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Posted


Wheeler's injury could plausibly cause the Mets other domino effect problems, besides his lost innings. This setback likely requires the Mets to carry Gee's salary, something that many suspect was not in the Mets plans. If the Mets were planning on dumping Gee's salary, they might no longer be able to do so. If the Mets are as financially strapped as their harshest critics and biggest skeptics believe they are, carrying Gee's salary might impinge on their "supposed" plans to increase the payroll depending on their W-L record later on in the season.

Again, this all depends on how broke the Mets are, and how much wiggle room they truly have with respect to their payroll, or as Sandy likes to say: how much "payroll flexibility" they truly have.


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Grand Central Contributor
Posted


batmagadanleadoff wrote:
Wheeler's injury could plausibly cause the Mets other domino effect problems, besides his lost innings. This setback likely requires the Mets to carry Gee's salary, something that many suspect was not in the Mets plans. If the Mets were planning on dumping Gee's salary, they might no longer be able to do so. If the Mets are as financially strapped as their harshest critics and biggest skeptics believe they are, carrying Gee's salary might impinge on their "supposed" plans to increase the payroll depending on their W-L record later on in the season.

Again, this all depends on how broke the Mets are, and how much wiggle room they truly have with respect to their payroll, or as Sandy likes to say: how much "payroll flexibility" they truly have.


except they have Syndergaard, Montero, Matz, etc. If they desperately needed to dump Gee he'd be gone already.


Posted


Lefty Specialist wrote:
You know, I'd be comfortable with Montero as the 5th starter.

I agree. But I'm guessing that TC would rather go with a proven veteran. Its "the book".

Later


Guest LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
Guests
Posted


Yeah, but it's literally the difference-maker between the two. As a control pitcher with unimpressive "stuff" who pounds the zone relentlessly and has been weirdly good (considering) at avoiding home-run-age, Montero is essentially Gee, minus the experience.

Thing is, though... with his ace-through-batter-18 stat profile, Gee has seemed a natural for the pen move this year. Ripples, man.


Posted


zips projections:


Wheeler: 175 IP - 8.81 K/9 - 3.43 BB/9 - 0.77 HR/9 - 3.48 ERA - 3.58 FIP

Montero: 144 IP - 8.65 K/9 - 3.11 BB/9 - 0.87 HR/9 - 3.61 ERA - 3.63 FIP

Gee: 142 IP - 6.78 K/9 - 2.54 BB/9 - 1.14 HR/9 - 4.18 ERA - 4.24 FIP


They project Montero closer to Wheeler than what Gee would provide.

Later


Posted


I certainly don't think it's the book to go with Gee. I do think it makes good business sense to give an opportunity to the established guy who has no options and challenge the younger player to figure things out and take the job from him outright.

I'm certainly rooting for Montero. But it's a good problem to have, as much as losing Wheeler is a bad problem to have.


Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
Guests
Posted


LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr wrote:
Ripples, man.


Yes and yes. That's where it hurts.


Posted


Frayed Knot wrote:
We should just start referring to those Mets who have NOT had TJ surgery as 'The Unsullied'.
'Game of Thrones' reference for those unfamiliar


I'm counting, out of 31 guys in camp, seven (or 22.6%) to be "sullied" by Tommy John surgery, and another six (19.4%) to be marked by pitching-related surgeries of a different stripe.

Those would actually look like pretty successful numbers, from a pure data standpoint, if the list of marked men didn't skew extremely toward the highest profile pitchers they have.

The SulliedThe UnsulliedBut�
Jacob deGromDario �lvarezNada!
Josh Edgin (to come)Vic BlackBut nothin'!
Matt HarveyMatt BowmanA healthy arm, and his mom's a doctor!
Steven MatzChasen BradfordGot knocked out of camp with an oblique injury last year, but no surgery!
Jenrry MejiaBuddy CarlyleA miracle!
Bobby ParnellBartolo ColonHe has had bone chip removal surgery.
Zach Wheeler (to come)Jeurys FamiliaHad arthroscpic surgery to remove bone spurs and "loose bodies."
Dillon GeeHad surgery to remove a blood clot in his shoulder.
Sean GilmartinA true blue spectacle!
Eric GoeddelClean!
Jack LeathersichA good candidate for gastrointestinal surgery, but otherwise clean!
Cory MazzoniSuffered a bad impact injury on a comebacker last year, but no surgery!
Rafael MonteroHe's a clean machine!
Akeel MorrisNo scars!
Jon NieseHe has had surgery to repair a hamstring tear.
Scott RiceBone spurs.
Tyler PillA former outfielder, his arm is still relatively fresh!
Hansel RoblesNo Jeff Walters, he!
Cody SatterwhiteShoulder surgery back in 2010.
Noah SyndergaardKnock a whole lot of wood!
Zack ThorntonAn enigmatic, but clean, character!
Carlos TorresNothin' but blisters!
Jon VelasquezAn indy ball survivor, but no record of surgery that I've found!
Gabriel YnoaHe's got the elbow of a newborn baby!


