This was prepared before the 4/21/26 game ended. As I post this, the Mets are trailing 5-3 bottom of the ninth. Blew a 3-0 lad and another great Nolan McLean start...
There’s no fair way to compare an 11-game stretch to a full season.
So let’s do it anyway — because what’s happening right now in Queens isn’t normal variance. It’s something else.
When a team stops hitting for a week, that’s baseball. When a team stops functioning offensively, even over a short window, that’s a signal. And the signal coming out of this 11-game stretch is uncomfortable:
This offense isn’t just struggling — it’s operating below the floor of even the worst teams in franchise history.
The Historical Comparison: A Race to the Bottom
To put this in perspective, we’re comparing the current 11-game stretch to three of the weakest offensive teams the Mets have ever fielded: the 1962 expansion team, the 1968 “Year of the Pitcher” club, and the 1993 collapse.
Yes, it’s apples to oranges.
That’s the point.
Even in an unfair comparison, the gap shouldn’t look like this.
But it does.
The "Empty-Out" Offense
The most jarring number on that table isn’t batting average or OPS.
It’s the strikeout rate.
At 28.4%, this lineup is striking out at nearly double the rate of the 1962 and 1993 teams. Those teams were bad — historically bad — but they still put the ball in play. They still created moments where something could happen.
This group isn’t doing that.
Too many plate appearances are ending without the ball ever entering the field of play. No contact. No pressure. No chance for a mistake, a bad hop, a misplay, or a productive out.
That’s not just poor execution. That’s an offense that’s effectively removing itself from the game.
The Power Vacuum
You can survive high strikeouts if you compensate with power.
This team isn’t.
At 0.36 home runs per game, this is a lineup producing less power than the 1968 Mets — a team that played in the most pitcher-dominated environment in modern baseball history.
Let that sink in.
Even in the “Year of the Pitcher,” the Mets generated more damage than this current stretch.
A .508 OPS isn’t just low — it’s functionally what you’d expect from a lineup full of pitchers in the 1960s.
There’s no contact. There’s no power.
Which leads to the real problem.
No Floor
Bad teams usually have a floor.
They scratch out runs. They stumble into rallies. They find a way to get to 3 or 4 runs often enough to stay in games.
The 1962 Mets — the gold standard for losing — still averaged 3.9 runs per game.
This team, during this stretch, is at 2.1.
That’s not just worse. It’s 46% lower than the worst full-season team in franchise history.
At that level, you’re not competing. You’re asking your pitching staff to be nearly perfect just to have a chance. And when the pitching inevitably cracks, the games get out of hand quickly — which is exactly what we’re watching.
Bad vs. Non-Functional
Here’s the distinction that matters.
Those historical Mets teams were bad.
They lacked talent. They lost games. Sometimes a lot of them.
But they still played baseball in a functional way:
They put balls in play
They created pressure
They allowed randomness to work in their favor occasionally
This stretch of the 2026 Mets is different.
This isn’t just underperformance. It’s an offensive approach that, under pressure, is breaking down to the point where it produces almost no outcomes at all.
No contact. No power. No run creation.
When that happens, variance disappears. There are no lucky innings. No cheap runs. No momentum shifts.
Just empty outs, over and over again.
The Pressure Gap
And it’s getting worse when it matters most.
In close games — the ones that are supposed to be coin flips — the strikeout rate is spiking even higher. The offense isn’t tightening up. It’s unraveling.
That’s not a talent issue.
That’s an approach under stress that isn’t holding.
Conclusion: A System Lock-Up
This isn’t about one bad week.
Every team has those.
This is about what the offense looks like when it’s not working — and right now, it looks like a system that has locked up entirely.
Until something changes — approach, sequencing, mindset, whatever you want to call it — this isn’t just a slump you ride out.
Because even the worst teams in Mets history still found ways to function offensively.
5 comments:
This is a stunning comparison. We all know that this has been a frustrating period of underperformance but you have put this in a whole new perspective.
It’s BRUTAL. Time to bring up Mauricio & give him regular at bats against righties. Sit him for lefties. Put pressure on the infielders.
Without the Lindor hit yesterday there was NOTHING.
retired last 14 batters & five of the innings were 3 up 3 down. Absolutely BRUTAL.
Bad! “Take a Soto, and Make it better.”
Mauricio is a start. Stearns screwed the pooch when he traded for Mullins and the dominoes fell in a way that out this kid on the bench just as he was starting to hit. Now, the infield is clogged up.
The two geniuses at GM that the Mets had in Alderson and Stearns both can’t let young players play, but rather love washed up players that were good three years ago.
Incredibly insightful post. Horrifying performance. Everything needs a reboot. There is no accountability for poor performance. I think it is time to bring in a new manager simply to signal the start of a reboot; you need to signal that you are looking ahead and that you can't remedy what has happened, but you can declare to be the past. But you can't do that if you don't signal the end of the past. Then as to players, bring up Mauricio to start. Semien can play against lefties and defensive replacement. We clogged up the infield with 3 first basemen. I pointed that out yesterday. That is not acceptable. So after Mauricio up, Pham should go down. Melendez could move to bench. Senger shouldn't be up. Morabito should take his roster spot. Baty and Vientos have not performed sufficiently to warrant playing time. When Polanco returns, he's full time DH. Manaea adds nothing appreciable. I have said this many times, Vientos and Alvarez are automatic outs when pitchers can pitch to their spots which means that the holes in their swings are cavernous. I would never say I know more than the hitting coaches, but I do know something about mechanics of a swinging action. And Alvarez's is killing his becoming the player he can be. And he is impatient on top of it. Vientos is another story that I tried to explain with a video, but that is only half of his problem. No ability to read pitches. I could go on.
Here's a thing I like about bringing Beltran into manage. He was a hitter with a long swing that made it work. He is potentially a mentor to two hitters with the same problem: Baty and Benge, both lefties.
Get some energy. The black holes at the end of last year's lineup are everywhere now. Play guys who put the bat on the ball. The best at that in the minors is Ewing. If you were to ask me, I would say, trade Taylor and bring him up. I know it's early but we need speed and a real leadoff hitter.
I repeat, look what clogging up the infield by trying to have a first base by committee has done.
Post a Comment