4/25/26

Reese Kaplan -- A Big Win (Finally) and a Look at Pitching


Forgive me from being a little late to the party, but how about the way you felt when the Mets finally got a big W in the standings column after a dozen straight L’s?  When Luke Weaver put on a baserunner with the Mets holding a single run lead due to a timely hit by none other than heretofore dismissed Mark Vientos, I ventured to fellow Mets fan friends in real time that I could foresee a two run homer happening slugged by Byron Buxton.  I’ve never been so happy to be so wrong about anything in my entire life.

That being said, we’ve already discussed many of the offensive issues facing the team.  Consistent with my prediction prior to the game Juan Soto was inserted as the DH.  While no none will moan about missing his suspect defense in left field, the issue was leaving the rest of the outfield open to a less than stellar cast.  In this victory the Mets started newcomer Luis Robert, no-offense substitute Tyrone Taylor and over-the-hill and ill-prepared late starter Tommy Pham.  That’s not exactly a trio vying for All Star consideration.

Futhermore, the injury bug struck once again with suddenly now hitting Francisco Lindor coming out due to discomfort in his calf.  That change necessitated Bo Bichette and his highly suspect glove moving to cover at shortstop and no-offense-provided Brett Baty taking over at third base.  We don’t yet know how severe the injury is but they have scheduled an MRI for Lindor and announced the call up of Ronny Mauricio to take his place temporarily while he recovers.  


Today, however, it’s time to ponder a bit about the on-again/off-again nature of the pitching performances the club has received.  The easy part are the starters.  Right now while Freddy Peralta has been better than others though not quite what he was in Milwaukee last year, he’s still on the positive side of the ledger.  Nolan McLean is in a way the new Jacob deGrom who pitches his heart out but can’t get the club to score a few runs for him to earn a victory.  The other solid arm is Clay Holmes.

After that it gets pretty messy.  It’s been announced that in yesterday’s game Christian Scott was being called up from AAA where he’s demonstrated the velocity and composure that made him a top pitching gem before his Tommy John Surgery departure.  All are hoping he can be more than a simple one game fill-in.

Leaving the rotation and joining previously banished Sean Manaea in the bullpen is the forever frustrating David Peterson who more often resembles a batting practice pitcher than a dependable starter.  At this point no one is clear what exactly his role is out there.  It could be to eat innings when a starter turns up incapable of the number of expected frames or it could be as as much of a LOOGY as is still allowed by the new minimum number of batters faced rule. 

In addition to this underperforming duo you have the ever questionable outcome expected from import Kodai Senga.  We have seen how dominant he can be when he is healthy and moving the ball around the zone to confound hitters.  We have also unfortunately seen how bad he can be when things are not working.  Being on the books until the end of 2027 the leash on him is likely a bit longer than it would be on someone like Peterson who is in his free agent walk year.  Still, you can’t hand over a pitcher allowing well in excess of seven runs per game when you’re club is struggling to provide even two (1.7 runs per game average during the losing streak).

Behind this group you have the sometimes starter from Milwaukee Tobias Myers who did serve as what we now call an opener earlier in the week.  He’s been far better than most out there though hardly stellar.  He’s more likely long term going to be slated as a long man in the pen and spot starter at best.

Then in the minors you still have Jonah Tong and Jack Wenninger.  Neither have done enough long term and solid work yet in AAA to consider them confidently as anything but emergency replacements should injuries occur, but in Tong’s case the strikeout capabilities are most definitely there. 

For Wenninger who is not quite as well known to the Queens faithful, he has spent his minor league career improving each of the past season and thus far in this one.  He finished 2025 in Binghamton with a 2.92 ERA, a 3:1 strikeout to walk ratio, a WHIP of 1.150 and a record of 12-6 over 26 starts.  This year in Syracuse he’s starting off with three starts earning a 1-1 record with a 1.26 ERA and the same gaudy strikeout to walk ratio.  With so little AAA exposure he’s doing consistently better than Tong who has already had a cup of coffee in the majors, but with time he could surpass him on the depth chart. 

In the bullpen there’s the Devin Williams situation.  Which Williams will the Mets get?  Is he the Yankees version from 2025 or the Brewers version from the rest of his career?  Lately he’s looked more like a Bronx Bomb than a Milwaukee Marauder.   

The rest of the pen is fungible.  While everyone is waiting for AJ Minter to join the mix, you have the up and down record of the streak ending winner, Luke Weaver, Brooks Raley, Austin Warren, Huascar Brazoban and Craig Kimbrel.  Let’s not forget David Peterson and Sean Manaea as well.  Who’s to know if Kodai Senga will be joining them? 

