2/11/26

MACK - Top 28 Prospects - #16 - OF - Nick Morabito

 



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.

16.    Nick Morabito



Turning 23 in May    RHH    CF/RF/LF    5-10    185

2nd round 2022  Gonzaga College HS (DC)

2025 AA – 492-PA, 115-K, 47-BB, 49-SB, 6-HR, 59-RBI, .273, .734-OPS

GROK -

Nick Morabito is a 22-year-old outfielder in the New York Mets' farm system, known for his elite speed, plate discipline, and potential as a leadoff hitter or defensive specialist in center field.

He's a right-handed hitter and thrower, standing 5'10" and weighing 185 pounds.

Originally from McLean (no… not THAT McLean), Virginia, Morabito attended Gonzaga College High School in Washington, D.C., where he exploded as a senior, batting .545 with 12 home runs and 52 stolen bases, earning D.C. Gatorade Player of the Year honors.

The Mets selected him in the second compensatory round (75th overall) of the 2022 MLB Draft as compensation for losing Noah Syndergaard in free agency.

Morabito's game revolves around getting on base and disrupting defenses with his legs—he's graded as a 70 runner on the 20-80 scouting scale by MLB Pipeline. His compact swing and above-average bat speed help him spray line drives, but he's still developing power and pull-side approach against advanced pitching. Scouts compare him to a smaller Clint Frazier or a light-hitting version of Jeff McNeil: versatile, contact-oriented, and speedy, but potentially limited to a bench/platoon role unless he adds loft to his swing.

He's Rule 5 Draft-eligible this offseason, putting pressure on the Mets to add him to the 40-man roster or risk losing him.

Professional Career Highlights

Morabito has progressed quickly through the Mets' system, earning the organization's 2024 Minor League Player of the Year award for position players. He's led Mets minor leaguers in batting average, on-base percentage, and stolen bases multiple times.

In 2025, he spent the full season at Double-A Binghamton (Eastern League champions), showing solid but not explosive production while posting a career-high six home runs—though his 53.9% ground-ball rate limited extra-base power.

Stats via Baseball-Reference and MiLB.com.

2024 - He was the only minor leaguer with 50+ steals, 50+ runs, 50+ walks, and a .300+ average.

2025 - 7th in full-season MiLB steals

Outlook and Path to the Majors

Morabito is projected for a 2026 or 2027 MLB debut. He's expected to start 2026 at Triple-A Syracuse, focusing on elevating launch angle and handling lefties better (he's struggled slightly against them as a righty).

Defensively, his range and error-free play (zero errors in 2025) make him a plus center fielder, though his arm is average. In a crowded Mets outfield, he profiles as a fourth outfielder or pinch-runner, but his OBP skills (.350+ career) and speed could carve out a niche like Harrison Bader or a modern Jason Tyner.

 

10-28-2025

STEVE SICA/MM

OF Nick Morabito:

After finishing off September with Double-A Binghamton on a bit of a hot streak. He batted .295 with an OPS of .756 in the last two weeks of the Eastern League regular season, Morabito then played a key role in winning the Rumble Ponies their first Eastern League title in over a decade. Three weeks later, he found himself in Scottsdale, where he’s continuing to tear the cover off the ball.

The Mets’ #16 prospect has been one of Scottdale’s best hitters so far this season. He’s batting .324 with an OPS of .824. He’s been patient at the plate, drawing six walks to eight strikeouts, and is showing off his speed with a team-leading eight stolen bases.

Their second round pick back in 2022, the Mets saw Morabito take the next step in 2025 with a successful season in Double-A. Now, he’s continuing to rake against some of the best MiLB pitchers in the game. Morabito has long been a dark horse prospect in the Mets’ system, but after the season he’s put together in Binghamton and now in Arizona, he could be a frontline prospect by the time Spring Training 2026 arrives.

 

10-16-2025 – John From Albany

OF Nick Morabito.  Coming off a great stint in the Arizona Fall League, Nick has a good chance of being added to the 40-man roster to stay out of the draft.  In Arizona Nick hit .362/.450/.464, 25 hits, 17 runs and 16 stolen bases in 17 games.  It seemed like every time up he was beating out a grounder for an infield single, then stealing 2nd and later scoring.  Beating out ground balls gave Nick an insane .453 Batting Average Balls in Play.  Granted, it is a small sample size but he has had high BABIP numbers in the past - .390 in 119 games for Brooklyn and St. Lucie in 2024.

 

11-7-2025

JUST BASEBALL

12. Nick Morabito – OF – (Double-A)

Height/Weight: 5’11″, 185 | Bat/Throw: R/R | 2nd Round-C (75), 2022 (NYM) | ETA: 2026

Arguably the fastest runner in the Mets system, Morabito also led all Mets minor leaguers in hits and batting average in 2024 and followed up with a solid year at Double-A in 2025.

It’s a direct and rather flat swing, resulting in higher ground ball rates and an average launch angle of just three degrees. The good news is, Morabito has the speed to beat out weakly hit ground balls and choppers, but as defenders become better, those kinds of hits become less easily attainable.

Morabito has the ability to be an above average defender in center field, demonstrating good instincts and range with an above average arm. He is a major factor on the base paths, but could be a bit more efficient, swiping 59 bags on 74 tries in 2024 and 49 on 60 tries in 2025. Morabito has a great chance of at least landing as a fourth outfielder.

 

11-8-2025

Tom Brennan/MM

12. OF Nick Morabito

Morabito started 2025 frigidly in 2025 in the Frigidaire known as Binghamton in spring time, but then scorched for a few months, before heating back up.  He has not hit many HRs, but surely knows that is a competitive negative and WILL add power, as he has the strength to do so. Steals bushels-full of bases.

