2/17/26

Cautious Optimist - A Failure of Imagination (Part I)

 



Let's talk pitching  

There have been numerous articles written about how the 2025 Mets season was done in by the failure of starting pitchers to provide 'quality' starts, to be or to stay healthy -- problems hard enough for a team  to overcome under the best of circumstances --  exacerbated by a relief staff, worn down by overuse, beset by injuries, and capable only of uneven performance, unable to pick up the slack. 

There are good reasons for investigating past failings, even if not for dwelling on them. 

By their very nature, some failings call for backward looking responses.  We cannot go forward as a society, either morally or psychologically, without doing what we can to address serious criminal wrongdoing. We punish individuals for crimes they have committed because we believe that they have acted in ways that demand that we do so, not because doing deters wrongdoing, which would rely on an empirical claim for which we have far less than convincing evidence.  Were our system of punishment to have a desirable impact on the level of crime, that would be a collateral benefit of it, not the reason for it.   In contrast, we are prohibited from punishing those who have committed no crime, for they have done nothing deserving of state imposed and publicly funded harsh treatment that punishment inflicts, something we would presumably consider doing if our primary goal was to reduce the incidence of crimes in the future.

Other past failings are worthy of investigation with both backward and forward looking goals in mind. If my cows trample bushels of corn you have planted on property adjacent to mine, or if the health of occupants living in your house is adversely affected by pollution oozing from my adjacent feedlot, we may investigate the events involved in order to determine who should bear their respective costs.  In effect, we are deciding whether the crop damage and ill health are the costs of ranching or farming, in the one case or living close to a nuisance or building and operating a nuisance in the other.  To answer those questions, we may want to know whether the rancher or the farmer was there first, and whether the factory or the housing project was there first.  Of course the cows caused the damage as did the pollution, but did the farmer 'come to place himself and thereby put his cows at risk', and did the homeowner do the same?  

But we can also investigate to see what the best solution going forward may be if our goal is to improve health or to secure an optimal mix of meat and corn available in the market place or if we want to impact their respective prices, or if we felt an urgent need to subsidize either industry.  

There may be much of moral and psychological value in investigating past failings with the goal of fashioning responsibility for them, in expressing appropriate feelings of resentment and indignation for them, but there is something especially liberating about investigating past failings for the very different purpose of fashioning novel solutions designed to avoid or reduce the incidence and costs of ongoing activities.. 

Here's an example. It may be that the best way to reduce the number of automobile accidents going forward, or to reduce the damage that results when they happen, would be to fix the roads and highways, or to impose the costs of accidents on car manufacturers thereby incentivizing them to create cars that drive themselves or are built like Sherman Tanks.   Or we can reduce accidents by lowering speed limits dramatically.  There are so many options we can consider when we turn our gaze backward with the goal of looking for solutions to problems that we are facing in the future.

By now, you may find yourself wondering, what, if anything, has any of this got to do with baseball?  

The answer is, quite a bit, actually. For when it comes to the behavior of baseball organizations deciding how to respond to past failures, e.g. the Mets' 2025 season, the question is what should they be looking for and what approach should they be taking. For while it is perfectly reasonable for fans and commentators to assign responsibility and lay blame for a season down the tubes, investigating the past is primarily helpful to an organization only if doing so points to a better way of going forward.  

Responding to a pitching collapse requires investigating different ways of thinking about what went wrong that can have the greatest impact on reducing the risk of it happening again and reducing the consequences it is likely to have, if and when it does.  

That's the approach I've taken here. In searching for a more fundamental and foundational source of last year's failure, I began not with the immediate causal factors outlined in every article on the Mets' failure, but to the set of background conditions that activated those causes, which once activated, could not be halted or their consequences effectively mitigated.  

In doing so I've come to believe that the collapse of the Mets' pitching staff was ultimately the result of a collective lack of imagination.  Surprising conclusion? Certainly.  Plausible?  That's for you to decide, but hear me out, please.

The limits of the existing pitching paradigm

Where one ends up is path dependent, which is to say that where one ends up depends on where one begins.  This borders on the banal, but many banalities can prove insightful.  Baseball began with a particular understanding of a pitching staff that relied on drawing a distinction between starting and relief pitchers. Starting pitchers were those assigned to start games.  They were expected to stay in the game until they needed relief, which is what the relievers were expected to provide.  Relievers were then to stay in the game until they needed relief, which another reliever would be expected to provide.  This definition created the framework of the pitching paradigm that has existed in baseball for over a century.  Its consequences are not merely semantic, but practical -- hugely so.

When the distinction was first introduced there would be no reason why the same pitcher who started one game could not be reasonably asked to provide relief in another at some point thereafter, and vice versa. No reason, in other words, to sort pitchers into exclusive roles. 

