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11/2/25

MACK - IN FOCUS - Bo Bichetter, Anthony Kay, Francisco Alvarez, Yesavage, Travis Jankowski, Chris Suero, Firing Stearns, Framber Valdez

 


Ben Nicholson-Smith                   @bnicholsonsmith

Bo Bichette says he’s not anticipating needing off-season surgery on his knee.

 

Anthony Kay



LINK

When the chance came to start fresh in Japan, Kay took it, signing with the Yokohama Bay Stars. Two seasons later, after setting records with Yokohama (1.74 ERA in 155 innings, NPB-leading 57.8 percent groundball rate) and mastering a new pitch that changed everything, he’s finally earned another shot at MLB redemption.

 

Francisco Alvarez

LINK

The injuries are a somewhat budding concern for the young backstop. In 2024, he lost nearly a month to a left thumb sprain that required surgery. As referenced above, he broke his hamate bone during batting practice in Spring Training. In late August, he sprained his UCL in his right thumb sliding into second base, opted to play through the pain, fractured his pinkie finger on his left hand from a hit by pitch on his left hand while on a rehab assignment for the aforementioned right thumb sprain, and played through both injuries through the final month or so of the season. His hands have been through the ringer these past few seasons, and the injuries do put the team behind the eight ball, even if they are not his fault — finding two catchers who can give you quality offense and defense is nearly impossible in modern baseball (frankly, it is hard enough to find one catcher who can do it), so constantly having to start a backup catcher and back him up with a Triple-A catcher is rough on the offense, especially when the absences have been long. It may behoove the Mets to find a backup catcher who can be closer to the 1B to Alvarez’s 1A, rather than a strict backup due to the growing list of injuries, even if that is a very tall task for the front office. While I would not call him injury prone, especially because some of these injuries can just be filed under Things That Can Happen, it is becoming a trend.


Past The Eye Test Baseball                           @PastTheEyeTest

The lion does not concern himself with establishing the fastball, but rather throws his best pitches instead.

               Pitch Profiler                     @pitchprofiler

This game will forever be known as The Trey Yesavage Game

 

Forgotten Ex-2025 Mets

LINK

Forgotten Ex-2025 Mets

LINK

Travis Jankowski

Travis Jankowski reunited with the Mets this year for a very brief encounter. He appeared in only 4 games, grabbing a bat once. He sacrificed the runners from second and first up a base in a game versus the Baltimore Orioles in July. It was the last game he’d appear in with the Mets before being designated for assignment.

Already a Mets legend in a weird way, his self-deprecating humor from his stint with the team in 2022 had fans overjoyed when the team picked him up in 2025 for a handful of days. Signed on June 10 and released on July 13, he became one of several players to occupy a roster spot the Mets never seemed to have much of a clue how to use properly.

Jankowski’s presence allowed for the Mets to demote Luisangel Acuna to the minors to allow him to play more regularly. It didn’t seem to make much of a difference as Acuna failed to do much at all after getting recalled. The veteran outfielder’s time playing baseball professionally is probably coming to a close. He didn’t play another game after getting released by the Mets. At 34 with faster and more intriguing options out there to be the 26th man off the bench for major league teams, we can probably expect a retirement announcement at some point this offseason.

Travis Jankowski reunited with the Mets this year for a very brief encounter. He appeared in only 4 games, grabbing a bat once. He sacrificed the runners from second and first up a base in a game versus the Baltimore Orioles in July. It was the last game he’d appear in with the Mets before being designated for assignment.

Already a Mets legend in a weird way, his self-deprecating humor from his stint with the team in 2022 had fans overjoyed when the team picked him up in 2025 for a handful of days. Signed on June 10 and released on July 13, he became one of several players to occupy a roster spot the Mets never seemed to have much of a clue how to use properly.

Jankowski’s presence allowed for the Mets to demote Luisangel Acuna to the minors to allow him to play more regularly. It didn’t seem to make much of a difference as Acuna failed to do much at all after getting recalled. The veteran outfielder’s time playing baseball professionally is probably coming to a close. He didn’t play another game after getting released by the Mets. At 34 with faster and more intriguing options out there to be the 26th man off the bench for major league teams, we can probably expect a retirement announcement at some point this offseason.


Who are the next young studs for the Mets?

