6/13/26

RVH - Rethinking the Mets, Part 6: Citi Field Is Still Part of the Problem

In Part 1, we argued that the Mets do not have an ambition problem. They have an execution problem.

In Part 2, we examined how slow starts create a pressure-amplification cycle that makes every season feel harder than it needs to be.

In Part 3, we explored how the Yankees learned to carry pressure through decades of stability and accumulated trust.

In Part 4, we examined how the Braves built resilience through development, continuity, and replacement power.

In Part 5, we looked at how the Dodgers use resources to create flexibility and optionality rather than simply accumulate talent.

Now we turn to something that may be less obvious but equally important.

The environment itself.

Because before deciding what the Mets should become, it's worth asking a simpler question:

Have the Mets fully adapted to the realities of where they play?

The answer may be no.

Every Great Organization Understands Its Environment

The Yankees understand Yankee Stadium.

The Braves understand Truist Park.

The Dodgers understand Dodger Stadium.

They understand how their ballparks play.

They understand how their climates affect performance.

They understand how their environments influence roster construction.

And over time, they build around those realities.

The Mets should be doing the same thing.

Because Citi Field is not neutral.

And pretending otherwise ignores a meaningful part of the equation.

Citi Field Is A Different Baseball Environment

The Yankees and Mets both play in New York.

But they do not play the same game.

Yankee Stadium remains one of baseball's most favorable offensive environments, particularly for left-handed power hitters.

A fly ball down the right-field line has a chance.

A struggling hitter can find confidence with one swing.

Marginal contact can become meaningful production.

The ballpark creates offense.

Citi Field often demands offense.

Especially in April.

The dimensions are larger.

The alleys are deeper.

The outfield is bigger.

The air is frequently heavier.

The margin for error is smaller.

A ball that leaves Yankee Stadium may become a long out in Queens.

Over 162 games, talent generally wins.

Over shorter stretches, environment can influence outcomes.

And those shorter stretches matter.

Why April Feels Different In Queens

This brings us back to one of the recurring themes of the series.

Slow starts.

The issue isn't simply temperature.

Both teams play in New York.

Both deal with cold weather.

The difference is how those conditions interact with the ballpark.

Citi Field sits in a more open environment near Flushing Bay and the waterfront.

Spring winds can be unpredictable.

Cold air suppresses carry.

Offense often feels harder to generate consistently.

Again, none of this determines a season.

But it can influence one.

And when offensive struggles emerge early, they often trigger the pressure cycle discussed in Part 2.

Expectations rise.

Runs become scarce.

Frustration grows.

The media amplifies it.

Players press.

The conversation shifts.

A baseball problem becomes an organizational problem.

That doesn't mean Citi Field causes slow starts.

It does mean the environment may contribute to conditions where slow starts become more likely.

The Mets Have To Stop Thinking Like The Yankees

This may be the most uncomfortable point in the article.

For years, many Mets teams have been constructed as though they played somewhere else.

Too often, the roster blueprint has leaned heavily toward:

  • aging power

  • station-to-station offense

  • limited athleticism

  • limited defensive range

  • limited speed

In many ways, those teams looked better suited for Yankee Stadium than Citi Field.

But Citi Field rewards different things.

Athleticism.

Defense.

Versatility.

Outfield range.

Run prevention.

Gap power.

Pitching depth.

The Mets don't necessarily need fewer stars.

They may need stars whose strengths align more naturally with the environment they play in.

New York Creates A Different Kind Of Friction

The ballpark is only part of the story.

The broader environment matters too.

Taxes.

Media scrutiny.

Cost of living.

Travel demands.

Lifestyle preferences.

Family considerations.

The Yankees have spent decades building enough organizational credibility to overcome many of those factors.

The Dodgers increasingly enjoy similar advantages.

The Braves benefit from a different set of market dynamics altogether.

The Mets must continue building enough organizational strength that players view those challenges as worthwhile tradeoffs.

That process takes time.

History Matters Too

The final piece of environmental friction isn't physical.

It's psychological.

Every Mets team inherits forty years of unfinished business.

Every season begins with expectations.

Every losing streak revives memories.

Every disappointment reopens old conversations.

The Yankees begin with trust.

The Braves begin with continuity.

The Dodgers begin with credibility.

The Mets still begin with questions.

Fair or not, that's reality.

And reality must be managed.