Over time, as one would expect, some pitchers showed an ability to pitch effectively longer into games than others. At that point it became natural to sort pitchers along two dimensions:  those who could effectively pitch over many of the innings of a regulation game and those who could do so for fewer innings. The former were designated starters, the latter relievers.

At some point, it would become apparent that those who could pitch for longer stretches in any one game would need more time between game appearances to maintain their effectiveness, whereas pitchers who were asked to pitch fewer innings in relief would be able to do so more frequently.  Practical experience would lead to further refinements, regarding how many innings, how often and which individual pitchers fit into which category.  Practical experience not only refined the distinction's parameters, but had practical implications by introducing strategic decision making in creating and using the staff during a game and over a stretch of games. 

Inevitably, the idea of a comparative advantage took hold and the still relatively loose distinction between those who start and those who provide relief as needed became more refined.  As it did, pitchers were developed to perform in distinctive roles, and their training and development evolved accordingly.  

Because decisions about who should pitch when in a game or over a period of games now took on strategic importance, the reasons for pulling starters in favor of relievers also reflected strategic considerations.  Relievers were inserted not just when the starter became exhausted or displayed worrisome ineffectiveness, but also when it made sense to pinch hit for the pitcher or to bring in a reliever to face a particular part of the opposing teams' line-up. 

The idea of specialization entered baseball much as it did in the workforce more generally, and in due course, the line between starters and relievers required further parsing.  Soon there were long relievers, middle relievers and so on. Ultimately, an entirely new category of relievers --'closers' -- was created, not just to define a role, but to help define categories of relative importance among relievers that needed to be reflected in pay scales.

Health data entered the picture, and starting rotations expanded in number as the number of innings starters were expected to last declined.  Data eventually revealed that starters in general fared best the first two times through an opposing team's order and then their performance dropped off considerably.  To optimize performance, starters developed a larger arsenal of pitches, while relievers, who were being asked to pitch fewer innings were asked to provide an especially effective, but smaller, array of pitches. Before long, most teams developed a pitching staff comprised of five regular starters who on average lasted around six innings who were then followed by a series of one-inning or one type of batter (usually a lefty) specialist, a closer and a number of pitchers who provided redundancy if the first tier of one inning and one batter specialists had been called upon too often over a given period of time. 

And lest we forget: compensation has always been tied to performance, but performance needed metrics and names tied to roles.  And so entered into the baseball lexicon, terms like 'quality start,' 'hold', 'save' and 'blown save' in addition to 'wins' and 'losses'.  

This is a partial list of the changes that occurred and the events that likely caused them.  There are likely more changes that I have missed and the causes of all of them may well be more nuanced than I have suggested.  I am not offering an historical account.  I am providing what is sometimes called 'a false history' which is narrative more than an effort to provide an accurate historical record.  

The point of the narrative is to show the force of the initial distinction between starters and relievers in shaping everything that has followed.  All the changes that have occurred have done so without once rethinking the value of conceptualizing a pitching staff in terms of starters and relievers.  Many refinements have occurred to the distinction, but the power the distinction itself has displayed on everything from initial sorting assessments, strategic development strategies, projection into roles on the staff and expected performance, strategies surrounding use of the bullpen, compensation differentials, and much more are what they are in part because we think of a pitching staff in terms of starters and relievers. That paradigm has ruled for over a hundred years.  Nothing really has changed in how we think about constructing a pitching staff -- except at the margins.  We are 'prisoners' of our original take on how to think about the role of pitchers in a ball game and over the course of a season.

Even now, innovative changes in pitching roles are anything but examples of thinking outside the box

Ask yourself: what are the two biggest pitching innovations in the past decade or two?  I may be wrong, but my answer would be: The Bullpen Game and The Opener.  I admit both are different from the norm, but that hardly makes either innovative.  The bullpen game is nothing other than an episodic response to a momentary shortage of quality starting pitching.  It is a tactical response, not a strategic development.

I don't know what to say about games in which a reliever starts and the normal starter or some other starting pitcher relieves him of his duties at some point one to three innings later.  Giving it a name of its own, 'The Opener,' does little to enhance its luster or genius. 

These 'innovations' are simply variations on a theme, completely understandable within the existing paradigm.  The Mets' pitching collapse was not the first such collapse in baseball nor will it be the last.  Within that paradigm it is not surprising that observers of the Mets' failure last year have called for more and better pitchers.  How we think of potential solutions depends entirely on the paradigm, the framework of thought, with which we operate.

What's needed most of all is a different way of thinking about pitchers: a paradigm shift I offer one (of potentially) many shifts in my next post on Thursday. 

Stay tuned.  


Steve Sica- Why Matt Harvey is Still One of my Favorite Mets'


I was having a debate online last week on top five favorite Met players. Along with names like Mike Piazza, Jose Reyes, and David Wright, I put in Matt Harvey on my top-five list, most seemed to disagree.

