5/14/26

Paul Articulates - A few thoughts about AJ Ewing


AJ Ewing has provided the Mets with a ray of sunshine amidst this dark season.  As you could tell from the tone of most of the stories written about the Mets recently, all hope had faded and there didn't seem to be much to write about on the positive side.

Ewing was one of many prospects that had looked pretty good as he moved up through the minor league levels.  We have touted many of them right here at Mack's Mets.  What was different this time was first and foremost the timing.  His appearance on the big stage and what he did with it on the first night was desperately needed to remind this team and its fans that baseball is fun.  

It is way too early in his career to make some big prediction of stardom.  He is very young, has not "seen it all" yet, and will have some bumps along the way as he learns the game at the MLB level.  But just seeing his youthful enthusiasm, watching him race around the bases with his first triple, and watching his teammates lighten up a bit was needed on many levels.

I watched Ewing and Benge interact in the outfield and it reminded me of the fun I had playing baseball (at a very low level).  It is a great game, filled with challenges and competition at the individual and team levels.  Most of the current Mets had forgotten about that, as the weight of failed expectations had consumed their conscious thinking.  Having a positive state of mind in any sport enhances performance because it removes distraction from the moments when muscle memory and twitch reflex need to fire.

I had the pleasure of interviewing AJ Ewing earlier this year (interview link) and there were several things I learned about him in that discussion and in subsequent observations of his play.

1) Ewing is an intense competitor.  He enjoys the competition of pitcher versus batter, hitter versus fielder, team versus team.  He wants to see his opponent's best to measure up to it.  Even in professional athletics, it is rare to find the player that wants the ball in the critical moments.  He does not fear failure, he accepts it as the price to get better.  This will differentiate him from others with equivalent physical tools.

2) He enjoys the game, and it shows in the passion that he plays with.  He has that grit that is tough to describe but easy to see.  Think Lenny Dykstra, Wally Bachman, or even Pete Rose as examples of people that played the game with tremendous passion.

3) He is an athlete as much as he is a baseball player.  When asked what he worked on in the off-season, his answer was speed and muscle tone, not some analytical swing plane mechanic that changes with the latest trends.  

4) He has worked his way rapidly through the levels because he is ready to learn and he does not let anything bother him.  He started the last few seasons at a lower level of ball than he may have expected.  That didn't matter, because it was a challenge to him so rather than fret about it, he went out to beat that level...and quickly did.  In 2024, he started in rookie ball, and it took him 19 games to get promoted. In 2025 he began the year in the Florida State League and it took him 18 games to get promoted.  This year, he started at AA Binghamton even though he hit .339 there in the prior season.  No problem - he hit .349 in 18 games before he was promoted.  Then he hit .326 at AAA Syracuse in 12 games to make the statement, "Don't hold me back".

Only time will tell if AJ Ewing will become a star in MLB.  But one thing is for sure - he will pump some much needed enthusiasm into his teammates as he competes with everything he has this year.  I hope the attitude is contageous.

5/13/26

Tom Brennan - Ewing a Plus, Alvarez a Minus?


(Image: SNY) 

AJ Ewing shows up and just like that, the Mets score 10 runs. Wow.

A triple, 3 walks, 2 RBIs and a steal in his debut. Wow. Wow. Wow. Wow.

And the pitcher’s park got him in the one out he made: 

The only out he made was on a 102.3 mph flyout to the warning track.”

But….

Alvarez hurt his knee…whoa.

- IL stint forthcoming?  No prognosis yet.

And Lindor is still likely a month away (reading between the lines) and Robert is not making the progress the Mets hoped for. Thud.

Elsewhere:

Syracuse hitters fanned 19 times in 13 innings, winning 7-4. 

Bay & Clifford each fanned 4 times. Clifford has now fanned 57 times in 38 games. You call him up if you want to. Not me.

Jack Wenninger was great for 5 innings. Miniscule ERA. He is AJ Ewing on the mound.

Call him up.

Binghamton (.198) and Brooklyn (.183) were both shut out on 2 hits. 

67 combined games for those two teams. Sub - .200? 

