3/31/26

Tom Brennan - The Mets Are 3-1…So Do Not Over Analyze

TOM’S TASTY TIDBITS 


The 1986 Mets won 108 games in the regular season.

They started out winning just two of their first five. That’s .400 ball.

I am guessing there was a veritable boatload of over analysis back then.  

“Is this Team overrated?”

Well, after those five games, they went 106–51, so I would say no, they weren’t overrated.

(I told my boss at the time that the Mets would win 105 games in 1986. He thought I was nuts. He was right. They won three more.)

The same with this 2026 team. Bo is off to a slow start, but it’s just five games. And he got robbed on a bullet liner at the right fielder that didn’t quite drop in. Had it, his very low batting average after four games would be a lot higher. I am not in the least concerned with Bo.

High level view? Let’s see now.

I am not concerned with the offense. 

I am not concerned with the defense. 

I am not concerned with the starting pitching. 

I am not concerned with the bullpen.

I am concerned, however, when fans are booing the new great hitter, Bo Bichette, in game 3. 

After a year’s hiatus, I decided to do a test.

I posted something on a Mets Fan page on Facebook. The responses that came back were oh-so-many, and demonstrated that there was a great need for psychiatric help.

I will not over analyze this team. 

They are three and one. 

Heck, if they moved the fences in 5 feet as I had suggested on a fairly frequent (constant?) basis in recent years, they would be 4–0.

My only concern is how much they will win the division by.

Other than that, I am chill.

How about you?

Cautious Optimist - The Future is Now: Skubal and the Trade Deadline

 



The Mets are in the thick of it at the Trade Deadline: now what?

I know the season is barely underway, and drawing strong inferences from such a limited sample size is unwise at best.  Still, I have seen enough over the past two years to feel justified in concluding that the biggest worry the Mets have right now is Mendoza's inability to manage the bullpen and the pitching staff more generally.

For the purposes of this post, I assume that this difficulty doesn't do the team in this year, and the Mets find themselves in the thick of a highly competitive race for a playoff spot or even the division title as the trade deadline approaches. What should they do?

The case is overdetermined that they should trade for Tarik Skubal, and not just because obtaining him reduces the extent to which we would have to rely on Mendoza's judgment in managing the bullpen!  Without diminishing the importance of reducing the damage poor management of the bullpen can do, the case for trading for Skubal is overwhelming.

As the deadline approaches, all manner of potential 'big trades' are bandied about, but few materialize.  Almost all 'buyers' share the same  goals for the deadline: pick up a bat, a reliever or two, and maybe a mid-tier starter -- all aimed at increasing the odds of making the playoffs.  Most teams have adopted the view that whereas how a team does prior to the playoff spots being settled is largely a matter of how the team is constructed and performs, once the playoffs are underway who makes it to the World Series is largely a crap shoot. 

The working hypothesis is: get to the playoffs and then take your chances.  This hypothesis is the assumption that drives the vast majority of buying decisions at the deadline. 

The playoffs are grueling, but they are not a crap shoot.  They are grueling because making it to the World Series requires winning a number of different series involving relatively evenly matched teams.  

The fact is that the differences in roster and performance are relatively small in comparison to the differences in the outcomes. 

The question is, what inference should teams draw from that fact.

My view is that the teams competing for a playoff spot when the deadline approaches have all drawn the wrong inference.  Because the differences in roster and performance are small in comparison to the differences in outcome, they infer that the difference in outcomes is down to luck of one sort or another.  Thus, the view that ultimate success is a crap shoot.  

If they are right, then all you can control for is the prospect of making the playoffs.  And thus, all the trades that are made around the deadline are designed to reflect that interpretation.  Almost every 'buyer' can use a bat, a reliever and a mid-tier starter to strengthen their chances of making the playoffs.  Each contender is prepared to deal away a few lesser minor league prospects for overpaid bats, relievers and an aging mid-tier starter from the marketplace of sellers -- those whose bets have failed who have re-conceptualized failure as 'building for the future.'

