6197633Jon Matlack4.6197334Dwight Gooden4.4198635Ron Darling4.4198536Al Leiter4.2200437David Cone4.2199138Rick Reed4.1199839Rick Reed4.1199740Jon Matlack4.1197641Tug McGraw4.0197142Carl Willey4.0196343Tug McGraw3.9197244Dwight Gooden3.8198745Jim McAndrew3.8197246Steve Trachsel3.7200347Dwight Gooden3.7199348David Cone3.7199049Sid Fernandez3.7198550Johan Santana3.62009batmagadanleadoff Aug 07 2010 04:38 AMRe: You're The General Manager Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Aug 08 2010 10:28 PM2010 NL Pitcher WAR leaders, to date, (BR).R.A. Dickey is 6th in IP/WAR and is on pace to knock Johan/2009 off of the Mets top #50 (see post above) Johan/2010 might also knock Johan/2009 off of the top 50. But first, some blank lines.WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA5.725.792Roy Halladay/PHI5.631.793Adam Wainwright/STL4.833.404Tim Hudson/ATL4.632.324Ubaldo Jimenez/COL4.632.256Brett Myers/HOU3.641.946Livan Hernandez/WAS3.640.098Chris Carpenter/STL3.546.869Johan Santana/NYM3.346.8710Tim Lincecum/SF3.247.4011Matt Cain/SF3.247.1912Yovani Gallardo/MIL3.140.7513Clayton Kershaw/LA3.045.8914Mat Latos/SD2.942.6415Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI2.850.4816Barry Zito/SF2.753.2117R.A. Dickey/NYM2.638.0818Jaime Garcia/STL2.646.5419Cole Hamels/PHI2.555.6020Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD2.451.67Benjamin Grimm Aug 07 2010 05:07 AMRe: You're The General Manager batmagadanleadoff wrote:(But first ... lotsa blank lines that appear before my chart for reasons that I don't know why)Try removing the line feeds from your BBCode. Make it look like one big fat paragraph.Edgy DC Aug 07 2010 06:30 AMRe: You're The General Manager Yeah, I jumped in there and fixed it for you, but removing the line breaks is the key.batmagadanleadoff Aug 09 2010 07:00 PMRe: You're The General Manager batmagadanleadoff wrote:2010 NL Pitcher WAR leaders, to date, (BR).R.A. Dickey is 6th in IP/WAR and is on pace to knock Johan/2009 off of the Mets top #50 (see post above) Johan/2010 might also knock Johan/2009 off of the top 50. But first, some blank lines.WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA5.725.792Roy Halladay/PHI5.631.793Adam Wainwright/STL4.833.404Tim Hudson/ATL4.632.324Ubaldo Jimenez/COL4.632.256Brett Myers/HOU3.641.946Livan Hernandez/WAS3.640.098Chris Carpenter/STL3.546.869Johan Santana/NYM3.346.8710Tim Lincecum/SF3.247.4011Matt Cain/SF3.247.1912Yovani Gallardo/MIL3.140.7513Clayton Kershaw/LA3.045.8914Mat Latos/SD2.942.6415Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI2.850.4816Barry Zito/SF2.753.2117R.A. Dickey/NYM2.638.0818Jaime Garcia/STL2.646.5419Cole Hamels/PHI2.555.6020Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD2.451.67Updated.Johan Santana makes the biggest gain on the WAR chart, moving up two places and reducing his IP/WAR by about four innings. As of now, Santana's 2010 season ranks as the 44th all time best Mets pitcher WAR season. Teammate R.A. Dickey takes the worst hit in the NL pitcher WAR rankings, (2.6 to 2.1) dropping out of the top 20 and falling to 25th place. Dickey's IP/WAR increases by 10 innings.WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA6.125.412Roy Halladay/PHI5.533.643Adam Wainwright/STL5.232.564Tim Hudson/ATL5.031.335Ubaldo Jimenez/COL4.632.256Livan Hernandez/WAS3.938.807Johan Santana/NYM3.842.638Brett Myers/HOU3.643.619Chris Carpenter/STL3.448.2410Matt Cain/SF3.248.7511Tim Lincecum/SF3.247.4012Mat Latos/SD3.240.5213Yovani Gallardo/MIL3.044.1114Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI2.948.7415Barry Zito/SF2.951.9516Cole Hamels/PHI2.852.1417Clayton Kershaw/LA2.655.2618Jaime Garcia/STL2.646.5419Ted Lilly/CHIC/LAD2.454.1720Johnny Cueto/CIN2.456.67.25R.A. Dickey/NYM2.148.57batmagadanleadoff Aug 09 2010 07:39 PMRe: You're The General Manager Mets all time pitcher WAR seasons 26-60, up to date, including Johan's 2010 season (#44). Pound per pound per WAR, the Mets all time best pitching season might be Armando Benitez's 1999; he racked up a 3.5 WAR score in just 78 innings. Armando's dominant IP/WAR in 1999 was 22.29. Seaver (1967) is not the only Wes Westrum managed pitcher to crack the top 60.RankPitcher/TeamWARYEAR26Jerry Koosman5.1197427Al Leiter4.7200028Bob Ojeda4.7198629Mike Hampton4.6200030Ron Darling4.6198631Craig Swan4.6197932Jerry Koosman4.6197633Jon Matlack4.6197334Dwight Gooden4.4198635Ron Darling4.4198536Al Leiter4.2200437David Cone4.2199138Rick Reed4.1199839Rick Reed4.1199740Jon Matlack4.1197641Tug McGraw4.0197142Carl Willey4.0196343Tug McGraw3.9197244Johan Santana3.8201045Dwight Gooden3.8198746Jim McAndrew3.8197247Steve Trachsel3.7200348Dwight Gooden3.7199349David Cone3.7199050Sid Fernandez3.7198551Johan Santana3.6200952Jesse Orosco3.6198353Armando Benitez3.5199954Nino Espinosa3.5197755Dennis Ribant3.5196656Kevin Appier3.4200157Jerry Koosman3.4197058Roger Craig3.4196259David Cone3.3199260Dwight Gooden3.31988batmagadanleadoff Aug 09 2010 09:30 PMRe: You're The General Manager Top 60 Mets pitcher WAR seasons in chronological order. Bonus: no superfluous blank lines preceding the chart below. If I didn't already post this chart, I'd ask the forum to guess the only Met season that would feature four top-60 Met pitcher WAR seasons. You can still guess before you look, below.RankPitcher/TeamWARYEAR58Roger Craig3.4196242Carl Willey4.0196355Dennis Ribant3.5196613Tom Seaver6.419677Tom Seaver7.519688Jerry Koosman6.819686Tom Seaver7.6196910Jerry Koosman6.7196915Tom Seaver6.0197057Jerry Koosman3.419703Tom