Mack – Catching, J.T. Benson, Anderson Severino, Channing
Austin, Zach Thornton, Randy Guzman
(stats
through 5-20-2026)
1. We
need to talk catching. I think all Mets fans are starting to realize that Francisco Alvarez is never going to be the catcher
they wanted him to be. At the same time, astute Mets followers are also
starting to realize that the FCL catcher, Yovanny
Rodriguez, (2026: 41-AB, 5-HR, 12-BB, 4-BB, 11-K, .293/,356/.683/1.038) is their best chance at producing an all-star caliber
plate behind the plate. Everyone else in the chain at this position is
currently underproducing, except for Rodriguez and his teammate, Josmir Reyes. (2026: 34-AB, .294). Syracuse catcher, Kevin
Parada (1.11 pick, 2022 draft, $5,019,735 bonus), is having another sub-par season, though an unexpected promotion to AAA-Syracuse this month is showing some return to him looking like a hitter again:
2026: AA-Binghamton - 98-AB, .184
AAA-Syracuse - 7-AB. .429
I have lost confidence in Parada. He has serious holes in his defensive game and I believe this bat surge in Syracuse is temporary.
Binghamton catcher, Chris
Suero (2022, $10,000 IFA bonus) couldn’t possibly be having a worse
start of a season, though he seems to be finding his batting skills this past
week. Still, his batting average is far too low (2026: 106-AB,
26-BB, 7-HR, 18-RBI, .198/.374/.453/.827) and he continues to strikeout too much (43-K in 106-AB).
Brooklyn catcher, Daiverson
Gutierrez ($1,9000,000 IFA bonus 2023), is starting to look like a real
bust. (2026: 117-AB, 1-HR, 6-RBI, 15-BB, 29-K, .162/.300/.231/.531).
Brooklyn catcher, Ronald
Hernandez (2021 trade with Miami), has the highest BA of these four,
which isn’t saying much (2026: 116-AB, 4-HR, 18-RBI, 25-BB, 38-K, .198/.340/.371/.711).
Yovanny is 19 years old and currently leading the FCL
in homers. Oh, Power. Does the Mets need this? Sure. He’s too young to play
Queens, but this guy does need to be fast tracked. I strongly suggest the Mets
get him to Brooklyn by the break, if for no other reason Reyes can breathe and
get to play every day at his natural position.
People always ask me why the Mets keep signing top
catchers internationally. I remind them that this is the hardest position to
find a top talent. Look at all the money spent over the past six years and they
are still stuck with the walking wounded plus two bats with huge holes in them.
2. On 5-18-2026, undrafted outfielder J.T. Benson was promoted to A+ Brooklyn. At that point, he led all Mets minor leaguers in wRC+ (143) and triples (5) and was tied for the lead in doubles (10). He’s had a .800+ OPS since 2023, which includes three years for the University
of Louisville. He’s 24/years old so he should be able to handle the bump up to
Brooklyn. Benson looks like one of those rare UDFA finds that could, at the
least, develop into a functional utility player; however, like many before him, he is off to a slow start at the elevated level: Brooklyn:
Don't sweat it. JT will work this out.
3.
It’s
too early to start calling up relief pitchers. They simply need to get more
games and innings under their belt. Most people speculate that Dylan
Ross (2026: 3-LEVELS,
11-APPS, 3-0, 1.54, 0.94, 11.2-IP, 13-K, 8-BB) will be the first up. Fits the youth movement. But let
me interject another name here that has really impressed me this season… 31/year
old Anderson Severino. Severino has had
little success over his career… a 0.0 WAR/6.14-ERA in the majors… eight meh
minor league seasons… eight more on foreign soil… and then the Mets signed him
after 23 appearances for Licey produced a 0.98-ERA. What has resulted this year
is: 2026: 15-APPS,
2-0, 0.98, 0.92, 18.1-IP, 19-K, 8-BB. All of this has been accomplished at the AAA level. Yes,
we are watching a youth movement right now, but I believe we need to pause and
give this old man one more shot at major year stardom. Oh. Did I tell you he’s
a lefty?
4.
Let’s
face it… there hasn’t been that many bright lights in the chain this year. That
being said, Channing Austin is one of them. The
6-3 undrafted righty joined the Mets in 2024 after going 6.28 for Southern
California. Nothing to get excited about, right? Last year, he went a combined
4.38 for St. Lucie/Brooklyn. Still no biggie. But this season, after (I assume)
considerable time in the pitching lab, he has turned out remarkable numbers for
the Cyclones.
On Wednesday, Austin put up another remarkable outing (6.2-IP, 0-R, 8-K, 1-BB) and made a strong case for an early promotion to AA-Binghamton. His current 2026 stat line is: 8-ST,
2-1, 1.17, 1.09, 38.1-IP. 48-K, 22-BB. He has allowed only two runs since April 21st and leaded tge SAL in ERA. His repertoire is impressive: mid-90’s fastball with
movement, three breaking balls, a fading change-up. What he needs to do is keep
refining it.
5.
On
Friday, May 15th, Zach Thornton made
a statement. He pitched six scoreless innings for AAA-Syracuse, giving up only
three hits, walking one, and striking out nine. This couldn’t have come at a
better time what with the Jonah Tong blow-up,
Sean Mataea and David
Peterson repeated disappointing starts, and the Clay
Holmes foot breakage. This resulted in a promotion to Queens and an outing on Wednesday (-0.1-WAR 0-1, 8.31). The good news is all the bad was in the first two innings that he pitched and he finished strong.
Helium Alert –
The Mets own
the ballplayer that just hit the fourth hardest ball in baseball this year.
117.6 mph. He also leads the Mets
affiliates in home runs and runs batted in. I’m talking about 21/year old St.
Lucie 1B/LF/RF, Randy Guzman. He first
impressed us last season when he went .302 for the combined teams of the FCL
Mets and St. Lucie. This year, he’s a little short in BA (.231), but the 44-K
in 145-PA is livable while the .816-OPS is impressive. We will keep an eye on
his and my hopes is he can improve to around .250, while hitting 20+ home runs
this season.