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1/5/25

2025 Draft Prospect - INF - Henry Godbout - Virginia

 


https://www.prospectslive.com/prospects-live/2024/11/1/2025-mlb-draft-top-75-collegiate-prospects?s=03  

Henry Godbout  -  INF - virginia

Prospects Live Ranking - #15

 Arguably the most proven hit tool in the ACC, Henry Godbout will look to guide Virginia to Omaha for the third consecutive season.  The bat to ball skills are incredibly appealing, with a 92% zone contact rate and a .443 BABIP.  He was one of the top hitters in the country against fastballs, ending 2024 with just a 5% whiff rate against them.  Nearly all of his extra-base hits were to his pull side (22 of 28), so I’m curious to see if he becomes more balanced in 2025.  One of the top hitters against velocity, Godbout hit .500 off pitches 92 MPH or harder with just a 3% whiff rate.  Defensively, he looks to be the everyday man at second base for Brian O’Connor while flirting with some opportunities to play shortstop over the course of next season.  Godbout displays solid range and instincts, along with proficient arm strength on the diamond.  Don't expect him to steal many bases, if any, in 2025, despite his average speed.  Overall, Godbout is one of the most polished hitters in this upcoming draft class, expect him to be a key catalyst for the Cavaliers, who have a deep lineup from top to bottom.

 

https://virginiasports.com/player/henry-godbout/ -

2024

• No. 46 on D1Baseball’s Top 50 Second Basemen as part of its Preseason Player Rankings

SUMMER 2023:

Played 20 games for the Kalamazoo Growlers of the Northwoods League … 18 of his 19 starts came at shortstop, the other at 3B … played alongside UVA teammate Anthony Stephan … batted .338 (27-for-80) with five doubles, two triples, two homers and 22 RBI … in his Growlers debut went 2-for-4 with a double and two runs scored and an RBI … had two triples in a game at the Kokomo Jackrabbits on July 21 … in the 20-10 win over over Kokomo on July 21, combined with Stephan to go 6-for-12, 2B, 2 3B, 11 RBI, 4 R, BB.

2023

• Appeared in 56 games and made 51 starts (43 2B, 8 DH) as a true freshman. Started the final 17 games at second base for UVA.

• Batted .286 (54-for-189) with 13 doubles, a triple, three home runs and 38 RBI. Was a perfect 9-for-9 in stolen base attempts.

• First collegiate hit came in his first at bat, a pinch-hit double down the left field line in UVA’s season opener against Navy (2/18).

• Led the team with 14 hit by pitches, the sixth-most in the ACC. The 14 HBPs were the tied for eighth-most in a single season in UVA history and the most by a Cavalier since Joe McCarthy was plunked 18 times in 2014.

• Two of his three homers came in a three-game stretch early in the season. Left the yard as part of a 3-for-3, 4-RBI effort against Longwood on Feb. 21 and again in the second game of a doubleheader against Columbia on Feb. 26 where he went 3-for-4 with four RBI.

• Put together three, three-hit efforts in his first six games of collegiate career.

• Came through with a game-tying 2-RBI single in the seventh inning of an eventual 7-4 win over Liberty on April 25.

• Hit his third homer of the year in a 3-for-4, 3 RBI game against Louisville on May 12.

 

https://northwoodsleague.com/kalamazoo-growlers/2023-kalamazoo-growler-henry-godbout-named-baseball-america-second-team-all-american/ -

2023 Kalamazoo Growler Henry Godbout has been named to the Second-Team All-American Team by Baseball America.

The sophomore from Virginia is now the third former Growler to get named to an All-American team this season with Cavaliers shortstop Griff O’Ferrall and Appalachian State outfielder Banks Tolley having been named last week to the ABCA/Rawlings Second-Team List.

After a freshman All-American nod and a trip to Omaha last year, Godbout continued his success with the Growlers.

Across 20 games in a K-Zoo uniform, Godbout slashed .338 (27-80)/.404/.525 while driving in 22 runs and walking (7) more than he struck out (6).

The primary Growlers shortstop collected 10 different multi-hit nights culminating in a 2-5, two triple, four RBI night in a 20-10 win over Kokomo on July 21st.

This spring, both the bat and the glove were carried back over to Charlottesville. This spring, Godbout started 51 games for the ‘Hoos slashing .372/.472/.645 clobbering nine home runs and driving in 47 RBI while again walking (29) more times than he struck out (20).

2025 Draft Prospect - SS - Clay Grady - Virginia Tech

 


https://www.prospectslive.com/prospects-live/2024/11/1/2025-mlb-draft-top-75-collegiate-prospects?s=03  

Clay Grady, SS - Virginia tech

Prospects Live Ranking - #71

A career .323 hitter for Virginia Tech, Clay Grady will look to carry his success into year three as their starting shortstop.  It’s a simple operation in the box; a short and compact swing with above-average bat speed.  Grady features above-average contact and whiff rates, along with exceptional fastball recognition, as evident by his 7% whiff rate against the pitch.  Though having only 10 collegiate extra base hits, he can work counts and reach base quite often.  The most exciting part about Grady’s game though is his defense.  He can field on the run throwing from various arm slots while playing with an elite internal clock; it’s so fun to watch.  Although Grady hit in various spots in the lineup last season, expect him to be at the top for Virginia Tech, setting the offensive tone for Garrett Michel and company this spring.

