The New York Mets Are Stuck

Josh Levitt by Senior Analyst Written on June 29, 2009
NEW YORK - JUNE 28:  Alex Cora #3 of the New York Mets throws his helmet after striking out against the New York Yankees on June 28, 2009 at Citi Field in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City. The Yankees defeated the Mets 4-2.  (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images) (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images)

After getting swept by the New York Yankees in a very ugly fashion, I'm sure nearly every New York Mets fan out there is clamoring for General Manager Omar Minaya to make a trade.

The lifeless Mets' offense has been decimated because of injuries to Jose Reyes, Carlos Delgado, and Carlos Beltran.

It's clear that the Mets need at least one big bat if they want to stay competitive in the putrid NL East in the upcoming weeks.

As fans, we can all yell and scream for Minaya to make a move because we want what's best for the team right now. But as a GM, Minaya has to think about the Mets' future, even if that's the unpopular decision.

As we look at the current roster, there is no doubt in my mind that Minaya and the Mets are stuck.

Teams know just how badly the Mets have been hit with injuries and they understand that Minaya is probably desperate to get another big bat ASAP.

Therefore, the price tag on the Aubrey Huffs and Adam Dunns of the world would be much higher than Minaya and the Mets are comfortable paying.

Consider this: Is it worth mortgaging 2010 and beyond for a year and a half of Adam Dunn? Of course not.

Even with Dunn on board, there is no guarantee that the Mets' ship can be turned around because their offense has been so ravaged by injuries.

The biggest problem for Minaya is that now is the time when the Mets are desperate for offense. Sure, in three to five weeks the price tag on some of these guys might come back down to Earth, but will the Mets still be in contention by then?

Very debatable.

The Mets have to be thinking about just surviving the next few weeks, until Reyes and Beltran (hopefully) return. But for now, the Mets are stuck with the players they currently have, unless an impact bat suddenly falls into their lap.

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written on June 29, 2009 Sports

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