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Reports of Curtis Granderson's demise have been greatly exaggerated

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While Granderson has avoided becoming the next incarnation of Jason Bay, many Met fans feel that Granderson has been underperforming and is in his decline phase. Although his age can't be ignored, Granderson is still much the same hitter as he's been in the past.

As the Mets' biggest signing this past offseason at four years, $60 million, Curtis Granderson was expected to add a strong boost to the team's outfield. Granderson's reputation as a dynamic and powerful player was a welcome addition, even when Yankee Stadium's effects on his performance were taken into account. Except for a strong May and June, in which he compiled a 153 wRC+, Granderson has mostly been seen as a disappointment. His .214 batting average and .147 isolated slugging (ISO) are at the lowest single-season marks of his career, leading to talks of his decline.

On August 20, our own Michael Avallone took a look at Granderson's performance. In his piece, he went into further detail regarding his struggles and attributed a portion of Granderson's struggles to poor opposite-field hitting. The rest of his struggles were chalked up to poor BABIP luck and age decline.

But there's evidence that Granderson is still the same hitter he was before and that, results aside, he should not be considered a poor signing because of this season's performance.

Note: statistics up-to-date through 9/1/2014

Granderson's plate discipline skills are still the same

Let's take a look at how Granderson's plate discipline statistics this season compare to his career numbers.

SeasonBB%K%O-Swing%Z-Swing%Swing%Contact%SwStr%Pitches/PA
201412.4%21.9%26.5%67.0%42.8%76.4%9.9%4.16
Career10.4%23.0%24.3%62.8%42.2%76.4%9.7%4.15


Granderson still has much the same plate discipline profile as he had in the past. Yes, he is swinging more often this year, but the uptick is not large enough to be very meaningful. In addition, his walk and strikeout rates have actually improved.

His overall plate discipline profile has also improved from his 2012 and 2013 marks. Simply put, he hasn't changed his approach at the plate much.

SeasonBB%K%O-Swing%Z-Swing%Swing%Contact%SwStr%Pitches/PA
201211.0%28.5%29.5%62.1%42.7%72.0%11.8%4.27
201311.0%28.2%31.3%63.7%45.3%69.5%13.6%3.99
201412.4%21.9%26.5%67.0%42.8%76.2%9.9%4.16

Granderson's batted ball profile is still the same

Granderson's batting average on balls in play sits this season at a strikingly low .250, far from his career mark of .299, and it seems due for improvement. Looking at his batted ball rates alone helps illustrate this point:

SeasonLD%GB%FB%
201419.6%32.8%47.6%
Career20.6%34.9%44.6%

His line drive rate is lower than it has been for his career, but a 1% drop is hardly the cause of a .049 drop in BABIP. These rates suggest that a dramatic BABIP improvement is likely to come.

But looking at batted ball rates doesn't go in-depth enough. Here's a spray chart that should further alleviate concerns about Granderson. (click to embiggen)

Grandersonsprayv2_medium

On the left is Granderson's spray chart from 2010 through 2013, and on the right is his 2014 spray chart. Both look very similar once you account for the fact that the chart on the left has a sample roughly four times as large as the one on the right (1,357 vs. 355 batted balls).  In fact, Granderson's average batted ball distances and average batted ball angles (which represents the angle of the ball relative to home plate) are almost identical in these two periods.

SeasonAvg. Distance (ft)Avg. Angle
2010 to 2013198.011.7
2014199.011.7

This means that, on average, his batted balls are going as far and in the same direction as they have always gone. He hasn't lost his power, and he hasn't become more of a pull hitter by any stretch. Granderson's approach in terms of both plate discipline and directional hitting have remained steady. Yes, you can point out that he has no opposite field home runs this year, but I'm going to claim small sample size variation and citing the above data table.

We can further filter the data to capture data only for batted balls with a minimum distance of 150 feet, which generally is the cutoff for balls hit to the outfield. We can do this to perhaps gain more insight as to whether Granderson's fly balls are now being hit more weakly or more towards a certain direction.

SeasonAvg. Distance (ft)Avg. Angle
2010 to 2013265.810.2
2014259.810.5

Yes, the fly balls are traveling a few feet shorter on average, and he is pulling them slightly more to the right; but this is again only a minor deviation from his recent averages. If the distance means anything and is actually caused by his aging and corresponding loss of power, it's not anywhere near dramatic enough to sound the horns of Granderson's demise.

Still skeptical? Let's take another step and segment his rocky season into three periods. The first period is his rocky April, the second period is his hot streak in May and June, and his third period is his rough season ever since. Below are batted ball distances and average angle by period (inclusive of batted balls of all distances); I'm not bothering to include the spray chart since it's not very meaningful in this case.

Date RangeAverage Distance (ft)Avg. Angle
4/1/2014 - 4/31/2014178.113.8
5/1/2014 - 6/30/2014207.912.7
7/1/2014 - 8/31/2014198.59.7

I'm segmenting this season to point out that he's not actually struggling more since the start of July. You can see that his horrible April, which is now well in the past, is his worst stretch in terms of batted ball distance and pull tendencies. In his past two months, his third period, he's hitting balls the same distance as he always has; Granderson is actually hitting more towards the opposite field recently.

This data also leads me to disagree with Avallone's recent piece on Granderson, which I mentioned earlier. As a refresher, he suggests that part of Granderson's struggles are because his batting average on balls hit to the opposite field has fallen. However, based on what I've presented above, I would like to suggest that his poor batting average is also due to poor BABIP luck, further compounded by the fact that his 2014 opposite field hitting has such a small sample size.

Granderson is still the same good hitter he has been, but his age is a worrisome factor

Here's what we've established so far:

  • Granderson's plate discipline skills are the same, ranging from BB/K ratio to contact rates.
  • Granderson's batted ball rates are the same, further suggesting BABIP regression.
  • Granderson's batted ball distances and directions are the same, showing that he has not lost power or changed his approach at the plate.
There are only two worrisome peripheral stats from Granderson: his career-low ISO (.147) and HR/FB rate (9.4%). I think the latter is depressed due to luck, since his batted ball distances are the same. The former appears due to the fact that he has only hit one triple this season—he hit as many as 23 in 2007—but has kept the same pace of doubles and home runs. It might be both a loss of speed and luck that has caused him hit so few triples this season. If you account for his low BABIP this year, Granderson would likely be hitting more doubles, resulting in more extra-base hits that would increase his ISO. Hopefully, some of those extra extra-base hits might turn into triples as well.

While Granderson has not changed much as a hitter, he won't necessarily continue to perform as the same hitter he's always been for the duration of his contract. He's already 33 years old, and we know that hitting—especially power hitting—is generally a skill that only declines with age. This means that, while Granderson may be underperforming this season, by next season, his current performance may become true to his talent level. This would be a scary proposition for someone due $47 million over the following three seasons. Let's just hope that Granderson's skills will minimally deteriorate during his remaining tenure with the Mets.

Mets Daily Prospect Report, 9/2/14: Coffee's For (The Season) Closers

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Catch up on all of yesterday’s minor league action from around the Mets farm system!

