Mets figuring out how to handle older pitchers under pitch clock

Major League Baseball had the best laboratory to test potential new rules: the minor leagues. And the league used the minors to do just that the past few seasons.

MLB officials could take a pitch clock or larger bases or elimination of extreme shifts out for a test drive not only with high-level competition, but also with the best of the players and umpires gaining experience under those edicts to carry with them to the majors if the rules changed there (as they did for this season).

Quirks could be worked out. Rough edges refined. Anecdotal information gathered. It all has helped a transition that — to date — is meeting with near universal approval, especially for playing games quicker with less dead time.

But nothing comes without unintended consequences. In part, not everything in the minors could mimic the majors, especially when it comes to pitchers.

Notably the pitchers are younger by a large degree in the minors. They are not asked to carry as great a workload, either in games or over the season. The crowds are not as big. The media contingents that cover them are not as large or as intense. And the priority is development, not winning.

This has stood out early if you are watching the Mets, possessors of the oldest pitching staff in the majors (average age 32.2), and their few early season tussles with the pitch clock. Max Scherzer, mad scientist and ace, has been trying to figure out whether to go quick or slow and when, and he has yet to find peace two starts into his season. Carlos Carrasco not only had two violations for taking too long to deliver a pitch, but also his velocity dipped significantly during his start.


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Mets starting pitcher Max Scherzer throws in the first inning of a Spring Training game against the Washington Nationals.
Corey Sipkin for NY Post

One expected consequence of the pitch clock was that by having to be in a delivery within 15 seconds with no runners on base and 20 seconds with runners on, pitchers would have to be in better cardiovascular shape to throw with less rest in between. But the Mets theorize that the 36-year-old Carrasco lost velocity not because of the short recovery time between pitches, but rather due to a shorter time between innings: notably that Carrasco had a long inning on the mound, then a shorter rest than in the past due to how quickly 1-2-3 innings now go, followed by another long pitching inning.

“In the past when a pitcher had a taxing inning, we could stall on offense,” one top NL executive said. “I would think this will take its toll on pitcher endurance.”

But is that just in games? Or the season? Again, starters, in particular, are asked to work longer than in the minors, and to throw more innings. The better prospects in the minors, in particular, are going to be limited in their pitch counts and innings.

That led another NL executive to wonder: “What is the pitching going to look like in July and August? How many pitchers are we going to need [over the season]?”

During the past two seasons MLB already set records for pitchers used — 909 in 2021 and 871 last year (that includes position players deployed to pitch). This year, there already were 403 pitchers used entering the weekend — 10 more than were used by all 26 teams in 1984.

“As much as we prepared in spring training, there is nothing like when you turn the lights on [to an MLB season] and there’s 50,000 people in the stands and the adrenaline is for real and you reach for that extra gear,” Mets pitching coach Jeremy Hefner said. “I think we are still learning. As much as the minors leagues showed us, that is only to a point. There is going to be an adjustment period, and I think we will adjust. But I do think we are trying to figure out what are the best practices.”

MLB also has asked for patience. League officials understood that younger pitchers who worked under many of these rules in the minors would be better situated early, but that the best players in the world would adapt with time. But the flip side is that veterans have become veterans by developing habits and rhythms that are not quite as entrenched with minor leaguers. As Hefner said, “Some guys have been doing it for 15 years a particular way.”


Carlos Carrasco struggled with the pitch clock in his first outing.
AP

Hefner has more of these types than anyone. Carrasco, Scherzer, David Robertson, Brooks Raley, Adam Ottavino, Tommy Hunter and, coming soon, Justin Verlander are all 35 or older. Jose Quintana, who may return around midseason, is 34. That group had appeared in 3,486 major league games, made 1,513 starts and thrown 11,436 innings before this year without the new rules.

Hefner wondered if the way to adapt might include starting every fourth day, but throwing less, or being part of a six-man rotation to create more rest, or doing nothing at all.


Relief pitcher Adam Ottavino throws a pitch during the 7th inning of the Mets’ Opening Day.
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

“We want to win ballgames,” Hefner said. “We want to put our players in the best position to be successful, and whatever that looks like, we will do. So we are just thinking about every option possible that might be a solution to this — and maybe doing nothing because we will adapt in a few weeks and this will feel normal again.

“There is going to be a balance of the 1,000-foot view and the 30,000-foot view — the micro and the macro. You talk about what’s going on if you need to make changes while you keep a long view of your whole season and what your goals are.”

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Why Carlos Rodon could be answer to Mets rotation questions

The Mets’ rotation didn’t get any younger this season.

In a win-now mode, the team last November added Max Scherzer, who turned 38 in July, and also featured the 35-year-old Carlos Carrasco and Jacob deGrom, who turned 34 in June. Chris Bassitt, who arrived in a trade from the A’s, turned 33 before the season.

It’s a fact team brass will have to weigh heavily this offseason. Mostly, that pertains to deGrom — and also to Carrasco and Bassitt — as the Mets consider how to rebuild a rotation that was strong for most of the season, but faded in the final weeks as the Mets squandered their NL East title chances and lost to the Padres in the wild-card series.

