Mets Bullpen Issues Must Be Addressed Soon
The New York Mets are a .500 team (45-45), standing only 1.5 games out of the wild card. In short, the Amazins are on the precipice of either serious October baseball or a serious October vacation. On Tuesday night the Mets held off a late Washington Nationals charge, winning 7-5, but it was a match-up the Mets never should have sweated out.
New York was up 6-0 in the eighth inning. Jose Quintana was cruising, allowing only a hit over seven scoreless. Francisco Lindor and Brandon Nimmo both hit three-run bombs. It was going to be a laugher.
Then it wasn’t. Adam Ottavino and Reed Garrett couldn’t shut the door, as the Nationals scored a combined five runs off the two relievers. Edwin Diaz, who an hour earlier looked like he would get the night off had to come in and get the final out.
Ottavino and Garret are prime examples of the taxed and overworked bullpen the Mets have right now.
Carlos Mendoza has had no choice but to go to guys like Ottavino, Garrett, and Danny Nunez regularly with Drew Smith and Brooks Raley both out for the year with elbow injuries. Sean Reid-Foley and Shintaro Fujinami are both on the way back soon from shoulder impingements.
New York is fifth in Major League Baseball in blown saves with 16. Throughout May the Mets would drop games they had leads in. Lately, the Mets have been fortunate to have a scorching hot offense to make up the difference as they did in Pittsburgh on Saturday when New York came back to win 3-2. But the question is how much longer can it continue? Are there reinforcements on the way?
TRADES
Before Tuesday’s game, the Mets acquired Phil Maton from the Tampa Bay Rays in exchange for cash considerations. Is Melton a savior? No. He’s decent. With the Rays this year he was 1-2 with a 4.58 ERA and two saves in 40 appearances. He owns a career 4.28 ERA.
New York also acquired reliever Matt Gage from the Dodgers for cash considerations and optioned him to Triple-A Syracuse.
Neither Maton nor Gage are going to jump off the page, but they are arms, and the Mets need that desperately.
DAVID STEARNS NEEDS TO DO MORE
It will be up to David Stearns to swing a deal between now and the July 30 trade deadline to get a bigger impact reliever in town especially if the Mets remain in the mix for a playoff berth.
The New York Times listed several potential relievers like Oakland’s Mason Miller or Pittsburgh’s Aroldis Chapman. Even Texas’ David Robertson — a player whom the Mets traded away last season at the deadline is potentially available if the Rangers keep falling out of it.
If the Mets are serious about playoffs in 2024, a move would have to be made — granted one that makes sense without depleting a minor league system that Stearns, and his predecessor Billy Eppler, started to re-stock.