Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Fire Sale

Should the Mets clean house and do a total Marlin-style reboot? It actually works pretty well for the Marlins as they DO compete for a ring every 5-10 years. The key here is what would classify a "Fire Sale" and what would simply be smart baseball mathematics.

Joel Sherman has shouted "Fire Sale!" for a while. When he says it, we know he's asking the Mets to trade Beltran, Rodriguez and Reyes. They aren't on the roster beyond 2011, so what is the harm? However, I don't REALLY see trading them as a TRUE "Fire Sale." A true cleaning house would likely see the departure of 90% of the current Mets.

My Question: Does Mr. Sherman mean that he wants a "Fire Sale" (selling all contracts that do not contribute to success for this team three or four years from now) or does he want to take advantage of some of our players with expiring contracts and/or high value?

Dearly Departed: 6/8ths of the Lineup

Jose Reyes, SS - You've heard about the Jose debate before. Trade Jose as the Mets have no shot of winning now and need to rebuild. Jose is worth at least two +/++ prospects and likely 3-4 players. He's clearly going to be a Type A free agent so he'd net the Mets a 1st rounder and a compensation pick at minimum. As the sage Matt Cerrone has noted, there isn't a backup plan to Jose in place. Ruben Tejada could play SS but if you lose Jose's bat you need more of a replacement than Tejada gives you.

Daniel Murphy, 2B/1B - Murphy has trade value? Yes, he does. He's played pretty solid 2B and he's proven to be a +hitting 2B while doing it. Add that he can man 1B and 3B reasonably well and more than a few teams might look at him. A lot depends on injuries and who the Mets would be willing to trade him for, but the Mets could get a + prospect in a deal for their blooming 2B.

David Wright, 3B - Trade Wright? I'm not for it, but this is me showing you what a "Fire Sale" would mean. Wright is going to go up in price and likely be looking for a large Ryan Howard/Ryan Braun pay-day in the next year and a half. Trade Wright for a bevvy of prospects and use them to craft a winning club. It's not as crazy as it sounds. Wright is under team control through 2013 and is still a great hitter and an okay defender. The Mets could ask for a boat of prospects for Wright and they'd probably get them from a team with a 3B vacancy looking to win NOW.

Carlos Beltran, RF/DH - Beltran is hitting well and "Fire Sale" or not he's due to be traded. You can thank that no Arbitration clause. He's looked good both in the field and at the plate so there would be some takers but the risk of health is always present so his value takes a hit. You might get a + prospect for Beltran but more likely you get 1 or 2 guys who are in the upper levels of the minors and look like lesser MLB contributors. As Robert points out the Arb Clause ends up not being a factor with Beltran's Age, Injury history and Salary. He'd earn to much in an arbitration case and the Mets wouldn't make the offer.

Jason Bay, LF - Jason Bay happens to cost a lot so if the Mets could move him for a similarly light-ish package like Beltran's they wouldn't be crazy, $36+ Mil is a lot of salary to pick up. Jason Bay can help teams looking for a good hitting corner OF with some power. They'll need to have money or the Mets will need to pay some contract because he makes more than half the players on some teams combined.

Angel Pagan, CF - Pagan is young and still under team control for another year. Even with a "Fire Sale" the Mets COULD keep him, but his skill set is replaceable. He'd get the Mets a middle of the road return. More than Beltran or Bay because of his age and price. Less than Reyes or Wright because he's not nearly as talented. It all depends on the markets need for CFs and how well he rebounds when he returns.

Dearly Departed: Almost the ENTIRE Pitching Staff

Johan Santana, LHSP - I'm in favor of trading Johan no matter what. He's been hurt too much, costs too much and he isn't the guy he was when we traded almost nobody for him. The Mets would be wise to look at offers even if they don't need to cut bait with everyone on a total overhaul. Santana isn't going to fetch the same number or perceived value he did the last time he was traded but at least one +/++ prospect and at least 2 prospects overall.

Mike Pelfrey, RHSP - Right now I'd trade Pelfrey for some Pogs. He's been awful and probably needs to go to AAA to reclaim some semblance of skill. He's young enough and cheap enough that somebody might still buy into his early 2010 numbers and make a deal. That list shrinks each time he pitches. Best case scenario is that he rebounds and builds back some value first. I worry that each time he pitches that value will go the other way.

R.A. Dickey, RHSP - Say it ain't so! Yep, this is a Fire Sale and R.A. Dickey is not a prospect under team control for little too no money. He's a veteran with solid value who could net the team multiple prospects on the trade market. The list for suitors might actually be higher than almost any other player. Met fans would likely have a riot if Alderson actually did it.

Chris Young, RHSP - Young has pitched well when healthy so it's only sensible that he has some value. Young is a 1-year rental and trading him would make sense as soon as the Mets are completely out of the race no matter what. He was definitely a good signing but holding onto him does nothing. Unless he could become a Type A free agent... I don't think he can.

Chris Capuano, LHSP - As a starter not so much value but as a lefty reliever and swing man he has some value. I don't claim that it's a lot of value but it's enough that the Mets could get something back which is generally better than nothing. Capuano or Pelfrey should be moved out of the rotation for Dillon Gee in the near future. It bothers me that the team is screwing around with Gee.

Francisco Rodriguez, RHRP - Frankie has some value already and more value going to a team who HAS a closer. On a team where his option won't vest he's a GREAT 7th or 8th inning setup man who can be a difference maker. Mets could either look to dump his salary and not get much back or pay part of it and get a prospect in return. Both solutions are good and both are smart to do with or without a fire sale.

