2/19/26

Cautious Optimist -- Lack of Imagination: (Part II: Reconfiguring the Mets Pitching Staff)

 


Some inconvenient truths about pitching

From opening day to September 1st, no major league team can have more than 13 pitchers, half of the total number of players on the roster.  On September 1,  the numbers go up to 14 of 28. On average, teams end up using between 25-30 different pitchers over the course of season, split evenly between starters and relievers.  Last year, the Mets used 46 different pitchers, thereby setting the major league record,  roughly 3.5 times the number of pitchers allowed on a major league roster. Impressive, but not in a good way.

Math problem of the day: How many different combinations of 13 pitchers would 46 different candidates yield?  And how many of the 46 can you name?  How many do you think even Carlos Mendoza or Jeremy Heffner (without a cheat sheet) could have named once the season ended?

Interestingly, the Braves, Angels, Diamondbacks and Orioles managed to use 40 or more pitchers as well, and the Dodgers fell just short of doing so after having hit the 40 mark in 2024. 

Pitchers experience more injuries than ever in spite of pitching fewer innings and appearing in fewer games. Tommy John surgery has become a right of passage.  There seem to be more and more relievers and fewer and fewer effective starting pitchers.  Fans invariably find themselves praying their team's staff can get the game in the hands of the closer, only a handful of whom are capable of reliably closing down the opposition, anyway.  No doubt, position players on any given day find themselves in quiet prayer as well

It's unimaginable that a team would go through position players at anything approaching a comparable clip, even though position players play many more innings and appear in many more games.  

The explanation of the difference lay in the nature of the workload involved and especially the toll pitching takes.  Pitchers are involved in every pitch in every inning in which they appear which means that their workload is not best reflected in the number of innings or appearances they make, but in the number of pitches they throw and the conditions under which they do so.  The effort and toll on the body each pitch requires is enormous.  From the point of view of impact on the body, there is no such thing as low impact pitching  All pitches are high impact, on the body if not necessarily on the outcome of the game. 

Constructing a pitching staff? What is the problem the staff is designed to solve?

There are no doubt a number of ways of answering this question.  Managers invariably think of their pitching staff in terms of innings. They need their pitchers to cover innings.  Asking pitchers to cover too many innings risks injury.  Having pitchers cover too few innings runs the risk of overusing other pitchers and thereby also risking injury.  When they are not discussing covering innings, managers typically speak about the need for the staff to keep the team in the games as often as they possibly can.

As constructed, far too many pitching staffs are finding it difficult to meet these goals.  The Mets needed 46 pitchers (in addition to a couple of position players) to cover the required innings.  It is not be surprising that digging as deeply as they did into the pool of pitchers (and beyond) that  they were unable to stay in enough games to catch the break that would have led them to a playoff appearance.

This problem is not unique to the Mets.  Something is amiss with how teams in general construct their pitching staffs.  In my view, the problem begins with an inapt idea of what teams are building a staff for: what problem they design the staff to solve. 

Another way of thinking: A pitching staff is designed to create strategic advantages

I am playing around with a different way of thinking about a baseball team and its roster construction.  That overall idea is incompletely developed, but goes like this.  Arbitrarily, perhaps, let's divide the roster into offense, defense, and pitching. At some level, I think you want to think about each of these three areas as having the same goal, but with different strategies for achieving that goal.

The overall goal is to efficiently create exploitable strategic advantages over the course of a game, a series, and ultimately a season.  Obviously, Stearns looked at the Mets' overall capacity to prevent runs and determined that it was a strategic liability.  Run prevention is on the defense and the pitching.  So the question is, how to turn a strategic disadvantage around, and ultimately into a strategic advantage.

I think Stearns is thinking in effect along the lines I am proposing.  I'm just focusing here on what would be the natural questions he would ask himself about pitching and a pitching staff.  They are (1) How can a pitching staff, taken as a whole create a strategic advantage; (2) How would one organize a pitching staff around the goal of securing strategic advantages.  

Because pitchers throw pitches to batters, one at a time, one batter at a time, the focus on innings is inapt to this way of formulating what the goal of a pitching staff is.  