 

https://hokiesports.com/sports/baseball/roster/player/clay-grady -

2024 at Virginia Tech

 

Statistics: Played in 52 games, making 52 starts ... Batted .335 through 188 at-bats ... Registered 63 hits, three doubles, four triples, and a home run ... Scored 38 runs and totaled 20 RBIs ... Drew 18 walks and four HBPs, posting a .394 on-base percentage ... Stole seven bases on 10 attempts ... Flexed a .982 fielding percentage, committing three errors at shortstop.

 

2023 at Virginia Tech

 

Statistics: Played in 48 games, making 37 starts ... Batted .307 through 150 at-bats ... Registered 46 hits, five doubles, a triple, and four home runs ... Scored 33 runs and totaled 34 RBIs ... Drew 15 walks and five HBPs, posting a .386 on-base percentage ... Stole four bases on five attempts ... Flexed a .992 fielding percentage, committing one error at shortstop.

 

https://hokiesports.com/news/2024/02/14/six-tech-players-ranked-by-d1baseball-before-opener -

Clay Grady – No. 42 Shortstop

Filling the cleats left vacant by pro-bound shortstop Tanner Schobel, Grady rose to the occasion as the Hokies' everyday starter during his rookie 2023 season. Despite injury preventing him from making a convincing case to be named last year's ACC Defensive Player of the Year, Tech's agile freshman committed one lone error across 125 defensive chances, settling at his nearly pristine, .992 fielding percentage.

With a bat in his hands, Grady hit .307, knocking around five doubles, a triple and four home runs to yield 34 RBIs. Returning to full health in 2024, he stands to be a key piece in the Hokies' returning infield that turned 47 double plays a year ago – a tie for the third most among ACC programs.

2025 Draft Prospect - SS - Marek Houston - Wake Forest

 


https://www.prospectslive.com/prospects-live/2024/11/1/2025-mlb-draft-top-75-collegiate-prospects?s=03  

Marek Houston, SS - wake forest

Prospects Live Ranking - #21

Marek Houston was one of the standout offensive breakouts this past season, establishing himself as one of the most refined bats in the 2025 class.  As the leadoff man for Wake, Houston displays a plus eye at the plate with the ability to spray the ball to all fields.  His whiff rates dropped significantly from his freshman to sophomore season, and he posted one of the nation's top zone contact rates at 93%.  Perhaps the best aspect of his game is his defense.  Houston has a plus arm and great range for the position that will keep him at shortstop come pro ball.  Over the recent summer, he played for Bourne in the Cape Cod League, where he stood out with a .306 batting average across 27 games and earned a spot as an All-Star.  His power is below average, though with adding roughly 10 pounds of weight, expect to see a jump in the extra base hits this coming season.

 

https://godeacs.com/sports/baseball/roster/marek-houston/8070 -

Sophomore (2024)

Third Team All-ACC Selection... Appeared in 54 games with 53 starts at shortstop... Led the team with a .326 batting average... Recorded 72 hits, 39 RBIs, and eight home runs... Ranked second on the team in doubles (16)... Recorded two RBI singles against Fordham (Feb. 16) and Akron (Feb. 18) during opening weekend... Notched five hits and four RBIs in the series against Dayton (Feb. 23-25)... Hit a grand slam in the first game of the doubleheader against Binghamton (March 2)... Recorded a nine game hit streak (March 15-April 5) with six multi-hit games during that streak... Hit an RBI single as part of a four-hit performance at Liberty (March 26)... Recorded four RBIs, five hits and a home run in the series against North Carolina (March 29-31)... Tallied three hits, including a two-run home run, against UNCG (April 2)... Notched two doubles and a home run in a seven-hit series at Boston College... Recorded an 11-game hit streak (April 30-May 17) and drove in a run in five consecutive games (May 1-9)... Hit a triple and a grand slam to help earn the sweep against Clemson (May 12)... Hit a home run in back-to-back games at the ACC Tournament against Pitt (May 22) and North Carolina (May 24) to help the Demon Deacons advance to the ACC semifinals... Recorded an RBI single in the NCAA Regional against hosts East Carolina (June 1).

 

https://www.prospectslive.com/prospects-live/2024/8/27/switzs-report-recap-cape-cod-best-of-the-best-prospects -

Cape Numbers: .306/.465/.329 (.794), 2 2B, 8 RBIs, 17 Rs, 7 SB, 26 BB (22.8 BB%), 21 K

(18.4 K%)

Switz’s Notes: From the first time I watched Bourne over the summer, my eyes were glued to watching Houston in the field. He is a natural athlete on the diamond and is one of the guys who has a higher ceiling than most in the 2025 draft. This year, he was a key contributor for the Bourne franchise to make another appearance in the Cape Cod Championship game with his run-producing abilities at leadoff and stellar defense. Nightly, over the summer, Houston produced web gem-after-web gem defensive plays that showed that he can stay on the left side of the diamond for the next level. Many other talking heads will criticize his bat for the next level due to it not producing the batted ball metrics that the new-age fans and gurus want to see.  However, it isn’t as bad as this crowd wants to voice as he displayed a good feel for the zone and protects anything inside his hands (a skill many hitters over the summer seemed to lack that is desired by scouts). Further, he showed good abilities to hit to all fields and not let the Cape’s BABIP inflation dictate his hitting abilities while taking walks and not forcing a play to be made when nothing was there. To quote Aaron Rodgers, the new age fans and gurus need to “relax” regarding Houston’s bat profile because Houston has advanced intangibles that metrics cannot measure and should be alright.