Taylor Buchholz, RHRP - In the absence of Frankie, Taylor might be the closer... never mind that. This is a "Fire Sale" so Taylor goes too as he's worth more than any other reliever we have. I'm not entirely sure what a cheap, team controlled setup man would net the Mets in terms of prospects but it's likely to be a decent haul. Besides, Pedro Beato is cheaper and younger and can be rushed into the closer role too quickly... just like we planned.

Jason Isringhausen, RHRP - Izzy deserves to be on a winning club the way he's pitched. He is still good enough to handle later innings and he's not going to be of much value down the road. He won't net the Mets a lot but even getting a mediocre prospect might be worth it if we are selling EVERYONE who isn't nailed down.

Who's Left?:

Ike Davis, Josh Thole, Jonathan Niese, Dillon Gee and Pedro Beato would be the players I'd peg to survive even the most complete Met Fire Sale. It would mean promotion for Lutz, Duda, Tejada, Evans, Nieuwenhuis, Martinez, Gorski, Schwinden, Cohoon and others. The team would finish poorly and have a good regular pick in the 2012 draft and enough payroll flexibility to do almost anything.

So... what I'm trying to say here... is that Joel Sherman is wrong. The Mets don't need to have a "Fire Sale". They need to make smart decisions with the players who are not going to be giving the Mets returns beyond this season.

Oh yeah... and if you want the fans to keep showing up at the park... re-sign Reyes.

20 comments:

Chris The Teacher said...

this is the dumbest blog post i have ever read.

rwdavis22461 said...

i am sure glad you are not running my team. What the Mets need as a fire sale is getting rid of Fred and Saul and mostly Jeff get owners with pockets and let Sandy and his two assistance due some magic . a fire sale never really works you need talent . how many fire sales has Seattle,KC and Pittsburgh had ? Say no

rwdavis22461 said...

You build around your guys like Ike,Reyes, maybe Wright a bit over rated. and Niece and Beato in the middle then use some of your farm others you get from Free agency . and creative trades. But to get rid of talent for other teams scraps gets you same as maybe cheaper but not as good.

rwdavis22461 said...

Mets major issue is we are running in quick sand with this ownership group who over stayed their welcome. When Nelson Doubleday was bought out that was the time for both Fred and Nelson to sell to outside sources and make provisions to get free season tickets with the new owners. But to get out of the game. Fred is too old and his son Jeff is too dumb.

David Groveman said...

@ Teacher, Your negativity is wildly appreciated.

@ rwdavis, I don't think you understood the purpose of the post. I am not saying the Mets SHOULD hold a "Fire Sale" I'm complaining about those that are calling for it. It's a terminology issue. Joel Sherman says Fire Sale and means something different.

rwdavis22461 said...

it does not take a brain surgeon to do the math. Next year both Reyes and Beltran drops off the payroll now you are about say 95 million after that . you take what Beltran made this year 18.5 and give Reyes 15 of the 18.5 that takes care of 2012 then you still have 11 million of the current Reyes salary plus you saved 3.5 of Beltran. Then both Oliver Perez and Castillo's total 18 million comes off the book that gives you about 21.5 left you made a profit and keep Reyes what is the problem?

David Groveman said...

P.S. rwdavis, nice comments in general

rwdavis22461 said...

i am not gearing my dislike to anybody here its just to the Mets ownership so if you read my post and think i am attacking about no just the Wilpons. Please take this into consideration.

David Groveman said...

@ rwdavis, payroll issues extend beyond the money cleared with Beltran, Reyes and hopefully K-Rod. Arb raises, poor attendance, and Wilpon's financial woes might see the payroll cut next year... significantly. Well.. Arb raises don't factor exactly but it cuts into free agent funds.

David Groveman said...

@ rwdavis, no worries I'm just trying to respond. Matt Cerrone has been one of the only readers of my blog for a while so I'm not used to this traffic. Thanks for the comments.

Unknown said...

the "no arbitration" clause has nothing to do with the Mets trading Beltran or Beltran's trade value or US trade deficit or anything else.

At a current salary of $18M and carrying around a chronic arthritic knee, there's no way any team would consider offering arbitration to Beltran b/c the 1 yr award would likely be far above his current open market value.

David Groveman said...

@ Robert, you're right, of course, Beltran's clause is meaningless but it would seal the deal were injuries/age/salary not a concern.

Unknown said...

This was a very interesting read, and I'm sorry to see that some mistook it for a proposal when it was clearly just an exercise.

Sandy's got his work cut out for him, particularly when you consider all the factors (finances, free agency market, how the current team is looking in 2-3 months), but I think he's got the wherewithal to right the ship.

David Groveman said...

@ Daniel, I hope the same thing.

David Daniels said...

Excellent read, although I believe Santana has a no-trade clause.

David Groveman said...

@ Dave Daniels, Thanks for the praise, become a follower and see what I pull out of my butt tomorrow.

keithninety said...

Unfortunately, under this scenario, Citi Field would be a windy, dusty ghost town and the Wilpons would lose even more money. In New York, you have to put an actual "team" on the field or else you won't draw flies.

David Groveman said...

@ Keith90, 100% agree with you. Even if the Mets trade only Reyes, Beltran and Rodriguez the stadium will have lots of empty seats.

Unknown said...

Would Reyes consider a hometown discount since he apparently loves this team and city and, for some reason, Long Island so much? Do players do that?

David Groveman said...

@ Daniel, I suppose they do. Cliff Lee preferred Philly to New York and took less money. Jose and the Mets need to see eye to eye on what he deserves and what he'll get. Jose could want to go to another club with a better shot at winning.