Tag: Jeff Francoeur

MLB Trade Rumor: Jeff Francoeur Might Be Traded

Rumors flying around the New York Mets say they might trade Jeff Francoeur before the trade deadline next week.

Is that possible? Yes.

Is it likely? Knowing the Mets, probably not.

Francoeur lost the starting right fielder job to Angel Pagan when Carlos Beltran returned and now is the fourth outfielder.

Francoeur has been a starter since he was single digits in age. He obviously can’t be happy being on the bench now.

If the Mets do trade him, I would hope it would be for a good starting pitcher, such as Roy Oswalt . Chances are, Francoeur won’t be traded though.

Flushing Baseball Daily reporter, Tyler Moore. Follow Tyler on Twitter, where he’ll discuss Mets, and also his posts. If you wish to email him, send an email to Tyler with the subject of Flushing Baseball Daily Mail. Thanks for reading!

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Are The Mets Destined For Another World Series Visit?

Please be sure to check out Mets Paradise and our forum for everything Mets!

The Mets start the second half of the season in a good position to reach the playoffs. There’s still a cloud of uncertainty hanging around the team, but that doesn’t mean they can’t do some serious damage. Don’t believe me? Look at some similarities to the last Mets team make the World Series:

  • Jeff Franceour = Derrek Bell : Bell had a fantastic April, and then disappeared afterwards, and lost playing time because of it. Franceour also had a fantastic April, and then much like Bell disappeared afterwards, and is going to lose playing time because of it, like Bell did.
  • Mike Pelfrey = Al Leiter :  Although Leiter was seond in the rotation he pitched like an ace, and so far Pelfrey has done the same.
  • Johan Santana = Mike Hampton : Hampton started the season unexpectedly bad, and turned it around in the second half. Santana also started the season unexpectedly bad, and has started to turn it around. Can Santana continue to turn it around like Hampton did in 2000? Santana has a history of being a second half pitcher.
  • Glendon Rusch/Bobby Jones = R.A. Dickey : Rusch and Jones solidified the back end of the rotation, a rotation that looked questionable after the third slot. Dickey has done much the same in a rotation that looked questionable after the third spot in the rotation Dickey has stepped in and solidified the fourth spot in the rotation.  Will the Mets acquire a started to push back Jon Niese and Dickey, and solidify the back end of the rotation like Rusch and Jones did in 2000?
  • Mike Piazza = David Wright : Piazza ended 2000 with 38 HR’s 113 RBI’s and a batting average of .324. Wright is on pace for 26 HR’s 120 RBI’s with a .314 batting average.
  • Todd Zeile = Ike Davis : Zeile ended 2000 with 22 HR’s and 79 RBI’s. Davis is on pace for 22 HR’s and 79 RBI’s.
  • Armando Benitez = Francisco Rodriguez : No explanation necessary.

Read the rest….

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New York Mets’ Lineup Needs To Start Producing

The New York Mets finally have their ideal lineup, and now it’s time to start producing.

Throughout the season, I’ve had a feeling Jerry Manual was going with the saying from last year that didn’t impress any fans. He wanted to basically stay within striking distance until players came off the disabled list.

We know Jose Reyes is at the top of the lineup and Carlos Beltran is hitting cleanup; the Mets should have no lack of offense from top to the eight-hole (I’ll give the pitcher a little slack).

With Angel Pagan holding more than his own while he replaced Beltran, players such as Jeff Francoeur and Jason Bay need to pick it up. Bay isn’t producing in the home-run department like he was expected to, and Franceour’s bat is so bad that his terrific arm in right field just isn’t a good enough replacement to get him starts every day.

Granted, the Mets paid Bay enough money to play him everyday, but his bat may become a liability toward the end of the season if he doesn’t start producing.

David Wright has surpassed his terrible season from last year, so anything he has put up so far is a bonus. When Reyes scores, the Mets win. I know it’s much easier said than done, but it’s a fact.

Mike Pelfrey isn’t doing what he did in the first two months of the season, so the bullpen is going to be in high demand; it may be time for the front office to make a move to bring in a solid reliever.

Oliver Perez is scheduled to come off the disabled list this week and he could rejoin the team in Arizona; he is headed to the bullpen. I’m still not sure if that’s a good thing or a bad thing, but I guess we will find out soon enough.