When drawing up a projection on Houston, it is tough to forecast what he will become. At first, I thought he might be a glove-first dude with below-average pop that he currently shows and could build into being a Dansby Swanson-like SS. However, when watching him play and looking at his build, there is more growth left in him as he has an unorthodox build of a large upper body frame and a smaller lower half. Between working on his mechanics in rookie development to add bat speed and going to the weight room for him to add muscle, I think there's a chance he could surpass the average 15 - 20 HRs (which is upside 45 FV and fringy 50 FV grades that vary based on organization grading and modeling) that Swanson averages each year (I know that Swanson crushed over that between 2021 - 2024 but, I see that as a too small of a sample size to call Swanson a genuine 55-60 grade power guy).

2025 Draft Prospect - LHP - Zach Root - Arkansas

 


https://www.prospectslive.com/prospects-live/2024/11/7/2025-mlb-draft-top-sec-prospects-part-2  -

LHP Zach Root - Arkansas

Prospects Live Ranking: #46

Zach Root enjoyed a breakout campaign as a sophomore for the ECU Pirates in 2024, teaming up with Trey Yesavage to create a lethal 1-2 punch atop Coach Cliff Godwin’s weekend rotation. In 11 starts last season for ECU, Root went 5-2 with a 3.82 ERA with 69 strikeouts over 63.2 innings pitched. He’ll make the jump in competition to the SEC, where he’ll join an Arkansas program known for developing top-class pitching. The stocky southpaw has a bit of a funky delivery, but has elite off-speed stuff. His fastball sits in the low 90s and can get up to 97, but the changeup is elite with good command. He also has a mid-80s cutter/slider combo and an upper 70s curveball. If Arkansas can continue to help Root develop those potential plus secondaries and improve his command, Root could find himself flirting with the first round next July.

 

https://ecupirates.com/sports/baseball/roster/zach-root/12890 -

· 2024 Preseason All-AAC Team (AAC Coaches/Perfect Game)

· 2024 Top 150 Starting Pitchers - No. 54 (D1Baseball)

· No. 93 On 2024 Top 100 Sophomores List (Perfect Game)

· No. 122 Overall Prospect For 2025 MLB First Year Player Draft (Perfect Game)

· No. 23 Collegiate Prospect For 2025 MLB First Year Player Draft (D1Baseball)

· No. 1 AAC Prospect For 2025 MLB First Year Player Draft (D1Baseball)

· No. 2 AAC Prospect For 2025 MLB First Year Player Draft (Perfect Game)

· 2023 American Athletic Conference All-Freshman Team Selection

· 2023 Perfect Game Top 100 Freshmen Selection

2023: Appeared in 20 games with 13 starts ... Compiled a 3-3 record with a 5.33 earned run average and 54 strikeouts against 27 walks in 53.2 innings of work ... Limited opposing hitters to a .254 batting average ... Notched multiple strikeouts in 12 contests ... Recorded victories over George Washington (Feb. 18), Elon (March 8) and Old Dominion (April 11) ... Turned in a superb start in the NCAA Charlottesville Regional finals against No. 7 national seed at host Virginia, allowing just one earned run and five hits in 4.2 innings of work ... Combined with Trey Yesavage and Wyatt Lunsford-Shenkman to post a 3-0 shutout of Missouri State (March 17) ... Registered a career-high six strikeouts twice against Tulane (April 29 and May 28) ... Collected his first collegiate save in East Carolina’s 6-5 home win over North Carolina (Feb. 24) in front of a Clark-LeClair Stadium record crowd of 6,003 ... Produced a key three-inning relief effort in helping the Pirates to a 13-9 win over NC State (April 4) in Greenville ... 2023 Summer: Suited up for the Charlottesville Tom Sox of the Valley League ... Posted a 2-0 record with 22 strikeouts against six walks in 18.0 innings of work ... Held opposing hitters to a .239 batting average against ... Tallied 11 strikeouts per nine innings ... Notched a season-high seven strikeouts against the Culpeper Cavaliers (July 12).

 

https://www.wholehogsports.com/news/2024/jul/01/arkansas-gains-transfer-commitment-from-east-carolina-left-handed-pitcher-zach-root/ -

Zach Root, a transfer left-handed pitcher from East Carolina, announced his commitment to Arkansas baseball Monday.

Root, a rising junior, announced his decision on social media, writing, "My next chapter."

He was a leading candidate to be East Carolina’s staff ace next season before he entered the NCAA transfer portal June 5.

