4/14/26

Cautious Optimist - It Hasn't Been Pretty

 



A confession

The Mets are off to a terrible start.  Really, they are.  Is it as bad as I am going to make it out to be in what follows?  I doubt it.  But it is bad.  Oh, the confession.  I have always been emotionally connected to how the Mets have performed.  Probably to an unhealthy degree.  But it's worse now that I write about the Mets, and I have spilt a lot of ink endorsing the path I understood the Mets to be on.  Not just that, I found myself something of a fanboy. So when the Mets play as poorly as they have, I am not only distressed and unhappy.  I feel let down: betrayed.  That's the confession. 

That said, everything I say in what follows, I believe to be true.  I am genuinely horrified by what I've seen so far from this team. and the thought that it might continue throughout the season is a nightmare I am unprepared to handle.

On the other hand

It's too early to draw conclusions about how the season will pan out for the Mets.  Nevertheless, the team's performance to this point provides no basis for optimism that this story will end well.  The recent 1-5 homestand is something of a punctuation point on the season so far 

If the question is, what's the problem, the obvious answer is, which one

You can't fix the problem without figuring out first what the problem actually is and what its cause is (or causes are).  If you misdiagnose the problem, you run the risk of exacerbating it.  If you fail to identify its cause, how can you hope to eradicate it.  

Unfortunately, eliminating the cause of the problem may not lead to solving the underlying problem.  There are many different ways of causing the same problem!  And just as many ways of failing to solve it.

When it comes to this year's version of the Mets, the most frustrating thing for fans is that -- to this point - many of the most significant problems that dogged the team last year have lingered, and, if anything, gotten worse.  To this point, the changes in position players and coaches seems more a case of moving deck chairs on the Titanic than anything else.

Persistent Problems

There are at least two categories of persistent problems: those that persist in spite of substantial changes in personnel and coaches; and those that persist in part because some of the personnel responsible for last year's problem remain in place.

Let's begin by identifying several of the persistent problems before considering them in order.

1. Inability to hit with runners in scoring position.

2. Defense

3. Starting Rotation

4. Bullpen

5. Manager's Performance/ Team DNA

Inability to cash in runners in scoring position

The 2026 Mets have simply not produced with runners in scoring position.  This is half of a larger problem, a part of which is an inability to get runners into scoring position.  This begins with getting on base and continues with moving runners along.  The overall offensive numbers are down from last year.  On base percentage is down; batting average is down; stolen base attempts are down, runners in scoring position who are left on base per game is up, extra base hits (in total and individually, i.e. doubles, triples and HRs)/game are down.  And more.  The Mets were not great offensively last year, especially in the clutch or with RISP generally.  They are worse this year in virtually every category.

Of course, a team doesn't have to be great offensively to have a good year.  They will need, however, to be better defensively, which is a combination of pitching and fielding.   It's hard to judge overall fielding performance.  For example, the 2025 Mets finished with .986 fielding percentage, which was the league average. On the other hand, they committed 63 errors compared to a league average of 49.  Errors contribute negatively to run prevention, but there are ways of preventing runs that have nothing to do with reducing errors.  

A less than eye-popping defense

I think it is fair to say that the Mets fielding defense has not been crisp to this point, in part a result of a number of individuals being forced to play out of position, e.g. Baty in right, Bichette at 3rd and anyone and everyone at 1st.  It is hard to fathom that the Mets have no actual 1B on their roster while currently having two natural 3B, another who has previously played 3B (Mauricio), while starting someone who has been a lifelong SS whose only other infield position had been 2B (Bichette).    The defense is not just a work in progress, but, at the moment seems more like a Spring Training  experiment.  It is early, but this is not how one would prefer to go into the season.  It could have gone worse, and may well have, had the Mets faced a harder early schedule.

The current infield alignment -- such as it is -- provides a very good example of the general claim that there are lots of different ways to fail.  Ostensibly, this team is stronger up the middle than last year's team, but weaker at the corners.  Bichette moving to 3B from SS is not akin to Rodriguez doing so for the Yankees.  Rodriguez was at least Jeter's equal at SS, if not better, and so his was an adjustment to a new position,  the angles and speed at which the ball got to him were the most important obstacles to his performing well, not his arm or his ability to cover the ground or handle the short hop, and bunt plays, which were among the obstacles Bichette has had to face, some of which would have followed him to any position on the infield.

