Morning Thoughts
I now have had a few days to think about
this draft in its entirety and I am sharing my overall thoughts here.
First, by being shoved back ten slots
for their first pick, and then losing their second round pick due to the Juan Soto sign, they had only one
pick in the first 100 people picked. This is not the way to start off this
process and look for any success.
Add to that one of the smallest money
draft pools… around the same as the entire bonus they gave Elian Pena, and it just keeps
getting worse.
I do like their first pick (Mitch Voit) and Peter Kussow could be a great future
starter, but, past that, the picks go (IMO) from a crap shoot to just plain
crap.
I thought there were better names left on the board here, but I always do.
Maybe David Stearns gathered his draft team
and said “look guys, we don’t have much to spend here and there isn’t much left
on the board, so go find me a ton of reclamation project pitchers that I can
lineup in the lab all off season”.
Whatever their motive was, all of us
have to go into this right now as a draft push and, frankly, don’t be upset if
this one goes down as a clunker.
The good news is two or three of these
damaged pitchers are tuned up and return to the racetrack.
OF John Bay from Austin Peay has a UDFA deal with the
New York Mets!
Hometown: Shattuck,
Oklahoma
High School: Shattuck High
School, where he was an all-state performer in baseball. Bay was also a
multi-sport athlete, starring in football and basketball, leading his high
school to three consecutive Class B state football championships.
Personal: Born May 16,
2001, to Mark and Kerie Bay, with three siblings (Jake, Jena, and Josh). His
father played football at Southwestern Oklahoma State. Bay’s favorite athlete
is Nolan Arenado, and he has cited playing in the all-state game during the
COVID pandemic as a favorite baseball moment.
Collegiate Career
Oklahoma
State University (2021-2022): Bay
redshirted in 2021 at Oklahoma State University.
In the summer
of 2021, he played for the Pulaski River Turtles in the Appalachian League,
leading the league with 10 home runs.
Austin Peay
State University (2024-2025): Transferred
to Austin Peay, where he had a breakout 2025 season, earning significant
accolades: NCBWA Third Team
All-America (2025)
First Team
All-ASUN (2025)
Second Team
All-ASUN (prior year)
ABCA
All-Southeast Region (2024)
In 2025, Bay
posted an impressive batting line of .360/.507/.769,
showcasing elite hitting, on-base skills, and power.
Known as
“Johnny Barrels” for his hitting prowess, Bay was a standout for Austin Peay,
with some describing his season as “absolutely ridiculous.”
Height/Weight:
6’1”, 211-216 lbs
Position:
Outfielder
Attributes:
Bay is recognized for his power hitting, as evidenced by his Appalachian League
home run title and his stellar 2025 college stats. He’s considered a
high-upside player with the physical tools to be a difference-maker at the
collegiate level and potentially in professional baseball.
Pitch Profiler @pitchprofiler
David Petersons' best stuff of the season was on
display tonight!
David Robertson
https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6493924/2025/07/15/david-robertson-free-agent-workouts/
Veteran
right-hander David Robertson, a free agent
since the end of last season, is throwing for interested clubs, The Athletic
has learned.
Several
teams, including the New York Mets and New York Yankees, have at least recently
looked into Robertson, league sources said. Multiple teams expect to attend one
of his throwing sessions within the next week.
Robertson
hasn’t pitched in a game since last September after opting out of his contract
with the Texas Rangers in the offseason. (Kiyoshi Mio / Imagn Images)
Robertson,
who turned 40 in April, hasn’t appeared in a game since late last September.
While pitching for the Texas Rangers, he continued to defy concerns over his
age with another productive season. In 72 innings (68 games), he had a 3.00 ERA
with 99 strikeouts and 27 walks. From 2022-24, he averaged 63 appearances per
season with a collective 2.82 ERA. His cutter averaged 93.3 mph in 2023 and
2024 after checking in at 93 mph in 2022.
How reliable
is the rotation?
https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6493419/2025/07/16/mets-second-half-trade-deadline/
The Mets
finished the first half with the fourth-best rotation ERA in the majors, behind
only the Phillies, Rangers and Royals. That’s good. But there was a pretty big
divide in how that rotation performed through June 13 and afterward.
What had been the best rotation by ERA for 2
1/2 months was 29th in ERA over the last month. A lot of that owes to injuries:
The Mets lost Kodai Senga on June 12, Tylor Megill on June 17 and Griffin Canning on June 27. Before Senga and Sean Manaea returned this past weekend, New York
was essentially running a three-man rotation with a mix of spot starters and
bulk guys to flesh it out.
Now the Mets
have less than two weeks to evaluate whether the returns of Senga, Manaea and Frankie Montas are enough to return the rotation
to its status as a team strength. All three looked solid in Kansas City, though
Montas hasn’t exactly looked trustworthy over his handful of starts to this
point.
