New York Mets could have a catching problem on their hands

MLB: Colorado Rockies at New York Mets

It hasn’t been much of a secret around the New York Mets that Jacob deGrom prefers pitching to Tomas Nido. The numbers clearly indicate that deGrom is more effective working with Nido than Wilson Ramos, and the Mets have recently begun accommodating deGrom’s preference by having Nido catch for him. This would be fine if deGrom was the only catcher on the staff with a working preference, but things took an interesting turn earlier this week when Noah Syndergaard reportedly asked for Nido to be his personal catcher as well, Deesha Thosar of the New York Daily News reports.

New York Mets could have a catching problem on their hands
Jun 8, 2019; New York City, NY, USA; New York Mets catcher Tomas Nido (3) in the dugout prior to the game against the Colorado Rockies at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Gregory J. Fisher-USA TODAY Sports

In three starts throwing to Nido this season, Syndergaard has pitched to a 2.29 ERA in 19.1 innings pitched. With Ramos behind the plate for his other starts, Syndergaard has worked to a 4.69 ERA in 71 innings over 11 starts. Both deGrom and Syndergaard have been noticeably more effective with Nido, the superior defender, behind the plate while the rest of the rotation hasn’t had any issues working with Ramos.

The problem the Mets run into is that Ramos is a superior hitter, hitting .275 with nine home runs and 41 RBI’s on the season. Nido has started to swing the bat better, hitting .275 with a homer and four RBI’s in June, but on the year he is batting just .244 with three home runs and 9 RBI’s.

In a year where the Mets are going nowhere, it’s fine to preserve Ramos’ health by having Nido catch deGrom and Syndergaard more often than not. The issue comes from the fact that if the Mets plan on winning in 2020, and that certainly appears to be the plan at this point, it’s hard to have your top hitting catcher on the bench in games where the top two starters pitch.

This could lead to a situation where the Mets explore trading Ramos, who will have a year and a team option left on his deal, in the offseason. If Ramos is healthy and has a good offensive year, he could have value as a trade piece, enabling the Mets to upgrade their roster in another area. The Mets could then either explore signing a catcher to complement Nido, like they were thinking about with Martin Maldonado last winter, or make a run at a better all around catcher like Yasmani Grandal in free agency. Grandal was a Mets’ target last winter but turned down a four year deal with them to sign with Milwaukee.

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