The virtual 1960s New York Mets (Part 3: 1964-65)
In our first installment, we conducted a virtual 1961 expansion draft, and in episode two we got our version of the New York Mets up and running in their initial two seasons.
To review, this is how our virtual performance has compared with that of the actual Mets of 1962 and 1963:
Actual Mets Virtual Mets W L Pos Year W L Pos 40 120 10 1962 65 95 8 51 111 10 1963 64 98 9
Now it’s time for us to move into the mid-’60s.
1963-64 offseason: Actual Mets’ deals we will make
Oct. 10, 1963: Drafted pitcher Jack Fisher from the San Francisco Giants in a 1963 special draft.
At the conclusion of the 1963 season, the National League decided to give its toddling two-year-old expansion teams a booster shot by conducting a single-round mini-draft. Certainly, a major motivation for this had been the disastrous performance of the actual Mets, as the Colt .45s hadn’t been nearly as bad.
In our scenario, the Mets aren’t an embarrassment. But we’ll assume the league would go ahead and hold the “special draft” anyway, as even in our scenario, the Mets and Colt .45s would have no competition for last place from any other ’63 NL team. So we’ll let our Mets draft Fisher, a burly right hander (his nickname was “Fat Jack”) who’d steadily backslid after making an impressive showing as one of the “Baby Birds” in Baltimore in 1959-60.
Oct. 15, 1963: Purchased infielder Amado Samuel and outfielder Adrian Garrett from the Milwaukee Braves.
The Braves wouldn’t have been selling these guys if either one of them was anything special, but once in a while you get lucky with these kind of bargain-bin pickups, as was the case with Ron Hunt a year earlier.
Dec. 2, 1963: Purchased catcher-outfielder Hawk Taylor from the Milwaukee Braves.
Oh, heck, why not another one from the Milwaukee clearance rack. Taylor was a teenaged Bonus Baby back in 1957, but he’d never panned out.
Apr. 14, 1964: Sold outfielder Duke Snider to the San Francisco Giants.
Snider did all right for our Mets (as well as the actual Mets) in 1963. But we really want to be able to get something for him in the trade market before it’s too late. Our Mets would try to find a team willing to surrender a prospect or two for Snider, but we have no luck. So, on the eve of Opening Day, we’ll accept the Giants’ straight cash offer.
1963-64 offseason: Actual Mets’ deals we will modify
The actual Mets did this:
Nov. 4, 1963: Traded pitcher Roger Craig to the St. Louis Cardinals for outfielder George Altman and pitcher Bill Wakefield.
The veteran Craig had absorbed the astounding total of 46 losses in two seasons with the Mets, but most everyone understood that he wasn’t really a bad pitcher, just a luckless journeyman being overworked in a perfect-storm-bad situation.
The Cardinals saw Craig as such a good candidate to handle a swingman role that they were willing to part with their first-string right fielder to get him—although it is the case that Altman had been a disappointment in his lone season in St. Louis, delivering far less power than was expected of him. (A guidebook commenting on this trade at the time hinted that Altman might have some issues, offering, “Maybe the Cards know something.”)
Our Mets don’t have Craig, so we can’t make this deal. However, it does seem that we could work out a reasonable alternative. We’ll do this:
Nov. 4, 1963: Traded pitcher Bob Bruce to the St. Louis Cardinals for outfielder George Altman.
In our scenario, Bruce in New York hadn’t gained anywhere near the notoriety of Craig. But he’d quietly put together back-to-back solid seasons as a fourth starter. He was two years younger than Craig, threw harder, and almost certainly had more major league future ahead of him. It’s plausible that the Cardinals would have accepted Bruce to fill the spot they were creating for Craig, particularly since we’ll let them hang onto the prospect Wakefield.
For our Mets, though there was reason to have some concern about Altman as he entered his age-31 season, if he could bounce back just a little bit he’d be providing a legitimate middle-of-the-order bat, and if that happened he would presumably become attractive as trade bait for some legitimate younger talent.
1963-64 offseason: Mets’ deals we will invoke
Sep. 30, 1963: Purchased pitcher Don McMahon from the Houston Colt .45’s.
It actually was the Cleveland Indians making this purchase. But—you guessed it—McMahon had to pass through waivers for that to happen, given that this was in September, before the annual interleague trading period had begun. And our Mets keep a close eye on that waiver wire.