DeGrom at his best is the most electrifying force in baseball, but how long the Mets are willing to extend the relationship, more than the average annual value of a new contract, might be the largest factor in whether the two-time Cy Young Award winner returns.

Does owner Steve Cohen set a strict two-year limit on a deGrom deal? Three years? DeGrom has indicated he plans to opt out from his contract, and a team desperate for a marquee attraction with Cy Young upside might be willing to hand over the moon to get it.

DeGrom has started 23 games combined over the two seasons Cohen has owned the team, which included a nearly 13-month stretch without an appearance. The risk is significant.

Jacob deGrom exited his lone playoff start amid uncertainty about whether he would return to the Mets.
Corey Sipkin

Carrasco is a back-end starter these days, and for the $11 million it will cost the Mets to pick up his option for next season (the net outlay of the $14 million option when the $3 million buyout in his contract is considered), it’s sensible to keep him.

But that’s only if you believe Carrasco has enough left in the tank to approach the same effectiveness he showed this season, when he started 29 games and pitched to a 3.97 ERA.

Bassitt was maybe the Mets’ most consistent starting pitcher, but he’s now headed toward free agency as somebody who will turn 34 in spring training. Team brass loved Bassitt’s dependability this season, but if deGrom and Carrasco stay — with Scherzer signed for two additional years — can the Mets justify keeping another older pitcher?

All factors considered, the Mets might want to take a long look at Carlos Rodon, who can opt out from the two-year contract he received from the Giants last offseason. Rodon, who is represented by superagent Scott Boras, is likely to reject the $22.5 million option and aim for a multiyear deal (think: five or six) in the $30 million range annually.

Rodon does have a history of shoulder issues, but he’s thrived the past two seasons while making a combined 55 starts. Rodon, who turns 30 before spring training, would provide a younger (and left-handed) alternative to potentially replace deGrom or Bassitt. This season, Rodon led the major leagues in FIP (fielding independent pitching), which measures a pitcher’s ability to strike out batters and limit home runs, walks and hit batsmen. Rodon had 2.25 FIP, which is measured on roughly the same scale as ERA. Rodon’s traditional numbers  for the Giants this year were also strong, highlighted by a 14-8 record with a 2.88 ERA over 178 innings.

Chris Bassitt won 15 games while throwing a career-high 181 ⅔ innings this year, but the soon-to-be 34-year-old may not make for a good fit in an already-aging Mets rotation.
Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

A dominant left-handed component to the rotation would be welcomed. David Peterson was effective in a fill-in role, but Rodon would have the potential to become a CC Sabathia-type presence.

The Mets had a lefty on their mind last offseason, but Steven Matz spurned a return to Citi Field to sign with the Cardinals, eliciting venom from Cohen toward the pitcher’s agents, whom he accused of “unprofessional” behavior. Matz was a disappointment for the Cardinals, pitching to a 5.25 ERA in 15 appearances before a torn medial collateral ligament in his left knee ended his season.

Rodon’s talent, relative youth (compared to the other members of the Mets rotation this season) and left-handedness are all factors that could make him an attractive addition for the Mets this winter.

A worthy cause

The winner of the Roberto Clemente Award — honoring MLB’s top humanitarian — will be announced during the World Series. The Mets’ nominee was James McCann for his work with families of premature babies.

McCann’s wife, Jessica, gave birth in December 2017 to twin boys who arrived seven weeks early. The twins spent seven weeks in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU).

James McCann was nominated for baseball’s Robert Clemente Award for the work he and his wife, Jessica, have done supporting the parents of premature babies.
Corey Sipkin

The McCanns visit NICUs in New York and at home in Nashville to lend support to families and distribute gift packages.

“The thing that is tough, and a lot of people don’t understand, when the baby is in there full-time, parents still have to go to work, they are not just sitting in the hospital all the time,” McCann said. “We go and visit … once in a while, we get a note from someone thanking us for the gift package that we left them. We’re just letting them know that as somebody who has been in their shoes, that as tough as it is right now, there’s brighter days ahead.”

McCann’s sons Christian and Kane, who weighed three pounds at birth, are fully healthy, according to McCann.

“They love baseball,” McCann said. “They will step over trucks and cars and legos to pick up a bat and a ball. They are obsessed. It’s incredible. Everything is normal as normal gets.”

McCann could join a list that includes Curtis Granderson, Carlos Delgado, Al Leiter and Gary Carter, all of whom won the Clemente award while playing for the Mets. The list of winners also includes Carrasco, who received the award with Cleveland in 2019.

“Just being nominated and in that conversation is a special thing, but to win the overall award and have your name etched in that legacy would be incredible,” McCann said. “When we had the Roberto Clemente night , you see the names of past winners … it’s a special group of people.”