Seaver9.2197141Tug McGraw4.019719Jon Matlack6.7197217Tom Seaver5.8197243Tug McGraw3.9197246Jim McAndrew3.819722Tom Seaver9.5197321Jerry Koosman5.7197333Jon Matlack4.619734Jon Matlack8.6197420Tom Seaver5.7197426Jerry Koosman5.119745Tom Seaver7.7197519Tom Seaver5.7197632Jerry Koosman4.6197640Jon Matlack4.1197654Nino Espinosa3.5197718Craig Swan5.7197831Craig Swan4.6197952Jesse Orosco3.6198324Dwight Gooden5.419841Dwight Gooden11.7198535Ron Darling4.4198550Sid Fernandez3.7198528Bob Ojeda4.7198630Ron Darling4.6198634Dwight Gooden4.4198645Dwight Gooden3.8198716David Cone5.8198860Dwight Gooden3.3198814Frank Viola6.3199049David Cone3.7199037David Cone4.2199123Sid Fernandez5.5199259David Cone3.3199248Dwight Gooden3.7199325Bret Saberhagen5.2199439Rick Reed4.1199711Al Leiter6.5199838Rick Reed4.1199853Armando Benitez3.5199927Al Leiter4.7200029Mike Hampton4.6200056Kevin Appier3.4200147Steve Trachsel3.7200336Al Leiter4.2200422Pedro Martinez5.5200512Johan Santana6.4200851Johan Santana3.6200944Johan Santana3.82010batmagadanleadoff Aug 10 2010 10:09 AMRe: You're The General Manager So look at who's 26th in WAR with the 2d best IP/WAR rate on the chart.....WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA6.125.412Roy Halladay/PHI5.533.643Adam Wainwright/STL5.232.564Tim Hudson/ATL5.031.335Ubaldo Jimenez/COL4.632.256Livan Hernandez/WAS3.938.807Johan Santana/NYM3.842.638Brett Myers/HOU3.643.619Chris Carpenter/STL3.448.2410Matt Cain/SF3.248.7511Tim Lincecum/SF3.247.4012Mat Latos/SD3.240.5213Yovani Gallardo/MIL3.044.1114Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI2.948.7415Barry Zito/SF2.951.9516Cole Hamels/PHI2.852.1417Clayton Kershaw/LA2.655.2618Jaime Garcia/STL2.646.5419Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD2.454.1720Johnny Cueto/CIN2.456.67.25R.A. Dickey/NYM2.148.5726Francisco Rodriguez/NYM2.027.67batmagadanleadoff Aug 10 2010 09:38 PMRe: You're The General Manager The top 100 Mets pitcher WAR seasons, then ranked according to IP/WAR. Or ... which Mets pitcher seasons might've generated the best Strat-O-Matic cards. An IP/WAR of 40 begins to approach dominance.Not surprisingly, seven of the top 10 IP/WAR seasons were turned in by relief pitchers, who generally pitch at a more intense pace than starters, given that they're not expected to throw more than 30-40 pitches per appearance, if even that many.IP/WAR RankWAR RankPitcher/TeamWARYEARIP/WAR153Armando Benitez3.5199922.2921Dwight Gooden11.7198523.65390Randy Myers2.6198826.15443Tug McGraw3.9197227.18541Tug McGraw4.0197127.75611Al Leiter6.5199829.69783Bob Apodaca2.8197530.24895Armando Benitez2.5200030.4092Tom Seaver9.51973 30.531052Jesse Orosco3.6198330.56114Jon Matlack8.61974 30.85123Tom Seaver9.21971 31.121379Jason Isringhausen2.9199532.071497Jesse Orosco2.5198632.401525Bret Saberhagen5.2199434.10166Tom Seaver7.6196935.961710Jerry Koosman6.7196935.971818Craig Swan5.7197836.37195Tom Seaver7.71975 36.41209Jon Matlack6.7197236.422112Johan Santana6.4200836.61227Tom Seaver7.51968 37.072389Tug McGraw2.7196937.16248Jerry Koosman6.8196838.772523Sid Fernandez5.5199239.032613Tom Seaver6.4196739.222722Pedro Martinez5.5200539.452814Frank Viola6.3199039.632916David Cone5.8198839.893070Sid Fernandez3.0199339.893124Dwight Gooden5.4198440.3732 36Al Leiter4.2200441.353320Tom Seaver5.7197441.403446Jim McAndrew3.8197242.283544Johan Santana3.8201042.633627Al Leiter4.7200044.263717Tom Seaver5.8197245.173842Carl Willey4.0196345.753950Sid Fernandez3.7198546.044021Jerry Koosman5.7197346.144128Bob Ojeda4.7198646.244251Johan Santana3.6200946.304345Dwight Gooden3.8198747.284429Mike Hampton4.6200047.324519Tom Seaver5.7197647.544667George Stone3.1197347.744715Tom Seaver6.0197048.444881Bret Saberhagen2.8199349.764984Rick Reed2.7200149.885039Rick Reed4.1199750.815130Ron Darling4.6198651.525238Rick Reed4.1199851.795326Jerry Koosman5.11974 51.965433Jon Matlack4.6197352.615566Craig Swan3.1198253.665632Jerry Koosman4.6197653.775755Dennis Ribant3.5196653.815831Craig Swan4.6197954.645972Pat Zachry3.0198054.896047Steve Trachsel3.7200355.326137David Cone4.2199155.406299Ed Lynch2.5198255.736380Ray Sadecki2.9197156.326435Ron Darling4.4198556.366548Dwight Gooden3.7199356.406662Al Leiter3.2200356.466734Dwight Gooden4.41986 56.826854Nino Espinosa3.5197757.146949David Cone3.7199057.217059David Cone3.3199259.607156Kevin Appier3.4200160.787264Dwight Gooden3.1199161.297371Sid Fernandez3.0199862.337457Jerry Koosman3.4197062.357591Jerry Koosman2.6197163.727674Galen Cisco3.0196463.897740Jon Matlack4.1197663.907877Al Leiter2.9200164.607961Tom Glavine3.2200466.358078Bobby Jones2.9199867.368163Sid Fernandez3.2198968.548258Roger Craig3.4196268.638375Mike Pelfrey2.9200869.208487Bob Ojeda2.7198870.498592Jim McAndrew2.6197070.908676Tom Glavine2.9200572.878769Al Jackson3.1196274.628860Dwight Gooden3.3198875.258994Jae Seo2.5200375.339068Gary Gentry3.1196975.389188Sid Fernandez2.7198675.689296Glendon Rusch2.5200076.279373Jack Fisher3.0196676.679465Ron Darling3.1198877.639582Jerry Koosman2.8197780.959685Frank Viola2.7199185.689786Dwight Gooden2.7199086.179893Roger Craig2.6196390.779998Tom Seaver2.5198392.40100100Jack Fisher2.51965101.47batmagadanleadoff Aug 11 2010 09:30 AMRe: You're The General Manager batmagadanleadoff wrote:The top 100 Mets pitcher WAR seasons, then ranked according to IP/WAR. Or ... which Mets pitcher seasons might've generated the best Strat-O-Matic cards. An IP/WAR of 40 begins to approach dominance.Not surprisingly, seven of the top 10 IP/WAR seasons were turned in by relief pitchers, who