Luis Castillo A Met In ’08?

The Mets and second baseman Luis Castillo have seemed like a good match for a while now.  The South Florida Sun-Sentinel reported today that Castillo nearly signed with the Mets three years ago before the Marlins improved their offer.  Additionally, the Mets almost traded for him in November of ’05.

Today I added Castillo to my list of 2008 Free Agents; he ranked 29th.  Should Jeff Kent retire, Castillo will compete with Marcus Giles as the best available 2B after this season.  Castillo won’t return to the Twins; they have a younger version of him in Alexi Casilla.  Actually, Casilla should probably be used at shortstop, but I doubt Castillo returns.  I should add that Casilla is going to make a phenomenal fantasy sleeper once he starts – .300+ average, 40+ steals.  Just like the Luis Castillo of the late 90s.  Put him on reserve in AL-only this year.

Since Jose Valentin‘s 2006 season looks just a tad out of line with his recent performances, the Mets may be compelled to trade for Castillo this summer instead of waiting for him to hit the open market.

Last Year’s Oswalt Trade Details Surface

Mark Hale of the New York Post was able to dig up some new details on the machinations that almost left Roy Oswalt a Met.  He’d certainly look good with this group.

The Mets were dying to get him last July, but didn’t have the goods to make a direct swap with Houston.  The Astros wanted a hitter, perhaps Hank Blalock from the Rangers or Miguel Tejada from the Orioles.  Morgan Ensberg, Brad Lidge, John Danks, Thomas Diamond, Mike Pelfrey, Aaron Heilman, and Brian Bannister were all names that surfaced in connection to a possible trade.

2007 New York Mets

The Mets are featured today in our team outlooks.  You can click here to see past outlooks.

Omar Minaya’s contract obligations:

C – Paul LoDuca – $6.5MM
C – Ramon Castro – $0.85MM
1B – Carlos Delgado – $14.5MM – $1.75MM from FLA = $12.75MM
2B – Jose Valentin – $3.8MM
SS – Jose Reyes – $2.5MM
3B – David Wright – $1MM
IF – Julio Franco – $1.1MM
IF – Damion Easley – $0.85MM
LF – Moises Alou – $7.5MM
CF – Carlos Beltran – $12MM
RF – Shawn Green – $9.45MM – 6.45MM from ARI = 3.05MM
OF – Endy Chavez – $1.725MM
OF – David Newhan – $0.575MM

SP – Tom Glavine – $7.5MM
SP – Orlando Hernandez – $4.5MM $0.5MM bonus = $5MM + incentives
SP – Oliver Perez – $2.325MM + incentives
SP – Chan Ho Park – $0.6MM + incentives
SP – John Maine – $0.38MM

RP – Billy Wagner – $10.5MM
RP – Scott Schoeneweis – $3.6MM
RP – Jorge Sosa – $1.25MM
RP – Duaner Sanchez – $0.85MM + incentives
RP – Aaron Heilman – $0.38MM
RP – Ambiorix Burgos – $0.38MM
RP – Pedro Feliciano – $0.38MM

Injured/Suspended/Minors:

SP – Pedro Martinez – $14MM (could return from rotator cuff surgery in July)
SP – Mike Pelfrey – $1.65MM
SP – Aaron Sele – $1MM + incentives
SP – Alay Soler – $0.93MM
RP – Guillermo Mota – $1.8MM – $0.55MM from steroid suspension = $1.25MM
RP – Dave Williams – $1.25MM (out til June from neck surgery)
RP – Jon Adkins – $0.38MM
RP – Juan Padilla – $0.38MM
OF – Ben Johnson – $0.38MM
OF – Lastings Milledge – $0.38MM

That’s my take, with the fifth outfielder job and perhaps last bullpen spot unsettled.  The payroll seems to be about $110MM, not terribly different than last year.

The Mets were third in runs scored in 2006, and that should continue.  Moises Alou replacing Cliff Floyd is a nice touch.

The defense looks pretty good overall, with only Delgado and Alou as the obvious weak spots at their offense-minded positions.

Much ado has been made about the Mets’ rotation, which appears to lack a "#1" starter.  I don’t see this as a big regular season problem given a strong offense and bullpen.  Rather than throw down a billion dollars on Barry Zito, Omar Minaya spread his risk among many starters.  He’s got low-upside Sele types but also the potential of Pelfrey and Perez.  If nothing’s working when July approaches, Lastings Milledge could make excellent trade bait.  Anything Pedro gives them late in the summer is gravy.

