There are times in a season where analysis becomes less about explanation and more about reflection.
This is one of those times.
I spent much of the offseason and early part of the year framing the New York Mets through a systems lens. I believed in the logic of the build — the shift toward run prevention, athleticism, depth, and a more balanced roster construction.
And I still believe that logic has merit.
But I was too confident in how cleanly that logic would translate to reality.
Where My Thinking Fell Short
Looking back, the issue wasn’t that the model made no sense. It did.
The issue is that I didn’t fully appreciate how many things needed to go right at the same time for it to work.
I treated the roster like a collection of solid parts that would collectively produce stability.
What it really was, in practice, was a system that relied on multiple outcomes aligning — health, timing, and performance — all at once.
That’s a very different level of risk.
The Assumptions I Smoothed Over
Some of these were easy to justify individually:
Expecting stability or rebound from parts of the rotation
Believing depth would absorb inevitable injuries
Assuming defensive gains would offset offensive inconsistency
Each of those, on its own, is reasonable.
What I didn’t properly account for was how interconnected they were.
When the rotation wavers, the bullpen absorbs it.
When the bullpen is stretched, the defense is exposed.
When the offense isn’t consistently producing, there’s no margin to recover.
At that point, small issues don’t stay small.
They start to stack.
Where I Was Too Dismissive
This is the part I take more seriously.
There were concerns being raised — not always cleanly articulated, but directionally right:
Questions about rotation reliability
Questions about offensive consistency
Questions about how thin the margin for error might be
My instinct was to filter those through the framework — to trust the structure, the design, the idea that over 162 games things would normalize.
In doing that, I was too quick to discount what was really being identified:
The number of things that had to go right for this team to function the way it was designed.
That’s not noise. That’s risk.
On the Offense — A Needed Correction
I also need to be precise about something I didn’t frame correctly.
This team did not lack offensive anchors.
With players like Juan Soto, Bo Bichette, and Francisco Lindor — along with support from Jorge Polanco — the capacity was clearly there.
The issue wasn't the absence of talent.
It was an absence of alignment.
Slow starts, injuries, and inconsistency meant that group never really existed at the same time in a stable way. The offense didn’t fail because it lacked pieces. It failed because those pieces never came together.
That’s a distinction I didn’t make clearly enough.
What I’ll Carry Forward
If there’s one lesson I take from this, it’s this:
A system can be well designed on paper and still be fragile in practice if too many of its outcomes are dependent on one another.
I leaned into the structure — maybe too much.
Going forward, I’ll spend more time asking a different question:
Not just “Does this make sense?”
But “How many things have to go right for this to hold?”
Because that’s where the real risk lives.
Final Thought
This isn’t a reversal of how I think about roster construction.
It’s a refinement.
The goal isn’t to be right from the start. It’s to get closer to the truth as the season reveals itself.
Right now, the 2026 Mets are doing exactly that — revealing where the assumptions held, and where they didn’t.
And for me, that starts with acknowledging where I didn’t see it clearly enough.