The goal must have more to do with pitches than with innings.  And it must have something to do with creating a competitive advantage wherever possible of the pitcher to the hitter he is facing, and turning that competitive advantage into a strategic one, that is, one that has positive outcomes in (1) at bats, (2), innings, (3) games, (4) series of games, and (5) over the course of a season.

Making sense of the idea that pitching staffs are designed to create strategic advantages

The basic idea is pretty simple and straightforward.  Pitchers throw pitches.  And what we want from them as a staff is for them to throw the maximum number of quality pitches over the course of a season, distributed over games and innings within games. Ultimately we are looking to the data to determine which pitches, when, by which pitchers  leads to the most favorable outcomes. 

What do I mean by 'quality pitches'?  Quality pitches are those that in sequence give the pitcher the competitive edge in an at bat.  The competitive edge if realized would result in more at bat pitching wins, which translates into an overall strategic advantage.  Ideally, you would want every pitch to be the best version of the pitch that the best strategy would call for at that point in the game. 

Practically speaking, the best any team can hope for is that taken as a whole its pitching staff will maximize  the opportunities to have a strategic advantage as often as  possible -- in at bats, across innings, games and seasons. 

That's the goal, now the question is, what plans can one plausibly implement to move in the direction of achieving it?

Here's my idea, my defense of it, and why I think it may prove to be a reasonable alternative approach to the ones that have evolved within the existing pitching paradigm. It's easier to make the idea concrete by using an illustration.  

Since last year's Mets serve as the most vivid and painful example of what can go wrong under the existing paradigm, let's use the current Mets projected staff (I'm obviously making some assumptions about its make-up) as an example of how thinking in terms of maximizing strategic advantage would influence the construction of the staff and the use of the pitchers on it. 

There are currently 6 starting pitchers on the staff all of whom have  shown a capacity to pitch very effectively for 3 or 4 innings, My first suggestion is that we match 2 of them in any one game, strategically, and that we do this for 4 of the pitchers on the team.

Now how should we match our pitchers with one another?  What criteria should we use?   For starters, I suggest pairing righties with lefties, as well as paring different pitching styles. pitch arsenals, or arm angles, etc.  Anything that reduces comfort in the batter's box.  These are suggested criteria.  Think of them as a first pass, revisable upon new information.  So how about:

* Senga and Manaea 

* Peterson and Holmes 

That would leave Peralta and McLean to pitch without an assigned mate, i.e as standard 'starters.'

Each member of a matched pair is expected to pitch 3-4 innings in a game.  When they are successful at doing so, on average they would pitch through the 7th inning leaving only the 8th and 9th.  Then one would have McLean and Peralta as traditional pitchers expected to go 6 innings each, which when they are successful, would leave the 7th, 8th and 9th to be covered by relief pitchers.

One obvious problem is that the best we can do with 6 pitchers is cover 7 innings of 4 games.  We are one game short of the modern standard of a full rotation's collective workload.  As an initial thought, I suggest that we increase the number of 4 inning pitchers to 8, which still leaves us with 5 so-called relievers on a pitching staff of 13.  For the purposes of illustration only, let's add Tong as the righty and Thornton as the lefty to fill out our initial rotation of 4-inning pitchers.  Now we have five games covered on regular rest for everyone.  The relievers are: Williams, Weaver, Raley, Minter when he's back, Myers and Garcia.  

The presumed workload of everyone is not only reduced, but much better defined. Every 4 innings pitcher is asked to pitch through the opposing line-up no more than twice and more likely less than that.  In general, pitchers are most effective under these circumstances, which in my interpretation, means they win far more than they lose battles with hitters, thus exhibiting a competitive advantage and creating a strategic one. 

In most games the reliever's tasks are extremely well defined and their workload appropriately distributed.  There are fewer pitchers in the bullpen because there are fewer innings in fewer games in which they are likely to be called upon.  

At the very least you have your best pitchers throwing in the circumstances in which they are most likely to perform well.  Of course, they won't always do so.  

All you can reasonably do is put them in the best position to do so.  

