7/14/26

MACK - 2026 DRAFT - METS PICKS 6.181 - RHP Alex Petrovic - & 7.210 - RHP Aiden Keenan

 



Pick 6.181 – RHP Alex Petrovic - Auburn

Alex Petrovic (full name Alexander Basil Petrovic) is a right-handed pitcher for the Auburn Tigers (NCAA) who was selected by the New York Mets in the 6th round (181st overall) of the 2026 MLB Draft.

Born: May 27, 2004 (age 22) in Cypress, Texas.

Height/Weight: 6-5, 235 lbs

Bats/Throws: Right/Right.

Class: Redshirt sophomore in 2026.

High School: Concordia Lutheran (TX); was a highly regarded prospect in Texas with strong pitching and hitting credentials.

He has overcome significant injury challenges: stress fractures/inflammation in his throwing arm limited him to very low innings in his first two college seasons (only about 30 combined before 2026). A key mechanical fix at the Florida Baseball Armory in summer 2025 (addressing lower-body use and release to reduce elbow stress) helped him stay healthy and break out.

College Stats (2026 Breakout Season)

In 2026, Petrovic was one of Auburn’s key starters (often in game 3/start of series finales) for a strong Tigers team. He showed excellent command, durability, and competitiveness.

2026 stat line – 10-2, 3.21, 1.01, 92.2-IP, 92-K, 24-BB

A 1.01 WHIP in the SEC is quite the accomplishment

Notable: Complete-game shutout vs. Kentucky (SEC Co-Pitcher of the Week), strong road performances (e.g., vs. Florida), and leadership on the mound.

He posted low walk rates (strong strike-thrower) and solid strikeout production while handling high-leverage spots.

Repertoire (Pitch Mix)

Petrovic is described as a strike-thrower with a simple, repeatable delivery and a big, physical frame that aids projection. He mixes pitches well and works the edges.

From 2026 scouting reports and game looks (e.g., Perfect Game/college baseball coverage):

Fastball: Primary pitch. Sits low 90s (often 90-94), touches 93-96 mph. Used for whiffs when elevated; good command.

Changeup: Strong secondary with heavy fade/tumble and depth. Often 79-82 mph; plays well off the fastball and generates misses.

Slider/Sweeper: Sweeping action, 80-82 mph. Used as a putaway pitch.

Cutter: Bridge pitch around 86 mph; flashes to help against opposite-handed hitters or for weak contact.

He has shown 4 pitches overall and the ability to mix them effectively. In high school/early college, velocities were a bit lower (FB up to 92-93), but the mechanical changes and development have helped velocity and consistency.

Outlook

Petrovic profiles as a potential innings-eater/starter with plus command and pitchability rather than overwhelming raw stuff. His size, poise (often highlighted as unflappable), and improved health make him an intriguing mid-round pick. MLB Pipeline and others have called him a "finesse righty" with upside.

He is known for mental toughness (influenced by his Serbian heritage/family "inat" mindset) and has been a leader for Auburn.

MACK – Holy cow! Another damaged pitcher. What’s next? An arm some hospital named themselves after? The good news here is the pitching coaches seem to have straightened him out for his 2026 season. Maybe the Mets ought to hire those guys.

Rating:  B


Pick 7.210 - Pick 7.210  RHP Aiden Keenan - Stanford

Aidan Keenan (often spelled Aidan) is a right-handed pitcher (RHP) for the Stanford Cardinal. He is a junior (class of 2026) from Morgan Hill, California, who attended Live Oak High School.

He stands 6-2 and weighs 202 lbs, with a B/T of R/R.

Keenan had a meteoric rise in high school. He went from mid-70s velocity to touching 95+ mph, posting a 0.74 ERA with 75 strikeouts in 47 innings as a senior. He earned honors like Blossom Valley Athletic League Pitcher of the Year and was a highly regarded prospect (top-50ish nationally in some rankings), but he honored his commitment to Stanford instead of turning pro early.

At Stanford, he has been primarily a reliever but has moved into starting roles:

2024 (Freshman): Limited appearances (5 games, 2 starts), 6.75 ERA in 6.2 IP, but strong strikeout stuff and low batting average against (.174).

2025 (Sophomore): Team-high 24 appearances (mostly relief), 2-3 record, 5.59 ERA in 37 IP, 43 strikeouts, and 5 saves. He showed good command in spots and stranded inherited runners well.

2026 (Junior, through available data): More starting experience (6 starts in 7 appearances), 1-3 record, 5.82 ERA in ~21.2 IP, 25 strikeouts. He has had some strong outings (e.g., scoreless multi-inning relief) but has also dealt with walks and inconsistency in longer outings.

He has also pitched in the Cape Cod League (Falmouth Commodores) and summer ball (e.g., Santa Barbara Foresters). He is known as a good student (ACC All-Academic) with upside as a potential high draft pick in 2026.

 

Repertoire and Pitching Style

Keenan throws from a low three-quarters (borderline sidearm) slot with a long, loose arm action, fast arm speed, and good extension. This creates deception and a lower release point that can be tough on hitters. He has a lean, athletic, projectable frame.

