A Healthy Matt Harvey Can Still Thrive With Mets

Baseline Perspective | Matt Harvey
Matt Harvey – (Image Credit: Anthony J. Causi)

Matt Harvey may not be the ace of the New York Mets anymore, but he can still thrive in 2018.

Harvey pitched three scoreless innings in a 4-2 victory for the over the Detroit Tigers in spring training.  Mets beat writer Anthony DiComo, of MLB.com, described his fastball as resting in the mid-90’s for a second straight start.

Velocity for the right-hander was a concern last season during his return from injury. There was a bout with shoulder weakness, a result from dealing with the aftermath of horacic outlet syndrome and arterial surgery.

To see Harvey finding his groove with his fastball again is an encouraging sign for the Mets. In 48 pitches, against Detroit, he struck out two, walked one, and allowed one hit.

Anthony’s Perspective

It’s no secret on this site that I really like the hiring of new manager Mickey Callaway for the Mets. There’s a confidence and charisma to his approach on the field. This was a team badly in need of a new voice and a player like Harvey can benefit from it.

Callaway, as Anthony DiComo noted in his article, spotted a mechanical flaw in Harvey’s delivery from past seasons. The results obviously are helping with Harvey’s approach this spring on and off the field.

Harvey might not turn back into the dominant force he was which took New York City by storm. But with Jacob deGrom and Noah Syndergaard, now at the front of the starting rotation, Harvey has a chance to fly under the radar for the start of the 2018 season.

Callaway, with new pitching coach Dave Eiland, were brought in for their leadership skills as much as their knowledge of pitching. Part of those skills include getting their players to embrace change. Harvey appears to be buying in and so far the results have been on the money.

 

 

 

 

 

Same Steven Matz Looks Like Familiar Problem

Baseline Perspective | Steven Matz
Steven Matz (Image Credit: . (Jeff Roberson/AP)

The Mets would like to see Steven Matz be a key member of their starting rotation in 2018. Now if someone can just remind Matz of this, preferably before the Mets begin their season.  

Matz, for the second time in as many starts, allowed five runs. He recorded only one out, gave up five hits, and walked two in a 7-3 loss to the Washington Nationals. 

It’s only spring training, and he’s working his way back from injury, but the early signs are alarming and familiar. 

The Nationals didn’t hit him hard, however the left-hander didn’t help himself by working deep into counts and running his pitch count up. 

Mets manager Mickey Calloway, after the game, called his struggles a “bump in the road”. Well, it’s a bump the Mets have seen before.  

[irp posts=”443″ name=”Mickey Callaway Brings What Mets Need Most”]

Anthony’s Perspective

In past seasons, whenever he’s struggled, Matz consistently falls behind batters. All this does is run up his pitch count and make it difficult to pitch deep into ballgames.  

The potential has always been there for Matz, however, his inability to stay healthy has been a problem.  

With his health concerns and command issues, the Mets have to think about their options for the 26-year old talent. With his history of arm problems, the bullpen doesn’t seem like a good fit. But, as Kristie Ackert of the New York Daily News points out in her article, Matz does have an option left and could be sent to the minor leagues. If it comes to that.

Callaway, and pitching coach Dave Eiland, are preaching patience, and as they should because it’s still spring training. But there’s enough depth on the roster to spark debate on what role their lefty should have when the regular season starts. 

Mets Manager Mickey Callaway Hits Right Note Praising Rotation

Baseline Perspective | Mickey Callaway
(Image Credit: Ames Keivom/New York Daily News)

The Mets report to Port St. Lucie, Florida this week. There’s plenty of buzz around the team with new manager Mickey Callaway taking over.  

Pitching is once again the projected strength of this team. Their ability to stay healthy, however, is a legitimate area of concern.  

What doesn’t appear to be a concern is the communication skills of Callaway. That’s not a knock on his predecessor, Terry Collins, but how quickly Callaway can win over his new team will be intriguing.  

