Meet the Mets, meet the Mets, step right up and meet the Mets!
History has shown that the Mets will hardly ever do anything conventionally. Just look at the Bobby Bonilla deal or that Yoenis Céspedes contract. You can even look at the Marcus Stroman trade. The common theme with all of these moves is that no one could’ve predicted any of these transactions and their outcomes.
You can now take into account the aggressiveness of young general manager Brodie Van Wagenen. This past offseason was one of the more wild ones in recent memory and had many head-scratching moves. Well, I’m going to become Brodie Van Wagenen for the moment and will take you through my construction of the New York Mets’ 2020 Opening Day Roster.
The pitching staff
As known, the Mets have an exceptional rotation — especially following the acquisition of Marcos Stroman. The only bump is that right-hander Zack Wheeler will become a free agent. The bullpen has struggled despite the acquisitions of Edwin Diaz, Jeurys Familia, Justin Wilson, and Luis Avilan. The ‘pen will need some work, too. Van Wagenen always talks about creating depth, so I will also have to account for that.
The rotation:
Zack Wheeler will sign a three-year, $49.5 million deal with the Mets.
The bullpen:
The Mets will trade 1B/LF Dominic Smith and LHP Kevin Smith to the Baltimore Orioles for Mychal Givens, LHP Keegan Akin, and OF Austin Hays.
Sergio Romo will sign a one-year, $2.2 million deal with the Mets. The deal will include a $1.9 million team option for 2021.
Will Smith will sign a three-year, $32 million deal with the Mets.
With the acquisitions of Givens, Romo, and Smith, the Mets will have acquired reliable veteran arms who have had some great success in years past. The signing of Zack Wheeler will retain the current powerful rotation. There is no guarantee that this will push the Mets over the top, but it sure is due diligence.
The infield
There are really only a couple of places of need in the Mets infield: a backup catcher and a third baseman.
First-Base: Pete Alonso
Second-Base: Robinson Cano
Third-Base: Josh Donaldson
Shortstop: Amed Rosario
Catcher: Wilson Ramos
Backup catcher: Travis d’Aranud
Backup infielder: Dilson Herrera
The Mets will sign Josh Donaldson to a three-year, $52 million deal.
The Mets will sign Travis d’Aranud to a two-year, $10 million deal.
The Mets will select the contract of Dilson Herrera
Go ahead and roast me for d’Arnaud and Donaldson all you want, but the Mets haven’t had a true cemented player at the hot-corner since David Wright. With the departure of Todd Frazier in free agency, it opens up the corner for an MVP in Josh Donaldson. This should give much more length to an already well-structured lineup.
The Mets would also benefit from a rejuvenated Travis d’Arnaud. His defense and versatility have improved greatly. I think it could be a true split of time between Wilson Ramos and d’Arnaud.
The outfield
All they need is a center fielder at the moment.
No, Yoenis Céspedes will not be in my plans, despite how much I love him.
Left field: Jeff McNeil
Center field: Austin Hays
Right field: Michael Conforto
Backup Outfielder: J.D. Davis
Backup Outfielder: Brandon Nimmo
With the trade mentioned before, the Mets will have acquired a high-potential centerfielder in Austin Hays who, before his injury, showed his potential as an All-Star caliber player. The rest of the outfield will stay the same as it is currently.
Overall, the Mets needed to improve in the bullpen, center field, catcher, and third base.
With the acquisitions of Zack Wheeler, Sergio Romo, Will Smith, Mychal Givens, Josh Donaldson, Travis d’Arnaud, and Austin Hays, the Mets will have addressed their needs within the payroll and farm system limitations.
To recap, this is what I would make the Mets’ 25-man roster look like come Opening Day 2020:
SP: Jacob deGrom
SP: Noah Syndergaard
SP: Marcus Stroman
SP: Steven Matz
SP: Zack Wheeler
CL: Edwin Díaz
RP: Seth Lugo
RP: Jeurys Familia
RP: Robert Gsellman
RP: Justin Wilson
RP: Mychal Givens
RP: Sergio Romo
RP: Will Smith
C: Wilson Ramos
1B: Pete Alonso
2B: Robinson Cano
3B: Josh Donaldson
SS: Amed Rosario
LF: Jeff McNeil
CF: Austin Hays
RF: Michael Conforto
BN: Travis d’Arnaud
BN: Dilson Herrera
BN: J.D. Davis
BN: Brandon Nimmo
Yoenis Cespedes and Jed Lowrie would open the season on the injured list.
Very dangerous, with playoffs written all over them.