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Upcoming Games and Starters
5/21/2013
vs. Cin
Jonathon Niese
5/22/2013
vs. Cin
Matt Harvey
5/23/2013
OFF
5/24/2013
vs. Atl
Jeremy Hefner
5/25/2013
vs. Atl
Dillon Gee

Recent Blog Post: Interesting Spring Performances, Part One: The NL
As spring training ambles nonchalantly towards the finish line, it's always fun to take a look at spring stats to see who really jumps off the page and might be making some kind of statement or other.

Now this being spring training, caveats abound. The sample sizes are tiny. The quality of competition, defense and field conditions are erratic at best. More often than not pitchers aren't particularly trying to get anybody out. And did I mention the sample sizes are tiny? But even with all that, it's human nature to try and tease some kind of signal out of all that noise, so what the hell. If a club has an opening, or a plausible path to an opening, then a big spring can allow an otherwise unheralded player to seize a role. And every once in a blue moon some guy comes along and puts up ridiculous numbers and turns out to be Albert Pujols and not all the other guys who put up ridiculous spring training numbers in 2001.

Since there are 15 players in each league now, I've sifted through and listed 30 interesting players (15 AL, 15 NL) who did interesting things this spring. Note that I said 'interesting'. Clayton Kershaw striking out a lot of guys is not interesting, it's expected. And fascist (contractually required Bull Durham joke - check). Mark DeRosa is not interesting as a fantasy player no matter how well he's hitting, although I'm sure that doesn't reflect on him as a person. Also note that I didn't pick one player per team, because some clubs had excruciatingly boring spring trainings (coughCubscough).

Here's the NL crew:


Adam Eaton, Ari: Poor, poor Adam Eaton. He goes out and hits .390/.403/.542, becomes everybody's trendy darling, shoots up draft boards and then hurts his elbow to sideline him for at least the first month of the season. For the record, though, there were indications he wasn't going to set the world on fire even if he hadn't gotten hurt. One walk in 59 spring at-bats isn't exactly leadoff material, nor is three steals in seven tries. If you were hell-bent on landing him, the injury might be a blessing in disguise.

Evan Gattis, Atl: If you don't know who Evan Gattis is, he's basically the Kwai Chang Caine of baseball. He gave up a college scholarship to try and get his head straight, went to junior college and injured his knee, then quit the game and wandered the west trying to find himself and probably solving crimes or something. He finally picked up a bat again in 2010 and this time it stuck, and he got drafted by the Braves and tore it up in the minors last year. He's still tearing it up, hitting .388/.404/.796 this spring, and with Brian McCann starting the season the shelf he might win a bench spot as a backup catcher and utility masher (a role that might become more common in the NL now that interleague play is scattered all across the schedule). Yeah, the zero walks and 13 K's aren't good, but if you aren't rooting for him to make the club (and/or his life story to become a Ryan Gosling vehicle) then you just have no soul at all, no sirree.

Julio Teheran, Atl: 35 strikeouts against nine walks in 26 spring innings. That, folks, is how you force your way into a major league rotation. Teheran was the Braves' best pitching prospect headed into last year but had a bumpy ride which, after the fact, got attributed to mechanical issues which he's since cleared up. He's done nothing this spring to prove that theory wrong, and with a spot open thanks to Brandon Beachy's Tommy John surgery Teheran has stepped up big-time. He might falter again of course, but he also might win Rookie of the Year.

Devin Mesoraco, Cin: Ah, the life of a youngster under the baleful eye of Dusty Baker. Mesoraco got his first crack at the majors last year and struggled, but he struggled in his first look at Triple-A in 2010 as well and that turned out pretty well the following year. His .406/.472/.688 line this spring, as well as a strong 2:3 BB:K ratio in 32 at-bats, hints that 2013 might turn out pretty well too, except that the Reds went out and got Miguel Olivo to caddy for the reliably vanilla Ryan Hanigan in case Dusty decides he don't trust no damn kids behind the damn plate. Mesoraco should probably still beat out Olivo for a roster spot but unless he hits like Johnny Bench right out of the gate (or, better, wears a Bench retro jersey to try and fool Dusty) playing time could be hard to come by. Still, as an upside play in deep two-catchers leagues, he's probably one of your best bets.