But these teams are working from the wrong inference.

Instead of inferring from the fact that outsized outcomes result from relatively small differences in performance that the playoffs are a crap shoot, the correct inference to draw is that there may well be small differences that matter a great deal to expected outcomes.  

And the right strategy would then be to see if one can identify what those differences are, and to gain a strategic advantage by making trades at the deadline that create the relatively small differences that have outsized consequences! 

I am betting that this year the Mets will be presented with an opportunity to create a strategic advantage in the playoffs while also building the foundation for sustained success at the highest level!

If that opportunity is presented how can they take advantage of it?

First, and foremost: don't follow the norm. Do precisely what most others fear doing because they are unwilling to gamble away the future in the absence of confidence that the gamble will have an immediate desirable payoff.  Take advantage of their conservatism because it ends up reducing the costs to you of taking the chance they refuse to. Their conservatism means they will shy away from taking the right big swing, which means that there will be fewer bidders and the price will be supressed accordingly.

What specifically should the Mets do?

Trade for Tarik Skubal. It's that simple, though doing so won't be as simple.  But it can and should be done, and it will be less difficult than it should be. 

Let's start with some background conditions that apply to the Tigers and the Mets, otherwise we won't fully understand the value of the trade for each and the parameters that would make a trade both plausible and fair.

To understand all the ways in which a trade for Skubal makes sense for the Mets, both this year and going forward, we have to take a look first at the contractual situation of the pitchers in the current starting rotation. Their nominal ace, Freddy Peralta, is a free agent at the end of this year as is their longest tenured player, David Peterson.  Holmes has one more year as does Senga. McLean is not yet arbitration eligible.  Manaea has one more year on his contract and Tobias has two.  Christian Scott, I believe, is also not yet arbitration eligible. This means that the only starting pitchers (loosely speaking) on the Mets roster (or likely to be on it sometime this year) signed beyond 2027 are McLean, Tobias Myers and Christian Scott. 

I am as excited as anyone about some of the pitchers toiling in the minors, though we may disagree about some of the particulars.  I am big on Santucci as a top tier talent, and believe in Wenninger as a solid back of the rotation starter.  Scott can be a mid rotation arm on a good team.  I am of two minds on Tong. He's mid rotation at best in my book, which isn't bad, but he's an injury waiting to happen -- which is bad.

The main thing you should notice is that there is no veteran presence among the names I have mentioned. And no matter how highly you rank this group of pitchers, it does not make for a top tier/WS ready staff.

I would also point out that what the Mets stated goal sustainable excellence calls for in terms of roster construction is an ongoing process of phasing in talented prospects into a stable core of veteran players.  This must occur in the outfield, infield and pitching staff -- including both starters and relievers; starting pitching being more important than relief pitching in this regard.  

Phasing in is not only essential to sustained success, it is also how you put your most talented young players in the best position for them to succeed.  

The phasing in process has already begun in the outfield, but nowhere else -- yet.  Taking a look at the contract situation for the starting rotation makes it very clear that the next phasing in should focus on starting pitching.

Skubal and phasing in starting pitching

When the current season ends, the Mets will have no veteran top tier pitchers under contract.  The year after, they will have no veteran pitcher currently on the roster under contract at all.  Phasing in requires veteran presence and a core of excellence so that as you bring top prospects in you are not putting too much pressure on them, and they are in a learning environment that provides the best conditions for their long term success.

This means that over the next year or two the Mets are going to need one or two top tier veteran pitchers in the rotation signed to appropriately lengthy contracts.  

Everyone mentions that Stearns doesn't like long contracts, but they are ignoring that the outfield phasing in is easier to do because they have Soto in place who occupies one of the three available positions and this makes phasing in smoother; nor do they mention that Lindor is on a long term contract that makes phasing in on the infield less complicated than it would otherwise be -- which would be very complicated in fact.