What Great Organizations Do

The Yankees did not eliminate pressure.

The Braves did not eliminate randomness.

The Dodgers did not eliminate uncertainty.

They adapted to their environments.

They built systems that function despite those realities.

They turned obstacles into considerations rather than excuses.

That's the challenge facing the Mets.

Not changing Citi Field.

Not changing New York.

Not changing history.

Adapting more effectively to all three.

What The Mets Should Learn

Championship organizations do not assume their environment is neutral.

They understand it.

They build around it.

They use it.

And occasionally, they turn it into an advantage.

The Mets have spent the first six years of the Cohen era investing heavily in talent, infrastructure, and organizational capability.

The next step may be ensuring those investments are fully aligned with the realities of where they actually play.

Because if Citi Field creates a different baseball environment than many competing parks, the obvious question becomes:

Have the Mets consistently built rosters optimized for that environment?

That may be one of the most important questions of all.


Part 6 Thesis

The Mets operate in a baseball environment that is different from many of their competitors.

Citi Field, early-season conditions, New York pressure, and organizational history all create friction.

Championship organizations do not ignore friction.

They understand it, adapt to it, and build around it.


What We've Learned So Far

Part 1: The Mets do not have an ambition problem. They have an execution problem.

Part 2: The Mets' slow-start problem is not a standings problem. It is a pressure-amplification problem.

Part 3: The Yankees did not eliminate pressure. They learned how to carry it.

Part 4: The Braves win because they reduce randomness better than almost anyone else.

Part 5: The Dodgers do not use money to buy certainty. They use money to create flexibility.

Part 6: Championship organizations understand their environment and build around it.


Next: Part 7 – The Difference Between a Headline Team and a Championship Team

If Citi Field rewards a different style of baseball than many competing parks, then the next question is unavoidable: Have the Mets consistently built teams optimized to win in their own environment, or have they too often built teams designed to win the offseason?


Tom Brennan - What Are the Odds?


The Happy Recap!  Hoo, Hoo, Hoo!

Randy Guzman has been a slugger for the St Lucie Mets.

So l glanced at a DSL Mets box score, and their starting pitcher fanned 6 in 3.2 scoreless innings. His name? 

Randy Guzman. Different guy, same name.

Guzman is a common name. For instance, the Mets have a reliever named Carlos Guzman in AA who fanned 3 in 1.1 IP Friday night. 

But two guys named RANDY Guzman? 

What are the odds?

Anyway, Bashing Bo Bichette answered his detractors on Friday night against Hot Lanta, with 2 homers against Spencer Strider, totaling 6 RBIs for the evening. 8 HRs and 40 RBIs on the year. Soto cracked # 15.

Devin Williams was sharp with a save in the 7-5 win. Every Nets fan can remember blown Nets saves against the Braves over the years. Not tonight.

One pesky Braves batter fouled off about eight pitches and then singled, raising those “oh no, here we go again” worries, but Williams mowed thru the other 3 hitters, including a game ending K of Olson.

In the minors:

Syracuse was limited to 3 hits and one run in a loss.  Nate Lavender lost in relief, but he sure strikes out lots of guys. On the stick side, Morabito and Senga each fanned 3 times, and Clifford slipped to .210.

In Binghamton, Suero (.191) and Lorusso (.212) each cracked their 10th of the season in a win in which the Rumblers scored 7 on 8 hits and 8 walks. In the other side,. Santucci was wild, but Bingo pitching racked up 15 Ks.

Brooklyn scored 13 runs on 10 hits. Houck is hitting well since June 2, and is up to .212. Mosquera got 2 RBIs and raised his average to .099 in Brooklyn.

Daviel Hurtado was excellent over 5 innings. The 21 year old has a 0.70 WHIP over 28 IP this year. 

St Lucie won, 2-1.

Finally…

The FCL Mets got 4 hitless innings from young Camden Lohman. He fanned six and walked one.

Reese Kaplan -- What Kind of Job Is David Stearns Doing?


Many people from Steve Cohen to professional sportswriters to die hard Mets fans were dancing in the aisles when it was revealed that the Mets successfully lured front office executive David Stearns from his mid level team in Milwaukee to New York’s center stage to give him the exposure and budget he needed to prove to the world how good he could be.  It’s currently June 11th and in the 2+ years he’s been here the Stearns Mets have won 201 games while losing 190.  That’s a positive winning percentage of just .514.  Hmmn...


