5/21/26

Tom Brennan - SMART Moves….The Pattern Remains…and Zach Faced Mission Impossible

 

SMART MOVES

The Washington Nationals traded Juan Soto, some years back, for a combination of top prospects

It was a smart move by the DC braintrust.

SO smart.

Two guys that they obtained, James Wood and CJ Abrams, in Washington’s first 49 games, have combined for 22 homers, 25 other XBHs, and 74 RBIs. That puts them on pace for about 70 home runs, 80 doubles/triples, and 240 RBIs combined this year. 

Golly gee, and gee whiz. But wait, there’s more.

They also got McKenzie Gore, who’s been a decent pitcher in his career as a starter, with upside, and Robert Hassell, who is 24 and back in the minors this year after a mediocre 2025 MLB trial run.

The Mets have occasionally made smart trades, but not as smart as that one. They made a very dumb trade giving up Pete Crow-Armstrong. But two smart non-trade moves were unaccepted QOs to Syndergaard (Morabito) and DeGrom (Ewing).


THE PATTERN REMAINS…

… When it comes to home-field advantage.

Through Tuesday, them Yankees are averaging almost 7 runs a game at home, and far lower 4 runs per game on the road. 

A super advantage at home, clearly. 

The Mets?  

4.3 runs per game at home, and 4 per game on the road. Slight home edge.

Seemingly an annual occurrence is the relative disparity in home-field advantage between these two teams.

The Yankees simply have a far bigger home-field advantage than the Mets do, very similar to what the Knicks have in Madison Square Garden when they have good teams. Great, well designed home stadiums can do wonders for a baseball team. 

It could mean the difference between annual playoffs, and early eliminations during the regular season.

Hey Uncle Steve, I have a suggestion for you for a great trade…

Trade stadiums.

Move the Mets to the Bronx and move the Yankees to Queens.

Somehow, I think the Yankees would politely say no to that one.


ZACH GOT SMACKED

“Your Mission… Should you choose to accept it, is to face the highest scoring team in baseball in your major league debut. This message will self-destruct in five seconds.” Zach Thornton accepted Mission Impossible.

The Nationals’ MLB-leading offense was like nothing Zach had ever seen. 

Zach retired the first batter in his MLB debut, then gave up a blooper hit, then just missed the strike zone and walked the next guy on 3-2. 

He then faced the type of hitter that he never saw in AAA, CJ Abrams. 

CJ clocked a three run Homer. CJ, if you are not paying attention, is a budding All-Star caliber player

The Mets, as is too often the case, could never recover. Zach gave up four runs in total in 4.1 innings, and looked good… 

Except for that one pitch. When you’re facing the best, sometimes that one pitch can do you in. However, I liked what I saw from him.

Otherwise, two relievers for the Mets gave up a total of four runs, which turned out to be the march of victory for the nationals in an 8-4 ball game.

On a positive note in a guy who really seems to heat up in the middle of May, Juan Soto, hit two Titanic home runs, and just missed a third.

Frankly… 

They need Lindor back badly. 

And I have the sneaking suspicion that the Mets current catching tandem may have a struggling time hitting .200. 

So they need Alvarez back too.

Why?  A team requires lots of hitters that can hit to consistently win.

Sadly, neither of them will be back soon.

The Nationals can sure hit, though…7 or more runs in each of the 3 games.


Alex Rubinson - Austin Warren is Proof that David Stearns still has his Fastball

In January, 2025, the New York Mets made an acquisition that popped up on the transaction wire that most fans and media paid barely any attention to. David Stearns claimed a reliever, Austin Warren, off of waivers from the San Francisco Giants. The relief pitcher had made just eight total appearances over the previous two seasons with the Giants and Los Angeles Angels. January is typically a time when front offices are looking for arms to just get the team through spring training. Warren appeared to fit that mold. 


He stuck around for the entire season with the organization, but bounced between the big league club and the team’s Triple-A team in Syracuse. Although he impressed in limited playing time, he only tossed just over nine innings. During the offseason, the Mets spent big to replace Edwin Diaz at the back of their pen by signing Luke Weaver and Devin Williams along with acquiring Tobias Myers, and Warren failed to break camp with the team. 


Over the last month, Warren’s 2026 season has mirrored his 2025 campaign with being transported back and forth between Syracuse and Queens. While the Mets have struggled to open the season, the bullpen has been pretty steady. As the Mets continue to navigate the long grueling summer months, Warren has proven and earned the opportunity to stick with the team for the foreseeable future. 


