3/7/26

RVH - The Blueprint for 93: Part II – The October Contraction

 

Preamble: The Map to 594 Outs

In Part I, we defined the “lung” of the 2026 season: a 9–11 man pitching collective designed to absorb the 1,458-inning friction of the regular season by living near a 5.4 IP/GS benchmark. We built a floor that ensures our highest-leverage arms arrive in September fresh, not frayed.

But October isn’t won by a crowd. It’s won by the concentration of talent. As the calendar turns, the organizational goal shifts from covering innings to securing outs.

If you’re going to win a World Series from the Wild Card line, the planning math is brutal, because you have to be ready for the longest path.

13 wins. 594 outs.

This is the October Contraction, the shift from a deep rotation tree to a strike force.


The Hypothesis: Shifting the Currency from Innings to Outs

During the regular season, innings are the currency of survival. In the postseason, we pivot to outs. This isn’t just semantics, it’s a tactical reset. In a short series, the “three-times-through-the-order” penalty is the primary predator of a lead.

By shifting to an out-based management style, we leverage the freshness delta we built in July. We don’t need Freddy Peralta or Nolan McLean to “gut out” the 7th inning. We need them to deliver 15 to 18 high-intensity outs, then hand the game to leverage arms before the opposition adjusts.

October doesn’t reward stubborn. It rewards timing.


The Map to the Ring: 594 Outs

This is the maximum road, the planning ceiling, and that’s the only honest way to build an October blueprint without lying to yourself.

Round

Format

Max Games

Outs Required

Starter Goal

Bullpen Goal

Wild Card

Best of 3

3

81

15–18 outs

9–12 outs

Division Series

Best of 5

5

135

18 outs

9 outs

LCS / WS

Best of 7

14

378

18+ outs

9 outs

Total

22

594

378 outs

216 outs


That’s why October is contraction: fewer pitchers, shorter stints, higher leverage, earlier hooks.

That’s the contraction: fewer starter outs, higher leverage, earlier hooks, and no third-time-through-the-order charity.


The Efficiency Metric: Managing “Pitches Per Out” (PPO)

To win 13 games, we have to manage fatigue like it’s payroll. That’s where Pitches Per Out (PPO) matters. Think of PPO as the simplest fatigue tax there is: when it rises, your starter hits the wall sooner.

In the regular season, an efficient pitcher averages roughly 5.1 PPO. In October, stress and hitter selectivity drive that number up. Success is won in the margin.

  • The logic: If Peralta secures 18 outs at 5.3 PPO, he exits at ~95 pitches with the lead intact. If PPO climbs to 6.0 due to fatigue or traffic, he’s at ~108 before the 6th inning ends.

  • The contraction: Because the bullpen arrives rested, we don’t have to chase 108. We pull the trigger at 95, maintain the velocity gap, and transition to leverage before the lineup adjusts a third time.


The Personnel: The October “Strike Force”

1) The Starting Trio: The First 15–18 Outs

Freddy Peralta, Nolan McLean, and David Peterson are the “engine” in the only way October cares about: they take the first chunk of outs and keep the game in a leverage shape.

  • Peralta: the strikeout profile that stabilizes Game 1.

  • McLean: the power sinker/sweeper that can erase innings with one ground ball when October traffic appears.

  • Peterson: the left-handed counterweight that neutralizes key pockets and keeps the ball out of the air when pressure rises.

2) The Hybrid Weapon: Kodai Senga

The most important pivot in the blueprint is Kodai Senga.

After a managed regular season, Senga becomes the October hybrid, the guy you deploy for “swing outs,” the 6 to 9 outs that decide a series. The bridge in a Game 4. The leverage patch when a starter exits early. The weapon when you need dominance but not 100 pitches.

If Part I was about creating breath, Part II is about spending it.

3) The Bullpen Ladder: The Final 9 Outs

October doesn’t care who got “saves” in July. It cares who can take outs when the leverage spikes. The bullpen is a ladder, not a democracy.

Back-end leverage (highest stress outs, smallest margin):

  • The top leverage righty (e.g., Devin Williams)

  • The top leverage lefty (e.g., A.J. Minter)

Precision layer (matchup control, clean innings, low traffic):

  • Right-handed strike-thrower who can live on the edges (e.g., Luke Weaver)

  • Left-handed matchup/control arm who can steal outs without drama (e.g., Brooks Raley)

Multi-inning bridge (when the game breaks shape):

  • A starter-background arm who can give you 4–9 outs without panic (e.g., Tobias Myers)

That last category is the October breaker bar. It’s how you survive the one early hook without burning the entire ladder behind it.


The Reserve Capacity: Recursive Strength

What separates the 2026 Mets from most Wild Card teams is reserve capacity. Another season of development turns “prospects” into usable October tools.

