Player A has a career OPS of .866 against left-handed pitching, and an .891 OPS versus lefties over the past three years.
If you want to open up the hood for a Baseball Savant dive, this player’s wOBA against lefties since 2020 is .370. We could go on, but you get the picture: He hits lefties.
Player B has a career OPS of .763 against left-handed pitching, and an .843 OPS versus lefties over the past three years. His wOBA against lefties since 2020 is .333.
Both players are on the Mets’ roster. Want to guess which one is far more likely to take at-bats at designated hitter this season?
That would be … Player B. For sure. But why?
Player A is Darin Ruf. He struggled mightily after the trade deadline last season, and gets booed a lot. Player B is Tommy Pham, a nice free agent signing who figures to help the team on both sides of the ball and in the clubhouse -- but doesn’t have quite the history against lefties that Ruf does.
I looked up most of these numbers on Wednesday, when our SNY Mets Hot Stove show producer posed a simple question: Why is Ruf still on the team?
That, in turn, led to a broader inquiry regarding the Mets' designated hitter plans. Here’s where the reporting led: At no point this offseason were the Mets looking for a full-time DH, I was told. They didn’t want to plug up the spot, which would have prevented veterans and rookies from taking at-bats.
In the former category, Mark Canha, Starling Marte, Eduardo Escobar, Jeff McNeil and Pete Alonso will all need a break from the field at times, and the front office wanted to make sure that was possible.
As for the kids, the Mets want to give Francisco Alvarez, Mark Vientos and Brett Baty a chance to claim some DH at-bats over the course of the season. All of those players still have development benchmarks to hit, mostly on defense; because of that, they will not be given the chance to compete for the DH gig out of spring training.