Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin

(115,283 posts)
Wed Apr 12, 2023, 01:15 PM Apr 2023

The Mets Assembled The Most Expensive Baseball Team Ever. Is That Enough To Make Them MLB's Best Tea

Team?

As the 2022 season ended, the New York Mets and owner Steve Cohen were wrapping up a major-league payroll record by shelling out about $430 million in salaries plus luxury tax penalties. Then Cohen doubled down, going on a further spending spree in the run-up to 2023. In free agency, the Mets added future Hall of Fame pitcher Justin Verlander (two years, $86.7 million), Japanese pitching star Kodai Senga (five years, $75 million) and veteran starter ​​José Quintana (two years, $26 million). Those weren’t even the team’s biggest outlays of the winter: Center fielder Brandon Nimmo re-signed for $162 million over eight years, and closer Edwin Díaz did the same for $102 million over five.1

All of this added up to $501.3 million doled out by Cohen in hot-stove contracts — a number that could, in theory, have been as much as $816 million if shortstop Carlos Correa had finalized a 12-year, $315 million deal that fell apart. As it is, the Mets are poised to shell out something on the order of $380 million in salary and tax commitments this season, the highest figure in MLB by more than $80 million. Having already won 101 games just last year, the Mets have turned into baseball’s impossible-to-ignore elephant in the room. Mets fans are captivated as their owner tries to win. Opposing fans aren’t jazzed about a financial behemoth trying to outspend the entire league, or they wish their team would be the one doing it. And Cohen’s fellow owners are even less jazzed about expanding player salaries, creating an “economic reform committee” that might as well be called the “stop Steve Cohen committee.”

Against that backdrop, the Most Expensive Team That Money Can Buy has to actually get down to the business of playing ball games. And after an offseason that was built to generate excitement, the first few weeks of New York’s regular season have been boring at best and frustrating at worst. Through 11 games, the Mets are 6-5, enough to nudge their FiveThirtyEight season forecast down from a 92-70 record projection and 75 percent chance to make the playoffs in preseason to 91-71 and 74 percent, respectively.2 The Mets’ computer outlook is dimmer in part because FiveThirtyEight’s model bakes in injuries to starting pitchers (though not to relievers or position players), and the Mets are heavy on injured starters. Verlander went on the 15-day injured list on March 30 and has yet to make his Mets debut as he rehabilitates a strained shoulder. He expects to be back before April is over, but Quintana, who had bone graft surgery on his rib, will not pitch for the Mets until at least July. The Mets’ planned starting rotation has five pitchers aged 30 or older, and so far, 40 percent of the staff hasn’t stayed healthy.

What remains has been a mixed bag: Max Scherzer has had an uncharacteristically shaky start and was striking batters out at a rate of just 7.71 per nine innings (with a 4.41 ERA) in his first three trips to the hill, but he pitched five shutout innings on Monday. Carlos Carrasco has walked 7.27 hitters per nine and shown a general inability to get anyone out. But fortunately, Senga has already been both good and fun to watch. Through two starts, he has struck out better than 11 hitters per nine innings while flashing a legitimate four-pitch arsenal — highlighted by a very spinny 97-mile-per-hour fastball and, maybe more importantly, his terrifyingly named “ghost fork”.

https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/mets-payroll-slow-start-2023/

5 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
The Mets Assembled The Most Expensive Baseball Team Ever. Is That Enough To Make Them MLB's Best Tea (Original Post) Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Apr 2023 OP
They ought to learn True Dough Apr 2023 #1
Oakland A's, Too ProfessorGAC Apr 2023 #4
True True Dough Apr 2023 #5
You need good fortune and chemistry. I don't know enough about the Mets' clubhouse. chicoescuela Apr 2023 #2
A little like buying high-profile stocks after a long bull run, no? Auggie Apr 2023 #3

ProfessorGAC

(69,881 posts)
4. Oakland A's, Too
Fri Apr 14, 2023, 08:28 PM
Apr 2023

For a very long time, Oakland was near the bottom in payroll but it seemed like 3 out of every 5 years they were respectable to very good.

True Dough

(20,264 posts)
5. True
Fri Apr 14, 2023, 08:50 PM
Apr 2023

Tampa just missed out on the record for most wins to start the season. Toronto ended their streak at 13.

chicoescuela

(1,574 posts)
2. You need good fortune and chemistry. I don't know enough about the Mets' clubhouse.
Wed Apr 12, 2023, 01:51 PM
Apr 2023

My team, the Giants, won 3 titles in five years and they were far from the most talented team. The baseball gods looked favorably upon them for five years. I suspect they have used up all their good fortune in my lifetime.

Latest Discussions»Culture Forums»Sports»The Mets Assembled The Mo...