generally pitch at a more intense pace than starters, given that they're not expected to throw more than 30-40 pitches per appearance, if even that many.IP/WAR RankWAR RankPitcher/TeamWARYEARIP/WAR153Armando Benitez3.5199922.2921Dwight Gooden11.7198523.65390Randy Myers2.6198826.15443Tug McGraw3.9197227.18541Tug McGraw4.0197127.75611Al Leiter6.5199829.69783Bob Apodaca2.8197530.24895Armando Benitez2.5200030.4092Tom Seaver9.51973 30.531052Jesse Orosco3.6198330.56114Jon Matlack8.61974 30.85123Tom Seaver9.21971 31.121379Jason Isringhausen2.9199532.071497Jesse Orosco2.5198632.401525Bret Saberhagen5.2199434.10166Tom Seaver7.6196935.961710Jerry Koosman6.7196935.971818Craig Swan5.7197836.37195Tom Seaver7.71975 36.41209Jon Matlack6.7197236.422112Johan Santana6.4200836.61227Tom Seaver7.51968 37.072389Tug McGraw2.7196937.16248Jerry Koosman6.8196838.772523Sid Fernandez5.5199239.032613Tom Seaver6.4196739.222722Pedro Martinez5.5200539.452814Frank Viola6.3199039.632916David Cone5.8198839.893070Sid Fernandez3.0199339.893124Dwight Gooden5.4198440.3732 36Al Leiter4.2200441.353320Tom Seaver5.7197441.403446Jim McAndrew3.8197242.283544Johan Santana3.8201042.633627Al Leiter4.7200044.263717Tom Seaver5.8197245.173842Carl Willey4.0196345.753950Sid Fernandez3.7198546.044021Jerry Koosman5.7197346.144128Bob Ojeda4.7198646.244251Johan Santana3.6200946.304345Dwight Gooden3.8198747.284429Mike Hampton4.6200047.324519Tom Seaver5.7197647.544667George Stone3.1197347.744715Tom Seaver6.0197048.444881Bret Saberhagen2.8199349.764984Rick Reed2.7200149.885039Rick Reed4.1199750.815130Ron Darling4.6198651.525238Rick Reed4.1199851.795326Jerry Koosman5.11974 51.965433Jon Matlack4.6197352.615566Craig Swan3.1198253.665632Jerry Koosman4.6197653.775755Dennis Ribant3.5196653.815831Craig Swan4.6197954.645972Pat Zachry3.0198054.896047Steve Trachsel3.7200355.326137David Cone4.2199155.406299Ed Lynch2.5198255.736380Ray Sadecki2.9197156.326435Ron Darling4.4198556.366548Dwight Gooden3.7199356.406662Al Leiter3.2200356.466734Dwight Gooden4.41986 56.826854Nino Espinosa3.5197757.146949David Cone3.7199057.217059David Cone3.3199259.607156Kevin Appier3.4200160.787264Dwight Gooden3.1199161.297371Sid Fernandez3.0199862.337457Jerry Koosman3.4197062.357591Jerry Koosman2.6197163.727674Galen Cisco3.0196463.897740Jon Matlack4.1197663.907877Al Leiter2.9200164.607961Tom Glavine3.2200466.358078Bobby Jones2.9199867.368163Sid Fernandez3.2198968.548258Roger Craig3.4196268.638375Mike Pelfrey2.9200869.208487Bob Ojeda2.7198870.498592Jim McAndrew2.6197070.908676Tom Glavine2.9200572.878769Al Jackson3.1196274.628860Dwight Gooden3.3198875.258994Jae Seo2.5200375.339068Gary Gentry3.1196975.389188Sid Fernandez2.7198675.689296Glendon Rusch2.5200076.279373Jack Fisher3.0196676.679465Ron Darling3.1198877.639582Jerry Koosman2.8197780.959685Frank Viola2.7199185.689786Dwight Gooden2.7199086.179893Roger Craig2.6196390.779998Tom Seaver2.5198392.40100100Jack Fisher2.51965101.47The top 100 Mets pitcher WAR seasons, in chronological order.IP/WAR RankWAR RankPitcher/TeamWARYEARIP/WAR8258Roger Craig3.4196268.638769Al Jackson3.1196274.623842Carl Willey4.0196345.759893Roger Craig2.6196390.777674Galen Cisco3.0196463.89100100Jack Fisher2.51965101.475755Dennis Ribant3.5196653.819373Jack Fisher3.0196676.672613Tom Seaver6.4196739.22227Tom Seaver7.51968 37.07248Jerry Koosman6.8196838.77166Tom Seaver7.6196935.961710Jerry Koosman6.7196935.979068Gary Gentry3.1196975.382389Tug McGraw2.7196937.16IP/WAR RankWAR RankPitcher/TeamWARYEARIP/WAR4715Tom Seaver6.0197048.447457Jerry Koosman3.4197062.358592Jim McAndrew2.6197070.90123Tom Seaver9.21971 31.12541Tug McGraw4.0197127.756380Ray Sadecki2.9197156.327591Jerry Koosman2.6197163.72209Jon Matlack6.7197236.423717Tom Seaver5.8197245.17IP/WAR RankWAR RankPitcher/TeamWARYEARIP/WAR443Tug McGraw3.9197227.183446Jim McAndrew3.8197242.2892Tom Seaver9.51973 30.534021Jerry Koosman5.7197346.145433Jon Matlack4.6197352.614667George Stone3.1197347.74114Jon Matlack8.61974 30.853320Tom Seaver5.7197441.405326Jerry Koosman5.11974 51.96195Tom Seaver7.71975 36.41783Bob Apodaca2.8197530.244519Tom Seaver5.7197647.545632Jerry Koosman4.6197653.777740Jon Matlack4.1197663.906854Nino Espinosa3.5197757.149582Jerry Koosman2.8197780.951818Craig Swan5.7197836.375831Craig Swan4.6197954.645972Pat Zachry3.0198054.895566Craig Swan3.1198253.666299Ed Lynch2.5198255.731052Jesse Orosco3.6198330.569998Tom Seaver2.5198392.403124Dwight Gooden5.4198440.3721Dwight Gooden11.7198523.656435Ron Darling4.4198556.36IP/WAR RankWAR RankPitcher/TeamWARYEARIP/WAR3950Sid Fernandez3.7198546.044128Bob Ojeda4.7198646.245130Ron Darling4.6198651.526734Dwight Gooden4.41986 56.829188Sid Fernandez2.7198675.681497Jesse Orosco2.5198632.404345Dwight Gooden3.8198747.282916David Cone5.8198839.898860Dwight Gooden3.3198875.259465Ron Darling3.1198877.637371Sid Fernandez3.0198862.338487Bob Ojeda2.7198870.49390Randy Myers2.6198826.158163Sid Fernandez3.2198968.542814Frank Viola6.3199039.636949David Cone3.7199057.219786Dwight Gooden2.7199086.176137David Cone4.2199155.407264Dwight Gooden3.1199161.299685Frank Viola2.7199185.682523Sid Fernandez5.5199239.037059David Cone3.3199259.606548Dwight Gooden3.7199356.403070Sid Fernandez3.0199339.894881Bret Saberhagen2.8199349.761525Bret Saberhagen5.2199434.101379Jason Isringhausen2.9199532.075039Rick Reed4.1199750.81611Al Leiter6.5199829.695238Rick Reed4.1199851.798078Bobby Jones2.9199867.36153Armando Benitez3.5199922.29IP/WAR RankWAR RankPitcher/TeamWARYEARIP/WAR3627Al Leiter4.7200044.264429Mike Hampton4.6200047.32895Armando