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Tag: Ronny Mauricio

  • Mets rookies look to finish strong, build on MLB experience this offseason

    Mets rookies look to finish strong, build on MLB experience this offseason

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    PHILADELPHIA — Over the last few weeks, the Mets have put a heavy emphasis on finishing strong so their emerging rookies can build some confidence heading into the winter. But it’s less about stats and numbers and more about feeling good about the adjustments made and more about having a solid foundation to work on in the winter.

    The Mets want infielders Brett Baty, Ronny Mauricio and Mark Vientos, catcher Francisco Alvarez and reliever Grant Hartwig to go into the offseason with the idea that they can compete at the big league level and that they do belong here.

    “What gets players is always the unknown,” manager Buck Showalter said Saturday at Citizens Bank Park. “We try to be open with them about the unknown. Now, these guys have got an idea of what’s ahead of them as they go through the offseason. There are some things you only can experience up here, like the first time you travel with a Major League team, the first time you take Major League batting practice, the first time you play in front of a third deck. Your depth perceptions are totally different and people don’t realize that.”

    For Baty, a 23-year-old third baseman, his rookie campaign has been anything but smooth sailing. He was brought up to the big leagues in April amid much fanfare and lived up to the hype in the early days. But like all rookies, he scuffled at times and he slumped big time late in the summer. So much so, that the Mets demoted him to Triple-A for a few weeks.

    But since he was called up on Sept. 1, he’s been solid on both sides of the ball. Friday night in Philadelphia, his ninth-inning theatrics tied the game and forced extra innings. The Mets have long been impressed by Baty’s ability to pick up on how pitchers have attacked him. His ability to pick up on the ride of Craig Kimbrel’s fastball on Thursday night and then hit that same fastball out of the park on Friday was impressive. He followed it up Saturday with a 2-for-4 performance.

    For the Mets’ first-round pick in 2019, the power numbers are good, but knowing he can navigate the highs and lows of the season is even better.

    AP Photo/Matt Slocum

    Brett Baty during the Mets’ game on Saturday in Philadelphia.

    “This game is so built on failure that you can’t will yourself to do anything,” Baty said. “You come to the field and be the same guy, be consistent and work really hard. Whatever the game gives you, the game gives you. That’s what I’ve been focusing on the last couple of weeks and it’s been good.”

    Hartwig came up to the Major Leagues with the intention of showing that he can get left-handed hitters out. A right-hander who works primarily off his sinker, Hartwig succeeded in that, holding lefties to a .154 average. But he might have put too much emphasis on lefties: Righties are hitting .306 with two home runs off him.

    “The biggest thing [for] me this season was having a lot of success against left-handed hitters,” Hartwig told the Daily News before the Mets played the Philadelphia Phillies in the third game of the series. “That was a big question mark when I got called up… But with the success against lefties, I need to have a little more success against righties. They’re having too much success off me and I think that’s in part to getting behind on righties and not executing.

    “I think I’ve allowed too many comfortable at-bats, getting behind in counts for hitters when the way that I throw, the way that I slow, and the way my stuff moves, there should be uncomfortable at-bats for righties.”

    This is where getting hit and learning to struggle has been important for an emerging young bullpen piece.

    “A dose of reality is good too,” Showalter said.

    Hartwig, who was planning on going to medical school before the Mets called him after college, attacks hitters with the precision of a doctor. He’s a cerebral pitcher who understands the nuance of a fickle sport. But even he isn’t immune to cliches.

    Taking it one game at a time and trying to string together a few games at a time is what the Baby Mets are after and they hope they’ll be better for it this winter.

    “I think it sounds cliche but it’s 100% true,” Hartwig said. “And it’s not just for young guys — everyone is trying to finish the season strong on a high note to create some momentum going into the offseason, and maybe for next year.”

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    Abbey Mastracco

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  • Mets lose to Reds again as both teams’ rookies leave their marks

    Mets lose to Reds again as both teams’ rookies leave their marks

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    Rookies for the Mets and Reds made their marks throughout Saturday night’s game, but it was a Cincinnati youngster who delivered the decisive blow.