In the Arizona Fall league, through Thursday November 6, he was simply smoking at .377/.472/.492, with 15 runs in 15 games along with 14 thefts.  WOOSH!!

The righty hit .273 in AA, and hit just .239 in Bingo, while hitting .305 on the friendlier road. .291 career in 1,122 at bats for the 5’10” righty speedster, with a terrific 130 career steals. He hit just .136 in the post season.

He is my # 12, even though he got passed over for a promotion when Jett, Benge, Clifford, and Parada were jumped up to Syracuse. So, he stayed in Binghamton, where they won a championship instead. Future 4th outfielder for Mets, if not dealt away. If you want to take the 5th, Nick will raise his right hand.

ATHLETE!

 

1-1-2026

ANGRY MIKE/MM

If Morabito can continue developing he could be much more than a reserve OF, and he is young enough to improve his ability to hit lefties. Despite the limited number of homers Morabito has hit, when he does connect, they are legit bombs. I’m sure at some point the Mets will work with him to begin tapping into his raw power, which could considerably raise his prospect profile. Even if he is only 10-12 HR player, his ability to make consistent hard contact would be an asset even in a reserve role, especially against right-handed pitchers. Unless there is a dire need for Morabito in Queens, I expect he will get a full year in Syracuse to hone skills, and be given a chance to win a job in Queens for the 2027 season.

Cautious Optimist - The Confidence Game: Projecting Talent (Part 2)

  






Yesterday and Today

Yesterday, I argued that one key to creating evidence-based confidence in projecting performance at the major league level is to do one's initial shopping where the talent is, where identifying it involves low search costs, sorting it happens relatively quickly and developing it to an acceptable baseline level is also relatively inexpensive.

The IFA market -- especially the LATAM region of it -- is a sweet spot for the Mets organization.  Shopping sprees should be matched by comparable investments that strengthen relationships with those on the ground, further reducing the costs of initial assessments and talent development. 

Today's post focuses on what I call the 'performance environment.'  If the goal is to increase the reliability of judgments projecting future performance, and if the basis of those judgments is to be current and recent performance, then those performances that form the basis of projections must occur in an environment designed to that purpose.  

Designing for purpose 

(1) In order for current performance to be a reliable predicate on which to project performance at the next level, the performance environment must approximate as closely as possible those that define play at the next level.  

How can this be done? 

One cannot control for many variables -- including the urgency or meaning of each game, the speed of the game or the intensity at which it is played.  One can control much of the roster, however.  

What the Mets are doing in constructing their Syracuse roster is instructive in this regard.  Those following the team cannot help but notice how many ex-major league players the Mets have signed to minor league or two-way contracts. 

These signings serve two purposes. The first is to provide depth at key positions as insurance against injury (and the occasional unexpected surgery) as well as disappointing performances from some who have made their way to the opening day roster. This form of insurance is designed to maintain a competitive level of performance at the major league level while also protecting top tier projects from being forced too early into service they are not yet prepared for, while saving the 'options' that may be needed later.

The second purpose is the role these players are expected to play in creating the right kind of performance environment for assessing the performance of top tier prospects.  Here's just one example.  Suppose a prized prospect is a sinker ball pitcher who induces a lot of ground balls.  One question is whether those ground balls are more likely to turn into hits or outs. The answer depends in large measure on the fielders playing behind him. 

You are more confident in judging whether those ground balls lead to hits or outs if your infielders are well positioned, experienced and adjust their positioning depending on the count, the hitter, whether there are baserunners, and so on.  In other words, if they play the game the way major league veterans would.   This is true for virtually every position and every potential at bat.  Surround the talent with a high baseline of professional level performance.  If you do that, then the performance they exhibit at this level is more projectable to the next. 

There is a further collateral benefit as well.  Suppose the same pitcher with the same stuff is backed by inexperienced infielders leading to ground balls more often turning into hits than they otherwise would.  It's not unreasonable for the pitcher to respond to the relative lack of successful outcomes by looking  for more strikeouts or by pitching away from contact.  Neither is desirable  and may well be counterproductive in every way.  Too many walks, too many pitches, not enough sinkers, and, worst of all, losing his faith in his best stuff.  That's the opposite of what you want to see.  You want to evaluate players at their best, throwing their best stuff at the most crucial moments.  That is what you want him to throw in the majors, but you can't project how successful he will be doing so if he is inclined to go away from his best pitch in the minors. 

(2) To increase confidence in performance projections it is important that the major league team and the affiliated minor league teams play the game the same way.  If the team at the major league level is built on speed and versatility, emphasizes bat to ball skills and putting pressure on the opposing team's defense, then this is the way all the affiliated teams should play -- to the extent doing so is possible.  

Every organization would benefit from having a characteristic way of playing the game that is coached throughout the organization.  This system-wide approach has become the norm in the NBA, where G-league affiliates run the same offensive and defensive schemes as does the NBA club.  In baseball, during Whitey Herzog's tenure, the St. Louis Cardinals were known for a distinctive 'Cardinal' way of playing the game.

If their recent drafts are any indication, the Mets are moving in this direction.  The drafts are heavy on shortstops, centerfielders, athletic catchers and starting pitchers. athleticism, positional versatility, bat to ball skills, speed, defense. The Mets favor a style of play built around athleticism, positional versatility, bat to ball skills, speed and defense: one that pressures opposing defenses while providing an offense capable of generating runs throughout the line-up.

Performance in the same scheme is a more reliable indicator of performance at the next level.

Again there is a collateral benefit.  Too often in the past Mets minor leaguers who are promoted to the majors seem lost and underprepared for the moment.  When teams throughout the organization play the same style there are fewer surprises a newly promoted prospect must face.