“Like nothing we’ve ever seen.”

St Lucie was no-hit - by the rain.



RVH - Forced Clarity Has Arrived for the Mets

 

This was drafted before last night’s lineup was posted.

Over the last few weeks, I’ve written several pieces about the growing gap between strategy and execution for the Mets. About how organizational theory only matters if it eventually produces tangible baseball outcomes. About how a 162-game season slowly strips away illusion and forces teams to confront what they actually are.

That process may now be starting for the 2026 Mets.

Not all at once. Not dramatically. Not yet.

But slowly, steadily, reality is beginning to force clarity onto this roster and onto David Stearns’ front office.

And honestly, that may be exactly what this organization needs.

Because at some point, the standings stop negotiating.

The injuries matter. The underperformance matters. The nightly inconsistency matters. The lack of continuity matters. Eventually, the season itself starts making decisions for you.

Francisco Lindor’s injury accelerated that process. So did the uneven play from veterans. So did the continued overreliance on platoons, matchup optimization, and temporary patchwork solutions that never seem to create any real rhythm.

And now the Mets are approaching a moment where they need to stop managing around reality and start leaning directly into it.

Which brings us to AJ Ewing.

If the Mets are promoting Ewing, then commit to what that promotion actually means.

Not another three-games-a-week partial role. Not another rotating cast of interchangeable pieces. Not another month of trying to preserve theoretical roster balance while the offense continues searching for identity.

Just let the team play.

For the next month, I’d run out something close to this every day:

LF Soto
CF Ewing
RF Benge

3B Baty
SS Bichette
2B Semien
1B Vientos / veteran addition

C Alvarez / Torrens

And then stop overcomplicating everything.

No major platoons. No nightly reshuffling. No trying to optimize every at-bat through matchup spreadsheets while nobody develops rhythm or accountability.

Play baseball.

Let Ewing settle into center field. Let Benge learn right field at the major league level. Let Baty continue either proving he belongs or proving he doesn’t. Let Alvarez catch consistently while rotating through DH when needed. Let Vientos either grow into a real middle-of-the-order bat or finally reveal his limitations through everyday exposure.

Most importantly, let this team establish an actual identity.

Because right now, too often, the Mets feel like a roster still waiting for the “real” version of itself to arrive sometime in the future.

One more injury return. One more adjustment. One more veteran rebound. One more matchup tweak. One more trade.

At some point, you have to stop waiting for perfect and start building continuity around the players actually available.

That does not mean abandoning veterans.

In fact, I’d argue the exact opposite.

Forced clarity does not mean removing veterans from the equation. It means finally putting veterans into the proper role: leading the next version of the team instead of delaying it.

That responsibility now falls heavily on Juan Soto, Marcus Semien, and Bo Bichette.

Those three have to become the emotional and competitive spine of this next phase of the season.

Not passengers. Leaders.

And honestly, I’d strongly consider adding one more experienced professional hitter at first base through trade if the opportunity exists. Not a superstar. Not another long-term contract. Just a stabilizing veteran presence who can anchor the lineup, professionalize at-bats, and help absorb pressure from the younger players.

That addition would also create flexibility.

Vientos could rotate between first and DH. Soto could get DH days. Alvarez could protect his legs while keeping his bat in the lineup. Melendez could move through DH opportunities as well.

Most importantly, it would help stabilize what increasingly looks like a team transitioning from one version of itself into another.

The same logic applies to the pitching staff.

Again, forced clarity.

Clay Holmes has competed. Peralta has shown flashes. McLean deserves runway. Scott continues battling. And if Jack Wenninger is truly part of the future, then bring him soon and let him learn at the major league level.

Enough pretending temporary answers are permanent solutions.

Enough delaying inevitable evaluations.

Enough hoping struggling veterans magically rediscover peak form because of prior reputation.

Reality already answered some of these questions.

The bullpen needs the same honesty. Keep the arms that are competing and producing. Replace the dead spots aggressively. Stop treating roster decisions like emotional commitments.

The hard truth is this: Mets fans can tolerate losing if they believe something coherent is being built.

