Good morning.
We start this morning with one of my favorite subjects… Tylor Megill.
Tylor continued his strong spring season by tossing four strong innings on
Tuesday, giving up only two hits and one walk, while striking out five (60
pitches). That makes his current spring stats 6.2 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 2 BB, 7 K. His fastball
has already been up to 98 mph. And his ERA/WHIP stands at 1.35/0.90.
Sometimes, there seems to be around 100 starters this spring trying to
make the Mets rotation. The fact is Kodai Senga has a slot until he loses it, David Peterson is a lock, and Clay Holmes couldn’t pitch better than he has since this competition
started. In my book, that leaves Megill fighting it out with Griffin Canning for the fifth slot, unless they will go with both under a
six-man rotation.
As for Max Kranick, he’s
one of my long men in the pen.
Odd man out is Phil Blackburn who really has done very little this spring to make a case
for him.
(so then he goes out and throws four freaking perfect innings...)
The good news here is there is nothing wrong with six starters all with an
ERA under 2.00.
But…
The true test is when Spring Training goes into the second stage and these
pitchers throw against their opponents starting lineup. Megill basically did on
Tuesday, which made this outing as special as it is.
The other subject I want to take about falls under a “good news/bad news”
category.
I know one of my dedicated readers isn’t going to like this.
The good news here is great news… the starting lineup of the 2025 Mets is
not only one of the strongest in baseball, but, on paper, seems to guarantee at
the least, a playoff spot. But. In my opinion, the bad news is the “second
string” on this team seems to have a talent level that would only qualify them
as “third string”.
And, adding to misery here is only Brett Baty seems to be both talented and ready to make the jump to the
major league level.
There are multiple Top 100 Prospect lists out there that show either
three, or, in the case MLB Pipeline put out this week, only two Mets prospects
in the Top 100. There are 30 clubs, which means the average amount of prospects
per team fall in the range of 3.3. Having only two, plus having the two that
are currently recognized as below the AAA level, is, in the words of my wife’s
cousin, Joey Bubotz, “not fuckin good”.
My theory is that this problem is shared by teams that spend a ton of
money building their primary roster. Many of those teams have had to trade off
key prospects to get these power starters and thus limit the growth from
within.
Other teams have had limited success in the draft process, and hurting
from injuries at that level, or are currently going through a prospect dry spell.
The Mets may fall into a combination of these issues.
Don’t get me wrong… Pete Alonso, Jeff McNeil, Francisco Alvarez, and Mark Vientos are all successful draft signs. And Baty looks like he will be the fifth bat to currently come out of this process.
(ya know, trading Baty for a starter chip and signing that Candilita guy for two years would have worked well here too,)
But, I’m just sayin…
MetCast @MetCastPod
the New
York Mets come in as MLB’s number two overall lineup in 2025
Pitch
Profiler @pitchprofiler
Danny Young showed out in a big way, mixing a heavy sinker with a nasty sweeper and
sprinkling in the cutter and slider!
The lefty
kept hitters guessing and looked like a real bullpen weapon for the Mets.
There
isn’t too much to say about the changeup (CH) honestly
It had 14
IVB / 15.5 HB at 84.7 mph in 2024
In 2025
he’s added more ride and velo while shaving some HB off
It’s not
a shape that traditionally sees success, but
@pitchprofiler's
model likes it!
Good lord that is a SWEEPER
Thomas
Nestico @TJStats
A.J. Minter made his Mets debut today!
His
cutter looked strong but his velocity is not back up to his 2024 levels yet.
Minter will be a key piece of the Mets bullpen this season, and he has the
stuff to excel!
Ben Joyce hit 103.6 MPH today.
Lol
How many times did I say that the Mets should have drafted him in the first round that year?
The Athletic Mailbag –
Why was Clay Holmes converted to starting pitcher while José
Buttó went to the bullpen? What do they see differently in these two? — Alfred
P.
Tim: As
Will wrote back at the time, the Mets liked what they saw at the end of last
season from Holmes when he started throwing a four-seamer and changeup. Combine
that with the quality of his sinker and sweeper, and they think he can run
through a lineup multiple times. (I don’t think it hurts that the contract for
Holmes was reasonable enough that, should the starting thing not pan out, he
wouldn’t be especially overpaid as Edwin Díaz’s set-up man.)
