With the New York Mets season coming to a sad conclusion with their six-game defeat to the Los Angeles Dodgers, there are always the people that are thinking of the second guesses the Mets should have made if they were to shock the baseball world and go to the World Series.
Many of the decisions coaches and front offices make in the postseason form come with a defined purpose and execution. Unfortunately, the Mets made some decisions that turned out to not work out in their favor and if done differently, it could have been a difference against the heavily-favored Dodgers.
1. The Mets only carried 12 pitchers instead of 13.
The Mets went the first two rounds of the postseason with Adam Ottavino on the roster, and did not pitch at all. He seemingly went from a major piece in their bullpen from the start of the season to an afterthought at the end. It became obvious that the Mets did not plan to use him in the NLCS against the Dodgers and was left off the roster to make room for Jeff McNeil, who had just completed his rehab from a fractured wrist he suffered five weeks before.
McNeil being on the roster made sense in the fact that the Dodgers only had one healthy left-handed pitcher on their active roster, and that was reliever Anthony Banda. The Dodgers had just lost star lefty Alex Vesia to an intercostal injury he suffered in the last game of their Division Series against San Diego, and an opportunity for the Mets to get righty-lefty matchups was there.
But here was the problem with carrying just 12 pitchers: The Dodgers lineup was just too good.
The Dodgers came in with a such a lethal attack offensively that it would have behooved the Mets to carry an extra pitcher for a long series with innings consuming more physical energy for their pitchers. The Mets seemingly had to get multiple innings out of long relievers so many times just to get out of a game and save their back-end relievers the next day.
In total, Mets pitchers issued 42 walks and gave up 46 runs in 52 innings pitched, and proved to be no match for the mighty Dodgers. They could have used an extra reliever in Game 6.
To make matters worse on the 12 pitcher cohort, the Mets also kept Luisangel Acuna on the roster, emphasizing speed and defense. It turned out to be pointless, because only one of the six games was decided by four runs or less.