Archive for the ‘Mets’ Category

Mets acquire Putz from Seattle

Thursday, December 11th, 2008

The Mets have acquired a setup man for new closer Francisco Rodriguez — and that setup man is another closer from the American League West. Though the Mets just acquired J.J. Putz, he may not be happy going from a closer’s role to being a setup man, Ken Rosenthal says.

J.J. Putz is headed to New York in a three-team trade with the Mariners and Indians, according to major-league sources. Under terms of the deal, the Mets get Putz, outfielder Jeremy Reed and reliever Sean Green from Seattle.

The Mariners receive reliever Aaron Heilman, outfielder Endy Chavez, first baseman Mike Carp, and minor leaguers Maikel Cleto, Jason Vargas and Ezequiel Carrera from the Mets. They also get Franklin Gutierrez from the Indians.

The Indians get reliever Joe Smith from the Mets and infielder Luis Valbuena from Seattle.
From the Mets’ perspective, the deal is Heilman and Smith for Putz. Chavez and Reed are simply an exchange of backup outfielders, Smith and Green are an exchange of right-handed groundball specialists.

Putz, 31, suffered through an injury plagued season for the M’s. He worked 46.3 innings after going 71.2 in 2007 and 78.1 in ’06. Putz recorded 15 saves in 2008, but combined for 76 the two seasons prior.

Mets, K-Rod closing in on three-year deal

Tuesday, December 9th, 2008

SI.com first reported the terms — a three-year deal worth $37 million. FOXSports.com’s Ken Rosenthal confirmed the terms Tuesday and also reported that the deal includes a vesting option for a fourth year that could raise the total value to approximately $50 million.

That is well south of the five-year, $75 million mark that K-Rod was reportedly was shooting for initially in this offseason. That would have been a record for a closer. But those dreams came before the nation’s economy tanked and began to seriously impact baseball, as well.

The Mets have concentrated their full energies on securing a closer as the leadoff to their offseason strategy. In Francisco Rodriguez, they are obtaining a reliever who does not turn 27 until next month and generated 62 saves last season for the Angels.

In recent days they put an offer out to Rodriguez and indicated they were about to follow with offers to others such as Brian Fuentes, Kerry Wood and perhaps Trevor Hoffman.

The Mets identified K-Rod as the best closer available due to his pedigree and age. However, in negotiations for a closer, the Mets were channeling their inner Scott Boras. They were doing to their closer candidates what Boras does when multiple teams seek one of his free-agent clients.
Boras is expert at making teams uneasy by playing one against the other while using time as his ally. As the clock ticks, teams tend to grow edgier, imagining that they will lose the player and often react by blindly increasing their bid.

The Mets still have worries about Rodriguez. He is not very big. He throws with maximum effort. His velocity dropped off a few mph last year. But the Mets also worried that Fuentes might not be temperamentally built for New York and that Wood is a pitching medical ward. Despite all the duress, Rodriguez has stayed healthy and effective for a perennial contender.
Now he is ever so near to being the man the Mets hope can replace Billy Wagner.

Ibanez to Mets?

Saturday, July 12th, 2008

So the Mets would figure to pursue a versatile outfielder, someone they could acquire without having to dip into a farm system mostly barren of talent. The underachieving Mariners, having begun looking to the future, released first baseman Richie Sexson on Thursday and could be persuaded to deal the 36-year-old Raúl Ibáñez, who had averaged 27 home runs and 114 R.B.I. over the past two seasons. A familiar name, Xavier Nady, could play both corner spots as well as first base. His Pittsburgh teammate, Jason Bay, is equally alluring but would come at a higher price. Jos� Guill�n has a few deterrents — his combustible personality, his streaky hitting, the $12 million owed for each of the next two seasons — but he would supply right-handed power and strong defense. — NY Times

Santana passes physical, finalizes Mets deal

Sunday, February 3rd, 2008

Santana passed his physical Saturday, finalizing the ballyhooed swap that sent him to New York for four prospects: outfielder Carlos Gomez and right-handers Philip Humber, Kevin Mulvey and Deolis Guerra.

After an offseason of shopping the two-time AL Cy Young Award winner, Minnesota considered hanging onto him. Without a new deal, Santana, who will turn 29 next month, could have become a free agent following this year’s World Series. The Twins offered him an $80 million, four-year extension, but he turned it down.

The Mets and Twins announced the trade one day after Santana agreed to a $137.5 million, six-year contract with New York – record riches for a pitcher. With an option for a seventh season, the deal could be worth $157 million. The left-hander gets $19 million this year, $20 million in 2009, $21 million in 2010, $22.5 million in 2011, $24 million in 2012 and $25.5 million in 2013, according to terms obtained by The Associated Press. The Mets have a $25 million option for 2014 with a $5.5 million buyout, and the option could become guaranteed based on Santana’s innings and finish in postseason award voting. Of each year’s salary, including the option season, $5 million will be deferred.

Santana agrees to $150.75M, seven-year deal with Mets

Friday, February 1st, 2008

Johan Santana and the New York Mets agreed Friday to a $150.75 million, seven-year contract, a record for a pitcher and the last major step needed to finalize the team’s blockbuster trade with Minnesota. After the sides were granted an extra two hours to work on a deal, the Mets announced about 30 minutes before the new 7 p.m. EST deadline that negotiations had concluded. The pitcher was scheduled to take a physical Saturday.

Santana’s contract topped the previous mark for pitchers, set when Barry Zito received a $126 million, seven-year deal from the San Francisco Giants last offseason. Santana was due $13.25 million in the final year of his contract with the Twins, and would have been eligible for free agency after the World Series.