Root had a 6-2 record for the Pirates this past season with a 3.56 ERA in 68 1/3 innings. He had a 3.62 strikeout-to-walk ratio with 76 strikeouts against 21 walks.

On3.com rated him the No. 4 available player and the top pitcher. Baseball America rated Root the No. 10 available transfer.

Arkansas has added two of the top left-handed pitchers in the transfer portal. Baseball America rated Ohio State transfer Landon Beidelschies, who committed June 24 to the Razorbacks, the top lefty available and Root as the third best.

Root is considered to be among the top left-handers available for the 2025 MLB Draft.

Baseball America writer Peter Flaherty analyzed Root’s pitching, writing, “His changeup is a plus pitch that gets solid separation off his fastball and flashes ample fade and late tumble, while his above-average slider-especially against left-handed hitters-is long and sweepy with a bit of depth. He could be a big-time program's ‘major splash’ of this year's transfer cycle.”

Root, a native of Fort Myers, Fla., started 12 games and had 13 appearances in 2024. He limited hitters to 56 hits and a .228 batting average.

He was utilized this past season as a Saturday starter for the Pirates. Root dealt with an arm injury during the season’s second half before he returned for the postseason.

During the NCAA Greenville Regional, he pitched twice against Evansville. During the first outing he threw 75 pitches and allowed 2 runs across 5 innings, then in the regional final he threw 61 pitches and allowed 4 runs on 6 hits.

MACK -.MY Sunday Observations Report -

 

Good morning.

 

The recent signings by the Los Angeles Dodgers have caused me to wonder just how important it is the operate a baseball team below the luxury tax limits… especially if your team is making a shit load of money or your owner is richer than the soon to be installed President.

(by the way… still think the best team in history was the 1977 Dodgers)

The current Mets are becoming dominant in power bats. 3B Mark Vientos, SS Francisco Lindor, RF Juan Soto, and emerging C Francisco Alvarez are all flashing current and future home run creds. Should we wait to see if current Mets chain prospects develop into the next one?

Well, that worked for Vientos, seems to be working for Alvarez, was stalled due to an injury for Ronny Mauricio, and failed for Brett Baty. This time last year, we thought Jett Williams, Drew Gilbert, Alex Ramirez, and Ryan Clifford would be banging down the CitiField doors this spring. How’s that working out?

Is it wrong… IF you can afford to do it… to look to the future at players like 1B Vladimir Guerrero Jr., 3B Alex Bregman, 3B Nolan Arenado, 2B Ozzie Albies (2026 FA… team opt), DH Joc Pederson (2026 FA), and DH Kyle Schwarber (2026 FA)?

And what about the prospects in the chain? Do you stop targeting future bat growth? Absolutely not. But all the hits in the world at the AAA level “don’t mean squat” if you can’t do the same in the majors.

I strongly am in favor of continuing to go down the current Stearns/Steve plan of bring in a major bat a year… Soto this year… Vlad Jr. next year… and so on. Keep building this team on prime beef and let a prospect or two shock you along the way.

 


Starter pitching remains another animal. No team is going to trade their ace. Hell, forget their SP2 also. And it seems like every team is in during free agent time when that handful of top shelf starters become available. Both the sensible and economical thing is to draft your brains off in this category.

You have to develop your own starters to accomplish building a decent rotation. So far, the Mets have done well with David Peterson. It looks like Christian Scott will develop as well. Future pieces could be any combination of Brandon Sproat, Jonah Tong, and Nolan McLean. Longshots are Jonathan Pintaro, Douglas Orellana, and Jack Wenniger. Considering they have both Kodai Senga and Sean Manaea under extended contracts, the Mets rotation may not be in bad shape during the remainder of this decade.

We get excited about prospect pitchers, but let’s remember last year at this time we were excited about Dom Hamel, Mike Vasil, and (especially me) Blade Tidwell.

Baseball Ga Ga.

 


This is the time of the year that people do resolutions and predictions. I stopped doing each year ago. I will give my overall observations on how the Mets have done during the off season when the signing is done. Right now, if no one else is signed, it’s going to be hard to say the Mets did bad due to the Soto signing.

MetsTwitter has been harsh to Stearns-Cohen. It may even have chased away my friend Steve from X. His site remains down without explanation. I will miss him there.

Fans are weird. They seem to always forget that it takes two to tango. For all we know, there are 10 decent offers on the tables of 10 free agents out there and all this is being held up by these player’s agents. There are no more leaks from Queens so we all have to wait this out until spring training starts. If you don’t like it, go watch soccer.

 


Ben Weinrib of MLB.com wrote a story on 12-30-24 about 18 exciting prospects set for full-season debuts in 2025. One was a Met:

                                        Jeremy Rodriguez, SS/2B, Mets

Rodriguez has an unusually high floor for a Rookie-ball player thanks to his defensive instincts, plate discipline and bat-to-ball skills. The Mets have played him some at second base so his defensive home is worth monitoring as well as his power, which has mostly manifested in the form of doubles to this point.