Benitez2.5200030.409296Glendon Rusch2.5200076.277156Kevin Appier3.4200160.787877Al Leiter2.9200164.604984Rick Reed2.7200149.886047Steve Trachsel3.7200355.326662Al Leiter3.2200356.468994Jae Seo2.5200375.3332 36Al Leiter4.2200441.357961Tom Glavine3.22200466.352722Pedro Martinez5.5200539.458676Tom Glavine2.9200572.872112Johan Santana6.4200836.618375Mike Pelfrey2.9200869.204251Johan Santana3.6200946.303544Johan Santana3.8201042.63batmagadanleadoff Aug 11 2010 10:09 PMRe: You're The General Manager Who is the only Met pitcher to have pitched two of the 20 all time worst Met pitcher WAR seasons?Edgy DC Aug 12 2010 07:14 AMRe: You're The General Manager Jay Hook.John Cougar Lunchbucket Aug 12 2010 07:48 AMRe: You're The General Manager Craig Andersonbatmagadanleadoff Aug 12 2010 10:58 AMRe: You're The General Manager The answer is Oliver Perez. RankPitcherWARYEAR1Paul Wilson-2.819962Craig Anderson-2.019623Randy Jones-1.819814Doug Sisk-1.719855Jim McAndrew-1.719736Aaron Heilman-1.520037Cal Koonce-1.519698Pete Schourek-1.519939Jay Hook-1.5196310Oliver Perez-1.4200911Doug Henry-1.4199612Mike Bruhert-1.4197813Mike Scott-1.4198214Chuck Estrada-1.3196715Calvin Schiraldi-1.3198516Jason Isringhausen-1.3199717Rich Rodriguez-1.3200018Larry Bearnarth-1.3196519George Stone-1.3197420Oliver Perez-1.2201021Jose Lima-1.2200622Gordon Richardson-1.2196623Jorge Sosa-1.2200824Bruce Berenyi-1.2198625Phil Hennigan-1.2197326Ray Daviault-1.2196227Dock Ellis-1.21979Edgy DC Aug 12 2010 11:00 AMRe: You're The General Manager Looks like Ollie could still get off of that hook.batmagadanleadoff Aug 13 2010 11:56 AMRe: You're The General Manager batmagadanleadoff wrote:So look at who's 26th in WAR with the 2d best IP/WAR rate on the chart.....WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA6.125.412Roy Halladay/PHI5.533.643Adam Wainwright/STL5.232.564Tim Hudson/ATL5.031.335Ubaldo Jimenez/COL4.632.256Livan Hernandez/WAS3.938.807Johan Santana/NYM3.842.638Brett Myers/HOU3.643.619Chris Carpenter/STL3.448.2410Matt Cain/SF3.248.7511Tim Lincecum/SF3.247.4012Mat Latos/SD3.240.5213Yovani Gallardo/MIL3.044.1114Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI2.948.7415Barry Zito/SF2.951.9516Cole Hamels/PHI2.852.1417Clayton Kershaw/LA2.655.2618Jaime Garcia/STL2.646.5419Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD2.454.1720Johnny Cueto/CIN2.456.67.25R.A. Dickey/NYM2.148.5726Francisco Rodriguez/NYM2.027.67Johan Santana's making his move on this year's elite pitchers .... Ryan Dempster cracks the top 20 ...... K-Rod still packs a mean wallopWAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA6.125.412Roy Halladay/PHI5.732.463Adam Wainwright/STL5.631.494Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.031.075Tim Hudson/ATL5.031.336Johan Santana/NYM4.438.867Livan Hernandez/WAS4.039.428Chris Carpenter/STL3.647.59Brett Myers/HOU3.544.8610Matt Cain/SF3.447.6511Mat Latos/SD3.240.5212Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.246.3513Yovani Gallardo/MIL3.044.1114Cole Hamels/PHI3.048.6715Tim Lincecum/SF2.953.6816Barry Zito/SF2.954.1417Clayton Kershaw/LA2.853.6918Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD2.552.0019Ryan Dempster/CHI2.562.9320Jaime Garcia/STL2.452.64.26K-Rod/NYM2.126.83.28R.A. Dickey/NYM2.148.57batmagadanleadoff Aug 14 2010 12:08 PMRe: You're The General Manager Johan Santana's making his move on this year's elite pitchers .... Ryan Dempster cracks the top 20 ...... K-Rod still packs a mean wallopWAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA6.125.412Roy Halladay/PHI5.732.463Adam Wainwright/STL5.631.494Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.031.075Tim Hudson/ATL5.031.336Johan Santana/NYM4.438.867Livan Hernandez/WAS4.039.428Chris Carpenter/STL3.647.59Brett Myers/HOU3.544.8610Matt Cain/SF3.447.6511Mat Latos/SD3.240.5212Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.246.3513Yovani Gallardo/MIL3.044.1114Cole Hamels/PHI3.048.6715Tim Lincecum/SF2.953.6816Barry Zito/SF2.954.1417Clayton Kershaw/LA2.853.6918Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD2.552.0019Ryan Dempster/CHI2.562.9320Jaime Garcia/STL2.452.64.26K-Rod/NYM2.126.83.28R.A. Dickey/NYM2.148.57updated through last night:WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA5.727.852Roy Halladay/PHI5.732.463Tim Hudson/ATL5.529.944Adam Wainwright/STL5.532.065Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.031.076Johan Santana/NYM4.438.867Livan Hernandez/WAS4.039.428Brett Myers/HOU3.843.169Chris Carpenter/STL3.548.8610Matt Cain/SF3.349.0911Cole Hamels/PHI3.346.6712Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.246.3513Mat Latos/SD3.141.8314Yovani Gallardo/MIL3.046.4415Barry Zito/SF3.052.3316Tim Lincecum/SF2.953.6817Clayton Kershaw/LA2.853.6918R.A. Dickey/NYM2.642.6919Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD2.552.0020Ryan Dempster/CHI2.562.93.27K-Rod/NYM2.126.83batmagadanleadoff Aug 14 2010 10:54 PMRe: You're The General Manager Mets top 10 ERA+ seasons - starting pitchers only:RankPitcherERA+YEAR1Dwight Gooden22919852Tom Seaver19419713Tom Seaver17519734Al Leiter17019985Johan Santana16620086R.A. Dickey16620107Tom Seaver16519698Jerry Koosman16019699Bret Saberhagen153199410Jon Matlack1491974batmagadanleadoff Aug 19 2010 11:12 AMRe: You're The General Manager Johan Santana's making his move on this year's elite pitchers .... Ryan Dempster cracks the top 20 ...... K-Rod still packs a mean wallopWAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA6.125.412Roy Halladay/PHI5.732.463Adam