3/26/26

Tom Brennan - 2026 METS OPENING DAY!



Mack & the rest of Mack’s Mets writers are OPENING DAY EXCITED!


Lots of new faces, including Freddy Peralta, who is the Mets new SP-1.

- Freddy, a happy warrior, is 13-5 in March/April career starts - sweet!

- He is 2-0, 2.25 career at Citi, allowing just 3 hits in 12 IP.

Marcus Semien, former MVP and gold glove, at second base.

- He had a very good .205 spring, with a bunch of hard outs. 9 RBI in 39 AB.

- He hit a Soto-like 45 HRs in 2021.

Bo Bichette, extremely professional - and clutch - hitter.

- MVP candidate? Perhaps.

Carson Benge?

- Possible rookie of the year, with good fielding range and a cannon.

Luis Robert, Jr.

- Enigmatic at the dish, but could have a big year.

- Great fielder and base stealer.

Soto will have the heavy weight of his transition year behind him, as he hunts for an MVP.

Alvarez at 24 may explode in 2026.

Devin Williams

 - out to prove his 2026 was a FLUKE. Strong spring.

- wants us to say, Edwin WHO?

Luke Weaver?

- Mets fans are hoping for a lock down version.

So: Peralta goes 7, Luke holds the lead in inning 8, and Williams gets save #1.

Today’s Mets lineup?

Lindor SS

Soto LF

Bichette 3B

Polanco 1B

Robert CF

Baty DH

Semien 2B

Benge RF

Alvarez C

Peralta SP

YEAH!

And…MLB.com has the Mets winning the division title. Who am I to argue.


PITTSBURGH?

Well, they have All-Universe Paul Skenes. Ouch.

After that, the Bucs were the worst 2025 run scoring team in baseball (583 runs). 

They, however, added an aging Marcell Ozuna, a good hitting Ryan O’Hearn, a legit power hitter in Brandon Lowe (31 HR in 134 games in 2025) and a competent batsman in ex-Met Jake Mangum, so their team offense potential has upticked. Maybe from #30 to #20?  Time will tell.

Major improvement is expected from Pittsburgh. I saw one site projecting them for 86 wins, a total they seemed to have not reached in decades.

Part of that is the expected arrival of baseball’s #1 prospect, 19 year old Konnor Griffin - he may well be a future superstar, but he is not here yet.


All that said, let’s win again, like the Mets have done almost every year since 1970 on opening day. 

THE MAGIC? IT IS BACK!



Cautious Optimist -- Play Ball!





Opening Day!

Why are Mets fans and bloggers alike apparantly so concerned about who makes the team's opening day roster?  Two reasons I can think of.  First, making the roster is an accomplishment for those who entered spring training competing for a roster spot.  Congratulations Carson Benge! 

And then there is the irresistible desire to see the team get off to a good start, and the opening day roster provides the bulk of the data we have available on which to base our optimism or pessimism about our chances of doing so.  

Of course, our optimism or pessimism has much more to do with our personality traits (or disorders) than with minor differences among the various potential opening day rosters.  The truth is that if you asked a million knowledgeable Mets fans to predict who would be on the OD roster, there would certainly be unanimity on at least 4/5ths of the choices.  But this is that time of year, when marginal, even miniscule, differences are certain to be magnified beyond recognition.  We are fans first, and are entitled to vacation days from any commitment to rational thought.  Can I hear an "Amen?"

I was excited about publishing my post on Tuesday as I didn't want to miss the opportunity to play GM.  Having already established my bona fides as a pretend hitting and pitching coach, I felt I owed myself a promotion to pretend GM before the season was underway.

My Tuesday post was postponed to Thursday, but I refuse to be deterred.  So as a pretend GM, here is my thinking on what the opening day roster should be. I am writing this on Tuesday and will make no updates prior to publication.  My goal is not to predict, but to pretend, and to explain my choices (not my pretensions). 

