9/30/25

MACK - TUESDAY OBSERVATIONS - Brett Baty, Bo Bichette, Sandy Alcantara, Mets fWAR, Draft Odds, Clayton Kershaw, Ryan Helsley, Mets Collapses, A Stopper, Dayron Oramas

 


Mets Mailbag

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6653579/2025/09/23/mets-mailbag-meltdown-pete-alonso/

Any insight into how the team views the long-term future of Baty, Vientos and Alvarez? — Will C.

Will: From the perspective of people within the Mets, per conversations with them, the outlooks for all three players seem to remain high. Baty’s name came up a bunch at the trade deadline, but not as a candidate — he was a main reason the Mets did not acquire infield help. The Mets could’ve dealt Vientos at the trade deadline but decided against shipping him out for a rental. And people within the club point to Alvarez as, potentially, an important leadership voice down the road — if he can stay healthy and be productive. These players all have flaws. They’ve had ups and downs. For the most part, they seem to be well thought of. Out of the three, however, Vientos stands out as someone who has had less time to navigate slumps this season. His inability to consistently defend well is largely why (if he’s not hitting, there goes his value).


Updated 2025 MLB Free Agent Predictions on Top Stars Available

https://bleacherreport.com/embedded/articles/25253129-updated-2025-mlb-free-agent-predictions-top-stars-available?_branch_match_id=1408222371212362866&utm_medium=share_sheet&_branch_referrer=H4sIAAAAAAAAA8soKSkottLXTyrSSywo0MvJzMvWz6%2FI9spMT3KNDE%2ByrytKTUstKsrMS49PKsovL04tsnXOKMrPTQUAdb3iNjkAAAA%3D

Bo Bichette, Shortstop, Toronto Blue Jays

After an uncharacteristically mediocre 2024, Bichette bounced back in Toronto this season, hitting .311 with 18 home runs, 94 RBI, and an OPS of .840. He created six runs per 27 outs and was a driving force behind the Blue Jays' playoff push.

More importantly, he is really the only notable shortstop hitting the market this off-season, increasing his value for teams in need at the position.

The question is whether Toronto, which already has invested 14 years and $500 million in Vladimir Guerrero Jr., will push the payroll to unforeseen levels, especially considering the need at starting pitching, where Chris Bassitt is a free agent this off-season.

Will Bichette even remain at shortstop, where he has struggled defensively, to put it lightly? Or will a team in need of a first or third baseman seize the opportunity to offer him a sizeable deal to switch positions?

On the one hand, it would seem rather unlikely that he leaves Toronto, given how important he was offensively to the team's rejuvenation this season. However, money and the potential for a positional shift could lead the second-generation player away from the Blue Jays.

Prediction: Bichette stays in Toronto, earns near Willy Adames' $180 million


Lance Brozdowski                            lancebroz@substack.com  

Marlins Sandy Alcantara had a 3.51 xFIP and a 17% K-BB in his final 10 starts of the season, an improvement from the 4.25 xFIP 11% K-BB from June and July. The largest driver of this improvement was success against right-handed hitters. His K-BB jumped from 16% to 25% as he almost doubled his right-right changeup usage from earlier in the year to 29%. His changeup was his best expected run value pitch down the stretch, not only because it was great in two-strike spots, but mostly because he began using it in the first or second pitch of an at-bat way more (12% to 25%, cutting his slider from 19% to 7%). We also saw the success of his four-seamer jump due to a location change on the offering. He used it more as a deep-count called-strike offering away from hitters (see below).

Sandy’s lefty approach never fully corrected to his 2022 days of better miss and less damage. We saw a push toward his changeup and curveball and away from his slider late in the year that didn’t really work. I’ll continue to say that I don’t understand his four-seam location to lefties, which is mostly over the plate despite the damage it allows. The pitch’s location became more elevated, but it wasn’t as clearly up as it was in 2022. It’s fair to project Sandy as a 3.6-3.8 ERA pitcher into next season. A stronger projection means you’re assuming some leap I presently don’t see against lefties. Maybe it’s as simple as elevating the pitch like in 2022.



 Mets Analytics                  @MetsAnalytics

Mets 2025 fWAR leaders by GM who acquired them:

6.1 Lindor (Porter)

5.8 Soto (Stearns)

3.6 Alonso (d. Alderson, s. Stearns)

3.1 Peterson (Alderson)

3.0 Nimmo (d. Alderson, s. Eppler)

2.3 Baty (Van Wagenen)

2.1 McNeil (d. Alderson, s. Eppler)

2.0 Díaz (t. Van Wagenen, s. Eppler)

1.9 Alvarez (Alderson)

1.9 Holmes (Stearns)

1.6 Torrens (Stearns)

1.5 Megill (Alderson)

1.4 Senga (Eppler)

1.2 McLean (Eppler)

 

Tyler Jennings                   @TylerJennings24

With the MLB regular season now over, here's the current odds for the draft lottery, which will take place in December

COL, WSH, LAA are all ineligible to pick higher than 10th due to revenue sharing rules. STL was moved to a "tax recipient" prior to 2025, making them eligible.