I have expressed the view before that it is a cardinal sin defensively to make two moves rather than one, when doing so makes you weaker at both positions.  Baty had made himself a better than average defensive 3rd baseman and moving him out for Bichette, who is decidedly less than average defensively at the position, makes the team worse defensively both at third and at whatever position Baty is being asked to play on a regular basis.

The Mets played all last year with something of a defensive liability in Pete Alonso at 1st base . A defensive liability on balance, Alonso was not without some defensive excellence, e.g. digging throws out of the dirt.  Second base defense was barely adequate as well.  This year's team, allegedly built around run prevention, features a better second baseman, a bevy of marginally worse and considerably less experienced first basemen, the same SS and a considerably worse 3rd baseman.  

I am excited (and surprised) by Alvarez's offensive improvement, but he is not a defensive asset.  I have my doubts about his ability to call a good game.  He's a work in progress, but the comparison with Torrens' defense is far from encouraging.

 Starting Rotation

In many ways the bullpen and starting rotation are, for me, both the most promising and the most disappointing units on the team  With the exception of Peterson, who seems to have inherited the Tylor McGill malady of having at least one inning every game blow up on him, the remainder of the starters have been very good and at times downright impressive -- which is not to say that they have solved the problem that last year's crew created.  While last year's rotation was both individually and collectively unable to pitch deep into games leading to overburdened and eventually burnt out bullpen, this year's group has improved about 1/2 inning's worth in their starts,  leaving the bullpen with fewer innings to cover  I worry that this improvement will be fleeting.  

If his last start is indicative, Senga is not likely to offer consistently deep starts if he continues pitching on regular rest.  He's provided more than ample evidence that he is at his best -- which is really quite excellent -- on more rest than the norm for others.

Senga can be brilliant.  He has an extraordinary assortment of pitches, but every one of them works off his fastball.  In his three starts on 'regular rest', his fastball velocity has dropped consistently, so much so that in his last start, he barely threw his four seamer, let alone deployed it to set up his other pitches.   Hitters waited on the breaking balls and laid off the ghost fork ball.  When Senga can't beat you with the fastball at least once an at bat, he has no comparative advantage to exploit.  

Holmes is a 5+ innings pitcher as is Peralta.  Senga is a 6+ innings pitcher on 5 days rest.  Who knows how many innings/game he can be counted on when he is asked to take the ball on less rest.

McLean is the ace of the staff, or is he?

ou may recall the following basketball joke.

Q: Who was the last person to hold Michael Jordan to under 20 pts/game?

A: His coach,  Dean Smith.

I'm sure you get the point.  

McLean will never become the ace until he is treated as the ace.  That doesn't mean letting him throw 125 pitches.  It means holding him accountable for getting himself out of jams of his own making.  No manager should see his job as protecting his player's from failing.  Failing is part of their development.  You want them to fail, if they must, in the context of a safe and supportive environment.  It's not all that different from how parents should address their children's accountaiblity and autonomy .  You can't prevent your kids from pain, harm and disappointment.  And a manager shouldn't even try to do so.  

Bullpen

With the exception of Edwin Diaz, last year's bullpen was a mess, one of such magnitude that it had a multitude of causes: overuse, injury incompetence, and especially the disastrous performance of the starting rotation. This year, the bullpen has been uneven at best.  There are structural issues that may emerge later in the year if we can't get good performances when called upon by some of our top tier minor leaguers who will join the major league team from time to time.  And it will be worse if Peterson and Manaea don't come around.

Setting the problems the starting rotation creates for the bullpen aside for the moment, the bullpen (over the first three weeks of the season) was structurally unsound -- no matter how well it would have performed, and at times, did.

Williams has done well as a closer, but he is not a 'lights out' closer: more a Hoffman than a Rivera.   The Mets had no long relievers last year; this year they have two.  With two long relievers, the team began the season (in cold weather, with starters not yet stretched) with an effective day-to-day bullpen of 6 pitchers, two of whom have proven inadequate to the task -- Garcia and Lovelady --  both  recently DFA'd

Considering that closers rarely pitch other than in closing situations that leaves a bullpen of 3 day in, day out relievers, in addition to a one inning closer who could in principle pitch 2 out of 3 days.  Overuse of the bullpen, especially this early in the season when starters haven't been stretched out sufficiently, is certain to follow.   