In his press conference, with pitchers and catchers already reporting to camp, Callaway raved about his first extended look at his pitching staff. 

“I got to sit there and watch bullpens in the last week and I’ve never seen anything like that,” Callaway said. “The amount of very good arms and quality stuff we have in this Mets organization, I promise you nobody else has that. I have been around some pretty good arms and this is the best group of arms and stuff that I’ve ever seen, from top to bottom. It’s really amazing.” 

Callaway, along with first-year pitching coach Dave Eiland, have their hands full with a staff full of question marks. Noah Syndergaard, Matt Harvey, and Steven Matz missed significant time last season and highlighted the injury woes of the Mets in 2017. 

 Anthony’s Perspective 

By praising his pitching staff, I thought new Mets manager Mickey Callaway made a great early impression in his first spring training. 

There is great power in compliments. Client strategist Kathryn Christensen wrote compliments can increase productivity, performance, and morale.  

The injuries to Syndergaard and Harvey helped put the Mets in an early hole they never recovered from. Of the five projected starters for 2017, only Jacob deGrom managed to avoid the major injury bug.  

Harvey and Matz are still major question marks in the rotation, not far behind is Zach Wheeler.  

The Mets are coming into camp this year excited and already talking about getting back to the playoffs. But this is a team which must crawl before they can walk again. 

Every team coming into spring training gets excited for the fresh start a new season begins. But those early expectations lead to humbling realities really quick.  

Callaway’s early praise of the pitching staff will help sustain the confidence of his players as the spring progresses.  

Mickey Callaway Brings What Mets Need Most

When the Mets open their 2018 campaign they’ll have a new voice in charge, Mickey Callaway.  

After seven seasons, Terry Collins stepped down as manager and took a role in the team’s front office. Collins, at 68 years old, took the Mets as far as he could. Under his leadership, the Mets reached the World Series in 2015. A year later, they returned to the playoffs as a wild card team.   Continue reading “Mickey Callaway Brings What Mets Need Most”

Mets Adding Adrian Gonzalez Better Wake Up Dominic Smith

Dominic Smith | Baseline Perspective
Dominic Smith (Image credit: Jim McIsaac/Getty Images)

The Mets are not getting the Adrian Gonzalez from five years ago, but his signing is enough to raise eyebrows on who they’ll be starting the season with at first base.  

Throughout the second half of the 2017 season, the Mets were believed to be leaning towards Dominic Smith as their first baseman going forward.   Continue reading “Mets Adding Adrian Gonzalez Better Wake Up Dominic Smith”

With Giancarlo Stanton Yankees Smell Dynasty

Giancarlo Stanton (Image: Getty)

The Yankees did their best over the weekend to break the internet when news surfaced of Giancarlo Stanton joining the Evil Empire.  

Derek Jeter, the new face of the Miami Marlins, as CEO and part owner, pulled the trigger on trading the team’s biggest name to the team he led to five world championships as their captain.   Continue reading “With Giancarlo Stanton Yankees Smell Dynasty”

Three Keys To Mets’ Matt Harvey Overcoming Latest Adversity

These days Matt Harvey isn’t the Dark Knight, he’s just Matt Harvey, pitcher for the New York Mets.

Harvey’s no longer the superstar taking New York City by storm, he’s now just a pitcher taking the field every five days.

It’s not the 2013 All-Star Harvey, and it’s not even the 2015 National League Comeback Player of the Year.

 The blazing fastball, hitting 98 mph on the radar gun, that Matt Harvey is no longer in the building. The growing reality is we may never see that Harvey again.

Adversity impacts us all in different ways. For Harvey, overcoming his adversity has become the biggest challenge of his professional career.

In three starts since returning from the disabled list with a stress injury to his right scapula, Harvey has posted a 1-2 record with an alarming 12.19 ERA. His struggles have escalated since missing the second half of last year due to surgery for thoracic outlet syndrome.