Key pitches (based on scouting reports from high school/early college):

Fastball (primary pitch): Sits 92-95 mph (has touched 97-98 mph). It has good run/rise ("explodes" out of the hand) and is especially effective when elevated to the arm side. Generates swing-and-miss and weak contact.

Curveball/Slurve: High-spin (approaching 3,000 rpm), high-70s to low-80s. Big horizontal sweep with biting action; a swing-and-miss weapon, especially vs. righties. Sometimes described as a slurve with variance in shape.

Changeup: Low-80s, used sparingly but shows tumbling/fade that plays off the fastball.

Later reports (e.g., 2026 MLB Draft Combine) mention a four-pitch mix including a slider (harder breaking ball, e.g., 84-87 mph in college outings) and possibly a cutter. His slider has been called a "knockout" pitch in some appearances.

Strengths: Explosive stuff, strikeout ability (career K/9 around 10+ in college samples), deception from slot/arm speed.

Areas to improve: Consistency with command (walks have been an issue at times), developing a reliable third pitch for starting, and sustaining stuff/velocity deeper into outings.

Overall, Keenan is viewed as a high-upside arm with "thunderous stuff" who profiles as a potential starter or high-leverage reliever. His combination of velocity, movement, and slot makes him a tough matchup when he's on. Keep an eye on him in the 2026 MLB Draft cycle! For the latest stats, check Stanford's site or MLB.com.

MACK – Another reliever. This one, with a career of poor ERAs. Ya know, I’m thinking of eliminating this who series of posts. I’ll give it a few more picks to see if they can pick a healthy person and a starter that really is a starter.

Rating:   F

Steve Sica - Mets Top Prospect Midseason Update

Image courtesy of Kylie Richelle

We've reached the halfway point of the MLB season, and the Mets are 17 games under .500, the furthest under that mark they've been since 1995. While they're easily the most disappointing team in the first half of the season in MLB, and maybe in Mets history, let's check in on their top-five prospects.


1. RHP Jonah Tong:

It's been an up-and-down season for Tong and nothing like last season, when he was the best Met pitching prospect and one of the best in the game. In 2026, Tong struggled in Syracuse, putting up a 6.00 ERA in 66 innings pitched. His short time in the Majors, though, has shown improvement from his first stint last September. In ten innings with the Mets, he's posted a 3.60 ERA, although control remains an issue as he's given up seven walks to just seven strikeouts. 

I'd imagine we'll be seeing a lot more of Tong after the trade deadline. What would be encouraging to see would be if he can continue to put up serviceable big league numbers while pitching in a virtually zero pressure environment, as the last-place Mets will just be running out the clock in the second half of an awful season.

2. 1B Ryan Clifford:

Still the best power bat in the Met system, he's been notoriously streaky this year with Triple-A Syracuse. He leads the team with 16 home runs, but his offensive numbers have taken a dive from last year. He's batting just .196 in 86 games, which would be typical of his player profile, except his OPS is an abysmal .678, and he has 129 strikeouts to 38 walks.

Clifford didn't quite pan out like the Mets hoped he would when they traded for him in their 2023 fire sale. A similar sale will be happening again in a few weeks, but despite his shortcomings, like Tong, Clifford will likely find his way to Queens in the post-deadline wreckage. It'll be interesting to see if he can continue to hit for power and at least show that he could be a valuable piece off the bench down the line.

3. 3B Jacob Reimer:

No prospect had a bigger turnaround season for the Mets in 2025 than Jacob Reimer. He batted .282 with 125 hits, 32 doubles, 17 home runs, 77 RBIs, and had an OPS of .870 across High-A and Double-A.

Unfortunately, no Met prospect has had a bigger falloff than Reimer in 2026. He's been on the IL since mid-June, but wasn't putting up stellar numbers before that. In 50 games with Double-A Binghamton, he batted just .212 with a .723 OPS. He did retain some of the power he found last year, collecting 14 doubles and seven home runs, but 2026, much like the rest of the Met organization, will be a year Reimer would like to forget.

4. RHP Jack Wenninger:

In 2025, Jack Wenninger was seen by many as the Mets' second-best pitcher in Double-A behind Jonah Tong. The two made a dynamic duo at the top of the Binghamton rotation that would eventually lead to the Rumble Ponies claiming their first Eastern League title in 11 years. Wenninger put up an ERA of 2.92 in 135 innings pitched while striking out 147. 

2026, though, hasn't seen him repeat that success. He was promoted to Triple-A Syracuse to start the season, and the results have been mixed. At times, he's shown flashes of brilliance, holding opponents to a .221 batting average, but other times he reveals some cracks in his armor, allowing 44 walks in 79 innings pitched.

He started out strong in April with a 1.61 ERA, but got lit up in June to the tune of a 5.87 ERA. He's simmered down in July, pitching to a 1.54 ERA in his last two starts this month. 

Wenninger, I'd argue, is the Mets' best-looking, highly ranked prospect of the season so far, and it's more than likely we'll see him in Queens sometime in September.

