2/13/26

MACK - Top 28 Prospects - #14 - SP - Noah Hall

 



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.

14.    Noah Hall



25/yrs old in March      6-0    195   RHSP

2025:    A+ –              25-G, 21-ST, 5-7, 2.72, 1.27, 112.2-IP, 63-BB, 115-K 

GROK -

Noah Hall is a promising right-handed starting pitcher in the New York Mets' minor league system. At 24 years old (born March 30, 2001, in Charlotte, NC), he's 6'0" and 195 lbs, known for his command, plus changeup, and potential as a mid-rotation arm.

He's currently assigned to High-A Brooklyn Cyclones.

He’s shown significant improvement in 2025 after battling injuries, positioning him as one of the Mets' more intriguing pitching prospects.

Hall began his college career at Appalachian State University, where he spent two seasons (2019-2021) primarily as a reliever, posting a 4.15 ERA over 34.2 innings with 41 strikeouts. He transferred to the University of South Carolina for his junior year in 2022, transitioning into a starting role in the competitive SEC.

That season, he logged a 4.34 ERA in 76.2 innings across 16 starts, with 78 strikeouts and a solid walk rate (31 BB), earning him a 20th-round draft pick (612th overall) from the Milwaukee Brewers.

Hall returned to South Carolina for his senior year in 2023 to improve his stock

In 2023, he started hot, going 5-1 with a 3.29 ERA in seven starts (41 IP, 43 K, just 9 BB), earning SEC Co-Pitcher of the Week honors in February and Perfect Game National Pitcher of the Week on February 28. Unfortunately, a back injury sidelined him for the second half of the season. His performance and pedigree as a two-year Gamecock starter caught the Mets' eye, leading to his selection in the 7th round (216th overall) of the 2023 MLB Draft.

Hall signed with the Mets for $176,250, slightly below slot value, and debuted in the Florida Complex League (FCL) Mets in 2023. Limited by his injury, he made just four starts, posting a 3.38 ERA in 13.1 innings with 13 strikeouts and excellent control (2 BB).

In 2024, he advanced to Low-A St. Lucie Mets, where he built on his command with a 3.45 ERA over 15 starts (72.1 IP, 78 K, 22 BB), though he dealt with minor setbacks that capped his innings.

Four-Seam Fastball

Straight with some ride; located up in the zone well.

92-95 mph (touches 96)

50-55 grade (primary pitch, ~50% usage)

Improved life in pro ball; pairs well with changeup for swing-and-miss.

Changeup

His best offering—tumble and arm-side fade; elite separation from fastball.

80-83 mph

60-70 grade (above-average to plus; ~30% usage)

Devastating vs. righties; generated whiffs in college and minors; Mets' development focus.

Slider

Shorter, tighter break with high spin (2,600+ RPM); horizontal sweep.

84-87 mph

45-50 grade (fringe-average; ~15-20% usage)

Shows promise but underutilized; added depth in 2024-25; potential third pitch.

Hall's strengths are his low walk rates (career ~2.5 BB/9 in college/pros) and ability to induce weak contact, but he could benefit from a curveball or refined slider for lefties.

His changeup is the carrying tool, often graded as his 70 on the 20-80 scouting scale.

Overall, Hall's trajectory is upward, and with the Mets' pitching lab, he could emerge as a reliable starter. Keep an eye on his Cyclones starts—he's one injury-free season from Mets contention chatter.

       

12-27-2025 –

MACK/MM

Noah Hall – another 2022 pitching draft gem (we’ll try not to hold it against him that he was a Gamecock). RHP. Pitched all of 2025 for A+ Brooklyn: 25-G, 21-ST, 5-7, 2.72, 1.26, 112.2-IP, 115-K, 63-BB. Needs to work on his control. There’s nothing left for him to do at Coney, but the question is can he squeeze into an already busy projected spring Rumble Ponies rotation.


Ernest Dove: My New York Mets Top 30 Prospect List: #24 Jose Chirinos

 


Making it #24 on my @mets Top 30 Prospect List is a young RHP who mirrors the delivery of the one and only #Mets great Jacob deGrom - Jose Chirinos. I explain. #mlb #baseballteam #metsbaseball #newyorkmets #metstalk #nymets

Watch on YouTube or below.



For more of Ernest's wisdom and lots of great Mets Prospect Videos subscribe to Ernest's YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@ernestdove.