    Christian Encarnacion-Strand’s two-run home run against Mets starter Tylor Megill proved to be the game-winner in the Reds’ 3-2 victory at Citi Field.

    The 23-year-old’s fourth-inning blast broke a 1-1 tie and spoiled an otherwise gritty performance by Megill, who entered the outing with a 2.20 ERA over his previous three starts.

    The right-hander wasn’t as sharp Saturday, allowing 11 baserunners over 5.2 innings, but he didn’t allow any earned runs beyond Encarnacion-Strand’s shot.

    “Didn’t have the greatest stuff today but was able to maneuver, make quality pitches, let the defense work and not let it snowball where past times before it would,” said Megill, who took the loss to fall to 8-8.

    Encarnacion-Strand was far from the only rookie to have a big night. Cincinnati’s Elly De La Cruz, the 21-year-old highlight machine who made his MLB debut in June, went 2-for-4 with a stolen base in his first-ever game against the Mets.

    For the Mets, 22-year-old Ronny Mauricio continued the strong start to his MLB career with two more hits, including a first-inning RBI single that gave his team a short-lived 1-0 lead. Mauricio is now batting .302 since making his MLB debut Sept. 1. Saturday marked the fourth multi-hit performance of his 12-game career.

    Francisco Alvarez, the Mets’ 21-year-old catcher, contributed an RBI double in the fourth inning, then extended a Mets rally attempt with a two-out single in the ninth. The next batter, Pete Alonso, grounded into a force out with the tying run at second base to end the game.

    Alvarez also made a throwing error in the second inning when his pickoff attempt sailed past Mauricio at third base, allowing Encarnacion-Strand to score the Reds’ first run. Saturday was the second time Mauricio, a natural shortstop who has primarily played second base with the Mets, started at third.

    “I talked to [Mauricio] two or three times about different situations, trying to remind him that at third base, the ball gets to you faster,” Mets manager Buck Showalter said.

    MLB Pipeline ranked Alvarez and De La Cruz among its top 10 prospects before the 2023 season. Encarnacion-Strand and Mauricio were both considered top 100 prospects before their second-half call-ups.

    “It’s big for them,” Showalter said of the rookies. “Cincinnati obviously is trying to contribute to getting into the playoffs, and our guys are continuing to try to build trust from everybody. That’s really what you’re trying to do: establish trust in people. Know what you’re going to bring.”

    Another touted rookie, 24-year-old pitcher Andrew Abbott, started Saturday for Cincinnati. The Mets got to him for two runs over 3.2 innings, but they failed to score against four Reds relievers over the final 5.1 frames.

    The Reds (78-72), who entered Saturday tied with the Arizona Diamondbacks for the final NL Wild Card spot, also won Friday’s game against the Mets, with 2021 Rookie of the Year Jonathan India hitting a game-winning homer.

    The Mets (68-80) will attempt to avoid a three-game sweep Sunday afternoon, with left-hander Jose Quintana (2-5, 3.05 ERA) set to pitch against Reds lefty Brandon Williamson (4-4, 4.47 ERA).

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    Peter Sblendorio

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  • Ronny Mauricio gets 1st big league HR in Mets’ victory over Diamondbacks

    Ronny Mauricio gets 1st big league HR in Mets’ victory over Diamondbacks

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    The David Stearns era is off to a strong start for the Mets.

    Hours after the Daily News confirmed the team is hiring Stearns as its president of baseball operations, the Mets delivered a well-rounded 7-4 win Tuesday night against the Diamondbacks at Citi Field.

    Ronny Mauricio, the 22-year-old sensation who debuted with the Mets this month, slugged the first home run of his career — a tie-breaking, two-run blast in the fourth inning that put the Mets up for good.

    The Mets also got a big swing Tuesday from star slugger Pete Alonso, who crushed a two-run shot in the fifth inning for his 44th homer of the year.

    Alonso’s future with the Mets is among the biggest decisions facing Stearns, a touted ex-Brewers executive who took Milwaukee to the playoffs four times during his tenures as general manager and president.

    The 28-year-old Alonso is set to become a free agent after the 2024 season and has been the subject of trade rumors after the retooling Mets (66-78) moved veterans including Justin Verlander and Max Scherzer midseason. Alonso is the only Met ever with multiple 40-homer seasons — he has three — and one of four players in team history with a trio of 100-RBI campaigns.