There are
a few things that stand out with Buttó’s shift to the pen. First, I don’t think
the Mets are closed off to him ever starting again. At the start of the
offseason, the plan was for Buttó to stretch out and come to camp as a starter,
even if it was likely he would end up in the pen. Second, given the shape of
their rotation, the Mets are especially eager to have multiple multi-inning
relievers in their bullpen — a job Buttó excelled in last year. And third,
while Buttó’s primary results as a starter last season were solid, his walk
rate was concerning. Only four pitchers who started as many games as Buttó had
a higher walk rate than his 13.5 percent last season. You can get by as a
reliever walking more than 12 percent of opposing hitters in a way you can’t as
a starter.
Mathew
Brownstein @MBrownstein89
Clay Holmes's whiff% on his kick-change this spring is 53.3 percent (15 swings; 8 misses).
https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6192476/2025/03/11/new-york-mets-breakout-prospects-2025/?onboarded=true
(sub needed)
Eli Serrano, OF
Highest
level reached in 2024: Low A
In their
first meeting with Serrano after plucking him in the fourth round of last
year’s amateur draft, members of the Mets brass asked him why he thought he
slipped to them.
Serrano
essentially told the group, “I hit the ball on the ground too much, and I’m not
strong enough.”
It was
the right answer.
Since
then, Serrano quickly got to work.
Under the
guidance of Mets director of hitting development Jeff Albert and coordinators
Kevin Mahala and Daniel Nicolaisen, Serrano retooled his swing. In a recent
minors scrimmage, Serrano pulled a fastball for a home run with an exit
velocity of 105 mph.
When the
Mets drafted him, Serrano weighed 190 pounds. He now weighs 209 pounds.
Serrano
profiles as mostly a corner outfielder, but the Mets also plan to play him in
center field.
“He looks
like he can potentially do it,” Christie said. “He is rangy with speed, and
he’s physical.”
Medium - The Really Big 2025 Mets Prospects Ranking
https://medium.com/@mdonodeo8/the-really-big-2025-mets-prospects-ranking-5c0fbaaa49f0
4) IF Jesus Baez
One of
the few recent success stories from the Dominican Republic, Baez popped pretty
soon after signing and showed a lot of underlying skills in the complex league
in 2023 even if the 71 wRC+ left a lot to be desired. I noted him as a breakout
player for 2024, and he responded by posting good results in low-A and a brief
stint in Brooklyn before tearing his meniscus in August, which ended his
season.
He has a
good amount of pre-pitch movement in the swing, but the hands generally get
into good loading positions to fire with bat speed, and the contact rates have
been very good so far, in the mid to upper 80s in the zone. He has shown some
whiffs against breaking balls at times, but also fantastic contact rates
against fastballs and offspeed, and it evened out to 87th percentile whiff
rates vs secondaries in low-A. Further reducing the strikeout rates is the fact
that he drastically changes how open or closed his stance is pre-pitch
depending on count, focusing more on contact when behind. He will expand the
zone some, but he’s also aggressive within the zone, and I think that approach
can work for someone who should be posting good results on contact. His 104
EV90 and 110 max exit velocities are both in line with MLB averages, and while
he’s pretty built out already, there’s a future above average power projection
considering his ability to hit the ball in the air to the pullside. While good,
the power outputs still haven’t been quite as prolific as his combination of
sweet spot rate and exit velos would suggest, but I’m willing to trust the
numbers here and project good power going forward.
I was
unable to find any defensive footage of him, but Ben Zeidman of BP (and now the
Red Sox) praised his twitchiness but noted the transfers can get long and the
footwork leaves some to be desired. With his thicker frame and good arm, this
feels like a future third base profile to me, although the meniscus tear could
change the outlook of this and his speed grade, which already leaves a little
to be desired. That side, you’re buying the traits with the bat, which could be
really fun.
Scouting
grades: 55 hit, 55 power, 45 run, 50 field, 60 arm
Optimistic
comp: 2024 Alec Bohm
5) RHP Nolan McLean
McLean
was a two-way guy at Oklahoma State and at first continued to go both ways in
New York. While he was pretty raw on both sides of the plate, his future was
always on the mound (the swing mechanics were rough and the contact skills
evaporated in the upper minors), and in June he switched to being pitcher-only.