NYM No. 7 - Scouting grades: Hit: 55 | Power: 45 | Run: 50 | Arm: 55 | Field: 50 | Overall: 50

Rodriguez was the D-backs’ biggest international addition in 2023, signing with the club for $1.25 million out of the Dominican Republic in January. He didn’t last long in the organization after a strong walk rate and OBP in the Dominican Summer League caught the Mets’ eye, and New York acquired him in a one-for-one swap for Major League outfielder Tommy Pham at the Trade Deadline. Rodriguez went 19-for-45 (.422) with eight extra-base hits, 11 walks and four strikeouts in 13 games for a Mets’ DSL affiliate after the move, further solidifying his status as a prospect to watch in his new organization.

Batting from the left side, Rodriguez was nearly stellar at protecting the plate in his first professional season, especially considering he didn't turn 17 until July. His 1.06 BB/K ratio ranked third among the 15 qualified DSL players playing in their age-16 seasons in '23. With only three of his 18 extra-base hits leaving the yard, his power plays best to the gaps, but it was always likely he’d need some time to get the pop to play in games.

The 6-foot infielder boasts above-average arm strength needed for long throws from shortstop, and while he’s just an average runner, he has the hands and footwork to keep getting work at the six. Notably, the Mets got him some looks at second base to keep his athleticism up the middle. Rodriguez will take his advanced approach stateside with plenty of development still to come.

 

Ernest Dove                 @ernestdove

18 year old Jeremy Rodriguez could become the "poster child" for player development under Stearns. Kid has already gotten reps/ABs stateside now & is ahead of the curve. Good enough BB/K rates so far. I've seen concerns with his glove so future pos like a Jett type is to be found

Mets News and Links 

@JohnFromAlbany

Jeremy Rodriguez has to be the Mets prospect to watch in 2025 as he will start the year in St. Lucie and may even see a call up to Brooklyn. He was heavily hyped after being traded from Arizona hitting .282/.355/.400 in 50 FCL Mets games in 2025. I want to see him in the field to see if he can be a future SS.

 

It will be interesting to see what position the Mets play him at in St. Lucie. He would showcase better as trade bait if they played him at short, but he would have a future as a Met (ETA: 2027) as a second baseman.

 


One prospect to watch for each team in 2025 - December 29th, 2024

https://www.mlb.com/news/mlb-prospects-to-watch-in-2025?partnerID=web_article-share

Mets: RHP Brandon Sproat

Plenty of questions remain regarding Sproat’s ability to develop into a true frontline starter, yet he also has the best chance of anyone in New York’s system to make a significant midsummer impact. Just a step away from the big leagues, Sproat, New York’s top prospect, must first master the Triple-A level. But if he gets off to a nice start, it wouldn’t be shocking to see him debut early in the season, as fellow prospect Christian Scott did last year. With a triple-digit fastball, Sproat boasts an even higher ceiling than Scott, as evidenced by his No. 40 ranking on MLB Pipeline’s Top Prospects list. At the highest level, he’ll need to be a pitcher not a thrower, which makes Sproat’s early-season development crucial to his chances. -- Anthony DiComo

 

I happen to think that Jonah Tong is the top Mets pitching prospect, but Sproat is a close second. One caveat… he did hit the wall when he was promoted to Syracuse. AAA is the introduction to old major league players that can still hit a pitch or two. Like many other pitchers in the past (Hamel, Vasil, etc.), let’s just say that Sproat had a hard time finding something positive in that brutal weather city.

His job in 2025 is simple. Steer the boat correctly and get back to producing stat lines like he did at the other levels he pitched in. If he does that, you could see him in Queens sooner than later.

 

Each team's breakout player for 2025 - December 30th, 2024

https://www.mlb.com/news/2025-mlb-breakout-players-for-every-team?partnerID=web_article-share

Mets: C Francisco Alvarez

Now that Mark Vientos has broken out, the Mets can hope for the same from his younger teammate, Alvarez. Entering his age-23 season, Alvarez has struggled to find consistency at the plate, and he dropped from 25 homers as a rookie to just 11 last season. But Alvarez improved his batting average and on-base percentage in Year 2, as well as his throwing arm behind the plate. He now has 228 games of experience at the game’s highest level and is at an age when players tend to break out. Often lauded for his work ethic, Alvarez still has a chance to be one of the game’s top offensive catchers. -- Anthony DiComo 

First of all, no one wants to see this “kid” play better this season than I do. That being said, he’s going to have to do a lot of things different in 2025 than he did in 2024.

First, stop worrying about the home runs here. There are plenty of other players on this team that can lead the way in that category. Just find a way to even out your game and produce productive batting results month after month.

As for defense, I don’t know what to do about his lack of being able to throw out runners at second. Let’s face it… opponent teams don’t attempt steals with their slower runners. It’s always the speed guys and Alvarez’ arm just isn’t strong enough.

Lastly, I think Alvy is an IL man walking. No proof or science or analytical study here. Just my gut. 