It gets worse. To minimize the extent of the overuse of the day to day relievers, at least one, if not both of the long relievers -- Myers and Manaea -- would have to be used in high leverage situations,  sometimes off schedule.  Alternatively, Lovelady and Garcia would be put in situations they were not suitable for.  The worst approach would be using both the long relievers and the least suited for high leverage usage -- the former off schedule, the latter at all.  This is what the manager ended up doing,  

The underlying problem was structural and not of his doing.  Still, his decision making approach ended up weakening the pens' ability to perform optimally but turning one unavoidably suboptimal outcome into two.

We simply do not have enough relievers who can be called upon regularly who can be trusted to perform to a reasonable standard.  Maybe that will change.  Minter's return should help, if healthy and adequately ramped up. , and he will be a substantial upgrade provided he is healthy when he returns.  I don't believe anyone should count on Kimbrel finding a fountain of youth.  At best, he will be serviceable -- which is nothing to sneeze at!

No team with championship aspirations can afford to have any relievers whose best use is mopping up.  The situation is a function of the widespread practice among managers to minimize the extent to which starters face the opposing lineup a third time.  

In the case of the Mets, the situation is worsened by the obvious fact that one of the starters needs an additional day of rest more often than not, and a manager who has shown himself to have an itchy trigger finger.  If we have to live with both of these features of the team, we have to plan for it.  And that means we will have to treat the 6th and 7th innings of most games as high leverage situations.  Everyone in the pen has to be up to the task of meeting the moment.

Bullpens are historically unpredictable.  The relievers the Dodgers were initially counting on,performed especially poorly.  Yet they won the world series.  Hopefully we find help from our minor leaguers and can pull off a trade or two at the deadline to bring in higher level reinforcements.

Manager

The construction of the roster is on Stearns, not Mendoza.  Just think what a mess we would be in had Stearns not acquired Peralta and Myers.  Which is not meant as praise.  It is more a reflection of where the pitching staff Stearns had assembled prior to the late in the offseason trade with the Brewers would have looked like. 

The manager has overworked the bullpen, especially, Weaver and Myers.  I don't know what he is doing with Manaea, or what one would do with him at this point. He has put Garcia in high leverage situations and used Lovelady, while he was with the team, as if he were the Everready battery man.  His approach to the starting rotation is puzzling at best.  He kept Peralta in to help him get a win, but he pulled McLean, his. purported ace to be, when he faced adversity of his own doing when he reached the 'magic mark' of 100 pitches.  Isn't the real issue, not the number of pitches as such, but the demand, the stress of the circumstances under which they are thrown?

And hasn't Senga provided enough evidence that if he is to be moved to a 'regular rest' spot, he should be eased into it.  Last Saturday, he not only barely threw his four seamer, he barely had one to throw.   I'd pitch him with additional rest right up through the All-Star game and reevaluate his usage then.  This is clearly a case in which it makes sense to be cautious.

We have a manager giving his catcher and center fielder days off as they work towards being able to provide high quality performance over a full season, yet he can't give Senga an additional day off in spite of all the evidence suggesting that that day may well make all the difference in the world to his performance. 

The way a team plays reflects its manager's temperament.  The Mets are playing without a sense of urgency.  They seem listless.

Let me put it another way.  We gave up a number of potential home runs in the offseason through trades (Nimmo) and free agency (Alonso).  I was all for it.  On the other hand, I took the changes to mean that we were going to find another way to score runs -- and to do so throughout the lineup.  I thought we were going to play a different style of baseball: work the pitchers, waste good pitches, make contact, put pressure on the defense, have them on their heals, use our speed to move them out of position, making them defensively vulnerable.  Isn't that what you thought too?  Where is the energy? The pressure?  The fun?  We look resigned to every defeat, and satisfied to move on to the next game.  I don't know anyone who has gotten what they have aspired to attain by accepting anything less.  

Every player in every sport has to learn to cope with adversity.  Managers have to as well.  Part of doing so is a matter of temperament, an ability to remain calm.  Mendoza is terrific when it comes to calm in the face of adversity.  The leader can't panic, and he doesn't.  This is an important team-facing attribute.  Players don't want to see panic in the manager's eyes.