With rookie Jon Niese and journeyman R.A. Dickey anchoring the staff, all they need to do is keep the Mets in games and hope their offense can come through in the late innings.

This should be a very interesting last few months of the season.

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MLB Trade Rumors: Can New York Mets Get Anything for Jeff Francoeur?

It goes without saying that Jeff Francoeur has pretty much worn out his welcome in New York. He is hitting a paltry .253, can’t run all that well, or play other positions. Also, with the return of Carlos Beltran to the Mets lineup, New York is rather deep in outfield talent.

The Mets have Carlos Beltran in center and Jason Bay in left. Right now, Angel Pagan and Francoeur are platooning in right, though the two have comparable OPS stats when facing lefties (.695 for Pagan vs. .737 for Francoeur). As a result, the platoon looks like it will be Pagan mostly playing, rather than anything split.

This leads to one question: What do the Mets do with Jeff Francoeur?

Releasing him is an option that is starting to gain steam. Matt Meyers of ESPN wrote, “Francoeur is still running on the fumes of his former potential, but it’s time to realize that he is what he is: A 26-year-old plodding outfielder with a great arm who is capable of hitting some singles when a lefty is on the mound. Does that sound like a player who can help a team in the midst of a nip-and-tuck playoff race?”

Harsh words, but when you look at his stats, they are not what you expect to get from a right fielder. Since June 1, he has hit .265 with three home runs and 15 RBI. They’re not terrible numbers, but where did the 100 RBI player from Atlanta go?

It goes without saying, at least to me, that Pagan is the outfielder to hold on to as the playoff race thickens, not Francoeur. However, I don’t think his stats are so horrendous that an outright release is necessary.

If he was put on the trading block, then there might be a suitor or two. The Red Sox have enough injuries to their outfield that having Francoeur just as insurance could help then keep pace in the AL East. The Giants may take a flier on him, as they could use an outfielder. They signed Dontrelle Willis, so I wouldn’t put it past them.

Beyond that, I can’t think of all that many teams who would want him. He’s only 26, so there is always the chance that he returns to his old form. The Mets also have Jesus Feliciano, who’s playing quite well and is proving to be a much better option due to his versatility.

The only thing the Mets can be glad about, perhaps, is that the person they traded to get him last year, Ryan Church, is hitting .186 and playing even worse.

I do not see Francoeur being in a Mets uniform in 2011 though, in any case. What’s your take? Should the Mets give up and release him? Should they trade him to salvage any value they can? If there are teams looking at Kerry Wood and Dontrelle Willis, there will be some looking at Francoeur, so it’s worth a shot to me.

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Jeff Francoeur: An Intriguing Character

I have seen a lot of posts on Twitter this year about Jeff Francoeur—about how terrible he is and how he should never play another game. I always find a way to defend him, if possible. The main reason is that I don’t think the naysayers were saying that at the start of the season when he was on fire.

Originally, the plan was for Carlos Beltran to be in center field when he returned, with Francoeur and Angel Pagan alternating in right field.

Jerry Manuel apparently changed his plans. Now Pagan will be the everyday right fielder, with Francoeur playing when the opposing team sends out a lefty starting pitcher. That made quite a few Mets fans happy.

Francoeur is such an interesting character. He did great to earn starts with Atlanta, then just fell off the chart until he got traded to the Mets for Ryan Church (who I never heard about again except to hear about how terrible the trade was).

Last year in 82 games with Atlanta, Francoeur went 76-for-304 (.250) with five home runs, 12 walks, 46 strikeouts, and 35 runs batted in.

In 75 games with the Mets, Francoeur went 95-for-289 (.311), with 10 home runs, 11 walks, 46 strikeouts, and 41 runs batted in.

This year, however, he has dropped off again; well, not in power at least. In 86 games, he has gone 74-for-293 (.253), with eight home runs, 19 walks (almost his whole total from last year), 53 strikeouts, and 42 runs batted in.

I saw these statistics, and knowing Francoeur was acquired a few days before the All-Star Game last year (he was acquired on July 10, the All-Star Game was July 14), I decided to see if there were statistics that showed a pre- and post-All-Star break difference.

There are. In his career before the All-Star break, he has played 442 games, hitting .259 with 51 home runs, 79 walks, 309 strikeouts, and 249 runs batted in. After the All-Star Break, he has played 350 games, hitting .282, with 45 home runs, 78 walks, 266 strikeouts, and 193 runs batted in.