 


Thomas Nestico                @TJStats

AL & NL Batting Title Winner



 Sarah Langs                        @SlangsOnSports

WHEEEEEEE!

 


Pitch Profiler                     @pitchprofiler

A picture-perfect ending to a picture-perfect career.



These 9 Mets might as well pack their bags

https://fansided.com/mlb/these-9-mets-might-as-well-pack-their-bags-along-with-ryan-helsley-01k694jksg0g

RHP Ryan Helsley

The Mets aggressively pursued rentals, thinking they had a great shot of winning this season, but that obviously was not the case. Ryan Helsley was the biggest of the rentals, and the biggest flop of the deadline in the majors.

By pairing him with Edwin Diaz, the Mets thought they had formed one of the best late-game bullpen duos in the majors. Diaz lived up to his end of the bargain, but Helsley posted a 7.20 ERA in 22 appearances with New York. What's even crazier is that he actually pitched better down the stretch, not allowing a single run in his final seven innings of work. He lowered his ERA from 11.08 to one above 7.00 by finishing strongly.

Perhaps Helsley has figured out whatever was troubling him and will have a huge 2026, but he'll have to prove that while wearing another uniform. It did not work out in Queens, and that's a very sad reality.


9 biggest MLB collapses in history ranked, from the 2025 Mets to the 2011 Braves and Red Sox

https://www.sportingnews.com/us/mlb/news/biggest-mlb-collapses-history-ranked/7c484ef8331d612b285818c2

3. New York Mets, 2007

Playoff format: Eight teams, four in each league

Key Players: Carlos Beltran, David Wright, Carlos Delgado, Jose Reyes, Tom Glavine

Building the lead: Coming off an NLCS appearance, the 2007 New York Mets were a star-studded team with championship aspirations. Carlos Beltran, David Wright and Jose Reyes led a strong lineup, while future hall-of-famer Tom Glavine was the leader of the pitching staff.

For most of the season, the Mets had the NL East lead, which reached as high as seven games a few times during the season. In a wide-open National League, New York was a World Series favorite.

The collapse: With 17 games left in the season, the Mets blew a seven-game division lead to the red-hot Philadelphia Phillies. New York went 5-11 to close out the season, which included a three-game sweep to the Phillies and several series losses to the lowly Washington Nationals and Florida Marlins.

Still, all the Mets needed to do to make the playoffs was win the last game of the year against the Marlins. However, Glavine allowed seven runs in the first inning, ending New York's chances before they even got a chance to bat.


It took mere minutes for the Mets to make their historic collapse even worse

https://fansided.com/mlb/it-took-mere-minutes-for-the-mets-to-make-their-historic-collapse-even-worse

Sure, Mendoza was given a bad hand in certain respects, from regression from core players like Brandon Nimmo and Mark Vientos to a pitching staff that was being held together with duct tape by the end of the year to a deeply underwhelming haul at the trade deadline. Even within those parameters, though, it's hard to understand the way he managed this team.

Above all else, Mendoza just patently refused to show the urgency required, especially once the Mets had put themselves in a position where every game was going to matter quite a bit for their playoff odds. He kept forcing players like Cedric Mullins and Ryan Helsley into key spots and refused to treat high-leverage moments with the desperation they deserved. Heck, he threw Edwin Diaz during Saturday's blowout win despite already having a huge lead, and despite knowing that he was almost certainly going to need to call upon Diaz again with the season on the line on Sunday.

And speaking of Sunday: It's all too fitting that the Mets watched their season go up in smoke with guys like Ryne Stanek on the mound, a frankly baffling decision that felt overengineered and unresponsive to the actual moment. He was pathologically incapable of projecting confidence, and his in-game decisions did not put the team in the best position to win all too often. Not overreacting to a very bad stretch of baseball when there's still plenty of reason for optimism moving forward is one thing — and yes, Mets fans, the future remains bright — but this just feels like stubbornness.


Mets Prospect Group                     @bkfan09

Dayron Oramas (INF) Will Officially Sign With the Mets On January 15, 2026




STEVE SICA - Things Aren't So Bad With The Mets. No, really!

The 2025 Mets season is officially in the books, and for most of us fans it was the angel of mercy instead of the angel of death that put us out of our misery over these last three and a half months. 

Many will say it was a collapse, but I disagree. A collapse is what happened in 2007, it’s what the 2011 Red Sox and Braves did. It’s what the Tigers almost did, even though they’re going to the playoffs despite blowing a 15 game lead in mid-July and a nine-game-lead by September. The Mets' slide began in June. No one “collapses” with a substantial lead to lose. The Mets led the Phillies by as much as five games in mid-June. Not exactly the same as blowing a seven-game lead with 17 to play. No, the Mets slowly disintegrated. A collapse happens quickly, so fast you can’t stop it. This was like watching a slow motion car wreck, and the Mets had plenty of time and opportunities to stop it, but never did.


