5/19/26

Cautious Optimist -- How to we get from here to a period of sustained success? The Problem of Time Alignment

 




Every team needs a foundational anchor, and the ideal anchor for a major league team is the pitching staff, in particular, the starting rotation and the back of the bullpen.   In a recent post I made a case that the Mets' current staff has the clearest path forward of any of the team's units and is closest to being ready for prime time.  My view has not changed since the most recent injury to Holmes.

The picture is more complicated and significantly less clear when it comes to position players.  This is true when viewed offensively, defensively or both at once.

The outfield is another bright spot in the pathway from pathetic to post season

Currently, Soto is in left, Ewing in center and Benge in right.  Taylor is the fourth outfielder, and the fifth is Melendez who is currently playing himself off the roster at an accelerating pace. 

Robert is on the roster and the IL simultaneously, which has been a destination location for him for years now.  He was, and will likely remain, 'fools gold,' as the luster continues to fade.  The Mets have an option to double down on this mistake in the form of an option that they have no reason to exercise, and almost certainly will not.  

On the other hand, if Robert recovers sufficiently this year, he could be traded at the deadline or replace Taylor who could be traded instead. I prefer Taylor as the 4th outfielder for the remainder of the year -- and perhaps beyond -- but so too might other teams at the deadline.  

It's safe to say that over his remaining career Robert's days on the IL will outnumber those he spends on the field in a Mets uniform.

So let's talk about next year's outfield unit.  The most likely starters, left to right, are Soto, Ewing and Benge.  The 4th and 5th outfielders are the question marks.  The 4th could be Taylor or Morabito.  Both are right handed hitters necessary to complement a starting trio of lefties; and both are stellar defenders with strong arms.

Taylor might be traded before then or not re-signed as a free agent.  Morabito may not be ready yet or he could prove himself to be better than just a 4th outfielder.  

We don't know the answer to those questions yet, and may not by the end of this season either. My guess is that Morabito becomes the 4th outfielder next year, and if he continues to progress will see more time in the field than would a usual 4th outfielder given his defensive skills and the need to provide Soto with more opportunities to DH.

If the club carries a 5th outfielder, it could be Pache, Tauchman, even Baty (more on him below).  For the first time in years, the FO doesn't have to shop for a CF, or for any starting outfielder. 

Now things get complicated. Catcher

I view Alvarez's current injury as both a bit of addition by subtraction and a potential opportunity. Of the  disappointing first wave of baby Mets, he is by far the most disappointing. He had the farthest to fall, given the hoopla surrounding him as the # 1 minor league prospect in all of baseball just a few  years ago. But fallen he has.

His defense is passable though he does not call a good game, and his superpower -- framing -- is no longer as important as it once was. The Mets are a significantly better defensive team with Torrens behind the plate, and, in my view, no worse offensively.  In fact, I would argue that they are marginally better as Torrens has a better approach, understands the game better and can hit situationally.

Others have attributed Alvarez's offensive decline to injuries, but while I don't discount their impact on his performance, the root of his decline is his hitting sequence and overall mechanics.  He is also an impatient hitter and lacks an overall strategic approach.

It isn't that he swings so hard at everything.  It is that his sequence is so poor, this is pretty much the only way he can generate reasonable bat speed.  He is the paradigm of powerless effort.  Speaking of power, his once prodigious power has proven short lived. Not surprising to me, but unwelcome by all, and not likely to resurface any time soon, certainly not without a major change in his mechanics.

When he is ready to return to baseball activities, someone on the coaching staff should replace his inefficient movement pattern with a more efficient one.  Happy to help!

The Mets have no one ready in the minors to replace Alvarez, so I am betting that he gets another year, if only to rebuild his trade value.  I do not believe he is a viable DH option nor a potential at 1B.  It is catcher or bust: sadly maybe both.

Ok. Who's playing where in the infield?

There are two questions about the infield: 

1.    Whose playing where next year?

2.    How do the Mets go from next year to the next wave of position players?  

Of the two, the second is the more difficult question to answer, and presents the major barrier to the Mets ability to turn themselves into a consistent contender any time soon.  The problem is not just a matter of 'who plays where?'; the more troubling problem is time alignment.

Stearns' decisions last offseason have contributed to both issues more than I had originally appreciated, but we can't overlook the contribution that the collective failure of the three remaining baby Mets have made to the problem the team faces.

We are fast approaching the time when we have to consider cutting ties with Vientos, Baty and Mauricio.  To earn a spot on a major league team that envisions contending for championships, a player must perform above major league average on one or the other side of the ball, preferably both  None of these players do, and certainly have not done so reliably to this point. 

Perhaps, I am in the minority, but I feel about Baty and Vientos much like a high schooler feels about a 'tease.'  Just enough to keep you wanting and hoping for more, so much so that you keep lowering your expectations about what you will settle for in order for the chase to be worth the effort.  Eventually, however, you have to move on from the tease and look for a more meaningful and lasting relationship- or at least a more promising one.

I would normally say that we will want to consider keeping Baty since he can play 3rd, 2nd 1st and serve as the 5th outfielder. He is a one man insurance policy of sorts, but he is not a plus defender at any of those positions, and not a major league average hitter either, but he can pinch hit and fill in at DH in a pinch.  