And while I agree with Stearns that you wouldn't want to give a pitcher in the modern era a 10, 12 or 15 year contract, there are some pitchers who warrant contracts between 5 and 7 years, and Skubal may well be one of them!  And if you are going to have coordinating phasing in the outfield and infield you need to be able to do it on the mound as well.  Skubal is as good a place to begin as the Mets could hope for.  

That's the future value for the Mets.  The current value is even more obvious.

Skubal makes your staff WS caliber, as your top five are Skubal, Peralta, McLean, Senga and Holmes.  You can move Holmes and Peterson to the bullpen along with Myers and your bullpen is as formidable as your starting rotation.

Can this make sense for the Tigers?

Now let's turn to the Tigers.  The Tigers showed last year that they are good enough to be a playoff team.  They also have a very sound manager.  They were never going to trade Skubal during the offseason. If they trade him at the deadline, they get him for 2/3 or more of the season, setting themselves up for another trip to the postseason.  At the same time, they were never going to let him walk away and get nothing for him.

Trading him at the deadline always made the most sense for them.  They get a bit less than they would have gotten in the offseason, but not that much less.  They get the benefit of his performance through most of the season this year which offsets some of the lost opportunity.  They will demand a pitcher in return that will allow them to convert the position having Skubal for this long during the season has put them in into a playoff berth this year, and going forward. 

They will therefore demand a low cost, high ceiling pitcher in return to continue the momentum this year and into the future.  

They have other needs as well. They need a third baseman with power, some bullpen help and some pitching depth in the minors. While an offseason trade may have allowed them to address more of these needs, a deadline trade with the Mets certainly gives them an opportunity to address some of their needs at a very high level.

Trade possibilities

These are the background conditions facing both teams.  The Mets can provide everything the Tigers need, but because Skubal comes with no guarantee that he will sign with them, the Mets will rightly press to offer something at each position a step below what they view as their top prospects at each position.  So the Mets' initial offer would likely not include Tong, preferring instead to give the Tigers a choice among Scott, Thornton and Wenninger.  They have two third baseman they could send in Mauricio or Vientos.  They will not trade Reimer or Baty.  They can add a catcher, of which there are many on the farm.  They are surprisingly short on outfielders at the moment, but if Ewing makes it to the majors in relatively short order, there would be no place for Morabito.  Frankly, I would want to save Morabito for another potential strategic trade.

At the end of the day, I believe what will clinch the trade for the Mets would be including Tong, perhaps a pitcher further down in the minors and Mauricio.  Or Tong, Clifford and a catcher or pitcher further down.  Or maybe Voit, if the Mets feel that Pena is close enough to be part of the coming wave in the infield.  Or something as simple as Tong and Suero, who I quite like, but have difficulty seeing as having a role on the Mets.

The key variable that determines what the Mets have to give up for Skubal is who else will be competing with them for his services.  There are really only three teams that are in play for a trade of this magnitude at the deadline: the Mets, Dodgers and Blue Jays. The Blue Jays minor leagues are not as strong as the Mets', and the Dodgers continue to experience injuries to starting pitchers.  So I believe parting with Tong and two other prospects from a list that the Mets would provide to the Tigers would be enough to get it done. And all that's left after that is to win the bidding for him once he hits free agency.

Lets do it!  The future is now.



 



Steve Sica- Previewing the Mets MiLB Season


The Syracuse Mets began their season a day after the New York Mets began theirs. This week, the rest of the MiLB teams, with the exception of the summer leagues like the FCL and DSL, will begin their season.

Let's preview each of these three teams and which players to keep an eye on as they move through the system in 2026.


Double-A Binghamton Rumble Ponies:

The defending Eastern League Champions have some big shoes to fill from last year's squad. That team ended an 11-year title drought and rolled through the Eastern League regular season and postseason with ease. 

There will be some familiar faces in Binghamton to open the season. Names like infielders Jacob Reimer, A.J Ewing, and pitcher Will Watson will be back. However, these players ended their season with the Rumble Ponies last year, this time, they'll be starting the season with them. This is significant for these three big prospect names who the Mets hope will contribute to the Big League club as soon as this season.