Ten years ago, if you said this, no one would've batted an eye, but now, most would question you. Here's my reasoning behind why Matt Harvey is still a key part of Met history.

The year is 2012. It's summer and the Mets and fumbling their way through yet another losing season, soon to be their fourth consecutive one, as the team hasn't been relevant since they moved into Citi Field in 2009. Outside of R.A Dickey's renaissance season in which he would go on to win 20 games, there really isn't much to get excited about watching this team.

Then, on July 26th in Arizona, Matt Harvey, the Mets' first round pick in 2009, makes his MLB debut. He came with plenty of fanfare and had been ranked as one of baseball's top pitching prospects. He turned in one of the best pitching debuts in Met history going 5 and 1/3 innings, allowing no runs and striking out 11. Met fans took notice right away as it looked like at long last, after years of wandering through the abyss, the Mets had a real future again, and something to get excited about in Queens.

Going into the 2013 season, there was still no reason to think the Mets' would be able to compete with the rest of the National League for a playoff spot. About the only thing to look forward to that year was that Citi Field was going to host the All-Star Game. In his first full season, Matt Harvey would be putting on All-Star caliber starts every fifth game. Through April he had 4-0 record with an ERA of 1.56. The term ""Harvey Days' was born, and every fifth game became a must watch event for Met fans.

On May 7th, Harvey threw a one-hit shutout over nine innings against the White Sox through a bloody nose, an image that is now iconic in Met history. Fans dubbed him the nickname "The Dark Knight of Gotham" they'd pack Citi Field whenever he pitched, and while the team was no where near postseason contention, Citi Field took on a playoff vibe whenever Matt Harvey took the mound. That was never more apparent than on a chilly night in April where the Mets took on the Nats and their ace Stephen Strasburg. Met fans rained chants of "Harvey's Better!" at Strasburg as the Mets won the game 7-1 over the defending NL East champions.

This is why, in my opinion, Matt Harvey is one of the most significant Met players in the last 15 years. A key part of that 2015 National League pennant winning team, and also the bridge from irrelevancy of the early 2010's to the World Series by the middle of the decade. Matt Harvey made Met games worth watching again, put the team back into the national spotlight, and the fact the he was homegrown, made all the much sweeter to watch, as Met fans had watched prospect after prospect fizzle out for years as they made the MLB debuts.

By July of 2013, Matt Harvey not only made the All-Star game but he was the starting pitcher in his home ballpark at Citi Field. David Wright was the starting third baseman, and it couldn't have been a more perfect night for a team that had very little of them over the last half a decade. 

While Harvey would go down with Tommy John surgery by the end of 2013 and missed the 2014 season entirely. By the time he came back in 2015, the Mets had a potent supporting cast around him and he would play an important role in helping the Mets win their first division title in a decade, and also their first pennant in 15 years.

Harvey's Met legacy is complicated. There's a lot of what if's surrounding him and you can't help but feel like he could've done more during his time in Queens. We've seen him back at Citi Field as a fan in the stands, and also at the Alumni Classic. It was nice seeing him get a big hand from the crowd when his name was called out. I think as time goes on, more Met fans will see where I'm coming from. The Matt Harvey season of 2013, is one the best in Met history. He brought a team that had been struggling to find it's way back to the top of the National League, and a team that lacked any sort of identity in years, and put them back on the map.

It didn't end with a World Series parade. It didn't end with Matt Harvey retiring in a blaze of orange and blue glory. In fact, none of those "five aces" wound up being forever Met players. But, you really can't tell the story of one of the most exciting Met teams, the 2015 squad, without Matt Harvey.

Paul Articulates – Who stays?

With a re-designed core and many new players and a deep reserve of prospects, this year’s spring training will become an intriguing competition for spots on the opening day 26-man roster.  

This series will take a look at the players that are in position to compete for a slot on that roster but are not a lock.  We will look at the pros and cons of carrying them with the MLB team when they break camp with the alternative being depth and development pieces in the minor leagues.

Some players are very well established as MLB regulars that are not reasonable candidates for demotion, so for the purposes of this review the following list of players are considered locked down on the MLB Roster:

Infielders: Francisco Lindor, Marcus Semien, Jorge Polanco, Bo Bichette, 

Outfielders: Juan Soto, Luis Robert Jr., Tyrone Taylor

Pitchers: Freddy Peralta, Nolan McLean, Clay Holmes, Kodai Senga, David Peterson, Devin Williams, Luke Weaver, Brooks Raley

Catchers: Francisco Alvarez; Torrens

Given this list, and MLB rules that allow only 26 players on the active roster from opening day through August 31st, and that a maximum of 13 pitchers can be listed among the 26 players, there will only be room to carry five more pitchers and five more position players beyond what is listed above.


