5/29/26

Ernest Dove - Young New York Mets Arms Thriving

Today's topic from prospect expert Ernest Dove is the young pitchers in the New York Mets development system.  Click the link below for the full report.


Young New York Mets Arms Thriving

Reese Kaplan -- Finally a Win and a Lindor Trade Question


Coming off a season-matching gap of 11 games below .500 it came as a most pleasant surprise to see the Mets take a game against the Cincinnati Reds in a questionable but ultimately successful way.  

Juan Soto hitting a homer is not big news anymore.  He’s proving his worth.  Eric Wagaman hitting one was, well, surprising.  Carson Benge not once but twice delivering RBI base hits shows he’s adjusting well after his rough start and perhaps David Stearns gets a rare gold star for having faith in Spring Training when others questioned Benge’s early arrival and his initial struggles reinforced that apparently inaccurate Stearns criticism.

On the pitching side, however, this game was an adventure.  Huascar Brazoban somehow battled his way through a scoreless first inning to open the game but he needed some good fielding to help him out. 

Next up was Jonah Tong who is most certainly a work in progress.  His control is not outstanding but he worked his interval in the game without giving up an earned run though he was responsible for the unearned one with his own throwing error setting it up. 

After that it appeared that the club made its way through nearly the entire bullpen for an inning or so at a time which included lots of baserunners who didn’t come around to score.  By final count the Reds had 17 men left on base.  That’s not exactly pitching dominance from the hometown team. 

The real exciting one was the 9th inning effort from closer Devin Williams who was facing a save situation with a 2-run lead but proceeded to load the bases on free passes, yet somehow also managed to fan the side.  So he faced six hitters and no runs scored.  That’s a save (of sorts).

With Jorge Polanco starting up baseball activity again people are getting mildly curious if the team could at least make a surge towards a mediocre record instead of the league’s worst they currently hold.  Since he’s here for another year after this one and hasn’t done anything offensively in his brief but derailed trial in the first two weeks of April you should consider him here to stay.

Stories are starting to appear about whether the Mets indeed need to do some headline grabbing rebuild trades that could move high priced veterans for an armload of high level prospects.  The club has no outfielders immediately knocking on the door (sorry, Mr. Morabito), and pitching is still a guessing game. 

The name that comes up more often than others is a trade away of All Star shortstop Francisco Lindor who is getting closer to a return.  We all know about his contract.  At the time it was an eye popping 10-year $341 million deal.  Believe it or not, we’re now at the halfway point with 2026 being Lindor’s fifth year as a Met with five more years to follow.  Given his defense, speed and power the $34.1 million per year doesn’t seem all that outrageous when he’s healthy enough to play.

The question now is he going to provide more to the Mets over the next five years as he approaches the end of it at his age 37 season, or would they be better off having another club assume the financial obligation while the club hopes to retain substitute shortstop Bo Bichette for 2027 as well? 

Right now there is no direct substitute in the system as a prospective Lindor replacement unless your belief in Ronny Mauricio is unreasonably optimistic.  There are players in the lower minors like Elian Pena who could eventually play shortstop in Queens but he’s a few years away.  Consequently making a Lindor deal would open up some roster vulnerabilities unless a top flight shortstop prospect was part of the return package from the acquiring team. 

Bear in mind that Lindor is a pre-Stearns contract that was given to him.  Consequently you can’t necessarily bank on loyalty over a deal Stearns didn’t endorse.  Remember Edwin Diaz, Brandon Nimmo and Pete Alonso as examples of making solid players available to leave. 

So, should the Mets make this type of monster deal to reinforce the roster in various places and save quite a bit of money, or should they instead welcome him back with open arms and look for him near the top of the lineup for the next five years?

MACK - Friday Observations - Weekly Update on the Future

 


Mack – Weekly Update on the Future

 

I’m currently following 20 prospects that I feel have a future in Queens. I will update weekly what they have accomplished positively over the past seven days. It will be positive highlights. I will leave the negatives to Tom in comment form and some of the rest of you.

Names might be removed and new ones might be added. Recent promotions of Carson Benge, AJ Ewing, Jonah Tong, Jonathan PintaroZach Thornton, and Nick Morabito have proven that the youth rebuild has begun. These additional 19 Mets prospects are the future of this team.

