4/22/26

Reese Kaplan -- Finding the Delusional Good Mets News


We’ve all heard the cliches like, “It’s always darkest before the dawn” and “Optimists see the donut, not the hole.”  Right now optimists are getting as hard to find as a good price on gasoline.  Still there remain some pink eyeglass wearing types who are willing to look past the 11 game losing streak as the club begins its home series against the Twins and try to reassure everyone that all is a temporary slump and that good things are coming to Citifield’s ballplaying employees. 

Hmmn...

So let’s try to put some optimism into the cerebellum for a little while and see if there is indeed room for positive thinking in this cesspool of pessimism.  There have to be some good things on the horizon, right?  Right?  RIGHT?


Well, there is the recovery of slugger Juan Soto.  After a somewhat slow start to his Mets career he rallied in both home run power and baserunning speed to make himself into a middle-of-the-order major threat to any opposing teams the Mets face.  The injury this year could not have happened at a worse time as the club was already struggling without his contributions but it removed the major offensive cog from a suspect scoring machine.  Word has filtered out that he’s returning to the lineup during this homestand though no one is committing to which date or against which team. Still, knowing that Soto’s bat is within a reasonable interval from happening is surely an overdue cause for celebration.

Similarly, reliever AJ Minter has been performing in games during his rehabilitation and estimates range from late April until early May for a return to a big league uniform.  Given the highly uneven pitching the club has received both from starters and relievers it is a most welcome message that the $11 million per year year man is soon to be on his way back to wearing orange and blue. 

On the current roster there are opportunities arising due to injuries to various ballplayers.  It is at this time players like MJ Melendez, Tyrone Taylor, Brett Baty, Mark Vientos and Tommy Pham are all getting more playing time than anyone anticipated during Spring Training in Port St. Lucie.  Right now the only offensive players with available options are Ronny Mauricio and Carson Benge.  Consequently you live with who you’ve got or you need to get busy in the mid year trade market. 

Furthermore on the positive front are the slow starts from nearly every hitter in the lineup.  Obviously Bo Bichette if healthy is a far better hitter than he’s shown.  Francisco Lindor has been a notoriously slow starter and given his injury healing time that prevented him from playing in Spring Training, it’s likely a doubly whammy thus far for 2026 but his career suggests the tide will eventually turn.  Luis Robert is still a great unknown between his one stellar year and the injury plagued ones that have followed that were quite poor.  Carson Benge has recently started landing a few of his batted balls, but it takes awhile to advance from a sub-.100 average into respectability.  Marcus Semien has shown a few flashes but he’s like Robert in that you don’t know what to expect.  Then there’s the ailing Jorge Polanco who has problems with his Achilles bursitis and now also a wrist injury that’s landed him on the IL.  On paper he’s a good hitter but he’s also a bit of a poster child for missing time due to injuries.  Francisco Alvarez has been better than expected.

For now we won’t focus on the players not providing good value.  The list is long and already well known.  The pessimist post will be forthcoming in the near future. 

John From Albany: 40 Years Ago - Bobby O Gets a W in his Mets Start, 4/22/1986


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

Year: 1986; Game #10; Tuesday;  Apr 22, NYM 7  Vs. PIT1;   boxscore  W: Ojeda; LP: Kipper; Time: 02:46; NIGHT; Attendance: 15,668; Record: 7-3; Standings: 1; Games up/behind: Tied; W;

Kevin Mitchell CF-LF: 2 for 4; 2 runs; 1 RBI; 1 walk; 1 K; Tim Teufel 2B: 1 for 3; SB; 2 walks; 2 Ks; Keith Hernandez 1B: 1 for 5; HR,2B; 2 RBIs; 1 K; Gary Carter C: 1 for 3; 2 RBIs; 1 walk; Darryl Strawberry RF: 1 for 4; 1 walk; 3 Ks; George Foster LF: 1 for 5; SB; 1 run; Ray Knight 3B: 1 for 1; 2 runs; 1 RBI; 3 walks; Howard Johnson 3B: 0 for 1; 2B; Rafael Santana SS: 2 for 4; 2 runs; 1 RBI; Bob Ojeda P: 2 for 4; 2 Ks; Lenny Dykstra CF: 0 for 1; Bob Ojeda, W (2-0): 7 innings; 1 run; 1 ER; 4 hits; 1 walk; 3 Ks; Roger McDowell: 2 innings; no runs; 1 walk; 3 Ks; 

Bob Ojeda (W,2-0) wins in his first Mets start, 7 innings, 1 run, 1 ER, 4 hits, 1 walk, 3 Ks.  Mets score 8 on 5 doubles (Strawberry, Rafael Santana, Hernandez, Mitchell, George Foster) and Ray Knight's 4th homer of the year.  

