The top news this morning is
going to all be about Mets infielder, Luisangel Acuna,
who hit… wait for it… FOUR HOME RUNS last night in winter ball play. An
accomplishment like this does three things. One, it increases his trade value
during this off-season. Two, it solidifies his position as remaining a member
of the 2026 Mets. And three, it makes one wonder who really should be the
starting second baseman in 2026, Acuna or that expensive guy that can barely
hit .230.
Mack’s Mets is both proud
and excited to announce the addition of “Jules L” to the 2026 Mack’s Mets team
of writers. Jules has been our most prolific comment maker on every single post
anyone writes around here and he will begin his writing this coming Tuesday. As
Paul said, we’re starting to look like a lineup that the Blue Jays would be
proud to put on the field.
The Mets have signed RHP Jun-Seok Shim to a
minor league deal.
RHRP 6-4
195 21/yr. old Seongnam, South Korea $750K bonus IFA 2023
2025 – FCL Marlins: 13-apps, 0-3. 10.80, 2.40,
13.1-IP, 23-BB,
16-K
He gained attention as one
of the top international prospects in the 2023 class, often hailed as the best
pitching talent from Korea at the time.
Attended Duksoo High School
in Seoul.
He opted out of the KBO
draft (where he was projected as a high pick) to pursue MLB.
In January 2023, the
Pittsburgh Pirates signed him for a $750,000 bonus.
His pro debut came in 2023
in the rookie-level Florida Complex League (FCL Pirates), where he posted a
3.38 ERA with 13 strikeouts in 8 innings (small sample).
Injuries limited him severely: He missed most
of 2023 and all of 2024 (shoulder issue).
In July 2024, the Pirates
traded him to the Miami Marlins (along with another prospect) for outfielder
Bryan De La Cruz.
In 2025, he appeared in 13
games for the FCL Marlins, struggling with a 10.80 ERA, velocity loss
(averaging low-90s, down from his peak), and ongoing injury concerns. The
Marlins released him in August 2025.
The New York Mets signed him
to a minor league deal, giving him another shot to rebuild his prospect status.
His career has been heavily impacted by
injuries (elbow, toe, back, shoulder) dating back to high school, which have
sapped his velocity and consistency. Once viewed as a potential mid-rotation
starter (or high-leverage reliever) with big upside, he's now a high-risk
reclamation project.
Repertoire
Shim's stuff was electric
pre-injuries, earning comparisons to pitchers like Gerrit Cole (his idol) or
even Chan-ho Park.
Fastball — His signature pitch: Sits
94-96 mph, touches 100 mph with excellent ride/hop due to high spin
rates → Creates the illusion of rising.
Curveball —
Sharp-breaking 12-6 type, often graded as plus (50-60 on the scouting scale).
Slider —
Solid breaking ball, sometimes blended with the curve.
Changeup/Splitter —
Developing off-speed pitches; the splitter shows promise as a swing-and-miss
offering, while the changeup needs consistency.
Scouting reports (e.g., from
Baseball America, MLB Pipeline) typically graded his fastball 60,
curve 50-60, slider/splitter 45-55, with control around 50 when healthy.
Post-injury, his
velocity dipped significantly (topping out mid-90s at best in limited 2024-2025
data), hurting the effectiveness of his secondaries.
If he regains health and
velocity with the Mets, he could still have MLB potential—plenty of upside left
at his age.
MACK –
Ah, what the hell… let him live in the lab
pre pre-season.
Jon Anderson @JonPgh
Nolan McLean - Overrated
His 21.2% called strike rate
was tenth highest in baseball among 478 pitchers who threw at least 500 pitches
His 12% SwStr% would predict
a 22-23% K%, nowhere near the 30% he put up
Against righties: 10.6%
SwStr%, 48% Strike% (not good)
He's one of the best at
getting ground balls (60%), and that matters, but he's
being drafted in the top 30 SPs, it's way too high
MACK –
Interesting… hope Jon is wrong here and
he goes back and plays with his band, YES.
