Good Morning –
And now for the pen…
Let’s put aside who is gone.
The only ones I ever knew that loved spilled milk were my now departed two
cats, Shatty and Ivy.
By my count, the new pen
currently stacks up as Devin Williams, Luke Weaver, Brooks Raley, David Peterson, Brooks
Raley, Tobias Meyers, and Huascar Brazoban.
That’s seven
That’s not enough.
There are a bunch of more
guys currently on the 40-man… (IL):
Reed Garrett, A.J. Minter,
and Dedniel
Nunez will start 2026 on the IL.
Also on the 40-man are Alex Carillo, Joey
Gerber, Justin Hegenman, Dylan Ross, Brandon Waddell, Austin Warren, and Luis Garcia.
Nothing against these guys,
but this pen needs more. And remember… I’m assuming that Peterson will go to
the pen. If he doesn’t, that reduces the core to six.
The Mets could start the
season with Christian
Scott in the pen.
Ross remains the first
prospect possibility, but will have to first improve his WHIP during ST.
Or, still sign or trade for
another reliever.
The bottom line here is that
the bullpen is not done.
The Mets signed RHRP Craig Kimbrel to a
minor league contract.
The first reaction by most
Mets fans was “Sure. Why not?” Yeah, I know… he’s around Ray’s age now and was
an absolute disaster for Baltimore in 2024 (5.33-ERA), but he put up +0.4-WAR
and a 2.25-ERA for Houston last season while producing 16-K in 11-IP.
Kimbrel was once the most
feared reliever in this game and a minor league invite to show us in spring
training what he has left in the tank hurts no one other than the other
reclamation project that would have pitched in that spring slot.
Love it.
Playoff Mets @PSNMets
Does anyone know why Dylan Ross is
only ranked as our #18 prospect?
He’s 6’5, throws 102, and
has a career 2.13 ERA and 13.6 K/9 in the minors.
I understand that he has
some control issues, but I feel like he deserves some respect.
MACK – believe
me… Ross has been working on his past control issues throughout the off-season.
You will see a lot of him during this upcoming spring training season, which
will determine where he opens up at come opening day. My guess is he will
become a member of the parent club, if for no reason other than the current pen
is not eight man strong.
Running From The
OPS @OPS_BASEBALL
Jacob Reimer was one of 4 players
in MiLB to have 15+ HR, 30+ 2B, & a 155 wRC+ or higher
21 YO, 6'0"/205, bat
first, corner INF w/ a pull-heavy profile (51.0%) & solid 10.5% SwStr%.
Good QoC results & saw a spike in his FB% in AA (40.3%), where he posted a
150 wRC+ w/ 9 HR.
MACK – impressive, but I’m
still not convinced if this will translate to the major league level. Plus,
third base is blocked tighter than… well, ya know. This leaves DH and 1B as
future Mets positions. There’s also Ryan Clifford standing in his way. A lot of obstacles.
Keith Law – Top 100 Mets
Prospects
https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6985939/2026/01/26/top-mlb-prospects-2026-keith-law-konnor-griffin/
Nolan McLean
RHP New York Mets
Age: 24
Ht: 6-2 Wt:
214
2025 Ranking: NR
McLean’s path from the
Oklahoma State bullpen to the Mets’ rotation is a heck of a story: He threw 25
1/3 innings as a sophomore, all in relief and rarely more than one inning per
game, while starting 52 games at third base and another 10 in the outfield. The
Orioles took him in the third round in 2022, then walked away without even
making another offer after something came up in his medicals, instead using the
money they’d allocated to him to pay 17th rounder Carter Young, who hit
.163/.230/.211 last year in Double A and is, obviously, not a prospect. McLean
returned to OSU in 2023, threw 30 innings with the same stuff but worse
strikeout and walk rates, and still played more in the field than on the mound,
after which the Mets took him in the third round again and signed him for slot.
After turning pro, he started more games in April 2024 than he did in three
years in Stillwater, making 43 starts over two years before his debut, and kept
getting better with the help of the Mets’ strong pitching development team.
Primarily a two-pitch guy in
college who lived off that top-rail four-seamer, McLean can show six pitches
now, with the fastball still a plus pitch, a bigger-breaking sweeper than he
had as an amateur and a new curveball with huge two-plane break. His changeup
gets a ton of tumble to it, and he barely even had to use the pitch in the
majors because everything else was so good. He’s an elite athlete, as you’d
hope a former third baseman-reliever would be, and has shown an incredible
capacity to make adjustments already. The command is the one facet of his game
that separates him from the true No. 1-No. 2 starters, and I’m betting that
will improve with more experience — McLean has thrown just 332 total innings in
five years, most of that in the past two seasons — and because he’s already
improved in so many other ways. He’s got a high floor as a No. 3 starter
already, and could be a top of the rotation guy given another 200 or so innings
of repetitions.




10 comments:
Reimer will be better than Baty and Vientos by this time next year. Why? Because I said so.
Kimbrel has a beast mentality. Beasts have more than the average bear to go to war with on the mound.
Ross will floss major league opponents. Lambert, too.
Any word on Drew Smith, in terms of a spring invite? He was solid.
Could Bryce MDO show up out of baseball limbo and fill the Stanek role?
Christian Scott will get plenty of BP innings early this year.
Montes de Oca signed with the Nationals last week.
Peterson is one of their better starters. For a guy I’ve crapped on, it brings me joy to say that I was wrong… again.
You seem to like Brooks Raley. Why have one when you can have two.
Not expecting it, but if Stearns has one more trade in him, I’m guessing it would be for one more high leverage bullpen arm.
The pen could suprise us this year, If Williams and Weaver revert to their 2024 seasons it could be real good. I saw Joe mention Adbert Alzolay in Reese's article, he could be a wild card. He came up as a starter and went to the pen after a couple of years. His last full year 2023, before injury was a good one as the Cubs closer with 22 saves and a 2.67ERA, 9+ k's/9 w a 1.15 career WHIP. We also have a few real good homegrown options that could help this year as well. It will depend on how Mendoza manages the starters and pen, if he struggles hopefully Stearns has a quick hook.
I like the idea of opening with Scott in the pen. It is a way to ease into pitching after an injury year. Don't forget that we can also use Megill in the pen. He usually has a couple of good innings in him - just not enough to adequately fill the role of starting pitcher.
I thus stand corrected. Missed that one.
Megill out all season with TJS
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