*All results from games played on Monday September 1st, 2014

Triple-A - Las Vegas 51's (81-63)_______________________________________

LAS VEGAS 5, ALBUQUERQUE 0 (Box)

After Sunday's profoundly disastrous affair, the 51s won the season finale.

Double-A - Binghamton Mets (83-59)_____________________________________

BINGHAMTON 4, RICHMOND 12 (Box)

It was 11-0 after four. It was bad.

Advanced-A - St. Lucie Mets (36-33 / 76-62)_____________________________________

SEASON ENDED

FINAL STATS

Low-A -Savannah Sand Gnats(41-29 / 85-51)__________________________________

SAVANNAH 4, ROME 1 (Box)

Robert Whalen with a gem for the jewel of the organization.

Short-A - Brooklyn Cyclones (42-34)__________________________________

BROOKLYN 3, STATEN ISLAND 1 (Box)

Casey Meisner and three pitchers made their Verrazano rivals bats' look quite meek, but Brooklyn lost out on the playoffs by virtue of a tie-breaker with the Connecticut Tigers.

Rookie -Kingsport Mets(34-34)__________________________________

SEASON ENDED

FINAL STATS

Rookie -GCL Mets(33-27)__________________________________

SEASON ENDED

FINAL STATS

Star of the Night

Robert Whalen and Champ Stuart

Goat of the Night

Tim Peterson


How the Mets can realistically get better this offseason

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The Mets can be Wild Card contenders in 2015. Here's how.

Sandy Alderson has taken steps in the past few years to put the Mets in a position in which they are just a few key acquisitions away from competing for a playoff spot. They have a strong farm system and players to build around at key positions at the major league level. However, the Mets' financial limitations and their desire not to gut their farm system for an individual player are holding them back from once again becoming relevant.

Presented in this article is a blueprint outlining how the Mets can realistically build a contending team in 2015 and beyond. Some of the steps may seem obvious, while others are more subjective. They don’t suggest acquiring a specific player in trades or free agency because their price in prospects or money is unknown; instead, it suggests realistic acquisitions that could become more or less realistic depending on how the market develops in the offseason.

Via Cot’s Contracts, the Mets’ 2014 payroll is just shy of $85 million, less than it was in 2001. While Alderson has openly stated that he has financial flexibility from the Wilpons, it’s hard to believe until he actually adds payroll. In this theoretical blueprint, they would raise their payroll to $95 million (although, admittedly, it's hard to imagine it break the $90 million plateau).

Step One: Establish who is worth keeping

The Mets have a number of players on their current roster who can contribute to a major league winner, but that doesn’t mean that any of them have business starting for a playoff team. There are a number of players who will be a part of the Mets in the next few years regardless of what they do. David Wright will be the third baseman and Curtis Granderson will be in the outfield; but, other than that, there is plenty of fluidity.

The Mets' pitching depth has been well documented, and while most teams will be looking to acquire pitching this offseason, the Mets could be looking to sell it. The Mets currently have the good problem of not having enough spots in their rotation for all their starters, and they have put together an exciting back-end of the bullpen led by Vic Black, Jeurys Familia, and Jenrry Mejia. They could look to acquire a pitcher for the right price, although they should focus their resources on fixing their offense.

Like most teams—notably the Athletics—the Mets have been searching for bargain major league players with flaws. While they failed miserably with Chris Young, it appears they have struck gold after years of waiting with Lucas Duda; and with Duda's outbreak season and what it would cost to get a better first baseman on the open market, he isn’t going anywhere.

The Mets are currently trying to find bargain major leaguers in their farm system, and are right to give Matt den Dekker and Eric Campbell opportunities the rest of the way. Both have intriguing qualities, like den Dekker's defense and Campbell’s ability to hit lefties, but neither has any business being in a starting lineup of a playoff team.

Juan Lagares continues to break WAR with his amazing defensive play in the outfield. He is far from perfect at the plate, but even if he fails to improve or even regresses, his defense should make him a mainstay.

The Mets are set at catcher with Travis d’Arnaud, who, even if he continues performing inconsistently, will be a solid major league catcher. The Mets also have insurance for d’Arnaud in Kevin Plawecki. D’Arnaud has had health problems in the past, and having a solid option to replace him in Plawecki means the Mets should have no desire to target a catcher this offseason.

Ruben Tejada shouldn’t be in consideration for anything but a backup role, and Wilmer Flores isn’t the shortstop of the future—although that doesn’t mean he isn’t a part of the team’s plans (more on him later).

Daniel Murphy has proven himself as an offensive force at second base. However, for a number of reasons, he shouldn’t be a part of the future, which leads to step two…

Step Two: Clear salary by trading Daniel Murphy and Bartolo Colon

In order to make the necessary improvements in other areas, the Mets need to clear money in areas of strength.

This step has very little to do with Daniel Murphy the player, but instead with Daniel Murphy the contract. Murphy is currently a bargain at $5.7 million this year, but he is due a tremendous increase in arbitration this offseason—even with his late-season DL stint—and he will be a free agent following 2015.

Murphy is far from a perfect player, but on a team desperate for offense, he is one of the few consistent forces in the lineup. For all his flaws on the field and the basepaths, he is a very important part of the roster. That being said, the current Mets team is not close to making the playoffs with him in the lineup. Adding talent becomes tremendously more difficult with him on the roster, as the Mets will have trouble adding salary after paying Murphy's impending raise.

Trading Murphy also makes sense because of the other options the Mets have at the position. In almost no situation should a team leave a position available with the expectation that a prospect will come in and shine immediately; yet, the Mets have multiple other promising options at second base.

Wilmer Flores is not the shortstop of the future, and his bat that was so lauded in the minors has been lackluster in the majors. However, he is far from a lost cause, as he is still a young player whose offensive struggles can be attributed to many factors, like playing a difficult position he isn’t capable of playing and being thrown junk in the eighth hole. He has shown that he can handle second base defensively and is quite adept at turning the double play on occasion; and despite his underwhelming performance this year, he is a solid replacement option with upside.

Putting Flores at second base could work out for the Mets, but it comes with risk. Despite this risk, the Mets should still deal Murphy as they have two other solid options they could use at second base if Flores struggles: the newly promoted Dilson Herrera and Triple-A shortstop Matt Reynolds. Both are far from sure things, the same way that Flores becoming a plus big league hitter isn’t a sure thing; but the combined risk-reward potential of the three makes dealing Murphy a gamble the Mets should make.

Last season, Murphy tallied an fWAR of 3.0, and in a career year 2014, he has accumulated 3.1 fWAR. It is possible that one of Flores, Herrera, or Reynolds can accumulate that value on a seasonal basis. Even if just one of them ends up as a 1.5–2.0 annual fWAR player, the difference in their cost to the team could allow the Mets to spend that money in more necessary areas, making the overall roster better.

In almost every circumstance, assuming a position will be filled by a prospect is bad business. But considering the multiple options the Mets have, as well as the financial limitations they have in other areas, they are better off taking the risk of trying to replace Murphy so they can use the money to fill in elsewhere.

It’s a similar situation with Bartolo Colon, who could be dealt in the coming days. The rotund righty has solid value next year at $11 million, but the Mets have a number of young pitchers who could take his spot in the rotation and provide similar production. Colon is effective and fun to watch, but if the Mets want to improve significantly, the $11 million owed to Colon would be much better spent on other areas of the roster.