On the other hand, the real point of remaining calm is to stay clear headed so that one can address the situation thoughtfully.  Managing through adversity provides the opportunity for the manager to actually add value, to be the source of additional, sometimes unexpected wins.  So far, over two plus years, Mendoza hasn't shown that he can do that.  Even the magical run two years ago was triggered by leadership among a handful of the players, not the manager.  

I wish I could say that the manager is not part of the problem, but I have no basis for that judgment.  I am, alas, pessimistic.




Steve Sica- The Next Rising Met Prospect?

Photo Credit: Bella Dunning

2025 saw a surge in Met hitting prospects. Names like Carson Benge, Jacob Reimer and A.J Ewing all had monster years which not only accelerated their rankings on the top prospect list, but also their development as each of them were promoted, some even getting multiple promotions through the 2025 season.

As we've gone about a week and a half through the 2026 season. Carson Benge is with the Mets, Reimer and Ewing are with Double-A, with Reimer off to the slow start, but Ewing, picking up right where he left off in 2025, flirting with a .400 batting average. Which Met prospects this year will see a similar rise?

One of the names I'm keeping an eye on this year is the very much hyped, Elian Pena, who at 18-years-old has put up an OPS of .933 in his first eight games in Low-A. Not bad, considering he skipped over the FCL and came to St. Lucie straight from the Dominican Summer League. Mitch Voit, the Mets first round draft pick last year, is another player I'm excited to watch this summer. A nice blend of contact and speed, Voit is currently with High-A Brooklyn, after showing off his stuff last summer in Low-A St. Lucie.

One name that really stands out to me though, and someone who looks to be adjusting to perhaps the toughest MiLB level in Double-A is outfielder Eli Serrano III.

The Mets drafted Serrano, no relation to the 1989 movie Major League slugger, in the fourth round of the 2024 draft out of North Carolina State. His first professional season found him in Brooklyn for all of 2025. He didn't turn a lot of heads in that time, batting just .222 with an OPS of .690. Keep in mind, as a left hander, he's not the first player to struggle in Coney Island, with the wind coming off the ocean cutting potential home runs into routine fly balls. Serrano saw his power numbers plummet because of this. The potential though is still there, as Serrano came into 2026 ranked at the Mets number 13 prospect per MLB Pipeline.

The Mets had enough confidence in Serrano to give him a bump to start this year in Double-A. So far, he's proven them right. In his first seven games with Binghamton, he's batting .320, has an OPS of .979, he's reached base in every game he's played so far, and has two doubles and two triples, in 25 at-bats. 

The key attributes in Serrano's game are power and plate discipline. Standing at 6'5 he can grow into his frame to become an intimidating presence at the plate. He mashed 16 home runs during his two years with NC State. He also is excellent at making contact. Despite his struggles in 2025, he only struck out 77 times in 324 at-bats and would walk 50 times. He's still a youngster, turning 23 in May, and is projected to make the Major Leagues by next season.

Serrano is one of a few promising hitting prospects that are coming up the Met system. He's flown a bit under the radar, as Carson Benge has been the most hyped outfielder for the last couple years. But if the early successful results continue for Serrano, he's going to start to come up in more conversations about the Mets' future and I'd image he could rocket up to at least the top-ten Met prospect list by mid-season. 

Paul Articulates - Who's on first?


The redesigned New York Mets are having a first base problem.  When they decided that Pete Alonso was too expensive and not defensively adept enough for their new "run prevention" roster build, they turned to former middle-infielder Jorge Polanco to fill the gap.

This was a gamble because Polanco had a total of one play worth of experience at first base.  He also had spent the entire 2025 season as a designated hitter, so his overall fielding skills would be rusty and his knowledge of the first base position was limited.  During the spring, he spent the first three weeks on the backfield doing drills and had no competitive repetitions.  Then he slowly built up to playing half games in the last two weeks.  Once the regular season started, he started a handful of games before being relegated to the bench to nurse a sore achilles.  This left a hole at first again.