Barring
another significant injury — always a large “if” for a pitching staff — the
Mets should be reasonably well-covered from a depth perspective. While Canning
is out for the season, Paul Blackburn should
be back this month and Megill next month to provide depth, if needed, with
other intriguing reinforcements in the upper levels of the minor leagues. But
the Mets plan not just to get to October but to make noise once there, and it’s
reasonable to wonder if they possess enough quality at the top of their
rotation to do so.
Mack
– For me, the next rotation pitcher would be Brandon
Sproat
Top 40 players on market as July 31 approaches
#21 David
Bednar
Age 30
Position RP
B/T L/R
Fits DET, NYM,
PHI
Deal
likelihood
Value: All-Star reliever returning to form
Analysis: Optioned to Triple A on the first day of
April, Bednar rebounded to be named the NL’s Reliever of the Month in June. His
ERA since returning to the majors in mid-April is under two, and the
right-hander has made 2024’s rough campaign look like an aberration. There’s a
chance he’s an All-Star for the third time in four seasons. He’s striking out
more than a third of opposing hitters and is showcasing the best walk rate of
his career.
Owed in 2025 $1.9 million
Controlled
through 2026
#22 Taylor
Ward
Age 31
Position OF
B/T R/R
Fits MIL, PHI, SD
Deal
likelihood
Value: Right-handed power hitter
Analysis: Seemingly an annual candidate to be moved
at the deadline, Ward is a good right-handed power bat whose late-blooming
career path has him under team control through 2026 despite already being 31.
Ward has
25-homer power, generally crushing left-handers and holding his own against
right-handers while posting an above-average OPS+ for the fifth straight
season. But will the Angels finally decide to move him?
Owed in 2025 $2.5 million
Controlled
through 2026
#23 Nick
Martinez
Age 34
Position SP
B/T L/R
Fits CHC, HOU, NYM
Deal
likelihood
Value: Versatile veteran arm
Analysis: Martinez won't wow you with stuff – his
vulcan changeup is the only pitch that's above average in that regard – but he
throws six pitches with good command of each. Despite his poor strikeout rate,
he's been able to limit the walk rate and keep hitters guessing enough that
they don't do lots of damage when they connect.
While this
year hasn’t gone as well as the end of last season did for Martinez, he
returned from a brief stint in the bullpen by taking a no-hitter into the ninth
inning in his last start of June. He owns a lot of experience as a starter and
as a reliever in the same season, and his versatility makes him a great pickup
for a team that just needs an arm to help it get to October.
Owed in 2025 $6.7 million
Controlled
through 2025
24 Zack
Littell
Age 29
Position SP
B/T R/R
Fits ARI, ATL, SF
Deal
likelihood
Value: Low-walk, low-strikeout starting
pitcher
Analysis: In a 12-year professional career, Littell
has been traded twice, sold once, and claimed off waivers. He’s also been a
free agent two times. But if he changes teams again at the deadline, it will
finally be a transaction you actually notice. That’s because Littell has
emerged from obscurity to become yet another productive Rays starter. He’s
given up a lot of home runs this year, and doesn’t strike out many batters, but
doesn’t walk many either, and he’s consistently minimized damage through
two-plus seasons in the Rays rotation.
The Rays are
very much in the playoff hunt, but they also have some Triple-A rotation depth
in Joe Boyle and Ian Seymour, and ace Shane McClanahan could return from the IL
sometime after the deadline. The team’s roster-churning style could lead them
to deal Littell before he becomes a free agent at season’s end.
Owed in 2025 $1.8 million
Controlled
through 2025



12 comments:
Johnny Barrels…what is not to like?
David Robertson is well-rested. How ready to pitch is he?
Bednnar would be a good get.
Pretty sad when your best bat sign is an UDFA
David Peterson was 10-16 in 2+ years in the minors before his MLB debut in 2020, with an ERA of 4.19 in AA before he went 6-2 in the majors in 2020. Morale of story? If a guy is ready, turn him loose. Nolan McLean is ready.
Has David Stearns learned that the business of baseball is a 365 day continuum that doesn't merely take place the last day or two of July?
Mack,
You summed up the 2025 draft quite well. Let's hope some of the high school players do sign and make this draft better than it appears today.
Camden Lohman, 8th round, looks like a good over-slot signing.
Hopefully they have something up their sleeves to take advantage of the money they saved by signing Voit for under his allotted amount?
The 2024 draft class looks pretty solid ao in Stearns i trust.
Ernest,
Are there any particular high school selections you like in the Mets' draft?
With fewer top picks and a smaller bonus pool, it looks like the FO went after undervalued upside, which seems like a smart strategy. Especially if you trust your scouts and evaluators and development team, which it seems they do. And I’m with Ernest in trusting them too. Particularly with live arms who need some refinement. Given the low overall grades assigned to their ‘25 draft, and the lack of excitement on the blogs (are there other blogs besides Mack’s Mets? And why would we need them?) it’ll be interesting to see how this class pans out over the next few years.
I wouldn't hold your breath on this one
Mack You think the best bat is the UDFA? says a ton on the first 2 picks
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