Hagen Snell @HagenSnellBB
Trade value after 5 years:
NYM:
Francisco Lindor: 29.8 WAR | $157M
Carlos Carrasco: 2.3 WAR | $38M
TOTAL: 32.1 WAR | $195M
CLE:
Andrés Giménez: 13.4 WAR | $8.3M
Amed Rosario: 5.9 WAR | $12.4M
Josh Wolf: 0 WAR | $ N/A
Isaiah Greene: 0 WAR | $ N/A
TOTAL: 19.3 WAR | $20.7M
5 years ago today the Mets
acquired Francisco
Lindor. fWAR leaders since then:
Aaron Judge — 42.8
Shohei Ohtani — 31.6
Juan Soto — 30.7
Francisco Lindor — 29.8
One of the best superstars
in the game, and still under appreciated
Post arbitration -
MLB – 2016 IFA Prospects –
By Rank
#2 Wandy Asigen
SS
AGE 16
BATS L
DOB 08/21/2009
THROWS R
HT 6' 0"
WT 175
Scouting grades: Hit: 65 |
Power: 60 |
Run: 60 |
Arm: 50 | Field: 55 | Overall: 65
Major League All-Stars
Nelson Cruz and Tony Batista are some of the biggest names to call Puerto
Plata, Dominican Republic, home. Asigen, despite being one of the youngest
players in the 2026 international signing class, already has the look of
potentially being next in that lineage. A standout performer during game action
despite consistently playing against some of the Dominican’s top talent from a
young age, Asigen has been heralded as having arguably the most advanced
offensive profile among his class. He trains with Jaime Ramos in the D.R., a
member of MLB’s Trainer Partnership Program.
The excitement around
Asigen’s prospect profile stems primarily from his special left-handed swing.
He has ripped off 110+ mph exit velocities and is repeatedly able to find the
barrel during in-game action. Asigen has a knack for creating loft from his frame,
something that should allow him to continue to tap into his above-average power
as he continues to fill out. The quickness of his hands has evaluators excited
about the future potential impact he can have with the bat.
Defensively, many of those same actions work in his favor. While his arm is merely average at this stage, he performs many of the quick-twitch movements that evaluators look for when projecting a young player’s ability to stick at shortstop. Asigen has a nose for the ball and his wheels – which have been clocked at 6.5 seconds on 60-yard dash times – allow him to cover tons of ground laterally.
#23 Cleiner Ramirez
OF
AGE 17
BATS R
DOB 12/01/2008
THROWS R
HT 5' 9"
WT 175
Scouting grades: Hit: 55 |
Power: 50 | Run: 45 | Arm: 50 | Field: 50 | Overall: 50
Venezuela’s representatives
among the Top 50 international prospects in 2026 is arguably the most
impressive crop the country has produced since the list began in 2012. Ramirez
is one of those players helping the nation’s stock as he displays a balanced skill
set with tons of upside, a la fellow countryman Luisangel Acuña.
One evaluator compared Ramirez’s build by the time he’s done filling out to
something mirroring Kirby Puckett. He trains with ABC Baseball in his native
Venezuela.
At just 5-foot-9, Ramirez
uses his shorter stature to his advantage in the box. His right-handed swing
has tons of bat speed as he displays a repeatable bat path and ability to
square up a variety of pitches. During his time in the Caracas Prospect League,
he hit .419 (13-for-31) and racked up 21 total bases in 10 games. His power is
still blossoming, but he has shown an advanced eye at the dish with 14 walks to
just eight strikeouts in that same sample size.
Ramirez has experience
playing around the infield as an amateur but many scouts see his future on the
grass. While he recorded a pair of outfield assists and went 3-for-3 on
stolen-base attempts during his time in the Prospect League, he’s something of
an unconventional runner with choppy strides. He could likely handle shortstop
or center field, but with such a focus on the premium positions at the lower
levels of the Minors, his ceiling will likely best be maximized by moving
around the diamond and letting his loud offensive tools do the talking.




Wandy Asigen overall rated a SIXTY FIVE? Wow.
ReplyDeleteLuis now has an answer to the people who ask him what have you done for me lately? His 4 HRs are quite impressive. Quality of pitchers, who knows, but nobody else is hitting 4 Home Runs in a game these days. Take that Cal Raleigh..