Francisco Alvarez snaps his bat in half as the Mets season ends in Miami
Image courtesy of Imagn Images


On the surface, things look bleak. Pete Alonso and Edwin Díaz will likely opt out of their contracts. The team just endured its most disappointing season since 2007. Even after signing Juan Soto, the Mets finished with six fewer wins than they did last year without him. Still, from a wider perspective, the situation isn’t as hopeless as it feels right now. You won’t want to hear this right now, so maybe bookmark this article for when the wound of missing the playoffs isn’t still fresh. Here’s why I’m feeling optimistic about this team going forward.

1. Starting Pitching
The lack of quality starting pitching was the single biggest factor in the Mets’ second-half demise. From mid-June on, Mets starters threw the fewest innings in baseball while the bullpen logged the most. That formula doesn’t work, and the results showed. There were bright spots, though. Clay Holmes delivered a solid first season as a starter, finishing 12–8 with a 3.53 ERA over 165 innings. His gem in game 161 kept the Mets’ season alive for one more day, and it likely earned him a rotation spot for 2026.

Next year’s rotation will be younger and more exciting. Nolan McLean burst onto the scene in mid-August and quickly became the team’s most dependable starter. He posted a 2.06 ERA over 48 innings and evoked memories of Matt Harvey and Jacob deGrom’s early days. Brandon Sproat also showed promise after a shaky start in Syracuse. Jonah Tong had ups and downs, but he’s just 22 and unlike Sproat and McLean, didn’t pitch in college and didn’t spend as much time in Triple-A as they did. Behind them, Jack Wenninger is on the rise, and Christian Scott is expected back from Tommy John surgery next spring.

For the first time in a decade, the Mets have a pipeline of young, homegrown arms that could form one of the most exciting rotations in the NL East.


2. Juan Soto

The Mets made a big splash last offseason in signing Juan Soto to a record breaking contract. In his first year in that 15 year deal, Soto didn’t disappoint. 


Baseball is a team sport and when you don’t make the playoffs, individual stats tend to be thrown out by fans and media alike, but we need to appreciate the year Juan Soto put up because it’s one of the greatest Met single-season performances of all-time.


In his first full season in orange and blue, Soto mashed 43 home runs, good enough for third on the Mets single season home run leaderboard. He set a Mets’ single season record in walks with 126. He finished with 38 stolen bases and a career high that put him just two away from a 40/40 season. As the Mets sputtered down the stretch, Soto carried the team as best as he could, putting up an OPS of 1.009 in August and 1.047 in September. 


He can hit for average, hit for power, and now he can steal bases! Coming into 2025, Soto’s career high in steals was just 12. It was a crime that he wasn’t named an All-Star back in July, but if year one is any sign of what’s to come from the 27-year-old Juan Soto, Met fans can rest easy knowing they have a superstar in their lineup that they can anchor the team around for years to come. 


3. An elite farm system

The 2025 season will be remembered as a major disappointment for the Mets, but for their minor league affiliates, it was one of the best years in recent memory. Two teams won their league titles, three of four reached the playoffs, and all four finished above .500. The Mets now have one of the deepest farm systems in baseball. Even after buying at the deadline, they maintained their status as a top system. Fans got a glimpse of that depth late in the year with the arrivals of Nolan McLean, Jonah Tong, and Brandon Sproat.

More talent is on the way. Carson Benge, Jett Williams, and Ryan Clifford made huge strides in 2025 and should be Major League ready by 2026. Benge, the club’s first-round pick last year, posted an .854 OPS across three levels. He excelled in Double-A with a .978 OPS over 32 games, proving he could handle advanced pitching. Williams, coming off an injury-plagued 2024, reminded everyone why he’s a top-100 prospect. He posted an .848 OPS between Double and Triple-A, adding 34 stolen bases, 17 home runs, and 34 doubles. Clifford mashed 29 home runs and drove in 93 runs between Binghamton and Syracuse.

Jacob Reimer and A.J. Ewing also broke out this season. Reimer rose into the organization’s top ten prospects after putting up an OPS of .853 with nine home runs over 61 games in Double-A, helping the Rumble Ponies win their first Eastern League title in 11 years. Ewing was a hitting machine, batting .315 across three levels, including .339 in his first taste of Double-A.

The pitching pipeline is just as strong. McLean, Tong, and Sproat might be just the start of a new wave of starting pitchers coming to Queens. Jack Wenninger, Will Watson, and Jonathan Santucci all impressed in 2025. Wenninger posted a 2.92 ERA in his first full Double-A season. Santucci, the Mets’ 2024 second-round pick, moved up to Double-A midseason and recorded a 2.52 ERA over 50 innings. Watson dominated High-A with a 1.70 ERA in 63 innings before earning a late promotion.