I may be last with predicting the opening day roster, and what I say may be of little interest to some, but I am going to be first to predict what the Mets will do at the trading deadline.  Just stay until the end of this post for that. I may be late in March, but I will be prescient about July.  Without further ado:

First, the 'Whose' as in 'Whose on First?'

Starting infield: Baty should be on first -- that's who; the rest of the infield is  Bichette, Lindor, and Semien

Backup infielder -- Brujan

Starting outfield: Soto, Robert, Benge

Backups --- Taylor, (and either Pache or Melendez, but see below for a caveat)

Catchers:  Alvarez, Torrens

Starting Pitchers:  Peralta, McLean, Holmes, Senga, Peterson

Relief Pitchers: Williams, Weaver, Myers, Raley, Garcia, Brazobon, Manaea (Lovelady, see the same caveat below).

DH: Polanco

Bench: Vientos

And now the whys

For me, the most important decision I make as GM is to make Polanco the full time DH.  He would be the Mets' first and best full time DH, and it is his best position.  Baty at first base is collateral benefit of having Polanco as the full time DH.  I want the team to be better at both positions. Any alternative to having Baty at 1st and Polanco at DH would make the Mets worse at both positions. As the GM with a background in Game Theory, I report that my decision is not only correct; it represents the dominant strategy.

Most fans (and the FO as well) are appropriately excited by Baty's versatility, so much so that they have taken to referring to him as the new Jeff McNeil.  The conflation of Baty with McNeil is inapt, however.  The Mets needed McNeil to be a super utility player for two reasons.  They didn't have enough quality players at the positions they moved McNeil into and out of; and second, McNeil was himself no longer anything more (or less) than a serviceable professional player at any position he played.  So you weren't making the team any worse by taking him from any position he would otherwise be playing as a starter, and you were likely making the team somewhat better by having him at the position you moved him to than they would have been with someone else there.

That is not the situation facing either the Mets or Baty at the moment. The Mets have credible players at every position that Baty could conceivably play. That means the Mets don't need him to move out and about the infield and outfield. Those positions are handled at least as well by someone else as they are by Baty.  Moreover Baty has shown (even with a limited sample size) that he is significantly more adept at 1st base than both Polanco or Vientos. So he has a position he can play better than the available alternatives. And that is why the Baty/McNeil conflation is inapt.

But that's not all. Baty needs a good start at the plate, and I can't help but feel that moving him all over the field gives him too much to think about, and simply disturbs the peace that someone needs to experience in the batter's box.

Limiting him to one infield position and a commitment to an everyday role at that position is important to his settling into the season.

In a previous post, I had argued for piggy backing starting pitching -- especially at the beginning of the season as starting pitchers are still stretching out while pitching in cold weather. The collateral benefit of piggy backing is that it protects the bullpen from being overused too early in the season.

Long term, Manaea and Myers are potentially redundant in the long man/spot starter role, but having two long men in the bullpen through the end of May -- which I think of as the end of the first part of the season -- makes very good sense.  For now, Manaea in the bullpen is a plus as my lefty long man and spot starter.

The third most consequential decision I have had to make as GM concerns the 5th outfielder -- indeed whether it makes sense to have a 5th outfielder at all.  I am not sure I need a 5th outfielder as neither Robert, Taylor nor Benge needs a late game defensive replacement; and the team can't afford to lose Soto's bat if he is replaced for defensive purposes regularly.  If I decide to have a 5th outfielder, the choice boils down to Melendez or Pache, neither of whom would be expected to see much action.  

Both are fine defensive players, but neither is worth a spot unless they bring something else to the table.  Pache had a better spring than Melendez did, but Melendez can serve as a third (emergency) catcher.  The problem with Pache is that his special skill is running the bases and that makes him no better a choice than Brujan, who has the additional benefit of playing an infield position. 

If I am not sold on having a 5th outfielder, my alternative would be placing an 8th bullpen arm on the OD roster. I am a believer in situational lefties which would justify choosing Lovelady, whose relationship with the Mets has featured a lot of what psychiatrists call 'approach/avoidance' behavior.  Every time he approaches, the Mets find a way to avoid a relationship with him.  There may be no long term love affair in the offing, but Lovelady is owed some love -- at least until Mr. Minter works his way back to the team. 