System shakeup

Tim Teufel’s 25-year tenure in a variety of instructiuonal roles for the Mets has come to an end, but he likely will serve as a team ambassador moving forward.
Getty Images

Tim Teufel’s departure from the Mets’ instructional ranks was surprising (he won’t be retained as the minor league infield coordinator) given his deep roots in the organization, but you can’t blame general manager Billy Eppler for wanting to import his own people.

In recent years, fan favorites such as Edgardo Alfonzo and Wally Backman departed from Mets minor league managerial roles as part of player development changes.

Teufel, 64, has served the organization well in various roles over the past 25 years and will remain a club ambassador. Omar Minaya, Mike Piazza, Mookie Wilson and Todd Zeile also served in that role this season.

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Mets turn back clock to their summer of fun

Somehow, it is as if September has represented an anticlimax for the Mets following a thrilling summer replete with full houses, dramatic moments, blaring trumpets, Jacob deGrom’s return and signal victories including two straight at Citi Field against the Yankees, four out of five against the Braves, two out of three from the mighty Dodgers and a rally to remember in Philadelphia. 

The temperature has cooled, the crowds have gotten smaller, the opposition is playing for nothing but pride and future employment opportunities. The Mets have not been able to rise above the elements even while in the midst of a pennant race and seeking to nail down the club’s first postseason invite since 2016. 

“You don’t want to be Captain Obvious,” manager Buck Showalter said. “Our guys don’t have to be reminded about what’s going on and what’s at stake. This is not, ‘Woe is me.’ It’s just the opposite.” 

The lead-in to this one was as opposite from the way the Mets had played through the guts of the season while at one point building a seven-game division lead over Atlanta.

Losing seven of 11 against a motley crew of Nats, Bucs, Marlins and Cubbies had cut the lead to one-half game. The Mets hadn’t been able to get Edwin Diaz into a game with the lead since Sept. 1. 

Everyone wants to give the Mets the benefit of the doubt, but there is no recent foundation of success that facilitates generosity of spirit. Has this been a lull? Has this been a slide? Has this been the beginning of an unthinkable 2007- or 2008-type catastrophic collapse? 

Francisco Lindor celebrates in the dugout after his two-run homer.
Francisco Lindor celebrates in the dugout after his two-run homer.
Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

Or maybe this has represented just a slice of a season in which all but the most exceptional teams endure the ebbs and flows of the 162-game marathon. Check out the Yankees and their parabolic 2022. 

“We’re all trying to solve that riddle. You’re never as good as someone may portray us, so you’re never as bad,” Showalter said as the Mets restored some sort of order with Thursday’s 7-1 victory over Pittsburgh on Roberto Clemente Night — shouldn’t the Pirates have been at home? —while extending their lead to one game over Atlanta. “There are three or four teams that were painted as the ’27 Yankees at some point this year. 

“You want to shorten the bad times and stretch out the good. We’ve done a good job shortening the challenges. This is one. There are a lot of teams that struggled in September and were real good in October. Right now, we’ve got to get to October.” 

If the Mets can cut if off now, the route becomes less treacherous and with fewer potholes. There is no question that the clearest path to the World Series is winning the division, avoiding the best-of-three wild-card round, and setting up a rotation that features deGrom and Max Scherzer at the top. This is what is at stake for the Mets, who are tied in the loss column with the Braves, New York with 17 games remaining and Atlanta 19, including three at their place in the penultimate series of the season. 

Pete Alonso celebrates in the dugout.
Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

The Mets looked like they were playing the summer game on Thursday. Carlos Carrasco struck out a season-high 11 batters in six innings in his second straight start in which he allowed just one run. This was noteworthy for the Mets, whose starters had pitched as many as six innings in just five of the 11 immediately preceding games and whose team trailed by at least three runs after three innings in all three of their defeats this week to the Cubs. 

After the right-hander fanned three in the top of the first, the Mets immediately put two on the board on a two-out double from Daniel Vogelbach, who might have experienced whiplash in going from folk hero to zero in 60. That’s what going 5-for-42 with a .119/.260/.119 slash line over a 16-game stretch will do for you. 

Vogelbach was one of three bats added by GM Billy Eppler at what recently has appeared like a Bizarro Deadline. Tyler Naquin entered Thursday 8-for-45, with a .178/.278/.289 slash line over his last 22 games before going 1-for-4. Darin Ruf, who needs hits more than consonants, was 2-for-35 at .057/.125/.057 in his last 17 games. 

The Mets got a couple of hits from Pete Alonso, and another RBI from Vogelbach. Mark Vientos, who later pinch hit for Vogelbach, ripped a run-scoring single for his first major league hit in his 11th at-bat. Francisco Lindor, who idolized Clemente and a number of the previous Clemente Award winners introduced on the field that included Carlos Beltran and Carlos Delgado, hit his 24th home run to establish a single-season record for Mets shortstops. 

“To do it in front of them on this night was special,” Lindor said. “Setting the record is, too, but it would mean a lot more to win the World Series.” 

There is much work ahead. One victory over the Bucs does not a stretch drive make. But though there was a touch of the fall in the air, this seemed like one of those Summer Nights.

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