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deShutdown  

20 members have voted

  1. 1. deShutdown

    • 1) You do nothing. It's unknown whether shutting a guy down is helping him and you or just denying yourself of his talent when he's healthy. Enough with the kid gloves!
      6
    • 2) You do nothing. Look, I get the whole regime of care, and you don't want him pitching 276 innings like Gooden '85, but this guy is 26, not 21.
      9
    • 3) Shorten his starts
      2
    • 4) Shorten his starts, but from the front end. Start his games with a middle reliever and then insert him in the third.
      0
    • 5) Pitch him out of the bullpen down the stretch.
      0
    • 6) Pitch him out of the bullpen in August, and then re-launch him as a starter down the stretch.
      0
    • 7) Pick a limit, and shut him down when he reaches that limit. He's a precious commodity for the future. The present means nothing!
      3


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Posted


Mets, caught up in the culture of the times, continue to wring hands over their marginal success, torn in internal (but leaky) discussions over limiting Jacob deGrom's innings. Wheeler's too. And among their potential replacements, Rafael Montero and Noah Syndergaard would be looking at eventual shutdowns too, under the general philosophy. You saw that coming.

Please pick a selection [crossout]below[/crossout] above that best represents your general attitude. Feel free to elaborate below.



Grand Central Contributor
Posted


Edgy MD wrote:


Please pick a selection below that best represents your general attitude. Feel free to elaborate below.


but but the selections are ABOVE


Don't do anything. These situations often resolve themselves in some ways. And if the Mets don't actually climb into a pennant race, you can do whatever you want in late August/September. 6-7 man rotations, bullpen, early shutdowns for some, etc. Especially if he/they starts to look gassed.


Posted


I don't know really whether the innings limit accomplishes what it sets out to do... which I guess is not overworking arms so that they don't break down? Much as I would like to vote "do nothing" I realize that is not just a DeGrom decision; that would have to be an organization-wide mandate and I don't think the org will do that. I'm not sure if they should either...again I'm not really sure whether it accomplishes anything or not. Lots of young guys with innings limits still come down with arm injuries.

I'm very much intrigued by 4, and would love to see a team try that. But I suspect it will be either: 3, which I don't really like; 7, which I guess I can live with if the org is going to stick to its limits; or the write in candidate of expanding the rotation.

I'd go with expanding the rotation


Old-Timey Member
Posted


HahnSolo wrote:

I'd go with expanding the rotation

That's the option I was looking for.
And, yes, he has already had TJ surgery.

Later


Posted


I see no need to shut him down. If anything, I agree that there are plenty of arms for the innings left. The Mets should get creative using a rotation of more than 5 starters to give work and/or rest to whoever needs it.


Guest themetfairy
Guests
Posted


TransMonk wrote:
I see no need to shut him down. If anything, I agree that there are plenty of arms for the innings left. The Mets should get creative using a rotation of more than 5 starters to give work and/or rest to whoever needs it.


I like this option the best.


Posted


TransMonk wrote:
The Mets should get creative using a rotation of more than 5 starters to give work and/or rest to whoever needs it.


After reading this again, I guess it should be "whomever needs it", right?


Guest themetfairy
Guests
Posted


TransMonk wrote:
TransMonk wrote:
The Mets should get creative using a rotation of more than 5 starters to give work and/or rest to whoever needs it.


After reading this again, I guess it should be "whomever needs it", right?


No, actually. "Whoever needs it" is correct.


Guest themetfairy
Guests
Posted


You would use whom the same way you would use him

Who needs it? He needs it.

To whom? To him.


Guest LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
Guests
Posted


Post-TJ? Age 26? Gimme #2. (Although both the start-with-middle-reliever-then-deGrom option and the off-the-menu expanded-rotation option intrigue, because, hey, Fun With Optimizin'-Strategemizin'!)


Posted


MetFairy has it. Substitute he and him, and it's easy.

And pitchers should pitch. Rather than limit innings, or count pitches, both of which are ridiculous if you're not a little leaguer, teach pitchers to pitch with some respect for the human arm, and teach them to be smart (can you do that?)


Grand Central Contributor
Posted


TheOldMole wrote:
MetFairy has it. Substitute he and him, and it's easy.

And pitchers should pitch. Rather than limit innings, or count pitches, both of which are ridiculous if you're not a little leaguer, teach pitchers to pitch with some respect for the human arm, and teach them to be smart (can you do that?)


You're up 2-1. 8th inning. You're at 90 pitches, with a runner on second and a slugger at the plate. What pitching _isn't_ pushing through any fatigue there? maybe subconsciously dropping their arm angle, pushing through a little pain?


Old-Timey Member
Posted


themetfairy wrote:
You would use whom the same way you would use him

Who needs it? He needs it.

To whom? To him.


Great tip TMF :)

I picked shorten his outings, and I mean that with possible exceptions.
Use something that is rarely used anymore. Discretion.


Posted


Cerrone's got a hairbrained double-start idea where deGrom and Syndergaard go four innings each on a designated day.

Why not just go to a six-man rotation?


Guest LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
Guests
Posted


seawolf17 wrote:
Cerrone's got a hairbrained double-start idea where deGrom and Syndergaard go four innings each on a designated day.

Why not just go to a six-man rotation?


The half-start thing-- as I've heard it-- puts them on target to throw every 2-3 days (as they do most of the season, throw days inclusive), only instead of start/throw days, you've got two long-relief stints. The six-man rotation spreads out that routine a bit, to the extent that it might throw off routine-reliant pitchers (read: ALL of them).


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