If you want to start an interesting debate, who will the Mets send out the door to make room for AJ Minter?  While no one would necessarily cry if Austin Warren was sent packing, there is no long term affection here for Brazoban nor Kimbrel either.  More would advocate finding out ways to part with one of the trio of Peterson, Manaea and Senga.  Perhaps one of those online gambling sites should set it up as a wager.  Submit your betting slip with the name of who will become an ex-Met when the club is ready to send the Uber from Queens to Syracuse to welcome rookie Wenninger.

4/24/26

Reese Kaplan -- Now it's Time to Examine What's Gone Wrong


Sit down with your fellow Mets fan friends and crack open the beverage of your choice.  It won’t take long for opinions (often loud and boisterous ones) to surface regarding what the Mets can or should be doing to change their now record setting losing streak direction.  Some are valid, some are creative and some are merely hostile.  The fact is however, there is one thing 99.99% of the fans are in agreement about.  Doing nothing doesn’t solve the problem!


Now there are a precious few who will recite that the team is a mere 25 or so games into the season and there is ample time for natural course correction to occur.  While the club has not yet been mathematically eliminated from post season baseball, the fact is that sitting and waiting instead of having a plan and taking action isn’t likely the best course to right the ship that has been taking on water for over two weeks.  It’s like seeing a building on fire and instead of evacuating or extinguishing the flames you merely sit and wait for it to burn itself out.  Yes, eventually it will but then there is nothing left once the last flame disappears.

Some folks are harboring the “tear it all down” perspective which suggests that save for 3 or 4 players the rest are ill suited to be a part of the team.  This suggestion is not without merit though how much is certainly up for debate.  Many people questioned specific actions and inactions from the front office since the 2025 season mercifully ended and now it would appear a number of them are looking somewhat prophetic. 

Take the matter of Jorge Polanco who was signed to play a position that was brand new to him at first base.  That alone was adding risk to the evaluation equation butt the other neer really discussed before offering him a lucrative contract was his history of injuries that kept him off the playing field for a great many games each season.  When healthy he is a solid and credible player but in a new position and chronically facing injuries that keep him off the field this decision certainly is a valid one for concern and criticism.

Other players brought in had questions about injuries and productivity.  Sometimes these gambles work out and other times you find out why the player in question was available in trade.  Luis Robert started off surprisingly well given his previous seasons of poor production and long term injuries hampering his output, but quickly he has joined the great many players responsible for the losing streak.  His AVG is below league average and he’s striking out at a prodigious rate.  Granted, this early in the season it’s too soon to declare it a totally bad move, but the whispers are becoming audible.

In terms of trades, you need to ponder both who was obtained and who was given up.  At the time the deal was made David Stearns stood pretty much alone in his faith that veteran Marcus Semien would in any way replace the productivity provided by popular hitter Brandon Nimmo.  Having begun the season below the Mendoza line, his recent surge to the .230s is welcome but hardly comparable to what was sacrificed in tis deal.  Yes, the Mets will save money given the salary still due to Nimmo vs. the shorter term obligation to Semien but again there are not a parade of excited fans cheering for this deal any more now than there were then when it was first announced. 

While many were excited to see rookie Carson Benge get an opportunity to play regularly after a terrfic spring  during which he demonstrated with his bat, his glove his arm and his legs that he was indeed a player around whom the club could build for the future.  There were some folks hinting that is inability to match up against AAA pitching suggested that major league hurlers might be overwhelming, but I (and others) were shouted down about being negative.  He’s still well under the Mendoza line and while the defense and baserunning have been excellent, thus far he’s seeming to be unable to tackle this level of pitching.


It’s way too easy to pile on when it comes to the duo of Mark Vientos and Brett Baty but fans are now realizing that 2024 was a long time ago for the former and 2025 may be the non sustainable high water mark for the latter.  Neither has minor league options left so you either live with them or make them part of the bench instead of the starting lineup.  Unfortunately with the soon returning Juan Soto you still find the outfield stretched thin having lost others to injury as well.  It is possible they may want Soto to DH instead of playing the field to ease him back into full health, so that likely keeps Baty a part of the outfield.  With Polanco gone and no sign of Ryan Clifford advancing to the majors, Mark Vientos remains your everyday first baseman.

For today we won’t delve into the pitching woes but suffice to say that David Peterson, Sean Manaea and Kodai Senga are already on thin ice with Devin Williams soon joining them. 

Through it all fans and media are certainly left wondering what is David Stearns doing to address these problems?  It sure doesn’t seem like much of anything. A single win after a dozen humiliating losses doesn't mean everything is coming up roses.  It's still more like the stench of fertilizer.  