 

SP Jack Wenninger/AAA-Syracuse –

                On 5-20:               8-ST, 3-1, 2.92, 1.20, 35.2-IP, 39-K, 22-BB

Wenninger was scheduled to start on Saturday but was 🌧 out. 

He did start Game 1 on Sunday which was not his best outing: 5.1-IP, 6-H, 4-ER, 5-K, 2-BB, 86/50

Still, his overall numbers are still good. 

                On 5-27:               9-ST, 3-2, 2.20, 1.22, 41-IP, 44-K, 24-BB

I still have Wenninger as the current top Mets starter prospect. 


SP Jonah Tong/AAA-Syracuse –

                On 5-20:               9-ST, 1-3, 5.68, 1.36, 38-IP. 55-K, 24-BB

On Friday morning, Tong was promoted to MLB-Mets. I don't know at this point if this is a one and done, so I will keep him around until that seems to be determined.

And with that, this loss to the Marlins may have just served as the reintroduction to someone that can help the Mets rotation, going forward... three glorious, scoreless innings. Fastball hit 98.5. Pitches: 28/17.

Note: Now has the largest one-year drop in 4-seam arm angle of any pitcher in baseball. Big overall improvement with a little loss of depth. 

On Wednesday,  3.2 more 0-ER innings, though only one strikeout,  four walks, and just too many pitches thrown.

                On 5-27:       MLB - 0.2-WAR, 0-0, 0.00

Overall, a really good week for Jonah. I expect him to graduate from this opener bullshite next week and get back to being a real starter.

Next week also looks like the last week I will track Tong as a minor leaguer.


SP Zach Thornton/AAA-Syracuse 

I originally didn't have Zach on this list. He was already in Queens. But, on Saturday, he was banished back to Syracuse and replaced by reliever Jonathan Pintaro.

Many players, that are sent back to the minors, mentally look upon this kind of move as a demotion and start off slowly back in the minors. So the story of Thornton on Wednesday in his forst return outing for  Syracuse: 4.1-IP, 7-H, 6-ER, 2-BB, 2-K, THREE HOME RUNS... 4.96.

                On 5/27:  MLB: -0.1-WAR, 0-1, 8.31

                  AAA/AA:   7-ST, 1-3, 3.16, 1.19, 37-IP, 40-K, 12-BB

Tough week for Zach. I expect an immediate bounce back next week. 


RP Ryan Lambert/AAA-Syracuse

                On 5-20:       15-APPS, 1-0, 6.23, 1.61, 13-IP, 20-K, 12-BB

Lambert continued on Sunday getting his game in shape. He pitched another scoreless innings, walking one, and striking out three. Fastball hit 98+ and all three strikeouts were whiffs.

                On 5-27:    16-APPS, 1-0, 5.79, 1.57, 14-IP, 23-K, 13-BB     


RP Jonathan Pintaro/AAA-Syracuse and MLB/Mets:

On Saturday, the Mets recalled Pintaro. At this point in the season, he had one 15 relief appearances for Syracuse (2-0, 2.81, 1.13, 25.2-IP, 32-K, 12-BB).

A good first impression on Saturday afternoon for the Mets: 1.0-IP, 0-H, 0-R, 0.00.

On Memorial Day, he was stretched out to 2.2 hitless, scoreless innings, with three strikeout. You can't ask for more than this and his MLB ERA continues to be 0.00. 

On Tuesday, he was optioned back to AAA-Syracuse when AJ Minter was activated.

On 5-27:  MLB - 0.1-WAR, 0-0, 0.00

               AAA - 2-0, 2.81, 1.13, 15-APPS, 25.2-IP, 32-K, 12-BB


RP Dylan Ross/AAA-Syracuse –

                On 5-20:   3-LEVELS, 11-APPS, 3-0, 1.54, 0.94, 11.2-IP, 13-K, 8-BB

Did not strengthen his case on Thursday, giving up two earned runs in 0.2-IP. AAA ERA soared to 4.32; however, he bounced back on Sunday, going scoreless in 0.2-IP and giving up only one hit.

Blew up on Memorial Day - 0.1-IP, 4-ER, BB, K

                On 5-27:  2-1, 7.71, 10-APPS, 11-BB, 9.1-IP, 8-ER, 12-K.