The win was the Mets 5th straight and moved them into a tie for 1st with the St. Louis Cardinals.


NL East Standings - 4/22/86
Tm W L W-L% GB RS RA pythW-L%
STL73.700--4425.738
NYM73.700--5438.655
PIT64.600 1.05440.634
MON56.455 2.54151.401
PHI37.300 4.03656.308
CHC38.273 4.53861.296
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 4/22/1986.

4/21/26

Cautious Optimist -- Mendoza and the Mets


 


The Mets are unwatchable

There are any number of reasons for watching or listening to a baseball game, ranging from pure entertainment to emotional commitment. Unfortunately, at the moment, none of these reasons apply to watching a Mets' game.  They are literally unwatchable.  Listening on the radio while driving should be prohibited by law, since doing so is likely unreasonably dangerous to other drivers, pedestrians, property, and to oneself.

If you disagree, you haven't been paying attention.  In the law, we use the phrase, res ipsa loquitur, (typically translated as 'the act speaks for itself') to describe situations like the ones the Mets are in.  The play on the field speaks for itself.

The Case for Replacing Mendoza

Unlike schoolyard play or political elections, baseball does not permit do-overs or a recount.  There are a number of factors that limit baseball teams from making wholesale changes to the roster all at once.   And while you can't fire the entire team, even if you would like to, you can always replace the manager. 

And doing so costs a lot less than than firing an SEC football coach. 

Speaking of which, if major league baseball had a transfer portal, how many current Mets players do you think would have entered it by now? 

Inevitably, the manager is a low cost scapegoat for a team trying to keep the fan base engaged.

Replacing Mendoza, however would not be a case of scapegoating. It would be unnecessarily harsh to say that he has earned his firing.  But it is not harsh to say that he has given the FO ample grounds for letting him go. His record in the first half of 2024 and the last half of 2025 was unacceptable.  If you put the first half of 2024 together with the last half of 2025, you get a pretty good picture of what 2026 is shaping up to look like. 

No one should believe that the Mets' current dismal performance is down to Mendoza's management alone. The players have contributed mightily as has Stearns.  Frankly, no one in the organization has given fans reason to think that changing the manager alone will stimulate a tectonic shift. 

It was always puzzling that while almost all of last season's coaching staff was let go, Mendoza was retained. The team's performance so far this year makes that decision virtually incomprehensible. The team is listless and frustrated, and Mendoza has failed to provide the spark or leadership to reverse course now, just as he was unable to put the brakes on (or even to slow down) the train wreck last summer. 

Kafka walked with a cane, as did Balzac.  Engraved on Balzac's cane was the expression: 'I overcome all obstacles.'  On Kafka's, "All obstacles overcome me.'

If the obstacles thrown his way have not quite overcome Mendoza, he has done little to show that he is ready to meet the moment.

The mistake may have been retaining Mendoza after last year's collapse. All that the FO can do now is stop the bleeding and limit its impact going forward.   Mendoza's contract expires at the end of the season and if he is not going to be extended, what's the point of letting the situation drag on. 

It's a bad look all around for the FO as well, as retaining Mendoza in the face of the team's currently embarrassing performance after last year's collapse would reasonably be understood as endorsing the job he has done while also, in effect, giving up on the season.  Accepting, if not endorsing a level of performance by the manager they would not accept in players or in themselves. 

As Bill Parcell's famously said, 'You are what your record says you are."

Is There A Case Against Letting Mendoza Go Now

The view that you are what your record says you are is best interpreted as a presumption and not a conclusion.  It may be generally true, but there are bound to be exceptions.  So something other than the record itself must provide countervailing reasons to keep someone whose record would suggest otherwise.

If there are countervailing considerations based on Mendoza's dugout performance that outweigh those adduced in favor of letting him go, I have not been privy to them.  I have certainly not seen them in person or on TV, and I'm good for over 100 games/season.  I have every reason to believe that his players like him and enjoy playing for him. I'm sure he's a good guy and probably an even better person. And, like others before him who have not performed well in their first foray into managing or coaching, he may well prove himself a good manager down the road -- if not quite to the level, say, of Bill Belichick. 