(3) The great unknown with players who have been successful all their playing lives is how will they respond to failure?  Failure takes many forms but is inevitable.  Helping a player emerge from failure is partially the responsibility of the coaching staff.  At the end of the day, however, only a player can lift himself from failure. 

Part of constructing a performance environment designed for purpose includes creating a space for failure and emergence from it. Oddly, perhaps, what one is looking to provide for players on the way up is what parents are looking to provide for their children as they move into and through their formative years. You want your children to experience failure in the safest of circumstances, surrounded by support, where the consequences are relatively minor: a place in which they can face failure, accept it as inevitable, emerge relatively unscathed by it, and if possible better for it.

I believe that under Stearns' leadership the Mets want to avoid their players facing meaningful disappointment or failure for the first time in the majors, where the stakes are at their highest, the stresses are greatest and most consequential.  At bottom, setbacks at what one believes they do best, and most closely identify themselves with, and finding the way back, rebuilding confidence, is a personal journey. Displaying it in the public eye and on the back pages of newspapers should be avoided if possible.

I may be in the minority, but I believe that Stearns' reluctance to promote McLean, Sproat and Tong to the majors last season had nothing to do with the financial implications of doing so or the possibility of securing an additional draft choice should one of them win Rookie of the Year honors in 2026.

The failure of the major league's starting rotation forced his hand. Left to his own devices, i imagine he would have preferred they made their major league debuts under less stressful circumstances. 

Always bet on those who take pride in their craft and joy in what one does

The best athletes see themselves as craft-persons, not merely as athletes or entertainers. They take pride in what they do, hone their craft, seek  advice and develop a deep but quiet confidence in themselves. They can handle the moment, and understand their relationship to the organization and to the fanbase.  They understand that being able to compete at the highest levels is a blessing, that the fans they perform in front of are also among those they perform for. 

These are traits of personality and character that need to be nurtured as much as any physical skill needs to be developed.  If they are, then players who emerge from the organization, whether they reach the majors or not are better for having spent some of their formative years in the Mets organization.  Other things being equal bet on the player who finds joy in the game, its challenges and opportunities, and takes pride in his craft.

There is no way to ensure the degree of success in projecting talent that every organization dreams of having. Projecting performance with well earned confidence that is the result of looking in the right places for talent, developing it well and under conditions that approximate those that they find at the next level, providing a safe place for experiencing and emerging from inevitable bouts of lost confidence, while working to build character, pride and the ability to experience joy when coming to the park every day and competing is reason enough to have faith in the process. 

There's no path to certainty, but there is a path to rational confidence.

The precepts outlined above and in the previous post provide some of the steps an organization can and should take to reduce the guesswork while increasing confidence in one's ability to project future performance.  This is the last hurdle that must be overcome -- the one the Mets have shown the most interest in and invested the most resources in overcoming -- in order to design a rational approach to roster construction capable of sustained success, a team the organization and the fanbase can be proud of and one that all of us will easy to root for.

One in other words that will mend our (too often) broken hearts.

Of that, I'm (more or less) certain!


MACK - WEDNESDAY REPORT -

 

 

Good morning


First some dirty laundry.

We are getting closer every day to, first, the beginning of Spring Training, and then, the real deal season.

Us writers here will be adjusting our approach once the season starts. For one, my Wednesday, Friday, and Sunday Reports will be much more result content base and will cover events that had happen prior to that day at all levels.

Tom Brennan will be following me on Sunday 7:30am with a new weekly recap of events through his eyes. Knowing Tom, you will need to sit back and enjoy the length of his explanation, expertise, and comments.

We’ve been blessed with the recent additions of Farm To Flushing, Angry Mike, RVH, and, most recently, Cautious Optimist. We’ve got a new one joining us this month… Alex Rubinson is majoring in his final semester at Syracuse University, majoring in Broadcast and Digital Journalism. His recent accomplishments is interviewing Kodai Senga and Carlos Beltran. Looks like we’ve found another live one.

 

NYM News                      @NYM_News

The Mets plan to start Jonah Tong in Triple-A to open 2026, per Jon Heyman. They want Tong to refine his breaking pitches to complement his 96–98 MPH fastball and Vulcan changeup. Tong, only 22, posted a 1.43 MiLB ERA in 2025 but had a 7.71 ERA over his first 5 MLB starts.

MACK – this makes total sense. Tong needs to master a third pitch so he has a fighting chance as a major league starter. He’s working on a couple of them in Florida and should see the results of this work sometime during the first week of ST.

As for the Mets rotation, right now, there seems to be plenty of candidates to form a five-man opening day rotation. Hell, there’s enough for a 6-man.

Baring an injury, my guess is Freddy Peralta, Nolan McLean, Clay Holmes, Sean Manaea, and Kodai Senga will get first shot.

I have David Peterson, Tobias Myers, and Christian Scott waiting in the wings, either in the Mets bullpen, or the Syracuse rotation, waiting for “new developments”, including an injury.

 

 

Mets agree to deal with MJ Melendez. MLB deal. $1.5M plus $500K incentives

GROK –

MJ Melendez (full name Mervyl Samuel Melendez Jr.) is a 27-year-old professional baseball player, currently a left fielder and catcher for the New York Mets in Major League Baseball (MLB).

He was born on November 29, 1998, in Daytona Beach, Florida. He bats left-handed and throws right-handed, standing at 6'1" and weighing 190 lbs.

Drafted by the Kansas City Royals in the 2nd round (52nd overall) of the 2017 MLB Draft out of Westminster Christian School in Miami, FL.

Made his MLB debut with the Royals on May 3, 2022.