Rex Brothers, Col: His name makes him sound like the chief surgeon on a hospital-themed soap opera ("Rex, I'm having your baby!"), but he's actually a former first round pick and the duly annointed Rockies Closer of the Future. Rafael Betancourt is their Closer of the Right This Second, but hands up anyone who thinks a) Betancourt will stay healthy all year, b) Betancourt will stay effective all year, and c) Betancourt won't get dealt for something vaguely prospect-like at the deadline if the a) and b) parlays come through. Brothers' 11:2 K:BB ratio in seven spring innings (to go along with a 0.00 ERA and just five hits and two walks allowed) just reinforce that he's ready for the job, and really the only thing that might stop him from getting the closer gig in Betancourt's absence is that the Rockies might try Matt Belisle instead.

Yasiel Puig, LA: Suddenly Yoenis Cespedes doesn't look so special, does he? The 21-year-old Puig fled Cuba, signed a big deal with the Dodgers, didn't look out of place in High-A at the end of last year and was assumed to be ticketed for Double-A this season. Then he goes out and hits .527/.509/.855 in his first spring training, and the Dodgers secretly start hoping maybe Carl Crawford doesn't recover so quick after all. Alas, Crawford's elbow looks like he'll be fine for Opening Day, and with three pricey, veteran outfielders on the roster El Naturale will probably have to bide his time in the minors before getting a chance to show what he's really made of. That OBP is no typo, by the way. Puig's got a 0:10 BB:K ratio in 55 spring at-bats, which is fine when you're putting up video game numbers every time you swing the bat but might be a bit of a problem over the long haul. Then again his plate discipline wasn't an issue in the minors last year, so maybe this is more a case of a player seeing beachballs than something Puig needs to work on a lot.

A.J. Ramos, Mia: Steve Cishek is the closer for the Marlins and has been plenty effective the last couple of years, but in Miami being effective just paints a big trade bullseye on your back. Ramos is actually a year older than Cishek but is just now getting to the majors after striking out everything in sight the last couple of years at High-A and Double-A. His 11:0 K:BB ratio in eight spring innings is more of the same, and if Cishek for whatever reason ends up out of the saves picture then Ramos seems like the kind of high octane arm to become the Marlins' next tradable asset. Umm, I mean closer.

Christian Yelich, Mia: While the Marlins sort out a bunch of fringy riff-raff to man their non-Stanton outfield spots, their top hitting prospect scorched the spring to the tune of .364/.451/.818 and an impressive 6:7 BB:K ratio. Another organization worried about quaint, antiquated notions like fan loyalty and winning ballgames might think about giving Yelich a job this April, but since he was only in High-A last year the club will send him to Double-A and wait long enough before calling him up to save a year on his arbitration clock. Assuming they don't just wait until mid-season 2014, of course.

BONUS PLAYER! Speaking of Giancarlo Stanton, he's hitting .379/.472/.655. That's not the interesting part though; it's his 6:2 BB:K ratio in 29 at-bats, and 10:5 ratio in 46 at-bats including his work in the WBC, that gets you wondering what kind of numbers he might put up if his strikeouts drop into the double digits...

Khris Davis, Mil: The Brewers' attrition at first base has left them looking at giving the position to Alex Gonzalez because, hey, moving an aging shortstop to first base worked with Ernie Banks that one time, right? It's a terrible idea, but until Corey Hart gets healthy the team didn't really see any other options. Davis, who's yet another bat-first Brewers prospect, hit .294/.345/.667 in 51 at-bats with six home runs and did his best to give them that other option. He might still end up back in Triple-A to begin the season, and Hart should be back sometime in May anyway, but if Davis does win a bench spot and Gonzalez shockingly proves not to be the answer at first base there could be an opening for the kid.

Matt Harvey, NYM: Harvey's hardly a secret, which makes him somewhat less interesting, but racking up a 29:7 K:BB ratio in 23.1 spring innings the first time you know you have a job locked up does wonders for cementing your status as the next big thing. If you miss out on one of the big seven elite starters, Harvey's a very nice consolation prize.

Domonic Brown, Phi: He's basically had a full season worth of at-bats over three seasons now with disappointing results, but busting out for a .368/.429/.671 spring and launching seven home runs in 76 at-bats nicely fans those last dying embers of his prospect status. Plus, having Delmon Young as your main competition for playing time pretty much guarantees that you'll get a chance at some point to run with a starting job. Brown might just be a late bloomer, or he might never meet the expectations created by his minor league performance, but either way it's still fairly cheap to find out if this is the year he finally does something useful.

Jonathan Galvez, SD: Everyone knows the story by now. The Padres need a second baseman, so in comes one of their top prospects to hit the cover off the ball this spring and seize the job... wait, no, that was Jedd Gyorko, and his .283/.306/.517 line is actually kind of limp next to Galvez's .375/.409/.550 performance. So why is Gyorko breaking camp as a starter while Galvez has to go ride buses some more? Well, Gyorko's already proven himself against Triple-A pitching while Galvez had some injury issues that cut into his counting stats at Double-A last year (although his slash line was still solid). If Chase Headley's own injuries force Gyorko back over to third base though, and Galvez continues hitting well in the minors, the Padres might find themselves with two rookies on their infield this season.