Tom Brennan - STREAK! Limping Lindor; 2026 Mets Minor League Teams Fall Short of 2025


“It’s like I told Lieutenant Dan…Stupid is as Stupid Does”

FIRST, THOUGH…A TWO GAME WINNING STREAK FOR THE METS

10-8 win. Game ends on a Devin Williams K after 3 straight hits allowed had the tying runs in scoring position. Game had it all…6-1 early Mets lead, half of the Mets runs coming on a 3 run Baty Blast.

Christian Scott left his control in Syracuse, and his evening was short. 

Bad relief in the 8th, including Brazoban surrendering a game tying grand slam, was followed by 3 runs bottom 8, keyed by Bichette.

Lindor did not play. Why? His Wednesday injury….

LIMPING LINDOR KEPT RIGHT ON RUNNING

I got on former Mets prospect Drew Gilbert a lot in my articles, two years ago, for running and not stopping when he felt his hamstring had strained, and then really pulling it by staying in the game, and missing much of 2024 as a result. 

I wrote then, why would someone not exercise extreme caution to not make an injury worse?  It was only one meaningless April game. STOP RUNNING.

You come out of the game, Drew Gilbert, and maybe you miss just a week instead of missing months of valuable career time. Another example:

Lagares’ acrobatics causing him to be injured more than Evel Knievel. Etc.

So I watched the replay of Lindor, gingerly running from first base on a Mets double and coming around to barely score ahead of the throw. That’s a whole lot of running when your calf is barking, which it clearly was before he even got to second base. 

Then, I read this:

“The Mets don't have a clear timetable yet on Lindor's injury, but they expect him to miss significant time. It's more serious than the calf issue that just cost Soto 15 games.

And I think to myself, “self, why would someone risk making an injury much more severe, instead of just stopping”? He could’ve stopped running at second base. He could’ve stopped running at third base. 

But like Forrest Gump, he kept right on going. And now he’s right on going to the IL. And he’s going to be there apparently for a long long time. And chances increased that the season probably just went up in smoke because of his decision-making.

What do I call that? I call it - oh, I dunno - dumb. Dumb seems like it.

Or, in Gump parlance, “stupid is as stupid does.”

I’ve seen it too many times. I ask: When are teams going to teach their players that when they feel a leg injury emerging, unless it’s the seventh game of the World Series, to just stop.  It reminds me of the tortoise and the hare. The hare was moving, mighty fast, until it wasn’t. And finally was passed by the uninjured tortoise. To me it’s just inexplicable.

We will probably be told that his continuing to run did not aggravate the injury. I think that it would be both baloney and malarkey. 

Of course, good things could happen. 

Ronny Mauricio could come in and become a gangbuster. But I just think that this injury is the final nail in the 2026 coffin, and we haven’t even gotten to May yet. 

Give Luis Guillorme a call? He’s home. Anyway…

Enough of that depressing garbage. 

On to my prepared topic du jour.




A.J. EWING HAS BEEN HOT

 

Boy, oh boy, last year’s Mets minor-league system was a game-winning machine.

This year, through Wednesday, not nearly so much. A collective 31 wins and 40 losses. Way off the pace of 2025. (Then, on Thursday, the 4 teams lost by a combined score of 34-10. Ouch.

The update below gives you a quick idea as to why.

When it comes to Syracuse, they are playing pretty well at 12–10, but it is a team filled with veterans, so what I like to look at for Syracuse is how are the prospects and near–prospects doing?  How the team does overall is less relevant because of the veterans that are unlikely to be called up.

So looking through the prospect prism, Mauricio has been doing great, Clifford has picked it up quite a bit after an abysmal start, Morabito is doing OK, but he is a better hitter this April than last April, and Lambert, Tong and Wenninger are doing mostly very well.  

Scott was also doing well enough to get chosen for the Mets starting role in Thursday night’s game in Queens. The S-Mets are 15th out of 20 in scoring runs, and hitting .250.

Binghamton? I thought they would be the beast of the franchise. But they are 6-10, and flat out not hitting. 

Jacob Reimer was hitting .122 before he went 4 for 4 Wednesday night. Doing that still only raised his average to .189. (Then he fanned all 4 times up on Thursday!)

Ewing was torrid, but slipped down to .327, and has no home runs. Only Serrano otherwise at .271 is anywhere close to a normal batting average otherwise. 

Sixteen games in, the Ponies are hitting a woeful .195.

Brooklyn is 4-12. Why? Lack of hitting. They sit at .184. 

Yes, Cyclone Park is tough for line up’s whackers, but on the road, they are a brutal .149, and .219 at home. 

They have hit somewhat better, and fanned less, over their last 9 games, so hopefully their upward trajectory continues at the plate.

St. Lucie (9-8) has had fine hitting performances from Pena, Zayas and others, and are hitting a league-leading .253, a league-best .357 OBP, and just one run short of the most runs, averaging 6.1 runs per game. So why are they only 9-8?