Wainwright/STL5.631.494Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.031.075Tim Hudson/ATL5.031.336Johan Santana/NYM4.438.867Livan Hernandez/WAS4.039.428Chris Carpenter/STL3.647.59Brett Myers/HOU3.544.8610Matt Cain/SF3.447.6511Mat Latos/SD3.240.5212Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.246.3513Yovani Gallardo/MIL3.044.1114Cole Hamels/PHI3.048.6715Tim Lincecum/SF2.953.6816Barry Zito/SF2.954.1417Clayton Kershaw/LA2.853.6918Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD2.552.0019Ryan Dempster/CHI2.562.9320Jaime Garcia/STL2.452.64.26K-Rod/NYM2.126.83.28R.A. Dickey/NYM2.148.57updated through last night:WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA5.727.852Roy Halladay/PHI5.732.463Tim Hudson/ATL5.529.944Adam Wainwright/STL5.532.065Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.031.076Johan Santana/NYM4.438.867Livan Hernandez/WAS4.039.428Brett Myers/HOU3.843.169Chris Carpenter/STL3.548.8610Matt Cain/SF3.349.0911Cole Hamels/PHI3.346.6712Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.246.3513Mat Latos/SD3.141.8314Yovani Gallardo/MIL3.046.4415Barry Zito/SF3.052.3316Tim Lincecum/SF2.953.6817Clayton Kershaw/LA2.853.6918R.A. Dickey/NYM2.642.6919Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD2.552.0020Ryan Dempster/CHI2.562.93.27K-Rod/NYM2.126.83Updated through 8/18. No changes in the top 20. Santana drops to 7th. Lincecum clings.WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA6.027.782Roy Halladay/PHI6.032.173Tim Hudson/ATL5.630.654Adam Wainwright/STL5.632.745Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.231.416Livan Hernandez/WAS4.338.297Johan Santana/NYM4.242.628Brett Myers/HOU3.943.859Chris Carpenter/STL3.452.0610Mat Latos/SD3.341.1111Clayton Kershaw/LA3.347.6812Matt Cain/SF3.350.9113Cole Hamels/PHI3.248.1314Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.248.5415Barry Zito/SF3.054.0016Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD2.946.9017Yovani Gallardo/MIL2.948.0518R.A. Dickey/NYM2.842.6219Ryan Dempster/CHI2.760.7420Tim Lincecum/SF2.563.73.27K-Rod/NYM2.127.30.37Jonathon Niese/NYM1.873.89batmagadanleadoff Aug 25 2010 12:41 PMRe: You're The General Manager .batmagadanleadoff Aug 25 2010 12:58 PMRe: You're The General Manager Johan Santana's making his move on this year's elite pitchers .... Ryan Dempster cracks the top 20 ...... K-Rod still packs a mean wallopWAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA6.125.412Roy Halladay/PHI5.732.463Adam Wainwright/STL5.631.494Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.031.075Tim Hudson/ATL5.031.336Johan Santana/NYM4.438.867Livan Hernandez/WAS4.039.428Chris Carpenter/STL3.647.59Brett Myers/HOU3.544.8610Matt Cain/SF3.447.6511Mat Latos/SD3.240.5212Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.246.3513Yovani Gallardo/MIL3.044.1114Cole Hamels/PHI3.048.6715Tim Lincecum/SF2.953.6816Barry Zito/SF2.954.1417Clayton Kershaw/LA2.853.6918Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD2.552.0019Ryan Dempster/CHI2.562.9320Jaime Garcia/STL2.452.64.26K-Rod/NYM2.126.83.28R.A. Dickey/NYM2.148.57updated through last night:WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA5.727.852Roy Halladay/PHI5.732.463Tim Hudson/ATL5.529.944Adam Wainwright/STL5.532.065Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.031.076Johan Santana/NYM4.438.867Livan Hernandez/WAS4.039.428Brett Myers/HOU3.843.169Chris Carpenter/STL3.548.8610Matt Cain/SF3.349.0911Cole Hamels/PHI3.346.6712Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.246.3513Mat Latos/SD3.141.8314Yovani Gallardo/MIL3.046.4415Barry Zito/SF3.052.3316Tim Lincecum/SF2.953.6817Clayton Kershaw/LA2.853.6918R.A. Dickey/NYM2.642.6919Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD2.552.0020Ryan Dempster/CHI2.562.93.27K-Rod/NYM2.126.83Updated through 8/18. No changes in the top 20. Santana drops to 7th. Lincecum clings.WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA6.027.782Roy Halladay/PHI6.032.173Tim Hudson/ATL5.630.654Adam Wainwright/STL5.632.745Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.231.416Livan Hernandez/WAS4.338.297Johan Santana/NYM4.242.628Brett Myers/HOU3.943.859Chris Carpenter/STL3.452.0610Mat Latos/SD3.341.1111Clayton Kershaw/LA3.347.6812Matt Cain/SF3.350.9113Cole Hamels/PHI3.248.1314Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.248.5415Barry Zito/SF3.054.0016Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD2.946.9017Yovani Gallardo/MIL2.948.0518R.A. Dickey/NYM2.842.6219Ryan Dempster/CHI2.760.7420Tim Lincecum/SF2.563.73.27K-Rod/NYM2.127.30.37Jonathon Niese/NYM1.873.89Updated through games of 8/24. The riveting news: Lincecum and Gallardo are out of the top 20; Jaime Garcia and Fla's Anibal Sanchez are in. Memorize the chart. Quiz tomorrow.WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Roy Halladay/PHI6.630.302Josh Johnson/FLA5.829.603Tim Hudson/ATL5.532.304Adam Wainwright/STL5.534.615Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.232.566Johan Santana/NYM4.343.497Brett Myers/HOU4.242.388Livan Hernandez/WAS3.844.479Chris Carpenter/STL3.749.8210Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.645.0911Matt Cain/SF3.648.8912Mat Latos/SD3.540.7613Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD3.543.2414Clayton Kershaw/LA3.448.3315Cole Hamels/PHI3.251.8816Ryan Dempster/CHI3.057.3317Jaime Garcia/STL2.948.7418R.A. Dickey/NYM2.746.7919Anibal Sanchez/FLA2.754.9420Barry Zito/SF2.663.72.27K-Rod/NYM2.127.30.36Jonathon Niese/NYM1.972.63.44Mike Pelfrey/NYM1.789.22.48Stephen