A year earlier, Houston GM Paul Richards had correctly assessed that McMahon, then 32 years old, wasn’t washed up, as The Wizard of Waxahachie had picked him up cheaply and been rewarded with a brilliant 1962 performance by McMahon. But the veteran fastballer had been distinctly more hittable in 1963, and here at the close of the ‘63 season Richards was concluding that McMahon was now, in fact, not worth keeping.
There would be no downside for the Mets, with ample room for improvement in the bullpen, to test that proposition. We’ll grab McMahon.
Dec. 6, 1963: Traded first baseman-outfielder Frank Thomas to the Los Angeles Dodgers for first baseman Bill Skowron.
Our Mets had hoped to cash in Thomas on the trade market following his strong year in 1962, but we were unable to find a plausible deal. With his moderated performance in ’63, now we’re really motivated to get something for Thomas while we can. Ideally we’d prefer young talent, but we’ll take Skowron, who’s a veteran himself, just 18 months Thomas’s junior.
The Dodgers had traded for Skowron a year earlier, and been deeply disappointed as he suddenly plunged off the proverbial cliff. In actuality, on this date they were dumping him off to Washington for just a cash consideration. So it’s plausible that they’d take an offer of Thomas instead, given that in 1964 the Dodgers would carry Lee Walls on their roster as a right-handed-batting first base/third base/corner outfield utility guy: Thomas would represent a significant upgrade over Walls in that capacity.
As for our Mets, we’re undertaking the risk that Skowron would be truly washed up at the age of 33. If so, we’ll have wasted the trade of Thomas. But if Moose would be capable of mounting some manner of a comeback—and until 1963 he’d always been a hell of a good hitter—then we’ll still have a power producer at first base, and a commodity we could flip in the market for our ever-sought-after young talent.
December 1963: Traded outfielder Jim Hickman to the Boston Red Sox for pitcher Arnold Earley and cash.
For the Red Sox, Hickman would represent a meaningful upgrade over Roman Mejias in the fourth outfielder role, and moreover Hickman had the kind of right-handed power that’s perennially of particular interest to a team housed in Fenway Park. And the Red Sox at this point had a glut of left-handers in the bullpen: Earley, Wilbur Wood, and Chet Nichols were all on the roster in ’63, and rookies Bill Spanswick and Ed Connolly would both be available for ’64.
Hickman had performed serviceably for two years as a utility outfielder for our Mets, but he was nothing to get excited about. Neither was Earley, a workaday journeyman. But we’re in need of some southpaw help in our bullpen, so this is a deal it would be sensible for us to arrange.
December 1963: Traded pitcher Galen Cisco to the Chicago Cubs for outfielder Don Landrum.
Another swap of journeymen. Landrum would provide our Mets with a left-handed hitter who could play a capable center field, and given that the Cubs would send him to the minors for nearly all of 1964, it’s clear he wasn’t figuring strongly in their plans. With McMahon on our roster, we can expend the right-hander Cisco, who would provide an improvement in the Cubs’ second-line pitching.
December 1963: Purchased outfielder Bobby Del Greco from the Kansas City Athletics.
The 30-year-old Del Greco had never been a major league regular, but had been more or less the primary center fielder for the A’s in 1962 and ’63. He was a good defender and had some power, but he’d always struggled to hit for average. The degree to which the A’s were now committed to him can be summed up by this listing regarding Del Greco on baseball-reference.com: “Before 1964 Season: Sent from the Kansas City Athletics to the Milwaukee Braves in an unknown transaction.”
Ah, the dreaded “unknown transaction.” Presumably it involved a bag of broken bats and a like-new pine tar rag. Surely our Mets could have taken Del Greco off of Charlie Finley’s hands for a modest cash payment.
Feb. 17, 1964: Traded outfielder Carl Warwick to the St. Louis Cardinals for outfielder-first baseman Jim Beauchamp and pitcher Chuck Taylor.
This was a deal the Colt .45s actually made, but since it’s our Mets who have Warwick, we’ll make it. Warwick was a solid performer, but the offer of a good prospect (Beauchamp) and a decent one (Taylor) was worth accepting by a team properly focused on the future. And with Landrum and Del Greco on board, while they didn’t add up to a Warwick, at least the Mets could be confident in adequate defensive coverage in center field for the time being.
