Tag: New York Mets

Steven Matz Injury: Updates on Mets Pitcher’s Elbow and Return

New York Mets pitcher Steven Matz is dealing with a bone spur in his left elbow that has delayed his next start but could eventually require surgery that would put him on the shelf for a considerable time.

Continue for updates.


Matz Has Start Pushed Back, Will Eventually Need Surgery

Tuesday, June 28

Anthony DiComo of MLB.com passed along word that Matz will now pitch Thursday against the Chicago Cubs instead of his slated start on Wednesday against the Washington Nationals.

However, DiComo added the Mets believe Matz’s bone spur will need surgery and the team is hoping that procedure can be done after the season.

On Monday, ESPN.com’s Adam Rubin noted that Logan Verrett would take the hill in Matz’s place if he was unable to make the start.


Matz Comments on Injury

Monday, June 27

“I feel like it’s something that I can pitch through, so that is something I have been doing,” Matz told Mike Puma of the New York Post. “I definitely wasn’t finishing my pitches last time in that fifth inning. There were balls definitely up, but if that’s the reason I don’t know. I can’t say.”


Matz’s Bone Spur the Latest Ailment for Mets’ Rotation

Fox Sports 1’s C.J. Nitkowski explained the possible repercussions of pitching through a bone spur in the elbow:

Losing Matz for any significant amount of time would hurt the Mets. He is 7-3 on the year with a 3.29 ERA. However, New York may need to treat this problem before it gets worse. Matz hasn’t recorded a win in his last five starts, with four of those resulting in team losses.

The Mets have the second-best team ERA in the National League behind the Cubs. However, Noah Syndergaard is also dealing with a similar injury, per Kristie Ackert of the New York Daily News, so this issue could become even more harmful for the team moving forward.    

 

Statistics are courtesy of ESPN.com.

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Jose Reyes-Mets Reunion Would Be Low-Risk Gamble on Past Glory

Back when Jose Reyes was an All-Star, the New York Mets didn’t even offer him a contract. Now that he’s absolutely not an All-Star, the Mets want him back.

UPDATE (2:45 PM ET, Saturday, June 25): the deal is now official, per Anthony DiComo of MLB.com—who has been on the story from the start:

/End of update

The crazy part about all that is the Mets were right then and they’re also right now.

They avoided disaster when they didn’t try to counter the six-year, $106 million contract offer Reyes eventually signed with the Miami Marlins back in December 2011. And Reyes might just help them avoid disaster by signing a no-risk deal with them Saturday, as multiple reports Friday night (including this one from Anthony DiComo of MLB.com) said he likely will.

Because the Colorado Rockies released Reyes in the fifth year of that six-year deal he signed with the Marlins, the Rox remain responsible for paying him the bulk of the $40-plus million he has coming. The Mets would pay just the prorated major league minimum, and they only pay that for as long as Reyes remains on their big league roster.

Given that someone has to take that roster spot for at least the big league minimum, Reyes costs the Mets nothing. Given the struggle the Mets have had finding major league-caliber players to fill out their bench, he doesn’t block anyone of importance, either.

He doesn’t keep them from signing Yulieski Gourriel, if the Mets can find a way to get the Cuban free agent. He doesn’t take at-bats away from Asdrubal Cabrera, except when he gives manager Terry Collins a chance to give his starting shortstop a needed break.

As Collins made clear to reporters, including Fred Kerber of the New York Post, the plan would be to play Reyes a little bit of everywherearound the infield and perhaps even in the outfield. The idea would be to find out if he can provide a boost to a Mets team that has little speed and has struggled to score runs with anything but home runs.

To find out if he can do that, the Mets would first send Reyes to the minor leagues. He hasn’t played anywhere but shortstop in more than a decade and has never played anywhere but middle infield as a professional. He’d need a few games to get ready.

With any other team in any other situation, Reyes might mope if presented with all that. The difference here is he never wanted to leave the Mets and always wanted to return. He never gave up his house on Long Island.

Besides, it’s not like other teams have been lining up to give him a chance. Between his greatly diminished abilities on the field and his problems off it, Reyes’ value dropped to near zero this season.

The Rockies didn’t want him when his domestic violence suspension ended on June 1. They obviously couldn’t find any team to take on even a small part of his salary in a trade, or they wouldn’t have released him.

Back when baseball announced Reyes’ suspension in the middle of May, I wrote about how little value he had and wondered if any team would take him. Back then, it didn’t seem the Mets would want or need him.