I don't believe the FO has seen anything that would make them believe he should be their manager long term. If they had, they would have extended him by now, and not left him hanging. I don't think they owe it to him (or to anyone) to give him the remainder of the season to prove himself, either.  

On the other hand, it is clear that they are reluctant to let him go -- just yet.  I don't know why they feel that way, but I have an interpretation of the current situation and its causes that might make their reluctance understandable, if not ultimately justifiable.   You be the judge.

Here's my take:

The story begins with this past offseason.  Many (maybe even most) Mets fans interpret Stearns' moves this past offseason as having two separate, but related, motivations.  The first of these was to break up the team's core because they weren't getting the job done.  The second was to replace that core with players who together and in concert with the remaining team would get the job done: in other words, lead the team to a deep playoff run.   Let's call this the conventional interpretation of what Stearns was up to.

Up to a point, I agree with the first part of the conventional view.  Where I differ is that there was more to letting this specific group of players leave or sending them packing.  I say that because there were other possible combinations of players within the core that, if let go, would have accomplished the same goal.  And some of those other players would have been easier to trade or could have netted a greater return in trades, or both.

Stearns picked these players, and not others, specifically, and for three related reasons.  One may well have had to do with club chemistry.  Another had to do with his view about which vet players would make better mentors to the players in the pipeline, soon to find themselves on the major league roster. The third, and perhaps the most important, had to do with time alignment with the coming influx of top prospects becoming ready for the majors

And it this latter point that leads to my rejecting the second part of the conventional view.  Fans have criticized the additions Stearns made to the roster on the grounds that they do not adequately replace the production of those who have packed their bags-- voluntarily or otherwise.  But this line of criticism is based on the assumption that the player moves were designed as replacements for the departed.  And that's the mistake.

Of course the newcomers replaced the departed, but only in terms of roster spots, not as direct replacements. The likes of Semien, Polanco and Robert Jr. were not brought in to replace anyone or to constitute a new core. 

They were brought in to help create a different kind of team that would contend for a championship over the next two years while forming a bridge to the infusion of the next group of core players, who were currently toiling in the minors, not yet ready for the majors, but, who would eventually form much of the team's core for a period of five to ten years thereafter.

Look at the deals. Polanco is on a two year deal, Semien on a three year deal; Robert Jr on a one year deal plus a team option; Peralta on a one year deal; and so on.  Even the deals they offered Tucker and Bichette were short term with opt outs likely to be exercised.  None of these deals and offers extended into the window when the first wave of new players of the Stearns era were expected to contribute significantly to the ballclub.  

Nor should one have any doubt that Stearns would have preferred to have Benge play in AAA for much if not all of this year as well, as his loading up outfielders with major league experience in Melendez and Tauchman, for example, not to mention the big swing he took at Tucker, would indcate. 

Even the trade with the Brewers fit the same interpretation of Stearn's motivation.  To compete over the next two years, the Mets needed better pitching and more of it.  They traded a good pitcher and a promising position player, but they had back-ups and alternatives to both just a year or two away from being able to compete for a role on the blg league club. And they received better pitching and more of it in return.

In talking about the next wave of players currently honing their craft in the minors, I have in mind position players like Ewing, Morabito, and Pena for a start, and pitchers like Santucci, Wenninger, Scott, Tong, Lambert, Ross and Thornton.  Others who might compete for roster spots and a role in the core are a bit farther off, like Voit and Suero, and others for a position on the roster include Clifford and Reimer.  

The process is designed to continue, and always be supplemented by the occasional well chosen free agent.  But it has to be started cleanly in order to create proper time alignment. The likes of Lindor, Soto and the young veteran Alvarez were to be among the veterans expected to mentor and integrate this wave of players into the major league team.

This offseason's additions are not replacements for Alonso, Nimmo, McNeil, and Diaz; they are the bridge to the actual replacements who are a year or two away.  

Still, I can understand a critic of the approach I attribute to Stearns arguing that Stearns could have (and should have) kept the players he let go and have them serve as the bridge to their replacements.  Why replace players you already have under contract who could act as a bridge to their actual replacements with other temporary replacements.  Isn't that one set of replacements too many?