Looking at those statistics, I decided to go even deeper, month by month. So far, the month-by-month comparison has been accurate, except for two months that seemed to have switched places.

This year in April, he went 23-for-81 (.284), with four home runs, nine walks, 10 strikeouts, and 13 runs batted in. In his career for the month of April, he is hitting .271, with 18 home runs, 84 runs batted in, 27 walks, and 68 strikeouts.

In May of this year, he went 20-for-95 (.211) with one home run, 14 runs batted in, five walks, and 21 strikeouts. In his career for the month of May, he is hitting .249, with 13 home runs, 76 runs batted in, 22 walks, and 109 strikeouts.

June and July have seemed to switched, though we are only halfway into July. This year in June, he went 26-for-84 (.310), with three home runs, 14 runs batted in, three walks, and 14 strikeouts. In his career for the month of June, he is hitting .259, with 13 home runs, 64 runs batted in, 26 walks, and 94 strikeouts. His strong month of June went pretty much under the radar this year.

So far in July of this year, Francoeur is hitting 5-for-33 (.152), with zero home runs, one run batted in, two walks, and eight strikeouts. For his career in the month of July, he is hitting .288, with 19 home runs, 76 runs batted in, 19 walks, and 88 strikeouts.

If his past is any indication as to how he will do in the second half this year, Francoeur should have a good second half. Too bad he will have fewer chances to prove it.

Flushing Baseball Daily reporter, Tyler Moore. Follow Tyler on Twitter, where he’ll discuss Mets, and also his posts. If you wish to email him, send an email to Tyler with the subject of Flushing Baseball Daily Mail. Thanks for reading!

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New York Mets: Revisiting Five Key Questions as Midseason Approaches

By the time the New York Mets get through with Stephen Strasburg and the Washington Nationals this weekend they will be exactly half way through their 162-game regular season schedule.

As we near the mid point of the season, let’s revisit five questions the Mets had coming into the season.


Will the Mets Pitching Hold Up?

Yes and no. First, the good. The Mets will have a 10-game winner at the All-Star break in Mike Pelfrey and the team currently has a collective ERA of 3.77, good enough for sixth in the league. The team has combined for more shutouts than any other team in baseball and no team has held baserunners in check than the Mets.

R.A Dickey has been a revelation, starting the year 6-0 before losing to the Marlins in San Juan, and nobody would have guessed that Hisanori Takahashi would be 6-3. Pedro Feliciano has been an absolute workhorse and Jenrry Mejia has shown the Mets the future, even if the club mishandled him.

Now for the average and the bad. While he’s not been terrible by any means, Johan Santana has been far from dominant. He sports a 5-5 record through 16 starts and his only real problems have came from an increased walk rate and far fewer strikeouts.

Oliver Perez has been a massive joke and I hope we have seen the end of him, and John Maine was battered on a regular basis before his trip to the DL.

Still, the good far outweighs the bad so far in 2010.

If you would have told the Mets they would be 10 games over .500 at the start of July even though Santana could count his wins on one hand, you’d snap their arm off in a heartbeat.


Can the Mets Keep Pace With the Phillies

Philadelphia was the team to beat heading into 2010. They had been to back-to-back World Series and three consecutive postseasons and many pundits thought they were as strong as ever before.

The Phillies came out of the blocks pretty well through the first six weeks, establishing a 4.5-game lead in the NL East where nobody could really find any consistency. After dropping a series at home to the Red Sox in the third week of May, the Mets really helped put the breaks on the Phils.

New York blanked them for three consecutive games, and the division lead was gone just four days later. The Phillies have not even been a .500 team since that series, and it’s fair to say the Mets are holding their own.

Both teams have been dealing with injuries, and while the Mets hope to have Carlos Beltran back healthy after the All-Star break, the Phillies have just lost two of their infielders to injury, just a week after DL-ing catcher Carlos Ruiz and welcoming Jimmy Rollins back from his second stint on the shelf.

The Phillies will no doubt be there or there abouts at the end of the season, but right now, the Mets are keeping pace with the defending National League champs and then some.

Will Jason Bay Be Worth Four Years and $66 million?

Jason Bay is the seventh-highest earning Met on the payroll in 2010, and his salary will more than double next season. But is he earning his $8.6 million so far this season?

He came to Citi Field with a reputation as being a power hitter with a decent batting average and a little speed, but his lack of pop has been the talking point so far this season.