Well, maybe his job as an evaluator of talent and procurer of free agent acquisitions and trades would explain the lackluster results.  After all, if you put together a good roster then it is reasonable to expect positive numbers when evaluating performance.

In 2024 David Stearns created a roster that made a run to the championship game in October.  He was responsible for adding the following major league players (or significant minor league options who eventually made it to Citifield for an extended period of time):

  • Harrison Bader
  • Max Kranick
  • Sean Manaea
  • Adam Ottavino
  • Jake Diekman
  • J.D. Martinez
  • Jose Iglesias
  • Jesse Winker
  • Paul Blackburn
  • Phil Maton
  • Ryne Stanek
  • Huascar Brazoban

Of this group only Sean Manaea, Adam Ottavino and Jose Iglesias wound up in the win column.  Others underachieved (in come cases quite badly).

Did things improve in 2025?  After all the club finished the year only barely over .500 and it would seem that new Mets faces would have some responsibility for how the team played.  Let’s have a look:

  • Jose Siri
  • Frankie Montas
  • Juan Soto
  • Sean Manaea
  • Griffin Canning
  • Jesse Winker
  • A.J. Minter
  • Nick Madrigal
  • Ryne Stanek
  • Brooks Raley
  • Dicky Lovelady
  • Travis Jankowski
  • Gregory Soto
  • Tyler Rogers
  • Cedric Mullins

Here Juan Soto was a full time quality ballplayer but was paid the biggest contract in baseball history to deliver.  A.J. Minter started off well but went down with injury for the rest of the year early on.  Brooks Raley eventually returned from injury and played well.  The rest?  Well, the year end results pretty much answer that question.

Come 2026 the club made some major roster revisions after losing closer Edwin Diaz and slugger Pete Alonso to free agency.  Some could argue that the Mets did not make much of an effort to retain them.  Then the trades came that sent veterans Jeff McNeil and Brandon Nimmo packing.  How has that worked out?  Let’s see who put on Mets uniforms for the first time:

  • Marcus Semien
  • Devin Williams
  • Fredd Peralta
  • Jorge Polanco
  • Luke Weaver
  • Craig Kimbrel
  • M.J. Melendez
  • Bo Bichette
  • Luis Robert

Of this group injuries have been the biggest obstacle they have not been able to overcome.  Then there are the slumping and otherwise underperforming players on this list.  Thus far AAAA returnee Jared Young is the lone standout.

So the question facing the Mets in the upcoming mid year roster reconstruction deadline is what kind of job has David Stearns done and what will he do to improve things now or in the future?  Obviously if they continue in last place fighting not to have the worst record in baseball a selloff is understandable, yet the fans and media are so frustrated by the lack of forward progress last season and things going even worse this year it makes you wonder if it is indeed the players or the guy in charge who picked them? 

Other than the July flurry last season with players who did not excel upon arriving in Queens you have to wonder what exactly is the waiting game in the front office?  What has been done at the major league level to address the multitude of injuries and the fact that many of the 2026 acquisitions frankly are not earning their inflated paychecks.  Isn’t correcting what’s wrong supposed to be a major part of a baseball executive’s job?

6/12/26

Tom Brennan - Yesterday’s Mets Action: A Space X View

 


The Happy Recap!  Hoo, Hoo, Hoo!

Space X IPO today. Expect it to soar.

The Mets minors did not soar yesterday.

Here is my 100,000 foot view:

The 4 main minor league teams, known for their collective hitting ineptitude, for the Mets combined for a stinking 6 runs yesterday.

Only two highlights:

Kevin Parada 2-3 and a walk. 14 AAA games: .366/.413/.537. 

WOW. Here is a comp for you:

In his marvelous MVP catcher season, Joe Torre went .363/.421/.555.

Secondly, Kodai Senga went 6 fine innings in AA: 1 hit, 1 walk, 5 Ks.

NY Mets bash 3 HRs (Soto, Young, Bichette), offsetting the 3 that Christian Scott surrendered.

But the bullpen went 4+ innings of no hit ball to secure the 5-4 win.  

Jared Young will be filming a Lifesaver commercial today.

OK. I’m done.



Reese Kaplan --- What Kind of Haul For a Freddy Peralta Trade?