Warren has not made more than 16 appearances once in a single season but entering Wednesday, he has already toed the rubber 10 times to start 2026. He has stuck out as one of New York’s top relievers who should continue to get high-leverage opportunities, as he has recorded a miniscule 0.69 ERA and a WHIP that is barely north of 1.00. Although it’s difficult to say that Warren will carry those numbers through a full season, he should give the Mets quality innings and can be used in a variety of situations. 


In an era when teams are constantly chasing velocity, Warren breaks that trend. His fastball averages just under 94 MPH. It’s funny to think about a 94 MPH pitch being unimpressive, but that’s the reality we live in in 2026. Due to him not overpowering opposing hitters, his strikeout and whiff numbers aren’t anything to brag home about, but that doesn’t mean he is not effective. His fastball is still an above average pitch in terms of run value with his breaking stuff generating a plus two when it comes to run value. 


His mediocre velocity plays a role in Warren using his sweeper as his primary pitch. The right-hander throws the sweeper almost half of the time. The sweeper will be the pitch to watch moving forward because hitters are hitting just a touch above .210 against it, but the expected average is over 50 points north of that. This isn’t to say it’s a bad pitch, but hitters might be guessing sweeper based on how often he throws it. Warren also has yet to give up a knock against his sinker. That rate will not continue, but it does show that hitters are unable to square up the pitch. 


Meanwhile, Warren’s fastball has been unlucky. Batters are hitting over .285 against the offering but are expected to hit under .165. The most eye-popping difference is slugging. As of now, hitters are mashing against the fastball to the tune of an .857 slugging percentage, but the expected slug is less than half of that at just .367. His four-seamer has a lower expected weighted on-base than both the sinker and sweeper, but the actual weighted on-base is north of .480. 


At first glance, one would expect the quality of the contact to be weak and the ball is just finding green grass, but batters do have an exit velocity of 97 MPH on the pitch. On the other hand, there is also a 50% whiff rate. At the end of the day, hitters aren’t making a ton of contact despite the less than stellar velocity, but due to the lack of velocity, hitters are squaring up the pitch when they do put the bat on the ball. 


Looking at guys that throw hard like Mason Miller or Jacob Misiorowski, they can afford to make a mistake or two. Due to their stuff being so nasty, they can get away with missing locations. With Warren, he has proven to be a very good pitcher with a 94 MPH fastball, but he doesn’t have nearly as much wiggle room if he misses his spot.


The biggest difference in Warren’s repertoire between his first season with New York and this year is how often he is mixing in his curveball. Granted, he didn’t pitch a lot last year, but he only threw his curveball once. This season, the reliever is tossing it almost 12% of the time. The curveball has produced the lowest exit velocity of any one of his pitches. 


Warren has also ditched his cutter (a pitch he threw 17% of time a season ago). Justin Willard and company should encourage Warren to throw the curveball at a higher rate. There might come a point where he is throwing the pitch too often, but we haven’t reached that threshold yet. Whenever a pitcher is discovering a new pitch or playing around with his repertoire, he shouldn’t be afraid to test the limits. He can always back off when he has crossed the line.  


The reliever has made strides even from last year. His hard hit rate is down 11% compared to 2025 with his expected weighted on base average down 35 points. Warren’s expected stats do show that his sub 1.00 ERA is probably not sustainable. Instead, he projects as a guy who will have an ERA in the mid 3.00s with an opponent batting average settling in about .215 (not ~ .155). Either way, Warren is a cheap option that can be trusted and relied upon to pitch in a variety of roles. 


Carlos Mendoza should continue to use him in high leverage scenarios until those sparkling actual numbers resemble more of the expected metrics. Stearns has been far from perfect during his Mets tenure, but he has always found hidden gems in the reliever market, and that part of his game still hasn’t wavered. 

Paul Articulates – The folly of the Mets' re-build


The New York Mets have had a very long history of failed free agent acquisitions.  From Bobby Bonilla to Jason Bay to Luis Castillo, the Mets have had some epic personnel disasters.  The list is longer than I can afford to post without depressing everyone reading this, and you are probably already depressed from watching the worst $355M team in MLB history every night.

The failed acquisitions are usually blamed on the general managers or the ownership making short sighted decisions to turn a team full of flaws into a champion.  This has been true in some cases, but not in all cases.  In some areas, the acquisitions of players that by all indications should be improvements to the team fall far short.  Why is this?  Bad luck?  The Curse of Flushing?  I think it is simpler than that.