  • Christian Scott and Jonah Tong: not just depth pieces, but insurance outs. If a series goes long, 3–4 competitive innings from this tier prevents the leverage group from being burned into mush.

  • Ryan Lambert and Dylan Ross: power arms waiting in the wings. If PPO spikes and contact quality turns into a pattern, velocity becomes the fastest correction.


The Takeaway: Strategy over Survival

Winning a World Series is about the concentration of talent. You use 9–11 arms to survive the summer so that you have your best weapons intact in the fall.

By building a staff that can expand to survive the war of attrition and contract to deliver leverage precision, the Mets move from hope to design. We’re no longer asking pitchers to hang on through October. We’re putting them in position to dominate it.

13 wins. 594 outs. One ring.


SAVAGE VIEWS – PITCHING IS THE KEY

I’m on record as predicting the Mets will win the NL East easily. In fact, I think that their 2026 record will be second only to the Dodgers. Of course, the key to a superlative season rests with the ability of the pitching staff to live up to expectations.


Not only do the Mets have two potential aces in Freddy Peralta and Nolan McLean with Kodai Senga as a possible third ace if he can recover the form of early last year. Hopefully, we can expect come back seasons from both David Peterson and Sean Manaea. Remember, Peterson was an All-Star last year before his second half collapse, Add Clay Holmes to the mix and we have excellent starting pitching. And Tobias Meyers is sitting in the wings should any of the top six get injured. On top of that, Jonah Tong, Christian Scott and Jack Wenninger should be ready to contribute by mid-season. Our pitching woes should be behind us.


The bullpen looks strong, although there will be concerns whether Devon Williams is able to fill the shoes of Edwin Diaz. Getting AJ Minter back by early May will be a major plus giving us two solid lefties in the pen. I suspect by mid-season, Dylan Ross and Ryan Lambert will be on board. My prediction is the Mets will win 96 games. Here’s how I think they will get there.

Name

Wins

Losses

 ERA

Freddy Peralta

16

8

   3.12

Nolan Mclean

15

10

   2.47

Kodai Senga

14

9

   2.80

David Peterson

12

8

   3.50

Sean Manaea

14

8

   3.75

Clay Holmes

12

10

   3.80

Tobias Myers

4

6

   4.20

Bullpen/Others

9

7

   3.40

Totals

96

66

   3.38


Of course, my projections assume that Carlos Mendoza has matured as a manager and with the guidance of Jeff Willard, our new pitching coach, will do a better job of controlling and not abusing the staff. One thing that has been suggested is piggybacking some of the starters. For example, Peterson and Holmes could be asked to combine for 8 or nine innings or Manaea and Myers might make an effective duo. It’s one way to reduce the wear and tear on the pen.

Here’s the deal, if the team averages close to five runs per game and keep the opposition to under 3.5 runs, we are going to win a lot of games.

Ray

March 7, 2026

Reese Kaplan -- Starting Pitcher Subs Could Be Much Better in 2026


When people analyze the pros and cons of the disappointing 2025 Mets team and the current group that will be heading north later this month when the 2026 season begins there are a great many obvious variables to analyze.  

How will Bo Bichette adapt to his new role at 3rd base?  How will Jorge Polanco make the transition to first base?  Who will play right field?  Is anyone going to be the DH?  How will they manage six starting pitchers?  Will Devin Williams revitalize his prior to 2025 spectacular career?  All indeed are valid questions worthy of debate over a decent amount of adult beverages among Mets fans.  No one can offer up definitive answers to any of these questions today nor will we really know for sure until the games start for real.

One aspect of the upcoming season that should be quite a bit better than 2025 is the subject of starting pitching.  No one is disputing how much it helps to have a true ace at the top of the rotation with the arrival of Freddy Peralta.  Health plays a huge role in starting pitcher quality as well.  

For now you have Sean Manaea and Kodai Senga both recovering from major health problems that impacted the effectiveness of what they were able to do on the mound.  Then you have Clay Holmes who hopefully arrives back from the WBC in good shape a ready to resume his second full season as a starter.  David Peterson is coming off a terrific first start in the preseason.  Then you have last year’s rookie sensation Nolan McLean ready to begin the year with the big club to provide his skill all year long.  All of these glass half-full evaluations could indeed make the club a more formidable opponent than the one who scrambled with an assortment of AAAA pitchers supplementing the starting corps last year. 

What is most interesting to me as a Mets fan is who resides behind these current six starting pitchers.  In the past the Mets relied on a variety of less than stellar options to be on standby should extra starting pitching be needed.  We can all remember numerous DFA castoffs acquired to help fill in when necessary.  It also obviously became very clear when they got the opportunity to take the mound why their former employers gave up on them. 