What they cannot tolerate anymore is watching a team that feels afraid to choose a direction.

And that is where the 2026 season may finally be pushing this organization.

Toward clarity.

Toward athleticism.

Toward accountability.

Toward continuity.

Toward a version of the Mets that looks less theoretical and more real.

The season is no longer asking the Mets what they want to be.

It’s asking what they actually are.

And sometimes the healthiest thing an organization can do is stop resisting the answer.


Cautious Optimist - There's No Success in Failure and a Failure is no Success at all (Part 1)


 


The Mets have fallen into total disarray and if you believe otherwise, I'd love to know what you see that I am missing.  Or better yet, to paraphrase a line from When Harry Met Sally, I'd love to have whatever you're having.

I do not support change for its own sake. I agree with posts and comments published on our site recently pointing out that the only thing worse than chaos is adding more chaos. 

If I disagree with those comments at all, it is because I don't view the current Mets situation as chaotic.   Chaotic processes are essentially unpredictable.  If anything, our Mets are quite predictable, and rather than being all over the map, too often land in the very same place. 

We are, I fear, witnessing a pervese, but nevertheless reliably functioning machine in action.  The problem is that our well oiled machine is an Edsel, not a Ferrari. Don't confuse minor variations at the margins with chaos.  The names change on the mound and on the line-up card, but the results don't.   We lose often, and in much the same way (almost all the time).  

Chaos is marked by unpredictable and extensive variance.

This isn't chaos.

It's a catastrophe.

This past off-season, I was foolish enough to believe that I understood what the front office was up to. I devoted energy to interpreting, explaining and defending it.  In retrospect, all I  was really doing was praising my own version of what I took them to be doing.  In effect, I was praising myself, and my interpretive acumen.  

Misplaced chutzpah; nothing more, I fear.

Ok. it's time for a bit of Bayesian updating.  New information has come to light that calls for reassessing our short and long term goals.  Ever the (cautious) optimist, I've revised how we might look at this season and enjoy what remains of it. With that in mind, I've taken to reconceptualizing the goals for this year.

1. Make the Mets an interesting watch, sufficiently so to keep the fan base engaged -- if not quite excited.

2. Begin the process of building -- on the field and not just on paper -- the team and the pipeline necessary to compete for championships regularly.  

Both goals involve time lines for the remainder of the season.  I have divided the season into four time slices.

1. The remainder of May.

2. June 1 to the ASB

3. ASB to Trade Deadline

4. Trade Deadline to Season End

The goal is to figure out what we can do and roughly when to do it so that we know much better than we do now what we have and what we lack, while building a foundation that will anchor the club going forward. Once that build is sufficiently, even if incompletely,aaaad                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    realized, we can then move on to build the complementary components required for sustained success.

The path from pathetic to palatable

The first step the organization needs to take is to admit and own mistakes, both in planning and in execution.  The second is to minimize the damage the mistakes continue to cause.  This stage requires honesty, accountability and will be financially costly -- but how costly depends on how one does one's accounting.

It isn't a matter of stopping the bleeding.  The patient is dying from the inside out: stop the cause, don't satisfy yourself with treating the symptons.

It will be costly to cut ties with past mistakes, but failing to do so, just allows the seeds of destruction to grow and will only make it more difficult and expensive to break from the past.  Proper accounting implores us not to throw good money after bad; or as the great baseball savant from Hibbing, Minnesota has put it: 

'there's no success in failure, and a failure is no success at all.'

The Anchor   

Every team needs an anchor, something that is rock solid and steady that it builds around and which remains its key focus, and puts the greatest emphasis on securing.  In spite of the fact that nowadays starting pitchers rarely throw complete games or 200 plus innings over the course of a season, pitching remains the key, and for me, the anchor of the Mets' future success.

Why? Because pitching failures or shortcomings have the greatest overall downstream negative effects on a team's performance.  Get it wrong, and you go nowhere.  Get it right, and you have a chance. Luckily for the Mets, and looking honestly at where they are, they have the makings of a solid pitching staff not just for the remainder of the season, but over the longer haul.