The Mets could potentially get a solid return for each player, although they shouldn’t expect the world—like they did when they reportedly asked the Orioles for Dylan Bundy in a trade for Murphy. Still, even if the Mets value a return slightly less than the player they are trading, the salary relief could make the trade worth it. Going into free agency having only roughly $70 million versus potentially over $90 million (pending Murphy’s raise) is a huge difference, and would give the Mets the ability to actually spend money.

Step Three: Acquire a shortstop

As established above, the Mets currently do not have the shortstop of the future on their roster; Flores can’t handle the position and Tejada can’t handle baseball. The Mets have some options in the minors, but they either are far away (Gavin Cecchini, Amed Rosario) or close to the majors but lacking an impact ceiling (Matt Reynolds).

With no great options available within the organization, the Mets must look outside of the organization to find a capable shortstop.

Last week, Amazin’ Avenue’s Chris McShane looked at the possible free agent shortstops the Mets could add. He notes that Asdrubal Cabrera and Stephen Drew would be enticing to the Mets because they are coming off down years and wouldn’t cost the team a draft pick. While these two would be realistic signings considering the Mets' budget, it is questionable as to whether either would actually shift the needle enough for the Mets to evolve from mediocre to relevant.

J.J. Hardy and Jed Lowrie are also listed as possibilities, yet both are in the second halves of their careers and have notable flaws. Both would also likely cost the Mets significantly due to their positional value. Hardy has been an underrated player throughout his career, averaging 3.4 fWAR over the last four years. While that consistency will likely garner him a long-term contract, it's a risky proposition as he is 32 and in the latter half of his career. Lowrie is two years younger and has been less consistent, but would likely gain interest in free agency due to his success in Oakland (despite a relatively down year in 2014).

While these free agents are possible targets, the more enticing options will be on the trade market. As I wrote previously, the Mets have a surplus of pitching depth and need to take advantage of it on the trade market before pitchers go down with injuries and lose their value.

An obvious and well-documented match for a trade seems to be with the Chicago Cubs, as they are primed for success in the near future, yet lack pitching and have an excess of shortstops. A blockbuster deal involving the two teams is possible, although the high price of players such as Starlin Castro, Javier Baez, and Addison Russell could scare the pragmatic Alderson away.

Another team with an excess of young shortstops is the Arizona Diamondbacks, who have unfortunately for the Mets decided to stick with Chris Owings as their future everyday shortstop. This leaves Didi Gregorius and Nick Ahmed, who are both much less exciting than the Cubs’ shortstops, but also much less expensive.

Regardless of the approach the Mets take this offseason, they still must acquire a shortstop that makes their team significantly better.

Step Four: Acquire a corner outfielder

The Mets took this step last season when they acquired Curtis Granderson, but that still left a gaping hole in their lineup from a position where most teams have a slugger.

Last offseason said a lot about the market for corner outfielders, although there isn’t likely to be a bargain quite like the one the Orioles got with Nelson Cruz. Signing veteran outfielders is far from a sure thing, as the contracts to the likes of Granderson and Shin-Soo Choo have proven. The Mets won’t be in the bidding for a player demanding Choo- or Jacoby Ellsbury-type of money, so their goal will be to find solid value from a good-but-not-great player.

One way they could do this is to go after an older player with a history of production, but who wouldn’t demand a long-term contract because of his age. Michael Cuddyer and Torii Hunter will both be free agents who fit this mold. Both would be risky targets because of their age, but they would be within the Mets' financial constraints and would significantly improve the Mets in 2015 if they could replicate any of their prior performance. Signing an older player to a short-term deal would also make sense, as it would allow the team’s big outfield prospects, Brandon Nimmo and Michael Conforto, more time to develop while giving the Mets more time to evaluate whether they will be stars or expendable pieces.

There are also outfielders available like Melky Cabrera, who have enticing qualities yet checkered histories that could lower their price tag. Nick Markakis is another intriguing outfielder who could be available as a free agent, pending either the Orioles not picking up his option or Markakis voiding his buyout and going on the open market.

The Mets could also dip into their starting pitching depth and trade for a corner outfielder. Carlos Gonzalez’s name has been mentioned in rumors involving the Mets, but his scary injury history (which has only gotten worse this season) would make it seemingly impossible for the Mets and Rockies to agree on his actual value.

If the Mets want to win in 2015, they cannot begin the season with den Dekker, Campbell, or a similar player in left field. They must fill the position with someone who could contribute immediately in order to compete against the rest of the National League.

Step Five: Fire Terry Collins

This step is much more subjective and less of a necessity than the others, as the manager has much less of an influence on a team’s success than do the players on the field. It is also an uncomfortable proposition to call for someone to lose their job—something fans and media often do without taking into account the hardship losing one's job has on a person.

That being said, Terry Collins should not be the manager of the Mets. While the front office has backed him all season, Collins commits the managerial cardinal sin of doing way too much. His in-game decisions hurt the team, whether it is leaving in a pitcher for way too long, bunting in ridiculous situations, or batting young and aggressive hitters in the eight-hole, putting them in a situation to fail.

While things like bunting in certain situations are frustrating, it isn’t as much an issue as some fans make it out to be—almost every manager in baseball adheres to the notion of bunting runners into scoring position. It is quite likely that the next manager of the Mets does many of the frustrating things that Collins does. However, that doesn’t change the fact that he has to go.

Collins is currently the oldest manager in the major leagues. He has presided over the Mets during their rebuilding years, and while one could argue that he has gotten the most out of some players, it doesn’t change how many players have underperformed for him while the team has struggled. While the idea of having a winning culture is completely subjective, the Mets have had a losing culture under Collins; and with 2015 being a year in which the team can realistically compete, it is time for the franchise to head in a new direction under a different leader.


Building a contender with financial limitations is difficult and especially frustrating considering the market in which the Mets play. However, by building a young roster with depth in their farm system, the Mets have already taken some of the necessary steps to build a contender. And yet, they are still a few steps away. Those steps can be completed this offseason and are much, much easier said than done; but contention is within the Mets' grasp. Now, Alderson must act and complete the plan, as sitting idle will ensure that the Mets remaining irrelevant.

Miami Marlins news: Marlins recall Andrew Heaney

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In a roster move before Tuesday night's contest, the Miami Marlins recalled Justin Bour, Anthony DeSclafani, Andrew Heaney, and Enrique Hernandez. Heaney may see time in the rotation if Henderson Alvarez is not healthy.

Miami's top pitching prospect may have another opportunity to prove he is ready to face major league talent. Before Tuesday night's contest against the New York Mets, the Marlins made several roster moves which included recalling Andrew Heaney from Triple-A New Orleans.

Heaney went 0-3 and posted a 6.53 ERA and 6.18 FIP in his first stint with the Marlins. Miami promoted him to add a young arm to the front of the rotation, however Heaney was plagued by the long ball and at times had difficulty throwing strikes.

He is 5-4 with 3.87 ERA and 3.89 FIP with New Orleans, and while the Marlins were expected to add Heaney to the major league roster when rosters were eligible to expand, he does not have a clearly defined role.