Strasburg/WASH1.642.50batmagadanleadoff Aug 30 2010 11:34 AMRe: You're The General Manager Johan Santana's making his move on this year's elite pitchers .... Ryan Dempster cracks the top 20 ...... K-Rod still packs a mean wallopWAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA6.125.412Roy Halladay/PHI5.732.463Adam Wainwright/STL5.631.494Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.031.075Tim Hudson/ATL5.031.336Johan Santana/NYM4.438.867Livan Hernandez/WAS4.039.428Chris Carpenter/STL3.647.59Brett Myers/HOU3.544.8610Matt Cain/SF3.447.6511Mat Latos/SD3.240.5212Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.246.3513Yovani Gallardo/MIL3.044.1114Cole Hamels/PHI3.048.6715Tim Lincecum/SF2.953.6816Barry Zito/SF2.954.1417Clayton Kershaw/LA2.853.6918Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD2.552.0019Ryan Dempster/CHI2.562.9320Jaime Garcia/STL2.452.64.26K-Rod/NYM2.126.83.28R.A. Dickey/NYM2.148.57updated through last night:WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA5.727.852Roy Halladay/PHI5.732.463Tim Hudson/ATL5.529.944Adam Wainwright/STL5.532.065Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.031.076Johan Santana/NYM4.438.867Livan Hernandez/WAS4.039.428Brett Myers/HOU3.843.169Chris Carpenter/STL3.548.8610Matt Cain/SF3.349.0911Cole Hamels/PHI3.346.6712Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.246.3513Mat Latos/SD3.141.8314Yovani Gallardo/MIL3.046.4415Barry Zito/SF3.052.3316Tim Lincecum/SF2.953.6817Clayton Kershaw/LA2.853.6918R.A. Dickey/NYM2.642.6919Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD2.552.0020Ryan Dempster/CHI2.562.93.27K-Rod/NYM2.126.83Updated through 8/18. No changes in the top 20. Santana drops to 7th. Lincecum clings.WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA6.027.782Roy Halladay/PHI6.032.173Tim Hudson/ATL5.630.654Adam Wainwright/STL5.632.745Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.231.416Livan Hernandez/WAS4.338.297Johan Santana/NYM4.242.628Brett Myers/HOU3.943.859Chris Carpenter/STL3.452.0610Mat Latos/SD3.341.1111Clayton Kershaw/LA3.347.6812Matt Cain/SF3.350.9113Cole Hamels/PHI3.248.1314Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.248.5415Barry Zito/SF3.054.0016Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD2.946.9017Yovani Gallardo/MIL2.948.0518R.A. Dickey/NYM2.842.6219Ryan Dempster/CHI2.760.7420Tim Lincecum/SF2.563.73.27K-Rod/NYM2.127.30.37Jonathon Niese/NYM1.873.89Updated through games of 8/24. The riveting news: Lincecum and Gallardo are out of the top 20; Jaime Garcia and Fla's Anibal Sanchez are in. Memorize the chart. Quiz tomorrow.WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Roy Halladay/PHI6.630.302Josh Johnson/FLA5.829.603Tim Hudson/ATL5.532.304Adam Wainwright/STL5.534.615Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.232.566Johan Santana/NYM4.343.497Brett Myers/HOU4.242.388Livan Hernandez/WAS3.844.479Chris Carpenter/STL3.749.8210Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.645.0911Matt Cain/SF3.648.8912Mat Latos/SD3.540.7613Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD3.543.2414Clayton Kershaw/LA3.448.3315Cole Hamels/PHI3.251.8816Ryan Dempster/CHI3.057.3317Jaime Garcia/STL2.948.7418R.A. Dickey/NYM2.746.7919Anibal Sanchez/FLA2.754.9420Barry Zito/SF2.663.72.27K-Rod/NYM2.127.30.36Jonathon Niese/NYM1.972.63.44Mike Pelfrey/NYM1.789.22.48Stephen Strasburg/WASH1.642.50Back by popular demand. (through 8/29) Zito the Giant is out; Wilson the Giant is in. Pelfrey moves up 16 spots.WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Roy Halladay/PHI6.531.852Josh Johnson/FLA6.129.133Tim Hudson/ATL5.931.304Adam Wainwright/STL5.535.525Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.432.656Brett Myers/HOU4.541.117Johan Santana/NYM4.345.128Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.943.689Matt Cain/SF3.946.7510Mat Latos/SD3.839.3911Clayton Kershaw/LA3.647.3112Cole Hamels/PHI3.648.3313Livan Hernandez/WAS3.648.7014Chris Carpenter/STL3.652.8715Ryan Dempster/CHI3.551.1416Jaime Garcia/STL3.344.4417R.A. Dickey/NYM3.044.4418Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD3.051.7819Brian Wilson/SF2.622.0520Anibal Sanchez/FLA2.658.97.27K-Rod/NYM2.226.0628Mike Pelfrey/NYM2.272.58.49Jonathon Niese/NYM1.689.79.54Stephen Strasburg/WASH1.545.33batmagadanleadoff Sep 04 2010 10:50 PMRe: You're The General Manager Johan Santana's making his move on this year's elite pitchers .... Ryan Dempster cracks the top 20 ...... K-Rod still packs a mean wallopWAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA6.125.412Roy Halladay/PHI5.732.463Adam Wainwright/STL5.631.494Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.031.075Tim Hudson/ATL5.031.336Johan Santana/NYM4.438.867Livan Hernandez/WAS4.039.428Chris Carpenter/STL3.647.59Brett Myers/HOU3.544.8610Matt Cain/SF3.447.6511Mat Latos/SD3.240.5212Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.246.3513Yovani Gallardo/MIL3.044.1114Cole Hamels/PHI3.048.6715Tim Lincecum/SF2.953.6816Barry Zito/SF2.954.1417Clayton Kershaw/LA2.853.6918Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD2.552.0019Ryan Dempster/CHI2.562.9320Jaime Garcia/STL2.452.64.26K-Rod/NYM2.126.83.28R.A. Dickey/NYM2.148.57updated through last night:WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA5.727.852Roy Halladay/PHI5.732.463Tim Hudson/ATL5.529.944Adam Wainwright/STL5.532.065Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.031.076Johan Santana/NYM4.438.867Livan Hernandez/WAS4.039.428Brett Myers/HOU3.843.169Chris Carpenter/STL3.548.8610Matt