Fourth looked like an on purpose lob
DeleteAsigen could be one of the great bats in this game
DeleteBregman to Cubs. One of the original Grateful Dead members died yesterday. Asigen? Very exciting.
ReplyDeleteIn rock, it's usually the drummer that dies first
DeleteIn the case of the Dead, the drummer is all that is left
Da Bears win. Bregman to Cubs. Big night in Chi-Town bars
DeleteMets stocking up on top Latin shortstops. Positions to be determined in around year three
DeleteMack, I know what the band mountain that drummer Corky Lang is the only surviving member. I know when I used to watch him drum, he’d be dripping with sweat, quite the workout. But the GD guy who died yesterday died of lung complications. Could’ve been too much weed, but I have no idea.
ReplyDeleteThink you're right
DeleteWe need some IFA superstars. Maybe he and Pena are.
ReplyDeleteThe current Mets plan is to spend more on top IFA prospects which offset the 10 slot domestic draft loss
DeleteAre there any salary dump acquisitions at all this year? Last year the Yanks gave up nothing to get Bellinger and San Fran didn’t give up too much for Rafael Devers? Why don’t any of these players ever fall into our laps?
ReplyDeleteDevers would have been a great pickup last year and would have been Alonso’s replacement.
I know some of you don’t like his makeup but I would be very happy with Manny Machado salary dump to protect Soto in the lineup. He would be the only player i would envision being a salary dump beside Arenado? Anyone else you can think of?
Good question
DeleteAnti-Mets bias?
I don't know
Ridiculous signing of Bregman. 35M per year for average results. He will be washed up in 3 years. The GMs just can't help themselves. And everyone keeps blasting Stearns for not severely overpay the latter portion of an over the hill player.
ReplyDeleteAs for Acuna, he still really has no place to blossom on this team unless Semien gets hurt. Really just an awful trade. The guy hit 230 the last 2 years. Acuna's only place on this team is as a utility player. The guy is the best fielder on the team and the fastest.
Joe
DeleteDidn't Stearns do the same thing for salary dumping Nimmo for Semien?
Best fielder
DeleteFastest runner
4 homers in one game =
Utility role
That's your 2026 Mets
Ok, we all need to pick a side here.
ReplyDelete1. All of you that want Acuna to start, should all revel in Mauricio’s MVP winter league performance two years ago - the year before he got hurt. This league is AA, and while I want Acuna to play more, Simien probably could do the same.
2. The Nimmo salary dump was to get out of the deal two years sooner. I put Nimmo’s Baseball Savant page on here the other day. Go check his percentiles and understand he had FIVE MORE YEARS HERE!
3. Simien is likely to be hurt half of this deal anyway and will be sitting for Williams in a year and a half. I’m sure Stearns knew that.
4. I agree that Acuna is a talented player, but he didn’t light up AAA either, so it’s hard to know how good he might be.
So true! Agree 100%
DeleteLosers like Jon Anderson should not be reposted. That’s what they want: attention. He makes up some stupid comment that no one else but him supports, finds a few stats and puts it on the web. The fact that this was the best 8 starts by a start by a starting pitcher in MLB HISTORY, should be dismissed. This loser knows his stuff - certainly.
ReplyDeleteJed Hoyer in Chicago is under alot of pressure to finally win something. They haven’t done anything since Theo Epstein left and his foolish trade for Cabrera showed his recklessness. So naturally, who would Boras call? Call the guy with a good young third baseman and no outfielders! LOL… Cubs fans are stunned this morning. Read their blogs.
ReplyDeleteFinally, it would be criminal to not acknowledge Jules’ writing. Pretty much Ph. D. levels, I will have to get alot of sleep Monday night! Can’t wait for the first one… poor Alvarez, he’s going to have his feelings hurt!
ReplyDeleteGuess what?
DeleteHe isba PH D
Welcome Jules!!! Very excited to read your work!
ReplyDeleteMack may have to change the site name to PHDs R Us once Jules’ articles start rolling off the presses to accompany all of the site’s other highly cerebral writers. I’d add Gus in there, too, except he won’t do articles.
ReplyDeleteRay got his PHD in Golf, back when Sammy Snead was a pre-teen, just wanted to add that. Ray by the way has the first recorded hole-in-one, in 1897.