While Miami has not yet decided how Heaney will get playing time, he may be slotted into the starting rotation if Brad Penny struggles or Henderson Alvarez is unable to make his next start. The Marlins don't want to use a six-man rotation, although it is unlikely the organization would promote Heaney if he wasn't going to take the mound on a consistent basis.

In addition to adding Heaney, Anthony DeSclafani was recalled and will likely see time as Miami's long reliever. DeSclafani is 1-2 with a 6.84 ERA and 4.27 FIP with the Marlins this season, and while he started his Miami career as a starting pitcher, the Marlins may rightfully determine if the former Florida Gator can have success as a middle reliever.

Miami also added depth to its bench by recalling Justin Bour and Enrique Hernandez. Bour has posted a .222/.323/.259 batting line in 21 games with the Marlins, but may progress with more playing time. Bour can pinch hit and give Garrett Jones a day off at first base.

Hernandez, acquired from Houston in July, has put together a .250/.345/.403 line in 21 games with New Orleans. He can play several infield positions and may have an opportunity to start at second base.

Editor's Note: SB Nation's partner FanDuel is hosting a one-day $18,000 Fantasy Baseball league for tonight's MLB games. It's $2 to join and first prize is $2,000. Jump in now. Here's the FanDuel link.

What to expect from Erik Goeddel

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The right-handed pitcher was just called up and made his major league debut. What does he offer the Mets this September?

Erik Goeddel, a 25-year-old UCLA product, was not the pitching prospect that most Mets fans were hoping would get promoted when rosters were expanded on September 1, but he's the guy they got. So how can Goeddel help out the 2014 Mets down the stretch?

After posting a 4.37 ERA and nearly four walks per nine innings as a starter at Binghamton in 2013, the Mets figured they would move Goeddel to the bullpen to give his stats a boost and get him ready for big league relief duty. Unfortunately that did not go according to plan with the right-hander working out of the pen with Las Vegas this season.

Sure, the 51s play in a scary environment for pitching, but it's still not a good sign that Goeddel saw his ERA rise a full run from 2013 to 2014. A higher BABIP is to be expected with the dry infield in Vegas, but Goeddel also bumped his walk rate up above four per nine while only boosting his strikeout rate by 0.2 percent. Overall, he struck out 64 batters and walked 30 in 63.2 innings of relief.

Those numbers don't seem to make Goeddel worthy of a promotion, but one thing he does well is keep the ball in the park. As a starter in 2013, Goeddel allowed just 14 home runs in 134 innings. As a reliever this season, he let up just six in about half as many innings. While Vegas may have made it tough for Goeddel to improve his strikeout, walk, and runs allowed figures, he overcame the elements when it came to home run rate.

This one special skill gives Goeddel purpose with the 2014 Mets. He can come in and pitch an inning in a one-run game where the Mets would be doomed by a solo home run. He can also be placed in the middle of jams where a ground ball can help the Mets get out of trouble. That's what happened in his major league debut on Monday.

With runners on second and third and two runs already scored off of Jeurys Familia, Goeddel entered the game with Giancarlo Stanton at the plate. It would have been fun to see the rookie pitch against an MVP candidate in his debut, but boring, old Terry Collins instructed Goeddel to walk Stanton. He then walked Casey McGehee by accident to force in a run before getting the left-handed Garrett Jones to ground into an inning-ending double play.

The short outing was a good example of Goeddel's strengths and weaknesses. He has the stuff to be able to get a key ground ball or to strike out an opponent in a key situation, but he might also lose control and dig you a deeper hole. Can Goeddel overcome his walk issues and become a productive member of the Mets' bullpen? We'll find out more this month.

Juan Lagares wins ESPN's Defensive Player Of The Month for August

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Is there anything Lagares can't do with the glove?

Juan Lagares’s remarkable defensive play continues to garner more attention around the league, and now he’s captured ESPN’s Defensive Player of the Month award for August. He had a league-high 13 Defensive Runs Saved (DRS) and was able to win the award for the second time in his career (he also won the honor last August).

The 25-year-old center fielder continues to flash his defensive brilliance with superb plays in the field and a strong arm that he uses to gun down potential runs at the plate. His defensive consistency has begun to draw comparisons to some high-end former players, and is becoming a bit unprecedented, according to Mark Simon.

Lagares entered September with 30 Defensive Runs Saved for the season. He’s the first outfielder to post back-to-back seasons of 25 Defensive Runs Saved since 2003, when Baseball Info Solutions (a data-tracking service for teams and media) began tallying the stat.

Mets first-base coach Tom Goodwin, a former big league outfielder himself, marvels at Lagares’s defensive abilities.

“He gets good jumps. And a lot of guys have to slow down when they’re coming up to the ball in order to catch it. He’s one of those guys who can maintain his speed and still be under control enough to make an accurate throw. Those things are hard to do. I had enough trouble myself, when I was playing, just trying to catch it. So I always had to slow down. And then I’d have to try to pick up my momentum. But he seems to be able to maintain that speed while he’s coming up to catch the ball and he maintains it all the way through.”

Fielding stats are known to be a bit inconsistent, but the eye test reinforces the stats’ judgment on how good Lagares has been for the Mets this season. His range seemingly has no limit, as he catches balls that seem destined to land deep in the cavernous Citi Field gaps. Let’s just hope that the amazing play continues because nothing beats Juan being Juan.

MLB Scores: New York Mets 8, Miami Marlins 6

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The Miami Marlins fell to the New York Mets 8-6 on Tuesday night. Brad Penny struggled in just three innings and the Marlins couldn't put together a late rally.

Miami slotted Brad Penny into the rotation because of his experience, but the Marlins may turn to another arm moving forward after Penny struggled in an 8-6 loss to the Mets on Tuesday night.

New York quickly on the board against Penny in the first, with RBI singles off the bats of David Wright and Matt den Dekker giving the Mets a two run edge.

A Juan Lagares double in the second pushed the Mets lead to three, and Lagares came around to score on a wild pitch before Miami was able to score against Jon Niese.

Penny was pulled after three innings, during which he allowed four runs while walking one and striking out two.

A Wright error on a Donovan Solano single allowed Christian Yelich to score in the bottom of the third before Giancarlo Stanton hit a two-run home run to left center field to make it a one run contest.

Anthony DeSclafani took over for Penny, but New York had good swings against him in the fourth. Lagares and Lucas Duda both added RBI singles and Wright's RBI double pushed the Mets lead to four runs.

A Reed Johnson sacrifice fly and Christian Yelich two-out RBI single in the bottom of the fourth kept the Marlins competitive despite the bullpen's inconsistencies on the night.

David Wright drove in a run with a sacrifice fly against Carter Capps in the sixth, but Miami got the run back on a Garrett Jones RBI groundout before Niese exited after six innings.

Dan Jennings and Sam Dyson pitched well out of the bullpen for the Marlins, who couldn't put together a late rally.


Source: FanGraphs

Attendance: 47,745

Hero of The Game: Giancarlo Stanton (+.197 WPA)

Goat of The Game: Brad Penny (-.299 WPA)

Play of The Game: Matt den Dekker singled in the first, allowing David Wright to score. (+.106 WPA)

Final Score: Mets 8, Marlins 6—Lagares, Wright have quite a night

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The Mets took an early lead and never gave it up in a win against the Marlins.