You can also catch Ernest on X (formerly known as Twitter)


Reese Kaplan -- Lots of Options for Temporary SS Replacement...


Well, the big news has hit everyone about Francisco Lindor’s hand surgery and the belief that he would need at minimum 6 full weeks of rehab and healing time.  It means no Spring Training and no World Baseball Classic for the Mets shortstop.  What it also means is that the club needs to execute a Plan B in the event that the healing takes longer than just the preseason period.

The most obvious approach has already been dismissed.  Former Blue Jays shortstop Bo Bichette who was brought here to play third base will not be sliding back to his familiar shortop position.  There appear to be two issues at play here.  First, Bichette needs to be free from distractions adjusting to the hot corner after having manned shortstop for his pro career.  Second, he’s not a good shortstop.  If David Stearns is serious about run prevention then moving from one of the better options to one of the worst makes no sense whatsoever.

The next in-house option is Ronny Mauricio whose presence on the major league roster just became significantly more probable.  He’s got a great arm and a still developing bat while offering up enough defensive skill that you could live with him in that position for however long it takes for Lindor to return to playing health.  Until now people were questioning whether he’d even make the team and all of the sudden his stock has risen out of injury necessity. 

Then there are the AAAA newcomers who could play shortstop but wouldn’t provide enough with the bat to provide anything in terms of run creation.  Diminutive switch hitter Vidal Brujan has had parts of major league presence since 2021 but in aggregate only delivered over 564 ABs a career .199 average with 5 HRs, 48 RBIs and 16 SBs.  None of these numbers suggests he’s anything more than a late inning defensive replacement.

The other infielders in camp are not on the 40-man roster and it’s hardly likely they would displace someone from their spot there for what might amount to a 2-4 week presence on the big club. 

Another interesting option would be to ask prospective starting first baseman Jorge Polanco temporarily to play as a middle infielder as he’s done during much of his career.  Polanco has a track record of over 500 games at shortstop.  Since it is a temporary thing, it’s possible to have the Mets live with Mark Vientos (if he’s still around) at first base for a few weeks until Lindor returns. 


Of course, the team could still go outside and bring someone in who could slot into Lindor’s position and the most seemingly natural fit is available free agent Jose Iglesias.  He’s a competent fielder and holds a career batting average of .279 and did even better as a Met in 2024 when he hit .337.  His one year in San Diego was not impressive and as such he’s been on the outside looking in as 30 major league ballclubs turned elsewhere for middle infield support.  More importantly he was a terrific presence in the clubhouse during his single year in Queens, something most definitely missing in 2025.  The price for his services would not be exorbitant.  The Padres paid him $3 million after his very strong 2024 season and with Spring Training beginning this week his price tag likely will have dropped as he prepares to play his age 36 season. 

It will be interesting to see how Stearns addresses this need.  

MACK - THE FRIDAY REPORT

 


The Morning Report

 

Carson Benge, Brett Baty, Tyrone Taylor, and MJ Melendez are all options for right field for the Mets, with Juan Soto shifting to left field.

MACK – I can’t help but feel that this could speed up the arrival of Benge. Why not. There are veterans at all the other positions so you can easily slip in a rook and bat him ninth.

Will it happen? Probably not. The same bet would be the glove of Taylor.

Still, it seems every day comes and goes and there is a national story or interview about this guy. Is this orchestrated this way? Who knows? Right now, I’d say it’s about even odds that he breaks camp with the other 25. Being a starter could be a whole different animal.

 

 

David Stearns mentioned that Vidal Bruján, Jackson Cluff, Grae Kessinger, Ronny Mauricio and Christian Arroyo  are shortstop options for the Mets now that Francisco Lindor misses time to start the season.

MACK – OK… we need to spend some time with Brujan and Cluff before we go forward.

GROK

Vidal Bruján is a Dominican professional baseball player, born February 9, 1998 (age 28 as of now), in San Pedro de Macorís, Dominican Republic.

He's a versatile utility infielder/outfielder known for his switch-hitting (bats both sides) and right-handed throwing.

Current Status (as of February 2026): He's currently with the New York Mets in Major League Baseball (MLB). The Mets acquired him from the Minnesota Twins on January 22, 2026, in exchange for cash considerations after he was designated for assignment by the Twins (who had claimed him off waivers from the Atlanta Braves shortly before).

