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 #14:
14. SP Noah Hall
25/yrs old in
March 6-0 195 RHSP
2025: A+ – 25-G, 21-ST, 5-7, 2.72, 1.27,
112.2-IP, 63-BB, 115-K
Noah Hall is
a promising right-handed starting pitcher in the New York Mets' minor league
system. At 24 years old (born March 30, 2001, in Charlotte, NC), he's 6'0"
and 195 lbs, known for his command, plus changeup, and potential as a
mid-rotation arm.
He's
currently assigned to High-A Brooklyn Cyclones.
He’s shown
significant improvement in 2025 after battling injuries, positioning him as one
of the Mets' more intriguing pitching prospects.
Hall began
his college career at Appalachian State University, where he spent two seasons
(2019-2021) primarily as a reliever, posting a 4.15 ERA over 34.2 innings with
41 strikeouts. He transferred to the University of South Carolina for his
junior year in 2022, transitioning into a starting role in the competitive SEC.
That season,
he logged a 4.34 ERA in 76.2 innings across 16 starts, with 78 strikeouts and a
solid walk rate (31 BB), earning him a 20th-round draft pick (612th overall)
from the Milwaukee Brewers.
Hall returned
to South Carolina for his senior year in 2023 to improve his stock
In 2023, he
started hot, going 5-1 with a 3.29 ERA in seven starts (41 IP, 43 K, just 9
BB), earning SEC Co-Pitcher of the Week honors in February and Perfect Game
National Pitcher of the Week on February 28. Unfortunately, a back injury sidelined him for the second half of
the season. His performance and pedigree as a two-year Gamecock starter caught
the Mets' eye, leading to his selection in the 7th round (216th overall) of the
2023 MLB Draft.
Hall signed
with the Mets for $176,250, slightly below slot value, and debuted in the
Florida Complex League (FCL) Mets in 2023. Limited by his injury, he made just
four starts, posting a 3.38 ERA in 13.1 innings with 13 strikeouts and
excellent control (2 BB).
In 2024, he
advanced to Low-A St. Lucie Mets, where he built on his command with a 3.45 ERA
over 15 starts (72.1 IP, 78 K, 22 BB), though he dealt with minor setbacks that capped his innings.
Four-Seam Fastball
Straight with
some ride; located up in the zone well.
92-95 mph
(touches 96)
50-55 grade
(primary pitch, ~50% usage)
Improved life
in pro ball; pairs well with changeup for swing-and-miss.
Changeup
His best
offering—tumble and arm-side fade; elite separation from fastball.
80-83 mph
60-70 grade
(above-average to plus; ~30% usage)
Devastating
vs. righties; generated
whiffs in college and minors; Mets' development focus.
Slider
Shorter,
tighter break with high spin (2,600+ RPM); horizontal sweep.
84-87 mph
45-50 grade
(fringe-average; ~15-20% usage)
Shows promise
but underutilized; added depth in 2024-25; potential third pitch.
Hall's
strengths are his low walk rates (career ~2.5 BB/9 in college/pros) and ability
to induce weak contact, but he could benefit from a curveball or refined slider
for lefties.
His changeup
is the carrying tool, often graded as his 70 on the 20-80 scouting scale.
Overall,
Hall's trajectory is upward, and with the Mets' pitching lab, he could emerge
as a reliable starter. Keep an eye on his Cyclones starts—he's one injury-free
season from Mets contention chatter.
MACK –
I have Hall beginning the season back in AA-Binghamton, in a very crowded projected rotation (Watson, Thornton, Santucci, Diaz, Girton, Cota). His number one and number two objective this season is to, stay healthy and, stay healthy. If he accomplishes that, he will end the season in AAA-Syracuse and line himself for a major league rotation on opening day 2027 (somewhere).
What would
make the 2026 season a success?
Winning the World Series 14%
Winning the pennant 26%
Advancing to the NLCS 25%
Advancing to the NLDS 7%
A division title 14%
A postseason berth 14%
“This is the
standard,” Stearns said in a champagne celebration in Oct. 2024, and Mets fans
agree. Nearly two-thirds of them think the Mets need to be in the sport’s final
four for 2026 to be a success.
Ca-Ching! Baseball America predicts big
contracts for the top NY Mets free agents
What Baseball America projects the top 5 Mets free agents earn on their next contract
Tyler Rogers - 3 years, $44 million
Everywhere seems convinced Tyler Rogers will
get paid. A contract of this magnitude probably has him landing somewhere other
than Queens. This, again, feels like a case of a year too long. Rogers is 35
and not a closer. Durable and consistent, he’ll price himself out of David
Stearns’ plans if this is the asking price.