Not all baseball players are cut out for playing in the big city environment.  If you have read my posts over time, one consistent theme recurs.  A player’s performance is greatly affected by their state of mind.  When the mind is busy or cluttered with thoughts or concerns, the ability to hit a 95MPH pitch that is breaking in vertical and horizontal planes is compromised.  This happens in slumps, in losing streaks, and in moments of intense pressure.  In a big city environment like New York, with the media constantly pressing on why players don’t play better, there is a constant background worry that can clutter the mind.  Players are constantly reminded to avoid use of the media so they don’t get upset, but in today’s world that is impossible.  Therefore, only the most mentally tough individuals can shut out the external distractions and come to the plate or onto the field with a clear mind and a focus on just playing baseball.

The players who have starred for the Mets, the Yankees, the Dodgers, and the Cubs are people who have proven the ability to shut out the noise.  They have the competitive drive to use the constant criticism as fuel to drive their performance rather than to inflict doubt.  This is a unique trait that is possessed by a small minority of players in the game.

It is with that premise that I enter into the subject of today’s post.  The idea of rebuilding the team around a statistical necessity by plugging in a combination of players with the right numbers is pure folly in a town like New York.  Maybe it works in Milwaukee or Kansas City or Seattle, but not in the spotlight of such a demanding town like NYC.  The complete collapse of the 2026 Mets is a perfect example of why this is the case.  At the onset of this season, you read some very articulate pieces on why the strategy to build a team around run prevention would work.  Using the back of the baseball cards for all players involved in the rebuild could justify how this could work better.  Then came the season, and after the first dozen or so games came the adversity.   With that adversity came the collapse of an entire lineup and pitching staff, not just a few slumps.  As it turns out, most of the replacement parts were not suited for this adverse environment.  Here are a few examples:

Bo Bichette – The two-time all-star had played all of his seven seasons in Toronto away from the prime media.  He never hit less than .290 except for an injury filled 2024 season.  Known as a clutch hitter, even in the playoffs, Bichette is hitting .200 this year with RISP.  Don’t blame it on the ballpark – this is batting average not OPS.

Freddy Peralta – A staff ace with Milwaukee who threw over 165 innings in each of the last three years, Peralta with the Mets has been just an average pitcher who is usually out of the game before the sixth inning begins.  He has a 3.31 ERA and a 1.25 WHIP, which is a good arm to have on your pitching staff, but not for the tens of millions he will ask for on the free agent market. I would not hand the ball to this pitcher in a playoff game.

Luis Robert Jr. – Robert was a coveted prospect out of Cuba who earned a $26M signing bonus.  He responded by winning a gold glove in his rookie season and then was named to the all-star game in 2023.  He has been touted as a five-tool talent but seemed to lack the motivation with the perennial cellar dwelling White Sox.  In New York, where he had the opportunity to shine on a contender, he withered quickly and then went down with injury.

Franciso Alvarez – The inability to play in the spotlight does not only apply to free agents.  Alvarez was one of the most touted prospects in the Mets development system, and was quickly promoted to the majors.  He showed flashes of the talent that earned him those accolades, but he could not stay focused or healthy.  His wild swings and mental lapses behind the plate have earned him a couple of demotions to work on his game.  He comes back refreshed, but soon reverts, showing the inability to maintain state of mind in NYC.

Mark Vientos – Mark displays the confidence and ability of a solid MLB player on his good days, but lapses into pitch-guessing and impatience at the plate which leads to prolonged slumps.  Despite continued work on his defense, his lack of speed and positioning instinct makes it look like the game is too fast for him.  In a smaller market, with less pressure, he may end up being a fine ballplayer.

The moral of this story is that there is much more to a player’s capability than statistics compiled in a safe environment.  The Mets front office needs to develop a much more rigorous screening method to acquire (or develop) players with a mental toughness that can compete in the stressful environment of New York City.  Failure to do so will result in just what we see this year – an expensive bust that will necessitate another off-season rebuild.


5/20/26

RVH - Part 2: The Mets’ Season Is Being Decided in the Toss-Up Games

 

As of 5/14/26, The Mets are 18–25, but not all losses tell the same story.

Some games are blowouts. You get beat. You move on.

Some games are competitive but not quite close enough to be decided by one swing, one bullpen matchup, or one defensive play.

And then there are the toss-up games.

The 1-run games.

The games that sit right on the edge between frustration and momentum. The games where one more timely hit, one cleaner inning, one better matchup, or one better defensive play changes the entire feel of a week.

That is where the Mets’ season has been leaking.

Through May 14, the Mets have played 43 games. If we separate those games by margin, the picture becomes clearer. The issue is not that the Mets are failing in every type of game. The issue is that they have been especially poor in the tightest games, where execution, sequencing, bullpen leverage, and situational hitting matter most.