He's listed with positions including third baseman (3B), second baseman (2B), shortstop (SS), and outfield spots like right field (RF).

Career Overview

Debut: July 7, 2021, with the Tampa Bay Rays.

Previous Teams: Tampa Bay Rays (2021–2023), Miami Marlins (2024), Chicago Cubs (2025), Baltimore Orioles (2025), Atlanta Braves (2025), brief stint with Minnesota Twins (claimed January 2026, then traded).

He's a journeyman utility player with solid speed and contact skills but limited power (career MLB slash line around .199/.267/.276 through prior seasons, with better recent marks like .253 in limited 2025 action and .222 in 2024).

Physical: 5'9", 180 lbs.

Contract: Signed through 2026 (1 year/$850k noted in some sources), arbitration-eligible 2027, free agent 2029.

He's valued for his positional flexibility in the infield and outfield, making him a useful bench/depth piece.

 

Jackson Cluff is a professional baseball player, currently a minor league infielder in the New York Mets organization.

He's a 29-year-old (born December 3, 1996, in Littleton, Colorado) utility infielder who primarily plays shortstop (SS), second base (2B), and occasionally third base. He bats left-handed and throws right-handed, standing at 5'11" and weighing 181 lbs.

Background and Career

College:

Played baseball at Brigham Young University (BYU Cougars), where he had a strong 2019 season (.325/.458/.515 with 27 extra-base hits and 12 steals).

Drafted: Selected by the Washington Nationals in the 6th round (183rd overall) of the 2019 MLB Draft.

Pro Career: Spent several years in the Nationals' system, reaching Triple-A (e.g., Rochester Red Wings). He has a career minor league batting line of around .219/.324/.363 with 42 HR, 86 SB, but high strikeouts (527 in 498 games). Known for solid defense up the middle, speed, and plate discipline, though contact has been inconsistent.

Recent Moves: Became a free agent and signed a minor league contract with the New York Mets in November 2025, with an invite to spring training. He's assigned to the Triple-A Syracuse Mets and listed as depth, especially at shortstop.

MACK – Frankly, neither of these two are going to the HOF.


And lastly...


I have been observing "pitchers/catchers" and a few initial things come to mind...

1. There are a lot of non pitchers already in this camp, and I don't mean catchers.

2. Most of the new guys are veterans and, thus, don't need a refresher with "the drill". No one is going to overswing in the batting cage or throw out a rib cage with a fastball. 

Not this week.

This is "loosing up" with an occasional intro to a new teammate.

3. I am immediately struck with seemingly a lack of previously produced depth. Almost fragility. 

4. Doing past numbers, the hits are there and you could walk off leading in team steals, but the power has left the building. Especially homers.

5. To me, early on, the starters look deep, talented, healthy, and frankly, exciting.

6. The pen is a work in progress and could easily be bailed out by excess starters.


I'm not dancing in the halls yet, but I'm not burying myself in the sand either 








2/12/26

MACK - Top 28 Prospects - #15 - 1B - Ryan Clifford

 



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.

15.    Ryan Clifford



2025:  481-AB, .237, 29-HR, 93-RBI, .826-OPS 

GROK -

Ryan Clifford is a highly regarded prospect in the New York Mets organization, known for his left-handed power-hitting potential and plate discipline.

At just 22 years old (born July 20, 2003, in Raleigh, NC), he's positioned as a corner infielder/outfielder with first base as his primary spot, and he's emerging as a key piece of the Mets' future lineup—potentially stepping in at 1B if Pete Alonso leaves in free agency.

Clifford was a standout at Pro5 Academy (now Combine Academy) in North Carolina, where he committed to Vanderbilt University. Scouts praised his track record of hitting, but his age (slightly older for the class) and uneven junior/senior stats caused him to slip in the 2022 MLB Draft.

Drafted by Astros: Selected in the 11th round (No. 326 overall) by the Houston Astros. They signed him for an over-slot bonus of $1,256,530—equivalent to a second-round pick—to buy him out of his college commitment. This aggressive move highlighted his upside as a bat-first prospect.

Clifford's path to New York came via a blockbuster deadline deal on August 1, 2023:Traded from the Astros to the Mets along with outfielder Drew Gilbert in exchange for ace pitcher Justin Verlander (and cash considerations).