Played for the Royals from 2022 through 2025, primarily transitioning from catcher to the outfield (especially left field) due to roster needs and to focus on his hitting.

Became a free agent after the 2025 season (non-tendered by KC).

Signed a one-year, $1.5 million contract with the New York Mets on February 8, 2026, adding depth to their outfield mix

Positions and Role

MJ Melendez is listed as Left Fielder / Catcher. He has significant experience in left field in recent years (most of his MLB innings there since 2023), along with some right field, first base, and emergency catcher duties.

His strong arm (consistently 93rd-95th percentile in arm strength) is a plus tool.

Recent Performance2025 MLB (with Royals): Struggled significantly in a limited role — .083 AVG, 1 HR, 1 RBI, .321 OPS over 23 games / 65 PA (mostly early in the season before demotion).

Strong in Triple-A (Omaha) that year: .261 AVG, 20 HR, 64 RBI, 20 SB, .813 OPS in 107 games.

Earlier MLB seasons (2022-2024) showed more power: 52 career HR entering 2026, with OPS around .674-.713 in fuller seasons.

He's a former top prospect known for lefty power and versatility, though consistency at the plate has been an issue. The Mets signing views him as low-risk with upside, especially in left field.

MACK

I was hoping for a little more with a leftfield addition. I also would be thrilled with Tyrone Taylor with the starter and Melendez as a backup. That’s me.


Mets announce they've acquired LHP Bryan Hudson from the White Sox in exchange for cash considerations.  In a corresponding move, RHP Reed Garrett has been placed on the 60-Day IL.

GROK

Bryan Hudson, the 6'8" left-handed relief pitcher, was recently acquired by the New York Mets from the Chicago White Sox for cash considerations (as reported on February 10, 2026). He was designated for assignment by the White Sox earlier this month after a mixed 2025 season split between Milwaukee and Chicago.

Hudson, a former standout in 2024 with the Brewers (1.73 ERA over 62.1 IP), is a tall lefty reliever who primarily relies on a multi-pitch arsenal.

According to Statcast data (via Baseball Savant and Brooks Baseball), his repertoire includes:

Four-Seam Fastball (primary pitch, around 66-67% usage in recent samples): Averaging ~91 mph, with heavy sinking action, good whiff generation, and slightly above-average groundball tendencies for a four-seamer.

Sweeper/Slider (secondary offering, ~22% usage): Around 81 mph, serves as his main breaking ball with significant horizontal movement.

Sinker (~7% usage): ~90 mph, adds another sinking fastball variant.

Cutter (~3-4% usage): ~86 mph, noted for heavy sink but extreme flyball tendencies.

Changeup (rare, <1% usage): ~85 mph, not a major part of his mix and limited effectiveness in small samples.

This mix allows him to attack hitters with velocity, sink, and sweep from his imposing frame. His fastball has good ride/sink characteristics that help generate swings-and-misses, while the sweeper provides a wipeout breaking pitch against right-handers especially.

Career highlights include strong command and strikeout rates in his peak year (2024: 9.0 K/9), though 2025 saw regression (4.80 ERA in limited innings). The Mets add him to bolster lefty relief depth alongside options like Hoby Milner (wait, reports mention Minter and Raley as other lefties on the 40-man).For visuals on his pitches, check Statcast pages or Pitcher List for GIFs of his four-seamer, sweeper, etc.—they show the sink and sweep well. He's a low-cost depth addition with upside if he recaptures 2024 form.


 



Reese Kaplan -- Questions About the Mets Spring Training Team


Let’s take a moment to examine some of the question marks facing the Mets for the upcoming season when Spring Training begins today and a week or so later when hitters join the pitchers and catchers.

  • When Kyle Tucker boarded a westbound jet plane the Mets almost instantaneously revealed securing sensational hitter Bo Bichette in free agency.  While it’s indeed a welcome addition it comes with questions.  The plan is for him to transition to third base but no one knows how that will go.  He also has an opt out in his contract if he feels he’d rather play shortstop again in the future or if he does so well that he smells a possibly bigger payday or more years on his next contract.
  • How will Luis Robert, Jr. look at the plate after tailing off miserably for two years in Chicago?  No one is questioning what Robert can do patrolling center field.  The issue has been a combination of his health and his bat.  The sensational 2023 seems very much like an outlier and he’s being paid as if it is replicable.  Will he reemerge as a bonafide star or will he turn into the next Siri/Mullins/Bader clone in a Mets uniform?
  • Will Marcus Semien do enough with the bat to justify his place in the starting lineup and his substantial salary after having appeared to be declining with age?  No one is questioning how much his stability on the infield will help the guys on the mound but after two seasons when he combined for an average of .234 with 19 HRs and 68 RBIs he’s a far cry from the former Silver Slugger player he once was. 
  • How is Jorge Polanco going to adjust to being a switch hitting first baseman after playing around the rest of the infield for his long major league career?  It’s not the first time the Mets miscast an infielder at first base.  Remember Todd Zeile?  Still, someone who could handle the range of middle infield positions shouldn’t have as much a challenge as others might have.
  • What kind of defense will Brett Baty provide as a left fielder, or is he more slated to a DH role with the arrival of never-was MJ Melendez?  While Baty fans and detractors have equal say in the man’s value, no one is going out on a limb and suggesting that Baty is an obvious solid defender where he has a single partial game in the majors.  Newcomer MJ Melendez is a regular outfielder but his bat is even far more suspect than is Baty’s. 
  • What happens to Mark Vientos?  There’s nothing much more to say.  He’s not playing third base nor first base so his only option if he is still on the roster is as a DH.  He has decent power but struggles with consistency and obviously has not fared will defensively.
  • What happens to Ronny Mauricio?  No one really knows.
  • Is Carson Benge ready for a fast track to the Show?   He will likely be a strong offensive player at some point in his career but after fewer than 100 AAA ABs he is likely not ready to be rushed to the majors until he develops more advanced bat-to-ball skills in the minors.  He could be up as soon as late May but everyone wants to see how he does at the plate.
  • Will Craig Kimbrel show enough left on his arm to force himself onto the Opening Day roster?
  • Are they better off with Austin Barnes or Luis Torrens as the primary backup to Francisco Alvarez?
  • Which version of Kodai Senga will the team see?
  • Can Sean Manaea rediscover what worked in 2024?
  • Which David Peterson arrives — the dominant one for the start of 2025 or the batting practice pitcher for the end of the season?
  • Will Nolan McLean replicate the same level of dominance he showed during his major league debut in 2025m
  • Will the re-engineered bullpen work?  Which Devin Williams arrives for the Mets?  Is AJ Minter finally fully healthy?  Is the Yankee Luke Weaver the one who pitches now or will he revert to former form?  Who are the last few fighting to go north to Queens?
  • How will Carlos Mendoza deal with not only a new cast of characters but also a full slate of new coaches to help support his efforts which were less than spectacular in 2025?