Lastly…

 


Prospect1500 - New York Mets Top 50 Prospects (2025)

Prospects1500 Tiers:

Tier 1: Players with high expectations of both making the majors and playing at an All-Star level for a number of years

Tier 2: Players with an above-average expectation of making the majors and being a solid contributor

Tier 3: Players with an average expectation of making the majors and being a solid contributor

Tier 4: Players who have the potential to make the majors; possible sleeper candidates for sustained MLB success

Tier 5: Players of interest, worth keeping an eye on, who may make (or have made) the majors but provide minimal impact

 

Levels listed for each player are the highest levels player reached in 2024

 

Tier 1

None                            

Tier 2

1. Jett Williams, SS, 21, Triple-A

2. Brandon Sproat, RHP, 24, Triple-A

3. Drew Gilbert, OF, 24, Triple-A

4. Luisangel Acuña, SS/OF, 22, MLB

Tier 3

5. Ronny Mauricio, SS/OF, 23, Injured (MLB in 2023)

6. Ryan Clifford, 1B/OF, 21, Double-A

7. Carson Benge, OF, 21, Single-A

8. Jonah Tong, RHP, 21, Double-A

9. Jesus Baez, SS/2B, 19, High-A

10. Blade Tidwell, RHP, 23, Triple-A

Tier 4

11. Jeremy Rodriguez, SS, 18, Rookie (FCL)

12. Nolan McLean, RHP/DH, 23, Double-A

13. Nick Morabito, OF, 21, High-A

14. Colin Houck, SS/3B, 20, Single-A

15. Alex Ramírez, OF, 21, Double-A

16. Boston Baro, 3B/SS, 20, High-A

17. Yovanny Rodriguez, C, 18, Rookie (DSL)

18. Kevin Parada, C, 23, Double-A

19. Marco Vargas, SS, 19, Single-A

20. Jonathan Santucci, LHP/DH, 22, College

Tier 5

21. Felipe De La Cruz, LHP, 23, High-A

22. Dom Hamel, RHP, 25, Triple-A

23. Trey Snyder, SS, 19, Single-A

24. Jacob Reimer, 3B, 20, High-A

25. Jeffry Rosa, OF, 20, Single-A

26. Edward Lantigua, OF, 18, Rookie (DSL)

27. Calvin Ziegler, RHP, 22, High-A

28. Nick Lorusso, 1B, 24, Double-A

29. Daiverson Gutierrez, C, 19, Single-A

30. Christopher Suero, C, 20, High-A

31. Nate Dohm, RHP, 21, College

32. A.J. Ewing, OF/2B, 20, Single-A

33. Joander Suarez, RHP, 24, Triple-A

34. Ronald Hernandez, C/1B, 21, High-A

35. Eduardo Herrera, RHP, 24, Double-A

36. Wellington Aracena, RHP, 20, Single-A

37. Franklin Gomez, LHP, 19, Single-A

38. Bryce Montes de Oca, RHP, 28, Triple-A

39. Trey McLoughlin, RHP, 25, Triple-A

40. JT Schwartz, 1B, 25, Triple-A

41. Eli Serrano III, OF, 21, Single-A

42. Douglas Orellana, RHP, 22, High-A

43. Joel Díaz, RHP, 20, Single-A

44. Jack Wenninger, RHP, 22, High-A

45. Julio Zayas, C, 18, Rookie (FCL)

46. Raimon Gomez, RHP, 23, High-A

47. Brett Banks, RHP, 23, High-A

48. Jose Guevara, RHP, 19, Rookie (DSL)

49. Simon Juan, OF, 19, Rookie (FCL)

50. Jefrey De Los Santos, 2B/OF, 21, High-A

Me?

I agree there are no top tier prospects

I believe both Tong and Benge should be ranked above Clifford and Gilbert.

Having Orellana and Wenninger this low is close to criminal.

1/4/25

Reese Kaplan -- Who's on First AND Who's on Third?


With all of the back and forth regarding Pete Alonso and his lack of an active market for his services as a slugger, a few things have become clear.  The obstacle in the negotiations appears more to be about total money as it aggregates over the greatest number of years. 

As a refresher, remember that the Mets offered Alonso initially 7 years for $158 million which works out to an AAV of $22.5 million which for a guy who’s had three straight years of offensive decline is seemingly a reasonable number.  He turned it down.

Then came the newer number first revealed by Carlos Baerga.  In this proposed offer the number would be 3 years at $90 million with opt outs after each season.  The AAV jumps all the way up to $30 million which would make him the highest paid 1st baseman in the game but the total drops by $68 million.  In addition, they are two-way opt outs so it could be as little as a single year commitment of $30 million if Alonso tanks in 2025.  He turned that one down as well.

Reports surfaced in media that the latest stretch is 4 years and $108 million.  That is an AAV of $27 million.  On the plus side it is $4.5 million per year more than he would have gotten if he’d taken the initial offer but it still falls $50 million short of that previous contract total.  Word is that Alonso and his agent Scott Boras don’t like this approach either.


It’s fairly clear from the Mets front office perspective what is going on.  They don’t want to tie up so much money into one player for another hyper length contract after just doing so with the much younger and more productive Juan Soto.  Towards that end Stearns and Cohen likely feel they are in the driver’s seat which would force Alonso to swallow hard and take what’s offered or go find work with another ball club.