I am removing Ross from this weekly update going forward. He simply is not prospect material right now


RP Anderson Severino/AAA-Syracuse –

                On 5-20:     15-APPS, 2-0, 0.98, 0.92, 18.1-IP, 19-K, 8-BB

5-21:  0.1-IP 1-ER, 3-BB

5-24:  1-IP, 0-R, 0-H, K

                On 5-27:   2-0, 1.37, 1.06, 17-APPS, 19.2-IP, 20-K, 11-BB


RP Ben Simon/AAA-Syracuse –

    On 5-19, Simon was promoted to Syracuse after going 14-apps, 1-2, 2.35, 1.11, 15.1-IP, 18-K, 5-BB, for Binghamton. 

                On 5-20:   1-APP, 1-0, 0.00, 0.75, 1.1-IP, 0-K, 1-BB.

                                He followed this on 5-22 with 1-IP, 0-R

                                Memorial Day: 1-IP, 1-H, 1-R, BB, K, 2.70

                On 5-27:  AAA - 1-0, 2.70, 1.80, 3-APPS, 3.1-IP, K, 4-BB

Starting off at the AAA level a little wild, but let's give him a chance to get adjusted here.  

        

OF Nick Morabito/MLB-Mets & AAA-Syracuse - 

Morabito started this week as a member of the parent squad, so I didn't save what his stats were on 5/20 at either the MLB or AAA level.

On Tuesday, he was optioned back to AAA-Syracuse at the same time OF  Jared Young was activated off the IL list. His stats ten were:

5/26 - Mets:  -0.3-WAR, 11-AB, 0-H, .000

          Syr:    146-AB, 4-HR, 17-RBI, .253/.364/.390/.755


SP Jonathan Santucci/AA-Binghamton –

                On 5-20:               8-ST, 0-5, 4.95, 1.37, 36.1-IP, 46-K, 19-BB

On Tuesday, Santucci had another so-so start... 4.2-IP, 4-H, 2-ER, 2-BB, an impressive 7-K, 4.83. 

                On 5-27:               9-ST, 0-5, 4.83, 1.36, 41-IP, 53-K, 21-BB

I'm still waiting for Santucci to break out this season and show he was worth a second-round draft pick. 


RP Saul Garcia/AA-Binghamton –

                On 5-20:     16-APPS, 0-1, 5.51, 1.22, 16.1-IP, 25-K, 4-BB

Garcia pitched on Saturday... 2-IP, 0-R, 4-K

He followed this up on Tuesday... 1-IP, 0-H, 0-R, K

                On 5-27:    18-APPS, 0-1, 4.66, 1.08, 19.1-IP, 30-K, 4-BB

Garcia is working hard to erase a poor start on this season.


C Chris Suero/AA-Binghamton –

                On 5-20:  106-AB, 26-BB, 7-HR, 18-RBI, .198/.374/.453/.827

                On 5-27:   121-AB, 30-BB, 7-HR, 19-RBI, .182/.361/.413/.774

I am removing Suero off this report. He simply is not prospect material right now.


3B Jacob Reimer/AA-Binghamton –

                On 5-20:  121-AB, 4-HR, 10-RBI, 22-BB, .222

Went 1-4 on Thursday... 

                On 5-27:   135-AB, 4-HR, 12-RBI, .215/.345/.393/.738

I'll give Reimer a few more weeks to pull these numbers up before I yank him from the report.


SP Channing Austin/A+ Brooklyn –

                On 5-20:               8-ST, 2-1, 1.17, 1.09, 38.1-IP. 48-K, 22-BB

On Tuesday, Austin was promoted to AA-Binghamton.

                On 5-27:   AA - no appearances yet

                                A+ - 8-ST, 2-1, 1.17, 1.09, 38.1-IP. 48-K, 22-BB

On Thursday, Austin was placed on the IL. No details were provided. 


OF JT Benson/A+ Brooklyn –

                On 5-20:     8-AB, 1-RBI, ,125/.125/.250/.375

Benson was promoted to Brooklyn earlier this month, after going .276/.361/.578/.938 for A-St. Lucie.

On Sunday, JT took a ball to his head. He was not back in the lineup on Tuesday. No word from the Mets on his status.