The domestic violence incident was part of it, to be sure, but only a part. Aroldis Chapman served a domestic violence suspension, too, and not only is he closing without controversy for the New York Yankees, but plenty of other teams want to trade for him in July or sign him as a free agent this winter as well.

As for Reyes, things have changed since last month, more for the Mets than for him. Reyes’ old buddy David Wright had neck surgery and may not play again this season. The Mets have fallen behind the Washington Nationals in the National League East, although a Mets win and a Nationals loss Friday cut the deficit to three games.

Already, the Mets have added James Loney (who had a big night in Friday’s win in Atlanta) and Kelly Johnson. Even with that, it was just five days ago that a frustrated Collins told reporters “we may shake some things up.”

Since then, the Mets have won three of four, but they’ve also watched their best hitter (Yoenis Cespedes) deal with a wrist problem and an ankle problem and their best pitcher (Noah Syndergaard) go off to get his elbow examined. Another rotation staple, Steven Matz, has admitted to elbow tightness after each of his last two starts.

All those guys mean more to the Mets’ chances of going back to the playoffs than Reyes does. But that doesn’t mean he can’t help.

I’m not sure he can. No one can be sure of that.

But now that he costs a lot closer to $100,000 than to $100 million, Reyes is worth a shot.

 

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

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Noah Syndergaard Injury: Updates on Mets Star’s Elbow and Return

New York Mets pitcher Noah Syndergaard suffered an elbow injury during his start Wednesday against the Kansas City Royals. He is expected to return on Monday against the Washington Nationals.

Continue for updates.


Syndergaard Comments on Injury

Friday, June 24

“It was just a little thing I was feeling that wasn’t allowing me to finish my pitches and compete to the fullest ability that I’m able to compete at,” Syndergaard said, per Adam Rubin of ESPN.com. “So I just told them that, hey, something is bothering me a little bit. The MRI turned out to be perfect, just a little something that flared up. I’ll be ready to go on Monday, though.”


Latest on Syndergaard’s Recovery

Thursday, June 23

Anthony DiComo of the league’s official site reported Syndergaard will make his next scheduled start Monday against the Washington Nationals.


Syndergaard MRI Shows No Damage

Wednesday, June 22

Rubin reported Syndergaard’s availability to start on Monday is unclear after his MRI came back clean, though he has been cleared to resume his normal routine.


Syndergaard Emerging as One of MLB‘s Best Pitchers

The 23-year-old emerged as an integral piece of the team’s vaunted rotation as a rookie, and he rounded out his first year in the majors with a 9-7 record, 3.24 ERA and 1.047 WHIP. He also tallied the only win among Mets pitchers during the team’s 2015 World Series clash with the Kansas City Royals. 

“At the end of the season, this guy was a bona fide major league pitcher who commanded respect from his teammates because of the way he worked, the way he went about things,” manager Terry Collins said, per the New York Post‘s Ken Davidoff. “And commanded respect from the other side of the field. So he made huge strides, and I think we’re going to see the results of it.”

Before Wednesday, Syndergaard had notched a 7-2 record to go with a 1.91 ERA and 0.965 WHIP. 

Any sort of extended absence from the ace won’t bode well for the Mets’ chances, but Collins’ club has enough depth to withstand a missed start or two.

With Matt Harvey, Jacob deGrom, Bartolo Colon and Steven Matz all integral pieces of New York’s rotation, the Mets can take solace in the fact a minor injury won’t squash their grand aspirations.

However, anything more would serve as a legitimate cause for concern. 

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com unless noted otherwise.   

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Yoenis Cespedes Injury: Updates on Mets Star’s Wrist and Return

New York Mets outfielder Yoenis Cespedes exited Wednesday’s game against the Kansas City Royals in the sixth inning with a wrist injury. However, he has been cleared to return.

Continue for updates.


Cespedes Active vs. Braves

Friday, June 24

The Mets announced that Cespedes will play against the Atlanta Braves on Friday.


Injury Rare for Durable Cespedes

Cespedes has proved fairly durable, playing more than 150 games in each of the last two seasons, but he dealt with hip soreness earlier in the year before this latest physical setback.

Prior to the injury, he had a .284 batting average with 18 home runs and 44 RBI in 2016.