A wealth of talent is on the verge of impacting the Major League roster. While 2025 was one of the most disappointing seasons in franchise history, it doesn’t mean the Mets are doomed to a regression in the years to come. There are still holes to fill and questions to answer before Opening Day 2026, but once the sting fades, it’s clear this organization is positioned to succeed for years to come, even if it doesn’t feel that way right now.


Tom Brennan - Two Righty Hitting Binghamton Star OFs; Durability; Why I Don’t Go


"ANYONE HAVE AN OPINION ABOUT THESE TWO?”

 YOU TELL ME….WHICH IS BETTER? 

Stats may give us a clue:

1) Stats for player A, a 22 y/o right handed 5’10 hitter:

.273/.348/.385, 115 Ks in 118 games, 49 of 60 in steals in 492 PAs.

He hit .136 in the post season.

2) Stats for player B, a 24 y/o right handed 5’9” hitter:

.282/.345/.417, 76 Ks in 101 games, 31 of 34 steals in 406 PAs.  

He hit .273 with a HR this post season.

Pretty even, huh?

Player A is Nick Morabito, who came into 2025 with 807 pro plate appearances.

Player B is D’Andre Smith, who came into 2025 with just 485 pro plate appearances.

Smith has excellent speed, and it would be interesting to see the two in a foot race. Morabito is noted for his elite speed.

Smith earlier in his career, as I seem to recall, had several injuries which reduced his playing time in 2023 and 2024 to just 111 games, after his short pro debut in 2022.

This year, what limited his playing time is that Binghamton was so darned excellent and deep, until promotions of Jett and Benge to AAA allowed for more playing time for him and WyattYoung, Binghamton’s hottest hitter in their successful playoffs.

Smith also hit better in the second half than in the first half.  

Morabito tailed off in the second half.

Smith can play both 2B and the outfield.  Morabito has just 5 games at 2B.


All told…

I wonder which of these two players has a higher ceiling?

If you could pick just one of these two to make his MLB debut later in 2026, which would you pick right now, if you could have just one?

Me? I never speculate (LOL)

I just hope D’Andre Smith has a better MLB career than Dom Smith.


P.S.  Smith is to be playing this autumn in the Arizona Fall League, and so is Nick Morabito.  How about that? 

Along with them and a few pitchers, speedy catcher/1B/LF Chris Suero is also going to be hanging out playing in Arizona, gazing at cacti this fall.

May all three hit .400.


AMAZING DURABILITY

Remarkably, it was reported that despite Brett Baty’s oblique pull on Friday, he would only miss 2 games…

I don’t think the oblique had been invented during my first 20 years of watching baseball.  The first one I ever recall was Keith Hernandez pulling one in the mid-80s.

Nowadays, everyone pulls an oblique or gets Tommy John surgery.  

Some get both injuries. Ahh, the good old days.


NOTHING LIKE NY PLAYOFF BASEBALL IN OCTOBER

I had a dream the Mets missed the playoffs. I shrugged it off, rolled over and went back to sleep. Anyway, that is the extent of my commentary on 2025. A bad dream.  I also dreamt that Mike Francesca called them gutless bums. Only a dream.

I will say this:

Fans live for the playoffs. You can probably go to a scalper to get tickets to go to a game in the Bronx.  Not my thing. I like a full head of hair.

I have been to two Yankee games in the Bronx in the last 48 years. One just happened to be ex-Met Reggie Jackson’s 3 homers in 3 swings legendary game that won the Yanks the crown. He, to be clear, became an ex-Met the moment they stupefied the baseball world by not drafting him as the consensus overall #1 pick. He went on to hit 563 HRs, and an additional 18 HRs in the playoffs.  None hit while playing with the Mets.

We had Helmsley Spear as a client back then. The head guy on our team got along great with them, and Ken Griffey Sr’s sister told him that Ken had dropped two tickets to each game with her, and would we want to buy them. He was a Yankee fan and said SURE! How much? She said, the price on the ticket, which happened to be $15! 

The four of us drew straws….and I got GAME SIX.

The other game was in 1998.  I went with a bunch of Chase co-workers.

I lived in Stony Brook at the time, and didn’t have my car, so I had to take a subway train downtown from the House That Ruth Built and then cross over on the Grand Central Times Square shuttle line to get to the seventh Avenue line to get to Penn Station.

Problem is, when I got to the shuttle, it sat there for nearly 10 minutes, something which they could’ve told me. I could have walked instead.  When I got to seventh Avenue and 42nd St. and had to take the subway downtown, that was delayed too. I miss my train to Ronkonkoma by two stinking minutes. The next train left a full hour later. It ran local. It was eternal.

So, I left the game at 9 o’clock, very early, knowing I had work the next day. I left after the 5th inning, and I got home at 12:30. 

Three and one half exhausting hours. 

With the next day a work day back in downtown NYC, not far from where (at the time) two towers still proudly stood. 

Two hour morning commute.

It crossed my mind that night that I could’ve hopped a flight from MacArthur airport to Miami in less time than it took to get home from the game.

That was my last Yankee game. I can’t foresee ever going to another one.  “See ya!”