In my view, when putting together a pitching staff, the two most important components are the starters and the back end of the bullpen.

Let's begin with the starting rotation.

The Mets starting rotation has been surprisingly good for over a month now: good enough to have formed a foundation of a team playing .600 ball during that period.  Of course the Mets have played nowhere near .600 ball over that period.  So the bulk of the blame for their poor performance lays elsewhere.

However, there are two problems with the starting rotation that would have made playing .600 ball unsustainable over the long run. If the team is going to be interesting for the remainder of the year, and if pitching is to anchor the team going forward, both issues need to be addressed-- the sooner the bette

        1.    As a group the starting pitchers barely go beyond 5.2 innings/game.  Part of the problem is the manager's itchy trigger finger.  The first batter on base after the 5th inning inevitably results in a call to the bullpen.  

It's one thing to be running on empty; another to be running scared.  Our manager is running scared, looking to avoid collapse.  Protect a lead even if it flies in the face of what learning theorists know about achieving excellence.  Excellence is developed only in the face of confronting failure; and confronting failure requires extending to the boundaries of one's capacities. In playing a risk averse strategy, the manager also too often wastes an excellent performance by the starter, while overworking a fragile and poorly constructed bullpen. 

Same as last year.  The only difference is that last year's bullpen was going to hell in support of a 'winning team'.  The team is employing the same bullpen destructive strategy in service of a losing team headed for complete disaster.  It's never a good strategy to double down on a bad strategy.  Proximity to the Casino may be dangerous for managerial staff.   

        2.    Last year's starters (until June 12 anyway) were well defined group, even if it was not populated with household names. Some performed better than expected; some a bit worse.  But they all showed up for duty and performed admirably when their names were called.  Here we are in the middle of May one year later, and we don't even know who the starters are yet.  Worse, while managed to start the season with six or seven starters among our pitching staff of thirteen, we are down to four at most, one of whom did not even figure among the seven with which we began

Peralta, McLean, Holmes and Scott.  

Peralta and Holmes cannot be counted on for more than 5.2 innings.  Not quite what one would be looking for in starters who will anchor a staff.  But Peralta and Holmes are both durable and that counts for something.

Scott is a newcomer to the current staff, and being treated with kid gloves for now, and correctly so, given his having lost last year to surgery and recovery.  He's performed admirably so far, after a forgettable first appearance, but do not forget that, as we go to press, he has yet to secure a win in the major league level.  Ace-in- waiting/training, McLean has also run into trouble after the 5th.  He has shown glimpses of someone capable of making it to and through the 7th inning from time to time if the manager would only let him give it a try.  

What do we do this year to make the staff interesting and build for the future?

Remember the days when Senga was part of the rotation and the question was whether we needed a 6th starter so that he could be given the extra day off he so desperately needed to pitch his best? 

Forget 6 starters, we need a 5th just to keep up with other teams fighting to stay out of the cellar that we so comfortably occupy at the moment.  Before we think of adding a 5th starter, we need to deal with making additional subtractions.

There are four potential subtractions to consider.  The FO needs to figure out what to do with the not so fabulous threesome of Peterson, Manaea and Senga. Manaea is a poster child for addition by subtraction.  Senga is the poster child for concierge medicine.  Like his cohort, Mr. Megill, Peterson is a tease.  A reliever who everyone mistakenly wants to believe is a starter. 

And while they are at it, the FO needs to figure out what to do with Peralta. The Mets should not and will not sign Peralta as a free agent.  He has lost juice on his fastball.  Though durable, he is not an ace.  Indeed, he is a potential drain on the bullpen rarely capable of going more than 6 innings . It makes no sense to put money into signing him, certainly not the sort of money others will ante up, let alone to do so for the number of years he will command.

Job # 1:  Trade Peralta now. You are likely to get more in return the earlier you trade someone in their walk year.  Apparently, the Cubs and A's are interested.  