One of the things the Mets must decide between now and the trade deadline in August is what to do with arguably the number one pitcher potentially available for player swaps in 2026.  Yes, Tarik Skubal has more ornamentation on his mantle than does Freddy Peralta, but the Met hurler is completely healthy while Skubal has just begun his rehab from injury.  Even if a GM wanted to lure Skubal away from the Tigers, he’d be in the same boat as the teams interested in Peralta — both are eligible to be free agents at year’s end. 

Right now Peralta earns a very modest $8 million per year which for Cy Young level pitching is pocket change.  Skubal is earning an eye popping $32 million this year and still not 100% healthy.  Therefore the ask for Peralta should be significantly higher than it might otherwise be, though a team in search of a lefty rather than a righty might still prefer taking a chance on the viability of Skubal returning to his dual Cy Young form for August and September. 

A good example of the kind of players who should be offered up to David Stearns would be potentially one top ten draft pick and another highly regarded one either also near the top ten or perhaps in recovery from injury which might otherwise diminish his overall value.  A good example was floated recently about the Los Angeles Dodgers being a team who might seek a push-them-over-the-top additional starting pitcher for the final two months of the season and it’s time to look at who they could provide.

Their top name is currently Josue De Paula who is a 21 year old outfielder who combines strong hitting and baserunning to make himself into the current number eight prospect in all of baseball.  Roughly halfway through his AA season for the Dodgers he’s hitting .319 with 10 HRs, 53 RBIs and 16 SBs.  Any hitter with strong batting skill, power and speed is certainly highly desirable, so much so that the front office of the Dodgers might pull him off the table entirely.


Next up for Los Angeles is current AAA slugger James Tibbs III.  He’s played both the outfield and first base in the minors.  Bear in mind that he’s in the PCL and his numbers may be somewhat inflated as is common in that league.  He’s batting .313 with 18 HRs and 54 RBIs.  Double those numbers for a full year and you could be looking at a post Pete Alonso solution for the Mets.  

At 23 years of age he’s ready to step right into the majors and even if the batting average diminishes a bit he might be a better solution at first base than a healthy Jorge Polanco.

The other player suggested the Mets consider is a pitcher who is working on his AAA campaign this year after going through Tommy John surgery despite having excelled in his brief major league trial in 2024.  River Ryan is no longer at the top of the heap when it comes to prospect ranking but if you look at his minor league numbers you have to be impressed.  

His career minor league ERA is a very good 3.17 and right now in the hitter’s league in the PCL he’s doing even better at 2.89.  In 2024 he appeared for the big club for 2 games and pitched to a 1.50 ERA.  He didn’t pitch at all in 2025 and has done 6 starts in 2026.  He’s now 27 years old which is a bit older for a guy not yet established as a major leaguer, but combined with someone like Tibbs it could be a decent haul for losing the final two months of Peralta.  

MACK - Friday Observations - Weekly Update on the Future

 



 

Taken off the report this week:

    AAA/Syracuse RP Ryan Lambert

    AAA/Syracuse RP Anderson Severino

    AAA/Syracuse SP Jonah Tong

   A/St. Lucie RP Christian Rodriguez


SP Jack Wenninger/AAA-Syracuse –

As of end 6-3 - 10-G, 9-ST, 3-3, 2.80, 1.33, 45-IP, 46-K, 25-BB

6-5 - a return to a good outing: 5.1-IP, 4-H, ER, 3-BB, 3-K. Would still like to see a reduction of walks which would relieve the pressure of pitch count buildup.

As of end 6-10 - 11-G, 10-ST, 3-4, 2.68, 1.33, 50.1-IP, 49-K, 28-BB

IMO, the Mets need to keep Jack in Syracuse until he cuts down his passes.

               

SP Jonah Tong/AAA-Syracuse & MLB-Mets  

As of end 6-3 - 

MLB: 3-APPS, 1-1, 3.60, 1,50, 10-IP, 7-K, 7-BB, 

AAA:  9-ST, 1-3, 5.68, 1.37, 38-IP, 55-K, 24-BB

6-9 -  4-IP, 5-H, 4-ER, 4-BB, 4-K, 6.00

I have to treat everybody the same here. No favorites. 

You do the numbers, you get to stay in this weekly update on minor leaguers we need to keep an eye on. What we don't need is to eye someone hitting .220 or punching out a 6.00 ERA. Oh. Did I say a 6.00 ERA? That's the same ERA that Tong has right now.