Being a Mets fan, I went to very few Bronx games. In the last game prior to the Reggie legendary classic, I think around 1975, in a game where I think the Yankees clinched against the Red Sox. Fans poured onto the field, which was still needed for the upcoming playoffs. Fans were tearing it up.  

Cops on foot and horseback also poured onto the field. And some fans got the crap kicked out of them by cops. There were no cell phones back then.

This playoffs flashback is done. Have a great day.

Yes it got by Buckner.

It’s gotten by us ever since.

Play the song, To Dream The Impossible Dream.  And reflect.

9/29/25

Paul Articulates - Shoulda, Coulda, Woulda ...


Baseball has always been an unpredictable sport, yet we are still shocked when the underdog rises above all odds to win.  Unfortunately, we are also shocked when the most talented of teams fails to live up to high expectations, and in the case of the 2025 Mets, crumbles to a logic-defying final day exit from playoff contention.

In the aftermath of one of the most epic collapses in modern baseball history, it is natural for all involved to ask, “What should we have done differently”?  It is all hindsight of course, because the damage was done long ago when choices were made and the team moved forward towards this ignominious destiny.

I will provide my opinions in three different categories: “Should have” being the strongest without reservation opinions on what would have made things better.  “Could have” are those ideas that may have had an impact on the collapse, but we will never know.  “Would have” are things that Paul would have done if he was being paid to do what Stearns and Mendoza do.

Should have (past):

David Stearns should have left Cedric Mullins in Baltimore.  Sure, Mullins had a season in his past where he played at an all-star level, and the price was relatively low for a deadline deal, but Mullins was always a redundant solution to the same old problem: defense-only centerfielders.  But in this case, Mullins’ defensive credentials only included his range and his speed.  For a center fielder, he had a weak arm, and this was exposed in a few critical instances during the fatal final month.  I understand that he was a step-in for an injured Siri, but Tyrone Taylor and for that matter Jeff McNeil played better than Mullins in the months after the trade deadline.

Kodai Senga was considered too valuable to damage, so the Mets tried to be ultra-careful not to overwork him.  The Mets should have pushed him into a five-day rotation routine.  If he couldn’t hack that, it would have been better to know early that he would not have the stamina to make it through the full season.  He got injured and spent more time on the IL than on the field despite all the kid glove handling – and the relievers paid the ultimate price for this.

Mark Vientos should have been made a designated hitter by the end of April.  He should have played third base only in emergency situations.  Instead, the Mets justified that he could play there because of adequate performance which would keep his bat in the lineup.  This not only hurt the team defensively, but caused a carousel of third basemen between Vientos, Baty, and Mauricio that helped none of them gain proficiency and kept all of them from achieving their potential.

Could have (past)

The Mets could have called up their young pitchers earlier.  With all the injuries and the sub-par performances by the starting rotation, there was plenty of need for guys like McLean and Tong to step up and get some innings, get some experience, and show how they stacked up to MLB hitters.  Instead, the Mets rode a struggling Sean Manaea, a tiring Clay Holmes, and Senga right down the slide from “best in baseball” to third worst in the league over the last 90-or-so games.  The desperation call-ups of McLean, then Tong, then Sproat was too little too late.  They all proved worthy, but without any experience in the big show, Tong and Sproat did not get up the curve quickly enough.  Calling them up earlier may have back-fired if they were not ready and had awful experiences, but after burning out one bullpen and buying a new one at the trade deadline, it seems ludicrous that they would not get fresher arms on the starting side.

The Mets could have played Mauricio more in September.  Yes, Baty was playing very well and earned the every-day starter job at third.  But Mauricio got virtually no playing time (13 at-bats in 30 days), and looked like he was playing in the second week of spring training when he was forced into action due to Baty’s oblique injury.  Mauricio seemed unsure in the field and struggled on any breaking balls thrown his way while at the plate.

Would have (past):

If I was making the lineup decisions (not sure who really was), I would have hit McNeil higher in the lineup on a regular basis.  His hot August (.276/.339/.459) was squandered mostly in the 7th or 8th positions in the order while the lineup cycled through countless iterations of R-L-R-L-R-L batters.  I also would not be so anal about trying to disadvantage the other team’s specialty relievers by making sure no two consecutive batters hit from the same side of the plate.  Yes, I understand that there are plenty of analytics that drive the highest probability of success from that approach, but those numbers are based on really large samples.  Sometimes you just have to go with the hot hand.  So if Lindor, Soto, and Baty are crushing the ball for several games in a row, why put colder hitters up in-between to keep them from driving in multiple runs?

If I was making the pitching decisions (I know this was Carlos), I would also stop using the law of left versus right for every single pitching change.  If Ryne Stanek is getting barreled on every third pitch, he is still not the right guy to bring in to create a right-versus-right matchup.  Now, if it is a close game and Kyle Schwarber and Harper were coming up, then I would certainly wave my left hand at the bullpen.  Otherwise, think about it – a starter is allowed to throw to both righties and lefties for (hopefully) a few times through the lineup.  If they can get the opposite guy out, so can a reliever.