    The 38-year-old Stearns, a New York City native who grew up cheering for the Mets, has served in an advisory role for Milwaukee since stepping down as Brewers president last year. He’s long been linked to the Mets, whose owner, Steve Cohen, has been open about his desire to add a president of baseball ops atop a front office that employs Billy Eppler as general manager.

    Mauricio has been a hit machine since his Sept. 1 call-up, batting .306 with at least one base knock in eight of his 10on games. The past two nights, he’s emerged as a run-producer, too. Tuesday marked Maurcio’s second straight game with two RBI after the infielder only drove in one run across his first eight MLB contests.

    His 440-foot home run against Arizona’s Ryne Nelson came in support of Mets starter Jose Butto, who struck out seven over five innings and only surrendered one run. Butto, 25, picked up the first win of his career in what was his seventh MLB game.

    Brandon Nimmo also had a big game for the Mets, going 3-for-4 with two doubles and a triple, while rookie Francisco Alvarez hit his 23rd home run of the season.

    The Mets lost Monday’s opener in their four-game series against the Diamondbacks (76-70), who are clinging to the third and final NL Wild Card spot. Joey Lucchesi (2-0, 3.54 ERA) is scheduled to pitch Wednesday for the Mets against Arizona’s Zac Gallen (15-7, 3.31 ERA), the NL’s All-Star Game starter and a frontrunner for the league’s Cy Young Award.

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    Peter Sblendorio

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  • Bill Madden: After disastrous season, Buck Showalter has help on the way in 2024

    Bill Madden: After disastrous season, Buck Showalter has help on the way in 2024

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    After the systematic detonation of his record $343 million boondoggle at the trade deadline, Mets owner Steve Cohen cautioned the Citi Field faithful not to expect much in 2024.

    But despite being stripped of his top two starters, Max Scherzer and Justin Verlander, along with his closer David Robertson, and continuing without the services of Starling Marte, Buck Showalter has somehow managed to keep the Mets competitive in what amounts to be garbage time for them this season. Part of the reason for that has been the emergence of DJ Stewart and Ronny Mauricio — and along with the expected arrival of top prospects Luisangel Acuna, Drew Gilbert and Christian Scott at some point next season, the near Met future could be a lot brighter than it appeared a month ago.

    We talked to a small cadre of scouts and people intimately familiar with the Mets’ minor league system about this group and while their appraisals varied, their one consensus was that Showalter will have considerably more depth to manage with next year. For one thing, they all agreed, the multi-talented Acuna — who hit two homers in a game last Wednesday for AA Binghamton, one of them a 426-foot eye-popping upper deck bomb that just missed clearing the stadium roof — is going to be the Mets second baseman at some point next year, very possibly from the get-go. Assuming so, what would that do for Mauricio, whom Showalter has mostly been playing at second in his late-season big league cameo, and Jeff McNeil, who can play almost anywhere but has mostly been at second?

    One theory being espoused has Mauricio playing third and McNeil shuffling between second, left field, right field and DH on an everyday basis. But then what about Brett Baty? So far, Mets GM Billy Eppler has been adamant about not moving Baty off third base despite his struggles defensively there. Baty’s defense has been better since he was recalled from the minors, but now it’s his offense (.212 in 372 plate appearances in the majors as of Saturday) that’s come into question.

    One thing about Mauricio: He’s not going to win a Gold Glove no matter where you play him, but the guy is a genuine power and speed threat (.292/23 HR/24 SB at AA Syracuse this year). He’s also a genuine airhead who’s forgotten how many outs there were at least twice in games since his recall, and throughout his career has had a habit of being annoyingly lackadaisical on the basepaths. Those sins won’t stand with Showalter, and if Mauricio hopes to make his considerable talents part of the Mets future he’s going to have to quickly adapt to having his head in the game — all the time, every day.