I get the point, but its persuasiveness depends on factors that the critic is ignoring.  First of all, Nimmo had a long term contract that would ultimately have interfered with the plan to integrate the likes of Ewing and Morabito into the team.  I believe the Mets would have been happy to keep Alonso for three years, but he wanted (and received) a longer deal that also would have upset time aligning the new wave of players into the core.  And keeping them and McNeil would have done nothing to address the clubhouse chemistry issues.

If there was a whiff by Stearns, it was letting Diaz go without much of a fight.  Who knows if he would have won the battle with the Dodgers given Diaz's strong desire to play for them  Maybe he could have gotten more for Nimmo.  I am focusing on the overall picture/plan.  Some moves will work out worse/better than others.  The interpretation I offer may not be correct.  It is certainly not the only plausible one.  But it may be the most plausible one, and even if it isn't, it is plausible.  And if it captures to some degree what Stearns was thinking, it sheds light on where the Mets are now and how they got here. It also explains why they are reluctant to let Mendoza go.

How does this explanation figure in Mendoza's situation

In other posts I have argued that organizations are typically designed to solve for three issues: information, authority and accountability.  Successful ones find ways to link the three effectively.  Unsuccessful ones don't. Among those that don't the biggest gap is that between authority and accountability.

I think Cohen and Stearns are aware of the issues organizations face and that both see that the failure of this season is that the plan isn't working out.  The additions (and some of the existing players as well) have not contributed to making the team competitive. In fact, their collective performance may be so bad that Stearns will be forced to abandon to some degree his plan to keep players in the minors until they are absolutely ready.  In other words, both legs of the plan -- maintaining competitiveness while providing a bridge to the real replacements -- may fail miserably.

Whatever the explanation, the fact is that the risk of failure at this level was created by implementing the first step in the overall plan hatched primarily by Stearns with Cohen's approval.  I think their reluctance to let Mendoza go reflects their realization that they are partially to account for the situation in which Mendoza has been placed.  

Thus, they are reluctant to let Mendoza go because they believe that they have not put him in the best position to succeed, and the players they have brought in as a bridge to the future have to this point not performed as planned. It is not a defense of Mendoza, but more an acknowledgment that they took away some of Mendoza's best assets for reasons having to do largely with their long term plans, not Mendoza's potential success, and they are reluctant to have him pay the full costs of their decisions.

Well then, what should the front office do? 

Speaking only for myself, while there is blame enough to go around, decisions made today should reflect what one is hoping to achieve going forward.  

As leadership of the organization, Stearns and Cohen have a responsibility to put the team in the best position to succeed going forward.  They haven't done that this year, at least not to this point.  

If they are not going to fire themselves, how can they justify firing Mendoza?

But then what was their thinking last year when in effect they let the entire coaching staff go while keeping Mendoza?  If it meant that they thought that Mendoza was the right person for the job, then they should have extended him then.

They didn't.

I take that to mean that they weren't sure about his fit.  They were going to determine this year whether he is the right choice.  In effect they were trying to do three things at the same time: win, prepare for the future, and assess whether the manager is the person to lead the team in the future.  

Obviously, they did not believe that the first two years provided them with enough evidence to be confident in whatever judgment they could have made on Mendoza.  The problem for them must be that they don't believe they have enough evidence yet this year as they believe the team's performance now is probably more their doing than his.

I think they want to see a larger sample size in which Soto returns and the players they brought in perform as the back of their baseball cards suggest they should.  They want to see how that team performs so that they can disaggregate what Mendoza has contributed to the record from what the players and the FO have.

That is entirely reasonable, but only if your only goal right now is to make the best decision on Mendoza based on the most reliable evidence you can ascertain. 

But the FO cannot have only this one goal at this moment  They owe it to the fans to keep them engaged and give them a team that competes and deserves their entertainment dollar.  Right now the Savannah Bananas are significantly more entertaining and very likely nearly as competitive.  More importantly, decision makers never have all the information they would like to have: that's why there exist entire fields of study devoted to decision making under uncertainty.  Decision making under certainty or full information is theoretical not actual.

This is the actual world. The goal is not to make the FO comfortable in their decisions.  By taking on the roles they have, they have bought into risking discomfort about even some of the most important decisions they have to make.

We should recognize that for them this is a hard decision, even if it isn't for us.  But we should expect them to make it when it needs to be made, not when they are sufficiently comfortable in doing so.  And that time is now.

If they believe that there will be insufficient chance that maintaining the status quo will result in a season that would lead them to extend Mendoza at its conclusion, then they should release him now.   