The unanswered questions to ponder during this soap opera of will he or won’t he is what the Mets do for an infield configuration at the corners.  It seems that there are 7 obvious configurations up in the air: 

Alonso at 1B, Vientos at 3B

Well, the same old, same old got them within 2 games of the World Series last year and no one could really squawk if there is a repeat of the corners for 2025 which now includes Juan Soto in the lineup. 

Vientos at 1B, Bregman at 3B

This argument is an interesting one because Vientos has extremely limited experience as a first baseman.  Bregman is a Gold Glove quality corner man at third base.  The issue here is the money Bregman wants.  Like Pete Alonso, in his mind he’s looking for his last contract of a long term totally over $200 million.  Like Pete Alonso, it certainly appears he will not get it.  Bregman is in the latter part of his career and his numbers have declined since his prime.  Figure with better protection he’d be booked for about 25 HRs and 90 RBIs to go with his glove.  That’s good, but not quite at the magnitude of Pete Alonso and for argument’s sake the same money.

Vientos at 1B, Arenado at 3B

This one is also interesting in the same way given Arenado’s superior defensive skills that accompany a top level bat.  His welcome in St. Louis appears to have vanished and they are currently on the hook for the remainder of his contract from 2025 through 2027 for a total of $74 million.  

While this number is certainly lower than the 3 years and $90 million offered to Alonso, it’s not chicken feed and you’re looking at a guy playing during his age 34, 35 and 36 seasons.  Also you need to either have the Cardinals pay down significantly on this contract to make a trade happen AND you need to give up most likely minor league resources in your upper echelon to make it happen.  

Arenado’s numbers have slumped a bit but still figure 28 HRs and 95 RBIs with a .285 average to go with a career metric of ten straight years with a Gold Glove is certainly more than respectable.  The less money the Cardinals put into a salary buydown the lesser the value of the trade prospects.

Vientos at 1B, Mauricio at 3B

Remember Ronny Mauricio?  Yes, he has power.  He has speed.  Theoretically now he once again has health.  It had appeared he’d be fighting Brett Baty to play third base when people looked ahead to the 2024 season but the injury happened and now has a missing season on his baseball card.  At his best in the minors Mauricio is indeed interesting with as many as 26 HRs in a season and as many as 24 SBs.  He did it at a .268 minor league career batting average.  Think of him as a speedier version of Eduardo Escobar.  Mauricio is good but not great and still unproven in the majors.

Vientos at 1B, Acuna at 3B

Ah, now here is a very interesting option.  If Jeff McNeil is still around then he owns second base and Francisco Lindor owns shortstop.  Acuna at 3rd base is not exactly the model most teams have for a corner man, but he’s shown the ability in the minors and now as a finalist for a Winter League MVP award that he can hit for average, show better power than you would anticipate from someone of his more petite size and can run like the wind.  While he is probably more well suited long term for second base, right now it’s third that may need filling and a 15 HR/40 steals guy who can hit over .280 is interesting indeed.

Vientos at 1B, Baty at 3B

Ah, you knew this one was coming.  Brett Baty has tanked in each of his major league playing opportunities, but extrapolate his home run display from 2024 to a full season’s worth and he’d be somewhere between a total of 35 and 40.  

The question is has he finally figured out the long ball swing at the expense of batting average?  Has his defense gotten any better as what he’s shown at Citifield thus far is shudder-worthy.  This option might actually have more merit than some of the others as it gives the Mets one last chance to have Baty show 29 other teams what he’s capable of doing.  At best they keep him around.  In the middle if he has a nice start he becomes a midseason trade option.  At worst he’s a non-tender candidate at year’s end. 

New acquisition at 1B, Vientos at 3B

Not much attention has been paid to alternative first basemen out there now that most of the top picks have already secured new employment.  The free agent market is pretty slim with Justin Turner, Connor Joe, Donovan Solano, Anthony Rizzo and Joey Gallo heading up the small prizes still available in the cereal box.  A trade is of course possible but if there’s any merit to a 2026 pursuit of soon-to-be free agent Vlad Guerrero, Jr. then why would they want to lock themselves into someone with a longer term future? 


So what do you think?  After all the brouhaha over these Alonso negotiations what do you think is the mostly likely scenario for the 2025 corners?

1/3/25

Reese Kaplan -- Is 2025's Team Better or Worse Than 2024's?


Having spent way too much time watching Youtube videos of the Mets moments in history during the year end holiday it got me to thinking about the team that came within two games of the World Series in 2024 and how it compares to the one thus far constructed to compete in 2025.  Let’s have a look.