                On 5-27:    20-AB, 0-HR, 4-RBI, .150/.227/.300/.527

             St. Lucie - 116-AB, 5-HR, 24-RBI, .276/.361/.578/.938

 

SP Nicholas Carreno/A-St. Lucie –

                On 5-20:    8-G, 3-ST, 1-0, 1.93, 1.03, 28-IP, 42-K, 14-BB

Carrero pitched four scoreless innings on Saturday, striking out seven, and lowering his ERA to 1.69. For now, I am changing his prospect rating to RED

                On 5-27:   9-G, 4-ST, 1-0, 1.69, 1.03, 32-IP, 49-K, 16-BB


SP Jose Chirinos/A-St. Lucie –

                On 5-20:    7-G, 6-ST, 2-1, 2.93, 1.11, 30.2-IP, 29-K, 6-BB

On Friday, I raised Chirinos to a RED prospect. He didn't start due to a previous commitment to Kodai Senga for a rehab assignment. No biggie. He made up for that in a big way when he followed Senga and did this: 5.1-IP, 3-H, ER, 3-BB, 10-K. He's gonna be eating Coney Dogs real soon, folks.

                On 5-27:    8-G, 6-ST, 2-1, 2.75, 1.11, 36-IP, 39-K, 9-BB


1B Randy Guzman/A-St. Lucie –

     On 5-20:     136-AB, 8-HR, 25-RBI, 18-BB, 47-K, .243/.348/.485/.833

Big start to the week on Thursday: 2-4, RBI... followed on Friday with 2-3. Tuesday 1-3.

    On 5-27:    150-AB, 8-HR, 26-RBI, 19-BB, 50-K, .260/.362/.493/.855

A nice bump in the numbers across the board. Let's hope it continues.

 

SS Elian Pena/A-St. Lucie –

  On 5-20:  143-AB, 2-HR, 17-RBI, 25-BB, 31-K, .273/.393/.385/.778

Was rested on Thursday, but reloaded on Friday, going 2-4.

He continued his recovery on Saturday, going 1-3 and raising his batting average to .280.

Tuesday 1-3.

On Wednesday we got back the Mets uber-prospect... 3-4 and a .294 batting average.

      On 5-27:  156-AB, 2-HR, 19-RBI, 29-BB, 36-K, .282/.405/.385/.790

I expect the Pena-slump is over and he's back on target to be promoted to Brooklyn before the season ends. 


C Yovanny Rodriguez/FCL Mets –

      On 5-20:  41-AB, 5-HR, 12-BB, 4-BB, 11-K, .293/,356/.683/1.038

           Memorial Day: 1-3, 2-RBI, BB, 2-K, .280, .957-OPS

      On 5-27:  53-AB, 5-HR, 15-RBI, .264/.339/.566/.905


HELIUM ALERT

There are two guys I'm just not ready to put on this list. One I've never targeted, and the other I have fell for oh so many times.

There's AAA-Syracuse infielder, Christian Arroyo, who currently leads all Mets minor leaguers in runs batted in (RBI), with 31.

The other is... yeah, it's him again... AAA-1B/OF Ryan Clifford, who leads all Mets minor leaguers, with 10 home runs. He also leads in something else, but we'll let Tom discuss this in comment form.

I'm not ready to sign off on either of them though I will raise their prospect status to BLUE.


I see some guys that I will remove from my watch, due to current under-performance.

I already see some more deletions coming.

Plus, look for some new guys next week. 

Cya.




               


5/28/26

Alex Rubinson - Mets Defense has not Lived up to Offseason Plan

During the offseason, a lot of the talk was on how the New York Mets were going to fix its pitching staff. Even after the team acquired Freddy Peralta in a blockbuster deal with the Milwaukee Brewers, there were still questions on how the Mets would be able to keep their opponents off of the scoreboard. It is well-documented how expensive pitching can be. That is something that will never change whether it be in free agency or via the trade market. 

David Stearns was well aware of this and tried to get around it by adopting a strategy he had used going back to his days with the Brewers. He made it a point of emphasis to focus on run prevention, even at the expense of the team’s offensive output. Although signing infielders like Jorge Polanco and Bo Bichette raised some highbrows, the team acquired Marcus Semien for Brandon Nimmo (despite Nimmo clearly being the better offensive player at this point in their respective careers). 