Does replacing Mendoza guarantee a turnaround?

Of course not.

Is letting Mendoza go fair to him?

Wrong question.  The question is whether it is unfair to him.  It is not.  

Sometimes you are going to do things that are hard and painful.  Sometimes you have to do so even when you feel you are partially to blame for the situation other people, whose fate is in your hands, face. 

Always you have to look to the future and that means that sometimes you just have to move on.  This is probably one of those times.




Steve Sica- Where do the Mets go From Here?

Photo By : Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

Going into 2026 there were plenty of question marks surrounding the Mets. A whole new roster, new core, and the usual amount of holes a team goes into Opening Day with. I don't think anyone, not even the most negative Met fan would've imagined that 22 games into the season the Mets would be 7-15, tied for the worst record in baseball, and on the heels of an 11-game losing streak. The longest such streak in over 20 years.

Social and traditional media are ablaze with finger pointing at who should shoulder the blame. The manager, the most popular scapegoat in this situation, has taken the brunt of the burden. David Stearns, the architect of the team, has received a lot of second guessing on how he built this roster after jettisoning several fan favorites in the off season. Francisco Lindor, who many fans across social media claim had a key role in ordering players like Nimmo and McNeil off the team, and is now off to his usual slow start in April, isn't winning many fans over, and it's reminiscent of his first season in Queens.

Meet the mess is what fans might be singing tonight when the Mets return to Citi Field, hoping stop their losing streak before it hits a dozen in a row. Everything has seemingly gone wrong for this team. Juan Soto has been on the IL, and I think we're all realizing just how valuable a piece he is when he's in the Met lineup. The starting pitching has been on and off, the bullpen is looking as bad as last year, and the lineup is abysmal. 

Not that there weren't warning signs of this before. Since mid-June of 2025, the Mets have the second worse record in baseball. If you stuck these first three weeks of this season to the backend of 2025, you'd think you're just watching the same horrible rerun over and over again.

So where can the Mets go from here? While the poor play on the field is the same as it was over the last three months of 2025, the cast of characters is very different. That's why it's very easy to blame the manager, Carlos Mendoza here. I don't want to pile on, and I don't think that a team's struggles on the field rest solely on the manager, but at some point, you have to look at the facts here. He's really the only constant from last year to this year. The team is playing with the same lifeless attitude they had which cost them a playoff berth last September. 

Any good feelings from 2024 for Stearns, Mendoza, and Lindor are all but gone. They're wonderful memories, but fans want to see results now, not live in the past. Speaking of the past, firing a manager in the first half of the season has had mixed results for the Mets in their history.

The Mets haven't done such a thing since 2008, when Willie Randolph was relieved of his Managerial duties on June 17th with the Mets floundering below .500 at. 34-35 and coming of an historic collapse the season before. Sound familiar?

Jerry Manuel would take over from there and the Mets did take off. They went 55-38 and stayed in playoff contention until the season's final day when they lost the Wild Card to Milwaukee in a 4-2 loss to the Marlins. I always think that if the Mets got into the playoffs that season, 2008 is viewed very differently. Even if they went on to lose in the NLDS. They would've made an inspiring summer comeback, similar to what they did in 2024. At the very least, Shea Stadium would've gotten to host another playoff series.

The last time the Mets fired a manager this early in the season was 1993. Jeff Torborg was let go after the Mets got off to a 13-25 start. Dallas Green didn't fare much better leading them to a 46-78 record in ultimately led to a 103 loss season. 

Firing a manager isn't a cure all. A new Manager isn't going to get this anemic offense to start producing. He isn't going to wave a magic wand and produce a ten game winning streak. What it does though is send a message to the fans, players, and media alike, that the front office is aware that the team is grossly underperforming and hasn't lived up to the expectations of a $300 million plus roster for almost a year.

After axing pretty much his entire coaching staff over the offseason, the leash for Carlos Mendoza was already short coming into this season. Mendoza's days in Queen might be numbered. What started off as a Honeymoon phase in 2024 has now turned into a tremulous relationship that may have finally run its course.

Either the Mets turn this around and become the first  in history to lose 11 in a row and still make the postseason, or Mendoza is history.

Tom Brennan - Look at the Bright Side

CASEY STENGEL HAD A GAME PLAN IN 1962.

SO, IT SEEMS, DOES CARLOS MENDOZA.