Today we will take a look at the infielders that are vying for those five “contested” spots:

Infielders on the 40-man roster: Vidal Brujan, Brett Baty, Mark Vientos, Ronny Mauricio

Brett Baty – Baty has a strong shot at making the roster.  He has been part of the active roster for four consecutive seasons.  Although he has had his ups and downs over this period, his 2025 season was his best.  He slashed .254/.313/.435 and played adequate defense at second base and very good defense at third.  Baty would normally be part of the “sure thing” list to start the season, but with all of the reworking of the roster and re-vamping of the core, we take nothing for granted this year.  My take is that Baty has a super spring training as he tries to show everyone that he can still be “the guy” at third.

Mark Vientos – Vientos, like Baty, has seen time on the major league roster in four consecutive seasons.  His 2024 season was a break-out year for Mark.  He displayed power, clutch hitting, and confidence that he belonged there.  He came into the 2025 season as the incumbent third baseman, but his bat forgot to come with him.  He plummeted from a 134 OPS+ in 2024 to a 97 OPS+ in 2025 and soon found himself sharing time on the field and in the lineup with a handful of other players.  By season end, he was a part-time DH who many thought would be lost through an off-season trade.  He is still here, and has the potential to demonstrate this spring that ’25 was a fluke.  He has opportunities at both the DH and first base positions – my prediction is that he will make the team but his opportunity will be judged month by month by the front office.

Ronny Mauricio – Mauricio came up through the minors around the same time as Baty, Vientos, and Francisco Alvarez.  Many thought that Mauricio had a very high ceiling because he has demonstrated both speed and power in his journey through the minors.  His time on the big league club has not proven that out to date.  He had some flashes of brilliance in the 2023 season, missed 2024 to a leg injury suffered in the winter league, and did little over 61 games in the 2025 season to show he was ready.  If not for Lindor’s hamate bone surgery I would say Mauricio had no shot at travelling north with the club in late March, but Ronny is a shortstop by nature with quickness and range that no one else has with the departure of LuisAngel Acuna.  If Ronny stays under control defensively and shows some proficiency in the batters box, he has a shot to make the active roster while Lindor rehabilitates.

Vidal Brujan – Vidal is another one of David Stearns’ insurance policies.  He was traded to the Mets for cash by the Twins in this off-season.  With only 3 years of MLB service, Brujan has plenty of team control remaining.  He is a versatile fielder, having shown the ability to play several positions, including second base, third base, and both corner outfield positions.  The infield is crowded with Baty, Vientos, and Mauricio fighting to stay on the roster, so Brujan’s play is his versatility to play both infield and outfield.  Given that he is not out of options and the other three are, I would bet that Brujan will begin the season in Syracuse and yo-yo a bit to cover injuries.

Infielders not on the 40-man roster but with spring training invites: 

The special invitees fall into two groups this year.

Rising prospects: Ryan Clifford and Jacob Reimer have been gaining accolades for their performance in the minor leagues with both possessing power bats.  This is important because the Mets gave up some of their power in the off-season restructuring.  Unfortunately, that restructuring focused on defense (run prevention) and neither of these two have distinguished themselves with the glove during their minor league careers.  With the promise of a big league career with a team that is positioning for a championship, the motivation is high for them to work on their defense and show the fruits of their labor to the coaching staff.  Look for both to begin the season in Syracuse, but with some hard work and a little good fortune, they each are within reach of the bigs.

New acquisitions with something to prove: Christian Arroyo, Jose Rojas, Jackson Cluff, and Grae Kessinger have all joined the club during the off-season through signing minor league contracts with invitations to spring training.  All except Cluff have had a taste of the major leagues with very limited success.  All were considered top prospects, so they have demonstrated talent at the minor league level that just has not translated yet.  They are  fairly inexpensive gambles for the Mets that have the potential to become depth pieces.  I would not predict that any of the four will travel north with the team this spring, but could use time in Syracuse to hone their skills.

To summarize the infield battle, there are ten players vying for a spot.  Baty and Vientos have a very high probability of success, Mauricio and Brujan have a moderate chance due to the Lindor injury, and the rest will use the spring as an opportunity to show what they can do for future consideration.  

What is your read?


2/16/26

Ernest Dove - #21 prospect Eli Serrano

Making it #21 on his @mets Top 30 Prospect List is outfielder - Eli Serrano

Watch on YouTube or below.


For more of Ernest's wisdom and lots of great Mets Prospect Videos subscribe to Ernest's YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@ernestdove.

You can also catch Ernest on X (formerly known as Twitter)

Paul Articulates - How are the Mets going to play the new rule changes?