I would add one 'in game' suggestion to the usage strategy set out above.  If, say, the first pitcher on a day in which there is a tandem of pitchers, is having a rough outing and needs to be taken out of the game in the third inning, he should not be replaced by his mate, but by a reliever who gets the team through the 3rd or the 4th inning and is then replaced by the second pitcher in the tandem.  

The second pitcher in the tandem is a former traditional starter and at least at the beginning will need more time and go through a different ritual to prepare for his outings than would someone who had been and continues to be a reliever.

So if Senga is having a rough go and needs to be replaced, he should be replaced by a reliever who one might even think of as a high leverage pitcher, or something of a competent if not elite 'closer' under the old paradigm.  That pitcher, say Weaver or Garcia, closes, in effect, the first four innings, a mini game within the game.  Then Manaea enters.  

One objection and many unresolved issues

Let me anticipate an objection.  I am claiming that I am offering an alternative way of thinking about the goal of a pitching staff and the problems it is designed to solve.  Yet here I am talking about innings, and isn't that just the old way of thinking that I am criticizing?

Fair question. 

I am re-introducing 'innings' but not as part of the goal of the staff, but as a proxy for being able to throw pitches creating a strategic advantage.  The paradigms are different because the goals are different. Innings matter only to the extent that they reflect a pitcher's actual effectiveness in creating a competitive advantage and turning it into an exploitable strategic one.

Innings are a proxy because the data shows that pitchers are typically as good as they can be on a particular day the first and second time through the opposing line-up, while being considerably less effective thereafter.  which is just another way of saying that they can no longer have a competitive advantage often enough, and their ability therefore to create an overall strategic advantage has decreased materially, so much so that it may, and often, does become a liability.  Their ineffectiveness shows up in increased walks, hits and runs given up after the second time through a line-up.  

There is so much more left unresolved of course: from metrics for compensation to the relative attractiveness of being a pitcher on a staff organized in this way.  

One suggestion: the Spring Training and early season beta test

Of course, the problem with novel ideas, both grand and small, is that reality can get in their way, sometimes in predictable way, other times in  surprising ways; some ways that are manageable, and maybe others that are not.

I would like to see whether this kind of thinking actually holds water in practice.  And there is an appropriate time to give it a try in the next few months.  In the later stages of Spring Training as the pitching staff takes shape, and pitchers are just beginning to stretch out a bit, why not devote a few games to 'pitcher matching' experiments.  Indeed, if it is at all promising on initial testing, why not use it early in the season while pitchers are still being stretched.  Not only would doing so provide useful information and perhaps result in more than the normal number of wins, it would also prevent overuse of the bullpen. 

Next, treat the minor leagues as a testing ground. 

At the end of the day, the current approach to constructing a pitching staff  isn't working, not just for the Mets, but certainly for the Mets.  There is always risk in thinking genuinely outside the box, but when it comes to pitching, and given the assorted problems pitching staffs face and their apparent intractability, perhaps the time for taking risks is upon us! 

What do you think?  


Alex Rubinson - Who is Justin Willard?

 



Shortly after the conclusion of a disappointing 2025 season, David Stearns and Carlos Mendoza took massive measures and completely overhauled the coaching staff. The team parted ways with longtime assistant coaches while trying to bring in fresh voices to revitalize the organization. The team brought in Kai Correa as its bench coach and Troy Snitker (former Atlanta Braves Manager Brian Snitker’s son) as the hitting coach. Those hires will be crucial if the Mets want to have a year that resembles more of 2024 than 2025, but the hire that could prove to be the difference is 35-year-old Justin Willard, the man in charge of leading the pitching staff. 


The Mets finished the 2025 season below average compared to the rest of the league in ERA+ (100) and were in the bottom 10 in WHIP (1.323). The starting staff recorded fewer than five innings per start. Only the Colorado Rockies, Chicago White Sox and injury-riddled Los Angeles Dodgers were worse. 


Willard comes from being the Director of Pitching for the Boston Red Sox. Before Beantown, Willard served as the pitching coach and coordinator with the Minnesota Twins from 2017-2023. His time as the team’s pitching coach coincided with the rise of Jose Berrios. Berrios enjoyed consecutive All-Star seasons under Willard’s guidance. Despite questions surrounding the Red Sox staff heading into the 2025 season, Boston’s pitchers were a top five unit in ERA for the year.