Since that time, the Mets have fielded a variety of first basemen in their lineups, including Mark Vientos, Brett Baty, and Jared Young.  Much like the spring when Polanco was on the backfields, these substitutes were rotated through the position like a revolving door with none seeing enough repetitions to become proficient.  Each has shown some capability, but the truth is that none of them, including Polanco, is showing the kind of anticipation and range at the position that makes a first baseman great.  Vientos and Young have both made some great scoops of errant throws in the infield, but we all remember that Pete was good at that too.  Pete turned in negative DRS and OAA numbers, and these replacements are on the same track.

Anticipation of where the ball is going is a mixture of good baseball IQ and a lot of experience in position.  I will not judge any of the candidates for their baseball IQ, but I will say that the Mets need to pick one player that they think is best and stick with him to develop the skill.  Range is related to quickness and although it is helped by anticipation, it cannot be taught.  

Meanwhile, in the minor leagues, other first base candidates are not showing readiness.  Ryan Clifford was touted as a big power bat that would eventually be ready for the position, but he has a huge problem with his K-rate in the minors which would lead to a worse problem against MLB pitching.  JT Schwartz showed promise early in his career, but had a horrible offensive year in AA last year.  He is probably the best defensive first baseman in the system, but unless he hits there will be no promotion.  Chris Suero is an upcoming candidate who can play multiple positions including first, but he needs more seasoning right now.  There are no easy call-up options.

Back in the majors, Vientos, Baty, and Young have shown highs and lows with the bat.  When Polanco is fully healthy, he has the healthiest bat of the four.  When Vientos and Baty are hitting well they are capable of contributing to the offense, but it needs to be consistent for the offense to deliver.

This leads me to the question of the day: Who should the Mets plant at first and leave there?

    Brett Baty - currently hitting .231/.222/.327

    Mark Vientos - currently hitting .263/.293/.395

    Jared Young - currently hitting .350/.391/.450

    No one - continue rotating the players through the position 

I look forward to your comments.

Tom Brennan - The Horror Show Continues


Can We Go Back to the Start of Spring Training in 2024, When the Mets Had REAL Hitters? 

We are back to those ugly days. The 1968 Mets have returned, the ones that averaged a lethal 2.9 runs per game.

Yes sir, David Peterson made a fatal mistake last night. Unforgivable.

He surrendered a run. The Mets were shut down completely at the plate once again, losing for nothing on three hits. 4-0 loss.

Yes, Soto is missing. But this team that David Stearns designed has water in the gas tank. The car has broken down. In five of the last six games, the Mets have scored a total of three runs.

I truly get the sense that it’s time to strap in. David has miscalculated. 

It’s going to be a very bumpy ride.

LINDOR WATCH: 0-4, .176, no RBIs. 

Where is Luisangel Acuna when you need him?


John From Albany: 40 Years Ago - Hojo's error sinks Mets in 13th inning, 4/14/1986

NY Newsday 4/15/1986

1986, the last year the Mets won the World Series.  This daily post will detail the game by game journey to that Fall Title.  Click here for More Mets History and Calendar Classics.


Year: 1986; Game #5; Monday; Apr 14, NYM 2 STL 6; boxscore; 13 innings; WP: Perry; LP: Niemann; Time: 04:21; DAY; Attendance: 47,752; Record: 2-3; Standings: 4; Games up/behind: 2.5; L; 


Lenny Dykstra CF; 1 for 5; SB; 1 walk; Tim Teufel 2B-1B; 0 for 4; SF; 1 RBI; 1 walk; 2 Ks; Keith Hernandez 1B; 1 for 4; Wally Backman PR-2B; 0 for 2; SB; 1 run; Gary Carter C; 1 for 4; GDP; 2 walks; Darryl Strawberry RF; 1 for 5; 1 RBI; 1 K; George Foster LF; 0 for 4; 1 walk; Ray Knight 3B; 0 for 2; GDP; 1 run; 1 walk; 1 K; Howard Johnson PH-3B; 0 for 2; Rafael Santana SS; 0 for 4; 1 walk; 1 K; Dwight Gooden P; 0 for 1; SH; Kevin Mitchell PH; 0 for 1; 1 K; Danny Heep PH; 0 for 1; 1 K; Dwight Gooden; 8 innings; 2 runs; 2 ERs; 5 hits; 1 walk; 6 Ks; Roger McDowell; 2 innings; no runs; 1 hit; 2 Ks; Jesse Orosco; 2 innings; no runs; 1 hit; 2 walks; 3 Ks; Randy Niemann, L (0-2); 0 inning; 2 runs; 2 ERs; 1 hit; Bruce Berenyi; 1 inning; 2 runs; 1 ER; 2 hits; 1 walk; 1 K; 