If there is an argument for keeping him around, it depends on the Mets needing a McEwing player for the final roster spot.  

I know, I am allowing myself to be seduced by the tease or the Siren's call. My brain tells me to call off the chase, but hope survives as my dreams of success continue unabated and unfulfilled.

With that venture into psychotherapy temporarily out of the way, we can return to the question of what does next year's infield alignment look like. The only certainty, barring injury, is Lindor at SS.  Less certain, but still highly likely, we should expect to see Semien handling most of the duties at 2nd while Bichette occupies the hot corner. 

We don't have a genuine replacement for Semien on the farm near ready to contribute at the major league level.  And Bichette's subpar season, the impending potential lock-out and his salary means that it is unlikely that Bichette will opt out of his current contract.

So whose on first next year?  I don't believe that person is currently on the roster.  The reasons are manifold: 

    *    Polanco is injury prone.

    *    He has no experience at 1B to speak of.

    *    He is only signed through next year.

    *    There is no obvious replacement for him currently in the minors. 

Clifford is not ready.  He doesn't hit enough homers to justify his K-rate.  Reimer doesn't appear ready either, and we may need to call upon him when and if Bichette leaves. Nor is Guzman, who may well be the future 1st baseman -- but he is unlikely to arrive in Queens before 2028, if then.

Maybe, Vientos you say, as he is looking better these days at 1B and in the box.  But that's how it is ease with teasers. Let's make a deal, then, and agree that the Mets need to demand more than either Baty or Vientos have shown themselves capable of providing, so unless things change dramatically for either or both, we move forward assuming neither provides an answer for a team with championship aspirations. 

I'll strengthen your resolve when you falter and you'll strengthen mine.

When your will falters simply remember that both are capable of producing the worst outs imaginable: weak popouts and turned over ground balls to the right side of the infield by Baty; and horrifyingly short at bats by Vientos featuring swings and misses by Vientos at breaking pitches that invariable end up in the opposite batter's box or beyond.

Polanco should be the lead DH reducing the likelihood that he spends an inordinate amount of time on the IL.  

When everyone is playing 1B in the majors, that's a sign that you have no one to play 1B. The club needs a real 1B and someone who can play the position for 3 years.  

Having traded away both Acuna and Williams, we also need to sign a free agent or make a trade for a high quality defense first utility infielder.  

Ironically, the names I am penning in for next year, constitute a much less potent offensive force than they might have just a few years ago. 

If we don't get much punch from a 1B signing or trade, this will be a genuine weakness in next year's team, highlighting further the impact of losing Alonso in the short term, as well as what appears to be Stearns' penchant for replacing aging players with aging players with more attractive back of the card statistics but with injury histories, almost guaranteeing a dropoff in expected performance.

To sum up: next year's most likely starting infield: Bichette, Lindor, Semien and ?.  

Back-ups: Polanco, in a limited role; unknown defense first utility infielder/defensive replacement.

How to we get from next year to the next wave? 

In theory Stearns' offseason moves were designed with two goals in mind: to create a highly competitive team over the next two years, and to build a bridge to the next wave of prospects/replacements capable of leading the team to a period of sustained success.  After that, the formula would call for periodic rinsing and repeating.

In fact, Stearns' off-season moves have made accomplishing either of those goals, let alone both, harder than they were before the offseason began! 

In those moves we acquired a IB with a history of injury and no experience at the position, a 2B who remains a plus defender but a minus offensive player (at the princely sum of 50m/year between the two of them); a 3B who had never played the position, was coming off an injury, dislodging the best fielding of the baby Mets from his natural position, at a cost of 40+m/year and only one year of team control, thus potentially destabilizing that position for 2027, while presenting a challenging defensive alignment for the current system.

That is NOT the formula one would adopt for putting together a championship run or even contending at a high level in 2026, let alone in 2027. 

The truth is that had all gone well in 2026, the situation would have been even worse for 2027 than it is now.  Bichette would likely have opted for free agency; Semien would be one year further into offensive decline, while the trades of Acuna and Williams would have robbed the team of high level defensive back-ups on the infield.

But this is not the main barrier to transitioning to the next wave of players

It's not just that competing at a high level has become more difficult in 2026 and 2027 (barring drastic changes), the transition to the next wave of replacement drawn from the farm taking root in 2028 is considerably less likely than it might have been had Williams not been traded; and that defense first infielder capable of playing all over the infield sounds an awful lot like Acuna.  

By 2028, Polanco will be gone. Bichette too as he would be foolish to risk waiting until his age 31 season if his goal is to land a long term contract.  And Semien likely would no longer be playing at a level -- either offensively or defensively -- that would warrant anything beyond part time duty.  

Come 2028, the team would thus be called upon to fill gaping holes at 1B, 2B and 3B. While not bereft of talent, the minor league affiliates do not boast players at any of those positions likely to be ready to perform at the major league level in 2028, or to do so at a level that would complement the quality of the outfield and pitching staff. 