So. I am removing Jonah Tong from my report for now.

 

SP Zach Thornton/AAA-Syracuse & MLB-Mets –

As of end 6-3: AAA: 4-ST, 1-2, 4.87, 1.3720-1-IP, 19-K, 9-BB

6-7 - 5-IP, 2-H, 0-R, 2-BB, 5-K - Thornton returns to his minor league dominance

As of end 6-10:  AAA: 5-G, 4-ST, 1-2, 3.91, 1.26, 25.1-IP, 24-K, 11-BB

Like his buddy Wenninger, he needs to work on cutting down his walks.


 C Kevin Parada/AAA-Syracuse

As of end 6-3:  AAA:  31-AB, 0-HR, 9-RBI, .355/.400/.484/.884

6-4:  0-0

6-5: 0-1

6-6:  1-4

6-9:  1-2, R, RBI, 1st AAA HR

As of end 6-10 - AAA:  38-AB, 1-HR, 10-RBI, 10-K, .342/.381/.526/.907

I still have no idea what's happening here, but Parada is holding his incredible numbers in Syracuse. He even increased his OPS after hitting his first AAA home run. Is this for real? 


RP Jonathan Pintaro/AAA-Syracuse & MLB-Mets -

As of end 6-3:   AAA - 18-APPS, 2-0, 3.38, 1.09, 29.1-IP, 37-K, 13-BB 

6-6:  2-IP, 1-H, 0-R, K

6-10: Pintaro was called up to the Mets. I expect it will be a short visit so I'll keep him on this report. He did pitch on 6-10 though:

6-10: Mets - 3-IP, 1-H, 1-ER, 1-HR, 0-BB, 2-K, 1.35

JP is getting the chance to show his value at the major league level. Trust me. He is becoming a valuable piece of the future rebuild of this team.

As of end 6-10 - 

    MLB - 3-APPS, 0-0, 1.35, 0.30, 6.2-IP, 1-BB, 5-K

    AAA - 19-APPS, 2-0, 3.16, 1.05, 31.1-IP, 38-K, 13-BB

6-11 - as predicted, returned to Syracuse before Thursday's game

       

RP Anderson Severino/AAA-Syracuse –

On 5-27:   2-0, 1.37, 1.06, 17-APPS, 19.2-IP, 20-K, 11-BB

5-30:  1-IP, H, 0-R, 0-BB, 0-K, 1.31

Severino cleared waivers, told the Mets to blow their return offer up their arse, and signed with  team in Japan. Stupid. Just stupid. You DFA the leader in Mets minor league saves. STUPID.

                

RP Ben Simon/AAA-Syracuse –

As of end 6-3:  AAA  5-apps, 3.18, 1.59, 5.2-IP, 1-K, 5-BB

6-5 - 1.2-IP, 0-H, 0-R, BB, 3-K. Nice.

6-10 - 1-IP, 0-H, 0-R

As of end 6-10:  AAA - 7-APPS, 1-1, 2.16, 1,20, 8.1-IP, 6-BB, 4-K

No one is going to be promoted with a stat line of more walks produced than strikeouts. Simon needs to reverse this.


2B Ji Hwan Bae/AAA-Syracuse

Bae makes this list after posting  a stat line of .293/.387.400/.787 in 150 at-bats for Syracuse.

As of end 6-3:   176-AB, 2-HR, 18-RBI, .278/.380/.375/.755

6-4:  0-3

6-6:  1-3, R, HR (3), RBI, BB

6-7:  2-3, 2-R, BB, 2B (10)

6-9:  2-3, R

6-10:  3-4, 2-R, BB

As of end 6-10:  192-AB, 3-HR, 19-RBI, .297/.400/.406/.806

You have to start thinking out loud that Marcus Semien should be moved before the trading break and this guy deserves another shot in the majors.


OF Nick Morabito/AAA-Syracuse

As of end 6-3:   AAA - 180-AB, 5-HR, 22-RBI, .256/.363/.400/.763

6-5 - 0-5

6-6 - 1-5

6-7 - 0-3

6-9:  0-3

6-10:  2-4, 2-R, BB

As of end 6-10:  199-AB, 5-HR, 22-RBI, .246/.352/.382/.734

I gotta say... I'm not that impressed with these numbers and, if I don't see an improvement soon, at this minor level, I will be removing Morabito from this report until he turns this around.