His .278 average is perfectly in line with his career average, and he’s running like it’s 2005 and he’s in a Pittsburgh jersey. He has learned pretty quickly how to utilize the spacious gaps and deep alleys in Flushing, and there’s every chance he could hit 40 doubles and double-digit triples.

But Omar Minaya didn’t bring him from Boston to hit doubles. It took him 20 games to hit his first home run this year and then 24 more games for his second. He only had four home runs on the season until he went deep twice against the Marlins on Monday, and it was the second time he has gone yard twice in a game.

Bay has never hit fewer than 25 home runs once in his whole career, but he’s barely on pace for 10 even if he stays healthy.

You’ve got to think that some of those doubles will eventually turn to home runs, but even if you include his plus defense as a big redeeming feature, he’s still not living up to his billing quite yet. It will come, there’s no doubt about that, but his swing isn’t quite paying back the hype.

Just How Badly Will the Mets Struggle Without Carlos Beltran?

When Beltran had his knee surgery in the offseason, one of the biggest questions centered around whether the Mets outfield would be able to tread water until he returned.

The outfield has actually been pretty solid, but nobody would have guessed that it would be Angel Pagan leading the way. While Bay has struggled with his power, as detailed above, and Jeff Francoeur has been on a rollercoaster of ups and downs, switch-hitting Pagan has commanded centerfield with All-Star efficiency.

He’s batting at a .302 clip and stealing bases, and he’s had more RBI than, Jeff Francoeur, Rob Barajas, and Ike Davis.

It’s pretty impressive when you consider he’s been batting leadoff, second, and sixth—hardly prime run-producing spots.

Ironically though, it is Pagan who may be shifted to the bench once Beltran returns, even though he has arguably been the Mets most valuable player in the first half of this season.

Pagan has been a pleasant surprise and he’s been keeping the Mets afloat when others have been struggling. The answer to this question could have been very different had Pagan been a below-average replacement. As it currently is, he’s one of the biggest reasons that the Mets are in touching distance in the NL East.


Will Jerry Manuel Still Have a Job By [inset month here]?

Whichever month you chose, the chances are that you would have said ‘no’. Sceptics might have said that he wouldn’t make it through April. Others might have thought that he was ripe for the chop after a four-game sweep in Florida mid May.

How about batting Reyes third, getting K-Rod to warm up against the Yankees only to bring in Raul Valdes to melt down, or telling beat reporters his team was unprepared to go against Livan Hernandez?

For all the calls for his head on a plate, Manuel has kept things in check and he’s ensured the Mets house is in order. There’s no infighting like in Chicago or players dogging after balls like in Florida or Tampa.

This isn’t 2009 and the Mets actually look like a team that could put teams on their backs in the playoffs.

There’s no reason to ditch Manuel now if the team was unwilling to part ways with him in May, and if the Mets get better as is expected when Beltran returns, there’s more than a punchers’ chance that he will make it through the season.

He’s going to be on a hot seat whenever the team slumps, but for now I think it’s fair to say that Manuel and the Mets are outperforming everyone’s preseason expectations.

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Should Jeff Francoeur Be Guaranteed Spot in Mets Lineup?

With Carlos Beltran closing in on his return to the New York Mets, speculation is running wild that he will replace Angel Pagan in the lineup. 

Why? 

Pagan has done nothing but form a dynamic one-two punch atop the Mets lineup with Jose Reyes.  Jeff Franceour?  He’s just done nothing.

OK, that’s a bit of a stretch, but Franceour certainly hasn’t performed like a player who should be guaranteed a roster spot.  While his defense is solid and he has a cannon for an arm, his offense just hasn’t quite been up to snuff (all stats are through Thursday):

240 At Bats, .263 Batting Average (63 Hits), 7 Home Runs, 38 RBI, 32 Runs, 7 Stolen Bases, .316 On Base Percentage, .408 Slugging Percentage, .281 Batting Average on Balls in Play.

After hitting 29 HR in 2006 with the Braves, everyone thought that he had the potential to be a solid power contributor.  Unfortunately, that just hasn’t happened.  Just look at his HR/FB since: 2007 – 9.8%, 2008 – 6.5%, 2009 – 7.1%, 2010 – 7.5%

That’s certainly not a middle of the order bat in the making, is it?  From 2007-2009 he’s hit a total of 45 HR, never hitting more then 19 (2007).  At this point, it’s impossible to depend on him to finally rediscover that type of stroke, especially in CitiField.