Will David Stearns do anything to address the glaring holes in the roster?  Thus far he’s not done anything except potentially recasting yet another player at a new position on the field and not finished building the pen.  The bench is still very much a mystery.

2/10/26

Cautious Optimist - The Confidence Game: Projecting Performance (Part 1)

 



The organizing framework

In the two previous posts, I've argued for the following claims that together constitute the framework I bring to my analyses of baseball organizations and to the Mets in particular: 

 (1) A successful organization must manage risks rationally. Doing so requires (a) taking all and only cost-justified risk reducing precautions, (b) imposing the responsibility of determining which risks are worth reducing and at what cost on those in the best position to make those decisions and to implement cost-justified precautions, and (c) distributing risks that are too costly to prevent in ways that reduce their impact on individual persons and time frames. 

(2) A successful organization implements plans to identify talent, access, develop and project it, and does so while managing risk in accordance with the principles stated above.

 (3) The most consequential and difficult judgments a team makes are those projecting how talent is likely to perform at the next level up, and especially at the major league level.  

(4) Normally, judgments of whether talent projects to performance at the major league level comes late in the development phase which implies that considerable resources have already been spent on player development, and the evidence on which the judgment is made is presumably substantial.

(5) Nevertheless, in spite of the extent of the evidence available at the time projections must be made, the level of uncertainty surrounding those judgments in conjunction with the consequences for the organization of making poor judgments has led to organizations  

(6) Pursuing alternative strategies for constructing their major league rosters they believe are less risky and fraught than those that rely on uncertain judgments about their own prospects' expected performance, e.g. trades and free agency, even though:

    (a) shifting to trade and free agency strategies does not obviate the need to make precisely the sort of talent projections they are seeking to avoid,

    (b) lead to poor trades and inefficiently long contracts of 'proven' talent precisely because they are bad at making talent projections, and

    (c) to overpaying for free agents both in terms of compensation and length of contract, thereby

    (d) creating the most inefficient approach to dealing with the uncertainty surrounding talent projection, that, in addition, does nothing to avoid having to make talent projections that choosing the alternative strategies in the first place is designed to avoid. 

Whatever strategy for roster construction an organization ultimately adopts, there is no escaping the need to project talent into performance.  One might as well address the challenge directly.  

Meeting the challenge amounts to developing evidence-based predicates for projecting performance thereby reducing uncertainty, increasing confidence in one's judgment and increasing the likelihood of developing an optimal use of home-grown talent, trades and free agency to construct rosters capable of regularly competing for titles over a sustained period of time.

In this and the next post (tomorrow) I explore several steps an organization should take (steps, I argue, the Mets have taken), to develop an evidence-based confidence in projecting performance at the next level. 

What organization behavior reveals

In order to solve the problem, we must correctly identify it, and uncover its source. Let's begin with organizational behavior, which, like behavior in general, can be revealing of motivations.  The question is what does the behavior of taking on substantial costs through trades and free agency reveal about the sources of uncertainty that plague talent projection judgments? I focus on two plausible inferences we should draw, the first of which is obvious, though both are important. 

(1) Teams are typically more confident in projections based on major league performance than they are on judgments based on what is often extensive information drawn primarily from minor league (as well as college and high school and other forms of organized baseball) performance.

(2) Teams are especially comfortable relying on the information provided by markets, that is, when other teams are pursuing trades for players made available and when teams in situations like the one's they face are bidding on players in free agency. 

Why are these inferences interesting?  

(1) They reveal that all teams believe that the best evidence of performance is prior performance, but more importantly that

(2) Performance at the major league level is generally significantly more trustworthy than performance at all levels of play inferior to it.  (More nuance is required to determine the extent of relative trustworthiness, etc.)

(3) Because talent projection is so riddled with uncertainty, teams are willing to enter the trade and free agent markets and thereby pay significantly more for 'proven' talent not just because the talent is proven, but also because they interpret other teams entering the bidding in those markets as factors strengthening the rationality of their bidding for those players as well, thus enabling them to feel better about additional costs they incur by choosing to construct rosters around trades and free agency. 

If this seems a little crazy to you, you won't get an argument from me. 

After all, the argument appears to have something like the following internal logic.  I am not confident in my ability to project my prospects' likely performance at the major league level.  So I will try to avoid having to rely on judgments I have inadequate confidence in -- to the extent possible, given my budget.  So far, so good.