The Rumble Ponies will enjoy the riches of the Mets' pitching prospects as they'll see four of the Mets' top-30 prospects in their starting rotation. Will Watson, Jonathan Santucci, Zach Thornton, and R.J Gordon are set to give Binghamton their most potent rotation in recent memory.

With A.J Ewing and Jacob Reimer patrolling the infield, Binghamton will have two of the Mets best hitting prospects starting the season with them. They'll be joined by fellow top-30 prospect, Chris Suero, to form what looks like a balanced Binghamton lineup with power, speed, and contact.

High-A Brooklyn Cyclones:

Brooklyn will begin the season with just three top-30 prospects on their active roster. Those are outfielder Eli Serreno (13), and infielders Marco Vargas (20), and Boston Baro (23). 

But don't let that fool you. The Cyclones are coming into 2026 with plenty of intriguing under the radar prospects on their roster. Pleasant surprises from last year Trace Willhoite and John Bay, both undrafted free agents who turned in solid seasons with Low-A St. Lucie in 2025, will get their shot at a full MiLB season in High-A. 

The Cyclones pitching staff will include Joel Diaz. A former top-30 prospect who has had his career derailed by injuries, will headline the rotation in Brooklyn. Last year, he turned in a solid season with Brooklyn, his first full healthy campaign, where he sported an ERA of 3.80 in 106 innings. 

Noah Hall, though he's not ranked on the top-30 Met prospect list, was the Cyclones' best pitcher in 2025. He put up an ERA of 2.72 in 21 starts and struck out 115 along the way. He'll be back in Brooklyn in 2026 as him and Diaz will form an exciting one-two rotation punch.

Low-A St. Lucie Mets: 

The Mets of St. Lucie come into 2026 with an interesting blend in their roster. They have a couple of early draft picks from last year, infielders Mitch Voit and Antonio Jimenez, both top-30 prospects in the Met system that were taken in the first and third round in last year's draft respectively. 

The two of them had a "cup of coffee" in Low-A last season, and I'm especially looking forward to seeing what University of Michigan product, Mitch Voit can do in his first professional season. 

One of the Mets' most promising catching prospects, Daiverson Gutierrez will spend his second full season in St. Lucie. While his 2025 numbers were inconsistent, he's still just 20-years-old, and his power and contact numbers remain promising.

The outfield consists of rising prospects such as Randy Guzman, who burst onto the scene last season by playing well in the FCL, and then, continuing that stellar play after his promotion to St. Lucie. 

Simon Juan, is just the opposite. After signing with the Mets in 2022, he had just as much fanfare as Elian Pena does now. However, he has yet to live up to that promise. He'll be turning 20 this year, but it feels as if 2026 will be a make or break season for him, as the Mets system continues to develop position players at a higher quality rate than in years past.

As a prospect hugger, I love this time of year. The MiLB season will have its first full slate of games this Friday the 3rd. Last year, two Met MiLB teams won their league titles. The Mets farm system is ranked in the top-10 across most expert lists. It's an exciting time down on the farm, and lets all look forward to another summer of tracking MiLB from Florida to Syracuse.


Ernest Dove - Yovany Rodriguez emerges


Mets prospect Yovany Rodriguez emerges as a high-upside catcher following breakout season

PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla.
— Among the catching prospects in the New York Mets system, few carry as much long-term upside as Yovany Rodriguez, who will spend the 2026 season at just 19 years old.

Rodriguez first drew attention when he signed during the 2024 international period, receiving what was, at the time, a franchise-record bonus for the organization. Early expectations were rooted in projection, with evaluators pointing to his physical tools and defensive potential as a foundation.

His professional debut in the Dominican Summer League served primarily as an adjustment period, but his return to the league in 2025 produced a significant leap forward. Over 43 games, Rodriguez posted a .331 batting average, .446 on-base percentage and .939 OPS, pairing production with improved swing decisions.