Here is the breakdown:

Game Type

Actual Record

RS

RA

RS/G

RA/G

RDiff

Category Expected

Toss Up, 1-Run

4–9

31

36

2.38

2.77

-5

5.6–7.4

Competitive, 2–3 Runs

6–5

36

35

3.27

3.18

+1

5.6–5.4

Blowout, 4+ Runs

8–11

94

107

4.95

5.63

-13

8.4–10.6

Total

18–25

161

178

3.74

4.14

-17

19.5–23.5

The first thing that jumps out is the 1-run record.

The Mets are 4–9 in toss-up games.

That is a major problem.

Now, the expected record says they probably should not be dominating those games. Based on run scoring and run prevention in that category, their expected record is only 5.6–7.4. So this is not a case where the Mets should be 9–4 and have simply been cursed by bad luck.

But they also should not be 4–9.

That gap matters. It represents the sequencing tax. The Mets have lost nearly two additional games in the tightest category beyond what their scoring profile suggests.

That is where the season begins to change shape.

A 4–9 record in 1-run games does not just hurt the standings. It changes the emotional rhythm of the season. It turns a competitive week into a disappointing week. It turns a possible series win into a split or a loss. It makes the team feel worse than the broader numbers suggest.

And in the Wild Card race, those games are not cosmetic.

They are the difference between buried and relevant.

The offensive issue in these games is obvious. In 1-run games, the Mets are scoring only 2.38 runs per game. That is not enough. It leaves almost no margin for error. If the bullpen gives up one run, it feels fatal. If the defense gives away an extra base, it feels fatal. If the lineup misses one scoring chance, it feels fatal.

That is not a sustainable way to win close games.

It also explains why these games have felt so frustrating. The Mets have not been getting blown out in their toss-up losses. They have been staying close enough to win, but not doing enough to finish the job.

That is a very different diagnosis.

The competitive-game category tells a more stable story.

In games decided by 2 or 3 runs, the Mets are 6–5. Their expected record in that category is 5.6–5.4. In other words, they are almost exactly where the math says they should be.

That matters because it shows the Mets are not failing in every pressure band. In the competitive middle, they are basically a break-even team. They score 3.27 runs per game and allow 3.18. The run differential is +1. The actual record and expected record are aligned.

That is not excellence.

But it is stability.

The blowout category is also instructive.

The Mets are 8–11 in games decided by 4 or more runs. Their expected record is 8.4–10.6. Again, that is almost exactly aligned with the math. When the Mets lose big, they tend to lose very big. That has dragged down the broader run differential, especially because nearly half of their games have fallen into the blowout category.

But the blowout record is not where the hidden leakage lives.

The leakage lives in the 1-run games.

That is the point.

The Mets’ overall expected record in this game-type view is 19.5–23.5. Their actual record is 18–25. That gap is not huge, but it is meaningful. And it comes almost entirely from the toss-up tier.

This connects directly to the broader Pythagorean picture. The weekly view says the Mets have played more like a 20–23 team than an 18–25 team. The game-type view tells us why. They have not been converting enough of the narrow-margin games that keep a flawed team alive.

That is also why the Detroit sweep matters.

For three games, the Mets did not live on the edge. They scored 22 runs and allowed only 8. They did not ask every bullpen matchup to be perfect. They did not need every late-inning at-bat to carry the weight of the entire season. They created separation.

That is what good teams do often enough to breathe.

But the Mets are not going to blow out opponents every night. No team does. If they want to climb back toward relevance, they have to improve in the toss-up games.

That means more late-inning offense.

It means better situational hitting.

It means cleaner bullpen sequencing.

It means fewer self-inflicted mistakes.

It means turning a 4–9 record in 1-run games into something closer to survivable.

They do not have to dominate those games. A team can live with being slightly below .500 in 1-run games if it is strong elsewhere. But they cannot keep losing them at this rate while already carrying the damage from April.

This is where the season gets very simple.

The Mets do not need to prove they are great right now.

They need to stop losing the games that are sitting there to be taken.

A team at 18–25 has very little margin left. But a team that should be closer to 20–23 is not dead yet. It is wounded. It is flawed. It is behind schedule. But it is still close enough that a few better outcomes can change the standings conversation.

That is the importance of the toss-up games.

They are not just close losses.

They are the hinge between collapse and survival.


Tom Brennan - Highs and Lows in Metsville


Mets lose 9-6 after leading 5-0. Ouch. 


Just a few thoughts. Short article.

The Mets followed their huge 10 run 12th inning on Monday with an early 5-0 lead on Tuesday, with one of their aces on the mound in Nolan McLean. Things went terribly wrong after that, with misplays galore. Games like that are why teams don’t win 120 games. Final losing score 9-6.

Nick Morabito had a very active night in the outfield, just missing a spectacular catch that turned into a Keystone cops, grand slam for Washington’s Wood, Just missing catching a home run clearing the wall the next inning, and making a great grab on a ball that was about 3 feet into the stands down the field line in Full territory. He went hitless, with an HBP.

