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 #10:
10. C Yovanny Rodriguez
2025: DSL
TEAMS – 168-PA, 39-K, 2-HR, 26-RBI, .331/.446/.493/.939
Yovanny
Rodriguez is an
18-year-old catching prospect (born November 7, 2006, in Guarenas, Venezuela)
in the New York Mets organization.
He stands
6'0" and weighs 175 pounds, batting and throwing right-handed.
Signed as an
international free agent on January 15, 2024, for a franchise-record $2.85
million bonus, Rodriguez was ranked as MLB Pipeline's No. 6 overall
international prospect in the 2024 class and the top catcher available.
Scouts
praised his advanced skills for his age, with early buzz comparing his arm
strength to elite MLB catchers like J.T. Realmuto—pop
times on throws to second base already at big-league levels.
The Mets saw him as a potential two-way star:
strong defensively with offensive upside. He drew interest from multiple teams
but committed to New York, where officials were immediately impressed by his
bat control, contact skills, and projectable power as he adds strength.
moved
stateside to the Florida Complex League (FCL) for the "bridge league"
(extended instructional play).
Hit: 55 –
Advanced bat-to-ball skills, consistent contact, and plate discipline. 47.8%
pull rate.
Power: 50 –
Present gap power; projects for more as he matures physically.
Run: 55 –
Above-average speed for a catcher, shown in 4 SB.
Field: 40 –
Raw
Arm: 60 –
Elite strength, 70-grade by some scouts
Overall, he's
a high-floor catcher with All-Star potential on both sides of the ball, often
compared to Francisco Alvarez in his early
Mets days (advanced for age, power/arm combo).
ETA:
2028-2029.
MACK –
IMO… this is your next Mets starter behind
the plate. The key to his success is working on all factions of his defensive
game. He has the arm strength. He just needs to find the target below right,
going towards first, for his throws. Hitting? Don’t worry about the homes. Just
get on base. If he does this, he can easily move Alvarez to a DH role.
Jon Morosi @jonmorosi
Free agent Justin Turner plans
to play in 2026, according to his agent, Greg Genske.
Turner, who turns 41, posted a .759 OPS
against left-handed pitching for the Cubs this year.
What I’m hearing…
And if Pete Alonso doesn’t return to the Mets?
Internal options exist. Some evaluators view
first base as a position that players with experience at other spots can move
to and generally figure things out. Similarly, some clubs choose to platoon at
the position.
To those points, it wouldn’t be out of the
question for the Mets to upgrade defensively at second base and ask Jeff McNeil, a
left-handed batter, to play some first base (perhaps among other spots, given
his versatility), people familiar with the club’s thinking suggested. It’s
likely the club would also think about Mark Vientos (right-handed batter) and Brett Baty (a
left-handed batter) as first-base options, too.
Mets trade for Felix Millan and
George
Stone
This November trade was considered one of the
more underrated trades the Mets made, and one that turned out great. On
November 2, 1972, the club traded Danny Frisella and Gary Gentry to the Atlanta Braves for Felix Millan and George Stone.
Millan spent five years at a Met, playing steady defense while also racking up
743 hits including 185 in 1973 and 191 in 1975. His slash line was
.278/.326/.337. While never considered a star, Millan was still a key member of
this team.
Stone, a once productive pitcher for the
Braves, had a bad year in 1972 leading to his exit from Atlanta. Still just in
his mid-20s, and despite being in the league for six years already, Stone had
an incredible year for the 1973 Miracle Mets.
In a rotation that included some of the most
popular Mets pitchers of all-time, Stone, wo started in the bull pen, later
shifted into the rotation and finished with a 12-3 record and 2.80 ERA as the
Mets won the division with a paltry total of just 82 wins. Without Stone, the
Mets would have been watching the playoffs on television. He pitched six and
two thirds innings in a playoff win against the Reds giving up just one run and
threw three shutout innings against the Oakland A’s in the series. Stone never
had the same success in 1974 and 1975 pitching to an ERA in excess of give, but
he certainly shined having a career year in 1973.
NY Mets Monday Morning GM: 3 changes David Stearns will
have a hard time selling fans
2)
Not re-signing Edwin Diaz, and getting too clever with his
replacement, is trouble
Re-sign Edwin Diaz and all is good. You’ve
sold the fans. At whatever price it takes, bringing Diaz back into the fold for
2026 and beyond wins with the fans.
We know this isn’t a given. Stearns’
reputation for taking chances on pitchers in particular could have them going
down other rabbit holes. Robert Suarez is the next best thing available in free
agency. Short term deals with Raisel Iglesias or Kenley Jansen are
other moves he could make. What about something more off-the-wall?
Pushing Clay Holmes out of the rotation and into a closer’s role
feels icky outside of it being necessary to bolster the rotation with two
really good arms. A signing like Emilio Pagan wouldn’t feel like the solution. Although he
effectively became a closer for the Cincinnati Reds last year, he should be
viewed by the Mets as a setup man option and not the final boss.
Not so much out of the box as much as it
would be risky, the Mets might find themselves landing Devin Williams at a
perceived bargain. It’s fine, but as a closer, it’s a step downward
. The same
would go if the Mets signed Luke Weaver, Kyle Finnegan, or any other pitcher who experienced
troubles in the closer role.
It’s fine to have the desire to fix a broken
pitcher. Just don’t let him be the end-all, be-all expected to get you your
final 3 outs.
6 things the NY Mets need to do this
offseason if run prevention is the focus
2) Sign Cody Bellinger to be a defensive stalwart at multiple positions
Is Cody Bellinger overrated as a defender? It
probably depends who you ask. Without a doubt he’d be a better player in both
corner outfield positions. He wouldn’t completely take away playing time from Brandon Nimmo or Juan
Soto. In fact, he probably wouldn’t see as much time in the
corner outfield spots as he would the two other dreamy positions Mets fans
would like him at: center field and first base.