The choice of a reliever instead of a 5th outfielder makes the case for Brujan that much stronger.  Beyond that, any way of filling the SS role worsens the team at as many as three positions:  SS, with Bichette rather than Brujan, and perhaps 3B with Baty rather than Bichette, and definitely 1B with either Polanco or Vientos instead of Baty.  Never let a forced change at one position create unforced changes at more than one, let alone, three positions -- especially if all your choices end up worsening performance at each!.  

So, with a gun to my head, and the fact that neither Taylor, nor Robert nor Benge needs a defensive replacement, I would choose a 13th pitcher, rather than a 5th outfielder.  So Mr. Lovelady, don't count on a long term relationship, but expect to have some fun until 'my boyfriend's back'.  Where are you Mr. Minter, Mendoza loves you more than you could know. 

Vientos was easier for me to include than I had initially expected it would be.  There are five reasons for including him, none of which is close to compelling on its on, though when taken together the case for keeping him on the roster is easily made (for now). (1) He is right handed. (2) He is (or has been) a power bat. (3) He has no trade value. (4) He is out of options. (5) In a pinch he can play 1st base, and, in a double pinch, he can play 3rd base. Vientos is the 25th man on the roster and should see as little time in the field as possible.

But I am no less unhappy having done so, for were there any other legitimate right handed power bat among the replacement position players on the roster, he would not make my team.  I am not expecting too much from him but hoping he is going to deliver more than i am expecting. Got to be optimistic, right?

Let's see how close I get as fake GM to the real one!  If we disagree, remember, Stearns is the one who has probably made a mistake :-)

If Stearns' decisions differ from mine, it is down to two things.  The first is that Tauchman got injured.  The second is that his 26th player is someone he has chosen thinking that the goal is to find a replacement for Tauchman.  That is absolutely the wrong way to think about the choice.  Even if Tauchman would have been a better choice than Brujan, Pache, or Melendez, it doesn't mean that the next closest player to Tauchman is. 

The goal is to find the next best player after Tauchman who adds to the ballclub; it is not to find the person who most closely replicates what Tauchman would have brought!  

I have no idea who that person is on the 40 man roster, but I am pretty sure whoever it is does not bring to the club what either of Melendez, Pache or Brujan does.  But if the choice surprises you it is likely because  Stearns is not thinking in terms of what the player brings to the table as much as he is thinking in terms of who most closely approximates what Tauchman would have brought to the table.  THAT would be a massively mistaken way to think about the position.

Oh Yes, the Trade Deadline

Assuming all goes reasonably well, the Mets should be in the thick of a pennant race with a crack at being the number 1 seed come the trade deadline. What should/will the Mets do by the deadline.  I'll spell out my thinking in more detail next Tuesday, but I'm putting my stake in the ground here and now.

The Mets should and will trade for Tarik Skubal.  And in order to obtain him they should and will offer a package that features Jonah Tong.  I think it will take three prospects to secure Skubal (if he is healthy) for the stretch run all the way to the World Series.  One package includes Clifford and Morabito in addition to Tong.  I do not view this as a particularly costly trade to make.  I will explain why in the next post and also consider other potential packages.  

I've put my stake in the ground and as Tom Petty has said, 'I won't back down." You will get no TACO or COACO (Cautious Optimist Always Chickens Out) from me!!








Alex Rubinson - Welcome to the Mets Newest Hitting Philosophy


After a long frigid winter, the baseball season is finally here. Opening Day is today with the New York Mets kicking off its season against the Pittsburgh Pirates. Before we jump headfirst into the games that count, let’s take one more look back on an offseason that saw sweeping changes. I already dug deep on Mets new pitching coach Justin Willard and how his philosophy might spark change for New York hurlers, so now let’s turn our attention to the hitting side of things. 