1964 season: Actual Mets’ deals we will make
Apr. 23, 1964: Traded infielder Chico Fernandez, catcher Bobby Catton, and cash to the Chicago White Sox for infielder Charley Smith.
Smith had notable power, and was a rifle-armed third baseman who had sufficient range to handle shortstop on a fill-in basis. But those strengths were countered by severe issues with walks (too few) and strikeouts (too many), and as such he hadn’t been able to stick in the majors. At the age of 26 his was a talent worthy of a chance with the Mets, as at the very least he would upgrade the infield bench.
September 1964: Purchased pitcher Tom Parsons from the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Not a top-tier prospect, but a young pitcher whose unusually good control made him worth a look.
1964 season: Actual Mets’ deals we will modify
The actual Mets did this:
May 8, 1964: Traded pitcher Jay Hook and a player to be named later to the Milwaukee Braves for shortstop Roy McMillan. (On Jun.17, 1964, the Mets sent outfielder Adrian Garrett to the Braves, completing the deal.)
We don’t have Hook, so we can’t make this exact transaction. But it makes sense for our Mets to acquire the veteran McMillan, who at nearly 35 was clearly in decline, but still a smooth fielder. And Hook wasn’t a key to the deal anyway, as the Braves were more or less salary-dumping McMillan and were only looking for a triple-A starter in return.
So instead, we’ll do this:
May 8, 1964: Traded pitcher Jim Golden, a player to be named later, and cash to the Milwaukee Braves for shortstop Roy McMillan. (On Jun.17, 1964, the Mets sent outfielder Adrian Garrett to the Braves, completing the deal.)
And, the actual Mets also did this:
Aug. 7, 1964: Traded first baseman-outfielder Frank Thomas to the Philadelphia Phillies for pitcher Gary Kroll, third baseman-outfielder Wayne Graham, and cash.
We’d already dealt Thomas the previous winter. But, of course, we do have the guy for whom we traded Thomas. So let’s do this:
Jul. 25, 1964: Traded first baseman Bill Skowron to the Philadelphia Phillies for pitcher Gary Kroll, outfielder-infielder Billy Sorrell, and cash.
We’ll make the deal a couple of weeks earlier than the actual trade, as we’d be on the phone to the Phillies as soon as Danny Cater broke his arm. And given that Skowron was hitting meaningfully better than Thomas at this point, we’ll be able to extract an additional decent prospect (Sorrell) out of them instead of the minor league journeyman Graham.
1964 season: Actual Mets’ deals we will not make
May 10, 1964: Signed pitcher Tom Sturdivant as a free agent.
May 30, 1964: Purchased pitcher Frank Lary from the Detroit Tigers.
The good news for us is that our pitching staff has reached the point where we no longer need to be bottom-feeding on other teams’ discards.
Jul. 28, 1964: Traded first baseman Tim Harkness to the Cincinnati Reds for infielder Bobby Klaus.
Nor do we need any help at utility infielder at this point. Besides, with Skowron traded, there’ll be some playing time at first base for Harkness until our hot young prospect Ed Kranepool fully ripens on the farm.
Aug. 8, 1964: Traded pitcher Frank Lary to the Milwaukee Braves for pitcher Dennis Ribant and cash.
Since we didn’t pick up Lary, we can’t pick up Ribant.
1964 season results
The major questions heading into the season were:
{exp:list_maker}Would Bill Skowron and Bob Aspromonte bounce back from their poor-hitting form of 1963?
Would the all-journeyman platoon combination of Don Landrum and Bobby Del Greco hold their own in center field?
Would the all-rookie platoon combination of Larry Elliot and Jim Beauchamp hold their own in left field?
Would either of the youngsters Jack Fisher or Tracy Stallard step up to fill the fourth starter role vacated by Bob Bruce?