The Mets beat the Marlins 8-6 in Miami this evening. Jon Niese was not at his best, but he somehow wound up lasting six innings. He allowed six runs in the process, but the Mets never trailed in the game after putting up two runs in the first and two more in the second against Marlins starter Brad Penny.

Among the highlights at the plate: Juan Lagares went 4-for-4 with a walk and stole two bases, David Wright went 3-for-4 with a pair of doubles and a sacrifice fly, Travis d’Arnaud picked up three hits, and Wilmer Flores and Matt den Dekker had two hits apiece.

And the Mets’ bullpen—Carlos Torres, Jeurys Familia, and Jenrry Mejia—set the Marlins down with ease in the last three innings of the game to hold on to the team’s two-run lead.

GameThread Roll Call

Nice job by MetsFan4Decades; her effort in the GameThread embiggens us all.

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Mets Morning News: "Dangerous" David Wright is back

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Your Wednesday morning dose of New York Mets and Major League Baseball news, notes, and links.

Meet the Mets

Choose Your Recap:Amazin' Avenue, MLB.com, ESPN NY, Daily News, Star-Ledger, NY Post, Newsday

Juan Lagares was asked by the Mets to steal more bases and he did it. Lagares also won ESPN's defensive player of the month award for August.

David Wright had a big day at the plate yesterday and is happy to feel dangerous again.

Joel Sherman says that the Mets should use Daniel Murphy as a super utility player. It'd be nice if he could actually play the outfield.

Josh Edgin and Daisuke Matsuzakareceived cortisone shots and should be back with the team by Friday. This may finally be the winter when the Mets don't have to build a bullpen.

Toby Hyde looked at all of the promotions the Mets made in the minors over the last few days.

Second base prospect LJ Mazzilli quit social media in order to better focus on baseball. Outfielder Brandon Nimmo's carving a path to the majors.

Around the NL East

The Philliesshut out the Braves again as Maikel Franco made his big league debut. Clayton Kershawdominated the Nationals as they fell to the Dodgers 4-1.

Around the Majors

Carlos Gomez will miss time with a sprained wrist.

Take it for what it's worth but Pat Gillick says that Ruben Amaro and Ryne Sandberg's jobs in Philly are safe.

Chris Young is back in New York! With the Yankees.

Derek Jeter's selfishness is likely holding the Yankees back.

Yesterday At AA

Have reports of Curtis Granderson's demise been exaggerated?

How can the Mets realistically get better this winter?

What should we expect from reliever Erik Goeddel?

If you read an article or find a link that you think would be a great addition to a future edition of Mets Morning News, please forward it to our tips email address tips@grission.com and we'll try to add it in.

Miami Marlins news: Henderson Alvarez may be done for season

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Miami Marlins starter Henderson Alvarez is listed as day to day after leaving his Monday start with an oblique injury. Miami may end Alvarez's season early if the injury will affect his health moving forward.

Miami already lost one ace this season, and there is a possibility they can be losing another.

Henderson Alvarez, Miami's most consistent starter since Jose Fernandez went down, left Monday afternoon's game with an oblique injury, and the Marlins may be in a position to shut him down for the year.

The Marlins' rotation has taken plenty of hits this season. Just when it seemed like the club was past all the injuries, Henderson Alvarez left Monday's 9-6 win over the Mets in the third inning with a left oblique strain.

Whether Alvarez will be able to return from the injury has not been determined, but the 24-year-old was listed as day to day.

Alvarez is listed as day to day, but if the injury will affect his health moving forward, the Marlins would be making the right move to end his year. After a consistent start, Alvarez has had several injury issues, most recently shoulder inflammation.

In 26 starts, Alvarez is 10-6 with a 2.88 ERA and 3.64 FIP in 159.1 innings. He has reportedly been in pain since his last start against the Angels, but "didn't want to miss another start."

Pain has nagged Alvarez since his last start against the Angels on Wednesday, when he allowed five earned runs over 6 1/3 innings and felt a tweak in his side.

"I didn't want to miss another outing," Alvarez said. "I wanted to keep pitching the way I know I can. ... I wasn't 100 percent, but I went out to battle."

While the Marlins are still in the Wild Card conversation, it is in the organization's best interest to make sure Alvarez is healthy heading into 2015. Jose Fernandez likely won't return until the All-Star break, and the Marlins are still going to need a front of the rotation arm. Jarred Cosart has pitched well since being acquired and a Alvarez/Cosart/Heaney front three in Fernandez's absence would likely be ideal for the Marlins.

Losing Alvarez for the last month of the season would hurt Miami's rotation, although the Marlins do have several internal options. If Alvarez is unable to make his next start, the Marlins would likely call upon Andrew Heaney, who was recalled prior to Tuesday night's contest against the Mets.

If Heaney doesn't take Alvarez's spot, he may take that of Brad Penny. Brian Flynn, Anthony DeSclafani, and Brad Hand could also be slotted into the rotation if an arm is necessary.

Without Alvarez, Miami's young rotation is without arguably one of its better arms. But it is better for Alvarez to be healthy for next year than risk making his situation worse.

Pacific Coast League playoff schedule set

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The Omaha Storm Chasers are seeking their third PCL championship in four seasons.

The Pacific Coast League (PCL) playoff schedule has been set. The best-of-5 Conference Championships begin tonight in Omaha and Las Vegas.

American Conference Championship

9/3 @ 7:05 pm - Memphis Redbirds (Cardinals) @ Omaha Storm Chasers (Royals)

9/4 @ 7:05 pm - Memphis @ Omaha

9/5 @ 7:05 pm - Omaha @ Memphis

9/6 @ 7:05 pm - Omaha @ Memphis (if necessary)

9/7 @ 6:05 pm - Omaha @ Memphis (if necessary)

All times CT.

Pacific Conference Championship

9/3 @ 7:05 pm - Reno Aces (Diamondbacks) @ Las Vegas 51s (Mets)

9/4 @ 7:05 pm - Reno @ Las Vegas

9/5 @ 7:05 pm - Las Vegas @ Reno

9/6 @ 7:05 pm - Las Vegas @ Reno (if necessary)

9/7 @ 6:05 pm - Las Vegas @ Reno (if necessary)

All times PT.

PCL Championship

9/9 - American Conference Champion @ Pacific Conference Champion

9/10 - American Conference Champion @ Pacific Conference Champion

9/12 - Pacific Conference Champion @ American Conference Champion

9/13 - Pacific Conference Champion @ American Conference Champion (if necessary)

9/14 - Pacific Conference Champion @ American Conference Champion (if necessary)

Triple-A National Championship

9/16 - PCL Champions vs. International League Champions @ BB&T Ballpark, home of the Charlotte Knights

MLB Scores: New York Mets 4, Miami Marlins 3

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The Miami Marlins fell to the New York Mets 4-3 on Wednesday night. Tom Koehler pitched well but the Marlins couldn't complete a late rally.

Coming off of a losing road trip, the Marlins were confident they could get things turned around. But with a 4-3 loss to the Mets on Wednesday night, the Marlins dropped their fourth consecutive series and are falling further behind in the Wild Card standings.