5. SS Mitch Voit:

The MLB Draft was this past weekend, which means it's been exactly one year since the Mets drafted Mitch Voit with their first-round pick, 38th overall.

2026 has been a tale of two seasons for Voit. He got off to a slow start with High-A Brooklyn, batting just .224 in April and .214 in May. When the weather started getting hotter in June, so did Voit's offensive numbers. 

He batted .305 with an OPS of .901 last month. He clubbed three home runs, drove in 13 runs, and stole 12 bases while being caught just once. As the summer progresses, the 21-year-old is starting to look more comfortable in High-A.

The Mets would sure like to see Voit progress even further this year and next year. Outside of Carson Benge, the team has struck out with its first-round selections in the 2020's. Here's hoping that Benge and Voit can begin to turn that trend around.

Cautious Optimist -- The Mets Suck and No One's Going to Throw Us a Pity Party


 


Last week I laid out an incomplete and tentative of what we can call the roster goals for the 2027 Mets.  I just assumed that the roster I had begun to put together would be good enough to achieve my initial goals for the year (without unduly hampering the teams' ability to improve further from there), and ultimately to reach of period of sustained success.

This week we take on the second thought experiment, which asks: 

How close can we get to our goals given where are now? 

Answering that question requires an accounting of our assets and debits, the paths they foreclose and those that remain open. 

Let's begin with the debits, the liabilities that impose constraints on the pathway forward. 

It may strike some readers as odd, but the main liability we face is that every team we are competing with and hoping to deal with, and every player in free agency, knows exactly the position we find ourselves in.    

No one, and I mean, not a single rational person, believes David Stearns when he professes to believe in the talent on this team.  

This team plays the likes of Short and Wagaman; has relied heavily on Melendez and Vientos, and has demoted Mauricio as not good enough.  Stearns lauds Alvarez who has yet to hit ten homers this year and puts the fans on strike out alert every time he approaches the plate. 

If I am not mistaken the combination of Ewing and Benge have roughly the same number of homers as the power hitting trio of Baty, Alvarez and Vientos does.

The Mets stink, and worse everyone knows it.  How could they not.

If there is something worse than that, it is that everyone also knows that the owner is appalled by the situation and is committed to turning it around as soon as possible. There are no secrets.  Just urgency

This is not a strong negotiating position from which to begin the path forward. 

That is the main liability.  But not the only one.  Let's take a close look at the team's roster as doing so will reveal additional liabilities, enough in fact to cripple a financially less well endowed team. 

Here's my assessment of the current Mets roster.  You may disagree with some of my particular assessments, but set those differences aside for the moment and let's look at the big picture, which is downright disheartening.

1. Absolutely top tier players on the roster:  Juan Soto, Francisco Lindor, Bo Bichette.  These are the guys any team would want to have playing for them (other things being equal).  Only Soto is a superstar, however. That's ok as many contending teams have no real superstars. Beyond Soto, it's fair to say that Lindor is among the best at his position, arguably, even a possible Hall of Famer.  Bichette is invariably among the best hitters in baseball with an uncanny ability to hit with runners in scoring position.

2. Plus major league players on the roster (based on either career performance or projections): McLean, Ewing, Benge, Weaver, Holmes, Scott. I'm being generous here in counting rookies and second year players who have not established a significant record of achievement.  I am projecting their futures, and I could turn out to be mistaken in my assessment.

The sad part, however, is that without this charitable projection, the team would be absolutely bereft of genuinely plus quality major leaguers.  Arguably, neither Weaver nor Holmes is truly a plus major leaguer but again they would be welcome additions on virtually any contending team -- even the Dodgers, Braves and Yankees.

3. Better than major league average, but not truly plus players on the roster:  Peralta, Minter, Brazoban, Williams and Torrens

4. Major league average players on the roster (at this point in their careers):  Polanco, Taylor

5. Superior back-up or bench players on the roster: Taylor, Torrens

6. Players who do not belong on any contending teams' major league roster (at this point in their careers): Melendez, Hagaman, Brujan, Vientos, Baty, Senga, Robert (I am including some who've seen time in Queens this year, and while they are not on the roster now may find their way back at a moment's notice)

7. Players who at this point in their careers are marginal major leaguers, some of whom are especially marginal given their contracts:  Manaea, Young, Semien, Tobias, Perez.

8. Most overhyped and rated player: Alvarez

If this list does not depress you, then I implore you to look not just at the names in each category, but the salaries and contracts associated with so many who have no business being on a contending team.  Robert, Semien, Manaea and Senga are marginal to worse and yet are among the club's highest paid players.  Add Polanco to the list given what he has contributed this year and that's a cool 100m of salary going to players whose performance falls somewhere between meh and drech.  

I don't doubt that there are other teams as poorly constructed as are the Mets.  We are not measuring ourselves against the worst, but against the better and, heaven help us, the best.

What to make of this state of affairs?

We can not pretend that it isn't as bad as it is.  We have a number of people we are paying way too much for who are basically untradable and unplayable.  