Stearns also traded for Luis Robert Jr. to patrol centerfield. Even the aforementioned Bichette wouldn’t have to play shortstop with Francisco Lindor in the fold. The plan definitely left Stearns and the front office open to criticism, but at the least the organization established a plan heading into the 2026 season. 

Fast forward two months into the season, and we can start having meaningful takeaways. The offense has been abysmal with some of the offseason additions not stepping up, but with Lindor and Francisco Alvarez on the shelf, the team has minimal options on who to turn to in the big moment. Although the offense is what will grab all of the headlines, the defense has left a lot to be desired. It doesn’t help that Robert Jr. and Lindor have missed significant time, but the team can’t even accomplish what it was designed to do. 

Coming into play on Wednesday, the team was in the lower third of the league in fielding run value at minus five. When looking at overall outs above average, the Mets are at negative eight. What’s puzzling is that the team struggles to come in on balls and go backwards. Only three teams are worse than the Mets when coming in on balls and a different set of three teams are the only ones that are worse when having to go backwards. 


It’s also noteworthy that the team is especially bad when facing left-handed hitters. The team once again ranks 27th in MLB in outs above average in that category at minus nine. Oddly enough, they are actually above average versus right-handers. 


The outfield specific metrics don’t look any better at negative three outs above average. This directly stems from the team being a minus three when they have to go back on batted balls. The only team worse when traveling backwards are the Miami Marlins. Of course going backwards is incredibly difficult. It’s why you see more outfielders playing deeper in today’s game, but the Mets stick out even compared to the rest of the league. 


Overall, the Mets have an 87% success rate in the outfield. That might not seem all that bad, but the three worst teams in that metric are at 85%. The infield is even worse. They are at negative six overall in outs above average with negative seven against lefties. The infield is pretty good at moving back on balls but really struggles at charging in. 


Looking back at the aforementioned trade that sent Nimmo to the Texas Rangers for Semien, it has gone even worse than imagined. The thinking behind the trade was that Nimmo was an aging player who already had to move off of centerfield. Although Semien was even worse offensively, his contract was shorter, and he had value defensively. The move has not gone to plan to say the least. Semien ranks outside the top 30 (remember, there are only 30 teams in MLB) in outs above average at second base. 


At minus three, only three second baseman are worse among qualifiers. Meanwhile, Nimmo has been an average defender with zero outs above average. Do you want to guess who is tied with Nimmo as an average defender? If you guessed Luis Robert Jr., you would be correct. Outs above average is a cumulative statistic, so Robert Jr. might be better if he wasn’t on the injured list, but his average defense does show that he wasn’t necessarily lighting it up in center when he was healthy. 


Ironically, Bo Bichette, the move that appeared to go against the Mets’ offseason philosophy, has actually worked out. Bichette is tied for the team lead among qualifiers with three outs above average. Meanwhile, Tyrone Taylor has been a below average defender. The Mets knew coming into the season that some of the players up and down their roster might be underwhelming offensively, but they figured they would help make up for it on the other side of the ball. 


At the very least, Luis Torrens has lived up to his end of the bargain. The former New York Yankee has a plus four fielding run value (91st percentile). The defensive mastermind has been fantastic at holding runners as well thanks to his 98th percentile pop time and 97 percentile caught stealing above average. 


Mets fans probably would like to see Torrens get better at blocking pitches. He is in the 55th percentile in blocking, which is still solid, but given the limited offensive production, you would like Torrens to be as close to perfect as possible on defense. 


The Mets have not played like a sound defensive team throughout the first third of the season. Not all metrics and statistics show the Mets as a bottom five defensive ballclub, but when run prevention was the priority all offseason and was what the entire organization preached during the winter, they should be held to a slightly higher standard, especially compared to what the team has put on display so far in 2026.  


Paul Articulates - Where is the fun?


Baseball is America’s pastime for one very specific reason – it is fun!  Every kid that learns to hit a ball with a bat wants to do it over and over again.  Even watching others hit the ball and run around the bases is fun, which explains why baseball stadiums all around the country fill up with fans every day for a baseball season that lasts for months.