At the time, Clifford was tearing up High-A Asheville, slashing .271/.356/.547 with 16 HR in 58 games. The trade package was seen as a coup for the Mets, with Clifford as more than just a throw-in—he was already a top Astros prospect.

Clifford has rocketed through the minors since signing, showcasing plus power and elite walk rates, though strikeouts remain a work in progress.

Led all Double-A hitters with 23 HR total (including brief Triple-A stint); improved consistency.

Promoted late 2024; strong barrel rate (top MiLB prospect metric) suggests MLB readiness by mid-2026.

Power Profile: Clifford's swing generates elite exit velocities and barrel rates, projecting 25-30 HR potential at the MLB level. He's a fringe runner with adequate corner OF defense and solid arm strength, but 1B is his likely long-term home.

MLB ETA: Likely mid-2026, starting in Triple-A Syracuse. If Alonso departs after opting out of his contract, Clifford could compete for the 1B job outright. Fans and analysts see him as a "bat-first" cornerstone with 20-25 HR upside, though refining contact skills will be key.

 

10-31-2025

MACK/MM

Ryan Clifford – normally, you would be excited about a 22/year old coming off a combines AA/AAA season with 29 home runs and 93 runs batted in, but Clifford is also carrying the baggage of 148 strikeouts in 579 plate appearances and only a .237 batting average. He’s also bat-first with average at best defensive skills at first, limiting his future value even more. His LHH game lines up better as a platooned DH (24-HR, 69-RBI, .247-BA vs. RHP – 5-HR, 24-RBI, .204-BA vs. LHP) going forward.

 

11-7-2025

JUST BASEBALL

7. Ryan Clifford – 1B – (Triple-A)       

Height/Weight: 6’3″, 210 | Bat/Throw: L/R | 11th Round (343), 2022 (HOU) | ETA: 2026

Drafted in the 11th round by the Astros, Clifford signed for second-round money ($1.25 million) to forego his Vanderbilt commitment before being traded alongside Drew Gilbert for Justin Verlander at the 2023 deadline. Clifford made some mechanical adjustments during the 2025 season which helped him cut down swing and miss.

Hitting

Clifford starts wide with his hands rested on his shoulder, before pushing his hands up and back to his slot with a pronounced coil as he loads. The emphasis on the coil is likely in an effort to mitigate his tendency to be heavy with his front foot, but during the 2025 season, he cut down his stride which in turn helped him hold his back side longer.

Now not pushing onto his frontside as early or heavily, Clifford’s barrel did not drag nearly as much, turning around velocity much more effectively. His contact rate on fastballs 93+ MPH jumped from 63% to 74% in 2025 with an OPS up roughly 200 points.

His improvements against velocity seemingly helped him control his at bats better as well. Now looking less rushed in the box, Clifford was much more effective against changeups as well, recognizing and staying back more easily.

Utilizing his lower half more effectively also translated into more consistently strong exit velocities. His hard hit rate jumped by 14% with a gaudy 90th percentile exit velocity of 108.5 MPH. His patience in the box can border on passivity at times, but Clifford’s swing decisions improved in 2025.

The contact rates are unlikely to be better than fringy at the highest level, though it is much easier to envision a quality power bat as he has rounded out some of the edges to his offensive profile while further tapping into his plus raw power in 2025.

He may ultimately be sheltered from left on left matchups, but Clifford has the offensive skill set to be a three true outcome hitter who can push north of 30 homers if he can maintain his contact gains at the highest level.

Defense/Speed

A below average runner, Clifford has seen action both in right field and first base. His easy plus arm could be more of an asset in right field, though his limited range and iffy reads could result in him playing most of his games at first base.

Outlook

Clifford’s easy plus power has always been his calling card, and with improved contact rates and approach, he is knocking on the door of the big leagues going into his age 22 season.

While his glove is not an asset, the ability to at least plug into the outfield corners in addition to first base helps his case. Ultimately, Clifford projects best as a bulk-platoon, three true outcome power bat, capable of launching 30+ homers.

 

11-11-2025

Tom Brennan/MM

6. 1B Ryan Clifford

The 22 year old lefty power hitting Clifford has accelerated, starting slowly in cold, pitchers park Binghamton in early 2025, hitting just .190 on May 4, with just 3 HRs and 9 RBIs, but heating up thereafter and getting promoted to AAA.

He hit just .237, but had an .356 OBP due to an high level of walks (85) that compensated for his 148 Ks.