Tell me if I am missing the boat here, but as I see it, the only players on the current roster who would definitely belong on a highly competitive or championship aspiring team are:  

Soto, Lindor, Bichette, Ewing, Benge, Weaver, Holmes, Torrens and Taylor as backups and Scott based on a mix of performance and possibility.

Others that would be reasonable additions to that group include, Minter, Raley, Brazoban and Williams in the right role.

That's a grand total of 14 players. 

But that doesn't mean we have 14 keepers and 12 we should trade.  Would that it were that simple.  Many of the 12 who we shouldn't keep will bring us somewhere between bubkus and very little in trade, and then only if we pay down their salary.

A few years ago we had two pitchers making over 40 million/year and we had to pay their salaries in order to get a total of 3 allegedly high end prospects in trades for them.  Two of the prospects we secured are gone (Gilbert and Acuna) and doing precious little to help their new teams.  The third remains in our organization and is well on his way to setting an all time minor league strike-out record (Clifford).  

There is literally no one we could trade -- other than Soto or Lindor-- who could bring us prospects as good as the three that Verlander and Scherzer did. 

Worse, the players who can generate decent returns fall largely among the 14 players we would be happy to keep.  As the saying goes, you can't have your cake and eat it.  So we will have to part ways with some of the 14 we would otherwise want to keep, which means that we will need to add more than 12 additional major leaguers to our roster to compete.

But let's see what trades we could make.

At the trade deadline, relievers bring decent returns. In our case,  that means Weaver, Minter, Raley and Brazoban.  Well then, they would not be part of the 14 players we could count on for next year. We are now down to 11.  Only Weaver could bring back players near major league ready or likely ultimately to have a shot at a place in Queens.

Worse, the 100m group of Semien, Polanco, Manaea, Senga and Robert are untradable unless we pay most of Semien's, Polanco's, Senga's and Manaea's salaries; and even if we do, we shouldn't expect returns equal to those we would get from trading Peralta and Weaver straight up.

We can't trade Bichette, given his contract because he has all the leverage.  In addition, let's be honest, can you imagine how much worse we would be without him.

I hope this exercise makes it clear just how flawed a team we have actually been for the past three years.  We have never had an abundance of talent during this period.  The fact is that the Mets over-performed for six months and had a magical run.  But that was not sustainable given the overall talent level.  The proof has been in what has happened since.  Our Mets (talent wise) are much closer to what we have seen over the course of the past season and a half than what we tricked ourselves into believing what they were during the magical season. 

The real Mets are simply not very good.  Truth is they are really bad.

What can we do?

Numero Uno has nothing to do with addressing the major league roster.

The Mets have to fix what they are doing developmentally. If not, they will be caught up in periods of overspending on FAs and making too many trades.  And never experience anything other than episodic success.

Two:

We have to build an anchor.  I've argued that the most efficient and important anchor is provided by a starting rotation.  As I see it, building the strongest starting rotation we can, one that is about as good as any in the majors, means signing two FA pitchers. One must be Skubal regardless of price.  Another should be either Ryan or Gausman on shorter term deals if possible.  

So I can see how we go from where we are now to an anchor of a rotation featuring: Skubal, Ryan/Gausman McLean, Holmes, Scott, Santucci and Thornton as spot starter and long man.  All it takes is money.  Not cheap but doable.

We are closer to building a contender-quality outfield than we are at creating an equally imposing starting rotation, but the latter is more important over the long run.  The outfield is our 'low hanging fruit.' We don't move Ewing and leave the outfield as is, adding only Morabito and resigning Taylor.

So I can see how we go from where we are now to an excellent outfield featuring: Soto, Ewing, Benge with Morabito and Taylor backing them up.

Getting to a stable infield that is good offensively and defensively is going to be a lot more difficult.  We need a power bat in the infield and we are not likely to find one.  In fact, we are going to be challenged for power throughout the line-up.  We need to own up to that.

We have Voit who should be ready in a year or two.  In the interim, I am buying into RVH's suggestion that we sign Arraez to 2yr contract with an option.  I still prefer a trade for Contreras, but if Boston played the Mets another six games, they'd be in the heart of the race in the American League East and would no longer be potential sellers.  In that case, I would pursue RVH's suggestion that we sign Walker as a FA for a year.

Let's say we can put together a decent infield whose floor is relatively high, whose ceiling is not, and is overall not perfectly time aligned with our outfield or starting rotation.

Speaking of the rotation, it's equally difficult to imagine how we put together as good or better a bullpen than the one we have this year especially because our best trade chips are relievers, and, to express the obvious, you can't build a contender quality bullpen if you trade your most valuable relievers -- and trade we must. 

The Mets' best relievers are: Weaver, Mintor, Raley, in that order, then a toss up between Williams and Brazoban.  The only two under contract are Weaver and Williams.  The other three are free agents, so you have to trade them because you are not going to give any of them a qualifying offer. Moreover, given the year's they've each had, they would all want to explore the FA market, so there is no hope of extending any of them before the season ends.

The problem is exacerbated by the fact that though Weaver is under control for next year, he is the Mets' reliever most likely to garner high end prospects in a trade. The problem is that if you trade Weaver, your bullpen is measurably worse. 