SP Jonathan Santucci/AA-Binghamton –

6-6 - 6.2-IP, 3-H, ER, 2-BB, 5-K

As of 6-10 - 11-ST, 1-5, 3.93, 1.23, 52.2-IP, 24-BB, 63-K

Santucci is starting to heat up. Got his ERA below 4.00. I envision continued improvement and an eventual promotion to Syracuse.

               

RP Saul Garcia/AA-Binghamton –

As of the end 6-3:  20-APPS, 0-1, 4.43, 1.21, 22.1-IP, 33-K, 5-BB

6-6 - 1-IP, 0-H. 0-R, 2-BB, K

As of end 6-10:  21-APPS, 4.24, 1.24, 23.1-IP, 34-K, 7-BB

Never accuse this guy of not having the ability to strike out batters. It's strange Binghamton doesn't use him more often.

          

RP Felipe De La Cruz/AA-Binghamton - 

As of end 6-3:  14-APPS, 0-0, 1.56, 1.15, 17.1-IP, 23-K, 9-BB

6-4:  2-IP, 0-H, 0-R, 2-BB, 2-K

6-7:  0.1-IP, 0-H, 0-R, K

As of end 6-10:  16-APPS, 0-0, 1.37, 1.12, 19.2-IP, 11-BB, 26-K

Frankly, the Mets may be developing a real deal reliever here.

               

SP Channing Austin/A+ Brooklyn –

5-27:   AA - no appearances yet

           A+ - 8-ST, 2-1, 1.17, 38.1-IP. 48-K, 22-BB

Also on 5/27, Austin was placed on the IL with an oblique issue.

As of 6-10 - still on the IL


SP Jose Chirinos/A+ Brooklyn –

As of end 6-3 - A+ - 1-ST, 0-0, 1.80, 1.20, 5-IP, 4-K, 3-BB

6-9 - 6-IP, 4-H, 3-ER, HR, 3-BB, 10-K, 3.27 - let's hope this is his worst outing this season. Love the Ks but he needs to get back to dominance.

As of end 6-10 - A+:  2-APPS, 0-1, 3.27, 1.18, 11-IP, 6-BB, 14-K

Chirinos seems to be going through the adjustment period most pitchers go through when they are promoted to a new level.


RP - Bryce Jenkins/A+ Brooklyn 

As of end 6-3 - 15-APPS, 1-2, 2.61, 0.87, 20.2-IP, 8-BB, 22-K

6-7 - 1-IP, 0-H, 0-R, K

As of end 6-10 - 16-APPS, 1-2, 2.49, 0.83, 21.2-IP, 8-BB, 23-K

Love the WHIP here.

               

OF JT Benson/A+ Brooklyn –

end of 6-3 - A+ - 39-AB, 9-RBI, .256/.310/.385/.694             

6-4:  0-2, BB

6-5: 0-3

6-7:  1-3, 2-BB

6-9:  1-3, 2B

6-10:  2-3, 2-R, 2-RBI, BB, 3B, HR (1)

JT seems to be getting settled into the A+ division. 

As of end 6-10 - A+ - 53-AB, 1-HR, 11-RBI, .264/.371/.472/.843


NEW ADDITION - SP David Hurtado/A+ Brooklyn - Hurtado was promoted to Brooklyn a week ago, threw a scoreless first outing and then came back with this gem:

6-6 - 5.1-IP, 1-H, 1-R, BB -5-K

He is a RED prospect.

As of end 6-10 - A+ - 3-ST, 1-0, 0.69, 0.46, 3-IP, 2-BB, 11-K

So far, I see nothing wrong with this guy.


SP Nicholas Carreno/A-St. Lucie –

as of end of 6-3:  10-G, 5-ST, 2-0, 1.43, 0.98, 37.2-IP, 56-K, 18-BB

6-4:  4-IP, 4-H, 3-ER, 3-BB, 2-K

as of end 6-10:  11-G, 6-ST, 2-1, 1.94, 1.05, 41.2-IP, 21-BB, 58-K

Another Mets starter with a walk problem. Other than that, a possible gem.


RP Christian Rodriguez/A-St. Lucie - 

As of end 6-3 - 15-APPS, 2-1, 1.91, 1.09, 28.1-IP, 33-K, 11-BB

6-10 - 0.1-IP, 6-H, 5-ER, BB 

An ugly outing on Wednesday. So ugly, I'm taking him off this report.

