Tag: Jeff Francoeur

Five Moves the New York Mets Must Make To Become Contenders

Former Mets first baseman and current television analyst, Keith Hernandez has said a few times during the course of the season that a team is never as good as they look during a hot streak, and is never as bad as they seem to be during a cold streak.

Well, the Mets have seen both sides of the coin early in this young season, which leads me to believe that they’ll end up, eventually, some place in the middle.

Right now, that middle seems to be the .500 mark, where the Mets are now hovering close to at 18-20, following a dismal four-game sweep at the hands of the Marlins down in Miami.

It’s not exactly the way the Mets envisioned the first four games of an eight-game road trip against division foes happening. Plus, things won’t be much better when they come home next weekend to host the Yankees and Phillies at Citi Field.

It seems like ages ago now that the Mets finished April on an eight-game tear, including a 9-1 homestand that saw them reach first place in an ultra-competitive NL East in which all five teams look like they’re for real this year.

Yet, since that eight-game win streak in April, the calender has not been kind to the Mets, who are now 4-11 in the month of May. In fact, had the Mets not rallied for six runs in the eight inning against the Nationals last Tuesday, they could be staring at an eight-game losing streak right now.

But it’s not as if the season is over. The season is not even one quarter of the way over yet. There is still time to try to fix this team and lift them back towards respectability.

One thing that shouldn’t be overlooked is that, despite the 4-11 record in May, the Mets have played games decided by 2 runs or less in 12 of their last 13 games, which tells me a few things.

Primarily, it tells me that the offense doesn’t quit, and they try to rally until the 27th out is recorded. We’ve seen them rally back from five, six, even seven runs down (with mixed results) and I love to see the fight and the never-say-die attitude. It’s a refreshing change from last year when often they’d look dead after falling behind in the game.

In addition, it tells me that at some point, the breaks have got to start going the Mets way. With so many close games decided by a few plays that go either way, at some point those breaks have to go the other way. It’s not as if the opposing team is going to continue to make every diving catch and get every slow roller to bang off the third base bag for a base hit.

I still believe that the core talent on this team has so much potential that it hasn’t fully realized yet, so today I’ll look at five moves that the Mets should make to try to salvage this season, with the hopes of contending both now in 2010, and in the future.

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Why Jeff Francoeur’s Days with the New York Mets May Be Numbered

Since joining the New York Mets last season in the trade that sent beleaguered outfielder Ryan Church to the Atlanta Braves, Jeff Francoeur has become one of my favorite players.

His “tell it like it is” approach to interviews is a refreshing change, and his attitude on the field is contagious.

Francoeur got off to a hot start this season, but as this chart shows, his batting average has been on a free fall since April 17th.

Although Francoeur has struggled at the plate for nearly a month, his defense has been as good as ever, and I think his role on the team as a leader is something that numbers can’t measure.

His lack of production has almost nothing to do with why I feel his job may be in jeopardy in the coming months of this season.

Instead, Francoeur’s job may be in jeopardy due to the return of Carlos Beltran.

Beltran is coming off major knee surgery, which has kept him off a baseball field until just recently, and I have major doubts that he will get back to form defensively.  A center fielder with limited range in the expansive outfield at Citi Field is a recipe for disaster, and I’m beginning to wonder if Beltran will be able to take over the center field duties effectively.

With Pagan relegated to center field, and Jason Bay not going anywhere any time soon, the only option the Mets may have is to move Beltran to right field, making Francoeur the odd man out.

I really hope these speculations never come to fruition.

I imagine Carlos Beltran coming back at full strength, playing the great center field he always played and adding some power and stability to the middle of the lineup.  It would transform the Mets’ outfield into one of the best in the National League and bring them back to a point where I believe they can seriously compete for a championship.

Of course, we won’t know anything for awhile, and until then I hope the Mets remain competitive enough to stay within striking distance.

Let’s Go Mets

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