Catchers

  • Francisco Alvarez
  • Luis Torrens

Infielders

  • Pete Alonso
  • Jeff McNeil
  • Jose Iglesias
  • Francisco Lindor
  • Luisangel Acuna
  • Mark Vientos

Outfielders

  • Brandon Nimmo
  • Harrison Bader
  • Starling Marte
  • Tyrone Taylor
  • Jesse Winker

Designated Hitter

  • J.D. Martinez

Starting Pitchers

  • Kodai Senga (injured for virtually the entire season)
  • Sean Manaea
  • Luis Severino
  • Jose Quintana
  • David Peterson

Relief Pitchers

  • Edwin Diaz
  • Ryne Stanek
  • Phil Maton
  • Jose Butto
  • Reed Garrett
  • Tylor Megill
  • Danny Young
  • Adam Ottavino (left off playoff roster)

Now let’s take a look at the 2025 squad everyone is thus far banking on to make up those two games they fell short in 2024:

Catchers

  • Francisco Alvarez
  • Luis Torrens

Infielders

  • Francisco Lindor
  • Mark Vientos
  • Jeff McNeil
  • Luisangel Acuna

Outfielders

  • Juan Soto
  • Brandon Nimmo
  • Tyrone Taylor
  • Jose Siri (injured)

Designated Hitter

  • Starling Marte

Starting Pitchers

  • Kodai Senga
  • Sean Manaea
  • David Peterson
  • Frankie Montas
  • Clay Holmes
Relief Pitchers
  • Edwin Diaz
  • Jose Butto
  • Tylor Megill
  • Dedniel Nunez
  • Reed Garrett
  • Sean Reid-Foley (injured)
  • Dylan Covey
  • Griffin Canning

Ummm...other than the addition of Juan Soto which is, of course, a huge one, there seems to be an awful lot missing with Spring Training starting next month.  The glaring vacancies are in the infield, the outfield, DH and the bullpen.  We’ll address comments about each of them in a bit, but first let’s look at the starting rotation.

Now, going into 2024 no one knew what to make of David Stearns’ reclamation project heavy rotation with Manaea not showing brilliance and Luis Severino not showing health nor competence.  Holdover Jose Quintana was a known commodity to give you better numbers than Severino, Kodai Senga was injured and out of all by a handful of innings for the entire year and David Peterson was an unknown coming back from surgery on his hip.

Much to everyone’s surprise, these less-than-spectacular moves worked.  Yes, there were innings given to the likes of Adrian Houser and others no longer in the picture, but somehow Carlos Mendoza and Jeremy Hefner got more out of this ragtag bunch than could have been expected.

The problem is that in this offseason Stearns has pretty much gone the same route, first by offering up Frankie Montas as the new Luis Severino.  Well, on a career basis, he has had injuries and never posted the eye popping numbers the team needs.  Even more surprising is how much he is being paid in the hopes that the on-the-field staff and the pitching lab can help push hm into a more competitive direction.

David Peterson was clearly the best pitcher in the rotation in 2024, finishing with an ERA of just 2.90.  The problem is people think this level of performance was not a fluke but instead a new standard to expect in the coming 2025 season.  Everyone hopes it could be yet at the same time it may not be realistic to write it in stone.  

Rumblings exist that the Mets might try to sell high on Peterson and transfer the risk to another team as a part of a trade to help them in other places.  Surely you would get a whole lot more for Peterson than you would for Megill.

The wildcard in the mix for 2025 is not as much Kodai Senga’s return to dominance which is more probable if he is indeed fully healthy and playing regularly, nor is it Sean Manaea’s rebirth in the second half of the year.  He got his money and now must show it was not merely an extended hot streak.

No, the one area that no one can rightly predict is the conversion of star reliever Clay Holmes from the bullpen where he was rock solid for the Yankees to the starting rotation now that he’s hit his mid career stride.  

The Mets failed to make this effort on Seth Lugo so they are hoping that Holmes’ more dominant stuff can push him into an even higher performance level than the man who got away.

Going into the bullpen is a bit unsettling as the names there are, well, unsettled.  Both Nunez and Reid-Foley are recovering from injuries.  We know what Diaz, Butto and Garrett can do.  We’re not quite so sure about Covey, Canning and Megill if they are all slated to spend time supporting the starters.

Now the outfield is frankly a mess.  Soto is a star, no question about that, but Nimmo is coming off his worst MLB season in terms of batting average.  Tyrone Taylor and Jose Siri are 4th outfielders at best.  

It would seem that the possibility exists for Jeff McNeil or Starling Marte to take the field in left with Nimmo going back to center.  That’s not exactly an awe inspiring group of guys behind the infield.

On that note, let me remind you that the 2025 squad is missing a guy named Pete Alonso and another guy named Jose Iglesias.  Granted, the Mets have some infielders in the system.  I’ve already penciled in Acuna for a spot to replace Iglesias.  Then there are the futures of slumping Brett Baty and lost-in-2024 Ronny Mauricio.

Finally we come to DH.  Everyone was happy to see Steve Cohen spend for professional hitter J.D. Martinez who delivered a “meh” kind of season, often relegated to platoon with Jesse Winker taking the other half.  Neither of those guys are here anymore and somehow few would expect Starling Marte in his final contract year to post numbers even equal to the ho-hum total the team got from the DH slot in 2024.

Any way you slice it, the club has a lot of holes to fill and while there is still about 6 weeks before pitchers and catchers report, the fact is that there are 29 other teams also looking to shore up their rosters as well.  That means the available free agent pool is getting rather empty in many places and trades may need to be engaged to improve the team from where it was with its roster as last season ended.  Right now even with Soto it appears weaker.