Brandon Belt, SF: Pretty much everything I said about Domonic Brown applies to Belt, except that he actually hit OK in the majors last year, has even less competition for playing time than Brown does, and his .433/.460/.900 (yes, NINE HUNDRED) spring line is even more impressive. Heck, he's hit as many home runs this spring as he did in the entire 2012 regular season. Brown might be the mayor of Posthypesleeperville, but Belt is the governor of the state of New Posthypesleepershire. I mean, what are the Giants going to do to deny him a starting spot this year, trade for Justin Morneau? Wait, I probably shouldn't give Brian Sabean ideas. Scratch that.

Michael Wacha, StL: Wacha seems to be good at this pitching thing. 40:4 K:BB ratio in 21 innings across three levels in his pro debut last year, then 15:1 in 11.2 spring innings, is about as dominant as you can get. The Cardinals haven't yet decided whether they want him in the rotation or bullpen long-term, but between Jason Motte's suddenly-balky elbow and an unsettled fifth starter spot there could be plenty of openings for St. Louis' latest high-K wunderkind. Plus his name sounds like the noise you make when you're flailing in the air after watching a really cool martial arts flick, which has to count for something.

Anthony Rendon, Was: Rendon pounded out a .375/.412/.875 line in 32 at-bats during stints of not being on the DL this spring, and assuming he can keep that up (the not being on the DL part, I mean) he'll probably force the Nationals to figure out a way to add him to the lineup much as they did with Bryce Harper last year. It may not be that hard, actually. Denard Span has his own history of failing to stay healthy to fall back on, and Danny Espinosa's left shoulder could cause him problems all year. This could be one of those problems that has a way of resolving itself.

Posted by Erik Siegrist at 3/24/2013 9:14:00 PM

Comments (5)

Recent New York Mets Player News
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RotoWire Update Recommendation
Rafael Montero (P)  NY-N  5/21/2013
Montero was a hard-luck loser in his spot start for Triple-A Las Vegas on Tuesday. Montero entered the seventh, and final inning due to the double-header, with a one-run lead. He allowed a game-tying home run, then retired the next two hitters before walking the next batter. Josh Edgin relieved Montero, surrendering two hits to allow the inherited runner to score and saddling Montero with the loss. Montero's line was 6.2-4-2-2-1-5, impressive for anyone, let alone a pitcher making his Triple-A debut. It's possible that Montero remains with the 51s and is not sent back to Double-A Binghamton.
Jordany Valdespin (OF)  NY-N  5/21/2013
While Ike Davis has been the most prominent name mentioned, Mets brass have also discussed demoting Valdespin and Ruben Tejada, the NY Daily News reports. Valdespin has shown that he can provide some pop off the bench, he also has shown that he struggles with full-time play due to his lack of plate discipline. Probably more importantly, he's received a lot of attention for his immature actions in the clubhouse and on the field, strengthening the case for a possible demotion.
Ruben Tejada (SS)  NY-N  5/21/2013
While Ike Davis has been the most prominent name mentioned, Mets brass have also discussed demoting Tejada and Jordany Valdespin, the NY Daily News reports. Tejada has struggled at the plate and in the field, and the Mets may want to send him a message that the job is not exclusively his if he does not produce. If that does occur, look for Omar Quintanilla to be promoted and share shortstop with Justin Turner.
Ike Davis (1B)  NY-N  5/20/2013
Davis was back in the lineup Monday with a right-hander on the mound, but was unable to get a hit in three plate appearances. The rumbles about a possible Davis demotion to Triple-A are going to continue to grow louder now that the first baseman has just one hit in his last nine starts. Over that time he has struck out 13 times. Davis is already losing at-bats to Justin Turner when opponents are starting lefties.
Marlon Byrd (OF)  NY-N  5/20/2013
Byrd provided all the offense for the Mets Monday night, cranking a three-run home run as the Mets fell to the Reds by the score of 4-3. Byrd has hit well this month after the Mets started platooning him in right field with Jordany Valdespin and Mike Baxter. Facing mostly lefties, Byrd is now hitting .269 with four home runs this season.
Shaun Marcum (P)  NY-N  5/20/2013
Marcum fell to 0-5 Monday night, allowing four runs over six innings against the Reds, striking out seven. Marcum has been better his previous two starts - allowing six earned runs over 12.2 innings — but that hasn't been enough to get him a win. He'll look to win his first game of 2013 when he takes the mound against the Braves this Sunday.
Andrew Brown (OF)  NY-N  5/20/2013
Brown is currently dealing with an oblique strain, ESPN New York's Adam Rubin reports. The severity of the injury is unknown, so consider him day-to-day for the time being.