 Bright side, if you please?

Well, the mess (my tablet got it right, but for clarity, the Mets) are only a half a game out of having the worst record in baseball after losing 11 straight.

Maybe this continues all year and they get the number one overall pick; this team could use a Konnor Griffin draft pick.

Mets already trail the Braves by 8.5 games.  

We need Bucky Dent to bring us back. Only he can do it.

We’re grooving like it is 1962 all over again. 



John From Albany: 40 Years Ago - Knight's Late Homer Ties it, Carter Walks it off, 4/21/1986


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

Year: 1986; Game #9; Monday;  Apr 21, NYM 6 Vs. PIT5;  boxscore  WP: McDowell; LP: Clements; Time: 02:55; NIGHT; Attendance: 10,282; Record: 6-3; Standings: 2; Games up/behind: 1; W-wo;

With the Mets down 4-2 in the 8th, Davy Johnson allowed Ray Knight to hit against right hander Cecilio Guante instead of sticking with the straight 3B platoon with Howard Johnson.  Knight responded by tying the game with a 2-run homer.  The homer lead to Ray Knight being the regular 3B in 1986.  After the Pirates scored in the top of the 9th, the Mets tied it again on a Tim Teufel double and won in on a Gary Carter walk-off single.  


The win was the Mets' 4th in a row and put them just 1 game back the first place Cardinals.

NL East Standings 4/21/1986
Tm W L W-L% GB RS RA pythW-L%
STL72.778--4222.766
PIT63.667 1.05333.704
NYM63.667 1.04737.608
MON46.400 3.53349.327
PHI36.333 4.03448.347
CHC28.200 5.53559.278
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 4/21/1986.



4/20/26

Tom Brennan - Aging Like Fine Whine; Hitting Advice from the Splendid Splinter

 

“WOW! I CAN ALMOST SEE UNMITIGATED DISASTER FROM HERE!”


BINGHAMTON GETS NO-HIT ON SUNDAY, IS HITTING .194 IN 14 GAMES.

BROOKLYN NOW UP TO .190 IN ITS FIRST 14 GAMES.  

ST LUCIE IS RAKING AT .264, AND PLATING 6.4 RUNS PER GAME.

METS?  Just 72 RUNS IN 22 GAMES (29TH). 61 IN THEIR LAST 21 GAMES.

NY METS LOSE 11TH STRAIGHT TO END ROAD TRIP FROM HELL.

METS TRAIL HOT-LANTA BRAVES BY EIGHT GAMES ALREADY, AND MIAMI AND PHILADELPHIA BY FIVE OR MORE GAMES. 

GOOD GRIEF.

AND IT IS STILL 11 DAYS UNTIL MAY 1.

THIS METS TEAM NEEDS THREE SOTO’S, NOT JUST ONE.  OK, FOUR.

LINDOR IN 22 GAMES THRU SUNDAY, HAS THAT ONE VERY LONELY RBI.  

UNREAL, DON’T YOU THINK?

LET US BREAK IT DOWN:

The Mets have lost 11 straight games, and 15 of their last 20. 

In nine of those losses, they allowed four or fewer runs. 

Usually, allowing 4 or fewer runs should get you 4 to 5 wins in those games. 

Take out the one high scoring loss, where they scored six runs, and in the other 14 losses, they scored an incredibly low 18 runs.

So, while you can place some blame on the pitching, this is completely, utterly, and squarely on the shoulders of the moribund Mets hitters.

Soto should’ve been a given. Lindor should’ve been a given. Bichette should’ve been a given. 

The three of them combined have “given”, all right…as in…

They have given almost nothing. 

The rest of the offense to me as constructed is a real crapshoot. 

And probably will remain so until many are dealt away, released or disabled.

How About You

Thoughts? 

I have one…


ONE OF THE REASONS:

Part of a Dysfunctional team’s dysfunction is “key players’ age”, where age increases injuries/decreases performance. 

Age-related decline in baseball?  - here is some info:

Interesting graphs on age-related hitter decline (Fangraphs)

And...

A 2021 Follow Up Fangraphs Article on Hitter Age-Related Deterioration

When Stearns rebuilds a team around aging players, you run a real risk.

The whining that occurs when you root for a team of old guys may well be joined by your own whines.

Of course, when you thrust role players into starting roles, or green rookies into starting roles, and the core hitters are MIA, then you are brewing up a potential disaster.

