Maybe that guy WASN’T the problem…
Let us ponder that for a minute…
“THE METS MAJORS ARE A MAJOR DISAPPOINTMENT. GIVEN THAT: HOW IS THAT METS MINOR LEAGUE SYSTEM LOOKING, ANYWAY?”
WELL, THE MINORS SYSREM NO LONGER HAS AJ EWING.
THE METS JUST CALLED HIM UP.
WELCOME BOARD, AJ.
.339/.447/.514, 17 STEALS.
ENTIRE NY METS TEAM SO FAR: 19 STEALS.
MACRO LEVEL, MINOR LEAGUE PERFORMANCE YEAR TO DATE:
There are essentially two ways to look at minor league performance.
The first, and probably the most important, is how well the farm system does in producing players that really help on the major league level.
The other way is to see how the teams as a whole are performing.
Viewing performance on the latter macro view leads one to the conclusion that the minor league system for the Mets this year is pretty disastrous. Why? Way below .500 in combined win-loss Mets minors percentage, and many, many hitters, and many, many pitchers performing quite poorly. Heck, Brooklyn is 8-23. Shades of 1962.
But, if one looks at it from the perspective of players becoming ready to be major league assets, the picture brighten somewhat.
AJ Ewing (promoted on Monday to Queens), Nick Morabito, perhaps Ryan Clifford, if he suddenly decides to continue to seriously reduce his strikeout rate, Jonah Tong, Jack Wenninger, Zach, Thornton, Dylan Ross, and Jonathan Santucci in the near term represent a decent, if not overwhelming numerically, group of prospects from which to promote in the months to come.
I say “not overwhelming” because I see no Paul Skenes or Jacob Misiorowski level talents in this cluster of prospects. Those two dudes are absolute game changers.
Regarding Misiorowski, he dominated the hot Yankees on Friday. How so?
Read on:
METS MISSED ON MISIOROWSKI
I read this about the bullet train named Jacob Misiorowski who, in his last two Brewers starts, went 11.1 shutout innings, allowing just 2 hits, and fanned NINETEEN:
“Facing the Yankees’ Trent Grisham, Ben Rice and Aaron Judge, Jacob Misiorowski threw 10 pitches in one inning to retire the side — striking out Grisham and Rice on three pitches each and getting Judge to fly out.”
“five of which registered as the five fastest pitches recorded by a starter during the tracking era (dating back to 2008).”
“They came in at 103.6, 103.5, 103.3, 103.3 and 103.2 mph during an inning in which his slowest pitch was a 102.3 mph fastball.”
That is sick, game-changer stuff. Bullet train chasers.
The Mets in 2022 drafted two uber-talents - Jett Williams (#14) and Kevin Parada (#11) - before Misiorowski (#63) came off the draft board.
Man, oh man, that is quality drafting, huh? No, I mean by the Brewers.
If my MLB team had the worst minor league system ever from a W-L perspective, but it also had those Skenes and the Faster Jacob ready for call up? I’d be very, very happy with my farm system.
So, despite the 2026 Mets minor league system as a whole, to date, being very disappointing to me, what really matters, I.e., available prospects for this present year, looks quite good. Or, at least quite decent.
Minor league help, for call up to this beleaguered franchise’s MLB roster, is likely coming soon. And not a moment too soon.
OVER-ANALYSIS LEADS TO POOR RESULTSIN METSVILLE
The recently torrid Pete Alonso has been speaking out of late about what some might term the overly analytical David Stearns Approach to baseball. If what I read that Pete said was true, it was awfully…shall we say…BLUNT.
That cogent Stearns analysis kept Pete from signing a lucrative new deal with the Mets.
So to him, the rejection over two straight off-seasons was personal.
I certainly think he has a real point, for two reasons:
1) being the underdog team in New York perpetually adds to the pressure of playing here under media glare and vocal, impatient fans. Many players cannot handle playing here. Pete Alonso was able to: therefore that should have been factored in as a premium regarding his salary demands because he has proven over time that he could handle the pressure cooker in Queens.
2) Box office appeal. Pete Alonso was a big box office draw. Jorge Polanco and Marcus Semien in NY simply are not. Box office appeal leads to box office ticket sales, which leads to box office, concession, and ancillary revenues, in major amounts.
3) I’ll add a third reason, free of charge:
Alonso and Nimmo do not miss games. They play every darned game.
Polanco? Robert? No. And no. Their infirmary card gets stamped a lot.
if you look at the small print on their uniforms, you’ll see it says “Fragile - handle with care”.
They spend far too much time in the MLB chassis repair shop.
It truly appeared that David Stearns was looking at constructing a team on a simple WAR calculus. And that was unfair to Pete Alonso for reason numbers one thru three above, and you could probably come up with your own handful of reasons.
He got 5 years, $155 million, so had he signed that 3 year Brennan-offered deal, he might have been willing to gamble on just 3 years, to see, after its 2028 expiration, if he could subsequently earn more than 2 years, $30 million for his 2029 and 2030 seasons under a new deal then.
Kyle Schwarber at age 33 signed for 5/150, so his situation worked out beautifully for him at an age pretty similar to where slugging Pete will be at the end of that hypothetical Brennan deal ending in 2028.
And Stearns would have garnered a more time-limited contract for his Mets’ portfolio. And the Mets offense wouldn’t suck so bad.
I often think of other “what-ifs”.
Such as, what if, after the Mets won in 1986, but then failed in ‘87 and ‘88, I had said “what if I try to root for another team instead? Like the one in the Bronx? I’d probably be much happier over the next 4 DECADES”.
So now, 40 years later, I probably should be asking myself that “what if”question right now. I’m sure that many New York area fans are doing exactly that right now. Some will act on that and make changes.
Why?
Because I think logical people would prefer to root for a perpetual playoff contender, rather than a perpetual playoff pretender.
No doubt, the percentage of Mets fans who have turned off the TV, stopped going to games, and begun occupying themselves with more controllable fun things has to be skyrocketing.
And that is my memo for the day.
Except, one more thing…we should ask retired Congressman Pete King to write here. He is a Mets fan and just posted this:
Just some facts for David Stearns to consider: In Pete Alonso's entire 7 year career with the Mets, he missed a total of 24 games. In less than 2 months this year Alonso's supposed replacement, Jorge Polanco, has already missed 26 games! Says a lot about whatever analytics formula Stearns is using!