Recent New York Mets Team News
RotoWire Update
NY-N  12/12/2010
The Mets are closing in on filling out their coaching staff and are expected to make an official announcement early next week. Dave Hudgens has emerged as the leading candidate to take over as hitting coach, after Andy Van Slyke and Don Long also interviewed. Mookie Wilson is expected to become first-base coach and Ken Oberkfell to be bumped up from the organization’s Triple-A manager to become manager Terry Collins’ bench coach, the NY Post reports.
  11/18/2009
The Mets continued their off-season front office and minor-league overhaul, hiring Wally Backman as manager of Brooklyn of the NY-Penn League while confirming Tim Teufel as manager of Double-A Binghamton. In addition, Sandy Alomar, Jr. left the team to become Manny Acta's first base coach in Cleveland, the NY Post reports.

Roster
Majors
Ankiel, Rick OF
Atchison, Scott P(15D DL)
Baxter, Mike OF
Buck, John C
Burke, Greg P
Byrd, Marlon OF
Carson, Robert P
Davis, Ike 1B
Duda, Lucas OF
Familia, Jeurys P(15D DL)
Francisco, Frank P(15D DL)
Gee, Dillon P
Harvey, Matt P
Hawkins, LaTroy P
Hefner, Jeremy P
Lagares, Juan OF
Lyon, Brandon P
Marcum, Shaun P
McHugh, Collin P
Mejia, Jenrry P(60D DL)
Murphy, Daniel 2B
Niese, Jonathon P
Parnell, Bobby P
Recker, Anthony C
Rice, Scott P
Santana, Johan P(60D DL)
Tejada, Ruben SS
Turner, Justin 2B
Valdespin, Jordany OF
Wright, David 3B
AAA
Aardsma, David P
Bixler, Brian OF
Brown, Andrew OF(DTD)
Byrdak, Tim P(Out)
Cowgill, Collin OF
d'Arnaud, Travis C(7-Day DL)
den Dekker, Matt OF(Out)
Edgin, Josh P
Flores, Wilmer 3B
Fox, Matt P
Germen, Gonzalez P
Hampson, Justin P
Henn, Sean P
Hicks, Brandon SS
Hoffmann, Jamie OF
Lutz, Zach 3B
Mitchell, D.J. P
Montero, Rafael P
Nieuwenhuis, Kirk OF
Owen, Dylan P
Powell, Landon C
Quintanilla, Omar SS
Satin, Josh 2B
Schwinden, Chris P
Torres, Carlos P
Wheeler, Zack P(7-Day DL)
AA
Campbell, Eric 3B
Ceciliani, Darrell OF
Cohoon, Mark P
DeGrom, Jacob P
Dykstra, Allan 1B(Out)
Egbert, Jack P
Fisher, Michael 2B
Forsythe, Blake C
Goeddel, Erik P
Gorski, Darin P
Harris, Alonzo OF
Havens, Reese 2B
House, J.R. C
Hughes, Rhyne 1B
Koch, Matt P
Lucas, Richard 3B
Mateo, Luis P(Out)
Mazzoni, Cory P
Mesa, Wanel P
Patterson, Scott P
Peavey, Greg P
Pena, Francisco C
Puello, Cesar OF
Ratliff, Sean OF
Rodriguez, Josh 2B
Rodriguez, Armando P
Rosario, Adrian P
Shelton, Chris 1B
Tovar, Wilfredo SS
Vaughn, Cory OF
Verrett, Logan P
Walters, Jeff P
A+
Feliciano, Pedro P(Out)
Fuller, Jim P
Lawley, Dustin OF
Robles, Hansel P
Rodriguez, Aderlin 3B
Shields, Robbie SS
Syndergaard, Noah P
Tapia, Domingo P
A
Fulmer, Michael P(Out)
Nimmo, Brandon OF
Rookie
Becerra, Wuilmer OF
Carr, Nick P
Cecchini, Gavin SS
Dotson, Zachary P
Doyle, Dock C
Matz, Steven P
Plawecki, Kevin C
Reynolds, Matt 3B
Rosario, Amed SS
Rustich, Brant P
Santomauro, Nick OF
Tejada, Miguel SS
Urbina, Juan P
Vernooij, Marinus 3B