The Mets revamped their hitting instructors after the team parted ways with Jeremy Barnes and Eric Chavez. The team promoted Jeff Albert to be the organization’s new Director of Major League Hitting and tabbed Troy Snitker as the new hitting coach.

Albert shouldn’t spark a major shift within the team’s hitting plan, especially among the young corps. He has been with the Mets since the 2023 season as the Director of Hitting for the entire organization. Albert oversaw the entire Mets farm system when it comes to hitting. Over the past few seasons, the Mets have developed plenty of MLB-caliber talent throughout the minor leagues. 


The biggest name is top prospect Carson Benge, who broke camp with the club and will be the team’s starting right fielder when it takes the field later today. Although players such as Luisangel Acuña, Drew Gilbert and Jett Williams are no longer with the team, Albert has played a huge part in the hitting depth the Mets were able to develop over the last few years. 


Albert has a proven track record for developing young talent into big league hitters. He worked within the Houston Astros minor leagues from 2014-2017. During this time period, players such as Yordan Alvarez, Alex Bregman and Carlos Correa were hitting their stride in Houston’s farm system. 


One can argue that Correa and Bregman were top two picks, so they were destined to be great regardless of the structure around them, but we just saw another LSU standout in Washington Nationals outfielder Dylan Crews get optioned to minor leagues after struggling mightily during last season’s big league stint. 


Even if we want to assume Correa and Bregman did not need a ton of development, the same can not be said regarding Alvarez. Remember, the Los Angeles Dodgers willingly traded away the star slugger for Josh Fields. The left-handed hitter hit the ground running with the Astros and has been an instrumental part in the team’s sustained success long after some of the franchise’s notable departures. 


After a season with the Astros big league team, Albert was hired by the St. Louis Cardinals to be the team’s hitting coach. Although the hard hit rate numbers won’t jump out, Albert was a key member of baseball’s launch angle revolution. 


In 2019, the Cardinals were eighth in average launch angle after being in the bottom half during the previous season. The team then ranked fifth in both 2021 and 2022. Although it took a few years for the process to meet the results, the Cards catapulted from 24th in long balls in Albert’s first season to placing in the top 10 by the time the hitting coach ended his tenure with the organization. 


In addition to retaining a familiar face in Albert, Carlos Mendoza did bring in a new one as well in the form of Troy Snitker, the son of former Atlanta Braves Skipper Brian Snitker. Like Albert, Snitker made a name for himself with the Astros. It’s noteworthy that Snitker replaced Albert on the Astros staff when Albert went to St. Louis. 


The new hitting coach had been with Houston since 2019 before taking his new role with the Mets. Although the Astros already possessed a loaded lineup, Snitker partnered with Alex Cintron to help develop the next wave of Astro stars, such as Jeremy Pena. Pena made his debut in 2022 when he was named the World Series MVP. Snitker also played a significant role in the development of Kyle Tucker. 


The corner outfielder struggled in limited playing time before the 2019 season. Under Snitker and Cintron’s guidance, Tucker took off and inked a massive four-year contract worth $240 million after the Mets pursued Tucker in an effort to reunite him with Snitker. 


From 2019-2021, the Astros lineup saw a full mile-per-hour increase in its average exit velocity. This might not seem like a lot, but the team’s ranking went from barely inside the top 20 (88.4 MPH) all the way up to seventh (89.5 MPH). During that same timeframe, the Astros jumped from 12th to fourth in launch angle and went from 17th to sixth in hard hit rate. 


The Astros also were on-base percentage monsters when Snitker first landed in Houston. Although the organization was already in the top 10, it jumped to number one in all of baseball in 2019 (.352) and was ahead of everyone else by 10 full points. The team remained number one in 2021 and placed inside the top seven in each of the three years after that. 


The New York Mets have a new look going into 2026. It was clear based on the moves made that last season’s second-half collapse was an embarrassment to both Mendoza and Stearns, who were both determined to make changes to ensure 2026 will see a different finish. 