The only players with larger packages are New York Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez ($275 million), Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter ($189 million) and Boston outfielder Manny Ramirez ($160 million).

Santana’s average annual salary of $21.5 million is second only to A-Rod’s $27.5 million. Among pitchers with multiyear contracts, it topped the $18.3 million of the Chicago Cubs’ Carlos Zambrano.

Mets Win Santana Sweepstakes

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

Omar Minaya kept telling rival executives this winter that he was going to land a star pitcher, a guy who could lead his rotation, and a month ago, none of his peers imagined how that could happen. But on Tuesday afternoon, the New York Mets agreed to a tentative deal with the Minnesota Twins for arguably the best pitcher on the planet, Johan Santana, for a package of four prospects.

Santana has a full no-trade clause and can veto the deal unless he gets a contract extension, and it’s expected that the Mets and Santana will begin negotiating as soon as possible. New York and Santana have until 5 p.m. EST Friday to reach an agreement, a baseball official told The Associated Press, on condition of anonymity. Deadlines have been extended in the past, however.

If Santana agrees to a deal — and it is thought he will seek a six-year, $150 million contract — then he also would have to pass a physical.

In return for Santana, the Twins would receive center fielder Carlos Gomez and pitchers Phil Humber, Kevin Mulvey and Deolis Guerra — a package which some talent evaluators believe could be the fourth-best offer that Minnesota received during this process.

Santana completely controls his fate because of the full no-trade clause that he possesses, and he asked the Twins to make a decision, which is why Minnesota imposed the Tuesday deadline for offers from interested teams. It is not known if the left-hander explicitly informed the Twins that he would invoke his no-trade clause for the rest of the year and then file for free agency after the 2008 season, but that has always been his right. It appears that the Twins took his request seriously.

The Twins had the option of keeping Santana into spring training, in the hope that a more aggressive market for the left-hander developed.

Humber, a 25-year-old right-hander, has made one start and four relief appearances for the Mets during the past two years, and went 11-9 with a 4.27 ERA last season for Triple-A New Orleans. The 22-year-old Gomez batted .232 in 125 at-bats with New York last year and .275 with 19 steals in the minors.

Guerra, who turns 19 in April, was 2-6 with a 4.01 ERA at Class A St. Lucie, and Mulvey, who will be 23 in May, was 12-10 with a 3.20 ERA in 26 starts at Double-A Binghamton and one at New Orleans.

Santana is under contract for 2008, for $13.25 million, and could get a new deal that surpasses Barry Zito’s record of seven years and $126 million. And if the Mets work that out, Minaya will have his man.

Mets get Pagan, send minor leaguers to Cubs

Monday, January 7th, 2008

The Mets acquired outfielder Angel Pagan on Saturday from the Chicago Cubs in exchange for a pair of minor leaguers. Outfielder Corey Coles and righthanded pitcher Ryan Meyers were sent to the Cubs. The 26-year-old Pagan batted .264 with four home runs and 21 RBIs for Chicago last year.

Coles, 25, rose to New York’s Triple-A affiliate last season, but spent the bulk of his time at Double-A Binghamton, where he hit .296 and stole nine bases.

Meyers is a 22-year-old who had 13 saves and a 2.14 ERA in 33 games at Class A Savannah. He struck out 48 and walked 14 in 42 innings.

Mets boost bullpen, sign righty Wise

Wednesday, December 19th, 2007

The Mets bolstered their bullpen Tuesday, agreeing with right-hander Matt Wise on a $1.2 million, one-year contract. Wise was 3-2 with a 4.19 ERA and one save in a career-high 56 appearances for the Milwaukee Brewers this season. He struck out 43 and walked 17 in 53 2/3 innings.

The 32-year-old Wise is 17-21 with a 4.18 ERA and two saves in 201 major league games. He also pitched for the Anaheim Angels from 2000-02.

He joins a Mets bullpen anchored by All-Star closer Billy Wagner and setup man Aaron Heilman. New York also hopes to get right-hander Duaner Sanchez back from a shoulder injury next season. He hasn’t pitched in the majors since July 2006.

Minaya says Reyes will stay with Mets

Friday, November 30th, 2007

The New York Mets need pitching and they’d love to land Johan Santana. Not enough to trade star shortstop Jose Reyes, though. “Jose Reyes is one of our core players,” general manager Omar Minaya said Thursday. “I don’t see us trading Jose Reyes for one of those guys being mentioned. It just doesn’t make sense for us.”

The Mets think they might have a package of prospects that could bring back a top starting pitcher, but Minnesota may want the 24-year-old Reyes included in any potential deal for Santana.

A two-time All-Star, Reyes batted .280 with 12 homers, 57 RBIs and 119 runs this season. He also led the major leagues with 78 stolen bases, the third straight year he’s topped the NL in that category. But he slumped in the second half as New York blew a big NL East lead and missed the playoffs after a historic collapse.

Mets fill need for a second baseman

Tuesday, July 31st, 2007

The NL East-leading New York Mets neatly filled a big hole at second base, acquiring three-time All-Star Luis Castillo from the Minnesota Twins for a pair of prospects Monday.

Castillo, who is making $5.75 million this season, can become a free agent after the World Series. He has only nine stolen bases in 13 attempts and just 29 walks in 349 at-bats with 11 doubles, three triples and 18 RBIs, but he has been one of only a handful of consistent hitters for the Twins this year.

Minnesota gets catcher Drew Butera, who will report to Double-A New Britain, and outfielder Dustin Martin, who will go to Class-A Fort Myers.