I'd be willing to trade Williams, but his contract is a barrier and his performance over the past two seasons as a closer for the Yankees and Mets raises reasonable concerns about whether he is up to the task at this point in his career.  So I probably can't trade him without paying down a part of his salary and I can't imagine that I would get back something all that good in return.

My best option for next year is to hold on to both Williams and Weaver and maybe reverse their roles.  I have to settle for trading the other three at the deadline and seeing if i want to enter the FA bidding for any of them in the offseason.  

A bullpen is like an insurance policy you take out on your investment in starting pitching.  The Mets cannot afford to get worse in the bullpen given their investment in starting pitching.  But it is hard to see how they avoid doing so. 

We're not done assessing the Mets' current situation, but it's worth summarizing our initial observations and the likely situation it puts the Mets in as far as the goal of competing next year goes.

Let's review where we stand so far 

We don't have to do much to ensure that we put out a top tier outfield alignment on the field day in and day out.  

If we refuse to be outbid on Skubal, we can get pretty close to guaranteeing that we have one of the best starting rotations in the majors.

Those two accomplishments would be genuine achievements on the road to sustained success. 

A great starting rotation calls for a heavy investment in the insurance a good bullpen provides.  Yet our bullpen is the most likely unit to be torn down as several of the relievers we count on are pending free agents, who we lose one way or another.

Worse, we will do Ok in those trades, but nowhere near as well as we would were we to make Weaver available.  But doing so is basically a sin since he is the best of the bunch and under our control for next year!  

I don't think we can feel confident that we can give up the likes of Weaver, Minter, Raley and Brazoban and maintain a quality bullpen. Quite the contrary.

Short of massive expenditures on free agent relievers our best hope is in the top tier relievers we have in the minors including Lambert and Ross, both of whom have been spotty this year.  The other wild card is Tong who may be promoted to the majors to serve as a high leverage reliever until the team decides whether he can become of rotation worthy starter.

The infield requires work just to be in the same general league as starting pitching and the outfield.   No matter what we do we will face a shortage of power in the infield. We are looking to create a high baseline holding pattern in the infield.  If we do better than that -- great.  We just can't afford to do worse than that.

One more issue.

Trade Alvarez

I want to go on record in favor of trading Alvarez.  I have never been sold on him offensively.  No one is sold on him defensively.  He plays the hardest position to fill for most teams.  A competition for his services is the only other asset we have (other than Soto or Lindor) capable of bringing major league ready talent capable of helping the team next year and beyond. 

His trade value is high for a number of reasons, only a few of which make sense to me.  Catchers are hard to come by.  I get that. He's young and energetic.  He's under team control for several more years.  His salary is low.  I get all that as well.

He once hit more than 20 homers in a season.  He was once the number one prospect in all of minor league baseball.  And apparently, everyone discounts his now two years of power outage.  I don't get that. Amazingly, his advocates cannot see that his offensive woes are the product of very poor kinematic sequence that he has taken no steps to rectify.  I definitely don't get that.

He is the poster child for powerless effort, and yet this seems to go unnoticed.  It won't go unnoticed forever.  The time to move him is upon us.

This means that the Mets will need to find another catcher over the off season.  The line-up can withstand a relative black hole behind the plate. What it cannot afford is having an all star staff of starters throwing to a defensively challenged catcher who can't call a good game. 

The pitching staff demands more, and as presently constructed the offense should be good enough to withstand one black hole at the catcher's position which is a hell of an improvement over the three to four black holes that have graced the line-up over the past two years.

The team is biding time until Yovany is ready to take over the reins three years from now.  In the meanwhile, what's wrong with a little bit of 'run prevention.'

The Mets are plenty bad, but can get significantly better by next year, but admittedly at great expense both financial --Skubal, Ryan/Gausman, Arraez, Walker?, a catcher? and all those miserable contracts: Senga, Manaea, Semien, and emotional --all those failed baby Mets, Baty, Vientos, Mauricio.  

A lot of work and a lot of money.  But that's the price the Mets are going to have to pay to turn this around now.  It's the price you pay for poor decisions, terrible contracts and underperformance.  It's also the price you pay when you allow a magical not repeatable finish delude you into thinking your team is something it's not. 

Let's do it right this time.  It's never too early to get on the right path.

 


7/13/26

MACKS - 2026 DRAFT - METS PICKS 4.120: LHP Shane Sdao - & 5.152: RHRP Luke McNeillie

 



Shane Sdao (born September 29, 2003) is a left-handed pitcher (LHP) for the Texas A&M Aggies.

He is a 6'3", 185 lb redshirt junior from Montgomery, Texas (Lake Creek High School), who bats and throws left-handed.

College Career Highlights

2023 (Freshman): Appeared in 22 games (2 starts), went 4-1 with a 4.78 ERA, 46 strikeouts in 43.1 innings. Showed promise in relief and postseason play.

2024 (Sophomore): Strong breakout year with 20 appearances (5 starts), 5-1 record, 2.96 ERA, 1.05 WHIP, 55 strikeouts vs. 9 walks in 48.2 innings, plus 2 saves. Had several standout outings, including shutout innings.

