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 #9:
Elian Peña is a 17-year-old shortstop (born October 19, 2007, in Azua, Dominican Republic.
He's a
left-handed batter and right-handed thrower, listed at 5'10" and 180
pounds, and is widely regarded as one of the Mets' top prospects following a
blockbuster international signing.
On January
15, 2025—the opening day of the international signing period—Peña signed with
the Mets for a record-breaking $5 million bonus,
the largest ever given by the franchise to an international free agent
(shattering the previous high of $2.85 million to Yovanny
Rodriguez in 2024). This was the highest bonus for any Latin American
prospect in the 2025 class and the second-highest overall (behind Rōki Sasaki's $6.5 million with the Dodgers). It
consumed most of the Mets' $6.26 million international bonus pool.
Peña, who
trained with La Alianza academy in the Dominican Republic, was ranked as MLB
Pipeline's No. 3 international prospect (behind Sasaki and Josuar De Jesus Gonzalez) and Baseball America's
No. 2 (behind Sasaki).
David
Stearns called him a
"unique talent" with a left-handed swing, power, strike-zone
awareness, and work ethic, noting he's already one of the top prospects on the
island.
Peña is
praised as a potential five-tool player with elite hitting ability for his age.
Hit tool:
Plus-to-plus-plus bat speed, advanced plate discipline (rare for a teenager),
excellent pitch recognition, and the ability to spray line drives to all
fields. MLB Pipeline gave him a 65-grade hit tool.
Power:
Projects for 25-30 HR potential as he adds strength to his lean, athletic frame
(still growing physically).
Defense:
Smooth actions at shortstop with soft hands, plus arm strength, good range, and
instincts. He's expected to stick at SS long-term, though some project a future
move to 3B or 2B for less demand on speed (which is average but playable).
Speed/Running:
Above-average underway, 21 stolen bases in pro debut.
Overall:
Baseball America grades him 55/Extreme risk, with high baseball IQ and
leadership potential
2025
Performance (Pro Debut)
Assigned to
the Dominican Summer League (DSL) Mets Orange (rookie level), Peña had a
standout season despite starting 0-for-26:In ~55 games: .292/.423/.540 (.949
OPS), 9 HR (six in just two games—two separate three-HR games, making him one
of only two pros in 2025 with multiple three-HR performances), 33 RBI, 46 runs,
35 walks, 21 SB (on 25 attempts).
ETA: Around 2030, given his youth. Likely starts 2026 in the Florida Complex League (stateside rookie ball), with potential for quick rises if he dominates.
Brett Baty took a big step forward after being recalled
from AAA, having him in a position to be the everyday third baseman
Running From The OPS @OPS_BASEBALL
Brett Baty posted a 111 wRC+,
slashed .254/.313/.435, and posted 2.3 fWAR over 432 PA. His QoC was fantastic,
and he also increased his bat speed from 73.5 MPH last season to 74.8 MPH in
2025. The 26-year-old proved a lot of people wrong!
What I’m hearing…
NY Mets Monday Morning GM: 3 changes David Stearns will
have a hard time selling fans
3) Failing to add an ace-quality starting
pitcher is defining insanity
The Mets have some starting rotation work to
do this coming year and the tricky thing is they don’t have an obvious open
spot. Even if they have a six-man rotation on a regular basis, we can already
expect Nolan
McLean, Sean Manaea, David Peterson, Clay Holmes, and Kodai Senga to
make up the main starting five. A move to the bullpen or trade opens up a spot
for an ace to arrive. That’s the big challenge for Stearns to figure out.
There isn’t a world where the Mets go into
next season with the same rotation. At least one change will take place. That
means making a subtraction of some kind.
As far as aces go, obvious trade candidates
include Tarik
Skubal, Freddy Peralta, and Sandy Alcantara. Free agency offers the Mets choices, too.
None seem free of red flags and come with outrageous price tags.
It feels like the Mets already have an ace in
McLean with questions about the others. Manaea and Senga pitched their way out
of the rotation last year with Holmes bouncing between roles. Peterson was
never moved to the bullpen but had one of the weakest finishes of anyone on
the roster. He flamed out big time.
Failing to add a truly impactful starting
pitcher this offseason when several trade candidates and free agents are
available will be malpractice.
Here's an early look at the top 2026
Rookie of the Year candidates
November 19th, 2025
https://www.mlb.com/milb/news/early-candidates-for-2026-rookie-of-the-year?t=mlb-pipeline-coverage
Nolan McLean, RHP
(NYM No. 1/MLB No. 11)
This guy was swinging the bat in 2024, so
there is still ceiling here for him (as a pitcher). He couldn't have been much
better than he was during the eight-start stretch in New York. But I think
there is more for him, ceiling-wise, because he's still learning how to be a
full-time pitcher, and the opportunity will be there. So let's see what he
does. -
Jonathan
Mayo
MetCast @MetCastPod
“Brandon Nimmo got pissed when Andy Martino did a
Yankees-Mets team and he had Alex Verdugo above him. Also I don’t think he liked any of
the talk about Francisco
Lindor being captain.“
- Adam Ottavino (on Brandon Nimmo)
X - Former
Mets reliever Adam Ottavino shared on his podcast that Nimmo strongly dislikes
trade talk and even bristled at ideas of Francisco Lindor as team captain. The
Mets are listening to trade offers for the 32-year-old outfielder, who has a
full no-trade clause and $101 million left on his deal, but they haven't asked
him to waive it yet. Nimmo brings elite defense and a lefty bat, though his age
and salary complicate moves as the team reshapes around Juan Soto and
Lindor.
MACK – This is a whole different shy
Brandon Nimmo that I knew in Savannah. Must be money doin the talkin’
Running From The OPS @OPS_BASEBALL
Juan Soto was 2 SB away from a 40/40 season, and there
were people seriously complaining about his slow start. Soto Pacheco is
generational, and he's going to be a Met for a very long time!
Angry @AngryMike24
Mets Jonathan Santucci had 19 outings in 2025, allowing 3 ER or
fewer for HI-A & AA:
97.2 IP | 23 ER | 52 Hits | 30 BB | 116 K |
2.13 ERA | 0.84 WHIP
29% K-Rate for ‘25
#’s on par or better than any LHP ranked
among Top 100, but Santucci remains unranked.
Absurd.








On Soto, what is LA Sweet Spot %?
ReplyDeleteI would really hope for Pena by mid 2029.
LA Sweet Spot%
Deletean abbreviation of LA SwSP%
Statcast metric
measures % of players batted-ball events with a launch angle of 8-32 per cent
Range is considered the sweet spoit for optial contact
Pena
DeleteI believe he will finish 2026 in Brooklyn
followed by finishing 2027 in Binghamton
followed by finishing the 2028 season in Syracuse