Posted


Don't think Matz had TJ procedures, just had complications and other problems which led to an ultra-long recovery period.
Hefner's the guy whose first TJ 'didn't take'.


Posted


Ceetar wrote:
Wheeler's injury could plausibly cause the Mets other domino effect problems, besides his lost innings. This setback likely requires the Mets to carry Gee's salary, something that many suspect was not in the Mets plans. If the Mets were planning on dumping Gee's salary, they might no longer be able to do so. If the Mets are as financially strapped as their harshest critics and biggest skeptics believe they are, carrying Gee's salary might impinge on their "supposed" plans to increase the payroll depending on their W-L record later on in the season.

Again, this all depends on how broke the Mets are, and how much wiggle room they truly have with respect to their payroll, or as Sandy likes to say: how much "payroll flexibility" they truly have.


except they have Syndergaard, Montero, Matz, etc. If they desperately needed to dump Gee he'd be gone already.


Maybe the Mets are looking to stall their arb clocks. Should fans trust the Mets to believe that their personnel decisions regarding their budding pitchers are not mainly driven by salary concerns?


Old-Timey Member
Posted


every team makes roster moves on the basis of Free Agency and arbitration. The Chicago Cubs are going to keep Kris Bryant in the minors so that they get another year of team control and nobodies saying that's due to money, it's just playing the standard cost/benefit analysis that any intelligent organisation will do.


Posted


Frayed Knot wrote:
Don't think Matz had TJ procedures, just had complications and other problems which led to an ultra-long recovery period.
Hefner's the guy whose first TJ 'didn't take'.


I believe Matz had TJ surgery 5/18/2010 and saw Dr Andrews fearing another tear in 2012.

A nice current background piece on Matz.

http://www.northjersey.com/sports/baseball/the-mets-next-big-thing-1.1289403?page=all


Grand Central Contributor
Posted


batmagadanleadoff wrote:

Maybe the Mets are looking to stall their arb clocks. Should fans trust the Mets to believe that their personnel decisions regarding their budding pitchers are not mainly driven by salary concerns?


Montero's been up already.

They could have signed any number of major league minimum veteran guys for depth to get 3 starts out of them in April.


Posted


Ceetar wrote:
batmagadanleadoff wrote:

Maybe the Mets are looking to stall their arb clocks. Should fans trust the Mets to believe that their personnel decisions regarding their budding pitchers are not mainly driven by salary concerns?


Montero's been up already.



Doesn't service time accrue only when the player's on the 25 man roster?


Posted


batmagadanleadoff wrote:
Edgy MD wrote:
So, the Mets are scornfully cheap for shopping Gee and scornfully cheap for keeping Gee.


Cheap is cheap.


The Mets were being prudent in keeping Gee to use when some starter went down. A starter did go down, just earlier than we expected.

I don't see any argument that includes Gee and cheap in the same sentence.


Posted


batmagadanleadoff wrote:
Doesn't service time accrue only when the player's on the 25 man roster?


Yes, for 51 days to be precise for Montero, meaning he has approx 28% of one season (51/182) under his belt.
So, assuming he were to make the club from opening day this season and never again go back down, he'd have 2.28 years of service time at the end of the 2016 season - almost certainly NOT enough to qualify for arbitration. With approx 1/6 of players between 2 & 3 years qualifying, it's those with ~2.7 and up who are the likely candidates. And on the other end, the Mets would have to keep him on the farm for most of this season in order to possibly delay his arb-time an extra year to 2019.

Besides, arbitration is relatively small potatoes anyway. Sure, given the choice of having your rookie reach it three years from now or four, the club would opt for four. But there's no specific cutoff date where you can be sure that would happen and the fact that a player's status depends not just on his own service time but also on that of every other major leaguer who will have greater than two years but less than three in the same year that he does means the math becomes very inexact and tough to project. As with the Montero example above, they'd have to choose to forego him for most of this season in order to gain a possible marginal savings to the 2018 payroll that's based on a whole lotta guesswork.

