Monday, April 20, 2015

Say hey, baseball: The Mets lose even when they win

Monday morning's baseball includes the Mets breaking bones, further A's vs. Royals violence, and the Marlins' manager in potential trouble. Subscribe for your daily Say Hey!

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The Mets are 10-3, and have the most wins in the National League. That's good! The cost of that 10th win was high, though, as in the process of notching the W, the Mets lost reliever Jerry Blevins to a fractured arm courtesy a Dee Gordon line drive, and then starting catcher Travis d'Arnaud went down with a fractured hand after a hit by pitch. In the case of Blevins, he wasn't even supposed to be on the mound to face Gordon that inning: Matt Harvey was feeling ill during his start, so he only threw 84 pitches over six-plus innings before manager Terry Collins finally handed things over to the bullpen

There is depth in the organization to handle both of these losses -- catching prospect Kevin Plawecki will take d'Arnaud's roster spot, while Blevins will be replaced by minor-league reliever Hansel Robles -- but that's of little comfort. d'Arnaud was hitting .317/.356/.537 and had the prospect pedigree for a huge season like that to be believable, and his loss comes at the same time David Wright is on the DL with a pulled hamstring. Blevins isn't the greatest reliever around, but the Mets' bullpen is an obvious weak point, and already lost closer Jenrry Mejia to a PED suspension this month.

The Mets kept a deep roster together by avoiding trading any of it this offseason, and while it's only April, it's already being tested. Those 10 wins are in the bank, but there is a whole lot of season left for even more to go wrong in New York.

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