New York Daily News

KEEP EYE ON THESE METS!

Canha, May seem like clear breakout players for Amazin’s this year

- BY MATTHEW ROBERSON

One of many problems for the Mets last year was the inability of several key players to match the production of their breakout seasons.

James McCann went from an .808 OPS in two years with the White Sox to a .643 in his first tour with the Mets, well below the league average. Taijuan Walker broke out in the first half but was shelled for a 7.13 ERA in the second half, and Jeff McNeil was unrecogniz­able from his 2019 AllStar self.

Getting those guys back to form will carry major importance in the Mets’ overall outlook, but some breakthrou­ghs from other parts of the organizati­on — including upstairs — could make the club’s 60th anniversar­y season a happy one.

MARK CANHA

Canha’s true breakout came in 2019, but now he’ll have a chance for a National League version of that.

The most anonymous of the Mets’ free agent signings has all the tools for a pleasant introducti­on to the 7 Line Army. He’s capable of clocking 25 homers (a threshold he crossed in 2019), bringing some modest but much-needed base running (his 12 stolen bases in 2021 would have ranked second on the Mets), and he’s one of the league’s most prudent hitters.

While power numbers are prone to fluctuatio­n, one skill that rarely deteriorat­es is plate discipline. A disciple of Billy Beane’s regime in Oakland, the 32-yearold Canha fully understand­s the value of patience. His watchful eye has bred an elite understand­ing of the strike zone.

Canha does not swing at many pitches off the plate. In fact, among 132 qualified hitters last year, Canha had the 12th-lowest chase rate in Major League Baseball. That restraint spawned his third consecutiv­e season with a walk rate above 12%, something that should find a comfortabl­e home in the Mets’ aggressive lineup.

His career year in 2019 was also the first year that Canha started crushing fastballs. Despite hitting .328 with a .677 slugging percentage on fastballs that year, catchers have kept putting one finger down when Canha is at the plate. Last season, 57.9% of the pitches he got were fastballs. While he didn’t inflict the same kind of destructio­n he did in 2019, if pitchers keep feeding him fastballs, Canha is going to keep eating.

TREVOR MAY

If anyone is liable to have an Aaron Loup-type season out of the Mets bullpen, it’s Trevor May.

No one should expect another veteran in his thirties to pop off quite like Loup did in 2021, but there’s certainly a possibilit­y of May ascending to another level. For starters, May has a fastball that averages 96.5 miles per hour in his back pocket. No matter how hairy things might get, or who’s at the plate, a baseball moving that fast is very hard to hit.

May’s fastball velocity puts him in the upper echelon of the league — the 90th percentile, according to Baseball-Savant — and his other two pitches are no walk in the park either. In addition to the blazing fastball that gets a swing and miss 33.2% of the time, May’s slider and changeup also had a whiff rate above 30% last season.

Sharing a bullpen with Loup and Edwin Diaz meant that May went overlooked. But the former fourth-round pick from Kelso, WA was one of just nine NL relievers to throw at least 60 innings and strike out 30% of their foes. Among those nine, May had the fourth-lowest walk rate.

Perhaps the most encouragin­g thing — and something that Buck Showalter will become aware of as he starts sponging up Mets-related data — is May’s expected numbers. May put up a 3.59 ERA and .227 opponents’ batting average. But by expected ERA (xERA) and expected batting average (xBA), he again ranked in the 90th percentile. These are Statcast numbers that attempt to quantify what a pitcher’s numbers would look like based on the quality of contact they allow.

Essentiall­y, if you removed defense, ballpark dimensions and other factors to examine just the exit velocity and launch angle of the batted balls allowed, how would a pitcher’s numbers turn out? For May, the answer last season was a 2.92 xERA and .192 xBA, both significan­tly lower than the numbers he put up. This means that with a few more balls getting stopped in the infield or dying at the warning track, May is primed to be even better than he was during a very underrated 2021.

BILLY EPPLER

Yes, a breakout season from their general manager should be on the Mets’ wish list.

Billy Eppler never made the postseason while running the Angels. His track record includes signing or trading for a slew of stunners (Shohei Ohtani, Anthony

Rendon and Justin Upton), but never actually accomplish­ing the goal that those players were brought in to do.

Eppler is following a startlingl­y similar path in his first months with the Mets. The big-name acquisitio­ns are already in place, but if they fail to get the Mets into the playoffs, the chorus of criticism will begin, and it will be much louder in Flushing than it was in apathetic Orange County.

Depending how the season plays out, a franchise-altering move could be necessary to get the Mets over the hump. There’s one every year, whether it was Atlanta getting their World Series MVP Jorge Soler at the trade deadline or the Mets wrangling Yoenis Cespedes six years before.

Last year, the Mets tried to spin Carlos Carrasco’s midseason return from injury as the equivalent of a dope deadline deal. That proved to be incorrect. A reinforcem­ent at the back of the rotation could be in the cards again for July 2022, the first in-season test for Eppler at his new job. The same could be said for a shrewd bullpen move here or speed and defense guy there, which could ultimately be the difference between Eppler being carried out of Citi Field on the shoulders of giants or leaving with his head on a spike.

 ?? AP PHOTOS ?? Newcomer Mark Canha has been overshadow­ed by other major offseason moves by Mets, but he and reliever Trevor May (inset) are top candidates to have breakout seasons in 2022.
AP PHOTOS Newcomer Mark Canha has been overshadow­ed by other major offseason moves by Mets, but he and reliever Trevor May (inset) are top candidates to have breakout seasons in 2022.
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