    The consensus on Stewart is that after languishing nine years in the Oriole system, he might finally have found himself, with 10 homers and 21 RBI in 40 games for the Mets following his recall from Syracuse, July 4. However, there are red flags everywhere with him. “Is Stewart real?” was the question I asked and these were the answers I got: “After being the Orioles’ first-round draft pick out of Florida (25th overall in 2015), and never living up to it, I think maybe he’s been humbled,” said one. “His power is legit and he’s got good plate discipline. Not great defensively, but not a liability either. I see him as Buck’s primary lefthanded DH next year.” But said another: “I would counsel Buck not to count on this guy.” He’s a bit overweight, not in the best of shape, and is prone to those soft tissue injuries. (In fact, Stewart has spent 278 days on the injured list in his career and just last week had to sit out three games with an oblique strain.)

    While it would appear the Mets will have nice surplus of productive position players next year, the one big determining factor as to whether they can compete for a postseason berth is the depth of their pitching. Given Eppler’s track record of success in Japan, they have to be among the favorites to land the pre-eminent Japanese free agent righthander Yoshinobu Yamamoto. Beyond that they are probably going to need rotation reinforcements from within. But scouts are not particularly high on any of the Mets top pitching prospects — the one exception being the 6-4 righthander Christian Scott, a fifth-round draft pick out of Florida in 2021 whose numbers at AA Binghamton (72 strikeouts, 8 walks, 41 hits, 0.83 WHIP in 11 starts) have been off the charts. “He’s the best they’ve got,” said one scout. “Plus fastball, slider and change. Mid-’90s fastball and slider. Smart kid with real good command. If he doesn’t get hurt, he could be there next year.” (That’s the one concern. Scott was sidelined earlier this year with an ulnar collateral nerve issue.)

    IT’S A MADD, MADD WORLD

    What in the world has happened in Texas where the Rangers, who were in first place in the AL West from Opening Day until August 26, are in a catastrophic freefall?  Suddenly, everything that could go wrong for the Rangers has, and Hall-of-Fame bound manager Bruce Bochy may be wishing he’d stayed retired. Things started to go south for the Rangers on July 18 when their ace Nathan Eovaldi went down with a forearm injury that sidelined him for seven weeks. Since then, the Rangers’ pitching has been universally awful. Max Scherzer, who came over from the Mets for their top prospect Luisangel Acuna, has been of little help and was bombed for three homers and four runs in 1 1/3 innings in his most important start of the year last week against the Astros, who hammered Texas pitchers for 16 homers in a three-game sweep. There is no one in the bullpen (ranked 25th in baseball with a 4.86 ERA), Bochy can count on. On August 6, third baseman Josh Jung, the front runner for AL Rookie of the Year, was hit by a pitch that broke his thumb and has not yet returned, and now the Rangers’ best player, Adolis Garcia, the AL RBI leader, is sidelined indefinitely with a patella strain in his knee. Incredibly, the Rangers, who for 4 1/3 months looked like one of the best teams in baseball, are now probably not going to make the playoffs. … For 28 years Jeffrey Loria was one of the most controversial owners in all of baseball, leaving hundreds of thousands of alienated fans and city officials in his wake after his departures from Montreal and Miami, but now he’s taken the opportunity to tell his side of the story in his recently published memoir “From the Front Row — Reflections of a Major League Baseball Owner and Modern Art “(Post Hill Press). Baseball fans and historians can skip the first half of the book, which is all about Loria’s career as one of the country’s pre-eminent modern art dealers. The second half, however, details Loria’s often tempestuous 28-year run as the last owner of the Expos (before they were sold to Major League Baseball) and then the Marlins that included a world championship over the Yankees in 2003. Some highlights: His frustration with his penurious Canadian partners with the  and the great satisfaction he felt when they lost the RICO suit they’d filed against him on every single count; his heartbreak when Marlins ace Jose Fernandez was killed in a boating accident in 2016 and how he almost sold the team because of it; his later regret at having fired Joe Girardi as Marlins manager in 2006 (the year he was NL Manager of the Year) over what he now says was an unfortunate misunderstanding. A native New Yorker who grew up with Mel Allen, in his chapter on broadcasters, Loria has high praise Michael Kay, John Sterling, Suzyn Waldman, David Cone and Paul O’Neill. It’s a terrific read and he even wrote it himself — without the help of any of the baseball scribes who routinely skewered him.

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    Bill Madden

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