He suffered an arm injury… Tommy John surgery… (oops, der it is) during the 2024 College World Series run, ending his season early.

2025 (Junior): Missed the entire season due to injury recovery; redshirted.

2026 (Redshirt Junior): Returned as a key arm with 17 appearances (13 starts), 4-4 record, team-high 83 strikeouts in 71.2 innings. Mixed results with a high ERA, but showed flashes like career-high 11 Ks vs. Georgia and strong non-conference outings.

Preseason Third Team All-American (Baseball America).

He has a career college record of 13-6 with 184+ strikeouts in ~163 innings. Known for strikeout stuff (high K/9 rates), command at times, and versatility (starter/reliever).

 In 2026, he dealt with some inconsistency and batted-ball luck issues but remained a trusted option for coach Michael Earley, including postseason starts.

Sdao was a two-way player (LHP/1B/OF) in high school but has focused on pitching at Texas A&M. He turned down draft money after 2024 to return for 2026 after his injury. He was viewed as a 2026 MLB Draft prospect (ranked in the top 100–250 range by various outlets pre-draft) due to his lefty stuff, size, and track record when healthy.

He has been praised for leadership, work ethic during rehab, and commitment to the program.

@shane.sdao

MACK - I use blue ink when I'm writing something negatively about a player. Three picks in and I'm already running out of blue ink. David Stearns seems to be in love with players that were superior before they were lost for, at least, half a season. Three picks so far and two question marks. Wonderful.



Pick 5.152 - RHRP Luke McNeillie

Luke McNeillie (born March 17, 2005) is a right-handed pitcher (B/T: L/R) for the University of Florida Gators.

He stands 6'3" and weighs around 200 lbs.

A native of Milton, Georgia, he was a highly regarded high school prospect (top-100 nationally) who committed to Florida and has developed into a 2026 MLB Draft prospect.

College Career Overview

McNeillie has primarily worked as a reliever with occasional starts for the Gators:

2024 (Freshman): 4-6, 7.07 ERA in 26 appearances (2 GS), 35.2 IP, 43 K, 21 BB. Struggled early but showed improvement later in the year.

2025 (Sophomore): 5-2, 4.82 ERA in 28 appearances (2 GS), 52.1 IP, 72 K (career high), 24 BB. Strong strikeout stuff with a team-high appearance total.

2026 (Junior): 3-0, 3.97 ERA in 18 appearances (3 GS), 34 IP, 48 K, 17 BB. Career-low ERA with a solid K/BB ratio.

Career (through 2026): 12-8, 5.24 ERA in 72 appearances (7 GS), 122 IP, 163 K, 62 BB.

He has also pitched in the Cape Cod League (Harwich Mariners) and showed promise in limited starting work.

He earned preseason honors like Baseball America Second Team All-American and First Team All-SEC for 2026.

His strikeout rate is consistently elite (often 10-12+ K/9), though command and consistency have been works in progress.

Pitching Repertoire

McNeillie features a power fastball-slider combination with a developing changeup. His stuff plays up in shorter stints.

Fastball: Primary pitch, sitting mid-90s and touching 96-99 mph (higher in relief). It shows some ride/carry when elevated and occasional running/tail action. Can be straight at times if command falters. High arm speed from his delivery helps it miss bats up in the zone.

Slider: His best and most-used secondary offering (often described as flashing plus). Sits 86-88 mph with good sweep, depth, and downer action. Generates swings-and-misses and is a separator against both righties and lefties. In high school it was already projecting well.

Changeup: Third pitch with arm-side fade and good separation (historically plus feel in HS reports). Used less frequently in college but part of his three-pitch mix.

Delivery/Mechanics: High 3/4 slot with good arm speed and some scap load. Delivery can be volatile (pulls open, drops slot at times), leading to inconsistent command and extension. He has projection and room to refine repeatability for starting.

Scouting Outlook (2026 Draft)

McNeillie projects as a Day 2 or early Day 3 pick. Teams like his arm strength and fastball-slider combo for high-leverage relief or back-end starting potential. Command and consistency are the main hurdles—if he improves strike-throwing and develops the changeup more, he has starter upside. Otherwise, his stuff could fit well in the bullpen.

He has shown flashes of dominance (low WHIP in Cape Cod starts, strong K rates) but has been more effective in relief than extended starts so far. Development-focused organizations could see him as a candidate to build into a starter.

Overall, McNeillie is an athletic, projectable arm with swing-and-miss potential.

MACK – So… four picks, two damaged arms and another wild one. Three pitchers, only one true starter. Starting to question the knowledge of the brain trust here. I live in this region and know McNeiliie well. Real big HS target. A big disappointment on the campus. Frankly, I’m getting sick of all these projects.

Status:   C



Paul Articulates - Andy Green has a big challenge


It is the middle of July, and the New York Mets are limping in to the all-star break on a three game losing streak and a record that is 17 games under .500.  This would have been unfathomable if you projected it during the pre-season after the front office went for broke with a major overhaul of the team and the defense.