Both Albert and Snitker have experience in multiple hitting roles throughout organizations across the league. Not only have they seen their offenses succeed at the highest level, but they also have shown a proven track record of developing talent at all levels where hitters have gone on and found success. 


Today is Opening Day. It’s a long season. Just remember to enjoy the 162-game marathon.


Paul Articulates - how is the strategy holding?


For the entire off-season, we have been writing about the re-tooling of the New York Mets.  After a disastrous slow-motion crash landing in 2025, the front office decided that the core was not sufficient to carry this franchise to a world championship, so they broke it apart and embarked on a new strategy anchored by the principle of run prevention.

After much difficulty getting over the lost of some fan favorite players, we have begun to get comfortable with the run prevention strategy and have even begun to build some excitement about the new core players and the cast that surrounds them.

But wait, the first pitch of the Mets' 2026 regular season has not yet been thrown and there seems to be a few leaks in the strategy.  I don't think that the Mets' leadership has been true to the strategic vision they espoused.  Here are four reasons why:

1) First Base.  Pete Alonso was "not good enough" with his below average defensive metrics, so the Mets passively watched the bidding war and then bade him goodbye.  In his place, Jorge Polanco was brought in.  Polanco didn't have the power bat that Alonso possessed, but being a former middle infielder it was plausible that he could learn to be an above average defensive first baseman and could still deliver enough offense to keep the engine running.  But the Mets did not show full commitment to this approach, as they kept Polanco in the back fields for half of the spring training season, and then played him minimal innings after that.  A revolving door of players, some of whom did not make the team filled at first.  In the end, it looked like Brett Baty was getting more reps than Polanco.  Now the Mets begin the season with no one having enough innings of real competitive play to have learned to play this position, leaving one major hole in the defense and another in the strategy.

2) Utility gloves.  Some of the slickest fielding players in the Mets organization have left the building.  Each of them was considered a defensive plus in the various positions they played.  It is not fair to include Luis Guillorme in this statement because he left before "run prevention" was ever uttered.  But LuisAngel Acuna was traded, Jett Williams never hit the big league field, and Vidal Brujan was just DFA'ed. Jeff McNeil, although not a "slick fielder", was a jack of all trades that never hurt the team in any position he played. The utility role is now theoretically manned by Brett Baty, who has proven to be not much more than adequate at any of the positions he played previously (2nd, 3rd) and is very much unproven at the new positions he is trying(corner outfield and first base).

3) Bo Bichette.  Bichette was knighted as the third baseman of this team, and it was made clear in the early going that he would NOT play short because the team wanted him to focus on learning to excel at third.  Three months later, he has been named the backup shortstop to Francisco Lindor.  Lindor, who has been an iron man for most of his career, has shown some physical fragility lately, and it may be only a matter of time before he hits the IL.  When that happens, we will see an infield with Baty at third, Bichette at short, and an ill-prepared Polanco at first.  Is that better than last year??

4) Pache versus Young.  Jared Young made the team.  Cristian Pache did not.  Young is limited to corner outfield play, has average speed, and has a little pop in his bat when he connects.  Pache can play all outfield positions, is a legitimate speedster, and sizzled at the plate during the spring training period.  If Pache is on the Mets bench, they have a great late-inning defensive replacement at any outfield position and someone who can steal a run for the team.  Instead, Young is on the bench, presumably as a late inning pinch hitter who might hit a long ball, but not a defensive replacement.

In my view, these are glaring inconsistencies with the stated strategy.  Strategies are meant to remain fairly constant with only slow evolution to be effective.  To me, if you can't follow a strategy, you don't have a strategy.  I hope I am wrong about this because it is key to a successful season. 


3/25/26

RVH – THE 2026 SEASON: Where the Mets Win (and Where It Gets Dangerous)

 

Good morning. It's time for the 2026 Season!

We’ve spent the winter breaking down the roster, debating bullpen roles, and asking whether the next wave in Syracuse is ready to contribute.

But roster construction is only half the equation.

The other half is the schedule.