FA-gency is a different story and also a lot simpler. Players qualify with exactly six years or more so, with the ability to delay whether their supposed prize gets to call his own shots after six years of seven simply be keeping him down on the farm for the first month of the season, clubs take that option nearly 100% of the time.


Posted (edited)


So, the Mets are scornfully cheap for shopping Gee and scornfully cheap for keeping Gee.


Cheap is cheap.


The Mets were being prudent in keeping Gee to use when some starter went down. A starter did go down, just earlier than we expected.

I don't see any argument that includes Gee and cheap in the same sentence.


Yeah, I was being sarcastic. I agree that if the Mets had legitimate worries about Wheeler's health, it made perfect sense for them to hold onto Gee as an insurance policy. It also made perfect sense for the Mets to keep their concerns about Wheeler to themselves rather than publicizing them, contrary to what Bob Klapisch believes:

excerpt:

But once again, the Mets make it hard to trust them. No one said a word this winter about Wheeler�s chronic pain. Was it because it was time to hustle season tickets? Was it because a potential setback to one of their prized young arms would sabotage the sales pitch? Is that the reason Alderson never pulled the trigger on a trade for Dillon Gee, because he privately feared this day was coming?

Shame on Alderson and his bosses, the Wilpons, for their lack of transparency. If Wheeler�s arm was enough of a concern for a PRP shot in November and an unscheduled MRI in January, it should�ve never been kept a secret. And for Alderson to say Monday, �This kind of result was not totally unexpected,� then every Mets fan has a right to ask: Why didn�t you do anything about it?


http://www.northjersey.com/sports/klapisch-mets-paying-for-not-taking-care-of-wheeler-s-arm-1.1290256


Edited by Guest
Grand Central Contributor
Posted


wait, what? KlapTrap is wondering why the Mets didn't do something about it? Like they have the magic pill for Tommy John and aren't using it?


Posted


Ceetar wrote:
wait, what? KlapTrap is wondering why the Mets didn't do something about it? Like they have the magic pill for Tommy John and aren't using it?


Are you always this obtuse, or just purposely being so?

He wants to know the same thing I want to know. Why weren't they more transparent about this?

I don't know about you, but I have a healthy dose of skepticism about everything the Mets do, because the Wilpons have hardly done anything to gain our trust.


Guest d'Kong76
Guests
Posted


I can't see the word obtuse without thinking of
The Shawshank Redemption.


Grand Central Contributor
Posted


dgwphotography wrote:
Ceetar wrote:
wait, what? KlapTrap is wondering why the Mets didn't do something about it? Like they have the magic pill for Tommy John and aren't using it?


Are you always this obtuse, or just purposely being so?

He wants to know the same thing I want to know. Why weren't they more transparent about this?

I don't know about you, but I have a healthy dose of skepticism about everything the Mets do, because the Wilpons have hardly done anything to gain our trust.


No, he's asking why they didn't do something about it.

Are the Mets now required to put out a press release for every doctor visit of their players? Maybe they give the email addy for their media listserve (and the bloggers please) directly to the doctor to CC when he gets back to them with results.


Guest d'Kong76
Guests
Posted


No reason to be dishonest!!


Posted


Ceetar wrote:
No, he's asking why they didn't do something about it.


According to our great GM's quote, they knew about this already. So, why not do something about it in the off-season, instead of pushing him and waiting until now?


Grand Central Contributor
Posted


dgwphotography wrote:
Ceetar wrote:
No, he's asking why they didn't do something about it.


According to our great GM's quote, they knew about this already. So, why not do something about it in the off-season, instead of pushing him and waiting until now?



No.

He didn't have a tear in January. It was only 'expected' because he's a freaking pitcher and his previous MRIs did show weakness.

Unless he's talking about the crock idea of a preventative Tommy John surgery.


Posted


I'm not sure what they're supposed to do either. Monitor, evaluate, maybe prescribe exercise. But when you get to spring, and the guy starts throwing in earnest, in game situations, and it goes, it goes.

Presuming guilt and searching for facts to back it up isn't getting us far. Elbows go. Nobody wants them to. Nobody knows quite how to stop it from happening.

The notion that they were hiding results to push season tickets is nutty for any number of reasons.


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