Miami's lone run against Jacob deGrom came in the bottom of the third. Christian Yelich and Donovan Solano opened the frame with singles, and after Giancarlo Stanton grounded into a double play, Casey McGehee's RBI infield single gave Miami a one run edge.

Tom Koehler was solid on the night, with New York's only being able to score a pair of runs in the top of the fourth. Travis d'Arnaud walked with two outs before Kirk Nieuwenhuis's two-run home run to right center field made it a 2-1 contest.

In seven innings, Koehler allowed five hits and two runs while walking four and striking out ten.

Miami tied the game in the bottom of the seventh against Buddy Carlyle. Adeiny Hechavarria doubled with one out and came around to score on a Christian Yelich two-out RBI single against Dario Alvarez.

Mike Dunn had difficulty throwing strikes in the eighth, and a d'Arnaud RBI single and Dilson Herrera RBI groundout against Bryan Morris gave the Mets a 4-2 lead.

Giancarlo Stanton's 36th home run of the season in the bottom of the frame made it a one run game, but the Marlins couldn't complete a late rally.


Source: FanGraphs

Attendance: 17,737

Hero of The Game: Christian Yelich (+.201 WPA)

Goat of The Game: Bryan Morris (-.298 WPA)

Play of The Game:Kirk Nieuwenhuis homered in the fourth, allowing Travid d'Arnaud to score. (+.298 WPA)

Final Score: Mets 4, Marlins 3—Mets manage to hold on in Miami

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In a sloppy, hard-fought game against the Marlins, the Mets emerged victorious with a 4-3 win.

The Mets, despite going 1-for-11 with runners in scoring position, beat the Marlins 4-3 tonight in Miami.

Marlins pitcher Tom Koehler held the Mets in check for most of the game. His one miscue came in the top of the fourth, when Kirk Nieuwenhuis's rocket of a two-run homer put the Mets on top 2-1.

Jacob deGrom made it through six innings and threw an ungainly 114 pitches, with the vast majority of them coming in his first three frames. In the third, he allowed his only run on a bizarre infield hit off the bat of Casey McGehee. Other than that, deGrom made it out unscathed, striking out six and walking two. Though far from his most efficient performance, the young righty showed some nice maturity and seemed to get stronger as the game went on.

In other news, Dario Alvarez made his major league debut and allowed the tying run to score in the home half of the seventh. Thankfully, the Mets added two more runs to their tally in the eighth against Bryan Morris on a Travis d'Arnaud double and a Dilson Herrera fielder's choice.

Though Giancarlo Stanton homered in the bottom half of the eighth inning against Carlos Torres to cut the Mets' lead to one, he didn't allow any other Marlins to cross the plate, and Jenrry Meija earned the save by pitching a scoreless ninth.

GameThread Roll Call

Nice job by LaRomaBella; her effort in the GameThread embiggens us all.

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Mets vs. Marlins Recap: Decidedly decent deGrom deflates Marlins' waning playoff hopes

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The Mets took the series from the Marlins tonight in a messy rubber-game in Miami.

There is a special joy for Mets' fans in crushing the playoff dreams of the Marlins, regardless of how fantastical those dreams have become over the past few weeks. To their credit, this Marlins squad has shown itself to be surprisingly resilient by staying in the playoff conversation far longer than anyone expected. Good for them.

Despite that, one cannot forget that the Marlins played spoiler to the Mets' postseason hopes in both 2007 and 2008. Though the Amazins were far closer in those years than the Marlins are now, it feels particularly good to have a hand in returning the favor, and watch as any faint hope of Miami playing in October blows away with the autumn breeze.

In summary, though the Mets did not look their best tonight, they emerged victorious, beating the Fish 4-3, and adding one more nail to the 2014 Marlins' coffin.

The game started off similar to last night's contest. Juan Lagares reached base for the sixth consecutive time when he led off with a single against Marlins' starter Tom Koehler. Lagares then advanced to third on Matt den Dekker’s double to right to put two runners in scoring position with no men out. Apparently though, Koehler had the Mets right where he wanted them, as he struck out David Wright, Lucas Duda, and Travis d’Arnaud to escape the jam and strand the runners.

Mets' starter Jacob deGrom also ran into a little trouble in the home half of the first. After Christian Yelich grounded out to Ruben Tejada, deGrom walked Donovan Solano, and coughed up a base hit to Giancarlo Stanton that skipped past Duda to put runners at first and third with no outs. Thankfully for the Mets, Casey McGehee followed Stanton and grounded into his National League-leading 27th double play to let deGrom off the hook and end the inning.

This was how much of the early part of the game went on. Though there was minimal scoring, both pitchers struggled with their command, particularly deGrom, who threw 48 pitches through two innings.

The Marlins got on the board first in the bottom half of the third. After coughing up consecutive singles to start the inning, deGrom faced Stanton again with runners on first and second and no out. The good news was that Stanton grounded into a 6-4-3 double play. The bad news was that Casey McGehee came up next and hit a high bouncing ball back to deGrom. Normally, this doesn’t present too much of a problem, but the ball deflected off of deGrom’s glove, forcing Dilson Herrera to make a low, but playable, throw to Lucas Duda at first. Duda—who had looked completely lost in the field at several points earlier in the game—couldn’t handle it, and Christian Yelich scored from third to put the Marlins up 1-0. deGrom then got Marcell Ozuna to strike out swinging to end the inning, but the young Floridian was clearly frustrated as he walked off the mound.

The Mets answered back in the top of the fourth with some runs of their own. After notching two quick outs, Koehler put d’Arnaud on first with a walk. Kirk Nieuwenhuis came up next and absolutely pounded a ball into the upper deck to put the Mets on top 2-1. Koehler got out of the inning without any more trouble, and held the Mets at two before ultimatley leaving the game after the seventh.

After his first 1-2-3 inning in the fourth, deGrom made a minor miracle occur to open the home half of the fifth when he allowed a bloop single to Koehler to give the Marlins’ starter only his fifth hit of the year. Generosity aside, it was yet another example of what deGrom had done all night: make life difficult for himself. He recovered though, inducing two fly ball outs and striking out Stanton on a 2-2 fastball to get out of the inning. He came out again for the sixth, and threw another 1-2-3 inning that allowed him to leave the game in place to get the win.

The Marlins tied the game up in the seventh, however, thanks to a stellar managerial move by that wild and crazy genius Terry Collins. Initially, Buddy Carlyle came on to relieve deGrom in the seventh. Carlyle got Jarrod Saltalamcchia to ground out before giving up a double to Adeiny Hechavarria. The Mets righty then got pinch hitter Reed Johnson to hit a grounder to Duda, who managed to get the out despite looking completely unfamiliar with fielding his position (yet again) on the play. At this point, Terry—for reasons only he knows— decided it was high time for Dario Alvarez to make his major league debut.

Now, one could argue that, conventionally, it made sense to bring in the lefty Alvarez to face the left-handed hitting Christian Yelich. However, Yelich’s average is actually forty points higher against lefties than it is against righties, and he showed why on the second pitch he saw from Alvarez, when he singled to drive in the Marlins’ second run of the game to tie the score at two. Terry quickly removed Alvarez from the game, and Carlos Torres came on to finish the inning without any further excitement.