Somewhere along the way, that fun becomes a passion, which becomes the driver for the motivation to chase the ultimate dream – to compete in the Major Leagues against the best players from around the world.  Unfortunately, along that journey there is also failure and disappointment, which impacts a person’s ability to play with the freedom and energy that first attracted them to the sport.

Failure clouds the mind; doubt slows the instantaneous response required to put the center of an elongated cylinder in front of a speeding sphere.  This is exactly what has confounded the Mets in their awful slide that has almost lasted for an entire year now.

In the world of baseball analytics and biomechanical study, there is a belief that there is a structural solution to every problem that a pitcher or batter faces.  With enough information, enough study, enough repetitive training, these flaws can be eliminated in favor of pure mechanical execution.

But these are humans, not robots.  With each adjustment to one motion comes an unintended change in something else or undue stress to another part of the body.  Tragically, the confidence in change is lost when initial failure is the result, and the compounding effect of lost confidence is the inability to execute things that were simple and mindless before.  Just watch me on a golf course.

Now put that together with thousands of screaming (and booing) fans, and the cumulative mental effect is almost toxic.  In fact, it is toxic if a measure of health is the team’s batting average and/or OPS.

These Mets have lost their fun.  They have lost the essence of what makes a player want to spend every day on a ballfield.  If you need evidence, re-watch Tuesday’s game and look at David Peterson’s face.  There is no joy.  More evidence?  Look at the short-lived, but real change in team dynamics when AJ Ewing joined the club and had that brilliant first outing.  Ewing brought the joy with him and it was contagious, especially in the outfield with his buddy Carson Benge.  But in the midst of this horrendous slump, with all of the discontent surrounding the team, that joy was quickly consumed.

If you think back to the OMG Mets of 2024, it was the fun environment that Iglesias brought with his music, it was the silly Grimmace costumes with fans in purple all over the stadium.  That made it light, and with quiet minds and a spring in their step, those Mets put on a very memorable run.  They were the same players that had underperformed early in the season, and I guarantee you that they did not simultaneously all make some biomechanical tweak to improve their game.  It was very simply fun to play the game again.

This team may not be the one that is going to give New York its coveted World Championship.  It may not be the beginning of a sustainable winner.  But this team is better than it has shown, and once the joy of playing baseball is rediscovered, by whatever combination of random events or player movements, the on-field performance will improve.  I long for that day, because watching the Mets used to be fun.


5/27/26

RVH - Rethinking the Mets

What the First Six Years of the Cohen Era Taught Us About Building a Long-Term Winner


Yesterday, our Cautious Optimist asked the question: Can the Mets become sustained championship contenders?


This new series is my attempt to address that same question by exploring what we have learned about the Steve Cohen Mets and what makes the Dodgers, Braves and yes - the Yankees so successful at winning.

Series Introduction

Over the past six years, the Mets have tried almost everything.

Massive payrolls.
Superstar signings.
Front office overhauls.
Analytics expansion.
Player development investments.
Sports science.
Infrastructure upgrades.
Aggressive trade deadlines.
Short-term pushes.
Long-term pivots.

Some moves worked.
Some failed badly.
Most landed somewhere in between.

But after six years of the Steve Cohen era, one thing is becoming increasingly clear:

The Mets do not have an ambition problem.

They have a consistency problem.

This multi-part series is not about blaming ownership, defending management, or recycling the same emotional arguments that dominate Mets conversations every season.

It is about stepping back and asking harder questions:

What have the Mets actually learned since 2021?

What parts of the Dodgers, Braves, and Yankees models have they successfully implemented?

What still is not working?

Why do the same patterns continue to appear?

And most importantly:

What does a sustainable Mets winner actually look like in the real world, not just on paper?

Because building a great baseball organization in New York requires more than money, headlines, or offseason momentum.

It requires clarity.
Discipline.
Adaptability.
Emotional stability.

And a system capable of surviving pressure, injuries, bad stretches, expectations, and the realities of a 162-game season.

The Mets have already started building pieces of that.

Now comes the harder part: Putting the entire thing together.


Rethinking the Mets, Part 1

The Mets Don’t Have an Effort Problem

Nobody can accuse Steve Cohen of lacking commitment.

