Morning Thoughts
Armus has arrived, to join his buddies, Athos
and Porthos.
The Musketeers are complete.
None of us had any money bet that Nolan McLean, Jonah Tong, and now, Brandon Sproat would be in the Queens
rotation in 2025. No one. But they are here now and rest of the rotation be
damned.
There is much more pressure on Sproat.
Not only does he have to face major league hitting in front of, like, 500,000
people, but he has to put up results similar to the other two guppies that
arrived, and produced, earlier.
The only thing I am annoyed at is that
the Mets are placating the rest of the rotation and making these young arms
pitch in a 6-man rotation. There current arms are built and conditioned for
every fifth outing.
Still, the future has arrived and I
really give a rat’s ass who is started in the rest of the games this season.
There three are the guys I have written about for the past three years and I
simply can’t believe they are all in the Queens dugout in 2025. It truly amazes
me.
Pitch Profiler @pitchprofiler
Ryan Helsley's slider has been incredible; the
rest of his pitches have not been.
Pitch
Profiler @pitchprofiler
Ryan Helsley throws his four-seam nearly 50% of the
time.
And it
lives squarely in the dead zone.
Mets’
problem with Ryan Helsley is getting worse
https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6596239/2025/09/03/mets-ryan-helsley-pitching-problems-tigers/
The Mets
have tried fixing Helsley’s tipping issue. Helsley said he “didn’t love” the
new adjustments at first, but believes he is better off now that he has changed
the positioning of his hands on the mound. Mendoza said Helsley’s struggles on
Wednesday were not related to tipping.
Whether he
is or he isn’t, the point is that Helsley’s struggles are not limited to
tipping. He is not elevating his fastball. He is not avoiding walks. He is not
hitting locations.
As Tigers
designated hitter Kerry Carpenter, batting from the left side, connected on a
fastball low and inside, Helsley immediately turned to watch the ball travel.
If Helsley hadn’t, he would’ve missed it. The ball traveled at 106 mph off
Carpenter’s bat. The three-run home run provided the game’s final margin.
After the
game, Helsley said he thought his execution was “OK, could probably be a little
better.”
Helsley’s track record suggests that he can turn things around, but the two-time All-Star has never encountered a stretch quite this bad before. From a metrics standpoint, his breaking pitches still seem good. And velocity remains strong; he hit 102 mph and averaged 99 mph. Also, he is not far removed from success; with the Cardinals, he had a 3.00 ERA in 36 innings. Still, immediate answers on how to fix Helsley are hard to come up with.
Pitch
Profiler @pitchprofiler
THE SPROAT
GOAT HAS ARRIVED
What to
expect from Mets prospect Brandon Sproat in MLB
https://www.mlb.com/news/what-to-expect-from-brandon-sproat-in-mlb?partnerID=web_article-share
For one
thing, his average four-seam fastball velocity has improved a tick from 95.9
mph before June 28 to 97.1 mph afterward. He’s touched 100 mph four times in
'25, and three of those instances have come in this 11-outing stretch. The
movement on the pitch has changed slightly, too, with Sproat trading a little
armside run for increased induced vertical break.
But the
velo change has been the biggest highlight. With the extra heat, Sproat has
improved his whiff rate on the four-seamer from 18.8 percent to 30.3 percent
and cut the slugging percentage against it from .467 to .390. As such, he’s
gone to the pitch even more against right-handed hitters, and it’s usurped his
95-98 mph sinker as his most-used pitch against same-side bats, albeit only
slightly (24.5 percent usage vs. 22.3).
Mets
Prospect Group @bkfan09
Mets have
$5.4M to spend on this 2026 Class.
MLB Power Rankings
https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6586384/2025/09/02/mlb-power-rankings-brewers-yankees/
11. New
York Mets (10.7)
Record: 74-64
Last Power Ranking: 12
Award nominee: Pete Alonso,
Silver Slugger
This is a pretty boring pick, right? Except, no, not
really, because Alonso actually has never won a Silver Slugger. He’s been an
All-Star four times. He won a Rookie of the Year award, and he’s been top 10 in
MVP voting a couple of times. He’s led the league in homers and he’s led the
league in RBIs, but he’s never won a Silver Slugger (there was always a Paul
Goldschmidt or Freddie Freeman or Matt Olson or Bryce Harper in his way). This,
though, could be Alonso’s year. It’s basically a three-man toss-up among
Alonso, Freeman and Harper, but Alonso might have the slight edge heading into
September. — Jennings
Jim Bowden’s top 50 MLB prospects
22. Carson Benge, OF,
New York Mets (Triple A)
Age: 22
Bats: L Throws: R
Height: 6-1 Weight: 185
Scouting Grades: HIT: 60 PWR: 50 RUN: 55 ARM: 60 FLD: 55
The Mets got a steal with Benge, whom they selected with
the No. 19 pick in the 2024 draft. He was a two-way player at Oklahoma State
and threw 95-98 mph from the mound. Since turning pro, he’s been a full-time
position player. He is a good athlete and capable of playing all three outfield
positions, while being a 20 home run/20 stolen base-type hitter. He’s “hit”
over “power” and should be major-league ready sometime next year.