The A's are unlikely to meet Peralta's free agency money demands so they will only offer the Mets what they think is fair for a rental. The Cubs are putting together a very good team, but one that is short elite pitching.  Peralta is relatively elite for five innings every game. Their manager knows Peralta and apparently welcomes being reunited with him.  Peralta knows the division.  The Cubs are the most likely trade partner, and one who can afford signing him and give the Mets something valuable in return.

They should feel that they owe us one since we gifted them Crow-Armstrong, the best defensive center fielder in baseball.  Not sure they will see it that way, but Chicago can nevertheless provide a top 100 prospect and someone with a high ceiling further down in their system.

Job #2.  See if you can get anything now for Senga or Manaea.  Likely very little.  See if they will accept a minor league assignment.  See if either or both qualify for 60 day IL.  I would make the case for Manaea based on how he mishandled the arm slot change and the entirely predictable injury to his obliques. I'm betting he can be moved to the IL for as long as it takes. But we don't want him there indefinitely.  He has to be healthy enough to trade even if we have to pay the bulk of the salary to get back a prospect. 

At this point, everyone knows Senga is capable of pitching well between  injuries, and that he cannot pitch through them. His trade value is modest, and even then requires that he return healthy from his most recent stint on the IL.  We will have to pay the bulk of his salary and player option to get a decent prospect or a B level first baseman catcher or DH.  

Cohen will have to eat almost all of Manaea's salary as the rest of the league sees that at this point he is a DFA in waiting.  The Mets bought a call option when they should have bought a put.  I can't predict when Manaea and Senga leave the IL, but the former is likely to be DFA'd or otherwise given away the day he does, and the other should spend a bit of time rehabbing and building modest trade value at AAA in anticipation of a trade that will bring little back in return or solace.

Job #3.  Keep Peterson in the bullpen for now.  He does well there.  Down the road, some other team may want him at the trade deadline as either a reliever or potential starter.  If he keeps his ERA as a reliever under 3 that's a plus. In the meantime he is insurance if Minter doesn't return to form and a capable reliever in his own right.  

Enough subtractions: how about an addition or two

On any version of how things play out with Peralta, Manaea, Senga and Peterson, the FO will have opportunities to add, not just to his year but for the future.

Step #1 Bring up Wenninger immediately and plug him in as the #5 starter, a role currently taken by an opener -- Brazoban -- and a half opener who follows closely behind -- Warren.

I would bring him up now ahead of Tong for several reasons.  He is the more accomplished pitcher, even if he has a lower ceiling.  He is relatively mature, has been very successful and his ceiling is roughly as 4/5 starter so he will settle in to where he is expected to perform.  He is not built to dazzle.  He is built to provide solid, stable, regular performance -- and he is one of our own.

Step #2 The day the ink on the Peralta trade is drying bring up Tong.  My views on Tong's movement pattern are well known.  It poses an ongoing risk of lower back injury and is not sustainable long term. On the other hand, he is built like Gumby and his body can handle the stress on his lumbar spine for some period of time  If he avoids injury he can be an A/A- level major league pitcher for five years.  His career path is likely to follow Lincecum's, but he will need a pitch with more horizontal movement if he is to reach his full potential.  He's working on it.  Good for him.  Lots of pitchers develop pitches when they are already in the majors.  He can refine his slider and cutter while pitching for the big league club.  

I expect a Peralta trade in the next two weeks or so which would mean that by mid June the Mets would have five right handed starters: McLean, Holmes, Scott, Wenninger and Tong. This group will draw interest from fans -- depending on what the rest of the team looks like.  Four of the five are home grown which is an added bonus, and inexpensive as well.  I don't think that all five will constitute the best pitching staff the Mets can put together going forward, but they sure as hell give fans a reason to be hopeful. And as many as four of them may become mainstays for years to come.

The curious case of Holmes, but not Sherlock

There is a case for moving Holmes at the trade deadline.  Would this a positive or a negative?  It depends on the pipeline and what we receive in return.  We lose the only real vet among the starters, and I don't take that lightly.  If he is not moved by the deadline, there is every reason to believe that he will be lost in free agency -- provided he continues to perform well and escapes injury.

