Preamble: The Map to 594 Outs
In Part I, we defined the “lung” of the 2026 season: a 9–11 man pitching collective designed to absorb the 1,458-inning friction of the regular season by living near a 5.4 IP/GS benchmark. We built a floor that ensures our highest-leverage arms arrive in September fresh, not frayed.
But October isn’t won by a crowd. It’s won by the concentration of talent. As the calendar turns, the organizational goal shifts from covering innings to securing outs.
If you’re going to win a World Series from the Wild Card line, the planning math is brutal, because you have to be ready for the longest path.
13 wins. 594 outs.
This is the October Contraction, the shift from a deep rotation tree to a strike force.
The Hypothesis: Shifting the Currency from Innings to Outs
During the regular season, innings are the currency of survival. In the postseason, we pivot to outs. This isn’t just semantics, it’s a tactical reset. In a short series, the “three-times-through-the-order” penalty is the primary predator of a lead.
By shifting to an out-based management style, we leverage the freshness delta we built in July. We don’t need Freddy Peralta or Nolan McLean to “gut out” the 7th inning. We need them to deliver 15 to 18 high-intensity outs, then hand the game to leverage arms before the opposition adjusts.
October doesn’t reward stubborn. It rewards timing.
The Map to the Ring: 594 Outs
This is the maximum road, the planning ceiling, and that’s the only honest way to build an October blueprint without lying to yourself.
That’s why October is contraction: fewer pitchers, shorter stints, higher leverage, earlier hooks.
That’s the contraction: fewer starter outs, higher leverage, earlier hooks, and no third-time-through-the-order charity.
The Efficiency Metric: Managing “Pitches Per Out” (PPO)
To win 13 games, we have to manage fatigue like it’s payroll. That’s where Pitches Per Out (PPO) matters. Think of PPO as the simplest fatigue tax there is: when it rises, your starter hits the wall sooner.
In the regular season, an efficient pitcher averages roughly 5.1 PPO. In October, stress and hitter selectivity drive that number up. Success is won in the margin.
The logic: If Peralta secures 18 outs at 5.3 PPO, he exits at ~95 pitches with the lead intact. If PPO climbs to 6.0 due to fatigue or traffic, he’s at ~108 before the 6th inning ends.
The contraction: Because the bullpen arrives rested, we don’t have to chase 108. We pull the trigger at 95, maintain the velocity gap, and transition to leverage before the lineup adjusts a third time.
The Personnel: The October “Strike Force”
1) The Starting Trio: The First 15–18 Outs
Freddy Peralta, Nolan McLean, and David Peterson are the “engine” in the only way October cares about: they take the first chunk of outs and keep the game in a leverage shape.
Peralta: the strikeout profile that stabilizes Game 1.
McLean: the power sinker/sweeper that can erase innings with one ground ball when October traffic appears.
Peterson: the left-handed counterweight that neutralizes key pockets and keeps the ball out of the air when pressure rises.
2) The Hybrid Weapon: Kodai Senga
The most important pivot in the blueprint is Kodai Senga.
After a managed regular season, Senga becomes the October hybrid, the guy you deploy for “swing outs,” the 6 to 9 outs that decide a series. The bridge in a Game 4. The leverage patch when a starter exits early. The weapon when you need dominance but not 100 pitches.
If Part I was about creating breath, Part II is about spending it.
3) The Bullpen Ladder: The Final 9 Outs
October doesn’t care who got “saves” in July. It cares who can take outs when the leverage spikes. The bullpen is a ladder, not a democracy.
Back-end leverage (highest stress outs, smallest margin):
The top leverage righty (e.g., Devin Williams)
The top leverage lefty (e.g., A.J. Minter)
Precision layer (matchup control, clean innings, low traffic):
Right-handed strike-thrower who can live on the edges (e.g., Luke Weaver)
Left-handed matchup/control arm who can steal outs without drama (e.g., Brooks Raley)
Multi-inning bridge (when the game breaks shape):
A starter-background arm who can give you 4–9 outs without panic (e.g., Tobias Myers)
That last category is the October breaker bar. It’s how you survive the one early hook without burning the entire ladder behind it.
The Reserve Capacity: Recursive Strength
What separates the 2026 Mets from most Wild Card teams is reserve capacity. Another season of development turns “prospects” into usable October tools.
Christian Scott and Jonah Tong: not just depth pieces, but insurance outs. If a series goes long, 3–4 competitive innings from this tier prevents the leverage group from being burned into mush.
Ryan Lambert and Dylan Ross: power arms waiting in the wings. If PPO spikes and contact quality turns into a pattern, velocity becomes the fastest correction.
The Takeaway: Strategy over Survival
Winning a World Series is about the concentration of talent. You use 9–11 arms to survive the summer so that you have your best weapons intact in the fall.
By building a staff that can expand to survive the war of attrition and contract to deliver leverage precision, the Mets move from hope to design. We’re no longer asking pitchers to hang on through October. We’re putting them in position to dominate it.
13 wins. 594 outs. One ring.