When healthy, Cespedes anchors the New York lineup. He hit .291 with 35 homers and 105 RBI in 2015, which marked the second straight year he reached the 100-RBI plateau. The 2014 All-Star helped the Mets reach the World Series with his powerful bat but is also a solid fielder.

He won the 2015 Gold Glove and was responsible for 11 total defensive runs saved above average in the outfield that year, per FanGraphs.

While New York at least has options in the outfield behind Cespedes, the team is undoubtedly happy to have its slugger back in the lineup as it looks to chase down the Washington Nationals.

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Bartolo Colon Injury: Updates on Mets Pitcher’s Thumb and Return

New York Mets pitcher Bartolo Colon left Tuesday’s start against the Kansas City Royals in the first inning after being hit in the hand by a comeback line drive. He was diagnosed with a right thumb injury, but X-rays were negative, and he is not expected to miss time. 

Continue for updates.


Colon’s Expected Return Date Revealed 

Wednesday, June 22

Anthony DiComo of MLB.com reported that “Colon’s swelling has mostly subsided. The team expects him to start Sunday in [Atlanta] as scheduled.”


Colon Injury Details Revealed 

Tuesday, June 21

The Mets announced Colon left with a right thumb contusion, per DiComo, who added the X-rays showed nothing was broken. 

Royals second baseman Whit Merrifield hit the ball up the middle on Colon’s fourth pitch, sending it caroming off the Mets starter and toward second base.


Colon Remains Reliable Starter for Mets

Colon, 43, is 6-3 with a 3.00 ERA, a 1.19 WHIP and 56 strikeouts this season. He’s given the team a nice veteran option at the back end of its rotation behind Matt Harvey, Jacob deGrom, Noah Syndergaard and Steven Matz.

It wouldn’t be a huge loss for the Mets if he were forced to miss time as the team has one of the best rotations in the majors and depth to spare, but Colon’s proved to be a solid innings-eater late in his career. His longevity has been something of a surprise, though not to his teammates who see him work every day.

“People make assumptions, but if you’re around Bartolo, you see how he prepares,” David Wright told John Harper of the New York Daily News in February. “I’d bet a significant amount of money that he’s the most flexible guy on the team. I see him prepare on the days when he’s pitching. He’s got a stretching routine second to none.”

Mets fans must be happy this was just a minor injury and that Colon is not expected to miss time.

 

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Zack Wheeler Injury: Updates on Mets Pitcher’s Recovery from Tommy John Surgery

New York Mets pitcher Zack Wheeler has experienced a setback in his recovery from Tommy John surgery. According to a Tuesday report by MLB.com’s Anthony DiComo, Wheeler has felt “discomfort” in his elbow and won’t be throwing a scheduled simulated inning this week. 

Wheeler underwent Tommy John surgery in March of 2015 when he tore his UCL. He hasn’t appeared on the mound for the Mets since September of 2014.

Continue for updates.


Discomfort Shouldn’t Stall Wheeler’s Return

Tuesday, June 21

DiComo added that Wheeler will fly to New York on Wednesday and be examined by team doctors, though the Mets don’t believe this is a “serious” concern.

If this discomfort proves to be nothing, then Wheeler should still be on track for a return in early July—the timetable Mike Puma of the New York Post reported in May. 

Before his injury, the 26-year-old Wheeler was yet another young, promising arm in a New York pitching rotation set to take the league by storm. 

Unfortunately for the Mets, they have been unable to get Matt Harvey, Noah Syndergaard, Jacob deGrom, Steven Matz and Wheeler all in the rotation at the same time. 

As Wheeler compiled an 18-16 record with subpar Mets teams from 2013-2014, Harvey had to undergo Tommy John surgery, which kept him out for the entire 2014 season.

During that Harvey-less year, deGrom was spinning together a National League Rookie of the Year campaign, while Matz and Syndergaard weren’t even in the major leagues with the team. Wheeler, on the other hand, was looked upon as a top-end starter, going 11-11 with a 3.54 ERA and 185 strikeouts in 187.1 innings. 

Even though the numbers didn’t jump off the page, Wheeler showed flashes of being a major league ace by winning nine of his final 13 decisions with a fastball that lived in the high 90s and a devastating curveball that was almost 20 mph slower, per FanGraphs.

An extended absence hasn’t been easy for Wheeler, though he’s put his faith in the recovery process that helped Harvey get back on the field and helped the Mets win the National League pennant in 2015, per Tim Rohan of the New York Times: “You see all these guys coming back from it doing well. You’ve just got to trust it.”