Does his bat actually fit into the ballpark?  It’s not like he’s piling up the extra base hits, with 12 doubles and one triple.  It has led to a slugging percentage of .408, putting him in the bottom 60 in the league. 

He’s been awful against right-handed pitchers, to the tune of a .229 average in 179 AB.  In contrast, he’s hit .361 against southpaws (in 61 AB).  That’s a stark difference and certainly could play a factor into when he is slotted in the lineup.

One of the knocks against Franceour has always been his ability to consistently get on base, which once again is rearing its ugly head.  Thus far he’s posted an OBP of .316, actually his best mark since 2007.  Unfortunately, it puts him in the bottom 35 of the league.

So, let’s get this straight.  You have a player whose average is mediocre, has not been hitting for any type of power, whether it be home runs or just the double or triple variety, and struggles to get on base.

Exactly why would this guy be guaranteed a spot in anyone’s roster?  Defense can only take you so far.  The Mets are in the midst of a division chase and it is not like Angel Pagan is a slouch with the glove. 

If you are a Jeff Franceour owner (most likely just NL-only and five-outfielder formats), you may want to make sure you have a viable replacement in hand.  The days of him being an everyday player could be numbered.

What are your thoughts on Franceour?  Do you think he belongs in the Mets’ everyday lineup?  Do you even consider him fantasy viable?

Make sure to check out our recent Scouting Reports:

This article is also featured on WWW.ROTOPROFESSOR.COM

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On the Field with the New York Mets: Interviews before Batting Practice

On Tuesday night I was fortunate enough to get the chance to speak with a number of the New York Mets about the 2010 season and their expectations for the second half of the year.

I spoke with Jason Bay about his power outage, Ike Davis about life as a rookie, and David Wright about the “Gaga for Wright” promotion at Citi Field to try and get him to the All-Star game.

You can read about what the players think about the return of Carlos Beltran here, check out the stars’ expectations here, or read about what Santana, Wright, Bay, Francoeur, and Co. think about trading for Cliff Lee and Roy Oswalt here

With those links out of the way, here are some other news and notes from batting practice with the Mets.

Begin Slideshow


New York Mets: Johan Santana, Jason Bay, and Co. Share Expectations

The New York Mets improved to 40-30 on Tuesday night, gaining ground on the Atlanta Braves and moving back to within 1.5 games back in the NL East.

After a successful 7-2 road trip which included back-to-back sweeps, the Mets are now on a roll and they are looking to finish the first half of the season strong.

I caught up with several Mets (David Wright, Johan Santana, Jason Bay, Jeff Francoeur, and Ike Davis) before Tuesday’s victory against Detroit at Citi Field to gauge the expectations among the players about just how far this team can go in 2010.

From Santana saying the Mets have assembled a team good enough to win it all to Bay saying the team hasn’t even hit its best form yet, there is certainly a vein of confidence running through the heart of the team.

This is what the players had to say about the expectations heading in to the All-Star break.

Begin Slideshow


Will the New York Mets Leader Please Stand Up? Part Three

In the last part of the series on leadership in the New York Mets club house, we will look at several player options.

Those options include Carlos Beltran, Jason Bay, Jeff Francoeur , Rod Barajas , Ike Davis and Jose Reyes. We have reviewed Johan Santana, David Wright and Francisco Rodriguez.

Now, moving on, let’s further examine the rest of that list, starting with Carlos Beltran.

Beltran was brought in to be the playoff-tested veteran. He was supposed to bring experience and leadership to a young core to push them over the top.

He has brought the experience, but he never has brought that leadership the team sought.

Too often, his mouth has written checks that his abilities couldn’t cash. That has gotten his reputation into poor standing in both the league and the clubhouse.

Then, his health became an overwhelming issue. It still is.

A leader, as previously stated, must be both on the field and produce.

He has not been both at the same time for a few years. The franchise is still desperately holding on to hope that he will magically heal, and become the leader they envisioned him to be. He is only getting older and slower. It most likely will not happen.

Another player recently brought in for such a role was Jason Bay. Bay is far too quiet for this role and far too new to the team and city to take on such a position. He is still relearning the National League and his own ballpark.

He has yet to truly produce in New York, and so he had his own struggles to be concerned with before he can convince anyone that he can help them with their struggles.