I believe I can avoid having to rely on judgments I have inadequate confidence in by relying instead on making trades and dipping into the free agent markets.  Of course I realize that I can't fill my entire roster this way, so I know I will have to make some judgments about my own players.  But I want to minimize those and if possible only make judgments that I am most confident about. Again, my budget will impact the extent to which I can rely on trades and free agency to compensate for my lack of confidence. 

In entering markets in which I have to bid against others to secure 'proven' talent, I have made myself vulnerable to taking on higher costs to obtain talent.  The more bidders in the competition, the higher the price tag of winning.  The price is worth it to me.  I am bidding to secure proven talent.  I am avoiding the consequences of making a mistaken judgment in projecting my player's performance at the next level.  And I am purchasing confidence in the strategy I have adopted.  

So rather than lamenting the fact that others are involved in the bidding, which drives the price I have to pay up, I'm happy to pay the premium because the fact that they are in the market for the talent in question and bidding for the player's service itself confirms the rationality of my being in the market and bidding along with them, and therefore my confidence in what I am doing. If my bid wins, I am pleased with having adopted this strategy.  

There are many flaws in this argument, but one stands out above the rest. If I am driven to bid on players in trade and free agent markets by my lack of confidence in my ability to project performance from talent, what reason do I have for thinking that this isn't what also drives the behavior of my competitors who are also bidding in the trade and free agent markets.  

It's not just that they are in the same markets I am in for the same lack of confidence in player projections that we all share.  Their confidence that they are right to stay in and bid up the price is largely a function of their interpreting the market signals exactly as I am.  In other words, the presence of other bidders bidding grounds my confidence applies to them as well.  Everyone is paying a premium to buy confidence that consists entirely in doing what everyone else is doing on the assumption that the other bidders have information about the proven talent's projected performance that you don't have.  But if everyone is acting initially and then thereafter for the same or similar reasons, confidence is being manufactured out of thin air.  It need have no basis in factual information at all. 

This is a genuine 'confidence game', a veritable Ponzi scheme for creating confidence from the thinnest of air.  A great strategy to adopt if you are on the right side of a stock 'pump and dump' scheme, but not a promising strategy around which to organize roster construction in baseball. 

Where you look for talent matters

It makes more sense to see if you can develop a basis for genuine confidence in judgments about your own players likely performance at the next level.  The question is, where to begin.

If you want to be more confident in projecting performance at the highest level, start the process with the best talent you can find.  Start with A or A+ quality prospects, and not only will you have confidence about your projections, but your floor is so high that with appropriate development you've put yourself in a position to be reasonably confident in your projections without very much additional investment in addressing the uncertainty that remains. 

Makes sense?  No doubt.  How likely is this approach to work.  Well, if players could reliably identify themselves as highly likely to be major league level performers while still in their teens, then the strategy would be simple and work for everybody.  Who wouldn't want to start the process with nothing but A and A+ level players.  

Unfortunately, young players do not wear the range of their future performance on their sleeves, thus making them harder to identify -- to say the least. We are left to make those judgments ourselves and to gather evidence sufficient to do so. It would be great to start from a place where the floor of projected performance is just inches away from the highest of high ceilings.  Short of reliable self-identification all we would have accomplished is shift the most difficult decisions about talent projection (which now takes the form of determining who is an A or A+player) to an earlier stage in a player development when there is precious little information available on which to make any such judgment!

Still, there is something to be said on behalf of reassessing where an organization goes shopping for talent at the outset of the process, especially if one can sort among potential talent pools and identify ones that are more likely to produce major league level talent.  This is precisely the strategy college basketball coaches employ when developing relationships with high school and AAU coaches in states known to have high level high school basketball programs, e.g Florida, Texas and California, and maybe New York.  (So sorry but NYC high school basketball isn't what it once was.) 

With that in mind, consider the following:

* Roughly 5% of international free agents make it to the majors, but

* Between 25-30% of major league rosters are comprised of international free agents.

* Of those, the vast majority come from Venezuela, Cuba and the Dominican Republic.

* The majority of those signed to organization contracts are between 16-18 years old.

What can we glean from the data?  

(1) Focusing on smaller, easy to identify geographic regions in which players are locally sorted and identified as having some non-trivial baseline level of talent reduces search costs. 

(2) Leagues and development programs for sorting that talent exist and are generally well-functioning. This leads to early sorting into talent tiers which is helpful in reducing overall developmental costs.

(3) Additional marginal investments by major league clubs (including especially those who want to shop heavily in this pool, e.g. the Mets) will increase both the effectiveness of local assessment and development programs while strengthening relationships with local scouts.

(4) Early sorting not only reduces development costs, but allows for more targeted expenditures, likely to lead to better skill and talent development even before players are available to sign with major league organizations.

(5) Most importantly, given that nearly 30% of players on current major league squads come from this pool, the investments in search and development produce benefits that swamp the costs the investments require.

If you want to increase confidence in talent projection, search in the places where high end talent is abundant; invest early in identifying, sorting and developing it.  Investments strengthens all important relationships and improves initial assessments, reduces development costs and allows for targeted spending in development that increases confidence in projecting performance ranges. 

If recent trends in IFA signings are any indication, there is no question but that the Mets have learned this lesson well. If IFA market is the place to shop, the Mets have made it clear that they are all in.

Ok. we know where to start, but where do we go from there?

Upon taking the Indiana job, coach Curt Cignetti had to dig relatively deeply into the portal along with taking more than a few of his players from James Madison University. When asked what he was looking for in dipping into the player portal, he offered a one word answer, 'performance.' 

Cignetti was not disparaging skillsets as a basis for projecting performance so much as expressing a preference for skillsets that have been realized in actual performance.  And not just any old performance either, but performance at a level of competition that exceeds, matches or approximates the level at which Indiana would be competing. 