He also demonstrated encouraging plate discipline, recording 25 walks against 39 strikeouts — a strong indicator of developing pitch recognition for a hitter at his stage. The combination of contact ability and on-base skill has begun to shift his profile from projection-based to performance-backed.

While Rodriguez hit just two home runs, evaluators within the organization continue to project future power as his frame matures. His current offensive profile — built around contact and strike-zone awareness — provides a foundation that could support increased impact as he develops physically.

Defensively, Rodriguez is already considered advanced for his experience level. He features a strong arm, quick release and developing instincts in his work with pitchers — traits that are often slower to emerge in young catchers. His ability to contribute on both sides of the ball at this stage has reinforced his status as one of the more complete prospects in the lower levels of the system.

The Mets are expected to bring Rodriguez stateside for the 2026 season, likely assigning him to the Florida Complex League. The transition will provide a more rigorous test against advanced pitching and offer further evaluation of how his offensive gains translate outside of the DSL environment.

Given his age, production trajectory and defensive foundation, Rodriguez is positioned as a potential fast riser within the Mets’ farm system. If his power development begins to materialize alongside his existing offensive skills, his overall profile could take a significant step forward in the coming year.

For all things New York Mets and the farm system check out The New York Mets Dove Report on YouTube @ernestdove

3/30/26

Tom Brennan - April Showers Bring May Flowers in Syracuse

 


LOOKING FOR RAYS OF SUNSHINE

Syracuse won 2 of 3 in its season opening series, playing in the Siberia known as Worcester, Ma.

Good news and bad news…first the good…

They come home for their first 6 game home stand to above normal early April temperatures.

The bad news?

Each day from Tuesday through Sunday is forecasted to have at least some showers, or rain. Some sun will likely appear, too.

Play ball. Watch out for puddles. Let the sun shine in.

Paul Articulates - First Impressions


One series is complete, and the Mets stand at two wins, one loss.  A .667 win percentage is pretty good, right?  I have my reservations.

Right now, there are no statistics that are valid – there is not enough of a sample size for any stats to tell a real story.  So we have to go by the eye test.  Here is what my eyes tell me:

Positives:

  • Game one was a gift, but the Mets showed some mettle in the last two, coming back to tie both games late.   Mettle is good – nothing drives belief in yourself and your team more than successful rallies.
  • Game three had a walk-off home run, which out-did all of last year.
  • David Peterson looked like the first-half version from last year.

Negatives:

  • Our “ace” did not pitch like one.  Five innings, four earned runs, two long balls given up.  In a match-up with one of the game’s best pitchers, you have to be on top of your game.  I hope that was not indicative of the top.
  • Carlos Mendoza has not shown any improvement to his in-game pitcher management.  Bringing Sean Manaea into a tied game (game 3) was a bad idea, and somehow he got away with it despite some very hard hit balls.  Bringing Richard Lovelady in for the second day in a row with a rested pen was an even worse idea, and he did not get away with it.  If this was September 29th, he would not have closed the game this way.  Wins matter - all of them.
  • Everyone raved about the new approach to hitting after the Mets seemed to foul off hundreds of pitches in game one and ran up pitch counts on the opponent.  However, games two and three looked nothing like that.  I saw more bad swings and strikeouts with runners on base in the late innings than earlier in the game.
  • Game one was an anomaly because of the horrible baseball played by the Pirates on defense.  They cleaned it up in games two and three, and we saw the Mets score a total of two runs in “regulation time”.  Any team can have a bad hitting game, but not two in a row against a below average pitching staff that the Pirates have once you get beyond SP1 and into the bullpen.  What is this going to look like against a capable staff?

So far, to my eye, the Mets are failing the test.  If you have followed the RVH blueprint to 93 wins, the Mets need to beat up on teams like the Pirates (win accumulation).  They escaped this series with two wins out of three games, but were dangerously close to ending the series with only one win.  I am not predicting doom, but the first series fell well short of expectations.  That’s my take.