It’s hard to say the Mets have missed Wheeler all this time given the depth of their pitching rotation. But a healthy Wheeler in a New York starting rotation that is second in the majors with 3.43 runs allowed per game could make the Mets defense even more unstoppable. 

Given that the Mets offense is third-worst in the league with 3.68 runs scored per game, his return could only help a team that is 5.5 games behind the Washington Nationals for the NL East lead. 

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com unless noted otherwise.

 

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Yulieski Gourriel: Latest News, Rumors and Speculation on Free-Agent 3B

The New York Mets are reportedly looking at Cuban free agent Yulieski Gourriel, 32, as a possible addition to their injury-plagued infield.

MLB Network’s Jon Heyman reported the news Monday.

Continue for updates.


Gourriel Puts Photo of Himself at Dodgers Game on Instagram

Tuesday, June 21


Gourriel Looks Like Ideal Fit for Mets

Monday, June 20

Per MLB.com’s injury report, New York has two infielders—first baseman Lucas Duda and third baseman David Wright—on the disabled list.

The Mets expect Duda back by early July, and he plays a position that is not too pertinent to Gourriel. However, the Cuban could be the perfect solution for the team at the hot corner.

Wright, 33, has an uncertain future after undergoing season-ending neck surgery earlier this month. The Mets are also struggling mightily on offense, ranking third-worst in the National League in scoring. In addition, the team has scored four or more runs in a game in just four of its last 10 games, losing six times in that span.

For Industriales in the Cuban National Series last season, Gourriel hit .500 with 15 homers and 51 RBI. He may have posted these gaudy numbers against weaker competition, but it’s apparent that Gourriel is a talented hitter.

His 2015 statistics weren’t his most impressive, but he has been consistent. Since joining the CNS as a 17-year-old, Gourriel has hit above .300 in 13 of his 15 seasons.

According to the New York Daily News‘ John Harper, one former Mets player, whom Harper said he could not name because of his connection with the team, made a strong case for signing Gourriel with Wright out long term:

This Cuban player [Gourriel] comes out of nowhere for them just when they need a third baseman, the player said.They won’t have to give up anything to get him, so just go sign him. That way you’ve still got something in the bank if you need to make a trade for more offense.

And I saw where [Yoenis] Cespedes said he was best friends with this guy when they were in Cuba together. So you never know, if [Gourriel] is on the team, maybe he gives them a better chance of keeping Cespedes too. I know that might be a reach, but it can’t hurt.

Harper also spoke with a scout who gave some input on what it would cost to sign Gourriel and the risks associated with that:

It’s more of an issue when a guy is listed at 32, one scout said. It’s not like someone who says he’s 22 and turns out to be 24 or 25. At 32 an extra year or two matters a lot more. You have to see if the athleticism is still there.

Even if he looks good in a workout, I wouldn’t give him more than two years The cost would depend on how many clubs get involved, but based on what some of the other (Cuban defectors) have gotten, it figures to be $10-$11 million a year, depending on the length.

The Mets have the pitching staff to return to the World Series. They are second, behind the Chicago Cubs, in the NL in team ERA, but they are floating around .500 at 36-32 because of an anemic offense. 

Going after Gourriel makes sense, even if it takes a three-year contract offer. Who knows how long this promising window of stellar pitching will last, so the Mets need to capitalize on it while they can.

 

Team statistics are courtesy of ESPN.com. 

Individual statistics are courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com.

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The Road to Intimidation: How Noah Syndergaard Built the Legend of Thor

NEW YORK — The legend of Thor began with a single pitch.

It wasn’t the first pitch Noah Syndergaard ever threw in the major leagues. It wasn’t even a strike, although that was kind of the point.

It wasn’t supposed to be a strike. It was supposed to make a statement.

And just in case it didn’t, Syndergaard followed it up with words.

“Hit that first pitch,” he said in a text that night to Frank Viola, his Triple-A pitching coach.

“If they have a problem with me throwing inside, they can meet me 60 feet, six inches away,” he told the world in a postgame press conference that late October night at Citi Field.

The Kansas City Royals had won the first two games of the World Series over Syndergaard’s New York Mets. Royals leadoff hitter Alcides Escobar, who loves to swing at the first pitch, had three hits and three runs scored.

In the eyes of the Mets, Escobar and the Royals were far too comfortable. Syndergaard’s first-pitch, high-and-tight 98 mph fastball was designed to change that.