Even if he didn’t have these productivity issues, he is not the fiery type that is needed to be the unquestioned leader.

The next one is fiery, however.

Jeff Francoeur is the epitome of fire and passion. He is the man a teammate wants in the trenches along side of them. But he is also too emotional and too passionate to be the sole leader.

He can help be an enforcer, but not the main leader. He has the emotion and the mouth to be a leader, but he often loses his grip on that emotion. A leader must have control of himself before he can take control of a team.

Rod Barajas has been well underrated and unnoticed in the offseason hoopla that surrounded the Mets ‘ need for a catcher.

In the talk of the team signing every available player over 35 to fit the mold and the pursuit of Benjie Molina, Barajas was lost in the shuffle. He was signed as a last desperation move.

It was a stroke of luck on the part of Mets GM Omar Minaya .

Skill had nothing to do with this acquisition. Minaya was simply desperate after he was embarrassed that Molina shunned him publicly by taking a hometown discount in San Francisco.

This lucky move has paid dividends already for the Mets . Barajas has had multiple big hits and moments of productivity.

He has performed well above expectation, but while he is the present, he is not the future. That distinction goes to Josh Thole.

Thole is widely regarded as the next great hitting catcher, and is expected to take that role for many years to come.

Barajas , though productive, is just a bridge to the future. Therefore, he can not be a long-term leader. Thole will need a few years to grow into the role, if he develops the brashness and the production, he could fit the bill.

Time will tell, but for now he needs seasoning.

We continue, to Ike Davis.

Davis has been the young gun. The player that everyone adores. He is the real deal. So much in fact, that he pushed the opening day first baseman to the bench or the minors.

The first baseman I speak of is last year’s golden boy, Daniel Murphy.

Davis is so good, that Murphy conceded and admitted that Davis belongs as the starter. Davis has shown the heart and hustle as the newest face of the franchise, and has captured the collective hearts of the fans.

The problem with Davis, however, is that he lacks the experience to be the leader at this time.

He may be able to in the future, but for now, he must show that he can respond to the adjustments that the rest of the league will inevitably make against him. He is a welcomed addition to both the lineup and the clubhouse, but as of now, not a leader.

Finally, we come to Jose Reyes.

Reyes is a very important component to the Mets franchise. I have him last on this list for a purpose.

He is one of the first names that come to mind when thinking of a leader for the team; however, he is the greatest example of the biggest problem with this team—identity.

Leadership is only forged after identity is established. When a player has an identity, they have confidence and confidence brings leadership.

Reyes has had a headline filled offseason that continued into the first few weeks of the regular season as well. He has yet to truly find his role on the team.

Is he a leadoff hitter or a No. 3 hitter?

This is an important question to ask.

Essentially it is a question of whether or not he is the table setter or the meat of the lineup? Is he better to the team at starting rallies or continuing them?

We all know what Reyes is capable of doing on the field. The problem is that Mets manager Jerry Manuel knows this too, and is still undecided on how to properly utilize him after almost a year of having him as a weapon at his disposal.

That indecision has hurt Reyes and his production. Therefore, it has hurt his role on the team.

If a player is not only undecided on his role to the team, but is uncomfortable as well, it is impossible to expect him to lead.

How can he lead with so many other issues?

Reyes cannot lead until he is settled and comfortable with one role, whatever that role may be.

So, therefore, he can’t be the leader because Manuel is holding him back from being it.

He certainly has the ego, the energy experience and the mouth to be the leader. But until he is assigned a role and is allowed to stay in it to allow himself to get comfortable, he cannot be a leader. He will just be a follower.

Here lies the essential problem with the Mets .

They have too many potential chiefs, but no one capable or willing to stand out to lead the tribe. All of them are followers that aspire to lead to an extent. That’s not leadership; that’s called aspirations.

No team has ever won based on aspirations. Teams need bonafied leaders in the trenches with them. Then the rest will follow suit and fall in line. That is what history has proven.

Going back to my very first example of leadership, George Washington.

Washington, like so many others, took control of the confused and directionless troops around him. Only when there was unity and true leadership on the field of battle, did victory emerge as a byproduct.

It was only under true leadership that this group of colonies prospered into a nation.

It will only be due to unity from true leadership that this slightly above average team of followers that we call the New York Mets will prosper into a contender and a champion.

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