Cain/SF3.349.0911Cole Hamels/PHI3.346.6712Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.246.3513Mat Latos/SD3.141.8314Yovani Gallardo/MIL3.046.4415Barry Zito/SF3.052.3316Tim Lincecum/SF2.953.6817Clayton Kershaw/LA2.853.6918R.A. Dickey/NYM2.642.6919Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD2.552.0020Ryan Dempster/CHI2.562.93.27K-Rod/NYM2.126.83Updated through 8/18. No changes in the top 20. Santana drops to 7th. Lincecum clings.WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Josh Johnson/FLA6.027.782Roy Halladay/PHI6.032.173Tim Hudson/ATL5.630.654Adam Wainwright/STL5.632.745Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.231.416Livan Hernandez/WAS4.338.297Johan Santana/NYM4.242.628Brett Myers/HOU3.943.859Chris Carpenter/STL3.452.0610Mat Latos/SD3.341.1111Clayton Kershaw/LA3.347.6812Matt Cain/SF3.350.9113Cole Hamels/PHI3.248.1314Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.248.5415Barry Zito/SF3.054.0016Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD2.946.9017Yovani Gallardo/MIL2.948.0518R.A. Dickey/NYM2.842.6219Ryan Dempster/CHI2.760.7420Tim Lincecum/SF2.563.73.27K-Rod/NYM2.127.30.37Jonathon Niese/NYM1.873.89Updated through games of 8/24. The riveting news: Lincecum and Gallardo are out of the top 20; Jaime Garcia and Fla's Anibal Sanchez are in. Memorize the chart. Quiz tomorrow.WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Roy Halladay/PHI6.630.302Josh Johnson/FLA5.829.603Tim Hudson/ATL5.532.304Adam Wainwright/STL5.534.615Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.232.566Johan Santana/NYM4.343.497Brett Myers/HOU4.242.388Livan Hernandez/WAS3.844.479Chris Carpenter/STL3.749.8210Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.645.0911Matt Cain/SF3.648.8912Mat Latos/SD3.540.7613Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD3.543.2414Clayton Kershaw/LA3.448.3315Cole Hamels/PHI3.251.8816Ryan Dempster/CHI3.057.3317Jaime Garcia/STL2.948.7418R.A. Dickey/NYM2.746.7919Anibal Sanchez/FLA2.754.9420Barry Zito/SF2.663.72.27K-Rod/NYM2.127.30.36Jonathon Niese/NYM1.972.63.44Mike Pelfrey/NYM1.789.22.48Stephen Strasburg/WASH1.642.50Back by popular demand. (through 8/29) Zito the Giant is out; Wilson the Giant is in. Pelfrey moves up 16 spots.WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Roy Halladay/PHI6.531.852Josh Johnson/FLA6.129.133Tim Hudson/ATL5.931.304Adam Wainwright/STL5.535.525Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.432.656Brett Myers/HOU4.541.117Johan Santana/NYM4.345.128Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI3.943.689Matt Cain/SF3.946.7510Mat Latos/SD3.839.3911Clayton Kershaw/LA3.647.3112Cole Hamels/PHI3.648.3313Livan Hernandez/WAS3.648.7014Chris Carpenter/STL3.652.8715Ryan Dempster/CHI3.551.1416Jaime Garcia/STL3.344.4417R.A. Dickey/NYM3.044.4418Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD3.051.7819Brian Wilson/SF2.622.0520Anibal Sanchez/FLA2.658.97.27K-Rod/NYM2.226.0628Mike Pelfrey/NYM2.272.58.49Jonathon Niese/NYM1.689.79.54Stephen Strasburg/WASH1.545.33Updated through games of 9/3/10. Lincecum rejoins the top 20 at the expense of our own R.A. Dickey, whose last start was his worst in more than two years and easily, Dickey's worst start as a knuckleballer and as a Met. Johan regains the 6th spot with a strong though injury shortened outing. Still, the gap between Santana and this year's elite NL pitchers is considerable, if not mathematically insurmountable.WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Roy Halladay/PHI6.632.422Josh Johnson/FLA6.129.133Tim Hudson/ATL5.833.054Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.732.345Adam Wainwright/STL5.535.526Johan Santana/NYM4.643.267Brett Myers/HOU4.542.448Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI4.341.089Cole Hamels/PHI4.144.1510Mat Latos/SD4.038.9211Matt Cain/SF4.047.9812Clayton Kershaw/LA3.747.6613Chris Carpenter/STL3.654.8114Jaime Garcia/STL3.543.8115Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD3.150.1116Livan Hernandez/WAS3.157.9617Anibal Sanchez/FLA3.053.4418Ryan Dempster/CHI3.060.6719Tim Lincecum/SF2.863.8120Brian Wilson/SF2.722.35.23R.A. Dickey/NYM2.653.59.31K-Rod/NYM2.226.06.35Mike Pelfrey/NYM2.178.41.40Heath Bell/SD1.830.93.65Nelson Figueroa/HOU1.250.28.68Aaron Heilman/ARI1.156.67.71Jonathon Niese/NYM1.1134.85batmagadanleadoff Sep 04 2010 11:01 PMRe: You're The General Manager Looks like Ollie could still get off of that hook.He might. But over the past three weeks, Ollie has solidified his status as the lone Met pitcher who owns two of the 20 worst WAR seasons in Mets history. His 2010 season is now the 18th worst, up (or down) from 20th worst. Ollie's current contract has to be in the running for worst ever given to a Met:RankPitcherWARYEARIP/WAR1Paul Wilson-2.81996-53.212Craig Anderson-2.01962-65.673Randy Jones-1.81981-32.964Doug Sisk-1.71985-42.945Jim McAndrew-1.71973-47.256Aaron Heilman-1.52003-43.557Cal Koonce-1.51969-55.338Pete Schourek-1.51993-85.559Jay Hook-1.51963-101.7810Oliver Perez-1.42009-47.1411Doug Henry-1.41996-53.5712Mike Bruhert-1.41978-95.4813Mike Scott-1.41982-105.0014Chuck Estrada-1.31967-16.9215Calvin Schiraldi-1.31985-20.2616Jason Isringhausen-1.31997-22.8217Rich Rodriguez-1.32000-28.4618Oliver Perez-1.32010-33.8519Larry Bearnarth-1.31965-46.6720George Stone-1.31974-59.23MFS62 Sep 05 2010 08:24 AMRe: You're The General Manager There must be a lot of work going into those charts.But, how is all that information about players, and years, long past going to help me as General