Yesterday, I wrote that Bo Bichette was about to get cooking. He ended up on Monday with three hits, and his first 2 ABs on Tuesday added two 2 run homers. It’s always fun when you call them.

But his throw to home plate on what should’ve been an easy cut down of a runner at the plate sailed away from Luis Torrens for a key error.

Then, Mark Vientos at first base went bonehead, when he held the ball too long on a guy caught in a rundown, allowing the guy to get back to third base. Keith Hernandez, he is not.

Yesterday was not, and I repeat not, all about run prevention. The defense for the Mets yesterday was all about win prevention. It prevented the Mets from winning.

My only other note from yesterday is that the Brooklyn cyclones even hit less yesterday than they normally do. They accumulated two hits and added 14 strikeouts, and left the game, nearly 40 games into the season, with a mind-blowing .178 batting average. I recommend that each batter take bats to the plate in future games. It might help them hit better.

I hadn’t talked to my brother in a while, but Steve brought up the fact that the Mets minor leagues that were supposed to be so good, but they look pretty darn lousy to him. 

I couldn’t disagree. Brooklyn’s offense is Exhibit A.



Reese Kaplan -- A Hopefully Permanent Change in Direction


Well, well, well...where to begin?

First there was the sweep of the Detroit Tigers that was a long overdue three day period in which the Mets looked like a first division ballclub after a year long bottom-of-the-barrel scraping to try to stay out of last place.


Then came the first game against the Yankees and it was a, “Oops, here we go again!” moment when the club not only lost the game but also had their de facto ace starting pitcher to a batted ball that fractured his fibula.  It was almost as if the baseball world was not going to allow the Mets and their fans have even a 4th day of positive feelings.

But what happened next no one anticipated.  The Mets won games 2 and 3 of the Subway Series to take the bragging rights for the Citifield based side of the annual rivalry.  There were a lot of Mets fans who became giddy about that and planned how best to needle and otherwise humiliate their Yankee fan rivals with the results.

From there the Mets moved onto Washington, DC to face the Nationals.  As a club that typically doesn’t hit the upper echelon of the NL East, many felt the Mets would be able to build upon their Bronx Bomber momentum.  For awhile it appeared more of the same old/same old performance but then the club blew it’s late game lead and fans were heading towards the edge of an elevated ledge. 


When the 12th inning arrived with a runner on second base the Mets fans were hoping for at least a base hit to drive in the 7th run to take a 7-6 lead over Washington.  Nowhere did anyone imagine the club would proceed to have a record setting 10-run outburst before the Nationals recorded the third out.  At that point the club opted to use Craig Kimbrel for the theoretically game winning bottom of the inning.  Although he allowed a run to score, the Mets finished the game with a 9-run margin of victory. Now that one felt like it was early season champagne worthy.

Going forward the Mets have made a few personnel decisions as they gear up for life without Clay Holmes and bullpen needs that extend beyond the since dispatched Joey Gerber.  The starting pitcher promoted for Wednesday’s game was a bit surprising when instead of former New York Met Jonah Tong or fast rising Jack Wenninger, the club opted to promote short term lefty Zach Thornton to take that start as it fell on his day of regular pitching assignment.  Thornton is not a flame thrower but he has shown great control and for now no one knows if he’s a David Peterson-like secondary pitcher with an opener preceding him, if he’s here as a long term temporary solution or is he around long enough for Tobias Myers to get stretched out to handle at least 5 innings as a starting pitcher.  Nowhere did anyone suggest Sean Manaea was an option, so here we are.

The other change made which involved needing a roster spot after moving AJ Minter to the 60-day IL was the somewhat unexpected arrival of 29 year old right hander Daniel Duarte, a refugee of minor league and foreign ball who has had mostly positive results wedged around a couple of missed years due to injury.  In Syracuse over 12 games he owns a 2.60 ERA so it’s not the weirdest idea in the world to test him out.  It’s not as if Gerber and a multitude of others in AAA seem like major difference makers.

5/19/26

Cautious Optimist -- How to we get from here to a period of sustained success? The Problem of Time Alignment

 




Every team needs a foundational anchor, and the ideal anchor for a major league team is the pitching staff, in particular, the starting rotation and the back of the bullpen.   In a recent post I made a case that the Mets' current staff has the clearest path forward of any of the team's units and is closest to being ready for prime time.  My view has not changed since the most recent injury to Holmes.

The picture is more complicated and significantly less clear when it comes to position players.  This is true when viewed offensively, defensively or both at once.