National League Players of the Month: August 2025
https://www.justbaseball.com/mlb/national-league-players-of-the-month-august-2025/
Just Missed the Podium: Juan
Soto, NYM
August Stats: 131 PA, 10 HR, 27 R, 22 RBI,
.277/.435/.574, 11 SB, 182 wRC+, 1.6 fWAR
A strong argument could be made for Juan Soto to make the
podium, but Profar did just enough last month to earn the nod over Soto.
Soto was tied with Turang for the second most NL homers
in August with 10 (which was one more than Profar), and he came in just behind
Profar with a 182 wRC+. Walking over 20% of the time in typical Soto fashion,
he was near the top of the leaderboard in OBP and OPS as a result.
Still, Profar had the edge in OPS thanks to a higher
slugging percentage, and he had a seven-point advantage in wOBA as well. The
margin between these two players was very tight, and while he didn’t crack the
top three on this list, Soto deserves his flowers for what he did in the month
of August.
Soto is now tied for fifth in MLB with a 155 wRC+ on the
year. Sitting seventh in OPS (.915) and wOBA (.389), Soto is hitting his stride
at the right time and is ready to lead the Mets down the stretch as the regular
season comes to an end.
OptaSTATS @OptaSTATS
Nolan McLean of the Mets
is the second MLB pitcher to go 4-0 with a sub-1.50 ERA and 25+ strikeouts over
his first 4 career starts (since ERA became official in both leagues in 1913).
The other was Fernando Valenzuela in 1981.
Binghamton
Rumble Ponies @RumblePoniesBB
Kevin Parada has been
promoted to Triple-A Syracuse!!







Stop chasing Philadelphia. They are not laying down
ReplyDelete22 games to go
Mets 4 loses ahead of SF
5 ahead of Cincinnati
Only.one away from SD for #2 slot
Win Your Series
I am most confident in the New Three, in the following order: McLean, Tong, Sproat. Mack, you are shocked the three were called up. I wish they were called up weeks sooner.
ReplyDeleteHelsley can turn it right around. First, he has to convince the opposing hitters that they are in trouble. Too many fastballs right down Broadway doesn’t help, though.
Beat the Reds.
I was shocked based on where they were pitching at the beginning of the season plus how well they were pitching then.
DeleteHelsley can figure it out
DeleteSend him to the Savannah Bananas
What is the prospect for Kevin Parada's future? If Francisco Alvarez can keep healthier he's certainly the catching future. Will he become trade bait as part of a package to address other needs?
ReplyDeleteDo you protect Parada in Rule 5?
DeleteMy opinion, none
DeleteToo much affiliate talent right behind him
No, I would not protect him
DeleteGood morning. Mack, I’ve looked at David Peterson’s numbers in the past and Clay Holmes, and both do better in the six man rotation. It’s just that having so many starters empties the bullpen. Plus, the kids have been pitching all year so it may be better to lighten their burden, as we know injuries happen with fatigue.
ReplyDeleteAs coaches wanted Sproat to conserve energy by throwing slower, since he went back to his old self we have seen that he is the goods. I don’t like starting his career in The Great American Ballpark as it is a bandbox, but I worry more about Tong due to he straighter fastball.
Good points and analysis on Peterson and homes
DeleteI will feel much better if Sproat can go 6- IP, 2-R this first time
I need to ask an ignorant question, because, well, I’m ignorant… I noticed the Mets signings are all from two countries, except for Fuentes. Is that because they have more scouting and presence in those two counties or because this year those are the better prospects and it’s a coincidence they all come from just those two areas?
ReplyDeleteMy educated opinion
Delete1. Both countries are far more scouted
2. Children commit earlier for organized ball
Gus, I saw this article. I guess they panhandle where the gold is. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_active_Major_League_Baseball_players_by_country_of_birth
ReplyDeleteIf you don’t protect Parada in Rule 5, how could some team not take him? So,I would protect him.
ReplyDeleteNah
DeleteHe blew it
Of course you protect Parada. Silly to lose him for nothing.
ReplyDeleteHere's my 2026 NY Mets team. I would trade Mauricio, Williams, Sproat, Benge and Clifford for Skenes and I would sign Grisham for CF Alonso 1b and Diaz for the BP. That means I have Alonso 1b Mcneil 2b Lindor SS Baty 3b Vientos DH Alvy catching and an outfield of Nimmo Grisham and Soto with Taylor and Acuna for the bench. I would also sign Marte for a year as his influence on the team seems to be very positive almost like Iglesias was last year and not a bad bat off the bence either. Skenes would be our SP1A of course with McLean SP1B then Tong, Peterson, Holmes and fingers crossed Senga with Scott in the wings. I know getting Skenes is a dream but it's my dream so live with it now O.K. guys what do you think?
ReplyDeleteGary I think that is way too much to give up. Pittsburgh will definitely get something like that for him but hopefully not from us.
DeleteI would keep all those players and sign a free agent top tier pitcher and just lose a 2nd and 5th round pick and keep all the guys you mentioned.
Also by keeping these guys we can try and go below the luxury tax?
Also like I said before I would let Alonso go
Gary is wheeling and dealing. Getting Skenes is worth lustily pursuing this off season. If I was Pittsburgh,I’d want Elian in any such deal.
ReplyDeleteGlad you guys are not Mets GM.
ReplyDeleteSays the guy that used to serve under Ulysses Grant
DeleteHi Mack. Great piece, as always. I don’t share your concern about a 6-man rotation for the kids, given that they were primarily pitching once per week in the minors. That said, I’d love to see them pitch more.
ReplyDelete