Whenever something goes wrong with Aaron Heilman, Mets fans don’t like the scared look on his face.  Fans don’t like that he gave up the home run to Yadier Molina in the 2006 NLCS, and they don’t appreciate his mostly poor showings this year that have involved way too many home runs. 

I’m probably the last guy left that does, but somehow and for some reason I believe in Aaron Heilman and I’ll try to defend him here.  For some Heilman hate, read Rob Harding’s piece here on Hot Foot

First of all, Heilman has been over worked this season.  He’s thrown the third most games of any NL reliever.  Consistently getting worked so hard year after year has to take a toll on a player.  Manuel has to do a better job resting his relievers, probably by letting starters go a little deeper in games.  While Heilman’s imploded a few too many times and lost a few too many games for the team, much of it has just been bad timing combined with a heavy work load. 

We also tend to look for Heilman to be the scape goat for our general bullpen issues.  We never liked him from the beginning, as we expected him to be a top part of the rotation starter and after some failure (and some success) he was converted into a reliever.  We’ve never liked him because he gave up that home run to Molina, or because he always has a deer-in-headlights look on the mound.  But let’s take a look at our bullpen statistics in the month of July:

  • In 16 innings, Heilman had a 4.41 ERA while striking out 21. 
  • In 11.2 innings, Duaner Sanchez had a 3.86 ERA while striking out nine. 
  • Joe Smith had a 5.25 ERA in 12 innings while striking out six. 
  • Scott Schoeneweis had a 3.00 ERA in nine innings while striking out ten.   

Well, Duaner clearly cannot close because of his noted velocity issues lately.  Even though his numbers seemingly look good, it’s tough for his off speed pitches to look good when his fastball is barely scraping 86 MPH. 

Last month, Smith was worse than Heilman.  Plus, as a reliever Smith is really a role player.  While righties hit a meager .235 off of him in his career, lefties lick their chops against him with a .292 batting average career.  Smith also lacks the K-factor: the ability to strike people out.  Late in games and in many crucial spots, strikeouts are needed to calm the situation. 

Similar to Smith, Schoeneweis and Feliciano are really only specialists.  In general, they are much better vs. lefties.  Their pitching to righties shouldn’t be strictly forbidden, but they definitely should do so as minimally as possible. 

Sure, there are Eddie Kunz and Ruddy Lugo, but are we really ready to throw Kunz into the fire already?   

I’m not writing this trying to convince  you that Heilman should be our closer while Billy Wagner is out, because that is clearly illogical.  However, the “Never-pitch-Heilman-again-because-he-sucks-and-looks-grumpy-all-the-time” bandwagon is becoming too popular and I can’t resist disagreeing and thinking that he’s the scape goat for all of the bullpen’s struggles lately.   

Heilman has the ability to consistently strike hitters out, which others in the bullpen lack.  He should also be put carefully into situations, because this season lefties have hit extremely well against him (although that hasn’t been true most of his career).  For now, the Mets should treat the ninth inning just like any other inning where we use relievers, like the 6th, 7th and 8th.  Manuel should play the match ups and go with whichever reliever is right for the situation.  But don’t blindly hate on Heilman, please - he’s serviced us well for a while, he has earned some patience.