Would the veteran reliever Don McMahon prove to have something left? {/exp:list_maker}
Pos Player Age G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS OPS+ 1B B. Skowron 33 80 265 29 74 10 0 9 40 12 49 .279 .310 .419 .729 106 2B R. Hunt 23 127 475 61 144 19 6 6 42 29 30 .303 .357 .406 .763 118 S-3-2 B. Aspromonte 26 157 553 56 155 20 3 14 69 34 55 .280 .322 .403 .725 106 3B-OF F. Mantilla 29 151 558 74 155 25 3 24 64 51 66 .278 .338 .462 .801 126 RF G. Altman* 31 124 422 49 97 14 1 9 47 18 70 .230 .262 .332 .594 69 CF B. Del Greco 31 119 282 32 64 10 2 5 21 32 62 .227 .306 .330 .636 82 LF-RF L. Elliot* 26 132 370 46 85 13 0 15 36 40 80 .230 .305 .386 .691 96 C J. Gonder* 28 131 341 29 92 11 1 7 35 29 65 .270 .329 .370 .698 99 OF D. Landrum* 28 121 326 38 77 10 3 3 20 21 52 .236 .282 .313 .595 70 LF-1B J. Beauchamp 24 103 278 25 66 13 1 7 30 19 59 .237 .286 .367 .653 85 1B T. Harkness* 26 70 218 21 56 4 1 4 22 16 41 .257 .308 .339 .647 85 3B-2B C. Smith 26 81 222 22 52 6 0 10 29 9 53 .234 .264 .396 .660 86 C-RF H. Taylor 25 92 225 21 54 8 0 4 23 8 33 .240 .266 .329 .595 69 C C. Cannizzaro 26 60 164 12 51 10 0 0 10 14 28 .311 .365 .372 .737 112 SS R. McMillan 34 68 139 12 29 3 1 0 9 5 6 .209 .236 .245 .481 38 1B-RF D. Carmel* 27 43 111 17 24 3 1 4 16 15 35 .216 .310 .369 .679 93 LF-1B D. Smith 25 31 63 9 14 4 1 0 2 1 19 .222 .234 .317 .552 56 Others 134 12 31 4 0 1 13 9 21 .231 .274 .284 .558 60 Pitchers 398 21 51 8 1 2 15 13 178 .128 .154 .168 .323 -8 Total 5544 586 1371 195 25 124 543 375 1002 .247 .298 .359 .657 87 * Bats left Pitcher Age G GS CG W L SV IP H R ER HR BB SO ERA ERA+ K. Johnson 31 35 35 7 12 15 0 218 209 104 92 17 44 115 3.80 93 D. Farrell 30 32 27 7 12 9 0 198 196 84 76 23 52 115 3.45 103 A. Jackson* 28 37 31 9 11 14 1 192 201 100 86 16 52 103 4.03 88 J. Fisher 25 30 23 4 7 11 0 152 166 78 66 14 35 79 3.91 91 T. Stallard 26 29 23 6 7 13 0 151 138 70 59 12 47 81 3.52 101 B. Miller 25 74 2 0 6 8 9 138 120 53 44 2 65 92 2.87 124 D. McMahon 34 70 0 0 5 5 16 101 75 32 28 6 49 89 2.50 142 M. Drabowsky 28 39 7 0 3 6 2 97 106 53 51 12 36 74 4.73 75 G. Brunet* 29 34 7 0 3 3 1 73 70 32 29 3 36 66 3.58 99 A. Earley* 31 25 3 1 1 1 1 50 53 17 15 3 17 41 2.70 131 W. Hunter* 30 21 0 0 1 2 1 25 27 13 12 2 5 11 4.32 82 Others 5 1 2 5 0 50 54 33 30 5 22 27 5.40 66 Total 163 35 70 92 31 1445 1415 669 588 115 460 893 3.66 97 * Throws left
All of those questions would prove to be answered more or less positively.
The season would present just one significant negative: George Altman, counted upon to provide a serious bat as the right fielder, was awful, nagged by minor injuries and unable to get any kind of a hitting stroke going. A less severe disappointment was the regression in performance by reliever Moe Drabowsky.
But overall the progress shown by the 1964 team is solid across the board. The hitting isn’t good, but it’s competent, and the pitching, led by the outstanding bullpen one-two-punch of McMahon and Bob Miller, is flirting with league-average. It adds up to a Pythagorean record of 70-92, not good but approaching respectability in just our third season. Almost certainly this team would avoid the league’s cellar, finishing ahead of the expansion-companion Colt .45s.
We’re miles ahead of the actual Mets at this point. Can we sustain this momentum into 1965?