I may miss a few prospects, and excuse me if I do, but by my (intended as charitable) accounting, the Mets minor league affiliates have the following 2028 candidates for the major league roster and the positions they would qualify to fill:

1B: Clifford, Reimer, Guzman, Cuero

2B: Voit, Pena, Ewing (the current CF)

3B: Reimer, Lindor, Pena

Setting Lindor aside, the most promising (talent wise) are, IMHO, Pena and Guzman. Both are currently playing A ball. At the other extreme, the least promising is Clifford, who must cut down on strikeouts to have a shot, as must Cuero, who may be the most versatile, if not among the most talented, of the lot.

In between the extremes, we have Voit, who has shown defense and speed, but no offensive prowess as yet; Reimer, who has shown flashes of power, a great work ethic and modest defense.  He is also experiencing a down year that is threatening to halt (at least temporarily) his previous upward trajectory.

Ewing is our current CF and even if he has the tools to be a sound 2B, I have repeatedly counseled against moves that result in weakening the team at two positions to solve a problem at one of them.

Unless Morabito is capable of dislodging Ewing from his starting outfield position both offensively and defensively by 2028, it makes no sense to move Ewing to 2B.

So Guzman and Pena are, let's assume, the best talents and those closest to being genuine replacements in the infield.  It is reasonable to assume that both -- still in A ball and very young -- would be better served by more seasoning and development, and that rushing them for OD 2028 might well prove counterproductive. 

Nor should we forget that Pena can only play one position, while we would need him to play full time at two of them if we expect to cover three positions with only two players!

The biggest issue is?

From my point of view the biggest issue is not that the infield is unsettled at this time, (which it is) or that it is hard to see the path forward to its being excellent, either offensively or defensively as early as 2028 (which it is).

The big issue is that the path forward for the team as a whole is not appropriately time aligned.  Even were we to fill out the infield with assets from within the organization, we are realistically looking at adding one of either Guzman or Pena in 2028 (at best), another in 2029, and a third by 2030.

And that means that we will not be getting the best out of our outfield and pitching staff in terms of a complementary infield (and catcher?). 

We can't risk getting fooled again by the four original Baby Mets as that will  make the transition ever more difficult and less aligned with the best years of our outfielders and pitching staffs. 

We can't settle for 'thoughts and prayers'; we need to plan.

Any plan capable of keeping the various units of the team time aligned will call for a portfolio of trades and free agent signings as our current infield propects are injected into more prominent roles in a staggered fashion.

This is what successful teams do; and they do it far more often than we imagine.  Take the Dodgers.  Most of their pitching staff and all of their stars except for the catcher, Smith, and their best young starter, Yamomoto, have been acquired by trade or free agency.  A roughly similar narrative has applied to the Yankees over the past decade at least.  The Braves rely more on trades and home grown talent than either the Yankees or Dodgers do.

In my book the model for the Mets is really the Braves, not the Dodgers. The Dodgers have competed successfully by signing lots of top tier free agents regularly.  The Mets are open to doing so as well, but it is a mistake to do so as often as the Dodgers do and especially to long term contracts.  Too many long term free agents like the Dodgers have can create a heavier reliance on ever more trades and free agent signings as the team's various units otherwise will fall out of alignment.  This is one reason for endorsing the general strategy of minimizing, if possible, the number of years in a free agent signing.

I think of the Braves as a more apt model than the Dodgers because only the Braves are as close to being time aligned along the various units of the roster as the Mets are.  The Yankees and Dodgers draw less often from their minor league affiliates than do the Braves and the Mets.  This frees money for the best and mot impactful free agents and flexibility for strengthening other units when they need support.

But as a noted in my first series of posts, trading and FA signings, are driven in large part by failures to develop and assess talent correctly.  This is where the FO matters most to executing on time aligned plans, through its constant assessment of minor leaguer prospects throughout the league and development and projection of their own. 

What are the chances that our front office can measure up to the standards our best competitors have set.?  More on that next time.  Meanwhile, I'd like to know what you think?

Getting the team aligned and comparably excellent throughout the various units is not just the most important goal we face, but also the most challenging.  Find out why I am optimistic about the Mets ability to pull this all together, why doing so will be costly in terms of eating salary, and why it is better to face this problem now than to kick it down the road -- next time when I look at the state of our FO and return to my discussion of analytics.





Steve Sica- In a New York Minute...

Photo courtesy of The Source


Like that song by Don Henley says, "In a New York Minute, everything can change." 

That's the case for the Mets over the last week, who, after a 5-1 home stand, including a dramatic pair of wins over the Yankees in the Subway Series find themselves with new life. Still sitting at 21-26, the Mets showed signs of life for the first time all season this past week, and they're 11-5 in May. 

It has a lot of fans bringing up 2024 again and pointing to the 2019 Washington Nationals, who had the same record as the Mets at this point in the year, and went on to win the World Series. Is it realistic to expect the same from this year's Mets? Let's take a look at what could help the Mets get back into contention this season and what could hold them back from it.

The Good:

Home Cooking: 

The emergence of Carson Benge and A.J. Ewing has been a much-needed breath of fresh air for this team. It's particularly sweet to watch homegrown Mets batters live up to their potential, albeit very early in their career, after the relative flop of the "Baby Mets" from a few years ago. Watching Benge, Ewing, and McLean become key parts of this team is encouraging to see, no matter how 2026 ends in the standings.

