The Mets Draft Mistake That Still Hurts Older Fans

Consider how the Mets' 2000 draft decisions might have transformed their rivalry with the Phillies and reshaped their team's legacy.

The 2000 MLB Draft didn’t give the Mets much to brag about. New York had two first-round picks, and neither one turned into a player who ever appeared in a big league game for the team.

Billy Traber was the club’s first choice, going 16th overall. He later went to the Cleveland Indians in the Roberto Alomar deal, and the Mets paid him a $400K signing bonus because of health concerns. That was the lowest bonus of any player who signed out of the first round, even with Traber going that high.

The draft’s best Mets success story was Bobby Keppel, and even that only added up to 0.2 bWAR. In all, just four players selected by New York reached the majors. The rest mostly never signed, which helps explain why the draft was eventually cut from 50 rounds to 20.

But the real twist sits one pick ahead of Traber. The Philadelphia Phillies took Chase Utley at No. 15 overall.

If the Phillies had gone in a different direction and the Mets had been the ones to land Utley, the whole thing could have changed. New York had moved up after losing John Olerud to the Seattle Mariners in free agency, and that spot might have been enough to grab Utley instead of Traber.

Utley made his MLB debut in 2003 with Philadelphia, but he didn’t really become a Mets headache until 2005. From 2006 through 2010, he was an All-Star every year, and he also had a strong 2005 season.

Put that version of Utley into a Mets infield with David Wright at third base and Jose Reyes at shortstop, and it looks a lot different. There’s no back-to-back collapse to Philadelphia, and there’s also no Luis Castillo.

Of course, changing the uniform doesn’t automatically change the player. Utley’s career would still have been Utley’s career; it would just have lived in the Mets record book instead of the Phillies’.

Based on the way he carried himself, he would have been either a favorite in Queens or one of those players fans never quite warmed to. Even when he was on your side, there was something about him that could read as hateable.

It’s hard to know whether he would have been one of those Phillies players who asked out, because things went so well for him there.

One of the biggest ripple effects would have hit the 2015 playoffs. That ugly slide that Mets fans remember so well probably disappears, at least in its famous form. Utley still might have made the same kind of play against a former team, but he wouldn’t have ended up with the Los Angeles Dodgers the way he did when Philadelphia traded him there in the middle of 2015.

That’s the strange power of old drafts. One pick, and a fan base can end up remembering a name in a completely different way.

In Other News...

Mets Just Sent Ronny Mauricio A Message Fans Can't Ignore

Ronny Mauricio keeps finding himself at the center of the Mets long-term infield conversation, but the latest roster move sent a clear signal about where he stands right now. After Mark Vientos landed on the injured list, the Mets turned elsewhere for help, leaving Mauricio in the minors while the big-league club leans on other options to patch together the infield.

It is not hard to see why the decision carries extra weight. Mauricio has not yet translated his minor league promise into steady production in the majors this season, and his brief big-league look has done little to change the teams view of its depth chart. For a player who still has real upside, the challenge now is simple but significant: keep forcing the issue until the Mets have no choice but to bring him back into the picture. [Read more 🡒]

Mets Fans Had The Same Reaction To This Shock First Round Pick

The Mets first-round choice sent a familiar ripple through the fan base on draft night, because Carson Wiggins was not the kind of pick most projections had linked to them at No. 27. The right-hander, a strikeout-heavy arm out of Arkansas with only limited college work, arrived well before many expected and instantly put the spotlight on a front office that clearly valued upside over safety.

Wiggins fits the profile of the kind of pitcher New York has been willing to chase lately: big stuff, real swing-and-miss ability, and enough uncertainty to make the whole thing feel like a bet. His command questions and thin workload only sharpened the debate, especially for a club that has leaned into injury-risk arms in recent drafts and is now asking fans to trust the upside path again. [Read more 🡒]

Juan Sotos All-Star Week Decision Says Plenty About The Mets

Juan Soto is headed to the All-Star Game as the Mets lone representative, but he will not add the Home Run Derby to his week in Atlanta. After giving it some thought, Soto has opted to pass on the event and instead use the break to get a little down time, a choice that fits with the way the Mets have leaned on him since he returned from an April calf strain. He has been in the middle of just about everything offensively for a club that has needed him to carry a heavy load.

The decision also says something about where Soto and the Mets are right now. He has already taken part in the Derby twice, so there is no mystery about the stage or the spotlight, but this time the priority is rest over spectacle. And while Sotos plans for All-Star Week are now clear, the Mets also made a quieter roster move by outrighting Matt Seelinger to Triple-A Syracuse, keeping him in the organization after his MLB debut. [Read more 🡒]