Hit that first pitch.

Syndergaard already had nine regular-season wins and another in the National League Championship Series, just five months after his big league debut. But it was that pitch to Escobar, and everything he said and did in its aftermath, that showed he was on the road to being the pitcher any number of coaches had pushed him to be.

The Royals would win the World Series two nights later, but Syndergaard would become not just one of the best pitchers in the National League but also the most intimidating force on a major league mound.

“That’s a kid understanding what he is,” Viola said months later, pleased and proud with the transformation of a pitcher he worked with at Triple-A Las Vegas.

The Royals won the World Series, but they didn’t forget Syndergaard. They were even more impressed when they saw him in the second game of the 2016 season, when he shut them out for six innings.

“We talk about it,” Royals first baseman Eric Hosmer said. “And the one comparison we came up with is he’s the pitching version of Giancarlo Stanton.”

He’s a physical presence, a 6’6″, 240-pound giant with a superhero nickname, a triple-digit fastball and a slider that can touch 95 mph.

“I wouldn’t say he’s intimidating,” said Hosmer, not wanting to give anything away. “But his fastball can be intimidating.”

The fastball can be intimidating, and no matter what Hosmer said, Syndergaard himself can be intimidating.

“Oh, very,” Mets catcher Travis d’Arnaud said. “Very intimidating.”

He wasn’t always that way.


The first day Steve Miller went to see Syndergaard pitch, he showed up almost by mistake. He didn’t even have the right name.

“I told my friend that Mansfield Legacy had a game, and they had some kid named Snydergrass,” said Miller, then the Toronto Blue Jays area scout for North Texas, now the international cross-checker for the Tampa Bay Rays. “He said, ‘Well, his name’s Syndergaard, but he’s a [guy who should go to college]. He throws 86-88 [mph].'”

Miller went to see him, anyway. He drove to Mansfield, where Syndergaard was already pitching.

“There was this big, beautiful guy on the mound,” he said. “I thought, ‘He certainly has the body, and his arm is really loose and fast.’ But I looked around, and there were no scouts there. He was 86-88, just as my friend said, but it just looked so easy.

“You could tell his fastball was going to take off.”

It did. By the middle of that season, Syndergaard’s senior year in high school, his velocity climbed to the mid-90s.

Then came the day his high school coach remembers well.

“We were halfway through the season, and he wasn’t getting but five or six strikeouts a game,” David Walden said. “I said, ‘I don’t see how, with your size and stuff, you’re not getting 10, 12, 15 strikeouts a game.’ He said, ‘How many do you want me to get tonight?’ I said, ‘You’ve got seven District games left. You should get 70 in those seven games.’

“That night, he struck out 14 and threw a no-hitter.”

Syndergaard says he doesn’t recall the conversation or the game, but he does admit that was a big year.

“I feel like I had a little attitude change my senior year,” he said. “And I’ve continued to progress.”

Memorable or not, the story fits with what others have said about him.

He’s coachable. He asks questions. And while the intimidating mound presence had to develop, he always had it in him.

“I remember he named one of his pitches ‘The terminator,'” Walden said. “I think maybe that part of him was just beginning to develop. He really started to get confidence.”


The confidence is there now. When Syndergaard takes the mound for the Mets this year, he looks in complete command.

He has done exactly what he said he would.

“Most people think I’m a quiet guy,” Syndergaard told reporters this spring. “When I’m on the mound, I try to be as intimidating as possible.”

Mets pitching coach Dan Warthen loved to hear that. He, Viola and every other coach Syndergaard has had pushed him to pitch like the 6’6″ guy he is.

“You look intimidating right when you take the mound because of your size and how hard you throw,” they would tell him. “Now you just need to take that attitude to the mound.”

“The big thing for him was to understand how intimidating he is,” Viola said.

It took time. It took the disappointment of not getting called up by the Mets in September 2014.

Syndergaard was 22 years old, and he was the prospect the Mets and their fans kept talking about. A September call-up felt like a formality, until that morning he woke up and saw a missed call from Mets general manager Sandy Alderson.

“I just called to tell you you’re not getting called up,” Alderson said when Syndergaard returned the call.

It took a while for Syndergaard to understand it was the right decision.

“I didn’t deserve it,” he says now.

He got in the car when the Triple-A season ended, and with his good friend and teammate Logan Verrett, he drove 18 hours straight through to Texas. Syndergaard says he was so angry and flustered that he doesn’t remember the drive.

