5/16/26

RVH - Part 1: How Bad are the Mets

 


The Mets are 18–25.

That is the only record that counts. No one gets standings credit for context. No one gets a playoff spot because the roster was banged up, the rotation was unsettled, or the expected record looked better than the actual record.

But if the goal is to understand what this team really is, not just react emotionally to what it has looked like, context matters.

And the context says something important.

The Mets have not simply been bad. They have also leaked wins.

Through 43 games, the Mets are 18–25. Based on runs scored and runs allowed, using the standard MLB Pythagorean formula, their expected record is closer to 20–23. More precisely, the weekly model puts them around 20.4–22.6.

That does not make them good. But it does suggest they have left roughly two wins on the table through sequencing failures, close-game losses, bullpen leakage, and inconsistent execution.

That distinction matters more than it may seem.

At 18–25, the Mets look buried. In the current National League Wild Card picture, they sit seven games back. That sounds like a team fading toward irrelevance before Memorial Day.

But at roughly 20–23, the Mets would look very different. They still would not look good. But they would be much closer to the crowded middle of the Wild Card race, near the cluster of National League teams hovering around 20 or 21 wins.

That is not contention in the strong sense.

It is survival.

It is relevance.

It is staying close enough for health, regression, and reinforcements to matter.

That is the real cost of the leaked wins. The difference between 18–25 and 20–23 is not cosmetic. It is the difference between feeling buried and still feeling within striking distance.

The weekly breakdown helps tell the story:

Week

W-L

RS

RA

RDiff

RS/G

RA/G

Weekly Expected

Cumulative Expected

Wk 1

2–1

22

15

+7

7.33

5.00

2.0–1.0

2.0–1.0

Wk 2

4–3

38

24

+14

5.43

3.43

4.9–2.1

6.9–3.1

Wk 3

1–5

14

28

-14

2.33

4.67

1.3–4.7

8.8–7.2

Wk 4

0–6

11

35

-24

1.83

5.83

0.6–5.4

9.2–12.8

Wk 5

2–4

18

22

-4

3.00

3.67

2.4–3.6

11.6–16.4

Wk 6

3–3

25

24

+1

4.17

4.00

3.1–2.9

14.7–19.3

Wk 7

3–3

22

26

-4

3.67

4.33

2.6–3.4

17.2–22.8

Wk 8

3–0

22

8

+14

7.33

2.67

2.6–0.4

20.4–22.6

Total

18–25

172

182

-10

4.00

4.23

20.4–22.6

The obvious disaster came during Weeks 3 and 4. That was the April collapse. Across those two weeks, the Mets scored 25 runs and allowed 63.

That was not bad luck. That was poor baseball.

The expected record during those two weeks was almost identical to the actual collapse.

But outside that stretch, the picture becomes more layered.

Week 2 was probably the first major missed opportunity. The Mets went 4–3, but their run differential suggested something closer to a dominant 5–2 week. They scored 38 runs and allowed only 24. That was one of the strongest underlying stretches of the season.

The inability to fully convert that into wins may have quietly set the tone for the weeks that followed.

Then came the recent stabilization.

Weeks 6 and 7 were important because the Mets played almost exactly to their underlying numbers. They went 6–6 while their expected record over that period was roughly 5.7–6.3. That suggested the chaotic variance of April might finally be fading.

Week 8 took that one step further.

The Detroit sweep was not just three wins. It was three wins backed by the scoreboard underneath the scoreboard. The Mets scored 22 runs and allowed only 8. They averaged 7.33 runs per game, matching their Week 1 offensive peak, but this time paired it with elite run prevention at 2.67 runs allowed per game.

That is the first truly balanced week of the season.

Before the sweep, the Mets looked like a team trying to stop the bleeding. After the sweep, they look at least temporarily like a team that may have found a foothold.

The last three weeks now matter. Across Weeks 6, 7, and 8, the Mets are 9–6 with a +11 run differential. That does not erase the April collapse. It does not make the full-season record acceptable. But it does begin to shrink the distortion created by the winless Week 4 road trip.

That can be interpreted two ways.

The optimistic interpretation is that the Mets stopped the bleeding and are beginning to stabilize.

The harsher interpretation is that they merely beat up on Detroit at the right time and still remain well below where they need to be.

Both can be true.

The Mets are still in trouble. An 18–25 record is not a rounding error. They dug a real hole. They do not get to explain away April.

But the Pythagorean view helps clarify the hole. This is not a team with no pulse. It is a team that played terribly for two weeks, leaked several winnable games around that collapse, and has recently started to perform more like a competitive baseball team.

That is why the next few weeks matter so much.

The standings say the Mets are in trouble.

The Pythagorean record says they have underperformed.

The Wild Card picture says the gap between buried and relevant is only a few wins.