Both points are important and provide keys to improving a team's capacity to make reliable evidence-based projections about player performance at the major league level.

If the first key to improving talent projections is to look for talent in the right place, the second is to base one's projections on actual performance, and not directly on skillsets or other components of talent. 

Why would performance be the most reliable predicate for projecting future performance?  The answer is that performance as such is not, but that performance under certain conditions is.  In the next post I identify what some of the most important of those conditions are and explain why their presence contributes to the reliability of performance projections.

I also argue that the Mets have set up their minor league system, intentionally, I'd like to think, in order to put several of these conditions in place, thereby putting themselves in an especially good place for implementing an optimal and sustainable approach to roster construction: one that will be central to achieving their goals of consistently competing at highest level and being rewarded with championships over a sustained period of time (hopefully one that overlaps with my remaining years).

Stay tuned.  See you tomorrow.



Steve Sica- Three Met Prospects I'm Excited to See Invited to Spring Training



Spring Training is a week away, and several top Met prospects received invites to Port St. Lucie.
Carson Benge is the most notable name to get one, and it should come as no surprise, nor would it be a shocker to see him get a roster spot in Queen in a little over a month. Here are a few names, excluding Benge, that I'm looking forward to seeing in Spring Training games over the next month.

OF A.J Ewing:
A.J. Ewing had a breakout season in 2025, and it's all too fitting that we'll see him in camp this spring. The 21-year-old batted .315 across three levels of MiLB last season. What stood out most to me was that during his 28 games in Double-A Binghamton, he batted .339 with an OPS of .801. At 21, he's still 3.5 years younger than the average age of a Double-A baseball player.
Ewing has several weapons in his offensive arsenal other than contact. His speed is otherworldly, as he stole a total of 70 bases last season while only being caught 11 times. He also collected 26 doubles and 10 triples overall.
Drafted in the fourth round of the 2023 draft, the Mets got a real taste of what Ewing can do at the professional level in 2025. With the trade of Jett Williams, Ewing is now considered, behind Benge, to be the Mets' most valuable offensive prospect, so much so that the Mets seemed to make it a point not to deal him away during this past winter.
Will Ewing make the MLB roster out of Spring Training? No, he'll likely start the season with Binghamton, where he ended last season. However, going up against some Big League pitching, it'll be Ewing's first taste of Major League talent, and for Met fans, who've been starved of homegrown offensive talent for years, it'll be an exciting Spring watching what this spark plug can do at the plate and on the bases.

3B Jacob Reimer:
Another prospect that had a pivotal 2025 season was Jacob Reimer. So much so that he's now ranked by MLB Pipeline as MiLB's second-best third baseman going into this season.
In 2025, Reimer split his time between High-A Brooklyn and Double-A Binghamton, playing 61 games apiece at each level. Overall, he batted .282 and had an OPS of .870. He also flashed some power, blasting 17 home runs and collecting 77 RBIs. His 32 doubles were also a career best for him.
Like Ewing, Reimer was drafted in the fourth round of the MLB draft, only a year earlier than Ewing. Also, like Ewing, Reimer is 21-years-old and 2025 was the first time the Mets and their fans got to see him at his maximum potential.
Reimer will be turning 22 right at the start of Spring Training, and the Mets gave him an early birthday present with an invite to Big League camp. I'm excited to see how he progresses in the Minors this season. If he can continue where he left off in 2025 and show improvements as he moves up the ranks, the Mets will suddenly have a bit more competition for third base in Queens, and it might be before the end of the 2026 season.

RHP Jack Wenninger:
When the Mets traded away Brandon Sproat, it was a tough loss to lose such a young and promising pitcher. However, it was tempered by the fact that the Mets have a deep rotation of arms across their farm system. Jack Wenninger is the most exciting one of the bunch. He's earned his Big League invite to Spring Training.
Wenninger spent all of 2025 with Double-A Binghamton, where he was second only to super prospect Jonah Tong in nearly all pitching categories.
Drafted in the sixth round of the 2023 MLB Draft, Wenninger dominated Double-A competition all summer long to the tune of a 2.92 ERA across 135 innings pitched. He totaled 147 strikeouts and allowed just 42 walks during that time. He was a key piece to Binghamton's first Eastern League Championship in over a decade, putting up a record of 12-6.
Ranked as the Mets' #11 prospect per MLB Pipeline, he's the most exciting pitching prospect coming to St. Lucie. It'll be very interesting to see how he responds to facing Major League hitters this Spring. While I doubt he'll break camp with the Big League team, his ceiling seems to rise every year he's been in the Mets' system. The team was clearly not willing to move him during their flurry of trades this offseason.
2026 will be a big year for Wenninger, and I think the Mets will be pleased that they held onto him as he becomes still another weapon in the Mets' arsenal of young arms coming up through their system.

MACK - Top 28 Prospects - #17 - RHSP - Jonathan Santucci

 



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.

17.    Jonathan Santucci



2025:        A+/AA:  25-G, 23-ST, 9-4, 3.06, 1.15, 117.2-IP, 41-BB, 138-K

GROK -

Jonathan Santucci is a highly regarded left-handed pitching prospect in the New York Mets organization, selected in the second round (46th overall) of the 2024 MLB Draft out of Duke University.

Born on December 28, 2002, in Leominster, Massachusetts, the 6'2", 205-pound southpaw bats and throws left-handed.

Santucci signed for the full slot value of $2,031,700

Attended Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, where he was Massachusetts' top prep pitching prospect in 2021. He also showed athleticism as a two-way player, occasionally playing center field and right field.

At Duke, he transitioned fully to pitching and earned a spot in the weekend rotation as a freshman in 2022, posting a 4.17 ERA over 41 innings with 58 strikeouts and 20 walks.