If he continues apace, I'd try to extend him between the ASG and the trade deadline.  A deal that makes sense is three years plus a player's option at 15-17m/year.   

Maybe that would work.  He's a professional, shows up for work.  Wants the ball.  He's done more than enough to warrant trying to keep him. He's not young, but because he has spent most of his time in the bullpen, his arm may not have the mileage on it that would make one fearful of a precipitous decline in performance.

If he stays or if he goes

On the other hand, whether or not Holmes stays, the team lacks a left handed starter. 

If Holmes is traded or leaves in free agency, we are likely to see either Santucci or Thornton this year  If not, they will be competing for starting roles next year.

The absence of a lefty and a veteran presence means that Skubal should be a serious consideration in the offseason depending on how he responds to his surgery.

All of these moves make sense, would add interest, and likely form the basis of a strong starting rotation that could anchor the team over the next five years -- especially if aided by a left handed veteran ace.  

I don't view McLean or Tong as aces yet, but add a lefty equivalent of Max Fried or what Kershaw once was and you have 7 or 8 potential major league starters vying for positions in what should be an excellent and not particularly expensive starting rotation.

Turning to the back end of the bullpen

Right now our closer is Devin Williams who is very good and paid as if he were better than he is.  His style and approach is more like Trevor Hoffman than Mariano Rivera.  We have a couple of arms in the minors  --  Lambert and Ross -- who might supplant him and move him into being the highest paid 8th inning man on earth. 

Williams will do for now.  The rest of the outfit vying for time at the back end of the bullpen includes Minter, Weaver and Myers.  To my mind, Weaver is the equal of Brazoban and a plus version of Austen Warren.  

I don't know what to expect from Minter upon his return.  

Unless Minter returns to top form -- which would make him a credible candidate to set up Williams -, I would describe our current group as having  a number of 7th inning guys,  some of whom, if used carefully could work a reasonably clean 8th inning or extra inning on the road. from time to time.   

Thinking about building a top tier pitching staff, what our bullpen lacks is an 8th inning pitcher who could also close tight games if necessary. That's where Lambert and Ross enter the picture.  Neither is likely to toss clean innings on a regular basis at this stage in their respective careers.

On the other hand, each offers what only Brazoban offers now, which is HEAT.  If Williams is the closer, it would be nice to have him preceded by someone who throws pees. 

I see Kimbrell being released (on his way to Cooperstown) in favor of Minter.  If healthy, the combination of Warren, Raley, Minter, Warren, and Brazoban can make for a formidable bridge in virtually any mix and match situation from the 6th through the 8th.  Add Peterson and Myers, who would be the most versatile members of the bullpen and you have a damn good bullpen.  Add either Lambert or Ross to the mix as your primary 8th inning guy and the occasional closer, a role that Minter and Myers could also play from time to time and you really have quite a good bullpen.

Peterson will go - either by the trade deadline or through free agency -- and that would open up a spot for whichever of Lambert or Ross fails to make the team this year and perhaps someone else from a minor league affiliate club -- whether Severino or Pintaro.  

I see a path forward to an excellent pitching staff.  No delusions necessary.

Pitching can and should be the foundation of the teams' success by next year and for years to come thereafter.  

With pitching taken care of, is there any path available that would take this line-up from putrid to palatable, and beyond?

The question is whether the pitching staff will be anchoring a nuclear-sub or the Titanic -- or something in-between. That depends on factors beyond the staff's control.  The current roster of position players is too heavy a load for any pitching staff to carry.   Even if there are players waiting in the wings, developing their chops in the minors who might lighten the load, the issue is whether they will be able to do so in a time frame that coincides with the development of a top tier pitching staff.

More on that next time.


 





Reese Kaplan -- Three Paths to Take to Help Change Mets Direction


As we sit here on Wednesday morning we see the Mets once again sitting at the bottom not only of the NL East in the standings but also owning sole possession of the absolute worst record in all of baseball.  Everyone understands the injuries that have derailed the Mets from their expected path, but at the same time there are any number of slumping and underperforming players who are quickly making themselves into very expensive DFA considerations as the season hits its six week mark. 