Media Panic was starting to set in with the Mets managing just 4 hits over 13 innings as they fall below .500, a 2-3 record to start the 1986 campaign.  In their home opener, Darryl Strawberry's single tied the game at 2 with 1 out but with the winning run on 3rd, George Foster popped up to the catcher and Howard Johnson popped up to short.  In the 13th, Howard Johnson's bases loaded error allowed the Cards to take the lead.  Mets went down 1,2,3 in the bottom of the 13th.  Though the season did not start the way fans hoped - things were about to change as the Mets would soon embark on one of their longest winning streaks in team history.


Steve Jacobson of NY Newsday had this to say about this game: "Besides, it was the Cardinals, The Mets were 8-10 with them last season and wound up three games behind them in the standings.  And one of the limited number of golden starts Gooden can make against the Cardinals was wasted - lost and gone forever.  That makes it more than just one game of 162."

 


NL East Standings 4/14/1986
Tm W L W-L% GB RS RA pythW-L%
STL51.833--2912.834
PIT32.600 1.52011.749
PHI33.500 2.03032.471
MON23.400 2.51326.220
NYM23.400 2.52528.448
CHC14.200 3.5921.175
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 4/14/1986.

4/13/26

Tom Brennan - I Need Your Predictions


The West Coast

No. The ice-cold Mets cannot take the rest of the season off to recuperate.

They in point of fact hit the road with 3 west coast night games against the Los Angeles Dodgers, followed by a Thursday travel day.


Crows Fly in the Windy City


That will be followed by 3 day games in Wrigley Field vs. the Cubs.

Questions:

How many of the games will the Mets win? 

 - Or, if you’d prefer, how many of the games will the Mets lose?

How many of the games will end in Edwin Diaz saves?

Will Francisco Lindor (with no RBIs this year) have an RBI before the trip’s over?

Have at it.

Ernest Dove - Cyclones broadcaster Justin Rocke reflects on journey

Cyclones broadcaster Justin Rocke reflects on journey, championship run and evolving minor league landscape


For Justin Rocke, the road to calling games on Coney Island has been anything but linear.

Now entering his fourth season as the voice of the Brooklyn Cyclones, Rocke has built a career defined by movement, persistence and a deep-rooted connection to the New York Mets organization he grew up supporting.

“It feels like it was just yesterday that I started,” Rocke said. “This is going to be my fourth season with the Cyclones and my 11th year in minor league baseball.”

Rocke’s journey began in 2014 and has included stops across Florida and Tennessee, with experience spanning multiple levels of the minors. Along the way, he’s seen top prospects pass through organizations, including time with the former Kingsport Mets and St. Lucie Mets.

A Brooklyn native raised in New Jersey, returning home to work for the Cyclones carried special meaning.

“As a New York guy, I always hoped to come back home,” Rocke said. “To be with the Cyclones the last few years, especially growing up in a Mets household, it’s been a privilege.”

Calling a winner

That privilege reached another level during the 2025 season, when Brooklyn fielded one of the most dominant teams in minor league baseball.

Rocke, who had rarely experienced consistent winning earlier in his career, found himself calling playoff games for the first time.

“Last year was my 10th year in minor league baseball — it was the first time I’d ever called games in the playoffs,” he said. “I’ve called more winning with the Mets organization than I had in my previous seven or eight years combined.”

The Cyclones’ first-half performance — a 46-20 record and the best winning percentage in the minors — set the tone for a season defined by resilience and late-game heroics.

“You knew they had a chance to win every single night,” Rocke said. “It didn’t matter if they were down one run or four runs late — they had the firepower to come back.”

That group, featuring rising prospects like A.J. Ewing and others, helped establish what Rocke described as a “comeback” identity — one that carried throughout the organization as players earned promotions.

A historic season meets a historic year

The 2026 season adds another layer of significance as Brooklyn celebrates its 25th anniversary.

For Rocke, the milestone connects directly to his childhood memories of following Mets prospects and the early days of the franchise.