1964-65 offseason: Actual Mets’ deals we will make
Oct. 15, 1964: Traded outfielder-first baseman Dick Smith to the Los Angeles Dodgers for pitcher Larry Miller.
Just a shuffle of mediocrities, but we’ve said it before and we’ll say it again: it’s never a bad idea to stockpile left-handed arms.
Jan. 15, 1965: Traded outfielder George Altman to the Chicago Cubs for outfielder Billy Cowan.
For 1964, the Cubs had handed their starting center field job to the 25-year-old rookie Cowan. In that opportunity, he performed quite a bit less than brilliantly: his batting average was a wishy-washy .241, his walk-to-strikeout ratio was a ghastly 18-to-128, and in the field Cowan picked up just two assists while committing 11 errors. But nevertheless we’re talking about a rookie center fielder who hit 19 home runs and stole 12 bases (in just 15 attempts): wouldn’t you think that might be something to work with going forward? Wouldn’t a rookie center fielder demonstrating that combination of power and speed be typically seen as a glass half full?
Obviously not by the Cubs, who turned around and swapped Cowan straight-up for Altman, whom as we saw above came into the 1964 season as a 31-year-old with a question mark over his head, and proceeded to deliver a completely terrible performance. As ragged as Cowan’s game was in 1964, Altman’s was distinctly worse, and he was six years older than Cowan. What was going on?
The only logical explanation is that the Cubs had off-field issues with Cowan. This is pure speculation, as I’ve searched but never found any corroboration, but it seems likely that there was something about Cowan that led Chicago management to consider him as either current trouble, or bound for it. No strictly talent-based assessment justifies this transaction otherwise.
For our Mets (as well as the actual Mets), we’ll be happy to take our chances with this bad boy. Cowan was a vastly better talent than we could have reasonably expected to receive in the trade market for the imploded Altman.
1964-65 offseason: Actual Mets’ deals we will modify
The actual Mets did this:
Dec. 7, 1964: Traded pitcher Tracy Stallard to the St. Louis Cardinals for pitcher Gordie Richardson and outfielder Johnny Lewis.
Neither Richardson nor Lewis projected as a star, but both were genuinely nice-looking young players, probably bound for some degree of major league success. They were sensible targets for the Mets.
But not at the cost of Stallard, who’d been a prospect of similar status when they’d acquired him just two years earlier, and after a rocky 1963 performance he’d stepped forward as a solid major league contributor in 1964, and he’d just turned 27 years old. To cash Stallard in for prospects at this point was to step from the path forward onto the treadmill.
So we’ll rework the trade this way:
Dec. 7, 1964: Traded pitcher Dick Farrell to the St. Louis Cardinals for pitcher Gordie Richardson and outfielder Johnny Lewis.
Farrell had performed wonderfully for our Mets in all three of his seasons since being acquired in the expansion draft. But he would turn 31 in the spring of 1965, and had shown a hint of injury-tenderness in both ’63 and ’64. The time to “sell” on Farrell was probably now. The World Champion Cardinals, gearing up for a repeat, would very plausibly accept him in Stallard’s place.
1964-65 offseason: Actual Mets’ deals we will not make
Nov. 23, 1964: Purchased pitcher Warren Spahn from the Milwaukee Braves.
Mar. 28, 1965: Purchased pitcher Frank Lary from the Milwaukee Braves.
Tempting as it is to give these former greats a whirl, it remains the case that our Mets no longer have room on the pitching staff for such long-shots.
1965 season: Actual Mets’ deals we will make
Aug. 5, 1965: Traded outfielder Billy Cowan to the Milwaukee Braves for players to be named later. (On Sep. 25, 1965, the Braves sent infielders Lou Klimchock and Ernie Bowman to the Mets, completing the deal.)
As we’ll see below, Cowan, with the actual Mets and with our version as well, would wear out his welcome in a hurry. We’ll be just as happy for the Braves to take him off our hands as was the case in real life.
1965 season: Actual Mets’ deals we will not make
May 11, 1965: Purchased second baseman Chuck Hiller from the San Francisco Giants.
This move was in response to a shoulder separation sufferred by Ron Hunt. Our Mets will have sufficient infield depth within the organization to deal with that problem without importing Hiller’s limited talents.
Jul. 8, 1965: Traded pitcher Frank Lary to the Jimmie Schaffer to the Mets, completing the deal.)