He ended up with impressive numbers: 29 HRs and 93 RBIs in 139 games.

A strong 26 HRs and 84 RBIs over his last 115 games. Project THAT over 162 games. Go ahead, reader, I dare ya.  That’s roughly about 40 / 112.

Part of those high RBIs, to be sure, was due to a plethora of fast base runners to for Ryan to drive in, guys named Jett, Morabito, D’Andre, and (briefly) Ewing.

Clifford is slow afoot, and will be a future DH/1B type, but can play in the OF. 

My comp for Clifford is Lucas Duda, who like Clifford hit righties a lot better than lefties, but to Clifford, I would say:

”OK, you’ve proved you can walk a lot, now ATTACK!”  Be aggressive.

Less walks, higher average, more HRs. Essentially:

From here on out, please be the next Nick Kurtz.  Attack.

I bring up his need to ATTACK, because others are already inferring it, but not saying it directly.  Who are those “others”?  The people who put together Baseball Top 100 lists, who do not include Clifford in that 100 list.

ATTACK!

 

11-21-2025

TJStats

#95 - Ryan Clifford continued to do what he typically does and posted a 136 wRC+ while making his way to AAA. His already impressive power took a large step this season compared to 2024 as he saw his 90th% EV increase from 105.3 to 108.6 MPH. This improvement caused his HardHit rate to spike from 41.2% to an otherworldly 56.8%, making him one of the most feared hitters in MiLB. Most impressive was that his contact rates improved across the board with his Z-Contact rate jumping from a poor 76% to a more average 81%. 

Clifford was more aggressive against in-zone offerings without sacrificing his already beneficial patience. These gains dragged Clifford away from a three-true outcome fate and paint him as a dynamic all-around slugger. He will likely not provide much defensive versatility, but he looks the part of a MLB hitter that could help the Mets out in 2026.

 

Angry Mike/MM               @AngryMike24

12-15-2025

Mets Brass encouraged Ryan Clifford to be more aggressive early in the count for the 2025 Season, in order to avoid from having to constantly hit being behind in the count. 


LouisAnalysis      @LouisAnalysis

It will be interesting to see what the Mets do with Ryan Clifford.

- 53.1% Hard-Hit%.

- 12.3% Barrel%.

- 111.0 MPH MaxEV.

- 107.4 MPH 90thEV.

- 23.09% Chase%.

Clifford has been young for all the levels he's played at and is a must-follow as 2026 Spring Training starts.

 

12-18-2025

ANGRY MIKE/MM

Ryan Clifford has been one of the hardest prospects to analyze who is currently ranked among the Mets top prospects. The raw talent is elite, as he has arguably the best power bat among Mets prospects and at times he can flat out carry an offense.

Clifford remains one of the key pieces in a potential youth movement, his development continues to trend in the right direction. Providing hope of a finished product that gives the Mets an impact bat who can play first base or outfield.

Frankly, it’s time for the Mets to break their cycle of trying to use as many veterans as possible, and begin to start utilizing their impressive collection of prospects they have knocking on the door for a promotion.


ANGRY MIKE: ALL EYES ON THESE METS DURING THE 2026 SEASON

 ANGRY MIKE 



The 2026 season has the potential to be a very important year regarding the development of key players at various levels within the organization. Obviously one season should never be used to solely judge a player’s development or potential, but a successful season by certain players could potentially elevate their profile exponentially, in regards to organizational depth chart rankings and future potential value.




NOLAN MCLEAN

All eyes will be on McLean, as he offers the Mets their best chance of finally 
developing a much-needed homegrown “ACE”. McLean has one of the best 
pitching arsenals in the MLB, and he has the rare ability to continue raising 
his ceiling in each given year. When you take into account he only pitched 
57 IP during his collegiate career and the fact that 2025 was his first 
full-season as a full-time SP, it’s easy to see why he’s only scratched the 
surface of what could be an extremely high ceiling.



FRANCISCO ALVAREZ 

Alvarez has some of the best offensive tools in the organization, his power is rare for a catcher, and he also has the ability to hit for a higher average than he’s shown. He started to finally unlock his best version after a demotion to AAA, if he can exhibit that type of ability over a full-season, he’ll not only be a perennial All-Star, he’ll also position himself as a perennial Silver Slugger candidate.