Verrett does.

“I think [not getting called up] gave him that motivation, that drive, that fire,” Verrett said. “I remember talking about it on that drive. With both of us, it lit that fire.”

That fire showed up in 2015.

Viola said in all his years in baseball, he’s never seen anyone make the mental transformation Syndergaard did from the end of 2014 to the beginning of 2015. Syndergaard’s teammates noticed the same thing.

“He had the stuff two years ago, but the mentality wasn’t there,” said Matt Reynolds, who played in Las Vegas in 2014 and 2015. “Now he acts like a guy who is 6’6″, 240.”


Syndergaard wasn’t always 6’6″, and he didn’t always weigh 240. When Miller first spoke to Syndergaard’s parents, the Blue Jays scout found out Noah had gone from 5’11” to 6’4″ in just 18 months. Noah remembers a three-inch growth spurt just going into his junior year of high school. It was so dramatic that some classmates didn’t even recognize him when the new school year began.

He got much stronger around that time, too, after his father introduced him to the weight room at the nearby YMCA. Syndergaard quickly became dedicated to building strength, a dedication that continues to this day.

“He puts on muscle very easily,” his offseason strength coach Josh Bryant told Stack.com. “If he decided to stop playing baseball and become a movie star with an action-figure physique, he could do it.”

Or maybe he’d just be a superhero.

Syndergaard has taken to the Thor nickname the same way he has taken to the great intimidator look on the mound—the same way a kid who grew up 20 miles outside Fort Worth, Texas, has taken to New York.

“I’m having the time of my life,” he said.

He was completely hypnotized by Times Square the first time he saw it, while in town for the 2013 All-Star Futures Game. He fully embraced a segment for the Mets’ SNY television network in which he dressed up as Thor and went to Times Square to greet tourists.

“It was actually a lot of fun,” Syndergaard said. “But I’m still not sure how many of them knew who I was.”

Last November, after the World Series, he walked around the city out of costume, just as himself. He stayed for about four weeks, before returning to Texas.

“I did a lot of thinking about what it would be like if we won the World Series,” he said.

When he showed up in Florida for spring training, going back to the World Series and winning was all he had on his mind.


Syndergaard would certainly open the season in the Mets rotation, but there was no way he would get the glamor job of starting Opening Day or of starting the home opener, five days later.

Matt Harvey got Opening Day. Jacob deGrom got the home opener.

Syndergaard got the second game, a matinee in Kansas City that easily could have gone unnoticed. It might have, if not for the way Syndergaard pitched in that 2-0 Mets win.

It was the day he unleashed the 95 mph slider—the one that shocked his teammates and the Royals, the one that Royals manager Ned Yost said “no man alive” could have hit.

“George Brett was in [my office], and I asked him if he could have hit that, and he said no way,” Yost told reporters.

“He didn’t have that in the World Series,” Hosmer said.

It was another sign Syndergaard is still developing, that as good as he has been, he’s still getting better. It was also more proof that he’s unique among starting pitchers.

According to MLB.com’s Statcast, Syndergaard has thrown his average slider this season at 91.38 mph. No other starter averages better than 90 mph.

His four-seam fastball averages 98.26 mph. Only New York Yankees closer Aroldis Chapman (100.14) and Miami Marlins reliever Brian Ellington (98.96) have been higher.

Syndergaard’s changeup average of 90.14 mph also tops big league starters.

Back in April, when Mets catcher Kevin Plawecki blocked one Syndergaard pitch, he ended up with a souvenir on his chest, as SNY’s Steve Gelbs famously tweeted:

“It kind of goes with the legend of Thor,” Plawecki told Bleacher Report later.

Yes it does.

“He starts the game at 98 or 99, and he finishes in the seventh inning at 99,” said Neil Walker, who faced Syndergaard last year and now plays behind him as the Mets second baseman. “You think, ‘Is this guy from another planet?'”

And then there’s the way he carries himself on the mound.

“I’m not going to say it’s confrontational, but it’s kind of like, ‘I’ve got you,'” one National League scout who has watched Syndergaard regularly said.

“Fearless,” d’Arnaud said. “I don’t think he’s afraid of anyone—and he shouldn’t be. Nobody intimidates him. I’ve never heard him say about a hitter, we’ve got to pitch around this guy.”