Now it is not always a question of older and unheralded pitchers.  At times both David Peterson and Tylor Megill were in the group of backup starters.  This past season they found Nolan McLean out of late season necessity as well as less effective rookies Brandon Sproat and Jonah Tong.  This coterie of pitching fodder should at least have been more effective than the rag-armed options also getting opportunities out of injury necessity. 

Going into 2026 the Mets do have two very strong options starting the season in AAA.  The aforementioned Jonah Tong had a brief trial in Syracuse after totally dominating in Binghamton but his first taste of the Show was not one for the record books.  He’s added some pitches and continued his development.  The Mets are indeed hoping he can rediscover what made him so effective in the minors as he prepares for a 2027 ascent to the majors (or sooner if injuries or ineffectiveness by others requires an earlier advancement).

The other pitcher getting back into game-ready condition is the still recovery Christian Scott.  Many have forgotten what his background was when he fell into the long term Tommy John Surgery and subsequent recovery.  As a minor leaguer, Scott was pitching at a level to rival what McLean and Tong did in the minors.  Over 49 games in the minors he went 11-7 with a 3.19 ERA, a WHIP of 1.059 and delivering 11 strikeouts and just over 2 walks per 9 innings pitched.  

In his first looks during Spring Training it seems like he’s again healthy and highly effective.  He and Tong are a much stronger AAA duo as backup than anyone the Mets have had in quite some time.  

3/6/26

Ernest Dove: My New York Mets Top 30 Prospect List: #6 RHP Jack Wenninger

 


Next on Ernest's New York Mets Top Prospect List at #6 is #metsbaseball P prospect Jack Wenninger.  #baseball #baseballteam #metsbaseball #newyorkmets #metstalk #milb

Watch below of click here to see on YouTube.




Reese Kaplan -- Spring Training is Both Good and Bad Thus Far


Spring Training is all about warming up for the regular season, getting a look at how players you know appear to be preparing for the 6 months of upcoming baseball and evaluating the ones you don’t know in terms of whether they would be better or worse than the alternatives.  It is natural in the early part of the preseason for the pitchers to be ahead of the hitters and looking at numbers for the Mets they appear to be reflecting these metrics.

Looking a bit more closely at pitching you will find that the entire staff is throwing to a pretty impressive 3.22 ERA with just a few clunkers here and there in limited action.  The starters are looking solid as are most of the relievers.  Again, take it with a grain of salt as the games only began a few weeks ago and things could balance out the other way as time goes by.

On the hitting side things are not exactly what you’d hope to see.  The Mets overall are hitting to a less than robust .229 batting average as of midweek numbers.  The highlight thus far are the 14 HRs hit by current and would-be Mets sluggers.  Averaging well over 1 HR per 9 IP is a good thing indeed.  The strikeout numbers are not terrible having occurred in fewer than 24% of the ABs.  That’s a good number given the high number of dingers.

Dig a little deeper and you see some things that shouldn’t concern you and others conversely that shouldn’t necessarily impress you either.  Take Juan Soto, for example.  Before departing for this WBC appearance he was hitting a mere .167.  At his age and his stellar track record you know that he is not that type of hitter and you just write it off to a small sample size and preparatory work.


On the flashing bright lights side, you have the unexpected performances like the .727 batting average earned by outfielder Cristian Pache or the stunning .333 provided by infielder Vidal Brujan.  No one expects either of them to perform at that level over a longer period of time (nor even to make the major league roster unless Brujan is a Francisco Lindor substitute for a few weeks).

Where it gets far more difficult to evaluate are the metrics of the players who are either at best a 4th outfielder or on the bubble to make it into a starting role in right field.  Newcomer MJ Melendez is already hitting .364 with a couple of home runs.  Fellow necomer Mike Tauchman is hitting a solid .286.  Familiar sub outfielder Tyrone Taylor is hitting an unexpected .273.  Will any of them be able to sustain these numbers?  It’s unlikely but the great unknown may take place because the alternative is still fairly raw as an everyday hitter.


Carson Benge has been touted as a possible right field solution after playing below the Mendoza line against AAA pitching in 100 ABs in 2025.  This year in preseason he’s hitting a much more impressive .306.  Is he ready to face major league pitching full time or is he feasting on fringe prospect pitchers who are not going to see the light of a major league day?  He is most definitely a solution for the future but the question remains if the future is now.

Finally, in the realm of “What have you done for me lately?” Mark Vientos was off to a weak start with just a pair of hits after starting off the preseason 0-10.  That’s pretty bad.  You know what’s worse?  Brett Baty is still hitless yet no one even whispers about it.  It’s still early for both of them but having each had one good and multiple bad seasons neither are going to be written in ink as sure things until they deliver better.