We continue with my countdown of Mets
prospects with…
#10 – 3B Jacob
Reimer
Jacob Reimer, a
21-year-old third baseman and the Mets’ No. 17 prospect, was drafted in the
fourth round in 2022 out of Yucaipa High School in California. He signed for an
over-slot $1.5 million bonus. In 2025, Reimer has emerged as a standout in the
Mets’ farm system, particularly at High-A Brooklyn, where he posted a
.284/.384/.502 slash line with an .886 OPS, eight home runs, and 11 stolen
bases in 61 games. His strong performance, including a 198 wRC+ (leading
full-season minor leaguers with 100+ plate appearances), earned him a South
Atlantic League Player of the Month nod in April. Reimer made history as the
first Brooklyn Cyclone in nearly 20 years to hit three home runs in a single
game on May 8, 2025.Recently promoted to Double-A Binghamton, Reimer has quickly
adjusted, hitting .333 with a home run and five RBIs in his first four games,
including a 367-foot homer on June 27, 2025. His improved power comes from
better timing and rotational torque in his swing, while maintaining a strong
batting eye (11.2% walk rate, 19.2% strikeout rate). Reimer primarily plays
third base but has also seen time at first base and as a designated hitter.
Despite a injury-plagued 2024 (hamstring strain limited him to 25 games), his
2025 breakout showcases his potential as a dynamic bat for the Mets.
Current AA-Binghamton stat line, as of
How bad can
it get for Mets?
https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6461477/2025/06/29/mets-struggles-pittsburgh-sweep-takeaways/
The Mets plan
on using Blade Tidwell as a starter against
the Milwaukee Brewers this week, with David Peterson,
Clay Holmes, Paul
Blackburn and Frankie Montas comprising
the rest of their rotation. Holmes is in his first year as a starter and needs
to prove that he can withstand the increase in volume. Blackburn is a depth
starter. Peterson is in a slump, battling his mechanics. Then there’s Montas,
who simply didn’t have it on Sunday.
Mack –
what you are not reading here is that they have no plans on promoting either Nolan McLean or Jonah Tong to help
them through this. The least they could do is consider Brandon Sproat, who is
pitching kind of decently in Syracuse these days.
Rob Manfred has a plan
https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6461725/2025/06/30/mlb-commissioner-rob-manfred-mlbpa-tour-lockout/
He rails
against the lack of a deadline in free agency. He tells players their salaries
should be growing faster. In fact, he says, they could be $2 billion-plus
richer had they decided to equally split the game’s revenues with owners some
20-plus years ago. He suggests, however, MLB Players Association leadership
doesn’t want to deliver change.
Mack –
so, the dude that currently makes $17,500,000 a year salary ( with bonus
potentials to make $25,000,000) off these players wants them to believe he has
their interest first in his heart…
Boy, this is
gonna be one long ass ugly strike which could result in the only way Trevor Bauer pitches a
major league inning again.
Sandy Alcantara
https://www.justbaseball.com/mlb/miami-marlins-sandy-alcantara-still-crown-jewel-trade-deadline/
If only his
most recent start on June 28 had gone better – he surrendered seven runs off 10
hits in six innings of work – his monthly totals would look far better.
All that to
say, a 4.34 ERA, 3.47 WHIP and 1.14 WHIP in June is far more palatable for
potential trade suitors to consider putting a package together for.
He might be
turning a corner and, again, all while still being a former Cy Young winner
with two more years of team control.
One key
factor of those two additional years as well is that the second year in 2027 is
a club option, so should things continue to go sour for Alcantara in a
potential new home, there doesn’t have to be a guaranteed financial commitment
for anything beyond 2026, should that new suitor simply want to part ways.
That’s just another added incentive for a buyer.
That being
said, seeing how things have not been altogether awful for Alcantara this
season, paired with his respectable June performance, it’s hard to think a
high-6.00 ERA arm is who he’ll be in the future.
A turning
point for Brandon Sproat?
https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6464300/2025/07/01/mets-pitching-prospects-mclean-sproat-tong/
Sproat, a
24-year-old right-hander, delivered his best performance of the season on
Saturday.
The
importance of the outing goes beyond the final line, though it was quite
strong: six innings, no runs, three walks, two hits and six strikeouts.
Sproat made a
couple of key changes. His velocity on Saturday was his best in 2025. He threw
as hard as 100.5 mph. His fastball averaged 97.9 mph (a lot of times, he sat
around 96 mph). Sproat always carried big velocity. On Saturday, he pitched
more aggressively. The added zip on the fastball opened up room for his
secondary pitches to perform better. With two strikes, Sproat deployed his
curveball one-third of the time, something he rarely did previously, especially
against right-handed batters. In two-strike situations, he relied less on his
fastball. The changes led to more success, particularly against left-handed
batters.
This season,
lefties own a .909 OPS against Sproat. Through 68 innings, all in Triple A,
Sproat has a 5.43 ERA. Unlike last year, Sproat hasn’t dominated batters with
his fastball. To some, the movement on the pitch had looked flat, especially
before Saturday.
Last year,
Sproat, who formerly pitched at the University of Florida, soared through the
farm system. Now, he has hit a snag. In an alternative reality, Sproat might be
helping the Mets by now. Instead, club officials are likely hoping his latest
start serves as a turning point (as an aside, multiple evaluators gave
Francisco Alvarez credit for the way he set up targets for Sproat).
Jim Koenigsberger @Jimfrombaseball
"I had
dinner with Mickey one night. It was in January in New York, and it was really
cold. We were walking back to the Regency Hotel, where we both were staying,
and I had noticed that Mickey Mantle had
asked for a doggie bag for his dinner in
the restaurant--which was sort of strange.
Anyway, he
asks me to take a walk with him. Now this wasn't the kind of night where you
wanted to take a stroll, but I went along, over to Madison Avenue, where Mick
knew this homeless guy who was in a cardboard box.
Mantle knocks
on the cardboard and suddenly this guy pops up his head. He looks frightened--and frightening--not knowing
who's there, and suddenly when he sees us, the guy's face softens. He says,
'Oh, hi, Mick.'
And Mantle
hands him his dinner.
It was clear
to me he had done this many times before. Did it mean that Mickey Mantle was
the greatest humanitarian in the world?
No, just that that was part of him, just as an hour later he could have
been drunk in a bar and told some very nice autograph seeker to go f*** himself." Bob Costas



10 comments:
So he wasn't like Ty Cobb?
Well, Blackburn’s to IL, too, and McLean fanned 10 in 5 IP. HMMM….
Half of him was
Nah
Probably spot start for Sproat
Then Manaea back next week closely followed by Senga
My guess next pen promotion
Dom Hamel
Sure is great to be a pitcher. So many hitters can’t make it to the majors, but those pitchers keep coming up as the arms keep breaking down. It is Hamel time. May he replicate Vasil.
Reimer off to a decent start in AA. 259 and .382 on base in 7 games, while I think they are facing tough pitching as Jett Williams has gone ice cold over the same stretch.
Mets have already used 31 pitchers, and by Thr ASB, that could rise to 35. HELP WANTED!
The game is so different these days. In the 1-0 15 inning game that Spahn and Marichal pitched, Spahn struck out just two batters. Today, everything is 1) strikeouts and 2) elbow blow outs. Spahn had stunning durability, and he also had to hit, getting up . He was also hit by pitches 68 times.
Getting up 2056 times.
I called for the Mets to turn both Vasil and Hamel into relievers three years ago
No one listens to me
They'll throw some Pop this weekend
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