Two holes in the lineup at the moment that’ll
be solved in some fashion this offseason, Bellinger’s versatility makes him a
unique option for the Mets. He’d be the biggest free agent position player
they’d sign, likely signaling an end to Pete Alonso’s reign in Queens.
Run prevention is something Bellinger can
bring to the Mets even if it’s primarily robbing doubles late in games.
Jacob deGrom
1. New York Mets
The most obvious landing spot would be the
New York Mets, with whom deGrom spent the first nine years of his illustrious
career, carving out a special place in Queens history. He is absolutely beloved
there and he would surely welcome the opportunity to return. This is more than
a sentimental fit, however. The Mets badly need an experienced ace to headline
the rotation as Kodai Senga and Sean Manaea become increasingly unreliable. deGrom can
deliver immediate results as the Mets attempt to get back into the postseason
mix and serve as a valuable mentor for New York's next generation of pitchers,
such as Nolan
McLean and Jonah Tong.
Ryan Hearn
Like Bellinger, O'Hearn was cut loose by his
previous club, the Kansas City Royals, after the 2022 season, but he rose from
the ashes in Baltimore and reinvented himself, earning an All-Star selection in
2025.
Over two and a half seasons with the Orioles,
O'Hearn slashed .277/.342/.454 with 42 homers over 1223 plate appearances.
Traded to the San Diego Padres this July, O'Hearn batted .276 with a .350 OBP
in San Diego, though he saw his SLG dip to .387. The Padres' Petco Park ranks
as one of the toughest places to hit homers as a lefty, however, which should
explain some of the drop off.
Like Bellinger, O'Hearn is versatile. While
he can't play center and he isn't a superb glove in the outfield, he can
competently man either corner outfield spot. Where he really shines is at first
base, posting four defensive runs saved and six outs above average in just
541.1 innings at first in 2025. Sticking him at first definitely would follow
David Stearns' run prevention mandate.
Codify @CodifyBaseball
Slowest MLB free agents (400+
PAs this year):
Josh Naylor, 24.4 ft/s (30 stolen bases!)
Wilmer Flores, 24.5 ft/s (1 SB)
Ty France, 25.1 ft/s (1 SB)
Josh Bell, 25.2 ft/s (0 SB)
Marcell Ozuna, 25.3 ft/s (0 SB)
Pete Alonso, 25.3 ft/s (1 SB)
Codify @CodifyBaseball
FEWEST STOLEN BASES ALLOWED THIS YEAR:
47 KC
78 MIL
80 CHC NYM
82 DET
92 SF
The Mets have signed LHRP Anderson Severino to a
minor league deal.
Just turned 31 5-10
190 DR
IFA – signed by NYY (2013) – known for
hi-velocity fastball
MLB Career: -0.1-WAR, 0-0,
6.14
2025: Monclova
(MEX) & Licey (DOWL) –
53-appearances, 3-1, 2.32, 1.21,
42.2-IP, 52-K, 21-BB
Mack – there always seems to be a Yankee connection with this team. I wonder why. Severino was know as a Yankee prospect with a 100+ fastball. I have no idea what that ticks up to now. Slot him into AAA-Syracuse until ST is over.
ella franco (John Franco’s daughter) @ellafranco_
Wouldn’t usually post something like this
because I like to be objective but gonna make a HOF case for my dad:
- 424 saves, 7th all time on the saves list
(2nd all time at the time of retirement)
- 1st all time saves leader amongst lefties
- Career ERA: 2.89 (across 21 seasons, 1245
IP)
- 23.5 WAR
- 8 seasons with 30+ saves
- 3 time NL saves leader
- 4 time All-Star
- NL record for most pitching appearances
- 1.88 ERA in the postseason, 10 strikeouts,
1 save, and 2-0 record (only 15 appearances)
Feel free to disagree if you wish, just
putting it out there
MACK – Well… since you put it this way….












Franco should be in the HOF, but look at how hard it was to sneak Billy Wagner in there.
ReplyDeleteNot sure on the Yovanny picture date, but I hope he looks a lot more beefy this season.
Daniel Murphy might make the ballot, but he has zero chance.
If Jake is healthy, why not a one year return? Kids could learn much from him.
Jake is a 37 year old, 96 game winner. Remarkable is today’s game of beisbol.
ReplyDeleteJake is still owed $95 million thru 2027, so there is THAT to consider.
ReplyDeleteAnd here are other potential costs, per Spotrac:
CONTRACT NOTES
2028 Club Option: $20M (contains no buyout)
625 Innings Pitched or 1 Top 5 Cy Young: $30M
725 Innings Pitched or 3 Top 5 Cy Youngs: $37M
Full no trade clause
2028 Becomes a $37M Player Option if:
160+ IP + Top 5 Cy Young + Healthy in 2027
Cy Young: $250,000
2nd: $200,000
3rd: $150,000
4th: $100,000
5th: $50,000
WS MVP: $150,000
$100,000 each for All-Star, Gold Glove, LCS
Tom, arise to today’s Mets… we don’t care anymore about the cost!!!
Delete:-) I’m liking adding JDG, someone who can still ace and can teach. I’ve heard some ridicule since I first wrote it a month ago, but his fits in nicely.
ReplyDeleteThe Mets CS numbers were a result of Torrens. Torrens should have huge value as a trade chip.
Baylor stole 30; Soto stole 38 and led the NL. I’m completely confused… where are the rabbits and what are they doing? Not getting in base or attracting too much attention?