Reese Kaplan -- Two Victories With Some Good and Some Bad


At the time of this writing the Mets have completed two games thus far and the Sunday game will be completed long after I’ve gone to sleep.  It’s obviously too early to draw definitive conclusions about anything but the opening pair of victories against the Pirates certainly showed some good, some bad and some inconclusive things about how the 2026 squad is assembled.


Speaking of which, for all of us doubters about whether or not the seemingly overpaid Luis Robert, Jr. was a good acquisition or not had their Hollywood cinematic moment in the bottom of the 12th inning when behind by a score of 2-1 the Mets started with a runner on second, then a go ahead runner on first in the form of Polanco.  What most folks hoped for was perhaps a long double that could drive both runners home and result in a victory.  What no one expected was  the long ball flying over the left center field fence that gave the Mets a miraculous and happy 4-2 win.  One great AB does not make a season, but it sure was a welcome sight from one of the newcomers with major question marks.

On the positive side of the ledger the Mets got a terrific opening salvo from questionable number two starter David Peterson who threw zeroes for the duration of his time on the mound.  Perhaps the front office and Carlos Mendoza are banking on his early season effectiveness over what could happen later in the year (and/or attempting to build up his trade value for a mid season deal elsewhere before he becomes a free agent at year’s end).

Jorge Polanco at the plate is showing the type of selectivity as a hitter that will keep him on base at a high percentage, something many of the past Mets never before had demonstrated. He had three walks in a row in the Saturday game and with the kind of offensive players surrounding him in the order it means he’s making it more possible to push runners across the plate.

Oh, by the way, did anyone notice that the horrific Spring Training non-hitter Mark Vientos was asked to do a lefty/righty pinch hitting swap with Carson Benge and delivered a base hit?  Trade him now while he’s still batting 1.000. 

On the flip side, defensive acumen has not been on display from either of the corner infielders, though Polanco already saved Bo Bichette from an errant throw going into foul territory.  Ace starter Freddy Peralta did not pitch like the unhittable All Star he’d shown during Spring Training.  Some of the hitters particularly on Saturday were struggling to catch up to what the Pittsburgh hurlers had to offer.

The true down side thus far (and take it with an entire silo of salt) is the performance of some of the relief pitchers.  Heading this dubious list if elder statesman Luis Garcia who thus far has appeared in both games having thrown two innings during which he’s given up five hits and is pitching to the tune of a 9.00 ERA.  Granted, a good week this early in the season would make these numbers disappear, but bear in mind the front office decided it was a wise choice to pay the 39 year old $1.75 million for his career .255 BAA and 4.09 ERA (neither of which are likely to improve with age).  Both he and Dicky Lovelady are on bullpen thin ice when AJ Minter and/or Craig Kimbrel are deemed healthy and capable enough to take the ball regularly. 


3/29/26

Tom Brennan - “Late & Close” Malaise in Metsville in 2025; and Luis Robert, Jr. in 2026

SOME TEAMS…WELL…THEY JUST…STINK…LATE & CLOSE


Hitting well in late and close situations is a real challenge in baseball. 

Not doing that well, of course, is detrimental to a team’s season success.

After all, highly paid, stat-squelching opposing closers have to be faced, and those suckers could be oh-so hard to get a hit off of.

2026 SO FAR: 

The Mets are two games into this March-birthed season (baseball in March is in fact March Madness) and that late and close hitting showed up in a tying run off the bat of Luis Torrens in the bottom of the 10th.



And a come from behind, 3 run inaugural Mets HR by Luis Robert Jr.! 

Yes, indeed, this is a new day! Wow!

2-0 this year might have been 0-2 last year.

That was BTW some strength poke out of the park by Luis Robert Jr., on a pitch down at the knees on the outside half of the plate. Against a strong wind, on a frigid night.

OK…on to my previously drafted article…

The Mets had an above average overall offense last year.

But when it came to late and close situations, as defined by Baseball Reference (“Late & Close is defined as the 7th inning or later with the batting team tied, ahead by one, or the tying run at least on deck”)the Mets were quite pedestrian.