Thankfully, the eighth inning saw the Mets put some additional runs on the board. Matt den Dekker led off with a bunt single against new Marlins' pitcher Mike Dunn. After David Wright earned the golden sombrero (Wright finished 0-5 on the night), Duda singled to put runners on first and second and knock Dunn out of the game. Bryan Morris came in to, presumably, keep the score tied, but instead, he gave up a double to Travis d’Arnaud that drove in den Dekker to put the Mets back on top 3-2. Morris then intentionally walked Kirk Nieuwenhuis to set the double play up with the struggling Dilson Herrera on-deck. Though Herrera grounded into a fielder's choice, Duda scored on the play to add some padding to the Mets’ lead, and Morris then hit Ruben Tejada to load the bases. Torres batted for himself, though, and, unsurprisingly, struck out to end the inning.

Not wanting to get too comfortable, Torres promptly gave up a leadoff home run to Stanton in the bottom half of the inning that cut the Mets lead to one. Mercifully, he got the next few batters out without any issue, and though the Mets failed to score in the top of the ninth, Jenrry Meija pitched a scoreless bottom half of the inning, letting all Mets fans every experience a faint taste of the schadenfreude that comes from playing the spoiler.

SB Nation GameThreads

* Amazin' Avenue GameThread
* Fish Stripes GameThread

Win Probability Added

Chart__10__large

(What's this?)

Big winners:Kirk Nieuwenhuis, 34.0; Matt den Dekker, 22.3
Big losers: Dario Alvarez, -23.3; David Wright, -21.9
Teh aw3s0mest play: Kirk Nieuwenhuis home run, top of the fourth
Teh sux0rest play: Christian Yelich single, bottom of the seventh
Total pitcher WPA: 18.4
Total batter WPA: 31.6
GWRBI!: Dilson Herrera fielder's choice, top of the eighth

Mets Daily Prospect Report, 9/4/14: Vegas and Binghamton Victorious, Savannah Look Like Playoff Tourists

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Catch up on all of yesterday’s minor league action from around the Mets farm system!

*All results from games played on Wednesday, September 3rd, 2014

Triple-A - Las Vegas 51's (81-63; 1-0)_______________________________________

GAME ONE: RENO 4, LAS VEGAS 5 (Box)

Rafael Montero was not too effective in this one, departing after 4.1 innings, but the offense and bullpen bailed him out. After falling behind 3-0, the 51s began to began to hit, culminating in Kevin Plawecki's home run to the tie the game at 3 in the sixth. After taking a 4-3 lead and surrendering it in the eighth, recent  51 call-up L.J. Mazzilli singled home Cory Vaughn giving Vegas a lead they would not relinquish. Gonzalez Germen shut the Aces down in order in the ninth to seal the victory.

Double-A - Binghamton Mets (83-59; 1-0)_____________________________________

GAME ONE: PORTLAND 5, BINGHAMTON 8 (Box)

Sea Dogs starter Brian Johnson quieted the B-Met bats for seven innings, leaving with a 5-2 lead. However, Binghamton got to the bullpen, aided by two errors leading to five unearned runs including T.J. Rivera's three-run game winning home run in the bottom of the ninth.

Advanced-A - St. Lucie Mets (36-33 / 76-62)_____________________________________

SEASON ENDED

FINAL STATS

Low-A -Savannah Sand Gnats(84-51; 0-1)__________________________________

GAME ONE: SAVANNAH 3, ASHEVILLE 8 (Box)

Champ Stuart led off the game with a home run, however, that would prove to be the only lead the Gnats would have this game as Robert Gsellman allowed three in the bottom of the frame before eventually being yanked in the fifth with a 5-2 deficit. Paul Paez had an ineffective relief appearance, allowing a two-run home run to David Dahl that left no doubt on the outcome of Game 1.

Short-A - Brooklyn Cyclones (42-34)__________________________________

SEASON ENDED

FINAL STATS

Rookie -Kingsport Mets(34-34)__________________________________

SEASON ENDED

FINAL STATS

Rookie -GCL Mets(33-27)__________________________________

SEASON ENDED

FINAL STATS


Mets Morning News: Backman is the manager New York deserves, just not the one it needs right now

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Your Thursday morning dose of New York Mets and Major League Baseball news, notes, and links.

Meet the Mets

Jacob deGrom was quality, Kirk Nieuwenhuis reached base four times, and the Mets held on to defeat the Marlins, 4-3.

Recap Parade: Amazin' Avenue shortlongMLB.comESPN NYNew York PostDaily NewsNewsdayStar-Ledger

Despite the series win in Miami, the Mets are still likely to finish with a sub-.500 record. How to we get the team back to winning? It's simple. We promote the Backman.

deGrom is exploring new territory as far as innings pitched are considered.

With Curtis Granderson showing good strikeout and walk rates this season, it's tough for the outfielder to explain where his struggles are coming from.

Mets minor league affiliates went 2-for-3 in playoff games last night.

Pitching coach Dan Warthen says that Jeurys Familia will not be shut down before the end of the season.

Terry Collins sees Dilson Herrera batting second for the future Mets.

I know we all love the drams, but Jordanny Valdespin is not bitter about being booted from the Mets last year.

The Star-Ledger talked to Bobby Parnell about the reliever being ready for 2015 spring training.

Around the NL East

The Nationals trailed the Dodgers 2-0 entering the ninth inning on Wednesday, but Washington managed to come away with an epic 8-5 win. Adam LaRoche knocked in five runs despite not entering the game until the ninth inning.

The Braves somehow scored seven runs while defeating the Phillies yesterday. Meanwhile, Talking Chop is coming to terms with the fact that Jason Heyward is not much of a power hitter.

Giancarlo Stanton has a couple of Marlins home runs records in his sights.

Ben Revere doesn't have the most stolen bases in the majors, but his combination of volume and efficiency has been pretty darn impressive.

Around the Majors

Diamondbacks right-hander Daniel Hudson overcame two Tommy John surgeries and pitched in the majors last night for the first time in over two years.

Carlos Beltran is going to have surgery on his elbow this winter, but he thinks he'll be healthy in time for spring training.

The Yankees ran into a pretty hilarious double play last night.

The Cardinals defeated the Pirates on Wednesday in a good, old fashioned 1-0 walk-off.

1-0 might have been the final score of the Mariners vs. Athletics game, but then Kyle Seager and Corey Hart decided to go back-to-back.

The Rockies agreed to a two-year extension with lefty starter Jorge De La Rosa.

HardballTalk explored the greatest MVP pairings of all time.

Yesterday at AA

On this date in 1985, Gary Carter wrapped up a legendary power surge. In 1968, Mike Piazza was born.

Miami Marlins news: Marlins yet to name starter for Sunday's finale with Braves

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The Miami Marlins have yet to name a starter for Sunday afternoon's series finale with the Atlanta Braves. Henderson Alvarez's return is questionable, and Brad Penny struggled on Tuesday night.

Henderson Alvarez didn't expect to be the Marlins' ace starting in June. He was slotted into the third spot in the rotation behind Jose Fernandez and Nathan Eovaldi, and became Miami's most consistent starting pitcher since Fernandez went down.

