The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Prized pitchers have Mets thinking playoffs

- By Mike Fitzpatric­k

NEW YORK » From the start of spring training in Florida, their lockers were lined up all in a row at one end of the rectangula­r clubhouse.

Left to right: Matt Harvey, Noah Syndergaar­d, Jacob deGrom, Steven Matz, Zack Wheeler.

The dream rotation for the Mets — if only their health would cooperate.

More than a month later, with opening day in sight, those five prized pitchers were still feeling good and the Mets finally had a chance to roll out that entire quintet together for the very first time.

Wheeler, however, failed to do his part. After compiling an 8.10 ERA and giving up 22 hits in 10 Grapefruit League innings, he was optioned to minor league camp Saturday and will begin the season at Triple-A Las Vegas.

Seth Lugo is likely to open as the team’s No. 5 starter.

Still, four out of five ain’t bad — and Lugo has chops, too. So after hiring rookie manager Mickey Callaway and spending nearly $90 million to fill holes in free agency, New York (with fingers crossed) is counting on its homegrown power arms to lead the way this season.

“The potential speaks for itself,” new reliever Anthony Swarzak said. “It’s incredible, the stuff that’s in that rotation. It’s second to none, I think.”

Harvey, Matz and Wheeler struggled on the mound last year during their latest injury-stunted seasons, so they must rediscover the nasty stuff that looked so promising when they first arrived in the majors.

At the top of the rotation, Syndergaar­d and deGrom make for a terrific tandem that offers more certainty.

Syndergaar­d is back from a torn lat muscle that limited the hardest-throwing starter in the majors to 30 1/3 innings last season, while deGrom is coming off 15 wins and a 3.53 ERA with 239 strikeouts in 201 1/3 innings.

“All of us are All-Star capable,” Wheeler said last month.

To solidify a fragile group, general manager Sandy Alderson signed veteran lefty Jason Vargas, an 18-game winner with Kansas City in 2017. Vargas got hit by a line drive in spring training and had surgery for a broken bone in his right hand. He’ll miss some time at the beginning of the season.

On offense, slugger Yoenis Cespedes returns after playing only 81 games last season because of leg injuries. All-Star outfielder Michael Conforto, who initially targeted a May 1 return from surgery for a dislocated left shoulder, had already played center in a Grapefruit League game and appeared way ahead of schedule.

Right fielder Jay Bruce was brought back as a free agent after the Mets traded him to Cleveland last August. He joins newcomers Todd Frazier and Adrian Gonzalez in a plodding lineup that boasts power.

“This has been our theme with the Mets: If we can be healthy, we can do some damage,” lefty reliever Jerry Blevins said.

Early in camp, Callaway boldly proclaimed that if his club fails to “do something special,” the blame should fall on him.

“I think Sandy and the brass have done a great job getting this team to where we should be. Now it’s our time to take care of the rest,” Frazier said.

 ?? KATHY WILLENS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mets opening day pitcher Noah Syndergaar­d is healthy and ready to give the team an ace at the top of its rotation.
KATHY WILLENS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mets opening day pitcher Noah Syndergaar­d is healthy and ready to give the team an ace at the top of its rotation.

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