Three rule changes were announced some time ago for the 2026 MLB season, and little has been said about them as the focus was on the intriguing player acquisition carousel that played out in slow motion between December and now.

There were three changes that were put into effect for this season:

1) The Automated Ball-Strike (ABS) Challenge System has been introduced.  This is the most significant of the cha
nges and could have a major impact on the game.  At first glance, it seems inobtrusive: each team gets two challenges to ball-strike calls during a regulation game (plus one more if it goes into extra innings).  However, if a team successfully challenges a call, the chance is not lost.  That means that multiple successful challenges could ensue.  Only the pitcher, catcher, or batter can challenge a call.  I will have much more to say on this rule change a little later.

2) The coaches’ boxes at first and third base are going to be enforced.  When the pitcher is on the rubber, coaches must be within the box.  A warning is issued on the first violation, and an ejection follows the second.  It looks like this will add two more rows to the Mets’ depth chart – one for first base coaches, and one for third base coaches.

3) Runners cannot initiate contact with fielders to force an obstruction call.  The rule change modifies the definition of “unsportsmanlike conduct” to include a runner committing an intentional act of interference unrelated to running the bases while in a rundown or avoiding a tag. If a runner is guilty of this, the umpires will rule him out and all other runners will return to the base last touched.

Of the three rule changes, the ABS will undoubtedly have the most impact on the game.  The ABS has been evaluated in the minor leagues for a few years to work out some of the bugs and has now been declared as “ready”.  

The testing over the last few years was done at the AAA level.  One observation that I had as it unfolded was that the ERA of pitchers in leagues that used the ABS was noticeably higher.  One can infer from this observation that the pitchers were forced to throw in the strike zone more because they could not get away with balls that broke around the plate or expertly framed by catchers.  With more balls thrown in the strike zone, batters have the advantage and therefore more hits and runs result.

The limit of two (unsuccessful) challenges per game is also something noteworthy.  As all of us know from watching ball games, both batters and pitchers get emotional at times over calls that went against them on close pitches.  It is easy to project that the two challenges could be wasted in the early innings by emotional rather than rational decisions on when to challenge a call.

All this requires strategic adaptation by the teams.  They can’t just go into the season without an established plan to make these changes work to their advantage.  Here are a few things that I am sure are being debated amongst club leadership right now:

Club rules on who can challenge and when.  As mentioned before, pitchers and hitters can quickly exhaust challenges with emotional reactions.  Clubs are going to have to decide who can initiate a challenge.  My guess is that the catcher is the only defensive player that will be allowed to challenge.  Catchers see every pitch, they learn where the umpire’s strike zone sits, and they will adjust that learning based upon any challenges that are successful.  From the hitters’ side, clubs will likely choose which players will be allowed to use a challenge.  As an example, Juan Soto has a superb eye for the zone, and he has a much higher probability of success in a challenge than someone that does not recognize pitches well and has a high chase rate.  If a club does not have a “Soto”, they may establish a rule that the challenges can only be used on defense unless it is a last-inning pivotal at-bat.

Managerial decisions on pulling pitchers will need adjustment.  If in fact the ERAs are going to go up in a similar fashion to the minors, then pulling a starter early because he is giving up more hits/runs will be useless, since the next guy in will probably have the same misfortune.  The quick hook of last season’s Carlos Mendoza would be disastrous in this scenario.

Modify the approach at the plate.  If you accept the premise that pitchers will be forced by ABS to throw more pitches in the strike zone, then you must agree that a more aggressive approach at the plate is warranted.  As always, batters have much more success when ahead in the count because the pressure is on the pitcher to throw a strike.  Prior approaches that were taught included waiting on a specific pitch in a favorable area because pitchers would try to nibble the corners and make the batter chase.  If this tactic is not successful anymore because of ABS, then pitchers will have to throw more early strikes to get ahead themselves.  The obvious counter is for batters to sit on those early strikes and be prepared to drive the ball.

Defensive shift evolutions.  If you believe that batters will become more aggressive early as just mentioned, then there will be more instances of balls pulled to the batter’s power zones.  This would necessitate defensive alignment changes in anticipation of trends on where balls are hit.

I believe that the teams that think this through will come out of the gate with an advantage in the 2026 season.  Those that do not will be playing catch-up to tactics that will probably be evolving continuously.  Where will the Mets end up in all this?  If you believe what we have been writing consistently on this site over the last few months, then put your money on the Mets taking the strategic approach.


Reese Kaplan -- Some Good News Stories for the Mets, Too


For someone who often illuminates a spotlight on what the Mets organization has been doing wrong (and it’s quite a long list), today instead let’s take a few looks at things that are going right as we approach full Spring Training for the 2026 season.