His sophomore year (2023) was abbreviated by a fractured elbow requiring surgery to remove bone chips, limiting him to 29.1 innings with 50 strikeouts but highlighting his strikeout prowess (13.9 K/9 career at Duke).

 As a junior in 2024, he rebounded as Duke's Friday night ace, logging a 3.41 ERA in 58 innings across 13 starts with a 35% strikeout rate but a 14% walk rate—issues with control that contributed to high pitch counts and kept him out of the first round of the draft. A mid-season rib injury (non-throwing side) also sidelined him for three starts late in the year.

Professional Career

Santucci didn't pitch in the Florida Complex League (FCL) after signing in August 2024.

In 2025, his first full pro season, he advanced rapidly: starting in Low-A, moving to High-A, and reaching Double-A Binghamton by mid-year, where he was activated as of August.

Health remains a watch point, given his injury history, but his athleticism and mechanics suggest he could improve his below-average control (scouted at 45/80) to average levels with coaching.

Pitch Repertoire

Santucci's arsenal is built around swing-and-miss stuff, earning him a career 13.9 K/9 in college. He works from a high arm slot with a flat approach angle, generating carry and deception.

Scouting grades (on the 20-80 scale) include: Fastball 60, Slider 60, Changeup 55, Control 45, Overall 45.

Four-Seam Fastball

92-96 mph

Features impressive induced vertical break (carry) and armside run; elite against college hitters for whiffs due to flat plane and high slot. Effective to both sides of the plate.

Primary pitch (50-60% usage); challenges with command lead to walks and deep counts. Mets may add a sinker or cutter for early-contact outs.

Slider

82-85 mph (low-80s at times)

Wipeout breaking ball with sharp, two-plane break (lateral and vertical); platoon-neutral, devastating vs. right-handers (56% whiff rate in 2024). Snappy at best, but can flatten if overthrown.

Key secondary (30-40% usage); thrown with fastball arm speed for deception; equalizer for his control issues.

Changeup

Mid- to upper-80s

Shows arm-side fade and vertical tumble; above-average potential with good arm speed replication, but inconsistent command.

Tertiary pitch (9-10% usage); mostly vs. right-handers later in games; sparingly thrown but effective when located.

 

11-7-2025

JUST BASEBALL

10. Jonathan Santucci – LHP – (Double-A)

Height/Weight: 6’2″, 195 | Bat/Throw: L/L | 2nd Round (46) – NYM (2024) | ETA: 2027

A southpaw with an exciting fastball, slider combination Santucci had plenty of first round buzz heading into his draft year before a rib injury and command issues pushed him to the second round. Santucci looked like a first round talent in his first pro season, cutting down the walk rate and improving as the season progressed, dominating at Double-A in the second half.

Arsenal

Santucci gets above average carry on a 94-95 MPH fastball, generating above average whiff numbers within the zone. His gyro slider pairs well with his fastball with the vertical action to make it effective to both lefties and righties, with strong whiff and ground ball rates. He commands the slider better than any of his offerings, with a strike rate of nearly 70% in 2025.

The southpaw is still looking for a consistent third offering, with his low 80s curveball looking more reliable than his firm upper 80s changeup. The shape of his curveball is similar to that of Noah Cameron’s, flashing at least average, but without much consistency and less than 10% usage.

Outlook

Santucci’s 2025 season has him rising up the Mets ranks as the best left-handed pitching prospect in their system. Though the control improved mightily in his pro debut, Santucci’s command is still a work in progress, with a strike rate of just 61% on all offerings other than his slider.

The fastball, slider combination gives Santucci the floor of an effective left-handed reliever, but his improved ability to throw strikes and at least signs of a third offering have earned him plenty of runway as a starting pitching prospect where he could be a quality No. 4 starter if it comes together.

 

11-23-2025 –

Angry             @AngryMike24

Mets Jonathan Santucci had 19 outings in 2025, allowing 3 ER or fewer for HI-A & AA:

97.2 IP | 23 ER | 52 Hits | 30 BB | 116 K | 2.13 ERA | 0.84 WHIP

29% K-Rate for ‘25

#’s on par or better than any LHP ranked among Top 100, but Santucci remains unranked.  Absurd.

 

12-20-2025 –

MACK/MM

Jonathan Santucci – thanks to Brennan, I didn’t miss on this guy. Big time Friday Night starter out of Duke. Started out with 15-G/13-ST with A+ Brooklyn (3.46), but ended strong with AA-Binghamton (10-ST, 2.52). Overall, a whopping 138-K in 117.2-IP. Could force his way into the opening day AAA-Syracuse rotation, but I have him first returning to AA-Binghamton to probably help create the strongest rotation n that league.

 

12-5-2025

Angry Mike/MM

JON SANTUCCI -> He’d be the #1 SP prospect for a lot of other franchises, he’s penciled for AAA.

-> What new pitches will he deploy in 2026? Will we see an increase in usage of his curveball and changeup in 2026? Any chance Santucci gets a look as a RP if the #Mets want to add another dynamic weapon for the bullpen?

 

1-13-2026

Angry Mike/MM             @AngryMike24

Mets Jonathan Santucci final 21 Outings & Z. Thornton 2025 Stats compared to MLB Pipeline’s Top 10 LHP:

<->  Mets J. Santucci -> Final 21 Outings in ‘25: Hi-A & AA:

-> 16 / 21 Outings of at least 5+ IP

-> 14 / 16 Outings of 5+ IP allowed 2 ER or fewer

105.2 IP | 28 ER | 124 K | 36 BB | 76 H | 2.40 ERA | 1.07 WHIP

->  29% K-RATE  |  8.5% BB-RATE