The median MLB team, in terms of Late & Close plate appearances, produced the following mediocre slash line in 2025:

.229/.310/.366.

The Mets in 2025? 

Remember the prosecuting attorney in the movie Movie “My Cousin Vinny” demonstratively saying at one point, “IDENTICAL”?

Well, Mets’ and baseball’s 2025 L&C “almost identical” as you can see below.

.229/.312/.361.

Virtually the same as the median MLB team produced, as you can see, although overall, the Mets bats provided a significantly better than average MLB offense in 2025. 

They, simply, hit very, very well in situations that were not late & close, but hit like a mere median-average team in late and close situations.

The average fan that looks at a player’s stats is going to look at their basic overall season stats. Average, home runs, RBIs.

They’re not going to drill down into Boutique-type stats like “Late & Close”.

So these fans could have gotten excited about Alonso and Nimmo and McNeill and Marte, our dearly departed Mets 2025 Brothers, but the team as a whole underwhelmed in 2025 Late & Close situations. Which is where games are won and lost many times. 

This malaise, despite not having to face a late & close squelching beast like Edwin Diaz during 2025, while he was still a Metsie.

We will see how well the restructured Mets do in late and close situations this year. I hope they rank higher amongst the 30 major league teams in Late & Close situations than they do in regular stats situations. Because if you finish higher overall hitting-wise than you rank in late and close, as occurred in 2025, you are not clutch enough. 

To be clear:

The 2025 Mets’ batting average, OBP and slugging % slash line for all plate appearances averaged 9th best.

Ninth best overall, but only 15th best in late and close situations? 

Big difference. 

Ergo? Not clutch in “late and close”.

I believe that’s one big reason why Steve Cohen and David Stearns chose to make the roster changes that they have…Subpar 2025 late and close output. Not just the oft-mentioned 2025 porous defense that was hemorrhaging runs.

Hopefully, the newly acquired Mets hitters will rake better in late and close situations in 2026 than the 2025 team’s hitters did.  I believe this team will be far better in late and close siruations.

If they do, wins will pour in and fans will SMILE. Even if they never heard of the “late and close” stat.

By the way, Bo Bichette in L&C situations in 2025?

He hit a robust .325/.354/.558. 

As you can clearly see if you look closely, lately I’m smiling over here, just thinking about that.


Mets game one against Skenes was not a good test of “late and close”. Because, after the first inning, it was never close. But the Mets, in that first inning of the opener, when it was EARLY AND CLOSE?

EXCEPTIONAL. 

AND A GREAT SIGN THAT “LATE AND CLOSE” MAY BE MUCH MORE INTERESTING IN METSVILLE IN 2026 THAN IN 2025.


ALONSO WATCH

1 for 5, no RBIs on Saturday.

His last RBI was a full month ago.

3/28/26

Tom Brennan - Mets’ AAA Opener was…A 3-1 WIN!

 


Tong Pitched Better Than Freddy Peralta. But What Do I Know?


Jonah Tong was almost terrific. 

Adjusted for the frigid weather, he was terrific.

Tong Terrific.

First frigid inning, 2 walks, no Ks.

Last 3 innings, 1 hit, 4 Ks.

Done after 4 rounds and 73 pitches. Then, treated in the clubhouse for hypothermia. J.j.just k.k.kidding.

Joe Jacques with the 9th inning scoreless save.

Morabito? 2 hits and an RBI. Nick!

Mauricio? A hit and a steal.

Rojas? A 2 run jack.

Clifford? A hit … and 2 Ks. In his first at bat, the first two pitches, naturally, were called strikes. Swing, dude. You can’t hit called strikes, trust me.

Senger? 2 hits. And 2 Ks.

The stadium was heated by 17 Ks by opposing pitchers. And just one walk. 

But they lost. Our guys prevailed.

The veterans…Melendez, Arroyo, Cluff, and Pache…were colder than the weather, with a combined 0 for 15 and 10 Ks.

Cold..but a heart warming final outcome.