Maybe the term "unfathomable" is overstated.  Certainly we expected a significant improvement from the 2025 nose dive based upon the definitive steps that were taken to change the team.  But at the same time, you could categorize that re-build as a high risk, high reward decision.  Unfortunately, the risk was realized and the reward was not.

In the steps that followed, the front office made many low risk, low reward moves by acquiring players on waivers from other teams, players that were unsigned free agents, and churning the AAA rotation to fill the MLB team.  From this, there were a few small positives such as the discovery of Jared Young as a very competent first baseman.  But all the rest did not deliver rewards and the constant churn on the roster took its toll on the field of play.  There is no consistency, no cohesiveness, and certainly no record to brag about.

There are too many moving parts right now, and it promises to be even more unsettling as the majority of injured players that were new to the team this year are just about ready to return to the active roster.  

This is a major concern to me, because there are only a few things that I can identify as positives from the first half and I don't want to see any of those things marginalized.

Positive: The play of the youngsters Carson Benge and AJ Ewing.  These kids are not only gaining confidence that they can compete at this level, they are excelling.  Ewing (.276/.350/.439) and Benge (.263/.326/.402) are two of the best bats in the current lineup.  I cannot condone sitting one or both so Luis Robert (.224/.327/.329) and/or Marcus Semien (.214/.271/.341) can play.  And don't forget Tyrone Taylor.

Positive: Juan Soto has played to expectations.  He has hit with power, hit for average, and gotten on base consistently.  Unfortunately it has not delivered wins for this team but he seems to be enjoying himself more with the enthusiasm that the rookies have injected in this outfield.  Soto's defense has been shaky recently, but if he is the DH when Robert is in the outfield then there is a solution.

Positive: Jared Young has shown to be very competent as a first baseman and his bat has not been a negative.  He is hitting .248/.318/.426 and seems to have a knack for getting hits in key situations.  With Jorge Polanco back on the active roster, this either means less reps for Young or an issue with too many designated hitters vying for at-bats.

Positive: Brett Baty is showing signs of life with his bat.  After struggling mightily in the first three months, Baty has suddenly started to make better contact.  He had a 10 game hitting streak going into yesterday's game and even some of his outs were very loud.  But with a three day cool-down period and then a log jam of available players, will Baty lose his stroke and his confidence?  I don't know where you fit him if the Mets want to play Bichette, Lindor, Semien, and Young/Polanco in the infield.  We already noted how crowded the outfield and DH positions have become.

Normally, when you have such competition for the starting lineup it is a very positive thing.  The competition often brings out the best in players, and having options for every day's lineup is a blessing.  But the reason I cannot label this as a positive is that none of these returning guys that want to play every day have batting statistics that help the lineup.  Semien (.214), Robert (.224), Polanco (.178), and Bichette (.255) are not going to get this offense revved up.

Andy Green has his work cut out for him.  He needs to find a way to keep these guys happy until the trade deadline relieves some of the pressure.  Unfortunately that is not the only goal.  Mets fans would like to see their team win a few games as well, and as mentioned earlier the dynamic of constant change has hurt this newly built club's ability to gel.

Reese Kaplan -- Take A Deep Breath and Prepare For Changes


As the Mets finishing stumbling and limping their collective way into the MLB All Star Break it creates a necessary break from the lack of offense, extended IL stints by way too many people and the inconsistent pitching they’ve been receiving.  As of Sunday the Mets owned a record of 40-57, a .412 winning percentage, and sole possession of last place in the NL East.  

It has gotten so bad that they are working on a dubious distinction of the worst record in all of baseball with their 17 games beneath .500, thus far a razor’s edge about the even more woeful Colorado Rockies in the National League as well as the Kansas City Royals and the Los Angeles Angels in the junior circuit.  Yeah, it’s pretty grim indeed.

Changes are indeed coming as people continue to heal.  Luis Robert, Jr. is in rehab and recently even had an uncharacteristically good game with his bat.  When he’ll come back and where he’ll play are still major questions since newcomer A.J. Ewing has done more to contribute to the precious and few wins the Mets have obtained than Robert ever did. 

Also under the spotlight is rehabbing pitcher Clay Holmes who is throwing again but not yet in a formal rehab assignment.  Obviously he needs to be able to push successfully off his injured leg and needs to rebuild arm strength necessary to handle starting pitching assignments.  Rumors are floating around that he is interested in talking about a contract extension which comes as something of a surprise given how poorly the Mets played in 2025 and even worse in 2026.

Second baseman Marcus Semien is running a full speed and will also soon hit the rehab circuit to demonstrate he is healthy enough to play regularly even if the performance level has not mirrored what he did regularly earlier in his career.  The team has played some interesting mixes of infielders lately with AAAA Zack Short, mediocre hitter Brett Baty and expensive but fully returned Francisco Lindor taking turn on the field.  Semien is a greater offensive player than Short, but with the club having also just lost Vientos they may need to explore other options from outside the current Mets personnel throughout their system.  

Some advocate making A.J. Ewing the second baseman with Robert returning to center field which would turn Semien into the world’s most expensive benchwarmer. 

