30) Jonah Tong
The Good
Tong has one of the funkiest deliveries in baseball with
his extreme over the top delivery. The fastball is easily plus-plus given its
extreme ride and improved velocity. The growth of his changeup has propelled
him into mid-rotation potential.
The Bad
The command and lack of chase are glaring concerns. He
has shied away from his breaking balls this season, which likely need to return
as he tackles AAA.
Mets
Prospect Group @bkfan09 DSL TOP 10
8. 3B/1B Roybert Herrera
Roybert Herrera is an 18-year-old minor league baseball
player in the New York Mets organization, born on June 30, 2007, in Caucaugua,
Venezuela.
He played as a third baseman, first baseman, and second
baseman for the DSL Mets Orange in 2025, a Rookie-level affiliate in the
Dominican Summer League.
Standing at 6'2" and weighing 175 lbs, he bats
left-handed and throws right-handed.
He is recognized as a prospect in the Mets' minor league
system.
2024 – Mets DSL Blue: 79-AB,
23-K, 1-HR, 9-RBI, .329/.407/.443/.850
2025 – Mets DSL Orange: 143-PA,
30-K, 6-HR, 17-K, 15-BB, .285/.371/.488/.858
New
York Mets @Mets
An incredible first season in Queens continues.
@JuanSoto25_ #LGM
Jim
Koenigsberger @Jimfrombaseball
"I was just 19 years old and had been in high school
the year before. There I was facing Henry Aaron, Eddie Mathews,
Felipe Alou, Joe Torre and Rico Carty.
It was very intimidating.
A couple years prior to that, I'd had all their baseball
cards and here I was on the mound facing them"
Nolan Ryan recalling
his first MLB appearance. Gary Gentry, Jerry
Koosman, Tom Seaver, Nolan Ryan.
Only eight pitchers started for the Mets all season, 1969
Mets
Prospect Group @bkfan09 DSL TOP 10
5. C/DH/1B Josmir
Reyes
Name: Josmir Daniel Reyes
Team: DSL Mets Orange (Rookie Affiliate)
Position: Catcher (C)
Bats/Throws: Left/Right (L/R)
Physical Stats: 6'0", 180 lbs
Age: 18 (Born September 21, 2006, in Guatire, Venezuela)
Status: Active
Notable Performance: In a game on June 3, 2025, Josmir
Reyes hit a double that allowed teammate Elian Pena
to score from first base during a DSL Mets Orange game against the DSL
Giants Black, contributing to an 8-5 victory
2024 – Mets DSL Orange:
4-PA
2025 – Mets DSL Orange:
190-PA, 4-HR, 28-RBI, 34-BB, only 15-K,
.300/.426/.480/.906
Prospects Who Will Break Into the
Top 100 in 2026
https://www.justbaseball.com/prospects/five-prospects-break-into-top-100-2026/?s=03
AJ Ewing, 2B/OF, New
York Mets
At a
Glance
2025 MiLB: 124 G, 564 PA, .315/.401/.429, 3 HR, 87 R, 55
RBI, 70 SB, 12.1% BB, 18.6% K, .113 ISO, .392 BABIP; 26 2B, 10 3B
Case
for Helium
A 2023 draftee, Ewing has broken out in his second full
pro season. He opened in Single-A and quickly earned a bump to High-A, where he
logged a 140 wRC+ in 78 games with a 13.1% walk rate. For a prep bat, the plate
discipline is advanced: it’s a patient approach, above-average contact, and
mature swing decisions that turn him into an on-base engine.
The double-plus speed is a separator — he has 70 steals
in 128 games across three levels, including 12 bags in just 28 Double-A games.
He’s been more swing-happy since the Double-A jump, but that’s a normal
adjustment for a fast-moving 20-year-old.
Overall
Outlook
The missing piece is impact. Ewing has homered just three
times in 2025, though the speed plays in the gaps (26 doubles, 10 triples) and
props up the slug. He’s moved around the diamond but likely settles in the
outfield; if he proves he can handle center, the ceiling pushes toward top 50
territory.
Even without big home run totals, the OBP/speed combo and defensive versatility make Ewing a firm top 100 candidate right now.
Baseball
America @BaseballAmerica
Shortstop Elian Peña showed
why he received the largest bonus for any Latin American prospect this year.
In the DSL he hit 292/.421/.528 in 228 plate appearances
with 36 walks and nine home run.
His success makes the Mets a team with a strong
international class.
Mets All-Star closer could seek another lucrative deal in
free agency
New York Mets closer Edwin
Diaz is already one of the richest relief pitchers in the history of
Major League Baseball, and he could seek an even more lucrative deal this
winter.