Although he wasn't the pitching coach in Boston, he oversaw the pitching operation and played an instrumental role in the development of the Red Sox staff. Willard was there for the transformation of Brayan Bello into one of the more promising young hurlers in MLB. In 2023, Bello’s first full season, his FIP was over 4.50. In the two seasons since Willard arrived, he lowered that figure by 35 points. Although his 2024 numbers might not be inspiring, Bello took a massive leap in 2025 with 3.35 ERA. He cut his WHIP by over a full walk and hit since Willard arrived. 


Bello is currently the best example of pitchers who have taken that leap to the next level, but the Red Sox have quietly built a solid young pitching nucleus. Top prospects Connelly Early and Payton Tolle both made their debuts late last season. Early was even tasked with taking the rubber for the winner-take-all game against the New York Yankees last October. Even looking at the big league roster, Garrett Crochet always had the undeniable talent, but there were concerns about the former relief pitcher throwing a full season of work ( he had never thrown over 150 innings in a season). A lot of the credit goes to Pitching Coach Andrew Baily, but Willard deserves some credit for helping Crochet turn in a Cy Young-worthy season when the southpaw tossed north of 200 innings. Lucas Giolito also enjoyed a resurgence under Bailey and Willard. The former top prospect pitched to a fantastic 120 ERA+. 


It’s also noteworthy to point out the trend the Red Sox set when Willard and Bailey first came aboard. Right off the bat, Boston was known as a team that had dramatically stopped throwing fastballs. All of a sudden, the notion that one had to establish good old-fashioned number one was thrown out the window. Now, I’m not trying to prepare Mets fans to see fewer fastballs come the spring. Newly-acquired Freddy Peralta is known for his four-seamer, as he threw the pitch over half the time last season. I highly doubt Williard agreed to acquire the former Brewer with the intention to completely overhaul his repertoire. What his time and experiment with Bailey and the Sox show is that Willard is going to try new techniques. He is going to invent new trends to stay ahead of the curve. 


Willard has been very outspoken with getting pitchers in the strike zone. It might be cliché in MLB, but Willard believes that’s how pitchers can maintain consistency at the highest level. As previously mentioned, New York’s rotation was one of the worst at working deep into ballgames. Meanwhile, Boston ranked in the top 10 in innings pitched per start. With the intent to throw more pitches in the strike zone, that can help the starters get quicker outs, keep their pitch counts low and work deeper into the ballgames while taking a lot of the pressure off of the arms and shoulders of their fellow relievers. 


One of the biggest mysteries in 2025 was the decline of Sean Manaea. It’s very possible it can be attributed to his injury, but that most likely doesn't explain the entire picture. In 2025, Manaea threw his four-seamer 60% of the time, but that percentage was nearly cut in half during his standout 2024 season. It’s unclear why this change was made (maybe injury-related), but it will be interesting to see if Willard comes in and changes Manaea repertoire and sequencing to reflect more of his 2024 numbers. Even someone like Kodai Senga might be on a similar track. He only throws his fastball about a third of the time, but it’s still the most of any pitch for a guy who is capable of tossing a handful of other options. Opponents slugged almost .550 off of his fastball compared to barely over .300 on his sinker. Some of the batting average statistics look similar, but it does show opponents were not getting nearly as many extra-base hits against it. When it’s all said and done, there might only be minimal changes, but Willard will tinker to maximize the different hurlers on his staff. 


If the Mets want to be playing in October, they are going to need to get more out of their pitching staff. They made the big move to acquire Peralta along with Tobias Myers in the offseason. They are hoping Chsitrian Scott returns at some point in 2026 and will be relying on Manaea and Senga to revitalize their careers. A lot of pressure sits on these men’s shoulders, and Williard, a 35-year-old former collegiate pitcher at Division II Concord and Division I Radford, will be tasked with getting the entire group to be at the top of their games when they toe the rubber. 