MARK VIENTOS 

Vientos was arguably our best power hitter during the 2024 regular season, and was by far the most dangerous hitter during the Mets magical 2024 playoff run. After battling inconsistency during the early months of the 2025 season, he finally kick into high gear after the All-Star break. Vientos has the ability to replace the production lost by the departure of Pete Alonso via free agency, whether he gets the opportunities to do so and if he capitalizes on those opportunities is anyone’s guess.



BRETT BATY

Baty has some of the best offensive tools of any young hitter in the MLB, as I’ve outlined in a previous article, prospects who are graded as having a 60-Hit Tool & 70-Power Tool is an exclusive club. Despite all the shenanigans regarding playing time, Baty took full advantage of his opportunities during the 2025 season. If he continues to improve his numbers against LHP, as well as improve his road splits, the Mets have another potential .265+ BA & 25+ HR bat capable of logging reps at a multitude of positions. Stearns recently commented how he expects Baty to make starts at RF, signaling their commitment to keeping Baty’s bat in the lineup at all costs.




CARSON BENGE

Benge had a breakout 2025 season, quickly establishing himself as one of the bigger steals of the 2024 MLB Draft. Concerns over his ability to hit for power were silenced after he exploded for 8 HR in only 32 games at Binghamton. He’s being fast-tracked to the MLB and is expected to challenge for the starting RF position, and the fact Juan Soto even moved to LF to make room for Benge, tells you all you need to know about the type of impact Benge can have on both sides of the ball.


JONAH TONG 

Tong’s 2025 season was nothing short of historic, and despite an entire off-season of the media and Mets fans clamoring for him to be traded for a proven “Ace”, he’s still here. The Mets were never going to trade Tong, you simply don’t trade young players who’ve elevate their ceiling as quickly as Tong has the past two years. Tong’s pitching arsenal is far from complete, the uptick in velocity opens the door for a multitude of new opportunities in regards to what other pitches he decides to develop to compliment his 70-Grade fastball & 60+ Grade changeup. How quickly he finishes developing his arsenal will ultimately dictate how fast he joins McLean at the top-of-the rotation.



JONATHAN SANTUCCI 

Santucci was David Stearns’ & Kris Gross’ second official draft selection, and he received one of the highest signing bonuses for a pitcher drafted outside of the first round, as well as one of the ten highest signing bonuses awarded to a pitcher. His breakout 2025 season quickly proved the signing bonus he received was a bargain, and teams overly concerned about his command issues and medical history during his collegiate career, made a huge mistake passing on a player who was widely considered a Top-15 talent.
Santucci has the explosive upside and the chance to continue rising his prospect profile during his sophomore season, while positioning himself for a rotation spot for 2027.




A.J. EWING

Ewing’s breakout 2025 season, raised his prospect profile arguably as high as McLean, if not higher. When you take into account, he went from being a senior in high school in 2023, to batting over .300 as the #2 hitter for a AA team’s championship run, it’s easy to see why he exploded onto recently released prospect rankings. Anyone who has seen Ewing play aren’t worried about his power numbers, as power is often the last component developed by a young hitter. If Ewing continues his torrid stretch at the plate, he could force himself into the Mets lineup later this season or Opening Day 2027, at the very latest. His tools are electric and perfectly complement the Mets current lineup.  




JACOB REIMER 

Reimer had an excellent professional debut during the 2023 season, which was overshadowed by Jett Williams stellar professional debut. Despite missing most of the 2024 season, Reimer established himself as one of the more exciting young hitters in the minors, by helping Binghamton win a Championship, even after the Mets promoted their three best hitters in the lineup. Reimer established himself as a legit 20+ HR hitter, who can also post .275+ BA and .365+ OBP, which is good enough to help lineups win games, regardless of where he plays defensively.




ZACH THORNTON 

Thornton was lost in the shuffle during the 2025 season, because of the sheer number of Mets pitching prospects who produced breakout seasons. Make no mistake the dominance he exhibited at AA, did not go unnoticed by true prospect-hounds, and Mets brass, as he continues to firmly cement himself as interesting candidate for either the rotation or bullpen as early as this season according to David Stearns recent press conference. Thornton’s velocity continues to tick up, and another significant velo bump and duplicating his 2025 production, will clearly place him in consideration for an integral role for the Mets in the near future.