Diaz is in the midst of the third season of a five-year,
$102 million deal signed before 2023. Diaz has an opt-out after this season.
Given his performance — pitching to a 1.85 ERA with 26 saves, and 87 strikeouts
— some feel as though it’s likely Diaz will hit the open market.
Since a disastrous 2019 season — Diaz’s first with the
Mets — Diaz has re-established himself as one of the top closers in the game.
He’s been named to two All-Star teams with the Mets, and as such is arguably
the top relief pitcher that could hit the open market this offseason
What we’re hearing about the Mets’ pitching plans into
the postseason
https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6645438/2025/09/19/mets-pitching-plans-into-postseason/
An off day Monday provides the Mets the luxury of setting
up their rotation for a potential Wild Card Series a week early. Specifically,
New York can move Nolan McLean up a day to
pitch on regular rest Thursday in Chicago, pushing Brandon
Sproat back to Friday in Miami. That would leave McLean in position to
start Game 1 or Game 2 of a Wild Card Series.
In general, the Mets see some value in having your best
starter throw Game 2 of a three-game series. That way, you have your ace to
either clinch a series win or stave off elimination. And make no mistake: The
Mets view McLean as their best starter. (This year, because there’s an extra
off day between games 1 and 2 of the NL Division Series, there’s no penalty for
saving your ace for Game 2 of the Wild Card Series; he can still start on
regular rest in games 2 and 5 of the NLDS should you advance.)
With this specific team, though, the best play might be
McLean in Game 1, given he’s the only sure starter for the Mets in a playoff
series. Sproat and Jonah Tong have put
themselves in the conversation for starts, and New York liked how the tandem of
Clay Holmes and Sean Manaea worked Tuesday against the San Diego Padres.
Provided Manaea was able to stay on routine while on paternity leave this week,
that tandem will work again Sunday against the Washington Nationals.
Outside of McLean, be prepared for creativity. Even in a
three-game Wild Card Series, the Mets would likely carry six starting pitchers,
using the other five in hybrid roles, similar to how they deployed David Peterson last October.





Mullins should be left off the playoff roster if there is one. Siri, too.
ReplyDeleteTHe Mets don't need three defensive specialists in center. Taylor is the best
DeleteCan you compare Morabito to Ewing? They seem so similar.
ReplyDeleteThe defense has been spotty, but the RISP hitting has been abysmal. Easily the Mets biggest weakness this year. Yesterday, they left thirteen guys in scoring position, or something like that. Acuna’s failed bunt execution led to Alvarez’s hard hit double play. With Marte on third, that rocket gets through the infield.
I have said many time that Stearns had to have been drunk at the trade deadline and yesterday left him with egg on face, rubbed into his hair and all over his clothes. Giving up such a haul for a sidearmer that you only control for two months was the dumbest decision in all of baseball. And Mullins… when Laureano is available, why Mullins? When McNeil and Taylor are doing the job, why Mullins?
And José Siri…. OMG he sucks!
Everybody is Ewing crazy right now. Call me crazy. I still like Morabito better
Deleteyou can't have two runners on with no out and not score a run... you just can't
Mullins had pictures
Gus, the numbers say Ewing > Morabito.
DeleteMullins was a total bonehead, Soto was lax in backing him up.
ReplyDeleteWe will live or die by the trio of young starters.
McLean on an off day gave up one earned run?
Pete is turning into Steve Sax.
Why they didn’t cut Siri and bring up Celestino (.272) is beyond me. Or Yonny Hernandez, who has hit .330 in AAA.
Josmir - three DSL catchers will be coming stateside next year….Yovanny, Zayas, and Josmir.
Reds and Az win, while the Mets choke. My brother would say “Typical.”
Even Pete's throw to second was done with flat feet. God, he's such a polar bear out there
DeleteGus, don’t forget the baffling Montas signing.
ReplyDeleteStearns seems to be an accumulator of pitchers on the roster regardless of talent. He cut Dom Hamel the other day instead of some of the shit he still had. He really needs a GM.
DeleteIf teams were named based on their primary attributes, New York Chokers would be an apt team name.
ReplyDeleteTom, last year’s Tigers showed everyone that winning is fickle and you can sell and still make the playoffs. Now, we are seeing major sellers like Cleveland, Arizona, San Francisco all driving for the playoffs after being major sellers. The Mets not only shot themselves in both feet prospect wise, but they cut off their in hands lineup wise. Stearns’ biggest flaw is wanting to be involved. He has Terry Collins disease at a younger age where he can’t leave something that is working alone. He wants to fix what’s not broken.
DeleteWILD CARD UPDATE
ReplyDeleteA NIGHTMARE
ll the teams that were needed to lose... won.
Mets lost
so...