As I mentioned earlier, the bullpen looks deep. Even with Sanchez a question mark, the Mets will get through the 7th, 8th, and 9th innings.  They’d love for Burgos to step in and be a lights out seventh inning option, and a step forward in control plus the National League could get his ERA under 4.

Right now I have a hard time picking the Mets or Phillies to win the NL East.  The Phils should have a better rotation and comparable offense.

Interest In Pavano

Yesterday I mentioned that Carl Pavano had his first healthy effort this spring, a major step towards a trade.  The Cards, Rockies, and Mariners have expressed interest in the past.

Today, a George King report indicates some other possible suitors.  King mentions that scouts from the Braves, Mets, and White Sox attended the game at which Pavano pitched.  Whether they were there to watch him is an open question, but it is reasonable.

A cross-town trade would be particularly interesting, although the Mets are not short on Pavano-like options.

A-Rod Not Headed To Cubs

I spent a good amount of time speculating on possible new teams for Alex Rodriguez in 2008, especially the Cubs.  I even assigned the Cubs’ chances at 15%.  However, Rodriguez was fairly frank yesterday about that idea:

"Whoever writes that couldn’t be more wrong."

He loves the American League, the Yankees, and the nonstop media buzz.  I do think Chicago is a top below New York and Boston for media insanity.  We’ve got just two major newspapers here, and only Jay Mariotti can be counted on for something offensive on a regular basis.

Meanwhile, David Wright professed his willingness to move off third base if the Mets could acquire Rodriguez.  The only alternative for Wright in ’08 would be left field, followed by first base after that.

Mets Sign Chan Ho Park

According to Adam Rubin of the New York Daily News, the Mets will add righty Chan Ho Park soon.  A Korean newspaper mentions that the deal is for $3MM with an option.  Park also had an offer from the Padres.  Hat tip to MetsBlog for originally finding this one.

Back in December, Scott Boras was reportedly trying to sell the Red Sox on the idea of using Park as a closer.  Park will be helpful for the Mets as a swingman.  I like the way Omar Minaya is building his pitching staff backwards.  I think it’ll work.

PECOTA says to expect a 4.70 ERA from Park in 115 innings.

Mets Sign Chan Ho Park

According to Adam Rubin of the New York Daily News, the Mets will add righty Chan Ho Park soon.  A Korean newspaper mentions that the deal is for $3MM with an option.  Park also had an offer from the Padres.  Hat tip to MetsBlog for originally finding this one.

Back in December, Scott Boras was reportedly trying to sell the Red Sox on the idea of using Park as a closer.  Park will be helpful for the Mets as a swingman.  I like the way Omar Minaya is building his pitching staff backwards.  I think it’ll work.

PECOTA says to expect a 4.70 ERA from Park in 115 innings.

Mets And Johan Santana?

Charley Walters of the St. Paul Pioneer Press throws it down:

"Don’t be surprised if the New York Mets, and not the Yankees, end up with Johan Santana for $20 million a year after the Twins’ Cy Young Award winner becomes a free agent after the 2008 season."

Who knows what Santana could do pitching half his games in Shea Stadium (one season there, at least).  I think it’s impossibly early to call any kind of Santana derby, but maybe Walters just wants to send half of New York into a frenzy.  If Santana does reach free agency, I’m sure all the major big-budget teams will have interest.  He’s only the best pitcher in baseball.

Just for fun: PECOTA says Santana will be worth $21,800,000 for the 2009 season.

Of course, this story from January 29th should not be ignored.  The Twins will approach Santana about a contract extension, and Santana is willing to work something out.

Mets And Johan Santana?

Charley Walters of the St. Paul Pioneer Press throws it down:

"Don’t be surprised if the New York Mets, and not the Yankees, end up with Johan Santana for $20 million a year after the Twins’ Cy Young Award winner becomes a free agent after the 2008 season."

Who knows what Santana could do pitching half his games in Shea Stadium (one season there, at least).  I think it’s impossibly early to call any kind of Santana derby, but maybe Walters just wants to send half of New York into a frenzy.  If Santana does reach free agency, I’m sure all the major big-budget teams will have interest.  He’s only the best pitcher in baseball.

Just for fun: PECOTA says Santana will be worth $21,800,000 for the 2009 season.

Of course, this story from January 29th should not be ignored.  The Twins will approach Santana about a contract extension, and Santana is willing to work something out.

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