A.J. EWING HAS BEEN HOT
Boy, oh boy, last year’s Mets minor-league system was a game-winning machine.
This year, through Wednesday, not nearly so much. A collective 31 wins and 40 losses. Way off the pace of 2025. (Then, on Thursday, the 4 teams lost by a combined score of 34-10. Ouch.
The update below gives you a quick idea as to why.
When it comes to Syracuse, they are playing pretty well at 12–10, but it is a team filled with veterans, so what I like to look at for Syracuse is how are the prospects and near–prospects doing? How the team does overall is less relevant because of the veterans that are unlikely to be called up.
So looking through the prospect prism, Mauricio has been doing great, Clifford has picked it up quite a bit after an abysmal start, Morabito is doing OK, but he is a better hitter this April than last April, and Lambert, Tong and Wenninger are doing mostly very well.
Scott was also doing well enough to get chosen for the Mets starting role in Thursday night’s game in Queens. The S-Mets are 15th out of 20 in scoring runs, and hitting .250.
Binghamton? I thought they would be the beast of the franchise. But they are 6-10, and flat out not hitting.
Jacob Reimer was hitting .122 before he went 4 for 4 Wednesday night. Doing that still only raised his average to .189. (Then he fanned all 4 times up on Thursday!)
Ewing was torrid, but slipped down to .327, and has no home runs. Only Serrano otherwise at .271 is anywhere close to a normal batting average otherwise.
Sixteen games in, the Ponies are hitting a woeful .195.
Brooklyn is 4-12. Why? Lack of hitting. They sit at .184.
Yes, Cyclone Park is tough for line up’s whackers, but on the road, they are a brutal .149, and .219 at home.
They have hit somewhat better, and fanned less, over their last 9 games, so hopefully their upward trajectory continues at the plate.
St. Lucie (9-8) has had fine hitting performances from Pena, Zayas and others, and are hitting a league-leading .253, a league-best .357 OBP, and just one run short of the most runs, averaging 6.1 runs per game. So why are they only 9-8?
The Lucites have by far the league’s worst ERA (6.44), despite 2 shutouts in 17 games! By comparison, Ft. Myers’ team ERA by comparison is 2.10. Lucie righty Omar Victorino has done the worst so far, allowing 21 runs in 9.1 IP. The entire Ft Myers team has only surrendered 34 earned runs.
Let’s see how all of that sub-mediocrity changes with warmer weather.
Hopefully, for the much better.
However, the fact that St. Lucie is hitting well is less relevant than what the other teams are doing at the three higher levels, since hitters that do well at the Florida State league level often struggle as they get to higher levels and face stronger pitching. Their stats are far less indicative of future success.
So my assessment is that the overall state of Mets minor league hitting is frankly poor at this point.
And that is something that I’ve unfortunately written far too many times during my decade plus as a Mack’s Mets writer.
Pitching has also been less impressive than in 2025.
And that’s my memo. Except, let me add this…
I LIKE LUKE WEAVER MORE ONCE I HEARD HIM SAY THIS AFTER WEDNESDAY’S 3-2 WIN:
Weaver said:
“Look, people smell fear.
“I'm not the biggest guy in the room, but I ain't scared of nobody.
“And that's the attitude I try to take, and if I screw up, it's on me, but at the end of the day, I'm gonna sleep at night, and I'm gonna feel good about the effort I put in, and I ain't fearing nobody. You remember that.”
Asked “What are the emotions, not just for yourself, but for this team, finally getting over the hump tonight?”
Weaver replied:
“A little bit of relief. Look, this wasn't about attitude. This wasn't about work ethic. This wasn't about a bad demeanor. There was none of that. It's about just showing up every day, giving you something to cheer about, and thankfully, today….we freaking did that.
“All right? Thank you. Let's go Mets.”
I REALLY LIKE THAT!