The Marlins are unsure if Alvarez will make another start this season, leaving the Marlins with questions about the rotation with just a month left in the season. Miami is still confident it can make a run at a Wild Card spot, but without a healthy Alvarez, that may be an unrealistic goal.

Since Fernandez made his last appearance on May 9, the Marlins have used six starters that didn’t open the season in the rotation (Anthony DeSclafaniAndrew HeaneyBrad HandBrad Pennyand Brian Flynn). Jarred Cosart, who the Marlins acquired from the Astros on July 31, essentially took Jacob Turner’s spot, so we won’t count him.

The aforementioned six have made 27 starts and are a combined 5-15 with a 5.72 ERA. The Marlins in those games are 10-17. Making that record all the more disappointing is that the upper level starting pitching depth was among the Marlins’ purported organizational strengths.

Miami was thought to have one of the best minor league systems in terms of starting pitching, however even without Fernandez, the young arms that were heralded prospects have had difficulty becoming solid major league starters.

DeSclafani has struggled in his few major league starts, posting a 7.57 ERA and 4.15 FIP in 27.1 innings. He was not expected to be an Andrew Heaney-type prospect, but he was thought to be a back of the rotation arm and has had difficulty finding the strike zone after seeing time in Triple-A and with the Marlins.

With Fernandez out for the season, the Marlins first decided to promote Heaney because there was a need. Miami had been rotationally situated until Alvarez has had difficulty staying healthy, and with their second best arm (statistically) uncertain about returning this season, the Marlins may once again turn to Heaney.

Jarred Cosart has pitched well, but Brad Hand was pushed to the bullpen and Brad Penny lasted just three innings in Tuesday night's 8-6 loss to the New York Mets. Manager Mike Redmond said he is unsure if Penny would make another start, however given the lack of success over just a few starts, Redmond would likely be better off getting a younger arm experience.

Heaney, DeSclafani, Hand, and Brian Flynn are all candidates to be slotted into the rotation if Alvarez's injury is serious or if Penny is moved back to the bullpen.

"We’ve tried to find somebody to step in that role and take that spot and it’s been quite a challenge," manager Mike Redmond said, after watching Penny last three innings against the Mets Tuesday. "We’ve tried I don’t even know how many guys.


There are few pitchers in all of baseball who can step into an adverse situation and pitch at Fernandez's level, making such an expectation unreasonable. Alvarez had been doing it, but with inexperienced arms, Miami may have to look more towards the future when it comes to the rotation.

Following a losing road trip, the Marlins refused to count themselves out. But if the rotation continues to be inconsistent and the bullpen gets called upon on almost a nightly basis, Miami's playoff odds are slim and the organization may have to reevaluate starting pitching options at the end of the season.

Considering the Marlins have yet to make Stanton an offer he has considered, he has no reason to be incredibly optimistic. And Stanton's true thought process may not be revealed until the offseason, when Miami will try and keep him in South Florida long term.

Juan Lagares's best plays of the year, as told by Juan Lagares

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Newday's Marc Carig spoke to the outfielder about his fanciest grabs of 2014.

While most of the attention on baseball in New York this season has been directed at a certain aging shortstop, the Queens minority has been focused on the spectacular play of an arguably more exciting player. While his offense may be inconsistent, one thing all Mets fans can agree upon—and there aren't many of those—is that Juan Lagares is an absolute stud on defense. By every measure and every highlight, he's fantastic.

With the center fielder finally starting to attract national accolades, Marc Carig of Newsday sat down with Lagares to hear from the man himself about some of his best plays of the season. Make sure to click that link for the full story. The highlights are below:

While talking about this play:

"Yeah, I forgot about that one," said Lagares, who surprised himself by making the catch. "That was better than Werth."

Here's the catch he made to rob Jayson Werth of a home run back in May:

Wow. Lagares's favorite play, however, may be this one against Denard Span of the Nationals last month.

"I think the (catch) I made on Span was the hardest," he said. "The only thing I can remember is that he hit a little blooper in the middle right there and I had to go really hard to that ball and dive a little farther." Lagares hit the ground so hard that he got the wind knocked out of him. According to Baseball Info Solutions, this type of batted ball falls for hits 80 perent of the time. Lagares tilted those odds in the Mets' favor.

We know all too well how New York's baseball fans feel about bodily sacrifice in the name of the game. Fortunately, Lagares just had the wind knocked out of him on this play and should be able to continue amazing Mets fans throughout September.

Lamar Johnson says that Curtis Granderson may need swing adjustment this winter

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The Mets' hitting coach says that the outfielder is struggling to find a consistent stroke.

There has been mixed opinion regarding Mets outfielder Curtis Granderson here at Amazin' Avenue this year. While some of us think that the four-year, $60 million deal that Sandy Alderson handed to Granderson is an example about how the general manager should stick to his guns regarding long-term contracts, others point to Granderson's strikeout and walk rates as reason for hope that he'll improve in 2015.

Mets hitting coach Lamar Johnson agrees that there is reason for hope... if Granderson changes his swing over the winter.

"Overall, there are some things I would like to see him do a little different next year," Johnson told Newsday this week. "But right now, I'm just trying to get him to drive the ball... I see some things where I know it's going to have to be (changed) in the winter."

While Granderson is not having too much trouble making contact this season -- his 22-percent strikeout rate is down six percent from his last full season with the Yankees -- the outfielder's power stroke could use some work. His 16 home runs feel like a lot for a Mets hitter, but Graderson's isolated power of .144 is the lowest figure of his career.

"The big thing that I talk to all the hitters about is developing one consistent swing," said Johnson, who took over in May after the firing of Dave Hudgens. "You do the same thing in the cage, in batting practice, and in the game. That's what we're going to work on. Sometimes, we develop to different swings, some guys do. I just want him to develop one swing, a consistent swing, and that's what we've been working on since I've been here. It's being consistent with your swing, your bat path."

The author of that article, Marc Carig, points out that Granderson has made swing adjustments in the past. When he was struggling in the Bronx in 2010, the outfielder made some changes with Yankees hitting coach Kevin Long that supposedly paved the way for the 40-home run campaigns of 2011 and 2012.

Mets Injury Update: Harvey to be shut down after a few more bullpen sessions

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Last season's ace will reportedly end the 2014 campaign without throwing a pitch against real competition.

No matter what the on-field Mets did in 2014, they were always overshadowed by updates on Matt Harvey's condition. The pitcher who captured the fan base's imagination in 2013 has so far had a smooth recovery from Tommy John surgery, but as far as management is concerned, Harvey is a distraction that needs to be controlled.

That mentality will probably be blamed for the news today that the Mets will shut down Harvey for the rest of 2014 after a few more bullpen sessions. He's reportedly not going to pitch in a major league game this season, no matter how badly the franchise could use the inevitable spike in attendance. In fact, according to the Daily News story, Harvey will not even be allowed to throw at 100 percent velocity until spring training in 2015.

Even if the Mets have been overly cautious with Harvey this season from a public relations standpoint, the team isn't wrong about him not wanting to go full throttle before the end of the season. There is still no guaranteed recovery from Tommy John surgery, and recently we've seen pitchers have to undergo a second procedure after suffering a setback.

As long as Harvey is ready for Opening Day 2015, no one is going to criticize the way the Mets handled him this season.

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