Mets interim manager Andy Green hit on several topics ahead of Saturday afternoon’s game in Philadelphia against the Phillies.
Fire and rain impacting Clay Holmes, Luis Robert Jr.
The weather in New York has tossed a bit of a wrench into the plans for some rehab assignments.
Holmes was scheduled to pitch on Saturday night in Brooklyn, but with rain hammering the borough, Green said that, at the time he was speaking, with plans up in the air and “weather dependent,” the plan had now become for the right-hander to “throw a live BP to ensure he gets his pitches in today.”
“He’s completely fine; he’s geared up to throw around 45 pitches either in the game or live BP,” the interim skipper said. “Where we stand right now with where the weather is, it’s most likely going to be a live BP."
(The Cyclones later called off the game due to rain.)
As far as a timeline, speaking even before Holmes had thrown a single inning in his rehab, Green said that once he is built up to around a five-inning mark, the conversation can begin on when he will be set to re-join the big league outfit.
Robert, who had a double and two walks in five times up in his first game with Triple-A Syracuse after the All-Star break, came out of the game “really good,” Green said.
“He’s also in this weird weather world right now; I guess we’re trying to dodge fire and water right now,” the interim manager said. “I think it is just water up there in Syracuse, so for him we’re hoping he plays today, but not sure what that day is gonna be.
“If he doesn’t, we gotta determine if he plays tomorrow or when he does come back to us because he’s looking better and better.”
For a return, Green said that when the Mets head to Milwaukee for a three-game set on Monday, it is possible Robert could be activated. “Hope so, certainly hope he’s back in the mix by then,” he said.
Carson Benge, A.J. Ewing see more LHPs
Both of the Mets' highly-touted rookie left-handed batters were in the lineup against Phillies lefty Jesus Luzardo, which continues a trend of Benge and Ewing getting more chances left-on-left.
“I think they stay in and there’s no fear,” Green said when asked about why they’ve been successful against LHP. “I think you see it, especially with Carson, just whatever the pitch shape is just a comfort in the batter’s box. He’s not rattled by anything.
“A.J. has just such a short, compact swing that I think that plays incredibly well for him.”
Green added that they “both kinda do it a little bit differently,” but there is “reason to believe that they handle left-handed pitching.”
Through his first 95 plate appearances against lefties, Benge has a bit less power than against right-handers, but still posted an impressive .267/.337/.384 slash line for a .721 OPS.
Ewing has a bit less time against southpaws, with a slightly bigger drop in his average, but still a decent .231/.305/.442 slash for a .747 OPS in 60 plate appearances.
Crowded outfield
When Robert does return, what does that mean for all the above?
“All of them are going to play,” Green said. “That’s right for us from a matchup perspective; that’s right from a talent-level perspective. When it comes to the two kids that we feel strongly about, it’s their first full professional season; taking a day off a week as we get into kinda the dog days of July, August, and September isn’t going to hurt them; it will help them.
“We welcome really good baseball players back to the team and we’ll be excited to get [Robert’s] bat back into the lineup, and he’ll get some days off as well.”
Could Robert also get some time at DH? Well, that’s a bit more complicated with Jorge Polanco “getting a lot of those” and Juan Soto also getting some time as a hitter only.
“DH at-bats are tougher to come by than usual,” the skipper said. “But yes, that is a possibility as well.
That could also see Polanco get some time again at first base.
“I think so in time,” Green said when asked about that possibility. “Right now we got him back to get his bat back in the mix. So we’ve thought of him primarily as a DH in the short term. As we get into August, if he continues to feel good, I would expect us to start to explore that, get him so more ground balls, get him going again.
“That obviously was the intent when we signed him. Right now we just want his bat viable for us and we’ll cross that bridge when we get there in August.
AI in the dugout
Asked for his opinion on MLB changing what is allowed on iPads in the dugouts, the interim manager said he “cares about that as much as I care about game times changing an hour,” referencing the past two Mets games’ start time moving up one hour.
“I don’t care about it at all,” Green said. “Whatever the rules are, we remain fully compliant. And Major League Baseball makes those determinations. And we go out and play a game.”
After the news of MLB’s change was reported, former Mets reliever Adam Ottavino said the Mets were "the main team" that got cracked down on by MLB for using an AI program on iPads in the dugout that would help them "pick pitches.”
Asked if he or the organization had any reaction to Ottavino’s comments, the interim skipper said, “I certainly don’t.”
“I don’t think it does us any good to talk about what everybody says publicly,” he continued. “From my perspective, what I just said remains true: We remain compliant with everything MLB’s asked us to do, and we’ll continue to do that.”