Since purchasing the Mets before the 2021 season, Cohen has spent aggressively, upgraded infrastructure, modernized baseball operations, pursued elite talent, invested internationally, expanded analytics, improved player development resources, and attempted to pull the organization into the modern era of baseball operations.

The mission has been obvious from Day One:
Build a sustainable championship organization worthy of New York.

That part has never been unclear.

And honestly, Mets fans should acknowledge something important here: for decades, one of the franchise’s biggest complaints was ownership unwillingness to operate at the level required to consistently compete with baseball’s elite organizations. Cohen erased that problem almost immediately.

The Mets are no longer behaving like a small-market organization pretending otherwise.

But six years into the Cohen era, another reality is becoming unavoidable:

Effort is not the issue anymore.

Execution is.

That distinction matters because the Mets have already implemented pieces of what successful organizations do.

They have spent like the Dodgers.
They have attempted to build infrastructure like the Braves.
They have pursued organizational professionalism more aligned with the Yankees.
They hired respected baseball executives.
They invested in development.
They expanded data and performance operations.
They aggressively pursued star talent.

In other words, the Mets have not been standing still.

But building a consistently elite baseball organization is not about collecting isolated best practices from other franchises.

It is about making all of those pieces work together under the specific realities of your own environment.

And this is where the Mets are still searching for answers.

Because New York is different.

Citi Field is different.

The media environment is different.

The pressure is different.

The expectations are different.

The emotional volatility surrounding the franchise is different.

The Mets are not trying to build a winner in a neutral environment. They are trying to build one inside one of the loudest, most emotionally reactive sports markets in the world.

That changes the equation.

Which means simply “spending more” was never going to be enough.

The Mets do have structural advantages.

Steve Cohen’s financial strength is absolutely one of them. Ignoring that advantage would be organizational malpractice. The Dodgers have already shown what happens when enormous financial resources are paired with discipline, depth, infrastructure, and flexibility.

But the Mets also have structural disadvantages that continue to show up year after year:

  • slow starts

  • cold-weather offense

  • roster imbalance

  • mounting early-season pressure

  • aging roster stretches

  • media escalation

  • emotional instability around failure

  • difficulty absorbing adversity over long stretches

And those problems compound quickly in New York.

That is the part many fans are exhausted by.

Every season begins feeling enormous.
Every slow stretch becomes amplified.
Every injury becomes a crisis.
Every slump becomes existential.
Every season starts carrying emotional weight by April.

Meanwhile, the Braves, Dodgers, and Yankees continue operating with a level of organizational calm and stability the Mets still have not fully established.

That does not mean those organizations are perfect.

It means they recover faster.

That is a major difference.

The Braves built continuity.
The Dodgers built flexibility.
The Yankees built an organization capable of handling NYC pressure without consuming itself.

The Mets are still trying to figure out how to combine those traits into something sustainable.

And to be fair, some of this takes time.

Player development takes time.
Infrastructure takes time.
Cultural change takes time.
Organizational alignment takes time.

But New York is also not infinitely patient. That is simply reality.

Which is why this moment feels important.

The first six years of the Cohen era were about proving commitment.

Now comes the harder part:
Turning commitment into sustained winning.

That requires sharper decisions.
Better roster balance.
More athleticism.
Better variance absorption.
Stronger internal replacements.
More emotional stability.
Smarter use of financial advantage.
And a clearer understanding of what actually works in New York over 162 games and multiple seasons.

The Mets do not need another dramatic reset.

They do not need another offseason championship.

And they do not need another cycle of emotional overreaction every time the standings tighten in May.

What they need now is sharper execution and a better understanding of why the same patterns continue to repeat themselves.

Because by this point in the Cohen era, some trends are no longer random. They are recurring.

And maybe the clearest example is this:

Every season seems to become emotionally heavy almost immediately.

A slow April turns into mounting pressure.
Pressure turns into pressing.
Pressing turns into volatility.
Volatility turns into noise.
And suddenly an entire season feels unstable before summer even arrives.

The Dodgers absorb bad stretches.
The Braves absorb injuries.
The Yankees absorb pressure.

The Mets still too often absorb stress.

That is not just a roster issue. It is a systems issue.

And until the Mets solve it, every season risks feeling harder than it needs to.

Because in New York, bad starts do not stay contained for very long. They spread.

That is where this series begins next.