This comes with expected progression on both the stuff and command side as he
is able to rest more and work more specifically on pitch design, and his season
culminated in a productive stretch from mid-August on where the K/BB rates
remained good but the results on contact evened out closer to where his
peripherals were. In this time he also saw some improvements in the delivery —
his old segmented “out-and-down” linear move replaced by a much more fluid
motion down the hill.
Most of
the talk around McLean is centered around the sweeper, for good reason, but he
has shown hints of a deeper arsenal, which is important for someone who can
spend an offseason specifically focused on pitch design. The fastball sits in
the mid 90s and grabs higher, hitting 99 in college and continuing to grab
upper 90s in pro starts. The movement is in the dead zone, but a lower release
height helps give the pitch some VAA traits when he can locate it up in the
zone. It’s probably an average pitch without future shape gains. His best pitch
is the sweeper, which has added velo since college — now sitting in the mid-80s
while still moving over a foot gloveside, sometimes well above that. It didn’t
perform quite as well as one would expect, but I’m willing to trust the stuff
grades here and put a 70 on it. His true cutter and standard slider from
college have merged into a bridge breaker with slight lift and sweep that
should be plus if he can improve his feel for it. His changeup is not
particularly good, but he has some traits that remind me of other pitchers who
have recently found success with a splinker (hard thrower, deadzone-ish
fastball), so that could be an interesting option for an offseason project. He
may have flashed a sinker and curveball towards the end of the season — a
sinker making a ton of sense for how the Mets have recently operated with these
types of arms — so those will be things to watch out for in the spring.
There is
a decent amount of reliever risk for someone ranked this high — right now he
has present feel for two pitches (although I’d be surprised if another pitch or
two doesn’t pop), and the fastball isn’t good enough to turn over a lineup
multiple times as a two pitch guy. That said, I’m excited to see what he looks
like with a full offseason of pitcher-only development.
Scouting
grades: 50 FF, 70 SW, 60 SL, 30 CH, 45 command
Optimistic
comp: If Evan Phillips had a better bridge pitch and became a five-and-dive
Just Baseball - New York Mets Top 15 Prospects
https://www.justbaseball.com/prospects/new-york-mets-top-15-prospects/?s=03
9. Drew Gilbert – OF – (Triple-A)
Height/Weight: 5’9″, 195 | Bat/Throw: L/R | 1st Round (28), 2022 (HOU) | ETA: 2025
A bad
hamstring injury and challenges with secondaries resulted in a frustrating 2024
season for Gilbert, but he is still a high-probability big leaguer who may
squeeze enough out of each tool to be an everyday option.
Outlook
While the
tools are mostly average across the board, Gilbert does not need to realize his
ceiling to fill a big league role thanks to his value with the glove and
overall feel for the game. That said, he will need to find more consistency in
the batter’s box to project as an everyday outfielder.
The high-end outcome is a center fielder with solid on-base base skills and close to 20 homers. He’s most likely a high-end fourth-outfielder platoon option or a second-division regular.
10. Jonah Tong – RHP – (Double-A)
Height/Weight:
6’1″, 180 | Bat/Throw: R/R | 7th Round
(209), NYM (2022) | ETA: 2026
Tong was
the breakout arm in the Mets system for 2024, riding a nearly two tick leap
with his fastball to a 3.03 ERA in 113 IP with a ridiculous 34% strikeout rate
across mostly Low and High-A. If he continues to out pitch expectations at
Double-A, Tong could fly up prospect lists.
Outlook
Tong’s
elite ability to generate carry on his fastball paired with the uptick he
enjoyed in 2024 has him now tracking like a potential back-end starter.
Execution will be crucial for Tong as he lacks a clear plus pitch beyond his
fastball, earning his whiffs on the back of his fastball and funkiness.
With a
secondary strike rate of just 58% in 2024, Tong will need to take a step
forward in the command department to upgrade his swingman outlook to a
potential No. 5 starter.
Mets looking for top prospects to complement veteran stars
Camp standout: Jesus Baez
The Mets have been thrilled to see how hard Baez, the No. 8 prospect in the organization, has worked of late as he nears the end of his rehab progression, and he should be ready to go at the start of the season.
“He’s really focused on getting stronger and he’s been a standout in live BPs by barreling a lot of balls,” Christie said. “He has a natural skill set as a hitter, he’s comfortable in the box. And we think he can play short, second and third and move around the infield.”
1 comment:
Looks like I got the number of starters in my Megill section wrong
Sorry
Happens when you write after gummies
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