It was disappointing after a number of good starts to see Jeremy Hefner roughed up yesterday, though as sonny mentioned there was the Murph error and also Wright missed a chance at a double play, muffled the ball at third for a bit but did get the out at first. Moved runners up though so it eventually cost us. These mistakes happen, though. The biggest thing however is these Mets as presently constituted need to click and pitch well, keep the game close, play virtually mistake free baseball. Right now things just look glum for our boys, we'll have a whole lot more starting pitchers in the pipeline....Wheeler, Montero, Mazzoni, Syndegaard,Mike Mulvey, Robles, our newest second round pick Andrew Church, and I'm sure there's one or two I've missed but even the closest major league potential bat Wilmer Flores has several main flaws...lack of speed and real defensive skills. Matt den Dekker is another potential great glove/strikeout prone bat..I really wish Kirk Nieuwenhuis or Matt would show they can make contact..... strikeouts are going to happen but we need players who at least have some clue about the strike zone and aren't wildly undisciplined as even if Ike gets back to being the player we all know he can be if he gets himself right in AAA he'll strike out some. Duda does, Buck does, Wright does as well so we need to develop more players who get the bat on the ball. Or trade for them this offseason.... but don't expect off the bat a huge spending rush. Sandy Alderson has said recently the Mets have several areas where they will target spending acquisitions...and with next year's set budget and potential raises to people like Ike(I don't think they'll non tender him as rumored, they'll still work for the next year or so with him to see if he can be the core player they envision) and Murph. They will have considerably more freedom to make acquisitions but for reasonable money, not big long term contracts. Mets feel until they can get better record wise, and correspondingly get more people to come to Citi Field, they cannot make too big a jump in salary levels...even Alderson said with the market the Mets should aim towards being in the higher end of salaries but will not mortgage their future risking long term contracts that will blow up in their faces. Flores may hold appeal to some teams thinking he could change positions, combined with one or two young pitchers we may be able to trade for a impact bat at a reasonable salary, relatively young and under control budget wise for awhile. But the offense has to evolve.... they have to at least score enough to help out our starting pitchers win when they make quality starts.
I don't like the Murph move to first, and Sandy Alderson and Terry Collins really aren't handling this well. Valdespin is going to be himself.... talented and occasionally electric and dynamic but there's always going to be some of the crap that just isn't team oriented. Duda should play first and Murph should remain at second....in fact Murph's improvement at second has been tremendous. He may never be a gold glove defender there but he makes a lot of tough plays and looks far more comfortable over there the more he plays. What is alarming though is how quickly Miguel Tejada went from being a major component of our future to not even being considered among Sandy Alderson's current Mets core. Some people have speculated it's basically a psychological move to push Tejada to not take his position on the club for granted...he his slid this year offensively and defensively...previously thought to a mature and heady beyond his years, and skilled fundamentally, there is no reason why he should be playing this year so often like in a cloud and when he returns from the DL, whether playing at CitiField or Las Vegas he had better get his head out of his ass and start playing right again or as the message implies he won't be part of the future direction of the Mets. Tejada disappoints me even more than Ike's regression or Lucas Duda's... he was never going to be a big home run threat, he was always intelligent with his decisions on the field and what he lacked in explosive speed his predecessor Jose Reyes had, he just looked like he was a good, solid major leaguer who should be that way for a long time and yet looks completely lost and undisciplined this year.
Always interesting take sonny has on Ike and we know he'll keep us informed about Ike's progress. Along with everything sonny mentioned I read today how they have tried to eliminate the hitch in Ike's swing to cut back on movement and help him react to the pitch selection more readily (sonny's a pitching guy, he'll delve into all that I'm sure). It's going to be a work in progress, and Ike won't get called back in a week or two.... they are seriously going to try to get him going again, and the more good habits he develops and maintains at Las Vegas the better the chances he keeps doing the same when he's called up again. Maybe a month, maybe more but one thing seems certain the Mets want Ike back to succeed, and not a moment before they believe he's ready to do that.