“To be part of the 25th anniversary campaign is really special,” he said.

The Cyclones plan to commemorate the season with a series of promotions, including a championship ring giveaway honoring the franchise’s 2001 co-title season, which was impacted by the events of September 11 attacks.

Additional initiatives include fan voting for an all-time 25th anniversary team and retro jersey giveaways celebrating the club’s early years.

“It’s been a lot of fun going through the names and the history,” Rocke said. “You remember guys who made it to the big leagues and others who were huge in Brooklyn but never quite got there.”

The challenge behind the mic

While fans hear a polished broadcast, Rocke says the preparation behind each game can be unpredictable — especially in today’s minor league environment, where roster turnover is constant.

“You can show up to the ballpark and one, two, three or four names are different,” he said. “Sometimes you’re scrambling the day of the game trying to gather as much information as possible.”

Advancements in technology have made the job easier, but challenges remain — particularly when opposing teams make last-minute changes.

“There are times you find out mid-game that someone isn’t who you thought they were,” Rocke said with a laugh. “You just have to have fun with it.”

Building relationships that last

Beyond the stats and storylines, Rocke emphasized the human side of the job — particularly the relationships formed with players and their families.

“You don’t always realize the impact you have until you hear it from them,” he said. “You’re the voice for their family and friends back home.”

Those connections often come full circle when players reach higher levels. Rocke recalled reconnecting with former players years later, including moments that highlight the lasting bond between broadcaster and athlete.

“When you get those reactions, especially when they’re not expecting to see you, it’s unforgettable,” he said.

A changing minor league landscape

As minor league baseball continues to evolve — with fewer teams and tighter roster limits — Rocke says fans are seeing more experienced players remain at levels like High-A longer than in the past.

“It’s a mix of both — depth and the new normal,” he said. “There’s just a logjam sometimes. It’s not always about performance.”

That reality has been evident in Brooklyn, where several returning players from the 2025 championship team are back to start 2026.

Rocke views it as an opportunity rather than a setback.

“The message is simple: go out there, dominate, and force their hand,” he said.

For broadcasters, the added familiarity can even be a benefit.

“It saves a lot of prep time,” Rocke said. “But more importantly, it builds trust. When new players come in and see how returning guys interact with you, that respect carries over.”

More than just a game

Rocke also works as an on-air personality for SiriusXM and has experience with outlets like WFAN, but his role in minor league baseball remains uniquely meaningful.

“I’m just calling baseball games,” he said. “But when you realize what it means to families who are thousands of miles away, it becomes something bigger.”

As the Cyclones open a milestone season, Rocke’s voice will once again serve as the bridge between the field and those listening — a role he continues to embrace with appreciation.

“It’s special,” he said. “It really is.”

To watch the full interview on The New York Mets Dove Report on YouTube @ernestdove click here


Paul Articulates - Saying it out loud


It is still very early in the season. Too early to panic, too early to jump to conclusions, but not too early to wonder what is happening to the Mets this year.

In the early season with a team that is mostly re-built from last season, it is natural that time is needed for everyone to gel.  

The synchronization between players on double plays, pickoffs, and 3-1 putouts always needs fine tuning when there are new players involved.

There are a whole lot of new coaches, and sometimes it takes a while for their instructions and guidance to be fully understood and operationalized.  

All of these are justifications I developed in my mind for a slow start to the season.  My mental model of the 2026 Mets implied a shaky start with an evolving trend towards better play.  I have tried to fit this view of an evolving team with the reality on the field which is wildly inconsistent and it just hurts my head.  

Full team slumps; mentally tough players making multiple mental errors; and hot spring bats suddenly looking like they have been dipped in liquid nitrogen do not fit the mold.  

Here are several points that I am struggling with:

1) What is interrupting Francisco Lindor's focus?  Mendoza thinks he is doing all the work and preparation he always does, and he will say in all interviews that he is fine and just has to play better.  He is not all right and it is not his hamate that is causing this.

2) The revolving door of Baty, Vientos, and Young through the first base position while Polanco is nursing his achilles is disturbing.  Pick one and stick with it for a majority of games or none will be proficient at a very important defensive position.

3) If no one is hitting, the best defense should be on the field.  That includes Luis Robert Jr., Carson Benge, and Tyrone Taylor.  Everything else other than a spot start to rest a player jeopardizes the "run prevention" that this team was built around.