162 games isn’t a straight line, it’s a distribution. If you want to understand how a 90+ win team actually gets there, you have to identify where wins are banked, where performance needs to hold, and where the season gets stress-tested.

A quick note on method:
This is a first-look schedule piece, so the frame starts with 2025 records as the baseline. That’s a useful proxy in March, not a final answer. As 2026 unfolds, this analysis should migrate to actual team quality, form, health, and run environment.

With that in mind, I’ve gone through the full 2026 slate and mapped where this schedule opens up—and where it tightens.


1. The Runway (March 26 – April 12)

The Mets open with:

  • Pirates (71 wins)

  • Cardinals (78 wins)

  • Giants (81 wins)

  • Diamondbacks (80 wins)

  • Athletics (76 wins)

This is not just a manageable start.

This is a win accumulation window.

The Observation:
This is a +EV stretch where something like 7–3 or 8–4 is the expectation, not the upside.

If you play this stretch at .500, you’re not just treading water—you’re losing ground to the math of a 90+ win season.

This is where good teams quietly separate early.


2. The First Stress Test (April 13 – April 19)

Then it flips immediately:

  • @ Dodgers (93 wins)

  • @ Cubs (92 wins)

Now you’re dealing with elite run prevention, swing-and-miss, and lineups that punish mistakes.

This stretch isn’t about sweeping.

It’s about stability.

Can the rotation:

  • Avoid blow-up innings

  • Keep games in a 3–4 run band

  • Protect the bullpen early in the season

You don’t need to win the week. You need to avoid giving back what you just built.


3. The Buffer Phase (Late April – May)

The schedule opens again:

  • Rockies (43 wins, twice)

  • Nationals (66 wins)

  • Angels (72 wins)

  • Twins (70 wins)

Layer in the Subway Series at home vs the Yankees.

The Strategy:
This is where you build the cushion.

You don’t need to beat the Yankees to win this month.
You need to stack wins across the lower half of the schedule.

A 12–8 type run here is what creates separation.


4. The Stability Window (June – Early July)

This may be the most quietly important phase of the season.

  • Limited West Coast travel after early June

  • Balanced home/road structure

  • Series against strong but manageable competition (PHI, BOS, ATL)

This is where:

  • Bullpen usage normalizes

  • Recovery cycles stabilize

  • Performance variance tightens

This is where good teams become consistent teams.

The Mets don’t need to spike here.  They need to hold form and avoid drift.


5. The Compression Point (Late July – August)

Now the schedule starts layering playoff-caliber teams:

  • Padres (90 wins)

  • Brewers (97 wins)

  • Cubs (92 wins)

  • Dodgers (93 wins)

This isn’t one gauntlet. It’s repeated exposure to high-end competition.

If there’s a weakness in:

  • The back of the rotation

  • High-leverage bullpen depth

  • Defensive consistency

This is where it starts to show.


6. The September Wall

Then everything compresses.

  • @ Yankees (94 wins)

  • vs Phillies (96 wins)

  • vs Brewers (97 wins)

Nine straight games against teams that averaged roughly 95 wins.

This is not where you win the division.

This is where you either:

  • Validate the work done from April through July
    or

  • Watch the margin disappear quickly

If the Mets enter this stretch with:

  • A 4–6 game cushion → manageable

  • A 1–2 game margin → volatile

  • Tied or trailing → extremely difficult


The Real Story: Front-Loaded Opportunity, Back-Loaded Risk

This schedule has a very clear shape:

  • April–May = Build the floor

  • June–July = Stabilize performance

  • August–September = Absorb pressure

The Mets don’t need to be great in September.

They need to arrive in September with margin.

Because once you hit that final stretch, you’re no longer playing the schedule. You’re playing the other contenders directly.


Final Thought

For all the focus on roster construction, this schedule asks a simple question:

Are the Mets built to bank wins early, or are they still a team that needs time to figure itself out?

Because this year, there’s no runway for a slow start.

And if you don’t build the cushion early, that September wall isn’t just tough.

It’s decisive.