The Lucites have by far the league’s worst ERA (6.44), despite 2 shutouts in 17 games!  By comparison, Ft. Myers’ team ERA by comparison is 2.10. Lucie righty Omar Victorino has done the worst so far, allowing 21 runs in 9.1 IP. The entire Ft Myers team has only surrendered 34 earned runs.

Let’s see how all of that sub-mediocrity changes with warmer weather.  

Hopefully, for the much better.  

However, the fact that St. Lucie is hitting well is less relevant than what the other teams are doing at the three higher levels, since hitters that do well at the Florida State league level often struggle as they get to higher levels and face stronger pitching. Their stats are far less indicative of future success.

So my assessment is that the overall state of Mets minor league hitting is frankly poor at this point.  

And that is something that I’ve unfortunately written far too many times during my decade plus as a Mack’s Mets writer.

Pitching has also been less impressive than in 2025.

And that’s my memo. Except, let me add this…


I LIKE LUKE WEAVER MORE ONCE I HEARD HIM SAY THIS AFTER WEDNESDAY’S 3-2 WIN:

Weaver said:

“Look, people smell fear. 

“I'm not the biggest guy in the room, but I ain't scared of nobody. 

“And that's the attitude I try to take, and if I screw up, it's on me, but at the end of the day, I'm gonna sleep at night, and I'm gonna feel good about the effort I put in, and I ain't fearing nobody. 
You remember that.”

Asked “What are the emotions, not just for yourself, but for this team, finally getting over the hump tonight?”

Weaver replied: 

“A little bit of relief. 
Look, this wasn't about attitude. This wasn't about work ethic. This wasn't about a bad demeanor. 
There was none of that. It's about just showing up every day, giving you something to cheer about, and thankfully, today….we freaking did that. 

“All right? 
Thank you. Let's go Mets.”

I REALLY LIKE THAT!

4/23/26

RVH - A Different Way to Read a Mets Win

 

It finally ended!

After two weeks of losses that felt heavier than the standings, the Mets beat the Twins 3–2. The losing streak stops at 12.

That’s the headline.

But the more interesting story is how it happened.

For this game, I tracked the offense a different way — not inning by inning, but turn by turn through the lineup. Every nine plate appearances, one full cycle of the order.

Not just what happened. But how the offense evolved.

Mets Offense — Turns Through Lineup

Time Through Lineup

PA

AB

H

2B

3B

HR

R

RBI

BB

K

BA

OBP

SLG

OPS

RISP

LOB

1st time thru

9

9

2

1

0

0

1

1

0

5

.222

.222

.333

.556

1-3

1

2nd time thru

9

9

3

1

0

0

1

1

0

1

.333

.333

.444

.778

0-2

1

3rd time thru

9

6

1

0

0

0

0

0

3

2

.167

.444

.167

.611

0-2

2

4th time thru

7

5

2

1

0

0

1

1

2

0

.400

.571

.600

1.171

1-1

1

TOTAL

34

29

8

3

0

0

3

3

5

8

.276

.382

.379

.761

2-8

7

Whole Game (What Happened)

  • 8 hits

  • 5 walks

  • .382 OBP

  • 2-for-8 with RISP

  • 7 LOB

That’s not a broken offensive line.

It’s a functional offense that finally converted enough.

Turn-by-Turn (Why It Happened)

Turn 1 — Overpowered

Five strikeouts in nine plate appearances.

The Mets weren’t controlling at-bats. The pitcher dictated everything. They scratched out a run, but the process was thin.

Turn 2 — Adjustment

Strikeouts dropped from five to one. Contact increased. The offense stabilized.

This is what a capable lineup does — it learns.

Turn 3 — The Game

Three walks. .444 OBP. Real pressure.

And:

  • 0 runs

  • 0-for-2 RISP

  • 2 stranded

Maximum pressure. Zero conversion.

If this game goes the other way, this is the inning you point to.

Turn 4 — The Difference

This time, they finished it.

  • OBP

  • Contact

  • Extra-base hit

  • Run scored

Same ingredients as Turn 3.

Different result.

The Inflection Point

The Mets didn’t suddenly become a great offense.

They followed the same progression:

  1. Struggle

  2. Adjust

  3. Create pressure

The difference: They converted once after failing once

That’s the entire game.

Takeaways

1. The offense can adjust
Turn 1 → Turn 2 proves it.

2. They can generate pressure
5 walks, multiple traffic innings.

3. Conversion remains inconsistent
Turn 3 vs Turn 4 is the gap.

4. Timing > totals
Same output, different timing = different outcome.

Final Thought

This wasn’t dominant. It wasn’t clean. But it mattered.

Process finally turned into result.

And sometimes, that’s how a season resets.