Ranking 'Japanese Babe Ruth' Munetaka Murakami's
Top 7 MLB Landing Spots
1. New York Mets
Back in August, Mets president of baseball
operations David
Stearns made the trek to Japan to personally scout Murakami:
That alone doesn't mean that the Mets are
definitely going to sign Murakami, but it's a pretty good indication that New
York will be in on him this offseason.
Pete Alonso is once again a free agent after hitting 38
home runs this past season. It seemed last winter like Alonso was more
interested in the Mets than they were in him. With his 2025 production, he'll
surely get four guaranteed years this offseason, if not more. If the Mets don't
feel comfortable giving that deal to a player who will turn 31 in December,
Murakami would be a pretty nice pivot.
Even if the Mets do bring back Alonso, you
can't discount the possibility of Steve Cohen also opening up the checkbook after missing
the postseason altogether in 2025. Murakami could co-exist with Alonso, instead
pushing Mark Veintos at third base and getting DH at-bats. Adding Murakami
might also make it easier to have Alonso DH on a more consistent basis.
Mets trade Ron Hunt and Jim Hickman to
the Dodgers
On November 29, 1966, the Mets traded Ron
Hunt and Jim Hickman to the Los Angeles Dodgers for Tommy Davis and Derrell Griffith.
Davis spent one year with the Mets and hit .302 and looked like the team had a
legitimate hitter they could depend on for many years to come. It didn’t work
out that way. I still have a 1967 Mets yearbook that Tommy Davis autographed.
In December of 1967 (yes, this article is
supposed to be about November trades – but I needed to close the loop on Davis
and what he actually brought to this team) and despite his strong season, Davis
and three other players were shipped to the White Sox for Tommie Agee and Al Weiss. No
one could have predicted the contributions that both would have to the 1969
championship season both at the bat and in the field. Agee is easily considered
one of the club’s best outfielders in franchise history and who could forget
those two magical catches against the Baltimore Orioles. While Weis was not
that strong of a player, his World Series home run in 1969 was essential to the
team clinching their first championship.
Why New York Mets may let Pete Alonso walk
in free agency
In a
November 5 article, ESPN MLB writer Jorge Castillo made
a bleak prediction about Alonso's chances of playing for the Mets in 2026.
When assessing the Mets' free agency outlook,
Castillo wrote, "There's the case of first baseman Pete Alonso, a free
agent for the second straight offseason. Alonso wants a lucrative long-term
deal coming off a rebound campaign.
"The Mets probably aren't going to give
him one, which would leave first base to fill," he added.
It's unclear where Castillo has gleaned this
opinion from. But his sentiment does make sense, given that the Mets weren't
willing to give Alonso a long-term, lucrative deal last offseason.
And while Alonso is coming off a successful
year, he's still one year older, which means that his inevitable regression is
one year closer to arriving than it was when these two sides were last
negotiating.
Despite this, it would be sad to see the Mets
not even make Alonso a competitive offer, given everything he has meant to the
franchise over the past six seasons. But baseball is a business, after all. And
if David
Stearns thinks that money could be better spent elsewhere, then
he has to make the best choice for his club.



10 comments:
Please, please, please do not sign Murakami. The last thing this team needs - whether or not Pete stays - is another defensively-challenged DH type on a long-term deal. Especially one who figures to K 200 times in MLB. Let him go hit .215 with 40 HR in lefty-friendly Yankee Stadium.
Adam
I haven't heard anything in the halls about him.
Bellinger and Bregman yes but no Murakami
Good morning on a lazy Sunday morning.
1. Hall - I did not see him coming. Need to keep my eye on him.
2. Agee and Ed Charles were two players I loved to watch play way back then.
3. As the team now stands, it appears to be left-handed dominate with Soto, Nimmo, Baty, O'Neil (plus Benge and Clifford) versus Alverez and Vientos (DH) (plus Williams). The free agent market for right-handed batters consists of Bichette and Bregman. Can / will they move across the field? Naylor and Murakami, first-basemen are lefties. The first three's projections are not close to Alonso's projections. Murakami as a lot of power and a lot of red flags. (What are Bellinger's projections away from Yankee stadium). Do the Mets need Pete more than Pete needs the Mets?
4. I am in the camp of the Mets need to go more in the youth movement as opposed of trying to go all in during 2026. Based on that I would have responded in the survey - Love to make the play-offs with close to 90 wins. See what happens then.
1. Hall will have to really flash to become an MLB Mets starter. And his injury history will probably deny him from being packaged.
My guess he is 2027 pen bound
2. Big time fan of Agee. Isn't Charles a river?
3. One of the reasons Breggy is being pursued (keep an eye on Randy Guzman for 2027)
4. I am too but they just aren't ready
Big fan of Agee and Charles.
Can still hear Bob Murphy saying "Never throw a slider to the Glider"
Wanna buy a Murphy blazer?
Mack, that was Lindsey Nelson with the crazy blazers
What size?
DOH
over medicated these days
44L
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