Superb Starting Pitching: 

The starting pitching staff has quietly been efficient. Ironic, because that's what did this team in late in the season last year. Christian Scott has rebounded nicely after spending nearly two years on the IL. Nolan McLean has looked just as good as last year, with only a few minor bumps in the road, and don't look now, but David Peterson is starting to look like he did in the first half of 2025, even though he comes in after a bullpen opener.

Six Playoff Spots: 

It's not 1990 anymore. It's not even 2010 anymore. Six out of 15 NL teams make the playoffs. Outside of maybe the Dodgers and Braves, no one is really running away with things in the National League. The Braves seem to be too far for the Mets to catch, but they're only seven games out of that last Wild Card spot with plenty more baseball left to play. They did the same thing in 2024 and in my opinion, that was a better class of teams they needed to hurdle over to get that last Wild Card seed. 

The Bad:

Bo Bichette: 

As the Mets march through May with an 11-5 record, none of that can be attributed to Bichette. It might sound cruel, but he's batting just .167 with an OPS of .504 this month. It's frustrating to see what was probably the Mets' biggest offensive signing in the Winter struggle so much in Spring. Even more perplexing is the fact that he finds himself at the top of the lineup and is becoming a rally killer late in the games.

Freddy Peralta: 

His 3.31 ERA doesn't tell the whole story. He's been consistent as a starter, but that's not what the Mets traded him for. He needs to be an ace, and he has yet to perform like one. While the Mets won in dramatic fashion on Sunday, Peralta surrendered six walks in five innings. His inability to go deep into games and really dominate an offense is concerning. What's worse is that if the Mets truly find themselves with an insurmountable mountain to climb back into the playoffs by July, his trade value is tanking with these inefficient starts.

Injuries: 

They've been with Francisco Lindor for nearly a month. Soto and Linder have played in just a handful of games together this season. To make matters worse, their best starter this season, Clay Holmes, just went down with a likely season-ending injury. That hurts on and off the field, as his trade value is non-existent. The Mets have been able to roll through May without falling any further behind than they are, but one look at their schedule in June and you have a feeling the other shoe might drop. If they can't get healthy by the summer, they might still find themselves on the outside, looking in by the trade deadline.

Tom Brennan: Bo Bichette Blues: Are Citi Fences The Culprit? Zach Thornton Call Up


BO BICHETTE SAW NOTHING BUT BLUE SKIES, AT FIRST…


I REALLY TRY…

I have been trying so very hard to not look at Bo Bichette’s slash line…

But after the May 16th game, I somehow felt compelled to do so.

I could no longer avert my gaze.

I finally peeked. 

It was ugly. Some things, you don’t want to see. You can’t unsee it.

I hope I don’t have nightmares.

.210/.269/.271? 

Really?

So, like every Mets devotee, I tried to look for “why”, and for a silver lining.

I think what’s happening is this:

1) The pressure of joining the New York Mets as a star hitter is enormous.

   - When the initial shock wears off, more normal hitting output begins.

2) Bichette was hurt by Soto missing more than two weeks.

  - And, Lindor missing much more than two weeks. 

  - John Lennon added, “and no Polanco, too”. 

  - Bo simply was naked in the lineup without them.

3) Getting back to Mets pressure thing, is their precedent? Most certainly.

  - Francisco Lindor, on May 16 in his first season as a Met?  

  - .185/.299/.274. UGLY!

  - But Francisco, thereafter, raised his average by 45 points

  -  his OBP by 23 points, and 

  -  his slug% by 138 points.

4) Soto also experienced it last year:

  - .252/.382/.459 thru May 16.  

  - But .263/.396/.505 for the whole season.


The unstated factor here is (what else?) 

Citi Field dimensions. 

Early in the year, the “Citi ball” doesn’t carry, and I am sure that these three hitters each lost many extra base hits in their first several Mets weeks in the pitcher-friendly dimensions, when coupled with the worst period of the season (early air deadness and winds) to hit for distance at Citi field.

Once again, Steve Cohen is making a huge investment in a major hitter. 

And, sadly, neutering that hitter by having the fences too deep.

And that surprises me not at all. 

History repeats itself.

I expect Bo to hit much better from here on out, much like Lindor and Soto did after the calendar turned “mid-May” in their first Mets seasons. 

Better weather makes the pitcher-friendly park a tad nicer to Mets hitters.  

To this humble writer, I would, as owner, see the handwriting on the wall.

And move the darned walls in.

Why, after all, have the fans turn on your newly minted imported star?

Fans form their opinions early, about the player…and the management.

Cheers are better than jeers. 

Respect is better than disrespect.

WHEN YOU MAKE THE DIMENSIONS EASIER TO HIT IN…

EVERY SINGLE METS HITTER WILL HIT BETTER…

SINCE TEAM HITTING IS CONTAGIOUS…

AND YOUR BIG HITTER FINANCIAL INVESTMENTS.

THEY WILL NOT ONLY LOOK SMARTER.

THEY WILL BE SMARTER.

AND WHO DOESN’T LOVE SMARTER?

Right in cue, Bo homered Monday nite, on the road. And then a guy named Schultz and a position player pitched against the Mets in the 12th. Soto popped up to end the inning, but not before plating TEN RUNS. 

16-6 going into the bottom of the 12th, and a 16-7 final. 

16-7…Jets beat Baltimore in Super Bowl 3, right?

