This is no longer a slow start. It’s a signal.
It’s not bad luck. It’s not a small sample size. It’s not something you explain away with expected stats and patience.
This is a credibility moment. And it requires a different posture.
Not the measured, process-driven, long-view approach that defines a well-run organization over time. That approach has value. It builds systems, pipelines, sustainability.
But this is not that moment.
This is a wartime moment.
What April Has Told Us
The Mets were built on an assumption: that a core of established players, supplemented by targeted additions, would produce a stable, competitive baseline.
That assumption is not holding.
The team looks flat. Predictable. At times, disengaged. More concerning, it looks like a group operating under an unspoken premise:
That roles are fixed. That opportunity is guaranteed.
That is the fastest way to lose a season.
Because when performance dips and nothing changes, the message becomes clear, even if unintended:
Nothing has consequences.
And when nothing has consequences, performance becomes optional.
Wartime Requires Different Rules
Wartime leadership is not emotional. It is not reckless.
It is decisive, time-compressed, and unambiguous.
It makes four shifts:
Time compresses – decisions happen now, not in June
Resources reallocate – at-bats and innings go to production, not projection
Accountability sharpens – roles are earned continuously
Signals clarify – the organization shows, not tells, what it values
Right now, the Mets are still operating in peacetime.
That has to change.
Start With the Rotation
Move David Peterson to the bullpen. At this stage, he profiles as a shorter-burst arm, especially in a walk year. Limit exposure, salvage value, and stop forcing a starter outcome that isn’t materializing.
Insert Tobias Myers into the rotation and promote Christian Scott.
At some point, upside has to be tested at the major league level. That point is now.
Place Kodai Senga on the IL if there is any question physically or mechanically. Grinding through April helps no one. Preservation now creates value later.
When A.J. Minter returns, there should be no hesitation. If Sean Manaea is not providing competitive innings, the Mets should reallocate those innings immediately, even if it means absorbing the cost.
Contracts are sunk. Outs are not.
Force Infield Clarity
It is time to stop managing around potential and start evaluating reality.
Give Mark Vientos first base. Every day. A real stretch.
No more partial roles. No more sporadic usage. No more waiting.
Find out what he is — definitively.
If he produces, you have something. If he doesn’t, you have an answer. Both outcomes are better than ambiguity.
Send Brett Baty to AAA with a clear directive: reset, play, and come back stronger. We have seen this work before. It may work again. Or it may not. But the current state is not helping anyone.
Promote Ronny Mauricio.
Tell him the truth: this is not a cameo. This is THE opportunity.
Play him frequently against right-handed pitching at second base. Move him around if needed. Inject athleticism and variability into a lineup that currently lacks both.
No player should be immune from occasional rest or adjustment if performance demands it, regardless of contract.
Veteran status cannot function as insulation.
Rebalance the Lineup
If Juan Soto is not fully healthy, move him to DH. Protect the asset while keeping the bat in the lineup.
If Jorge Polanco is not physically right, address it directly.
The goal is not to maintain appearances. The goal is to optimize performance.
Right now, the lineup is too easy to game plan against. It lacks movement, variation, and pressure. Mauricio helps that. So does a healthier Soto.
Inject Athleticism
Promote Nick Morabito and give him real opportunity.
Not a bench role. Not a token start.
Real playing time.
This roster needs speed, range, and energy. It needs players who change the shape of the game, not just the box score.
Build the Next Layer Now
Promote AJ Ewing to AAA.
This is not about April. This is about August.
If he can handle the level, you have another option. If he cannot, you learn early and adjust.
Waiting delays learning. And right now, the Mets need information as much as they need wins.
What This Signals
These moves are not about punishment.
They are about alignment.
They tell the roster:
Performance matters
Roles are fluid
Opportunity is earned
Time is not unlimited
Right now, the team feels like it is operating without urgency.
That is the problem.
Not talent. Not even construction, necessarily.
Urgency. Accountability. Consequence.
The Stakes
This is bigger than April.
This is about the credibility of the current build.
If this season fails, it will not be framed as a blip. It will be a referendum.
On the roster.
On the strategy.
On the leadership.
And for David Stearns, it will raise a simple question: Was this the right plan?
Because if the answer becomes no, the next step is another reset.
Another infusion of capital. Another cycle. Another attempt to get it right.
That is expensive. It is disruptive. And it is avoidable.
The Choice
The Mets can continue as they are.
They can wait for regression to the mean. Wait for veterans to normalize. Wait for the season to settle.
Or they can act.
They can compress time. Reallocate opportunity. Test upside. Enforce accountability.
They can move from protecting what this team was supposed to be to discovering what it actually is. Right now. Because the worst outcome is not collapse. It is drift.
And drift is exactly where this team is headed if nothing changes.
11 comments:
Good plans. NOW is the time to panic…and act boldly.
Once again, you've stolen my thunder! I had just finished my post for Tuesday, which might now seem either redundant or piling on :-). I will publish nonetheless because... well just because the right message is worth repeating..
I'd call your post 'brilliant' but that might seem a bit self-serving at this point :-)
Tom & Jules, thanks for the feedback. Went to game at Wrigley yesterday. The teams body language is as bad if not worse than last June, August, September.
They look lost, completely lost. Even the strong players. Paralta could close out the 6th. Two straight walks & pulled when he went into the inning g looking like he might get through 7 innings. Scored a sub without the ball leaving the infield. Raley gives up a 3R HR off first pitch - he has been gold all season.
0-6 with RISP. 8 men LOB.
Brought up Senger instead of Mauricio or Moribito to replace Polanco. Tommy Pham (0-8) as PH.
The 2026 Plan is exactly like a former Mike Tyson opponent- it crumbled after the first punch in the face.
I needed to get this off my chest.
Breaking News: Myers replacing Peterson for today’s start.
When, in addition to the underperforming players, will the architect face accountability for his .500 level performance?
Wow RVH.... where can I sign up???? Love everything you said. Couldn't agree more! If I were Uncle Stevie, I'd hire you as GM over DS, immediately!!!!
Great comment, Reese!!!! But no, Stearns is floating on that river in Egypt......... what's that called?????
I have been laid up due to shoulder surgery and trying to catch up on what's happening. Just found out the Mets are in a little (?) losing streak.
I like a lot of you have written. One thing about Baty. You cannot send him down without first going through waivers. Most likely he is picked up quickly. (Unless you manipulate the I/L).
I enjoyed your article RVH. Sorry about the game, but your solutions are credible. Not sure about the Marabito one, however.
Baty should have been traded but now his value has sunk for sure; never trusted him.
The Nimmo trade backfired when they didn’t get Tucker, and Semien looks feeble. If Nimmo is still around, they don’t sign Polanco.
But, you missed the biggest change. You speak of the body language and lack of fire… doesn’t that reflect on the leadership? If Peralta is your ace, are pulling him after two walks? Did he “want” to come out? I make the change tomorrow when they get back.
Outstanding analysis of the Mets' current status. It is well past time to utilize the team's prospects. As a long time fan, I am on-board with your plan
I've made the point before- Mendoza pulling the starrter at the first sign of trouble.
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