Enough hindsight – we can’t change another historical Mets collapse that will go in the books alongside the 2007 and 2008 seasons.  The future is the only thing that can be influenced over the next few months’ decisions, so let’s discuss the “should-could-would” actions to set the table for a quick recovery in 2026.

Should do (future):

Sign Pete Alonso.  If he hasn’t opted out yet, he will.  He earned the paycheck.  We need him back on this team for his bat, his scoops, and his devotion to everything orange and blue.

Incentivize Edwin Diaz to not exercise his 2026 player option.  He still has great closer stuff.  Put incentives in his revised contract for every baserunner that he holds on first.  Put disincentives in his revised contract for every three consecutive balls that miss by 12” on the arm side.

Pick up the club option on Brooks Raley.  He was one of very few guys that performed every time he came into the game.

Sign Luis Torrens.  He was the perfect guy to back up the oft-injured Alvarez.

Thank a few guys and send them packing.  Starling Marte has had some great years with the Mets, and he showed that he can still hit.  However, he had to see limited action to keep him healthy, and that takes a full roster slot for a partial player.  Keeping him inhibits the club from making Vientos a DH-only player.  Ryne Stanek can still throw 100mph, but when he throws his other pitches, they go 100mph in the other direction.  Time for him to go in the other direction.

Could do (future):

The Mets could re-sign Griffin Canning, Tylor Megill, Max Kranick, David Peterson, and Tyrone Taylor for 2026.  The first three had too much injured time to prove their worth, and each showed flashes of brilliance.  Peterson carried the club through the summer by eating innings and getting the Mets into position to win.  Yes, he faded in the end but if that happens next year, there are plenty of young arms to call up.  Taylor is the best center fielder the Mets can field until either Carson Benge or AJ Ewing is ready to challenge.  Yes his bat has had its ups and downs, but he’s much better than Siri and Mullins.

Would do (future):

I can’t really see what is going on behind the scenes regarding pitching and hitting decisions.  Prevailing opinion is that the lineup is handed to Mendoza by some combination of Stearns and the analytics guys.  His decisions on pulling pitchers have been highly questionable, but it is uncertain how much they are influenced.  If I was calling the shots, I would hand him the full responsibility for both and let him sink or swim.  He clearly has the support of the players, but if he is not up to making winning decisions for the club (or if he can’t be trusted to), then he is not the man for the job.

Get a guy in the clubhouse that doesn’t tolerate losing.  This could be a veteran player or a coach, but someone has to spark enough emotion in this team to bust out.  There was way too much talent for them to play .408 baseball (38-55) from June 13th to the end of the season.  Every team has bad streaks, but this wasn’t a streak – it was a mentally exhausting spiral that consumed the team’s resiliency.


Reese Kaplan -- Lots of Work to Do to Build a 2026 Roster


The difficulty of writing from the other side of the planet is time zones.  My Monday morning column is actually Monday evening for me here in Malaysia.  Consequently I cannot write with praise nor pulverization for how the Mets season ended as Game 162 has not yet been played.  All I can do is reflect on key Mets needs going into the 2026 season which will indeed happen whereas the playoff roster is still pure hypothesis at this point.  So, moving forward regardless of the Sunday outcomes (in Miami and in Cincinnati), let’s instead take a look at the job David Stearns and his staff will have for the next baseball season. 

Pending Free Agents

  • Pete Alonso — Available Opt-Out Clause
  • Nick Madrigal — Contract Ends
  • Starling Marte — Contract Ends
  • Cedric Mullins — Contract Ends
  • Jesse Winker -- Contract Ends 
  • Griffin Canning — Contract Ends
  • Edwin Diaz — Available Opt-Out Clause
  • Ryan Helsley — Contract Ends
  • Brooks Raley — Contract Ends
  • Tyler Rogers — Contract Ends
  • Gregory Soto — Contract Ends
  • Ryne Stanek — Contract Ends

Under Performers

  • Luisangel Acuna — Never achieved consistency
  • Ronny Mauricio — Recovery season lackluster and limited playing time affects output
  • Jeff McNeil — Batting title is long behind him and he finished 2025 very poorly
  • Tyrone Taylor — As a fourth outfielder he’s credible but not enough bat to start
  • Mark Vientos — The power returned but he was way too inconsistent with defensive struggles
  • Huascar Brazoban — He was up and down between the Mets and Syracuse
  • Sean Manaea — An ERA of over 7.60 to finish the year is untenable
  • David Peterson — He went from rock solid to sinking like a stone
  • Brandon Sproat — He showed flashes of brilliance but is still a great unknown
  • Jonah Tong — Perhaps the biggest shock, the Mets best minor leaguer did not look the part

Long Term Injuries

  • Reed Garrett — Elbow injury
  • Max Kranick — Tommy John Surgery
  • Tylor Megill — Tommy John Surgery
  • A.J. Minter — Abdominal Surgery
  • Frankie Montas — Tommy John Surgery
  • Dedniel Nunez — Tommy John Surgery
  • Christian Scott — Tommy John Surgery
  • Drew Smith — Tommy John Surgery
  • Danny Young — Tommy John Surgery

Who’s Left?