Just as we didn’t have Lary last year, we don’t have him this year. And Schaffer is hardly compelling anyway.
Jul. 21, 1965: Traded catcher Jesse Gonder to the Milwaukee Braves for outfielder-catcher Gary Kolb.
Gonder was having a lackluster year. But we don’t see anything to be gained by converting him into the scrubeenie Kolb.
Aug. 18, 1965: Purchased pitcher Dave Eilers from the Milwaukee Braves.
Once again, no room on our staff for this manner of mediocrity.
1965 season results
So for ’65, the key changes were the insallations of Cowan in center field, Lewis in right, and rookie Ed Kranepool at first base, the emergence of left-handed batting rookie outfielders Johnny Stephenson and Billy Sorrell (thus sending Larry Elliot back to the minors), and the pitching staff replacement of Farrell with Richardson (thus requiring someone from the bullpen to step up into a starting role).
Pos Player Age G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS OPS+ 1B E. Kranepool* 20 153 525 44 133 24 4 10 53 39 71 .253 .303 .371 .675 93 2B R. Hunt 24 57 196 21 47 12 1 1 10 14 19 .240 .309 .327 .635 83 SS-2B B. Aspromonte 27 152 578 53 154 15 2 7 50 36 56 .266 .308 .336 .644 85 3B C. Smith 27 135 499 49 122 20 3 16 62 17 123 .244 .273 .393 .666 89 RF-CF J. Lewis* 25 148 477 64 117 15 3 15 45 59 117 .245 .331 .384 .715 105 CF B. Cowan 26 82 221 21 41 11 3 6 14 5 60 .186 .210 .344 .553 56 LF-RF B. Sorrell* 24 80 229 25 54 9 2 4 17 14 25 .236 .278 .345 .623 78 C J. Gonder* 29 111 263 14 58 10 0 9 23 26 49 .221 .289 .361 .650 86 2-O-3 F. Mantilla 30 150 534 60 145 16 3 14 62 68 87 .272 .358 .391 .749 115 LF-C J. Stephenson* 24 91 257 19 56 7 0 8 22 17 41 .218 .266 .339 .605 73 SS R. McMillan 35 105 238 20 57 9 1 1 17 11 27 .239 .270 .298 .569 63 OF D. Landrum* 29 87 213 25 47 9 2 3 15 17 44 .221 .290 .324 .614 76 LF-RF R. Swoboda 21 68 200 26 45 8 2 10 25 16 51 .225 .286 .435 .721 104 CF-RF B. Del Greco 32 82 183 19 38 7 1 3 15 21 48 .208 .290 .306 .596 72 C C. Cannizzaro 27 71 126 9 23 4 1 0 4 14 30 .183 .266 .230 .496 44 2B-SS A. Samuel 26 30 75 5 16 4 0 1 4 3 16 .213 .241 .307 .547 56 CF C. Jones 22 30 74 2 11 1 0 1 9 2 23 .149 .171 .203 .374 7 LF-1B J. Beauchamp 25 24 53 5 10 1 0 0 3 5 11 .189 .259 .208 .466 36 C H. Taylor 26 25 46 5 7 0 0 4 10 1 8 .152 .167 .413 .580 61 Others 81 7 16 1 1 1 3 4 21 .198 .235 .272 .507 45 Pitchers 394 17 40 8 0 0 11 9 178 .102 .117 .122 .239 -31 Total 5462 510 1237 191 29 114 475 398 1105 .226 .279 .335 .614 76 * Bats left Pitcher Age G GS CG W L SV IP H R ER HR BB SO ERA ERA+ K. Johnson 32 37 34 9 14 12 2 231 217 95 83 19 50 148 3.23 110 G. Brunet* 30 41 26 8 9 12 2 197 154 71 62 10 66 138 2.83 125 T. Stallard 27 40 26 4 10 10 0 194 169 77 68 23 72 97 3.15 113 J. Fisher 26 33 30 6 6 18 1 191 182 87 79 15 48 91 3.72 95 A. Jackson* 29 34 31 6 7 18 1 185 192 98 86 15 53 111 4.18 85 B. Miller 26 61 1 0 6 8 9 103 85 42 37 10 27 75 3.23 110 D. McMahon 35 58 0 0 3 5 11 85 83 38 33 8 35 60 3.49 102 A. Earley* 32 46 0 0 0 2 0 59 63 34 25 4 23 38 3.81 93 G. Richardson* 26 45 0 0 3 4 2 73 60 35 30 6 23 62 3.70 96 G. Kroll 23 16 6 1 3 3 1 44 42 24 22 6 21 31 4.50 79 M. Drabowsky 29 14 5 0 1 5 0 39 46 23 20 5 17 25 4.62 77 Others 5 0 0 3 0 52 50 25 23 6 21 32 3.98 89 Total 164 34 62 100 29 1453 1343 649 568 127 456 908 3.52 101 * Throws left
Well.
