I promised
all of you that, as soon as the season ended, I would breakout and post my
current Top 30 prospects.
This is
performance based, not players that came to the Mets full of promise but have
only produced butterscotch pudding. A perfect example of a player that didn’t
make this list is catcher Ronald Hernandez.
I still like the guy, but based on what he did in 2025, I don’t like him “top
30 guy”.
Nolan
McLean, Brandon Sproat, and Jonah
Tong (maybe) are not on this list. They have
graduated.
I will post
them in each of my weekly Observations and In Focus posts… one player at a
time… beginning with #30.
Today, we
move to #7:
7. OF Nick Morabito
Turning 23 in
May RHH CF/RF/LF
5-10 185
2nd
round 2022 Gonzaga College HS (DC)
2025 AA – 492-PA,
115-K, 47-BB, 49-SB, 6-HR, 59-RBI, .273, .734-OPS
Nick Morabito
is a 22-year-old outfielder in the New York Mets' farm system, known for his
elite speed, plate discipline, and potential as a leadoff hitter or defensive specialist in center field.
He's a
right-handed hitter and thrower, standing 5'10" and weighing 185 pounds.
Originally
from McLean (no… not THAT McLean), Virginia, Morabito attended Gonzaga College High School
in Washington, D.C., where he exploded as a senior, batting .545 with 12 home
runs and 52 stolen bases, earning D.C. Gatorade
Player of the Year honors.
The Mets
selected him in the second compensatory round (75th overall) of the 2022 MLB
Draft as compensation for losing Noah Syndergaard
in free agency.
Morabito's
game revolves around getting on base and disrupting defenses with his legs—he's
graded as a 70 runner on the 20-80 scouting
scale by MLB Pipeline. His compact swing and above-average bat speed help him
spray line drives, but he's still developing power and pull-side approach
against advanced pitching. Scouts compare him to a smaller Clint Frazier or a
light-hitting version of Jeff McNeil: versatile, contact-oriented, and speedy,
but potentially limited to a bench/platoon role unless he adds loft to his
swing.
He's Rule 5 Draft-eligible this offseason, putting pressure on the Mets to add
him to the 40-man roster or risk losing him.
Professional
Career Highlights
Morabito has
progressed quickly through the Mets' system, earning the organization's 2024 Minor League Player of the Year award
for position players. He's led Mets minor leaguers in batting average, on-base
percentage, and stolen bases multiple times.
In 2025, he
spent the full season at Double-A Binghamton (Eastern League champions),
showing solid but not
explosive production while posting a career-high six home runs—though
his 53.9% ground-ball rate limited extra-base power.
Stats via
Baseball-Reference and MiLB.com.
2024 - He was
the only minor leaguer with 50+ steals, 50+ runs, 50+ walks, and a .300+
average.
2025 - 7th in
full-season MiLB steals
Outlook and
Path to the Majors
Morabito is
projected for a 2026 or 2027 MLB debut. He's expected to start 2026 at Triple-A Syracuse, focusing on elevating launch
angle and handling lefties better (he's struggled slightly against them
as a righty).
Defensively,
his range and error-free play (zero errors in 2025) make him a plus center fielder, though his arm is average. In a
crowded Mets outfield, he profiles as a fourth outfielder or pinch-runner, but
his OBP skills (.350+ career) and speed could carve out a niche like Harrison
Bader or a modern Jason Tyner.
@NickMorabito1
MACK – when I
started compiling this list, I had Morabito in the 17th slot; however, what he
did in the Arizona Fall League made me move him up to seventh. Now, I hope he’s
still around by the time this prints out.
I still project
Carson Benge in center. Left is a battle
between this guy and AJ Ewing; however, no
matter what he does in the AFL this off-season, he can’t make the arm throw
faster than God intended it to be.
Nick Pollack @PitcherList
This is the #1 most overlooked stat when
assessing Starting Pitchers.
The defense behind them.
If you can determine defensive strength in
the pre-season, you WILL have a leg up.
BaseballHistoryNut @nut_history
The richest owners in
MLB right now. Incase no one knew. The Jays could outspend anyone if they
actually wanted too
The Mets may have just handed Tyler Rogers the
perfect invitation to Queens
Marcus Semien’s first press conference with the New York media delivered one moment that stood out above the rest. When asked about his defense (13:54 mark), he explained that his priority is making pitchers feel comfortable pitching to contact. It was straightforward, confident, and clearly rooted in experience, the kind of comment that immediately shapes how a team’s pitching staff can expect to operate with him on the field.
The numbers supporting that message are as
steady as they come. Semien ended 2025 with 5 DRS, 7 OAA, and a Gold Glove,
adding to a run that already included three straight seasons of double-digit
DRS and double-digit OAA in the last two years. That level of consistency isn’t
decorative. It reflects a defender who reliably turns contact into outs and
gives pitchers the freedom to attack the zone without hesitation.
Unprotected From the Rule 5 Draft
https://www.justbaseball.com/prospects/most-surprising-prospects-left-unprotected-rule-5-draft/?s=03
Yohendrick Piñango (OF) – Toronto Blue Jays
2025 Stats: 131 G, .258/.361/.430, 15 HR, 70
RBI, 122 wRC+
As Aram Leighton highlighted in his write-up
of Yohendrick Piñango in May, the outfielder is well-known as being a data
darling. The issue with Piñango’s profile is that it comes with a lot of
inconsistencies.
Piñango was a part of the 2018 International
class, signing for $400,000 with the Chicago Cubs. He made his way to the Blue
Jays in the Nate Pearson trade.
Watching him swing the bat is truly
mesmerizing. Putting up exit velocities north of 105 mph, ranking in the 90th
percentile, he offers intriguing power that is surprising to see in someone as
young as he is. The most impressive part about it is that he has put up contact
rates above 80% during his minor league career.
The issue comes with the rate at which he is
swinging the bat. His swing percentage has been sub-50% since his 2023 season
in High-A South Bend.
I would be surprised if Piñango is drafted,
but the intrigue at the plate could be enough to have a team jump at the
opportunity.






Lots of fascinating stuff. One cannot compare Morabito to McNeil on speed. Jeff in the early days was fast and all out hustled. Nick is faster, period.
ReplyDeleteSemien’s D is here….let’s embrace it.
Semien's D
DeleteChanges the whole dynamic of the infield:
Will now a step or two back and a step or two towards first to help who plays there
Lindor will play six inches off second base to help balls hit to the top end between second and first
Morabito vs. McNeil
DeleteThree important goals for future Mets utility players:
OBP
D
base running
Bito wins all three, hands down
At age 22, Morabito is far ahead ofMcNeil at the same age, when McNeil at22 played half a season in low A Savannah, then hit .246 in the second half of that season for St Lucie.
ReplyDeleteI expect Morabito to dominate AAA next season.
I don't think he gets a sniff at starting in Queens someday unless someone goes down
DeleteBaseball America in its latest issue did not have Morabito list in their top ten but had him as the most athletic prospect. I have his base as a 4th outfielder. That said, I imagine Morabito dancing on the base path with Williams and Ewing. That dancing could be so distracting to pitchers trying to concentrate on Lindor and Soto and ...
ReplyDelete