  • Luisangel Acuna
  • Francisco Alvarez
  • Brett Baty
  • Francisco Lindor
  • Jeff McNeil
  • Brandon Nimmo
  • Juan Soto
  • Tyrone Taylor
  • Jared Young
  • Luis Torrens
  • Mark Vientos
  • Huascar Brazoban
  • Clay Holmes
  • Sean Manaea
  • Nolan McLean
  • David Peterson
  • Dylan Ross
  • Kodai Senga
  • Brandon Sproat
  • Jonah Tong

It’s a lot to digest but if you somehow felt the remaining folks on the roster were all due back it would add up to 20 spots with 6 vacancies to fill.  It also suggests that the Mets need to choose carefully among those active 20 players to decide who deserves to come north from Florida or who is more valuable as a trade chip to fulfill other needs.

The Needs

  • Center Field — The incomers are gone with Jose Siri already DFA’d and Cedric Mullins a free agent.  There is no starter on the roster with Tyrone Taylor not providing enough offense.
  • Backup Outfielder — Unless you consider Jeff McNeil in this role they need someone else there.
  • Second Base — Who gets to play here?
  • Starting Pitching — Right now you have Clay Holmes, Sean Manaea, Nolan McLean and Kodai Senga returning.  The club is most definitely missing an ace.
  • Relief Pitching — Almost everyone is gone and it goes from bad to worse if Diaz hits the road.
  • Designated Hitter — At this point they don’t have anyone for this role.
  • Bench — No one knows who will reside here given the lackluster performance of many substitute players this past season

Yup, David Stearns has a lot of work on his plate.  Let’s just hope he doesn’t plunge into hopeful cases no one understands like Frankie Montas or else waits until late July to make changes for the outcome of the 2026 season as he did in 2025.

9/28/25

MACK - DEEP DIVE - OF Randy Guzman - RHRP Dylan Ross - LHSP Colton Cospor

 


Full Name: Randy Enmanuel Guzman


Born: April 19, 2005, in Tenares, Dominican Republic

Position: Outfielder (primarily Right Field, also plays First Base and Left Field)

Bats/Throws: Right/Right

Physical: 6'4", 215 lbs

Team: New York Mets (Minor Leagues, Single-A Affiliate, St. Lucie Mets)

Status: Active

Age: 20

Career and Role

Randy Guzman is a young prospect in the Mets’ minor league system, known for his impressive physical build and offensive potential. He has played in the Dominican Summer League (DSL) Mets Orange and has progressed to the Single-A St. Lucie Mets. In 2025, he has shown promise at the plate, with notable performances including an RBI double for St. Lucie, as highlighted in a Reddit post from the New York Mets community. His first season stateside has been described as impressive, indicating he’s a prospect to watch in the Mets’ system.

2025 –

    FCL METS:              178-PA, 33-K, 7-HR, 33-RBI, 15-BB, .282/.371/.474/.845

    ST. LUCIE METS:   105-PA, 21-K, 3-HR, 24-RBI, 6-BB, .333/.381/.604/.985

Summary

Randy Guzman is a 20-year-old outfielder in the Mets’ minor league system with a promising bat and physical presence at 6’4”, 215 lbs. He is active with the Single-A St. Lucie Mets and has shown offensive potential in 2025.


Ernest Dove                                       @ernestdove

Mets 25 yr old RP prospect Dylan Ross numbers across 3 affiliates this season (A+, AA, AAA)

49 gm    54 inn    29 H    13 ER (2.17 ERA)    33 BB    80 K

.154 opp AVG      .531 opp OPS

credited with 9 'holds' and 7 saves

rule 5 eligible this winter



                deep dive…

Dylan Ross is a 25-year-old right-handed pitcher in the New York Mets organization, drafted in the 13th round of the 2022 MLB Draft from the University of Georgia.

Born September 1, 2000, in Statesboro, Georgia, he stands at 6’5” and weighs 251 pounds.

Ross has overcome significant challenges, undergoing Tommy John surgery in 2022 during his junior year at Georgia and a subsequent UCL revision surgery in 2023, which delayed his professional debut until September 2024 with the Single-A St. Lucie Mets with one inning, in which he fanned the side.

 Despite these setbacks, he has rapidly progressed through the Mets’ minor league system, reaching Triple-A Syracuse in 2025.

Career and Performance

Ross has shown promise as a reliever in 2025, pitching across High-A Brooklyn, Double-A Binghamton, and Triple-A Syracuse. He has a 2-0 record, a 2.25 ERA, and 77 strikeouts in 52 innings, with a 30% strikeout rate in Triple-A. However, his command needs refinement, as evidenced by a 6.3 walks per nine innings rate in Triple-A. His performance, including a 1.80 ERA in 30 Triple-A innings and a 49.4% whiff rate on his splitter, has positioned him as a candidate for a late-season MLB bullpen call-up in 2025, especially as he is Rule 5 eligible this offseason.