The high velocity comes with high-level command. Syndergaard has just 12 walks in 85 innings, with a 9-1 ratio of strikeouts to walks that is second to Clayton Kershaw among National League starters, according to Baseball-Reference.com. Statcast says only 64 of his 246 sliders have been taken for a ball—and only 10 have been turned into hits.

Syndergaard credits a simplified delivery, one he says is “night and day” different from the one he brought to the big leagues last year.

“Last year, I was gripping the ball so tight,” he said. “Now, I barely hold on to it. I’m using my legs less and my hips more.”

The “wonderfully repeatable delivery,” as Warthen calls it, has Syndergaard and the Mets hoping he can avoid the injury plague that continues to affect pitchers, especially those who throw their fastball ultrahard.

Not that Syndergaard is taking chances. He remains dedicated to his workout routine, and as Ken Davidoff wrote last week in the New York Post, Syndergaard has worked with a nutritionist who emphasizes drinking specialized juice.

It’s all part of the development of a pitcher who is still just 23 years old.


The development process takes time, but for those who were willing to look, the possibilities were always there.

Miller, the Blue Jays scout who first saw him, looked at Syndergaard and saw Nolan Ryan. After just one game, he called a cross-checker and told him to drop everything and make plans to see the next start.

By draft day, the Blue Jays were convinced. They had four of the first 41 picks that year, the result of losing Marco Scutaro and Rod Barajas to free agency and failing to sign 2009 first-rounder James Paxton.

They liked Syndergaard enough that they considered taking him 11th overall (they chose Georgia Tech pitcher Deck McGuire instead). They thought about him again with the 34th pick, when they chose Aaron Sanchez, a high school right-hander from California.

They knew not many teams had scouted Syndergaard as much as they had. They were gambling he’d still be available, but they weren’t willing to wait past the 38th pick, the one they got for failing to sign Paxton.

The Jays drafted Syndergaard and quickly signed him for a bonus of just $600,000, according to Baseball America. Anthony Ranaudo, a pitcher drafted one spot later by the Boston Red Sox, got $2.55 million.

As the years went by and Syndergaard became who he is today, executives looking back at that draft see that he went 38th overall and figured he must have fallen because of signability concerns. Then they look at the bonus and realize the Blue Jays actually underpaid for him.

The Mets underpaid, too, getting Syndergaard along with d’Arnaud in a December 2012 trade that sent R.A. Dickey to Toronto.

Dickey was a Cy Young winner. Syndergaard may become one.

“He looks like Nolan Ryan,” SNY Mets analyst Ron Darling told Mike Puma of the New York Post. “He walks like him. He acts like him, throws like him. He just has better control than Nolan had at that age.”

Syndergaard appreciates the comparison. He watched the 2015 movie Fastball, which studied hard throwers from Walter Johnson to Bob Feller to Bob Gibson and Ryan.

“I think of Bob Gibson a lot,” Syndergaard said. “Listening to him in the documentary, he was the nicest guy in the world. But then he was a savage on the mound. Nolan Ryan seemed like a great guy, and he was an intimidating presence on the mound.”

Spend some time chatting with Noah Syndergaard, and you come away with the same impression.

Nice guy. But I sure wouldn’t want to meet him at 60 feet, six inches.

 

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball. 

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Sputtering Mets Lineup Could Be Facing Another Critical Trade-Deadline Makeover

Last season, the New York Mets mixed a sputtering offense with a strong, young pitching staff, added a healthy dollop of trade-deadline cavalry and rolled to a World Series appearance.

Now, the Queens faithful had better hope history repeats itself.

After a humbling 6-0 loss to Julio Teheran and the Atlanta Braves on Sunday, the Mets have lost six of their last eight. Worse still, they were swept by a Braves team that’s floating belly up in the National League East cellar.

At 36-32 entering play on Monday, New York sits in third place in the division, six games back of the first-place Washington Nationals and a half-game behind the Miami Marlins.

The Mets starting corps—fronted by NL Cy Young Award hopeful Noah Syndergaard and Rookie of the Year contender Steven Matzhas been mostly as advertised, posting the second-lowest ERA in baseball behind only the Chicago Cubs

Yes, the arms wobbled in the Atlanta series, causing manager Terry Collins to note, flatly, “We did not pitch well in the last three days,” per James Wagner of the New York Times.

The offense, however, has been by far the bigger culprit.

Part of the problem has been injuries. Third baseman David Wright (neck), catcher Travis d’Arnaud (shoulder) and first baseman Lucas Duda (back) are all on the shelf. 