          

1B Randy Guzman/A-St. Lucie –

As of end 6-3:  173-AB, 9-HR, 29-RBI, .260/.363/.480/.843

6-4:  1-4, BB

6-5:  0-2

As of end 6-10:  210-AB, 9-HR, 29-RBI, .257/.357/.469/.826

Have no idea why Guzman was shut down in the middle of the week.

               

SS Elian Pena/A-St. Lucie –

As of end 6-3:  177-AB, 35-BB, 3-HR, 22-RBI, .282/.410/.395/.806

6-4:  0-5, 4-K

6-5:  2-3, 2-R

6-6:  1-3, 2-R, BB 

6-7:  1-5, BB

6-9:  0-3, 3-R, BB

6-10:  0-3

As of end 6-10:  199-AB, 3-HR, 22-RBI, .271/.404/.377/.781

Not a good week for Elian.


C Yovanny Rodriguez/FCL Mets –

As of end 6-3:  60-AB, 5-HR, 16-RBI, .267/.353/.567/.920

6-4:  2-3. R, BB, .288, .957-OPS

6-9:  1-2, RBI, .300, .967-OPS

6-10:  1-4

As of end 6-10:  74-AB, 5-HR, 18-RBI, .297/.402/.541/.943

A great week for Y-Rod.


NEW ADDITION - OF Wyatt Vincent/FCL (round 11, 2025)

As of 6-3:  39-AB, .282, HR, 8-RBI, 4-SB, 1.010-OPS

6-4:  1-2, R, RBI, BB, .300, 1.045-OPS

6-6:  0-5

There is no report of injury here. I have no idea why he hasn't played since mid-week.


NEW ADDITION - SS Vladi Gomez/FCL 

6-3:  49-AB, .327, HR, 9-RBI, 14-SB, 1.051-OPS

6-4:  1-2, 2-RBI, .321, 1.049-OPS

6-6:  2-5, R

6-9:  0-3, .349, 1.075-OPS

6-10:  1-4

As of end 6-10 - FCL - 47-AB, 1-HR, 8-RBI, .340/.500/.532/1.032

Wouldn't you like to see these numbers hold as he rises up the chain.


NEW ADDITION - RF Bohan Adderley/FCL

As of end 6-5:  76-AB, .289, 3-HR, 11-RBI, 19-SB, .796-OBP

6-6:  2-4, R, HR (4), 2-RBI

6-9:  2-4, 2B (4), .310, .870-OBP

6-10:  0-4

As of end 6-10 - 88-AB, 4-HR, 13-AB, .295/.354/.477/.831

A great week for a young prospect.


HELIUM ALERT

RP Dan Hammer - AA/Binghamton - As of last Friday, Hammer has thrown 22.2 innings for the Rumble-Ponies, going 3-1, 1.99, 26-K.


SS Cleiner Ramirez - DSL Mets - Ramirez is one of the uber-prospects signed in the off-season ($1,372,500 bonus) and had one hell of a bat day on Saturday: 3-5, 3-R, 2-HR (2), 3-RBI, BB. To date, batting average is now .300 and OBP is a whopping 1.091.


RP Hunter Hodges - Brooklyn - 

Hodges has quietly put up some very nice numbers for the Clones, especially K/IP.

As of 6-7 - 18-APPS, 0-2, 1.99. 1.15, 22.2-IP, 10-BB, 31-K


2B Mitch Voit - Brooklyn 

We all have been waiting for this ex 1.38 draft pick to show us his stuff and recent results may be showing signs this is happening. Now tied with John Bay in HRs. Not enough beef to earn a paragraph going forward but still worth a helium heads up. June through the 8th:  5-G, 2-XBH, 2-BB, 0-K, 4-SB, .286/.423/.476/.899.

As of 6-7 - 167-AB, 7-HR, 20-RBI, .228/.328/.395/.723

As of 6-10 - 174/AB, 7-HR, 20-RBI, .224/.328/.391/.719


RHRP Sebastian Gomez - DSL Mets

The 2026 crop of DSL pitchers doesn't look like much this year, but Gomez is one 16/year old off to a good start... 2-apps, 7-IP, 0-R, 0.00, 0.43, 8.K.


OPINION

I have to say at this point in this report that the overall list of current Met minor league players doing well is quite depressing. I take off more each week than I put on.