Well, enough of that, it’s only Monday. 

At least Elian Peña.(.333) is splendidly raking at the age of 18 in St. Lucie.



HITTING ADVICE FROM THE SPLENDID SPLINTER

I saw this in a non-baseball article the other day. Mets minor league
hitters would be smart to read and consider it:

The legendary baseball player Ted Williams once wrote a letter to the Angels outfielder Jay Johnstone on improving his hitting. 

“Among his pieces of advice was that "with two strikes, you simply have to protect the plate." ”

Your batting average, you see, is .000 in at bats where you take strike 3.

- I wonder what the “splendid splinter” would advise Mets fans. 

He probably would say, after 11 straight losses, to protect your eyes by finding something else to do than watch Mets games, which can cause eye strain.

Paul Articulates - None of the above


<The following piece is to be read with tongue in cheek - a little fun to make frowning Mets fans smile>

As the New York Mets’ losing streak continues to extend, now reaching 11 games (longest since 2004), there has been much written about the futility.  Of course, when things are going very wrong, everyone wants a reason.  They need to blame someone for the disappointment of watching a team full of promise take a nosedive.  Let’s look at the potential culprits:

A) It’s the starting pitching.  Well, certainly we have not gotten the best out of new ace Freddy Peralta with his 4.05 ERA in 26.2 innings.  Kodai Senga has been a bust since his second start, with an 8.83 ERA, 1.90 WHIP, and only 17 innings pitched in four starts.  David Peterson has lost his starting job already.  But McLean has been very good (2.28 ERA, 0.76 WHIP) and Holmes has been solid (1.96 ERA, 1.09 WHIP) so it would be difficult to say that starting pitching is the reason for 11 straight losses.  It’s not them.

B) It’s the Manager.  We have all had a few things to say about Carlos Mendoza’s management of the pitching staff and some of his peculiar choices to sit players after a good game.  But when you see the way this team has performed on the field, making physical and mental mistakes and failing to execute pitches and at-bats, it is hard to imagine that Gil Hodges could do any better.  It’s not him.

C) It’s the bullpen.  The last two losses were late give-aways with two different relievers throwing middle-middle pitches in critical situations and being burned.  That really hurts.  But when the team scores 19 runs in 11 games, anything less than perfect saves nothing.  It’s not them.

D) It’s the “new core”.  David Stearns replaced much of the core of the 2025 team with a new set of players.  Gone are McNeil, Nimmo, Alonso, and others.  Here are Semien, Polanco, and Bichette.  The latter three have done little to help this team win, but the former three were present for the team’s long, slow crash out of the playoffs and they didn’t pick it up.  It’s not them.

E) It’s David Stearns.  As just mentioned, Stearns made the decision to blow up the core and rebuild the team.  Stearns signed a bunch of veterans off waivers or low end free agent deals to build in “depth”.  Stearns brought in Peralta but not Cease; he brought in Bichette but not Tucker.  As you have seen from the series by RVH, he had a plan that was very feasible and he took action when many GMs would have just run last year’s team out there expecting a different result.  It’s not him.

F) It’s the injuries.  Juan Soto came up lame.  Polanco never really seemed healthy.  AJ Minter had not recovered.  These are all factors that may have impacted the team, but these injuries are nowhere near the level of adversity faced in prior seasons by this team or any other ballclub.  It’s not that.

G) It’s the coaching.  Somehow the Mets’ entire lineup can’t get a hit in a critical situation, ranking 26th in MLB in average with RISP.  Overall, the team has the 23rd best batting average in a league with 30 teams.  They can’t all go bad at once, so it must be the hitting coaches.  Well, look again.  The same thing happened to this team last year with an entirely different set of hitting coaches.  They all got let go so we could start fresh with new ones.  Same with the pitching coaches.  It’s not them.

I could go on, but you get the gist.  In fact, if you can force yourself to watch the post-game analysis and interviews of the manager and the players, you get a similar result.  This collapse cannot be pinned on one thing.  It seems like everything contributes at different times (and always the worst times).  Some would say, “That’s baseball” because there are always some set of unexpected results in baseball games due to the difficulty of the game.  But uncanny coincidence of many events to bring on such a mind boggling losing streak can only happen rarely.  This has happened twice in a row if you consider last year’s post-June collapse.