JACK WENNINGER 

Like Thornton, Wenninger’s breakout 2025 season at Binghamton was also overshadowed by other pitching prospects who produced dominant numbers. 
It didn’t help that the younger prospects who replaced McLean and Tong, Santucci and Will Watson, also performed remarkably. Nevertheless, Wenninger remains a high-upside prospect, who can cement a role in Queens, if he can continue to improve his secondary pitches and duplicate his 2025 success, while pitching for AAA Syracuse in 2026.




WILL WATSON 

Watson is a similar case to Thornton, in that, here we have a pitching prospects who produced with limited experience pitching at the Division I level, drafted in the middle rounds, and then quickly exhibited huge improvements across his entire pitching arsenal. Despite getting his first real taste as a SP, Watson improved the velocities of all his pitches, and continued to improve his production as a SP, even after surpassing his career high in IP for a season & tallying higher pitch counts and IP each outing than ever before. His stuff is electric and he even sneaked onto a Top 100 Ranking, ahead of other Mets prospects, which speaks volumes as to his future ceiling.




TREY SNYDER 

Snyder received the third highest signing bonus for the 2024 Draft class, despite being a 5th round pick out of high school. He more than held his own during an aggressive assignment to St. Lucie, and offers a similar athletic profile and skillset to A.J. Ewing. He’s my sleeper pick for a prospect who could produce a similar breakout season like Ewing, only because many people might overlook what he accomplished in his professional debut. He’s an electric talent, who could rise quickly, if he continues to improve.



ELIAN PENA 

Pena is going to be one of the most closely watched prospect in the minor leagues by Mets fans, prospect analysts, and Mets brass. Make no mistake about it, the Mets didn’t just unload Jett Williams and Luisangel Acuna to improve their MLB roster, they were also making room for what they expect will be a meteoric rise through the minors by Pena. Stearns didn’t hesitate allowing Jackson Chourio to establish himself at the MLB level as a 19-year old during his tenure with the Brewers. Whether he fast-tracks Pena in similar fashion remains to be seen, but many scouts believe Pena has the rare ability to debut as a teenager, and the Mets unloading both players ahead of him on the organizational depth chart for the future starting 2B role, certainly speaks volumes in my humble opinion. Pena has the ability to join Juan Soto as the only player on the Mets to develop scouting grades that exhibit 70+ Power Tool and 70+ Hit Tool. Analysts whose opinions I trust, firmly believe Pena will start in the FCL, but I have to respectfully disagree with their prediction, and will venture to guess, Pena starting with St. Lucie, like recent high school draft picks, and hopefully finishing in Binghamton like Jett Williams did during his professional debut.

These youngsters in particular will be tracked closely by Mets brass, the scale of progressions in their development could have huge implications as to their futures within the organization. 2026 shouldn’t be characterized as a “make or break” season, for some, a successful 2026 campaign shows they were able to build off of their breakout 2025 campaigns. For others a successful 2026 campaign shows they were able to make the necessary adjustments to overcome the adversity that caused an inconsistent 2025 campaign, which is arguably the most important quality in a professional athlete playing under the bright lights of New York City.

Alex Rubinson - Why Tobias Myers might be the Key Member of the Mets' Staff


The New York Mets are coming off one of the more disappointing seasons relative to preseason expectations. Coming off a season in which New York reached the National League Championship Series, the Mets appeared as if they had carried their momentum into the 2025 season. By the middle summer months, the Mets were playing like the best team in baseball, but as the dog days of summer went on, things unraveled rapidly. After losing two out of its final three contests to the Miami Marlins, Carlos Mendoza’s squad finished outside of the playoff picture with an uninspiring 83-79 record. 


A lot of fingers pointed at the pitching down the stretch as the main reason for the Mets’ collapse. Griffin Canning was having a career year before rupturing his Achilles to end his season prematurely. Key free agent acquisition Clay Holmes started the year strong, but in his first year as a starter, the former Yankees’ reliever could not have been trusted to consistently work deep into ballgames. Holmes was one of only two Mets pitchers to qualify in innings (162 innings or more). The aforementioned Canning finished fourth on the team in innings despite not pitching past the first week in June. Both Sean Manaea and Frankie Montas struggled mightily. Kodai Senga was expected to be the staff’s ace coming into the year. Although the former Japanese star looked like a Cy Young contender to begin the season, a midseason injury derailed his year. After spending a month on the shelf, Senga did not return to form in the second half of the season. He surrendered three or more runs in six of his last eight starts and did not offer much length. 