Starting Pitching

Freddy Peralta’s arrival could be for as little as a single year as he has free agency pending at the end of the 2026 season, but no one is complaining about it given his high arsenal quality and the very low price being paid for his salary.  It is now incumbent upon the front office to turn him into a long term Mets, much as was done with Johan Santana.

Kodai Senga is supposed to be completely healthy.  If true then he’s a co-ace in this starting rotation.  People are too quick to forget what he’s done while a member of the Mets and all it will take is the first double digit strikeout game to refresh the memory.

Clay Holmes made a highly successful transition from quality reliever to middle of the rotation starter.  Yes, he seemed to run out of gas a bit towards the end of last season, but if you asked anyone if they’d sign up for a winning record with a 3.53 ERA pretty much everyone would sign up for that right now.  It is possible with more time to work on arm strength and duration he could be even better.

Nolan McLean may be somewhat cursed by the magnitude of his success at the end of last season.  Consequently expectations are sky high.  Still, if you look through his minor league numbers it shouldn’t come as a huge surprise.  No one realistically expects a full season of 2.06 ERA but his numbers for his entire minor league career amounted to just a 3.10 number that improved each of the last two seasons.

Sean Manaea is one of the two huge question marks in the rotation.  When he’s good he’s miscast as a number one starter, but three times he saw his ERA dip below 4.00 as a starting pitcher.  No one knows what to expect this year, but a repeat of his NY Mets 3.47 ERA in 2024 would be most welcome.

David Peterson is the other lefty for whom no one can solidly predict numbers.  In 2024 he finished with a 2.90 ERA and he started off 2025 with the same level of dominance before everything fell apart in the second half of the year.  His ending number of 4.22 is borderline acceptable but folks would rather see a number between these two extremes to call him a true asset to the current six-man rotation.


Up the Middle Defense

Francisco Lindor has demonstrated both at the plate and in the field what kind of top tier player he is.  Right now everyone is anxious for his recovery but pairing him as part of the double play combo make everyone feel warm and fuzzy about the coverage he’ll provide.

Marcus Semien has gone from shortstop to second base during his career.  While his offensive numbers have sputtered over the past few years, the Gold Glove on his mantle is testament to the kind of defense that has been missing from the Mets probably since Doug Flynn manned that position. 

Luis Robert, Jr. has been brought here as much for his Gold Glove as he has for his so far unrealized full offensive potential.  While folks will appreciate what he can do with his legs and with his middle-of-the-order power, the fact is with a struggling corner outfielder on one side of him and an unknown commodity on the other he’s a Met for what he’s done with his leather.

Francisco Alvarez has had more than his fair share of injuries which curtailed his numbers overall, but winter conditioning and apparent full health have people optimistic about what he can provide not just as a slugger but also as a defensive stalwart behind the plate. 


Big Bats

Juan Soto did everything the Mets had hoped when he signed that record setting contract last season.  He added speed to make him an even more formidable offensive weapon.  He is so good at producing runs that you’ll survive what he does in the field (though long term he maybe should become a DH).

Bo Bichette’s arrival came immediately after the club missed out on Kyle Tucker.  It sure took a lot of the sting out of the new Dodger.  He is a career .294 hitter having hit as many as 29 HRs and driven in as many as 103 in a single season.  He’s sure a welcome addition to the lineup.

Jorge Polanco came as something of a surprise as a new Met.  He’s played up the middle which is currently covered by Semien and Lindor.  The story is that he is going to shift to first base which should be a bit less challenging defensively, but he’s still a competent hitter.  In a given year he’s good for .263 with 23 HRs and 85 RBIs.  They’re not Alonso numbers but they’re certainly solid.  

2/15/26

Tom Brennan: In Defense of Mets’ Defense; I Am Iron Man; Velo Matters

 

 


OH, WHAT A RELIEF STRONG DEFENSE IS!

Playing a new position is hard. Of that, there is no doubt. 

Everyone says that, and I concede to that point.

Bichette to 3rd base, Polanco to first base? Hard.

But, let’s step back and think about this for a minute.

These guys found out in January that they be expected to play these positions in April. So they have three months to learn.

Secondly, they played alongside guys in those positions for quite a long time and understand the interactional dynamics of that, so they are not coming at it like Jay. I never focused on those positions whatsoever. You understand what people do with those positions very deeply comment when you are a Professional player who’s played so many games. 

Lastly, consider this factor, as spelled out an interview byNSNY freelance writer, Colin Martin, with Freddie Peralta.

Peralta….was asked his thoughts on having four traditional shortstops playing different spots in the infield, as the Mets' 2026 lineup will consist of Francisco LindorBo Bichette (playing 3B), Marcus Semien (playing 2B), and Jorge Polanco (playing 1B). Although Semien has been at second base the past few seasons with Texas and Toronto, and Polanco moved from mostly SS to 2B in 2021.