There is one last possibility.  It is a curse.  Yes, the word that was once associated with the futility in Boston and Chicago is now taking root in Flushing Meadows.  The curse has unknown origins, but could date all the way back to 1987 when the defending champion Mets were expected to become a dynasty but lost the NL East to the Cardinals and were dismantled over the next few years.   It was certainly there in 2006 with the stunning game 7 loss in the NLCS.  The curse was intensified by Jimmy Rollins in 2007 causing them to lose a seven game lead with 17 to play.  It was there in 2015 when the hottest team in baseball cooled off against the Royals.  The curse was in full effect last year to will the team to failure.  There are countless ghosts that come back to haunt the team in the form of cast-off former players that did not perform in Queens but rise to stardom elsewhere.   In yesterday’s game the ghost of Michael Conforto drove home PCA (ghost of Javy Baez) to neutralize the Mets’ lead in the bottom of the 9th.

I think it’s time for Pedro Cerrano to sacrifice a live chicken (if you remember the move “Major League”).  He can summon Jobu to take fear from the bats.  Maybe that is a solution that the front office has not yet considered. 


Reese Kaplan -- There Are Actually Some Good Mets Things in 2026


So while the Mets are in the midst of an attempt to tie their worst ever losing streak has anything gone right with this team?

We can all recite all that has gone wrong.  There are the injuries to Juan Soto, Jorge Polanco, AJ Minter and the preseason deal with Francisco Lindor.  Then they lost AAAA outfielders as well. 

Next there are the slumps.  I won’t recite them one by one.  If I did we’d be here all night.  Suffice to say a large number of people are not earning their paychecks.


Instead, let’s take a look at some glimmers of hope in the overrun sewer runoff in which the team has been mired for nearly two full weeks.

  • Francisco Alvarez -- As a still-learning catcher with some good raw tools the questions about the young man has been more about staying healthy and delivering consistency at the plate.  He’s always struggled with the batting average and after his fairly impressive 2023 rookie campaign that included 25 HRs he’s not put together full seasons worth of offensive contribution.  In 2026 thus far, however, he leads the club with 4 HRs and is currently hitting a never before seen .271.  If he can keep it up for the rest of the year he’ll be crossing the 30 HR mark with a highly respectable batting average.  That’s worth celebrating (even if he’s the only offensive player thus far still healthy and playing regularly).  
  • Nolan McLean -- His 2025 late season call up was expected but no one anticipated how absolutely dominant he would be when facing the best of the best with the spin on his thrown pitches.  He ended his cup of coffee with 8 games started, a 5-1 record, over 10 strikeouts per 9 IP and a 2.08 ERA.  For 2026 he’s picked right up where he left off.  Thus far he’s had 4 starts with a 2.28 ERA, the same strikeout and walk numbers with a WHIP dipping to an astounding 0.761.  Yowza!
  • Clay Holmes -- Not everyone was totally convinced in the wisdom of moving stellar reliever Holmes into a starting pitching role for the first extended period last season, but the Mets offered him a deal to do just that and he responded with 31 games started, a 12-8 record and a commendable 3.56 ERA.  He seemed to peter out a bit towards year end as his arm was not accustomed to the workload he was now carrying and went from a previous career high of 70 IP to a never before attempted 165.  This year he’s also made 4 starts and has an even better ERA than McLean at 1.96.  He’s 2-2 which has more to do with the lack of offense than anything he’s done wrong.  His WHIP has improved by about 25%.
  • Huascar Brazoban -- The former Marlin was better in Miami than he has shown in New York but this year he’s been off to a terrific start.  Thus far in the combustible 2026 season for the Mets he has a perfect 0.00 ERA over 9 IP.  His ERA is just 0.889 and he’s not yet given up a single walk. 
  • Brooks Raley -- Despite having given up the game losing home run in his last appearance, Raley has continued his late career solid effort with the Mets.  Including that blast his ERA is still just 2.45 and is providing the team with left handed dominance until AJ Minter is healthy enough to join him in the pen. 
  • Others -- Tobias Myers has been given a starting assignment so anything we’ve seen thus far is on hold as his new role provides a different kind of challenge.  He delivered shutout ball vs. the Cubbies, but Craig Kimbrel didn't fare as well.  He was off to a strong albeit limited start in his late arrival to the bullpen but not enough IP have occurred to make definitive projections on what his season long numbers will be.

So given the seemingly innumerable things that have gone wrong, every now and then someone steps up and delivers at or above reasonable expectations.