But it was Harvey’s comments after his most recent start which may have provided the clearest case of someone struggling to regain the success he once had.

In 3 1/3 innings of work, Harvey gave up five runs and loaded the bases three times. The Mets lost the game to the Cubs, 17-5, at Wrigley Field.

“It’s kind of hard to take any positives out of the last two years,” Harvey said. “I am extremely frustrated. It’s hard going out there and not doing what I can to help this team win and it’s extremely frustrating.

“There is a lot of work going in that is not paying off, and it’s becoming very frustrating for me, but there is still three starts to go and you have to do everything you can to go out there to just be better.”

Awareness

Harvey’s frustration is clear and his concern is justified. The results have not been there for him, this despite all the hard work he’s put in behind the scenes.

I covered one of Harvey’s rehab starts this summer for the Mets short-season Single-A affiliate, the Brooklyn Cyclones. Afterwards, Harvey expressed excitement for getting back to the Mets in time to finish the season. But his comments also displayed an awareness of the process he’s going through.

I came away from that game thinking Harvey’s starting to get it now. He’s 28 years old and these last two years have clearly humbled him.

You can click here to read my article on Harvey, for NY Sports Day.

Harvey is at a career crossroads.

Early success can have us feeling like a superhero, or in Harvey’s case Batman. We feel invincible. Then, like a thief in the night, we’re reminded it’s never that easy.[bctt tweet=”Having an awareness of your situation is always the first step to correcting what’s gone wrong.” username=”TonyRushingNY”]

Willingness to Evolve

Once we’re aware of our situation, there’s an evolution phase we’re confronted with.

Michael Jordan didn’t come into the NBA known for his jump shot, he developed it as he grew older. Muhammad Ali was known for his footwork and hand speed, as much he was for his ability to talk you into the arena. But it was the rope-a-dope strategy he employed against a stronger George Foreman which displayed his willingness to evolve.

The ability to throw a blazing fastball can give you early success in Major League Baseball. But it’s more than just having a fastball, it’s knowing when to throw it.

In three starts since coming back from the disabled list, Harvey has struggled early, largely due to his working deep counts and throwing too many pitches. That’s an indication of someone still trying to beat you with only a fastball in their arsenal.

The moment Harvey finds a healthy balance between his power pitches and off-speed stuff, the chances of pitching deeper into ballgames can increase.

Harvey won’t successfully throw 95 to 98 mph throughout a ballgame and come away healthy. He’s no longer that person.

Evolution, however, doesn’t happen overnight.

Matt Harvey Is Pitching For His Future

Harvey’s Gotta Have Faith

Having patience is one thing. But having faith in what you’re being patient for is an entirely different ballgame.

Quite simply put, to achieve our goals requires faith in our own abilities to meet them. If we don’t believe in ourselves then what’s the point of even doing it.

Harvey’s not only looking to regain success on the field, he’s facing the challenge of having to evolve his overall game in order to do it. The critics and doubters will only grow with every setback.

The Mets are also looking to see if Harvey has what it takes to get through these tough times. They have a decision to make on Harvey’s long-term future with the team. He’s one year away from free agency, his value is arguably at the lowest it’s ever been.

How far Harvey goes from here remains to be seen, his faith in himself to see it through will go a long way towards his future with the Mets.

If Matt Harvey is to overcome this latest bout with adversity then implementing awareness, a willingness to involve, and maintaining faith in himself are all key components.

The Dark Knight may rise again one day smarter, stronger and fully evolved.

 

Yankees’ Gary Sanchez Will Be Fine Long as He’s Willing to Listen

The New York Yankees are very much in the thick of a pennant race in 2017. The youth movement in the Bronx, led by Aaron Judge and Gary Sanchez, has fans talking about another dynasty in the making.

A pennant race means a brighter spotlight for the young Yankees. For every step forward there’s more attention on the missed steps along the way. Continue reading “Yankees’ Gary Sanchez Will Be Fine Long as He’s Willing to Listen”