I don’t know how to defend this anymore.
Not after today. Not after another blowout loss, 12–4 to the Cubs. Not after nine straight losses. Not after being outscored 56–16 during this stretch.
At some point, you run out of language like “small sample size” and “early.” At some point, April stops being a feeling-out period and starts becoming a warning sign.
We’re there.
This was supposed to be different. That’s the part that’s hardest to sit with tonight.
All offseason, we talked about a re-tooled Mets team. Younger. More athletic. More dynamic. Built to win different kinds of games. A system. A philosophy. Something sustainable, something modern, something that could actually close the gap between theory and October reality.
And right now? It looks completely broken. Not flawed. Not underperforming.
Broken.
The Numbers Are Bad. The Way They’re Bad Is Worse.
You can live with losing games in April. You can even live with a losing streak.
You cannot live with how this team is losing.
Blowouts
Early deficits
Pitching implosions
Defensive mistakes
Empty offense despite traffic
Today was the perfect microcosm.
Kodai Senga gave up seven runs in barely three innings.
The Cubs scored early and often, including another first-inning punch.
The Mets had hits — plenty of them — but almost no impact.
That’s not variance. That’s dysfunction.
Even worse, this isn’t isolated. The Cubs have scored 10+ runs in three straight games — and the Mets are making it look easy.
This isn’t one thing. It’s everything.
The System Isn’t Showing Up
What’s unsettling isn’t just the losing.
It’s the absence of identity.
We spent months talking about:
Run prevention
Athleticism
Defensive reliability
Pitching depth
A lineup that could pressure, not just slug
Where is any of that right now?
The defense has been sloppy. Errors, misplays, lack of execution.
The pitching has been inconsistent at best, disastrous at worst.
The offense? It’s producing 3.4 runs per game, near the bottom of the league.
Even the adjustments feel desperate.
Francisco Lindor — the centerpiece — is getting shuffled in the lineup because nothing is working.
That’s not process. That’s searching.
This Is Where It Gets Personal as a Fan
I’ll be honest — this one hits differently.
Because this wasn’t blind optimism.
This wasn’t “hope they figure it out.”
There was a real argument behind this team.
We saw the logic:
The roster construction made sense
The philosophy was coherent
The organization appeared aligned
And now? I don’t know how to explain what we’re watching.
It’s not just that they’re losing.
It’s that they look nothing like the team we thought we were getting.
And when that happens, you start questioning everything:
Was the roster evaluation wrong?
Did we overestimate the talent?
Is the system not translating to the field?
Or is this just a complete loss of confidence cascading through the roster?
Because right now, it looks like a team playing tight, reacting instead of dictating, waiting for something to go wrong — and then it does.
April Matters When It Looks Like This
You can say it’s early.
But here’s the problem:
This isn’t a 9-game stretch of coin-flip losses.
This is a 9-game stretch where the team has been thoroughly outplayed in every phase.
That travels. That becomes identity if it lingers.
And the standings don’t care when it happens — April losses count the same as September.
At 7–13, you’re not buried. But you’re no longer experimenting either.
You’re chasing.
So What Now?
This is the part where I’d normally pivot to solutions.
Adjustments. Regression candidates. Structural fixes.
I don’t have that tonight.
Because before you fix something, you have to understand what it is.
And right now, I don’t think we do.
This team doesn’t look like it has one problem. It looks like it has five — and they’re feeding each other:
Pitching instability creates early deficits
Early deficits force pressing at the plate
Pressing kills situational hitting
Defensive lapses extend innings
And suddenly every game spirals
That’s not a tweak.
That’s a reset.
Final Thought
This isn’t a “panic” post. It’s worse than that. It’s confusion.
Because the gap between what this team was supposed to be and what it actually is right now is wider than any of us expected.
And for the first time all offseason, I don’t feel like I can explain it. I can only watch it.
And right now, it’s ugly.



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