Going forward there are three primary approaches that can be taken to address the missteps that have plagued the team almost since spring training.  None are completely right nor completely wrong.  The best approach might even be a hybrid of all three.  However, folks are certainly losing patience awaiting offense, pitching and fielding to occur regularly at a professional level.  David Stearns and his boss need to decide which route to season salvation makes the most sense.

Path 1 — Waiting

Thus far the David Stearns “fix what’s wrong” approach involves a lot of waiting while occasionally adding roster members from other teams’ DFA lists rather than making significant changes.  The philosophy here is that the thinking putting together this team was valid and once everyone is healthy it’s indeed possible that the next 120+ games will unfold dramatically better than what has been seen already.  Everyone knows the quality players like Francisco Lindor, Jorge Polanco and (to a lesser extent) Luis Robert can bring to the team, but if their bodies are not allowing them to compete regularly then the patience exercised by the leadership is something the fans and media are expected to embrace and accept.  Hmmn...

Path 2 — Find Major League Players

The theoretically easiest thing to do is to find players on other teams that are theoretically available in trades and who will bring major league pedigree to replace the AAAA coterie of less than solid players getting multiple ABs and innings pitched.  Rumors have already started that the Mets could be persuaded to part with Freddy Peralta who, if not extended, will walk away as a free agent at year’s end anyway.  Other players in that boat included free agent to be David Peterson and previously non-regulars Brett Baty and Mark Vientos.  Unfortunately there are not a lot of solid options ready within the organization behind them and perhaps just the pitchers are viable chips at this point of the cellar dwelling season.

Path 3 — Promote the Kids

The riskiest approach yet the one which costs the least in terms of player personnel and salary dollars is the promotion of higher performing AAA players (and even AA players) who could theoretically displace the afterthought roster additions and laying the groundwork for future trades of current roster members once the youngsters show they belong in the big league.  The names here are not new.  A.J. Ewing picked right up in AAA where he’d left off in AA and the Mets currently are sporting just one established star player in Juan Soto accompanied by suddenly progressing Carson Benge.  Another outfielder is most definitely needed. 

 

Similarly, after a very slow start Ryan Clifford has come alive and it’s entirely possible to shift Mark Vientos to DH to create space at first base for the young slugger to take root with the Mets.  Pitchers like Jack Wenninger is already showing what he can do while Jonah Tong is still learning how to pitch beyond merely racking up strikeouts and Zach Thornton is too new to AAA to draw conclusions..  Jonathan Pintaro and Anderson Severino are dominating for Syracuse where some of the major league relievers most certainly are not doing the same for the Mets.

Which approach the Mets can or will take is very much a matter of debate, but the clock is ticking with no improvements showing for the first path of waiting for everything to resolve on its own. 

5/12/26

A Letter to A Friend

 


Dear Steve

 

Yes, it’s me. Mack. Back from the dead. Medically, I’m doing better. Two carotid artery surgeries and a TIA later and I’m rehabbing from my home. I’ve retired from writing following the advice of my doctor and the demands of Mrs. Mack, though I am guest posting every once in a while. Consider this one of them.

We haven’t communicated with each other since this season started. You following me when X was Twitter led to my contacting you via private messaging. I remember my first suggestion of getting more aggressive in the international market. You messaged me “I’m all over this” and two days later you snagged away another top prospect. And you weren’t afraid to tell me when things I wrote could have been framed more professionally.

You sure as hell didn’t seem to need my advice after the way your season started. But here we are, a million injuries later and falling to the worst win-loss percentage in the league.

Steve, I’ve never worked an inning for the Mets, but I have written about them for over 25 years, and I’ve been a fan since Game 1 in 1962. You know I love this team as much as you do and I truly feel your pain right now. I just think it’s time to take a good look in the jacuzzi and realize this team isn’t going anywhere this season and the players that matter to you the most may be agreeing with the fans that this is the time to begin building for the future rather than chasing the unobtainable in the present.

I have suggestions based on 30+ years of successful management. They are just MY suggestions. Nothing more:

1 – Whatever you are doing internally that is either unpopular, or not working, stop doing. Today.