WITH 7 METS GAMES TO GO:
METS 80-75 ----
CIN 79-76 1
AZ 78-77 2
SF is 4 back with three teams ahead of them. They are out of the race
And CIN has the tie breaker advantage
DeleteCurious as to what Stearns and Mets will do to fix the team this winter. I do hope that he will do a better job than what he did at the trade deadline. This team needs pitching help as well as hitters who hit with men on base and can consistantly make normal defensive plays. I still struggle to understand how we can go from a first place team ,possible the majors best, in the first half of the season to one of the leagues worst in the second half of the season. What the hell happened!! What changed!!
ReplyDeleteLes, I'm sure they wonder this as well. The one thing seems for sure... Stearns and Mendoza will be back
DeleteOne thing none of you, or I, have mentioned this morning
ReplyDeleteAt this point in the season, you win the game you are playing FIRST before worrying about the next one.
Diaz threw only 7 pitches
Why do you not bring him back and, if he does get in trouble, bring in Helsley then?
The “playoffs” have already begun. IFthe Mets falter, they will not reach the next (formal) round (the Wild Card series).
ReplyDeleteStearns is not getting “Gus Love” or “Tom Love” today.
ReplyDeleteI’d prefer Senga not return. How about you gents?
Sad news on Megill, who always seemed to be on the cusp of breaking out, only to get injured, etc.
Am I too late to join the Stearns bashing party.
ReplyDeleteDamn, I've been saying this shite for weeks now and couldn't get a rise out of anyone.
Cedrick Mullins, the gift that keeps on giving.
BTW Mack, Montas must have had some pictures also.
And don't get me started on Siri. Why the hell is he taking up space on this roster. AND NOW HE CAN'T EVEN FIELD...yeesh.
Back off on the Stearns dumping
ReplyDeleteHe's not going anywhere
And why bring a GM in if you aren't going to give that person any power?
C'mon Mack, he's really crapped the bed this year. He's easy pickins.
ReplyDeleteAnother year like this and he will be outa here.
He will be back in 2026
DeleteMack is right. Stearns and Mendoza will be back in 2026. They should be back. How can you preach continuity and then fire everyone after the first year things go wrong. We were all singing Stearns praise at the first part of the season. I am sure that the Mets braintrust will have long discussions on what happened and how to fix it. In the words of Tug McGraw," you gotta believe "! This is what Stearns and company get paid the big bucks to figure out and correct. I just hope and pray that they are up to the task.Let's go Mets!!
ReplyDeleteTwo recommendations: Do not sign “I am Rick Peterson and I can fix this pitcher in 10 minutes” hurlers. And NEVER sign low average very high strikeout guys. Other teams love it when their pitchers can face that. The Mets let HIGH CONTACT HITTERS like Jake Mangum (.300 with Tampa) and Rhylan Thomas (.327 with 78 RBIs in AAA) go, instead. That is idiocy.
DeleteDespite everything I think Stearns is the right person for the job. Don't feel the same way about Mendoza.
ReplyDeleteMack please don't tell me DS has the same "I know I'm the smartest guy in the room" disease that Jeffy had oh God and iron clad contract AND bro love with Cohen and Mendy. I love all the "when were in the playoffs" talk but have you all watched this disaster lately like last night like how could we lose that game as well as play like shit for over 3 months ugh. So the Reds are 1 game back and have the tie breaker and we finish the season against the fish who are hot and will be gunning for us with nothing to lose great just great. O.K. Mack how about ideas for this winter and next year as I'm really burned out about now and need some encouragement PLEASE.
ReplyDeleteGary, look at my Rhylan Thomas comment.
DeleteGary
DeleteThe Stearns thing is two-fold
1. He has a total buyout clause in his contract
2. Steve loves his ass
Rhylan Thomas in AAA:
ReplyDelete614 plate appearances, 32 Ks, 7 HR, 78 RBI, 104 runs, .327, 33 of 41 in steals…Idiots.
In typical Mets rehab approach, Taylor had 4 at bats Friday and sat on Saturday. I assume he will be in the lineup up in AAA on Sunday. Why didn’t he instead DH last night, to sharpen his rusty bat?
ReplyDeleteTom totally agree with you and of course the evil Empire rolls into the playoffs W/O Soto and Cole so lets file this under same old same old. As far as Taylor we both know he'll finally play when too late just like waiting so long to bring up the kids.
ReplyDeleteOne suggestion
ReplyDeleteI think Mets fans think there is a lab in Queens and all the affiliate ballparks
Not true
The lab is only in St. Lucie
The hardest adjustment is from AA to AAA.
PUT A 2ND LAB IN SYRACUSE
Guess who's in center today?
ReplyDelete