LINK

C Chris Suero (No. 15 prospect, Double-A BNG)

2025 MiLB Totals:

115 G, 475 PA, .233/.379/.407, 88 H, 16 HR, 16 2B, 1 3B, 78 R, 68 RBI, 35 SB, 29.3%-14.7% K-BB%, .175 ISO, .316 BABIP, .375 wOBA, 141 wRC+

Latest Scouting Grades:

Hit: 40   Power:  Run: 60      Arm: 50    Field: 50     Overall: 45

MLB Comp: Daulton Varsho

Suero’s 35 steals last season reflected a near-doubling of his 2024 output (20), which itself was a major explosion from the seven he tallied across his 2022-2023 rookie ball campaigns. When you pair that with steady, year-over-year offensive improvements and legitimate defensive flexibility in the outfield, I don’t think the growing buzz is at all misplaced.

(Seriously, when’s the last time this franchise had a catcher who could hit for power, steal bases, and play the outfield? Have they ever?)

Now, unlike Reimer and Ewing, Suero’s raw hit tool still needs a bit of work. His 139 strikeouts ranked second-most in his group; his 29.3% K-rate was top of the class. He likes to swing, and he swings hard — his tendency to swing over fastballs is documented. He also hits the ball on the ground a lot: Suero had the worst line-drive rate among his class, alongside the second-most severe tendency to hit pull-side (55%). That pull power is great if you’re keeping the ball up, but hitting it on the ground to the same spot repeatedly can turn an otherwise dangerous hitter into a predictable one very quickly.

Still, Suero’s ~15% walk rate and 70 walks both ranked seventh in his group, and his HR/FB ratio ranked sixth, so the untapped power and plate discipline tools are clearly there. If he can learn to keep the ball in the air and start spreading it around the field a bit, I have no doubt his already-solid .317 BABIP will skyrocket.

All told, Suero is an incredibly promising prospect with excellent defensive skills to back up a developing bat and quietly freakish athletic tools. Looking at the numbers, he already seems to be the most complete catching prospect in the Mets’ system. It feels like we’ve barely started to scratch the surface with this guy, and I don’t doubt he’ll be sharing the MLB spotlight with Alvy before we know it.


Mets fan survey results

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6757524/2025/10/29/mets-fan-survey-results-2025/

Do you agree with the Mets’ decision to retain…?

92% Yes               David Stearns

79% Yes               Carlos Mendoza

It’s a fun dichotomy. More fans blamed Stearns for 2025 than Mendoza, yet fewer wanted Stearns fired than Mendoza. In both cases, though, the fan base is largely copacetic with New York’s leadership.


3 SP doors the NY Mets can refuse to knock on due to their scary second half

https://risingapple.com/ny-mets-3-starting-pitcher-doors-refuse-knock-second-half?utm_source=bleacherreport&utm_medium=referral&_branch_match_id=1408222371212362866&_branch_referrer=H4sIAAAAAAAAA8soKSkottLXTyrSSywo0MvJzMvWt%2FQOKg939Y8MjUiyrytKTUstKsrMS49PKsovL04tsnXOKMrPTQUAOMh%2BuDkAAAA%3D

Framber Valdez

Framber Valdez could be considered the best starting pitcher available in free agency. However, like the Houston Astros, the year didn’t end so well. Valdez was 10-4 with a 2.74 ERA in the first half. After the All-Star Break, he was 3-7 with a 5.20 ERA. His ERA reached 5.64 in August and 6.51 in September. The weak finish makes it easier to talk ourselves into skipping his house altogether. Sign him and you're going to miss out on the opportunity to reach all of the best houses in the neighborhood.


5 comments:

  1. Look I just don't want the crazy SNY trade proposals for everyone from Skubal to Skenes so lets go into next season and let the kids play and grow and go after Skubal when he's a FA. We have to build team to last year after year and we're almost there but to compete the the new Evil Empire who has that pipeline from Japan all to themselves (like are they winning the WS w/o Yamamoto and Ohtani) which really sucks but its the facts of life in baseball so we have to deal with it.

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  2. Jankowski would not be retiring if teams were able to each add two more offensive slots, adding salaries of $2 million or less. As I’ve said before, teams in the 1960s and 1970s had 15 offensive players, but now, just 13. That is 60 fewer slots.

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  3. Why sign Framber when you have the equallyineptManaeaalready?

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  4. Torrens is 1A catcher defensively; if he could just hit a little more with more pop

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  5. No catcher will sign with you having to wait for Alvarez to get hurt. Further, for whatever reason, once Alvarez is healthy, he tends to play all the time.

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