As the Mets turned the page and looked ahead to 2026, all eyes were on David Stearns and how he was going to fix the rotation. Coming from the Milwaukee Brewers, Stearns had plenty of experience developing young pitching and finding diamonds in the rough, but with Steve Cohen’s resources and a deep farm system, there was an expectation that Stearns would not go bargain hunting like he had done in the past. As the months turned, fans and analysts waited and waited to see what move Stearns had up his sleeve. One day after former New York Met Carlos Beltrán was announced as an MLB Hall of Famer, Stearns made his move.


The Mets headline acquisition was ace pitcher Freddy Peralta from the Brewers in a trade for a young pitcher in Brandon Sproat and utility prospect Jett Williams. Peralta, coming off a season when he finished top five in Cy Young voting, understandably drew the majority of eyeballs, but with Peralta having just one more year left on his contract, two promising players in Sproat and Williams might be a tough pill to swallow to hand over in the swap, which is why the real value in the trade could come from the secondary name: Tobias Myers. 


In 2024, Myers pitched nearly 140 innings and made 25 starts over the course of that season. He pitched to an impressive 3.00 ERA and recorded an eye-opening 138 ERA+ (38 points better than a league average number of 100). Had Myers qualified and kept those same numbers, he would’ve tied for sixth in all of baseball with Framber Valdez. Valdez meanwhile just signed a three-year contract with the Detroit Tigers for almost $40 million a season. Myers’ WHIP of 1.17 would have been just behind Luis Castillo. Maybe what’s most impressive from the former Brewer is the control he displayed. His 2.3 walk rate had him just outside the top 20 in the big leagues. 


Myers currently has only one year of service time attached to him and is not scheduled to test the open market until 2031 and isn’t even eligible for arbitration for another two seasons. With Myers still being in pre-arbitration, he will represent a very cheap option on the Mets pitching staff for years to come. 


The risk with the righty is that he only made 22 appearances (six starts) in 2025 after he struggled to return to form after suffering an oblique injury. After over a month-long stint in the minor leagues, Myers started to get back to the performances Milwaukee had grown accustomed to. Although most of his work came out of the bullpen, he showed that the pitcher that was great in 2024 as a rookie was still inside him. He finished his season with an impressive ERA- of 85 (100 is league average and a lower number is better). In 2024, he registered a 73 in the same metric. In an era when the long ball is as prevalent as ever, Myers improved his home run rate last season, dropping it to below 0.90. 


Last season, Myers relied heavily on his four-seam fastball, throwing it 45% of the time. He then mixed up his cutter (19%), slider (17%) and splitter (16%) to round out the majority of his repertoire. The Florida native does not blow anyone away, as his fastball sits in the middle to low 90s. He did throw a changeup more in 2024, but only tossed it a dozen times this past season. After adding a splitter in his sophomore season, opponents mustered only a .108 batting average against it. As Myers enters spring training healthy, it will be interesting to watch if he throws his splitter and slider (.167 opponent average) more often while peeling back on his harder stuff. 


As of now, the former sixth round pick is ramping up as if he will be a starter in the Mets rotation, but with the rotation healthy heading into big league camp, that remains to be seen. Coming from the Brewers, Stearns has plenty of experience firsthand at developing pitchers in reliever roles before promoting them to the big league rotation. The baseball world saw this with the likes of Corbin Burnes and Brandon Woodruff. Another key element is Myers still has an option left, so in an ideal world where the Mets remain healthy going into the final week of March, Stearns and company could send Myers to the minor leagues in Syracuse before inevitably calling him when an injury or spot start occurs. Whatever the plan is in February, Myers gives the Mets plenty of options and offers much-needed flexibility no matter the health status of New York’s starting five. 


It is rare to see a team give up multiple noteworthy promising prospects for a player with only one year of control remaining on his contract. That would’ve been the case had Peralta been the only player coming over from the Brewers, but with Myers joining him in Queens, the trade could still pay dividends beyond the 2026 season. Even as the Mets look to compete for a World Series over the next eight months, Myers will play a role in that quest and could become an unsung hero when we reach the fall months and turn the page to October. This isn’t to say Myers will come in and fix all of New York’s issues in its rotation, but he will provide the organization plenty of versatility for a team that was left scrambling in the midst of a playoff race a season ago.