2 - Make your operation more people based, rather that AI or analytical driven. I’m not saying eliminate all of it. Just get your organization back to being people driven.

3 - Hire real ballplayers as your instructors. One person suggested Daniel Murphy as your hitting coach. Love this idea. Nothing against who you have, but hire an ex-major league pitcher as your pitching coach. One with a successful tract record wouldn’t hurt either.

4 - Give back the lineup decisions to your manager. He does know his team a little better than people who have never played an organized inning in their life.

5 – Make the decision as to what pitching changes are needed be determined by your pitching coach. Same logic as the lineup decisions.

6. Stop worrying about the fact that what you did in the off-season is backfiring. And don’t blame this on injuries. You don’t see Atlanta sitting on their hands through all their time in the infirmary. You have some great, young talent on this team, but even the most talented minor leaguer rarely comes out of the box like an all-star. Take Carson Benge. Only now is he starting to jell. The BA is perking up, the defense is top-notch, and the confidence is building. You have the most talented rookie pitcher in the league in Nolan McLean. And Juan Soto? Well, he’s Juan Soto, and his current slump is probably highly affected by what the box score looks like at least half the time. But they aren’t the only talented young players you either have under long-term contract or team control. Players like Jack Wenninger, Christian Scott, Jonah Tong, Nick Morabito, and AJ Ewing should all be starting at the major league level for the rest of this season. They too need the Benge plan.

7. There are other players that simply need to be polished off or, if needs to be, determined that that they don’t have what’s needed to be successful at the major league level… and this can’t be accomplished unless they get major reps in the major at some point this season. Players like Dylan Ross, Ryan Lambert, Ryan Clifford. Early? Yes, but so what. Where do they play? On to #8.

8. The trading deadline is coming up. You have players with trade value that either are going to opt out or simply don’t have a long-term future with your team. Bo Bichette, Freddy Peralta, David Peterson, Clay Holmes, and Brooks Raley all have the talent that other teams could use to help them earn a playoff birth while, at the same time, could bring a serious addition of prospects to replenish the depleted Mets minor league teams.

9. And let’s not forget Devin Williams, Luke Weaver, Brett Baty, and Mark Vientos. You need to shop these names as well to see what some teams would come back with. Remember, this didn’t work and all the players mentioned here are a big part of this failure. This is a business, Steve. You operated this like a business when you dumped Pete Alonso, Brandon Nimmo, and Jeff McNeil. Don’t be embarrassed at what has happened. The embarrassment begins if you don’t start making changes now.

10. Let’s talk Carlos Mendosa. Let’s me put it this way. Put someone at the helm of your ship and call him your Captain. Then put one of those audio thingies in his ear and have someone at your base be given the responsibility of telling the Captain what to do. This includes steering the ship. Next, tell your Captain to turn left, causing the ship to hit an iceberg. Question: who is getting hit with the blame? See, it’s its impossible for me to call for the firing of Mendoza because I don’t know how much he really is in charge of. On the other side of this, HE is the face of this failure and I’m not sure fans are going to rally around him anymore. Your call here, Steve.

11. And finally, let’s talk David Stearns. This one is easy. If you’re not already secretly looking for a replacement here, I shouldn’t even have written this post. Your players will never want to play past their current commitment if you don’t find a new person to lead this organization. I’m sure he’s a nice man. I’ve had a lot of nice men managing my radio stations into the ground. What I never had was one of those failed stations rise from the ashes still managed by that person that put it in this position.

Lastly, I hope you read this Steve. And I hope you don’t unfollow me now on X. I’m a retired writer now, so I can just be a fan now. I love your team but my heart is broken at what has happened this year. To you.

BREAKING NEWS

I finished writing this yesterday afternoon, but like everything I write, I wait a day before posting it. They I polish it up and place it in draft form on the site.

Sure as hell, things seem to have started without me. You promoted AJ Ewing in the middle of me watching Hannah Harper win American Idol. Is this a one and done?

Sure wish I posted this a day ago. Woulda looked like genius.