"Oh my God, I don't know. I think if we are going to have that, a lot of baseballs are going to be caught everywhere," Peralta said jokingly. "Excited to see."

I think there are tons of logic to absorb here. And, if Peralta is excited, if he thinks there’s going to be a lot of baseballs caught everywhere, which really makes a lot of sense, then why should we have trepidation? Why shouldn’t we be downright excited?

Also consider this thought: time and time again, we all look at guys being potentially drafted who are short stops, and the question always comes up, will they be able to remain at shortstop? That question is asked because it’s the most demanding position in the Enfield to play. All of these guys have passed the test at shortstop. So why do we think they will have trouble mastering easier positions?

Lastly, some folks talk about Bo Bichette’s weak arm for third base. But a chart I saw recently that ranked shortstop arm strength had Bo B ranked HIGHER than a guy named Francisco (the Hamate Man) Lindor. 

How about them apples in the big apple?

Me? Put me in the “downright excited” column. I think this infield is gonna flash some leather this year that’s going to make us smile.


WHAT COULD GO WRONG LETTING YOUR GUYS PLAY IN TOURNAMENTS?

Saw this, thought of Edwin:

The leg injury Kings star Kevin Fiala suffered during the Olympics is season-ending, according to ESPN.  Fiala, playing with Switzerland, sustained the injury during the team’s loss to Canada on Friday.

No, no key players EVER get hurt in these things, clearly.


I AM IRON MAN

Last year, Alonso, Soto, Lindor, and Nimmo missed almost no games between them, averaging 159 games played.  

Baseball is grueling. David Wright was an Iron Man until he rusted out.

Now, Lindor has a balky hamate bone. Surgery zipped-zip, as I write this mid-week. 

It is great when the great players play every day, but their not resting more increases the likelihood of nagging injuries becoming worse. Because aside from Ripken and Gehrig, no one is Iron Man in baseball anymore.

I for one believe Lindor has his eyes on the Hall of Fame. He knows that huge career numbers come from extremely high levels of games played in one’s peak years. But the worn out tire has a bubble in it. It just blew out.

Hopefully, for Lindor, it will only be a “short stop” on the injured list.

But not TOO short, as he could STOP being as productive if not properly healed. 

And I would recommend not returning in cold late March/April weather.

The Mets have already lost a lot of power this last season. What if Lindor loses half of his?  

The Mets (Alvarez, Lindor) may lead the major leagues in hamate bone removals.

Lastly, this injury basically ended one Mets “prospect’s” career: 

Tim Tebow was never the same after his hamate surgery. The month prior to it, he hit .300 in the minors. His long shot bid died right there.


VELO MATTERS

Mets sign Craig Kimbrel. The now-37 year old former uber-beast has less velocity than he did several years back.

Baseball Savant showed his 2025 FB velo at 93.5. 

Several years prior, per their charts, he averaged 99. Huge difference.

See the charts:

BB Savant Yearly Charts for Kimbrel


THINGS OFTEN HAPPEN IN THREES

Saw this:

“One college baseball player had a Baylor debut for the history books — and it left him “speechless” afterward.

“Tyce Armstrong, a redshirt senior who transferred to the Bears after four seasons at UT Arlington, crushed three grand slams — tying a collegiate baseball record — and drove in 12 runs during a 15-2 win over New Mexico State on Friday.”


- Maybe he saw my advice to be aggressive like Brent Rooker.





MACK - THE SUNDAY REPORT -

 


The Morning Report

 

First, let's talk short.

Yes, Francisco Lindor is scheduled to be back by opening day, but some combination of rust, bad timing, and possible sub-par throwing could shelve this plan.

One then has to asked why not return Bo Bichette to short and play either Brett Baty or Mark Vientos on third until the trainer gives the a-ok?

Plus, there's Ronny Mauricio.

However, I have a new plan...

Why not let Bichette play third and move another ex-shortstop back there. Marcus Semien. You can then play either Baty or Mauricio at second. 

 

A quick observation..

Mets Metrics ran some numbers on Bo Bichette's arm, both from third base and short. I was disappointed that it was below the average. Better than Alex Bregman, but still, below average. The bottom line is he is potentially the league leader in hits so that's the hand they will play this season.

 

A few Q&A

Q. I think I asked you this earlier but do you think the 26 roster is complete?

Mack. The only move I possibly see is Lindor going on the 7-day IL and being replaced by someone like Vidal Brujan (of course this could always be the entry point for Carson Benge).


Q. At what point do you think Benge will be in the starting lineup?

Mack. I've evaluated this for countless hours plus consulted with baseball God's throughout the industry. Then, I threw all that shite in the crapper and promoted him before game 1.