THE WORM - IT HAS TURNED.

The Mets have crawled out of the crypt.


GUESS WHO?


Guess who hadn’t surrendered a relief run from April 24 through this past Sunday?

Edwin Diaz.

He hasn’t pitched, either.

No, I am referring to his Replacement, DEVIN WILLIAMS.

Once it…ahem… Warmed up, weatherwise, so has he. A lot.

He has been one excellent sugar substitute.

Too much Sugar is bad for your health.

Credit where credit is due: David Stearns got this one right.



ZACH THORNTON PREVIOUSLY, AS A CRAFTY CYCLONE 
THE SEATS WILL NOT BE EMPTY ON WEDNESDAY, WHEN HE DEBUTS 

ZACH THORNTON GETS HIS MLB PROMOTION

Zach Thornton, 2023 fifth rounder, will be pitching for the NY Mets vs. the Nationals on Wednesday.

Why him, you might ask, and not guys like Wenninger or Tong or Santucci?

CONTROL

Thornton is a tough lefty with excellent control, and he keeps the ball in the park, too. In 110 innings this year and last in the minors, just 23 walks and 7 HRs allowed. And slightly over a K per inning. Impressive.

The Mets coincidentally (and synonymously) had a righty reliever in the minors from 2010 through 2016 named Zack Thornton, no relation, who ended up with a career 3.72 ERA…but never made the majors. 301 games pitched. So near, but…

5/18/26

Tom Brennan - Reason To Be Optimistic?



LUIS ROBERT’S ABSENCE…ADDITION BY SUBTRACTION?

Gloom and doom are in the air, everywhere, in Metsville.

I think much of that doom and gloom fails to disperse because of the critical injuries to Francisco Lindor, Francisco Ouch-verez, and Clay Holmes. 

I think the other long-term injuries have been manageable, but those three? Ouch!

Yet, the Mets are 10–5 in May. 

So much gloom abounds, and the team is 10–5 in May.

Tyrone Taylor, hitting just a buck-something, crushes a 2 out, 3 run game-tying BOMB in the 9th and the Mets win it 7-6 in the 10th. 

Crazy.

Maybe the kids (Benge, Ewing, and soon Wenninger) can keep this tug boat running. Humming, even.

Imagine if somehow, someway, the Mets are in contention in July. 

Not for the division, but for a wild card. 

And then, what would the three acquisitions be at the trade deadline?

Answer: Lindor, Alvarez, and the clay man. 

That would be pretty remarkable.

The Mets now play a mediocre, but not bad, Washington Nats team next. 

The Mets, they just gotta keep going 10-5 every 15 games. 

How hard can that be? I mean, come on really? 

A piece of cake, if you ask me.


Meanwhile, a brief minor league report: 

Jacob Reimer, who has been off to an absolutely miserable RBI start, seemed to wake up yesterday, with a three for three day with a walk and four RBIs. Let’s hope he goes on a tear. 

At the risk of beating a dead horse, they are finally playing in comfortable weather in Binghamton. Bats thaw out.

Brooklyn (10-28), meanwhile, lost again, on four hits. 

Through 38 games, they are hitting .180, which is the worst thing I have ever seen from a Mets minor league team offensively. Each day that they compile three or four hits is going to make it tougher for them to reach the .200 mark before the end of the season.

But heck, maybe they too go 10-5 in their next 15 games.

How hard can that be, really? They already know how to win 10 games.

Paul Articulates - The booby prize


The Mets won a series against the Yankees with a walk-off hit last night.  That puts them up 2-1 in the subway series, with three more games at Yankee Stadium in September.  Hold on to some hope that the Yanks will gift them two more games, because a Subway Series win will be the only title this team will contend for in 2026.

Despite the dramatic game-tying shot in the ninth and the walk-off win in the tenth, this team has shown that they do not belong in the playoff picture and in some ways do not even belong in a major league ballpark.

I am shocked when I see multiple players dropping fly balls in a three game series.  This might happen in a softball beer league, but in an MLB game?  Multiple times?  I am embarrassed and I don't even wear the uniform.

Speaking of uniforms, I believe that uniform number 59 is soon going to be available.  It doesn't matter that the Mets are paying Sean Manaea $25M this year, he does not deserve to wear it.  How many times does he have to get lit up by the opposing team before David Stearns decides to DFA him?  There are talented young pitchers in the development system that can learn a lot in the big leagues at no risk to team success (because this is not a successful team), so why not start working on the future.

Let's face it - the Mets have to play .600 ball just to be the last wild card team, and they have not really faced the tough teams in their schedule so far except one series with the Dodgers and one with the Cubs.  

Another uniform number that should be on the auction block in July is 19.  I think that Bo Bichette really epitomizes the folly of the off-season rebuild of the Mets.  Bichette is a guy with a baseball name and some good numbers on the back of his baseball card.  Those numbers were earned in Toronto, which is not a high pressure media environment.  Those numbers looked convincing when plugged in to the front office's algorithm, but in the spotlight of New York City, Bichette has withered.  

So has the absent Jorge Polanco, who delivered nothing before applying for sick leave with a boo-boo on his wrist.  The guys like Alonso and Nimmo that were ditched for these guys had their ups and downs, but they both proved that they could play in the difficult environment.  None of the free agent pickups that represented the "new core" of the team have shown that they could except Juan Soto.