Hopefully David Stearns is lining up conversations with 29 other front office representatives over the course of this mandated three day break.  Obviously the Mets do have some players other teams would covet even if they’re not performing the way the POBO anticipated when they got a NY Mets contract.  

We all know the list of the obvious free agents to be and the players who have minimal financial risk as they are on expiring contracts.  What’s far less well known is if the team would consider moving less obvious pieces like Francisco Alvarez or even Francisco Lindor in order to maximize the passel of prospects obtained in return.


Consider the All Star Break the front office equivalent of Spring Training for the real trading deadline on August 3rd.  Obviously changes are needed now and for the future.  What those changes will be is still a great mystery.  A change is gonna come.

7/12/26

Tom Brennan: Carson Benge? AJ Ewing, Too? I Just Pinched Myself


BENGE 


A lot has gone wrong this year for the Mets.

Even the superlative Juan Soto missed a few weeks with a leg injury.

But a few things have gone oh-so-extremely RIGHT - namely:

1) Carson Benge

2) AJ Ewing

Carson had a really tough first 3 weeks but has been SENSATIONAL since.

 - He’s already had Carson City named after him.

 - And the Mets just used their top pick for a guy named CARSON Wiggins.

Ben Carson told me you don’t have to be a brain surgeon to love Carson Benge.



EWING

AJ is already outstanding.

 - Better NY sports talent than the great Patrick Ewing? You decide.


Pinch me, I must be dreaming.

But forget me, how do you feel about each of these two?

I’d rather hear how thrilled YOU are with them. 

Could they be in the same class as Strawberry? Wright?

Better?


Let me know your thoughts in the comments.


Tom Brennan: Draft Day 1; Soto Last 162 Games; DSL OBP Means What, Exactly?

 


SUPER STAR OVER HIS LAST 162 GAMES


LAST 162 GAMES

162 games is a full season equivalent.

Superstar Juan Soto, in his last 162 games through Wednesday?

Juan Soto is hitting .286 with 166 hits, 49 home runs, 115 RBIs and 110 runs scored in 162 games in his last 162 games. (Source: Statmuse). I assume that is correct and up to date.

Tons of Soto walks, too. Which makes him a….

Superstar. 

Oh, right, I already said superstar.

So, if you think the Mets should burn it all down, and even trade Soto, think twice. Scalpels surgically handled are a more effective management tool in baseball than sledge hammers.

The draft is now underway, and the Mets have made a few picks. I certainly wish they could have a lot more picks, but then I guess so do other teams wish the same thing for their own teams.

I wish all the Mets’ draft picks well. My advice to them?  Be the best players you can be. 

If you are a pitcher, do not be afraid to throw strikes. Be afraid to not throw strikes.

If you’re a hitter, work on keeping your strike out rate low. Too many don’t. The ones that don’t almost always fail.


WHAT DO DSL OBP STATS REALLY MEAN?

So I looked at bonus baby Wandy Asigen mid-way through his game on Thursday:

He had been up very little this year so far, but he had been on base 12 of 18 times. What does that mean? It is probably very favorable, but his twelve times on base include 3 hits, plus…

EIGHT WALKS, and a HBP.

Walks are off the charts in the DSL this year. His game was suspended after 4 innings, and by then, DSL Mets Orange pitchers gave up, you guessed it…

EIGHT WALKS, and a HBP.

The game resumed, and the Mets squad eventually gave up 12 walks and 2 HBPs. Another typical game in the DSL, although in some games, control is apparently improving slowly.

I think that just about the only thing one can conclude with DSL hitting stats is that if someone’s OBP is high, that might be a good thing. 

But if their OBP is low, they probably are not going to accomplish much.

The walks are so extremely extreme in the DSL this year, that I would probably just focus on batting average and strikeouts per game when trying to evaluate a hitter’s performance. OBP in the DSL is misleading.

There is one DSL Mets hitter, Jonnhan Sanchez, hitting .367 with a .508 OBP in 29 games. The lefty hitter turned 19 two months ago. He may turn out to be one to watch. 

But keep this in mind: 

He is 17th in batting average, and only 58th in OBP, even with a .508 OBP! 

FIFTEEN Non-MET DSL GUYS stunningly have OBPs between .605 and .693!

How bad must the league’s pitching be, collectively?

P.S. Asigen, who missed some time earlier this season with a leg injury, stole his first two career bases, then got pinch hit for. I was concerned he might be hurt. But it seems he is OK, as he has since played another game, and now sits with a .593 OBP. 

I say: .600 or bust!

P.S. Elian Peña last year in the DSL hit .292 (70th) with a .421 OBP (80th).


OFF BASE PERCENTAGE

Mark Vientos falls slightly below the required number of plate appearances to “qualify”. If he qualified, he’d have the 3rd lowest On Base % in the majors, with Marcus Semien just two slots behind Mark.

That’s some tremendous OFF base % for those two. 

Around a .262 Off Base Percentage, combined.

Jake deGrom, career, has a .238 on base %, as a point of comparison.

With both Mark and Marcus now on the IL, one would surmise that the team’s ON base % should climb.

But these are the Mets, so I might be a little off-base here in saying that.