Wednesday, July 31 Updated: August 1, 5:35 PM ET Thomson takes D'Amico's spot in Mets' rotation Associated Press |
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NEW YORK -- The New York Mets bolstered their pitching staff, acquiring starter John Thomson from Colorado and reliever Steve Reed from San Diego in a pair of deals before Wednesday's non-waiver deadline. The Mets got Thomson and outfielder Mark Little from the Rockies for outfielder Jay Payton, right-hander Mark Corey and minor league outfielder Robert Stratton. "I'm surprised we got a starter,'' Mets general manager Steve Phillips said. "I wasn't very confident we would. Thomson is one of the guys we had identified that if the price was right we thought he would help us. But we weren't sure the price would be right.''
Earlier Wednesday, the Mets acquired Reed and righty Jason Middlebrook from San Diego for lefty Bobby M. Jones, right-hander Josh Reynolds and outfielder Jay Bay. "We've addressed our pitching needs,'' Phillips said. "Steve Reed is not the sexiest name out there among the relief corps, but he's probably the guy pitching the best.'' Reed went 2-4 with a 1.98 ERA in 40 relief appearances for San Diego this season, holding opponents to a .228 batting average. Thomson will replace the struggling Jeff D'Amico in New York's rotation as the Mets try to make a playoff run. New York began the day 4½ games behind San Francisco and Los Angeles in the NL wild card race and was looking for a more consistent starter than D'Amico. D'Amico allowed five runs in three innings of a 16-3 loss to Houston on Tuesday night. After spending parts of the past five seasons on the disabled list, D'Amico is finally healthy but he has struggled, going 5-9 with a 5.09 ERA. "I've never felt this good and pitched this bad,'' he said. "Everything feels great. I'm just not getting the job done out there.'' Thomson has also pitched poorly of late, going 1-6 with a 5.74 ERA in his past 11 starts. He was 7-8 with a 4.88 ERA for Colorado but should benefit from a move from hitter-friendly Coors Field. "He's done a good job in a tough park this year,'' Mets manager Bobby Valentine said. Thomson admitted that a few years ago he thought there wasn't enough money that would make playing in New York worth it. But he is looking forward to joining a playoff race after languishing in Colorado. "I haven't been in this situation before,'' Thomson said. "It's something I'm looking forward to. I think I'm going to like it.'' Payton, once a top prospect for the Mets, overcame a slew of injuries early in his career and is hitting .284 with eight homers and 31 RBI this season. Payton has been especially hot of late with a .365 average his last 18 games. "It's going to be a good situation for me,'' said Payton, who is 8-for-13 in his career at Coors. "Some of those flyball outs to the warning track at Shea might go for round trippers. That won't be a bad thing.'' The Rockies also sent outfielder Todd Hollandsworth and left-hander Dennys Reyes to Texas for Kapler and infield-outfield prospect Jason Romano. "Payton could really help us with his bat in our ballpark,'' Colorado manager Clint Hurdle said. "Our most glaring problem has been offensive. Hopefully, we'll find some more firepower.'' Corey was 0-3 with a 4.50 ERA in 12 relief appearances for the Mets this season. He also had a seizure on June 26 shortly after smoking marijuana. Little will provide outfield depth for the Mets. He batted .200 with no homers and five RBI in 105 at-bats for the Rockies this season. The Mets activated infielder Joe McEwing from the 15-day disabled list and recalled lefty Mike Bacsik from Triple-A Norfolk before the game. They also transferred pitchers John Franco and Kane Davis to the 60-day disabled list and recalled first baseman-outfielder Jorge Toca from Norfolk to put him on the 60-day DL.
Bacsik was optioned back to Norfolk after the game, along with reliever Satoru Komiyama and infielder Marco Scutaro. |
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