Soto cannot carry this team on his back, and he has to be pretty displeased that he can't because his contract includes a half million dollars for an MVP award and $350k for a World Series MVP and both of those are unobtainable on a team that will probably finish the season with a .400 winning percentage.

If the Mets get a reasonable haul of prospects for the huge mistakes of this past off-season, there may be some hope in the future for this team.  For now, we can hope that by September 11th the games are meaningless for the Yankees so we can have a competitive rookie-on-rookie game with a chance to win the Subway Series and hoist the booby prize.

Reese Kaplan -- How to Replace Clay Holmes for a Few Months


Well, the Francisco Alvarez injury seemed like the latest health debacle to derail the already losing season for Steve Cohen’s Mets until Saturday when a batted ball resulted in a fractured fibula for their hottest starting pitcher, Clay Holmes.  A cracked bone that doesn’t require surgery is the best news they’ve gotten thus far and the expectation is that Holmes will return to pitch during the 2026 season.  In the interim, however, the question of how to fill the open slot in the rotation is what’s causing the most emotional buzz among the fans and media pundits.


Minor League Options

Right now the Mets have three starting pitchers in the minors to consider for an injury related early arrival to Queens.  One we’ve seen before, one we have not except for spring training and the third has just arrived in Syracuse but in his whopping two game stat sheet has looked ready for the higher level of competition.

Jonah Tong is very much a puzzling hurler.  He strikes people out at a very high rate and in 2025 was clearly the hottest starting pitcher in the Mets minor league hierarchy.  Then he hit the majors in September and the wheels not only came off but blew out spectacularly.  This year he seems to be on-again/off-again in his output.  Right now his ERA of 5.68 suggests he is not quite ready for prime time despite having 55 strikeouts in 38 IP. 

Quickly looking to bypass Tong on the promising pitcher depth chart is Jack Wenninger who has had just 7 starts in Syracuse but he’s absolutely making the most of them.  While questions have arisen about his less than spectacular velocity, it’s very hard to argue with his 7 games there that include 38 Ks in 32 IP, a 1.08 ERA and a batting average against of just .165.  It would seem that he’s showing the strong pedigree to give him a temporary shot in the majors and see whether he’s more McLean or more Tong when facing the best of the best. 

The third guy with very little experience in AAA is southpaw Zach Thornton.  During his three minor league seasons he owns a 3.04 ERA and in Syracuse thus far it’s just 2.25.  At age 24 he’s at the point in his development that a push to the majors may not be considered early but they probably want to see him deliver a bit longer in the minors before declaring him ready.


Major League Options

Here’s where it gets a bit strange.  For all intents and purposes David Peterson is a starting pitcher even with Huascar Brazoban taking over opener duties in his past several games.  So you can’t really count him in the mix.  There are others, however.

Sean Manaea is rapidly evolving into the 2026 version of Frankie Montas that makes people question David Stearns’ judgment in picking up starting pitchers.  He’s been banished to the pen as a punishment for his awful numbers as a starter.  Right now he’s sporting an overall 6.56 ERA with a godawful WHIP of 1.714.  For that output he’s earning $25 million this year and again next year.  Uggh!

Moving Manaea into the starting rotation once again has a few layers of probability.  First, he is an experienced starting pitcher and should not have the rookie growing pains that the AAA choices would likely endure.  Second, he right now has no value whatsoever as a trade chip, but if somehow he could turn things around to say a 4.00 ERA level as a starter then he opens up the possibility for the club to do a late July trade to another team who’s aching for a starting pitcher.

The other current roster member who could slot into the rotation would be former Brewer Tobias Myers.  While this year he sports just a single starting pitcher assignment, for his short career he has been in 64 games with exactly half of them as a starter.  His career ERA is 3.16 and this year he’s right near that number at 3.25.  The issue here would be arm strength as he’s been at best a multi inning reliever but not expected to carry the game for five or more innings.  Still, at nearly minimum wage and still just 27 years old he’s a hurler with a future on this club that should be longer than the one year remaining for Manaea.

Let us not forget about the other injured starting pitcher, Kodai Senga.  We all know how good he can be when he’s healthy but over the past few years remaining available to start every 5th day has not been something the Mets can write down in ink for their right handed ghost fork specialist.  With his injury history although he’s now working off the mound it’s likely a month or more before he’d be deemed ready.  Consequently he is not a short term solution for Holmes’ next start.

Now it is possible for the Mets to go out and look at either the DFA transactions or (shudder) actually make a trade, but thus far the club has not shown an inclination to add anything but scrap heap picks when needs arise.  With a fractured fibula the timeline for the bone to recover is 6-8 weeks but conventional wisdom has it more like 3 full months before someone resumes all normal activities.  For a professional athlete it could be even longer.  A three month outage means mid August if everything goes right.  That’s not right around the corner.  The easiest thing to do would be to return Manaea to the rotation but the smarter move might be promoting Jack Wenninger.  Time will tell.  

5/17/26

Tom Brennan - Mets Kiddie News and Thoughts


 

A BIG ZACH ATTACK

It is possible that Zach Thornton has leapfrogged over Jonah Tong.

