The excitement about the Mets' prospect pipeline has been building year over year as the team improves their domestic and international scouting. Many of the Mets' picks are being discussed throughout baseball, so Mack has boiled it down to the top 28 to give the readers a glimpse into the team's future. This series will run for 28 days, counting down from #28 to #1. The entire list can be viewed by clicking "2026 Top 28 Prospects" on the top menu bar.
24. Peter Kussow
GROK –
Peter
Kussow is a right-handed
pitching prospect in the New York Mets organization. The Mets selected him in
the fourth round (133rd overall) of the 2025 MLB Draft out of Arrowhead High
School in Hartland, Wisconsin.
He was an
18-year-old (born December 8, 2006) high school standout who signed with the
Mets for an overslot bonus of $897,500, skipping his commitment to the
University of Louisville.
At 6'5"
and around 205-215 lbs, Kussow has a projectable frame with significant upside,
often described by analysts as having "legitimate ace potential" due
to his athletic delivery, room for velocity gains, and strong pitch traits.
He's considered one of the top prospects from the Mets' 2025 draft class—some
call him the "crown jewel"—and MLB Pipeline named him their breakout
Mets prospect for 2026.
Pitching
Repertoire
Kussow's
arsenal, based on scouting reports from his high school/pre-draft era (which
remains the primary source as he's still early in pro development):
Fastball:
Primary pitch, sitting 91-95 mph with a top-end of 96-97
mph. It features firm ride and armside run, plus above-average spin
rates (2400-2600 RPM). Scouts note velocity gains over time and projection for
more as he matures physically.
Slider: His
best/standout pitch—high-spin (2500-2700 RPM),
tight gyro shape in the mid-to-upper 80s (79-88 mph range), with late two-plane
break and good command potential. Often called elite or plus-plus for a prep
arm.
Curveball:
Secondary breaking ball with 12-6 shape (downer action), thrown in the mid-80s
or so in flashes.
Changeup:
Developing third pitch in the high-80s, showing tumble and fade but still
inconsistent and a work in progress.
Command has been noted as inconsistent due to his mechanics and limited
innings (common for cold-weather high school pitchers from Wisconsin), but his
delivery is clean and repeatable for his size. The Mets' pitching lab is
expected to refine this mix, potentially adding velocity or sharpening
secondary pitches.
He's a
high-ceiling arm the Mets invested in heavily for a mid-round pick, with
projections placing him as a potential future rotation piece (ETA around
2028-2029).
1-2-2026
MACK/MM
Peter
Kussow
I want to
lead off the first three reports with three pitchers the Mets drafted last year
who have not pitched a single professional inning so far.
Peter Kussow
is a 19-yr old, 6-5, 200-pound RHP , drafted out of Arrowhead HS (WI) last year
in the 4th round.
Kussow was
Wisconsin's top high school pitching prospect, known for a no-hitter with 16
strikeouts in his senior year and velocity gains leading into the draft.
His
repertoire is:
Fastball: Sits 91-95 mph, touching up to 97
mph. It features sink and run from his low three-quarters to high
three-quarters arm slot, with good command and deception, especially tough on
right-handed hitters.
Slider: His best pitch — a high-spin,
wipeout offering in the upper 80s (often low-80s to upper-80s) with late
vertical slice, sharp break, and excellent command. Scouts call it potentially
above-average or elite for a prep arm
Changeup: Developing third pitch in the high-80s
to low-90s (often 87-90 mph), showing fade, tumble, and depth. It pairs well
with his fastball but remains inconsistent as he refines it.
Curveball: Occasionally mentioned as a downer with
12-6 shape in the mid-to-upper 80s (around 2,600+ RPM in some reports); some
sources blend it with or distinguish it from his primary slider.4
His arsenal
profiles as a potential starter, with the fastball-slider combo as the
foundation and room for growth in velocity and offspeed pitches as he adds
strength.
For age
reasons alone, I have him starting off 2026 as a member of the FCL Mets


3 comments:
Hopefully, Kussow joins the conveyor belt of excellent prospects with a sold MLB ceiling. Liked that pick.
No rush needed here
Very possible back ender
Here is a really nice video on Kussow, while he was still thinking of attending Louisville.
https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=1606027873408737
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