Repertoire

Ross is known for his power pitching, relying on a four-pitch mix:

Fastball: Sits in the mid-90s, often averaging 97 mph, and has topped out at 102 mph. It features arm-side life and good extension, making it effective for blow-by scenarios, though he can overthrow, impacting command.

Splitter: Thrown in the high 80s to low 90s, this pitch is a standout with a 49.4% whiff rate in Triple-A, serving as a key strikeout weapon.

Slider: Sits in the mid-to-high 80s, tunneling well with his fastball. When effective, it has tight break, but it can flatten into a cutter-like pitch when he loses feel.

Curveball: A less frequently used pitch, graded lower (45 on the scouting scale), but part of his arsenal for added variety.

 

MLB Draft League                            @mlbdraftleague

𝐀𝐥𝐥-𝐒𝐞𝐜𝐨𝐧𝐝 𝐇𝐚𝐥𝐟 𝐓𝐞𝐚𝐦

The first 2025 second half player to be signed, Colton Cosper joined the @mets organization as an MLB Draft League Pitcher of the Week (7.15-20) with one run surrendered in three starts (17 innings).

 


                deep dive…

Colton Cosper is a 23-year-old left-handed pitcher in the New York Mets organization, signed to a minor league contract in late July 2025 after a standout summer stint with the Williamsport Crosscutters in the MLB Draft League.

Born September 8, 2002, in Carrollton, Georgia, he stands at 6'1" and weighs 190 pounds. A Mercer University product, Cosper earned 2024 All-SoCon First Team honors (media and coaches), SoCon All-Tournament Team selection, and CSC Academic All-District recognition during his college career, where he honed a deceptive, control-oriented style.

Undrafted out of college, his pro signing came after a dominant three-start stretch with Williamsport: 17 innings pitched, 0.53 ERA, 20 strikeouts, and just one walk, showcasing his command and ability to miss bats.

He began his Mets career in the Florida Complex League (FCL Mets) rookie affiliate, quickly advancing through High-A Brooklyn and Double-A Binghamton before reaching Triple-A Syracuse by early September 2025.

His rapid rise positions him as a potential 2026 organizational starter, especially given the Mets' need for lefty relief arms.

Career and Performance

Cosper's pro debut highlighted his poise under pressure, with his Williamsport gem (5 IP, 1 ER, 8 K vs. Trenton Thunder) drawing Mets scouts. In the Mets system, he's transitioned seamlessly to a multi-inning reliever role, emphasizing efficiency and deception over velocity. Key stats through September 23, 2025:

Overall Minors (2025): 2-0 record, 1.98 ERA, 0.98 WHIP, 10.3 K/9, 2.6 BB/9, .208 opponent BA.

Triple-A Syracuse: 1.93 ERA in 14 IP over 8 appearances (3 starts), with a 28.6% strikeout rate and opponents hitting .179 against him.

His ground-ball tendencies (48% GB rate) and low walk numbers make him a fit for Citi Field's dimensions, though he'll need to add velocity or secondary bite to handle big-league hitters. No major injuries reported, and his athletic, projectable frame suggests room for growth.

Repertoire

Cosper operates as a "touch-and-feel" lefty with a compact, quick arm action from a low-3/4 slot (release point ~4.9 feet), creating excellent deception by hiding the ball until release. He works fast, attacks the zone, and mixes pitches to keep hitters off-balance rather than overpowering them. His arsenal is a four-pitch mix, graded on the 20-80 scouting scale (per recent Mets evaluations):Pitch

Fastball               86-89 mph (touches 90)

Four-seam with late run and sink; commands both sides of the plate, used as a strike-stealer and chase pitch. Effective due to arm speed illusion.

50-55 grade; primary pitch (~50% usage).

Changeup           82-85 mph

Fading, arm-side action that mimics fastball shape before diving low-away; generates whiffs (35%+ rate) and weak contact. His go-to off-speed offering.

55 grade; high usage (~30%), deceptive "slower fastball."

Slider                    78-82 mph

Sharp, late-breaking with two-plane tilt (sweeping lateral movement); starts middle-in and bucks gloves, tough on righties.

50 grade; ~15% usage, best when located low.

Curveball            74-77 mph

12-6 shape with depth; less consistent but adds variety for tunneling with the slider. Used sparingly against same-handed hitters.

45 grade; ~5% usage, developing feel.

Cosper's strength lies in sequencing and location—his low release enhances movement profiles, leading to a 24.5% K-rate overall. Areas for improvement include boosting fastball velocity (currently fringe-average) and refining the curve for more sweep-and-miss. Scouting consensus (e.g., MLB Pipeline) pegs him as a potential mid-rotation starter or high-leverage reliever with polish, projecting an overall future value of 45.