The outfield is another bright spot in the pathway from pathetic to post season

Currently, Soto is in left, Ewing in center and Benge in right.  Taylor is the fourth outfielder, and the fifth is Melendez who is currently playing himself off the roster at an accelerating pace. 

Robert is on the roster and the IL simultaneously, which has been a destination location for him for years now.  He was, and will likely remain, 'fools gold,' as the luster continues to fade.  The Mets have an option to double down on this mistake in the form of an option that they have no reason to exercise, and almost certainly will not.  

On the other hand, if Robert recovers sufficiently this year, he could be traded at the deadline or replace Taylor who could be traded instead. I prefer Taylor as the 4th outfielder for the remainder of the year -- and perhaps beyond -- but so too might other teams at the deadline.  

It's safe to say that over his remaining career Robert's days on the IL will outnumber those he spends on the field in a Mets uniform.

So let's talk about next year's outfield unit.  The most likely starters, left to right, are Soto, Ewing and Benge.  The 4th and 5th outfielders are the question marks.  The 4th could be Taylor or Morabito.  Both are right handed hitters necessary to complement a starting trio of lefties; and both are stellar defenders with strong arms.

Taylor might be traded before then or not re-signed as a free agent.  Morabito may not be ready yet or he could prove himself to be better than just a 4th outfielder.  

We don't know the answer to those questions yet, and may not by the end of this season either. My guess is that Morabito becomes the 4th outfielder next year, and if he continues to progress will see more time in the field than would a usual 4th outfielder given his defensive skills and the need to provide Soto with more opportunities to DH.

If the club carries a 5th outfielder, it could be Pache, Tauchman, even Baty (more on him below).  For the first time in years, the FO doesn't have to shop for a CF, or for any starting outfielder. 

Now things get complicated. Catcher

I view Alvarez's current injury as both a bit of addition by subtraction and a potential opportunity. Of the  disappointing first wave of baby Mets, he is by far the most disappointing. He had the farthest to fall, given the hoopla surrounding him as the # 1 minor league prospect in all of baseball just a few  years ago. But fallen he has.

His defense is passable though he does not call a good game, and his superpower -- framing -- is no longer as important as it once was. The Mets are a significantly better defensive team with Torrens behind the plate, and, in my view, no worse offensively.  In fact, I would argue that they are marginally better as Torrens has a better approach, understands the game better and can hit situationally.

Others have attributed Alvarez's offensive decline to injuries, but while I don't discount their impact on his performance, the root of his decline is his hitting sequence and overall mechanics.  He is also an impatient hitter and lacks an overall strategic approach.

It isn't that he swings so hard at everything.  It is that his sequence is so poor, this is pretty much the only way he can generate reasonable bat speed.  He is the paradigm of powerless effort.  Speaking of power, his once prodigious power has proven short lived. Not surprising to me, but unwelcome by all, and not likely to resurface any time soon, certainly not without a major change in his mechanics.

When he is ready to return to baseball activities, someone on the coaching staff should replace his inefficient movement pattern with a more efficient one.  Happy to help!

The Mets have no one ready in the minors to replace Alvarez, so I am betting that he gets another year, if only to rebuild his trade value.  I do not believe he is a viable DH option nor a potential at 1B.  It is catcher or bust: sadly maybe both.

Ok. Who's playing where in the infield?

There are two questions about the infield: 

1.    Whose playing where next year?

2.    How do the Mets go from next year to the next wave of position players?  

Of the two, the second is the more difficult question to answer, and presents the major barrier to the Mets ability to turn themselves into a consistent contender any time soon.  The problem is not just a matter of 'who plays where?'; the more troubling problem is time alignment.

Stearns' decisions last offseason have contributed to both issues more than I had originally appreciated, but we can't overlook the contribution that the collective failure of the three remaining baby Mets have made to the problem the team faces.

We are fast approaching the time when we have to consider cutting ties with Vientos, Baty and Mauricio.  To earn a spot on a major league team that envisions contending for championships, a player must perform above major league average on one or the other side of the ball, preferably both  None of these players do, and certainly have not done so reliably to this point. 

Perhaps, I am in the minority, but I feel about Baty and Vientos much like a high schooler feels about a 'tease.'  Just enough to keep you wanting and hoping for more, so much so that you keep lowering your expectations about what you will settle for in order for the chase to be worth the effort.  Eventually, however, you have to move on from the tease and look for a more meaningful and lasting relationship- or at least a more promising one.

I would normally say that we will want to consider keeping Baty since he can play 3rd, 2nd 1st and serve as the 5th outfielder. He is a one man insurance policy of sorts, but he is not a plus defender at any of those positions, and not a major league average hitter either, but he can pinch hit and fill in at DH in a pinch.  