4) In the early season, pitching is usually ahead of the hitting.  The Mets' pitching staff is all over the place.  One day Senga is great, the next he is awful.  Same goes for Peterson and Weaver.  Stearns has already begun to spin the pitching carousel, putting Richard Lovelady on waivers and bring back Craig Kimbrell.  That doesn't feel like stability.

5) The Mets of the last few years were awful with runners in scoring position.  Much of the lineup was replaced.  Much of the coaching staff was replaced.  The Mets are currently awful with runners in scoring position.  There doesn't seem to be anything left to replace.  Is this a correctable deficiency or a curse?

There are also things going on that I could anticipate, and I have all the patience in the world for them to work out, including:

1) Carson Benge is going to be fine.  I agree with David Stearns - Carson has had some very good at-bats.  He has hit a few balls right at the defense and he has failed to get the barrel on some very nasty pitches, but that is expected with a rookie who is only two years into professional ball.  I see him swinging at the right pitches and taking the right pitches.  He is going to be good and I am glad the Mets are letting him find his way on the field.

2) Injuries are going to happen.  Losing Soto and most of Polanco early is painful, but it is part of the game.  I hope Holmes is okay.  We should have the depth to work through those issues.

3)  The team is going to have ups and downs, so a losing streak or winning streak should not be used to project performance for the entire year.  But getting swept at home by the homeless Athletics is a gut punch.  I will eventually forget this pothole if things get better.  (until the end of September when we need one more games to reach the playoffs)

Mets fans are used to living with adversity, and here we have it again.  If you are like me, these questions have been running through your head since March 26th.  I am just saying it out loud.

Reese Kaplan -- So What If the Mets Sold Stadium Naming Rights?


Given the losing streak marked by the invisible offense, torturous defense and uneven pitching it would be very easy to create a point by point analysis of what has gone wrong and why.  Believe me, countless fans, writers and professional baseball media outlets are already doing that slog through the mire and frankly it is hard to come up with something totally original or insightful to say in that regard.

Instead, let us focus our creative energies in a more acerbic and dark direction by following up on this weekend’s announcement that the Los Angeles Dodgers have capitulated to the easy money grab of selling the naming rights to their playing field which follows suit now with 23 of the 30 professional teams.  You’d think that with the deep pockets of the ownership and the post season revenues that have come into Chavez Ravine’s Dodgers coffers that this move is nothing more than a conspicuous and somewhat embarrassing means of passing out the hat taking big dollar donations for renaming the home of the boys in blue. 

Since Steve Cohen has yet to succumb to this same transparent greed methodology, it does call to mind the question of what would make for an appropriate Mets naming deal to reflect exactly what the team represents and fitting for how they’re performing on the national stage.  Let’s have a look:

Bacardi 151 Field

In the realm of drinking heavily which is perhaps the only way to view the current Mets team we could propose a sponsor of the special Bacardi 151 rum which is rated at just over 75% alcohol.  Not only would it be helpful in obliterating all sense of rational thought, but it could also relieve the brain from focusing on its suffering. 

Alka Seltzer Stadium

In the more medicinal realm, perhaps it would be time to revive the old “Plop, plop, fizz, fizz” slogan that helped make Alka Seltzer famous for its ability to relieve the headache, heartburn and indigestion caused by indulging in things not necessarily good for you.  It’s a well known product and regarded as effective at what it is designed to do.

ZzzQuil Mets

Continuing down this health oriented path, another option might be Proctor and Gamble’s popular ZzzQuil to help induce restful sleep, available even in a non-threatening gummy form that resembles candy.  Since the club is apparently sleepwalking through most of its games recently it seems that a parallel effect should also be made available to the fans, too.

Carson Coliseum

Finally, for the folks looking to salvage some silver lining from the otherwise less than glittering performances, maybe they need to consider the name of one of their starting players, Carson.  However, in this case it has a lot less to do with the unproductive hitting of the outfielder and more aligned with the major American manufacturer of magnifying products who might help folks identify something as yet unseen that would make these games worth watching. 

So have at it.  If the Mets were to join the sell out crowd collecting money for stadium naming rights who would be a good and appropriate sponsor to engage for this new Mets team identity?