3/16/09
Rocky Cherry heading back to Baltimore
Cherry was a Rule V draft pick in December. Cherry was placed on waivers on Friday, and if he clears, must be offered back to the Orioles for $25,000. If the team, the Orioles in this case, refuse the pay the money, Cherry could stick with the Mets. That would allow him to be sent to the minor leagues within the franchise.
The Mets still have Darren O'Day on the roster, and some Mets officials are very high on the side-armer. He has a pretty good shot at making the Opening Day roster.
Goodbye, Cherry. I'll miss typing your name.
If Marty Noble was GM...
From his latest post, entitled "Back at ya":
That would be quite a team he'd assemble. A quick look at a possible starting lineup for that Noble team, while somehow retaining all the other starters...Why does Marty Noble always pick the fan mail written by people he intends to discredit and denigrate? Anyone else notice that? He never picks mail from people with whom he agrees or whose opinion he values.
Unless you're hacking into my mail, you have no idea what kind of messages I receive. Since camp began, nine of every 10 comments/questions I have received have involved Pedro Martinez, Manny Ramirez, Adam Dunn, Orlando Hudson and Ivan Rodriguez. The Mets should have signed all of them and also traded for Jake Peavy.
- Jose Reyes
- Orlando Hudson
- Manny Ramirez
- Carlos Delgado
- Adam Dunn
- David Wright
- Carlos Beltran
- Ivan Rodriguez
- Pitcher
- Johan Santana
- Jake Peavy
- John Maine
- Mike Pelfrey
- Pedro Martinez
Is he serious? Is the wear and tear of the job getting to him? Is he just fed up?
We may never know...
(Ed. note: Yes, I realize Marty Noble doesn't actually want to sign all of these players. The way it was stated caught my eye, and I ran with it.)
Pudge is Houston-bound
For that money, maybe the Mets should have taken a look at him.
I think the Mets are pretty set with the team they have though. As long as Brian Schneider can raise his batting average a few points and Ramon Castro can stay healthy, I'm pleased with the guys behind the dish.
Happy Birthday, SNY
Why trading Lastings Milledge was and always will be a great move
Here is the rest of the Q&A.Q: OK, you keep talking about 'your way,' but what does that mean?
LM: You know, there's always a thing where, Oh, rookies have to be here 2-1/2 or three hours before stretch. No. I'm not gonna be here three hours before stretch. If you're here and you get your work in, it shouldn't matter how early you're at the field. You know what you need to do. That's fine. You don't have to be at the park three, four hours before the park if you don't want. You don't see nobody clocking in three or four hours before they have to show up to work. So, I mean, some people feel like they have to get here to read the newspaper or do crossword puzzles or get their mind ready. I feel like I come to the park, I have 45 minutes of stuff I have to do to get prepared for practice and get ready for the game. Five minutes might be watching videos. Fifteen minutes might be going in the cage. And then getting whatever other work I need.
The Eddie Kranepool Society puts it perfectly with the headline "THE MORE LASTING MILLEDGE SPEAKS, THE MORE THE METS LOOK SMART FOR DUMPING HIM."
Does anyone still think this was a bad trade?
Baseball Digest: The Curious Case of Nicholas Reginald Evans
I wrote a brief article this morning about Nick Evans and where he does, or doesn't fit, into the Mets plans.
Pedro will not go gently into that good night
Steve Popper writes:
Don’t rule out Pedro Martinez just yet. While some Mets’ officials continue to claim that the marriage has ended, one person familiar with the discussions said Sunday that the Mets are among the teams that have begun to request financial requirements with the 37-year-old right-hander.I'd be more comfortable with Pedro over Livan Hernandez, Freddy Garcia or Jon Niese. If healthy, he'd be a fine fifth starter. The team would not be asking him to be the ace of the staff again, only the back end starter.
Heck, he can throw 10 miles an hour faster than Garcia.
Razor Shines is one optimistic fellow
Here are some highlights:
The article also notes that since Shines was with the Phillies last year, he will be recieving a World Series ring. When asked if he would wear it around his new team, he responded with "no chance."Why Razor? Is there a story behind the name?
"There's no story behind it. It's my middle name. It's my father's middle name, and my son's middle name. I think it goes a little farther back than my father, to his father. I don't know the story behind it."
---
How many championship rings do you have?
"I don't like to discuss that, but I'll tell you the number is 12. Most of them are from playing. I came up in the Expos organization with Randy Johnson, Marquis Grissom, Larry Walker, all those guys. We won five [minor-league] championships in six years in that system."---
You worked in the Phillies' organization last year. Now you're with the Mets. Who is the team to beat in the N.L. East this year?
"Let me see how to answer this. I'll answer it this way: The team to beat will be the team that's on top when it's all said and done. And we expect to be that team."
Shines seems like the eternal optimist, something I think a team needs around. He'll always be there to tell you there are brighter days ahead and all that good stuff. I'm comfortable with that as long as their is a realist somewhere on the team to give the players a reality check when needed.
3/15/09
Poll Results: Who will hit the first home run in Citi Field?
I asked: Who will hit the first home run in Citi Field? Here are the results...
- David Wright -- 32% (40 votes)
- Carlos Beltran -- 20% (25 votes)
- Jose Reyes -- 19% (24 votes)
- Other -- 14% (18 votes)
- Carlos Delgado -- 13% (16 votes)
Next poll: Who will be the fifth starter?
Redd means stop
Another serious blow to Redding's chances of making the team. In this weeks The State of the Mets, I mentioned that Redding would make the team, no matter what, but likely as a long reliever. As it stands now, Redding would be lucky to make the roster when spring training breaks.
That doesn't mean he won't be on the team eventually, but he's probably heading for extended spring training.
Steve Popper brings up a good point: Remember Matt Wise? This sounds almost exactly like what happened with Wise, who signed a one-year, $1.2 million with the team before the 2008 season. He was shut down when he started getting a sore arm and ended up pitching in only eight games for the Mets before being lost to injury.
Hopefully Redding, and his $2.5 million contract, will be able to bounce back from this injury and pitch effectively in 2009. Otherwise, that's $2.5 million the Mets have to pay him.