Magager (the title of the thread)?But wasn't this thread was going to be about what we would do to make the club better?Laterbatmagadanleadoff Sep 06 2010 01:25 PMRe: You're The General Manager MFS62 wrote:There must be a lot of work going into those charts.But, how is all that information about players, and years, long past going to help me as General Magager (the title of the thread)?But wasn't this thread was going to be about what we would do to make the club better?LaterThe original charts took some time. The updates aren't nearly as time-consuming as you suspect. I wrote the code in MS Word and saved it. I also saved any entries for pitchers that dropped out of the top 20 (e.g. Yovani Gallardo), should they drop back in. So updating the charts is simply a matter of shuffling the order of the entries and updating some stats. I don't need to write any more code.batmagadanleadoff Sep 09 2010 01:31 PMRe: You're The General Manager WAR RankPitcher/TeamWARIP/WAR1Roy Halladay/PHI6.732.992Josh Johnson/FLA6.329.153Tim Hudson/ATL5.734.744Ubaldo Jimenez/COL5.633.995Adam Wainwright/STL5.337.806Brett Myers/HOU4.841.257Cole Hamels/PHI4.640.878Johan Santana/NYM4.643.269Mat Latos/SD4.436.9710Roy Oswalt/HOU-PHI4.243.7311Clayton Kershaw/LA3.947.0112Chris Carpenter/STL3.952.4813Matt Cain/SF3.751.1714Ted Lilly/CHIC-LAD3.349.1915Livan Hernandez/WAS3.258.1316Jaime Garcia/STL3.150.7517Brian Wilson/SF2.921.8418R.A. Dickey/NYM2.851.9019Jonathan Sanchez/SF2.858.8120Tim Lincecum/SF2.866.1921Johnny Cueto/CIN2.760.8622Ian Kennedy/ARI2.764.0823Claudio Guzman/LA2.766.8124Anibal Sanchez/FLA2.663.2127Billy Wagner/ATL2.325.2230K-Rod/NYM2.226.0634Heath Bell/SD2.127.7840Brandon Lyon/HOU1.935.2641Ross Ohlendorf/PITT1.957.0242Barry Zito/SF1.994.9143Chico Mecoatl/PRP1.899.9352Stephen Strasburg/WASH1.545.3357Mike Pelfrey/NYM1.6105.2159Madison Bumgarner/SF1.557.5665Nelson Figueroa/HOU1.350.2679Hisanori Takahashi/NYM1.0110.0080Jonathon Niese/NYM1.0154.33John Cougar Lunchbucket Sep 09 2010 01:35 PMRe: You're The General Manager I'm glad I drafted CHICO MECOATL of the Puerto Rico Pisstakers for my fantasy team.batmagadanleadoff Sep 09 2010 01:36 PMRe: You're The General Manager Just checking to see if anybody here actually reads this thread anymore. That's the Port Ruppert Mundys, though.batmagadanleadoff Sep 09 2010 07:23 PMRe: You're The General Manager Eeeeep.batmagadanleadoff Oct 03 2010 09:52 PMRe: You're The General Manager The top 50 Mets pitching WAR seasons, all-time, in chronological order. Despite missing the last month of this season, Johan's 2010 ranks as 34th best Met season ever, displacing Jesse Orosco's fabulous 1983 campaign from the Mets top 50. R.A. Dickey misses the top 50 by a few knuckles, checking in at 56th all time best Met pitching WAR.RankPitcher/TeamWARYEARIP/WAR43Carl Willey4.0196345.7513Tom Seaver6.4196739.227Tom Seaver7.51968 37.078Jerry Koosman6.8196838.776Tom Seaver7.6196935.969Jerry Koosman6.7196935.9715Tom Seaver6.0197048.443Tom Seaver9.21971 31.1242Tug McGraw4.0197127.7510Jon Matlack6.7197236.4217Tom Seaver5.8197245.1744Tug McGraw3.9197227.1845Jim McAndrew3.8197242.282Tom Seaver9.51973 30.5320Jerry Koosman5.71973 46.1431Jon Matlack4.6197352.614Jon Matlack8.61974 30.8519Tom Seaver5.71974 41.4026Jerry Koosman5.11974 51.965Tom Seaver7.71975 36.4121Tom Seaver5.71976 48.3932Jerry Koosman4.6197653.7741Jon Matlack4.1197663.9018Craig Swan5.7197836.3733Craig Swan4.6197954.6424Dwight Gooden5.41984 40.371Dwight Gooden11.71985 23.6535Ron Darling4.4198556.3647Sid Fernandez3.7198546.0428Bob Ojeda4.71986 46.2430Ron Darling4.6198651.5236Dwight Gooden4.41986 56.8246Dwight Gooden3.8198747.2816David Cone5.8198839.8914Frank Viola6.3199039.6350David Cone3.7199057.2138David Cone4.2199155.4022Sid Fernandez5.51992 39.0349Dwight Gooden3.7199356.4025Bret Saberhagen5.21994 34.1039Rick Reed4.1199750.8111Al Leiter6.5199829.6940Rick Reed4.1199851.7927Al Leiter4.72000 44.2629Mike Hampton4.6200047.3248Steve Trachsel3.7200355.3237Al Leiter4.2200441.3523Pedro Martinez5.52005 39.4512Johan Santana6.4200836.6134Johan Santana4.4201045.23�.56R.A. Dickey3.4201051.27
ashie62 Old-Timey Member Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 Lou Brock is in the hall of Fame...Jose Reyes is a pimple on his ass for now
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 Ashie62 wrote:I see your point, but isn't it ultimately about the fans.It's not about giving them blood nor instant gratification. A five-game winning streak and they'll get over the bloodlust.It's ultimately about putting on a good successful performance. There's always a market for that.
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 Ashie62 wrote:Lou Brock is in the hall of Fame...Jose Reyes is a pimple on his ass for nowLou Brock is also 70. (Holy shit! 70!) I don't think he's going to win that one.I don't know what makes Reyes a pimple, but I've got to wonder why you so often want to get rid of everyone.
ashie62 Old-Timey Member Posted November 19, 2009 Posted November 19, 2009 LWFS Says Reyes is as valuable as Brock was ? Is that a joke.Right now Brock could take him in the 40As far as getting rid of people I did post the 2010 Mets will likely resemble the 2008-2009 team.Yes, I would like to see Manuel & Minaya gone based on performance...
Zach Thornton Syracuse Mets - AAA LHP On Sunday, the southpaw tossed five shutout innings as the bulk pitcher. He gave up 2 hits, walked 2 and had 5 strikeouts. Explore Zach Thornton News >
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