Q. Do you think Craig Kimbrel will return to dominance?


Mack. Dominance? No. Competitiveness, yes. Plus I think of all that wealth of relief knowledge working with your young pen-mates.. I'm not sure how long it will last but I would keep him if his ERA stayed below 4.00 and kis K/9 was over nine.


Q. Who does you think will be the first rookie to make a splash on this team?

Mack. Trick question, huh? I mean, Nolan McLean sort of charged up in the later portion of last season. Technically, he is still a rookie and has to be counted too. However, I expect two more rookies to be also showcased during spring training. They are aforementioned Carson Benge and probably second half season sensation, Jonah Tong. Tong will start off in AAA-Syracuse and work on his secondary pitches. Where his entry point into the rotation is, and when, is totally up to a lot of factors that simply haven't transpired yet.


Q. Is Ronny Mauricio ever going to pan out?

Mack. Maybe as a platooned designated hitter, but that's all I see for the young man. In his defense I'm not sure he has been given a decent change and, with the long list of infielders on this team, he may never.


Q. There is a lot of experience in the current projected Mets bullpen. Do you see either Ryan Lambert or Dylan Ross wearing Mets blue and orange come April?


Mack. Boy, I wish, but watch for the Mets to open up out there with vet-only relievers.


Q. 

  






2/14/26

RVH - The 2026 Diagnostic: Building for the Grind

 

As we move into Spring Training, the conversation is shifting from “who did we sign?” to “how does this actually work?” To understand the 2026 Mets, we have to understand the difference between a load-bearing roster and a layered one.

In engineering, a load-bearing wall carries the weight of the entire structure. If it fails, the building collapses. For years, the Mets built load-bearing rosters. They relied on a few aging pillars—Jacob deGrom, Max Scherzer—to hold up the entire season. When those pillars inevitably cracked due to injury or age, there was nothing underneath to catch the weight, and the result was total system failure.

The 2026 Mets are attempting a different architecture. Instead of asking a few players to carry the full weight of the franchise, they’ve built layers. This roster is designed to operate as a model, not to chase a miracle season.

1. Redundancy as a Multiplier

The blockbuster acquisitions of Bo Bichette and Luis Robert Jr. aren’t just about adding star power. They’re about offensive redundancy.

In prior seasons, the lineup was so top-heavy that if one star slumped or missed time, the entire scoring engine stalled. There was no insulation from variance. By layering Bichette and Robert alongside a deep group of professional hitters, the Mets have protected themselves from the Variance Cliff.

If one player hits a cold streak, the lineup doesn’t shut down. It keeps functioning. That redundancy matters most in the Competitive Middle—the roughly 40% of games decided by two to four runs. Those games aren’t won by heroics. They’re won by steady, professional execution, by lineups that don’t need everything to go right on a given night.

This is how you win 4–2 games in June without burning emotional or bullpen capital.

2. Stabilizing Innings: Durable Infrastructure in the Rotation

The 2022 Mets proved you can buy wins with aging aces. They also proved you cannot buy durability.

You can’t build a foundation on a load-bearing arm that might only give you 100 innings. Over 162 games, injuries aren’t anomalies; they’re guarantees. A mid-June oblique strain that costs a starter three weeks is not bad luck—it’s part of the season.

In 2026, while Freddy Peralta leads the staff, the success of the rotation rests on the foundational innings provided by the middle of the order. The front office prioritized durable infrastructure over fragile “Top-5 starter” projections. Arms like Clay Holmes and Tobias Myers aren’t expected to be saviors; they’re expected to be available.

That availability creates margin. It means a single injury doesn’t cascade into bullpen overuse, emergency call-ups, and the kind of pitching spiral Mets fans have seen too many times before. This staff is built on stabilizing innings that allow the team to absorb failure without collapsing.

3. Protecting the Option Value

The most important part of the 2026 diagnostic may be who the Mets did not trade.

By retaining top pitching prospects and creating an infield surplus with Marcus Semien, Jorge Polanco, and Bichette, the organization has preserved option value. This surplus isn’t about hoarding talent; it’s about flexibility.

It allows for rest, matchup optimization, and injury absorption without dropping to replacement-level scrambling. When the grind of July hits, the Mets aren’t digging into the bottom of the barrel; they’re re-sequencing known quantities. That distinction is the difference between a layered roster and a load-bearing one.

The Final Word: Operating the Model

A successful 2026 season will reveal itself in the "boring" wins—the 4–2 games where nothing spectacular happens, but nothing breaks. The games where the Mets simply out-execute the opponent because they have more professional layers to lean on.

For the first time in the Cohen era, the Mets aren’t hoping for a miracle or praying that a single star stays healthy for six months. They’re trusting a machine. The goal isn’t just to reach a theoretical ceiling. It’s to ensure the floor is finally strong enough to survive the full 162-game marathon.