If there is an argument for keeping him around, it depends on the Mets needing a McEwing player for the final roster spot.  

I know, I am allowing myself to be seduced by the tease or the Siren's call. My brain tells me to call off the chase, but hope survives as my dreams of success continue unabated and unfulfilled.

With that venture into psychotherapy temporarily out of the way, we can return to the question of what does next year's infield alignment look like. The only certainty, barring injury, is Lindor at SS.  Less certain, but still highly likely, we should expect to see Semien handling most of the duties at 2nd while Bichette occupies the hot corner. 

We don't have a genuine replacement for Semien on the farm near ready to contribute at the major league level.  And Bichette's subpar season, the impending potential lock-out and his salary means that it is unlikely that Bichette will opt out of his current contract.

So whose on first next year?  I don't believe that person is currently on the roster.  The reasons are manifold: 

    *    Polanco is injury prone.

    *    He has no experience at 1B to speak of.

    *    He is only signed through next year.

    *    There is no obvious replacement for him currently in the minors. 

Clifford is not ready.  He doesn't hit enough homers to justify his K-rate.  Reimer doesn't appear ready either, and we may need to call upon him when and if Bichette leaves. Nor is Guzman, who may well be the future 1st baseman -- but he is unlikely to arrive in Queens before 2028, if then.

Maybe, Vientos you say, as he is looking better these days at 1B and in the box.  But that's how it is ease with teasers. Let's make a deal, then, and agree that the Mets need to demand more than either Baty or Vientos have shown themselves capable of providing, so unless things change dramatically for either or both, we move forward assuming neither provides an answer for a team with championship aspirations. 

I'll strengthen your resolve when you falter and you'll strengthen mine.

When your will falters simply remember that both are capable of producing the worst outs imaginable: weak popouts and turned over ground balls to the right side of the infield by Baty; and horrifyingly short at bats by Vientos featuring swings and misses by Vientos at breaking pitches that invariable end up in the opposite batter's box or beyond.

Polanco should be the lead DH reducing the likelihood that he spends an inordinate amount of time on the IL.  

When everyone is playing 1B in the majors, that's a sign that you have no one to play 1B. The club needs a real 1B and someone who can play the position for 3 years.  

Having traded away both Acuna and Williams, we also need to sign a free agent or make a trade for a high quality defense first utility infielder.  

Ironically, the names I am penning in for next year, constitute a much less potent offensive force than they might have just a few years ago. 

If we don't get much punch from a 1B signing or trade, this will be a genuine weakness in next year's team, highlighting further the impact of losing Alonso in the short term, as well as what appears to be Stearns' penchant for replacing aging players with aging players with more attractive back of the card statistics but with injury histories, almost guaranteeing a dropoff in expected performance.

To sum up: next year's most likely starting infield: Bichette, Lindor, Semien and ?.  

Back-ups: Polanco, in a limited role; unknown defense first utility infielder/defensive replacement.

How to we get from next year to the next wave? 

In theory Stearns' offseason moves were designed with two goals in mind: to create a highly competitive team over the next two years, and to build a bridge to the next wave of prospects/replacements capable of leading the team to a period of sustained success.  After that, the formula would call for periodic rinsing and repeating.

In fact, Stearns' off-season moves have made accomplishing either of those goals, let alone both, harder than they were before the offseason began! 

In those moves we acquired a IB with a history of injury and no experience at the position, a 2B who remains a plus defender but a minus offensive player (at the princely sum of 50m/year between the two of them); a 3B who had never played the position, was coming off an injury, dislodging the best fielding of the baby Mets from his natural position, at a cost of 40+m/year and only one year of team control, thus potentially destabilizing that position for 2027, while presenting a challenging defensive alignment for the current system.

That is NOT the formula one would adopt for putting together a championship run or even contending at a high level in 2026, let alone in 2027. 

The truth is that had all gone well in 2026, the situation would have been even worse for 2027 than it is now.  Bichette would likely have opted for free agency; Semien would be one year further into offensive decline, while the trades of Acuna and Williams would have robbed the team of high level defensive back-ups on the infield.

But this is not the main barrier to transitioning to the next wave of players

It's not just that competing at a high level has become more difficult in 2026 and 2027 (barring drastic changes), the transition to the next wave of replacement drawn from the farm taking root in 2028 is considerably less likely than it might have been had Williams not been traded; and that defense first infielder capable of playing all over the infield sounds an awful lot like Acuna.  

By 2028, Polanco will be gone. Bichette too as he would be foolish to risk waiting until his age 31 season if his goal is to land a long term contract.  And Semien likely would no longer be playing at a level -- either offensively or defensively -- that would warrant anything beyond part time duty.  