In Thorton’s Friday night start, he threw six shut out innings in AAA, allowing just three hits in a walk, and fanning nine batters.

In the previous day’s game, Jonah was beaten unmercifully.

By the same opponent that Thornton whupped.

Tong? 1.2 IP, 7 runs, two homers allowed.

That says “LEAPFROG” to me.


THE WINNER OF THE AWARD FOR SLOWEST START GOES TO…

Yonaton Henriquez.

After a very good season in 2025, I was expecting big things.

But through Friday, Henriquez was just 4 for 50 (.080) with Brooklyn.

Hey…. I fib you not.


Close runner up?

R.J.Gordon.

After a very good season in 2025, I was expecting big things from R.J.

But through Friday, Gordon had made five starts this season.

In those five starts, he had a total of just seven innings.

His ERA exceeds 21.00, and his WHIP exceeds 3.00.

You can’t even use the old adage that he is getting his work in.

Seven innings in five starts disqualifies him on that count.


If you want to flip my two man ranking order there, feel free.

QUESTION…

Would you trade rhe Mets’ Nolan McLeam for Cam Schlittler, straight up?

The Cam Man is 6-1, 1.35, 0.78 WHIP in 10 outings this year. Cy Young?

Our guy is great. Cam is…deGrom ++?


Oh, and the Mets won. 6-3. Benge and Soto had 5 hits, everyone else had 3.

And Brooklyn lost 1-0, and sits at .182 after 37 games. I like .282 better.

And Randy Guzman launched his 8th rocket. At 117.6 MPH.


Have a blessed Sunday, everyone.

And remember… 

While Clay Holmes got hurt only because he was not wearing full body armor, the personal decision to wear body armor is only one that you can make for yourself.

I kind of like the White Knight look, myself.

Tom Brennan: Players With Injury Histories Should Not Be Acquired Willy-Nilly; Next Man Up?

LUIS ROBERT

Mets Injury Poster Child, Rehabbing For A Mere $125,000 Per Game 


David Stearns said this on Tuesday:

“We absolutely have to look at our risk assessment on injured players,” Stearns said. 

“We know we’re taking a level of risk when we bring players in with injury histories.”

“We’re feeling that risk right now, and it hasn’t helped that a number of our players have gotten hurt at the same time.”

“It’s not something that we necessarily anticipated, and it’s something we need to look at.”


Well…to that, I say…

You are the baseball decision maker for the franchise. You darned well have to do more than cross your fingers and acquire players with injury histories. You have to, to use your words, “necessarily anticipate”.

Montas, Robert, and Polanco are just 3 very expensive injured puppies that immediately come to mind in that regard.

Then Alvarez goes down, joining Lindor, Tauchman, Mauricio, and Young on the IL with extended stays.

Me? I prefer bumbling to crumbling. 

Anyway…

In January, not knowing some of the newly acquired players anywhere near as well as the Mets should have known them, I wrote this:

“I will throw some numbers at you:

110, 127, 139, 138.

That’s how many games Luis Robert, Marcus Semien, Bo Bichette, and Jorge Polanco were in last year.

Collectively, employing my considerable mathematical skills, that comes out to 134 combined games that they were NOT in. 

Or, looked at another way, they missed 27% of the 162 games.

So, for those concerned about where Baty and Vientos will get their ABs, those concerned citizens of Metsville should keep in mind that they no longer have to play on the same roster as Messrs. Nimmo and Alonso who, combined, missed just 7 games last year, or just 2% absence, for the percentage-minded among us. 

The Iron Men of 2025 are gone. The Part Timers are here.”


How prescient that turned out to be.

Nimmo and Alonso combined missed just 2 games this season thru mid-week.

They were Iron Men in 2025, and are Men of Steel in 2026, too.

We have a team of Putty Men now. Men seemingly made of Clay.


David, I must say: naivety is not an intelligent strategic strength. 

It can lead to franchise disaster.

Oh, and back to Alvarez…

Alvarez is hurt - again? I say…Trade him whenever his value is high. 

Why? He will likely get hurt again…and again…and again. 

Based on his track record.

He takes a licking and just stops ticking. 

Oh, and…

Misery, it seems, loves company in Queens…


HOLMES JOINS THE METS’ FREAKY LENGTHY INJURY PANDEMIC

 RED ALERT!!

 NEXT MAN UP…

The Mets lost two on Friday night:

First, they lost 5-1 to the superior Yankees.

Then they lost Clay Holmes, too. How?

“Clay Holmes was pitching in the fourth inning at Citi Field when Yankees DH Spencer Jones struck him on the right leg with a 111.1 MPH comebacker. The right hander stayed on his feet, even going as far as to jog after the ball, before receiving a visit from Mendoza and a trainer - even then the concern did not immediately present itself. After a couple of warm-up pitches, Holmes said he was fine and remained in the game, throwing 6 straight balls but recovering to strike out two more batters.”

He then came out of the game, and got x-rayed.

He found out that he had a broken fibula. 

I fib you not.

Everyone was surprised… 

But not me. You see…

The curse is real. An inch to the right or left, and he’s just bruised.

Clay Holmes was not injury-prone.

He was healthy as a horse.

Now, he might return by late July.

A Devastating Blow.