Outfielder Michael Conforto, meanwhile, has been nursing a wrist issue and has seen his average drop to .231. And second baseman Neil Walker, an early source of unexpected power, is battling back problems of his own.

Excuses, however, don’t score runs. And right now, the Mets are ranked No. 28 in MLB in that department, ahead of only the Braves and Philadelphia Phillies, the two teams looking up at them in the East.

“Our lineup is what [it] is because that’s what we have,” Collins said, per the New York TimesTyler Kepner

Not exactly a ringing endorsement. 

Yes, the Mets have Yoenis Cespedes, last season’s trade-deadline savior. The power-hitting Cuban leads the club in home runs (17), RBI (43) and slugging percentage (.564). 

Cespedes himself, however, missed time with a hip problem. And New York can’t realistically expect him to go on another Ruthian tear the way he did last summer after coming over in a July 31 deal with the Detroit Tigers.

Instead, the Mets brass will almost surely have to work the phones as the Aug. 1 deadline approaches. And they may not be able to wait that long.

If the season ended today, the Mets would be just out of the second wild-card slot. With the Nationals rolling and the Marlins looking like a pesky threat, that’s a precarious position for the defending NL champs.

Quite simply, they can’t keep losing ground.

The bad news for New York is that this figures to be a sellers’ market, with widespread parity and most clubs hanging around the edge of contention.

Still, there will be at least a few impact bats available.

Before reacquiring utility man Kelly Johnson from the Braves on June 8, the Mets inquired about Oakland A’s third baseman Danny Valencia, according to Ken Davidoff of the New York Post.

With Wright likely out for the season after undergoing surgery, Valencia and his .910 OPS could provide a nice shot in the arm at the hot corner. 

The asking price figures to be steep. But, as Davidoff noted, Oakland executive Billy Beane “has a strong relationship with Mets general manager Sandy Alderson, who preceded Beane as the A’s GM, as well as Alderson’s special assistant, J.P. Ricciardi, who worked under Beane in Oakland.”

Then there are veteran sluggers like the Milwaukee Brewers‘ Ryan Braun and the Cincinnati Reds‘ Jay Bruce, who could provide protection for Cespedes in an all-too-often punchless lineup.

Or what about another former Met and current Big Apple resident, outfielder Carlos Beltran, who could become available if the New York Yankees slide further from the playoff picture?

If you’re looking for high-risk options, there’s former Mets shortstop Jose Reyes, who was released by the Colorado Rockies and carries the stigma of a recent domestic violence suspension

Collins, at least, sounded open to a Reyes reunion, saying on June 15 that he “missed” Reyes and “certainly always [rooted] for him,” per Joe Giglio of NJ Advance Media. 

As with all trades and additions, there’s no guarantee any of those names would offer an instant fix. What’s clear for now is the Mets cannot continue with the status quo.

No, they don’t want to mortgage an already-depleted farm system that Bleacher Report’s Joel Reuter ranked No. 19 in the game after the 2016 amateur draft. 

But they also can’t afford to squander this stellar young staff, or to lose the goodwill they built with 2015’s magical run. 

Last year, the Mets caught lightning in a bottle with Cespedes. Now, it appears they’ll need that trade-deadline magic to strike twice. 

 

All statistics current as of June 19 and courtesy of MLB.com unless otherwise noted. 

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Wilmer Flores Injury: Updates on Mets 3B’s Hand and Return

New York Mets third baseman Wilmer Flores suffered a hand contusion Thursday after being hit with a pitch by Minnesota Twins pitcher Ricky Nolasco. However, he’s ready to return.

Continue for updates.


Flores Active vs. Braves

Saturday, June 18

Flores was active against Atlanta on Saturday.


Flores a Capable Option in Mets’ Struggling Offense

Flores has been on fire as of late. Before Thursday’s game, Newsday‘s Marc Carig provided a look at the 24-year-old’s numbers:

Flores was struggling to even come close to his numbers last season, when he hit 16 home runs and 59 RBI while batting .263. He is currently hitting .250 with two homers and only nine RBI, so Flores still may not match his 2015 statistics, but at least he is starting to show some life at the plate.

New York ranks second-to-last in the National League with 240 runs scored, so it needs all the firepower it can get offensively. Getting Flores back without missing any time may not provide a major boost offensively, but he’s a step in the right direction.

 

Statistics are courtesy of ESPN.com unless otherwise noted.

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