Come 2028, the team would thus be called upon to fill gaping holes at 1B, 2B and 3B. While not bereft of talent, the minor league affiliates do not boast players at any of those positions likely to be ready to perform at the major league level in 2028, or to do so at a level that would complement the quality of the outfield and pitching staff. 

I may miss a few prospects, and excuse me if I do, but by my (intended as charitable) accounting, the Mets minor league affiliates have the following 2028 candidates for the major league roster and the positions they would qualify to fill:

1B: Clifford, Reimer, Guzman, Cuero

2B: Voit, Pena, Ewing (the current CF)

3B: Reimer, Lindor, Pena

Setting Lindor aside, the most promising (talent wise) are, IMHO, Pena and Guzman. Both are currently playing A ball. At the other extreme, the least promising is Clifford, who must cut down on strikeouts to have a shot, as must Cuero, who may be the most versatile, if not among the most talented, of the lot.

In between the extremes, we have Voit, who has shown defense and speed, but no offensive prowess as yet; Reimer, who has shown flashes of power, a great work ethic and modest defense.  He is also experiencing a down year that is threatening to halt (at least temporarily) his previous upward trajectory.

Ewing is our current CF and even if he has the tools to be a sound 2B, I have repeatedly counseled against moves that result in weakening the team at two positions to solve a problem at one of them.

Unless Morabito is capable of dislodging Ewing from his starting outfield position both offensively and defensively by 2028, it makes no sense to move Ewing to 2B.

So Guzman and Pena are, let's assume, the best talents and those closest to being genuine replacements in the infield.  It is reasonable to assume that both -- still in A ball and very young -- would be better served by more seasoning and development, and that rushing them for OD 2028 might well prove counterproductive. 

Nor should we forget that Pena can only play one position, while we would need him to play full time at two of them if we expect to cover three positions with only two players!

The biggest issue is?

From my point of view the biggest issue is not that the infield is unsettled at this time, (which it is) or that it is hard to see the path forward to its being excellent, either offensively or defensively as early as 2028 (which it is).

The big issue is that the path forward for the team as a whole is not appropriately time aligned.  Even were we to fill out the infield with assets from within the organization, we are realistically looking at adding one of either Guzman or Pena in 2028 (at best), another in 2029, and a third by 2030.

And that means that we will not be getting the best out of our outfield and pitching staff in terms of a complementary infield (and catcher?). 

We can't risk getting fooled again by the four original Baby Mets as that will  make the transition ever more difficult and less aligned with the best years of our outfielders and pitching staffs. 

We can't settle for 'thoughts and prayers'; we need to plan.

Any plan capable of keeping the various units of the team time aligned will call for a portfolio of trades and free agent signings as our current infield propects are injected into more prominent roles in a staggered fashion.

This is what successful teams do; and they do it far more often than we imagine.  Take the Dodgers.  Most of their pitching staff and all of their stars except for the catcher, Smith, and their best young starter, Yamomoto, have been acquired by trade or free agency.  A roughly similar narrative has applied to the Yankees over the past decade at least.  The Braves rely more on trades and home grown talent than either the Yankees or Dodgers do.

In my book the model for the Mets is really the Braves, not the Dodgers. The Dodgers have competed successfully by signing lots of top tier free agents regularly.  The Mets are open to doing so as well, but it is a mistake to do so as often as the Dodgers do and especially to long term contracts.  Too many long term free agents like the Dodgers have can create a heavier reliance on ever more trades and free agent signings as the team's various units otherwise will fall out of alignment.  This is one reason for endorsing the general strategy of minimizing, if possible, the number of years in a free agent signing.

I think of the Braves as a more apt model than the Dodgers because only the Braves are as close to being time aligned along the various units of the roster as the Mets are.  The Yankees and Dodgers draw less often from their minor league affiliates than do the Braves and the Mets.  This frees money for the best and mot impactful free agents and flexibility for strengthening other units when they need support.

But as a noted in my first series of posts, trading and FA signings, are driven in large part by failures to develop and assess talent correctly.  This is where the FO matters most to executing on time aligned plans, through its constant assessment of minor leaguer prospects throughout the league and development and projection of their own. 

What are the chances that our front office can measure up to the standards our best competitors have set.?  More on that next time.  Meanwhile, I'd like to know what you think?

Getting the team aligned and comparably excellent throughout the various units is not just the most important goal we face, but also the most challenging.  Find out why I am optimistic about the Mets ability to pull this all together, why doing so will be costly in terms of eating salary, and why it is better to face this problem now than to kick it down the road -- next time when I look at the state of our FO and return to my discussion of analytics.