I guess, as of Saturday AM, that Jack Wenninger is next starter up.

It is a matter of “Wenn”, not if.

If so, I have a suggestion for young Jack: 

Wear body armor on the mound.




5/16/26

RVH - Part 1: How Bad are the Mets

 


The Mets are 18–25.

That is the only record that counts. No one gets standings credit for context. No one gets a playoff spot because the roster was banged up, the rotation was unsettled, or the expected record looked better than the actual record.

But if the goal is to understand what this team really is, not just react emotionally to what it has looked like, context matters.

And the context says something important.

The Mets have not simply been bad. They have also leaked wins.

Through 43 games, the Mets are 18–25. Based on runs scored and runs allowed, using the standard MLB Pythagorean formula, their expected record is closer to 20–23. More precisely, the weekly model puts them around 20.4–22.6.

That does not make them good. But it does suggest they have left roughly two wins on the table through sequencing failures, close-game losses, bullpen leakage, and inconsistent execution.

That distinction matters more than it may seem.

At 18–25, the Mets look buried. In the current National League Wild Card picture, they sit seven games back. That sounds like a team fading toward irrelevance before Memorial Day.

But at roughly 20–23, the Mets would look very different. They still would not look good. But they would be much closer to the crowded middle of the Wild Card race, near the cluster of National League teams hovering around 20 or 21 wins.

That is not contention in the strong sense.

It is survival.

It is relevance.

It is staying close enough for health, regression, and reinforcements to matter.

That is the real cost of the leaked wins. The difference between 18–25 and 20–23 is not cosmetic. It is the difference between feeling buried and still feeling within striking distance.

The weekly breakdown helps tell the story:

Week

W-L

RS

RA

RDiff

RS/G

RA/G

Weekly Expected

Cumulative Expected

Wk 1

2–1

22

15

+7

7.33

5.00

2.0–1.0

2.0–1.0

Wk 2

4–3

38

24

+14

5.43

3.43

4.9–2.1

6.9–3.1

Wk 3

1–5

14

28

-14

2.33

4.67

1.3–4.7

8.8–7.2

Wk 4

0–6

11

35

-24

1.83

5.83

0.6–5.4

9.2–12.8

Wk 5

2–4

18

22

-4

3.00

3.67

2.4–3.6

11.6–16.4

Wk 6

3–3

25

24

+1

4.17

4.00

3.1–2.9

14.7–19.3

Wk 7

3–3

22

26

-4

3.67

4.33

2.6–3.4

17.2–22.8

Wk 8

3–0

22

8

+14

7.33

2.67

2.6–0.4

20.4–22.6

Total

18–25

172

182

-10

4.00

4.23

20.4–22.6

The obvious disaster came during Weeks 3 and 4. That was the April collapse. Across those two weeks, the Mets scored 25 runs and allowed 63.

That was not bad luck. That was poor baseball.

The expected record during those two weeks was almost identical to the actual collapse.

But outside that stretch, the picture becomes more layered.

Week 2 was probably the first major missed opportunity. The Mets went 4–3, but their run differential suggested something closer to a dominant 5–2 week. They scored 38 runs and allowed only 24. That was one of the strongest underlying stretches of the season.

The inability to fully convert that into wins may have quietly set the tone for the weeks that followed.

Then came the recent stabilization.

Weeks 6 and 7 were important because the Mets played almost exactly to their underlying numbers. They went 6–6 while their expected record over that period was roughly 5.7–6.3. That suggested the chaotic variance of April might finally be fading.

Week 8 took that one step further.

The Detroit sweep was not just three wins. It was three wins backed by the scoreboard underneath the scoreboard. The Mets scored 22 runs and allowed only 8. They averaged 7.33 runs per game, matching their Week 1 offensive peak, but this time paired it with elite run prevention at 2.67 runs allowed per game.

That is the first truly balanced week of the season.

Before the sweep, the Mets looked like a team trying to stop the bleeding. After the sweep, they look at least temporarily like a team that may have found a foothold.

The last three weeks now matter. Across Weeks 6, 7, and 8, the Mets are 9–6 with a +11 run differential. That does not erase the April collapse. It does not make the full-season record acceptable. But it does begin to shrink the distortion created by the winless Week 4 road trip.

That can be interpreted two ways.

The optimistic interpretation is that the Mets stopped the bleeding and are beginning to stabilize.

The harsher interpretation is that they merely beat up on Detroit at the right time and still remain well below where they need to be.

Both can be true.

The Mets are still in trouble. An 18–25 record is not a rounding error. They dug a real hole. They do not get to explain away April.

But the Pythagorean view helps clarify the hole. This is not a team with no pulse. It is a team that played terribly for two weeks, leaked several winnable games around that collapse, and has recently started to perform more like a competitive baseball team.

That is why the next few weeks matter so much.

The standings say the Mets are in trouble.

The Pythagorean record says they have underperformed.

The Wild Card picture says the gap between buried and relevant is only a few wins.

And the Detroit sweep says there may finally be some stabilization.

That does not guarantee recovery.

But it does suggest the story of the 2026 Mets may not yet be fully written.

The Mets may still be bad.

But after Week 8, we may finally be getting closer to learning whether they are broken, or whether they have simply been late to stabilize.