New York Daily News

Top prospect Alvarez to Triple-A

- BY DEESHA THOSAR

The Mets’ No. 1 prospect is ready to make his next big leap.

Francisco Alvarez has been told that he will be promoted to Triple-A Syracuse today, a source with knowledge of the organizati­on’s decision confirmed to the News.

Alvarez, 20, entered Sunday slashing .277/.368/.553 with 18 home runs, 47 RBI, 36 walks and 16 doubles in 67 games with Double-A Binghamton. The 5-foot-10, 233-pound catcher has a stocky, powerful frame that was built to mash home runs. Alvarez has crushed 14 dingers over his last 141 plate appearance­s.

Getting a promotion to the uppermost echelon of the minor leagues is a big deal no matter the situation. But for Alvarez, his advancemen­t will carry extra weight as it relates to his short-term future.

Alvarez, the best power hitter in the organizati­on behind only Pete Alonso, has the opportunit­y to make a difference for the Mets as soon as this season. If he can continue crushing baseballs at Triple-A at even close to the same rate as he’s been doing it at Double-A, Alvarez will have forced the Mets’ hand for the ultimate promotion to The Show.

Even so, the Mets wouldn’t call up Alvarez until the end of the season as the club does not want to mess with his developmen­t behind the plate. Despite the compliment­s Alvarez received from Max Scherzer, who threw to him last Wednesday in a rehab start for Binghamton, the catcher still has a lot of work to do as a defensive catcher and the Mets don’t want a promotion to designated hitter for the big-league team getting in the way of that.

“The statistica­l stuff takes care of itself,” Buck Showalter said. “That’s easy. It’s the other stuff that’s really a difference-maker.”

Showalter said when he calls a minor-league manager and asks about a player, he is interested in two things: the player’s defense, and his impact on teammates. Showalter believes those are the elements, one even an intangible, that will set a player up for long-term success.

When shortstop Manny Machado was called up to the Orioles, then-Baltimore manager Showalter said he wasn’t worried about his slow offensive start. Going from Triple-A to the majors is the biggest jump in profession­al sports, and it’s difficult to predict how any given player will handle that leap, offensivel­y. What Showalter was more interested in was how well Machado could play defense.

“We knew he was going to be an excellent defender while he figured out the offensive part of it, which is exactly what happened,” Showalter said of Machado. “He impacted us defensivel­y while he figured out the pitching difference. When you start bringing up guys like that, they have to be good defenders.”

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