And the Detroit sweep says there may finally be some stabilization.

That does not guarantee recovery.

But it does suggest the story of the 2026 Mets may not yet be fully written.

The Mets may still be bad.

But after Week 8, we may finally be getting closer to learning whether they are broken, or whether they have simply been late to stabilize.


SAVAGE VIEWS – FEELING GOOD

HERE I GO AGAIN! 

As I sit down to write this column the Mets are a couple of hours away from facing the Yankees in a three-game series. I’m finally starting to feel better about the season. Many pundits have written the Mets off and have determined that it’s only a matter of time before the team starts selling off key assets. Me? I’m feeling optimistic.

The addition of AJ Ewing has provided the team with a sparkplug that has been missing. I compare him to a combination of Lenny Dykstra and Wally Backman. He’s has the potential of being our leadoff man for the next decade. All of a sudden, the “baby Mets” have started to produce. Carson Benge has been the best hitter after a brutal start. Mark Vientos has been solid over the past few weeks, averaging about a RBI per game. It was delightful to see Baty hit a homerun to the opposite field. Now, if only the vets can pick up the pace, we are going to be tough to beat.

I’ve made the point before – there are only about a half a dozen good teams in MLB. That means if we split games against the good teams and dominate the rest, we have a good chance of being a playoff team. It’s going to be interesting when Lindor returns to shortstop. Baty is your best third baseman and he should remain there for the rest of the season. Perhaps Bo Bichette should be moved to second with Semien relegated to the bench.

The starting pitching is good enough to keep the team in most games.  It’s fair to expect Jack Wennniger getting promoted within the next couple of weeks to fill the number five slot. The bullpen has been mostly solid recently and should get better once Minter arrives.

David Stearns has been rightly criticized for the roster construction. I don’t disagree with letting Alonso walk – I would not have offered him a five-year contract. The trade to bring Semien on board has been a disaster. The move that I was most against was trading for Robert, Jr. His injury history should have set off all kinds of red flags.

I’ve decided to curtail my criticism against Mendoza. There’s little chance of him being replaced before the end of the season. In fact, if we make the playoffs, he will probably be awarded an extension.

Ray

May 16, 2026

Reese Kaplan -- A Nice Few Days But Roster Is Still Uneven


With the recent sweep of the Detroit Tigers many Mets fans are already declaring that the awful start has officially ended and everything will be coming up roses from this point forward.  Surely there were some excellent things in this last game including 5 HRs and Nolan McLean coming back from an early 3-0 deficit to shut down the Tigers for the remainder of his stint on the mound. 

Even with the sweep the Mets still stand at a less than impressive 18-25, still sitting alone at the bottom of the NL East.  For people trying to put a red ribbon on the recent three game winning streak they did move ahead of the records of the Colorado Rockies and the San Francisco Giants.  Remaining seven games under .500 it is hard to must enthusiasm until they at least pull up to an equal number of wins and losses at which point they can declare it’s a new season from that point forward.

Many people are spending time pondering who the club will move off the roster as the multitude of injured players eventually return to action.  Some decisions are easy with Vidal Brujan an obvious cut when Francisco Lindor is healthy enough to play regularly.  AJ Ewing has already been promoted and error-prone Andy Ibanez was recently told to hit the road, Jack.  The other recent personnel change was the end of Mets days for Eric Wagaman.

With AJ Minter ready once again to resume preparatory work for his return to the major league roster from multiple injuries the question is who goes to make room for him?  If the season was just beginning the answer would likely have been Austin Warren who was never a frontline option for the roster but who has been pitching pretty much lights out since his arrival.  Huascar Brazoban has been solid.  Brooks Raley, Luke Weaver and Devin Williams are all going nowhere from the major league bullpen.  Tobias Myers has certainly been more good than bad although has had a few tough outings lately.  That leaves former starters David Peterson, Sean Manaea or Cooperstown-bound reliever Craig Kimbrel as the likely candidates.  Given the salaries of the first two it would seem that Kimbrel may be the one on thin ice.

A similar question arose about who the Mets might move to create room for Jorge Polanco when he returns.  With Mark Vientos leading the club in HRs it is unlikely he’s coming out of the lineup, though a move from 1B to DH could happen, just as it could for Polanco.  It would seem that the likely casualty is Austin Slater who is hitting a combined .220 during the 2026 season though even worse is all glove and no bat Tyrone Taylor who is under .200. 

With no clear timetables for Robert and Francisco Alvarez, it is entirely possible that other personnel moves may be a bit hard to make.  Alvarez has an expectation after surgery of eight or more weeks and there is no timeline associated with Robert that anyone will state publicly.  AJ Ewing might be an adequate center field option but no one is suggesting seeing more of Hayden Senger is going to help the club correct their losing ways.