On the positive side: the pitching was the best our Mets had yet enjoyed, performing slightly better than league-average in just our fourth season. Moe Drabowsky would fall short when tasked with some starting assignments, but George Brunet would step into the breech and succeed wonderfully, achieving a breakthrough at the age of 30. As a result our Mets would feature five solid starters. Neither Bob Miller nor Don McMahon did as well as in ’64, but they were all right, and the bullpen overall was competent.
The problems would arise in run production. Hunt’s injury was a blow: he missed most of the season, and performed at less than 100 per cent when in the lineup. But our Mets had the depth to deal with that, as hard-hitting Felix Mantilla would slide over to second base, with Charley Smith taking over third and doing a satisfactory job.
But Cowan’s bat was a disaster, so embarrassingly bad that he would not only lose his first-string role but also, as we saw above, end up dumped in August for a token return. And if hitting slumps are contagious, then our Mets sufferred an epidemic: rookie Cleon Jones, called up to take Cowan’s place, was completely overmatched. Stephenson, projected to hit well based on his minor league stats (indeed he looked as though he might become a Johnny Blanchard-style power-hitting outfielder-catcher), didn’t get the job done either.
Disappointing hitting was the rule across the roster, as the only bats producing as well as expected were those of Mantilla, Smith, Lewis, and Ron Swoboda, a rookie outfielder called up in mid-season desperation.
Perhaps we can take solace in the fact that, weak as our offense was, it wouldn’t be quite as weak as the anemic attack presented by the actual Mets. But ours would still be the worst in the league, and thus despite our admirable pitching, we’ll most likely finish last. Certainly we remain a whole lot better than the real-life Mets at this point, but still there can be no way of perceiving our 1965 season as anything but a setback.
Next time
We’ll see if we can get back on track in 1966.
References & Resources
The comment on George Altman is from Bill Wise, ed., 1964 Official Baseball Almanac (Greenwich, Connecticut: Fawcett, 1964), p. 131.
Well, the virtual ‘65 Mets did outperform the real team by 12 games… it seems, though that this team was pretty much doomed.
So… guessing ahead to when there were drafts… are you going to draft Reggie instead of Chilcotte (sp?)?
Another excellent ‘What if…’ piece.
I remember something similar about the 1961 expansion clubs a while back in a SABR publication article called, ‘‘What if God Owned the Angels.’‘
Although some improvements for stocking new clubs were made in subsequent expansions, 1962 expansion was the first by the National League since 1891, with the A.L. having never expanded in its history since becoming a major league. Like major league baseball moving to the West Coast, it was charting new territory.
It’s still a shame though that MLB didn’t give the 1969 expansion clubs a running start by allowing them to fully participate in the 1968 entry draft.
Unfortunately for the 1961/62 clubs, they came in before the entry draft was created. But the Expos, Padres, Pilots and Royals could have benefited from such a system.
According to MLB.com, the 4 expansion clubs were only permitted to participate in the 1968 entry draft after the 4th round.
http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/history/draft/index.jsp?feature=decade1960s
However, I’ve yet to discover any list of 1968 June picks by the 1969 expansion clubs. If someone finds it, please publish it. If not, I suspect someone at the MLB website has a fuzzy memory.
In any case, the first 4 rounds of the 1968 June entry draft did include talents such as: Thurman Munson, Bobby Valentine, Greg Luzinski, Gary Matthews, Bill Buckner and Lynn McGlothen.
The 1968 June Secondary draft included Steve Garvey, Elliott Maddox and Ron Cey.
Some of that talent certainly could have helped the 1969 expansion clubs improve their outlook going into the 1970s.