Paul Articulates - Who stays? Part 3: Catchers

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; Luis 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 catchers that are vying for those five “contested” spots:

Catchers on the 40-man roster: Hayden Senger, Ben Rortvedt

Hayden Senger - I have always been a fan of Hayden Senger.  He is a terrific defensive catcher with a quick pop and a great arm.  Last year when Hayden was called up to back up Torrens during Alvarez' injury recovery period, he filled very nicely.  Baseball Savant had him in the 91st percentile for his pop time and the 80th percentile in blocks above average.  This is not a misprint - the third Mets catcher on a two catcher roster pops better than 90 percent of MLB catchers!  The issue that holds Senger back is his bat - his career average in the minors is .234.  During his time on the parent club last year he hit .181. A very dramatic offensive turn-around would be essential to his chances, but then again I don't see the Mets rostering three catchers in the early season so his chances of making the April roster are the same as his chances to beat out Luis Torrens.

Ben Rortvedt - Rortvedt was claimed off waivers in mid-February, ending his tenure with the Los Angeles Dodgers.  The Dodgers liked him, but were committed to accelerating the development of younger prospect Dalton Rushing.  With no options remaining for Rortvedt, the Dodgers twice tried to sneak him by on the waiver wire and failed.  That said, I don't like his chances more than Senger to make the team when they break camp.  His career batting average is .190 and his defensive stats are all around the 50th percentile. 

Catchers not on the 40-man roster but with spring training invites: Austin Barnes, Kevin Parada, Chris Suero

Austin Barnes - Another Dodgers catcher joined the Mets back in late January.  Austin Barnes is a strong defensive catcher with 11 years of experience and 612 major league games under his belt.  Barnes has a career slash line of .223/.322./338 which puts him in the long line of defense-first catchers.  However, his experience and defensive accomplishments as a Dodgers backup catcher give him an edge in this competition.  Considering the fact that Luis Torrens has a career slash line of .227/.288/.354 this could be quite a competition.  The factor that does not favor Barnes is his age.  37 is quite old for a position that traditionally wears down the body earlier than anywhere else on the field.

Kevin Parada - As the Mets top pick back in 2022, Parada came into the system highly touted for his offensive capability, including a power bat.  He has worked his way up through the system and spent the past year at AAA Syracuse, so it is natural that the Mets would give him a look during this year's spring training.  However, Parada's performance in the minors has not been quite as expected.  His defensive game was exposed with a weak rating on his arm, and his offensive numbers never reached the level that was expected.  He has never hit over .250 above low A and his .720 OPS for a minor league career does not match his slugging potential.  I don't expect him to make the big club at any time this year, particularly with the expanded field of catchers available.

Chris Suero - Chris Suero presents a very interesting case in his bid to make the club.  Unlike his rivals, Chris is not just limited to playing behind the plate.  He has experience at both first base and in the outfield corners.  This kind of versatility opens options for the roster on a team not expected to carry three catchers.  In his minors career, he has logged 350 innings at first base, and 409 innings in left field.  373 chances with 4 errors outside the catcher’s box equates to a .989 fielding percentage.  Suero is young (22 years old) and only has experience up to the AA level.  It would be quite a leap for him to break camp with the major league club, and I would project a very low probability that this happens.  But give him a little time, and he could be a very valuable roster piece.

In summary, the battle for roster slots at catcher is not going to come down to the team deciding to carry a third catcher because of some breakout performance during spring training.  It is going to be the battle for number two catcher between Luis Torrens and all comers.  Torrens has played admirably for the Mets these last two years and will not likely lose the position as their backup.  It is just a little more interesting than expected given some of the Mets recent signings like Austin Barnes and Ben Rortvedt.

2/18/26

RVH - “Variance” Is Having a Moment — But Not All Variance Is the Same

 

Variance

IIf there’s one word that’s quietly taken over Mets discourse this winter (and MLB discourse as well), it’s “variance.” You see it everywhere. Wide range of outcomes. Lots of "IFs." Hard team to read. Honestly, that’s a healthy evolution—it’s far better than pretending we can forecast a 162-game season with unearned confidence.

But the way the word is being used is doing too much work without enough precision.

Not all variance is created equal. Some of it is noise you expect; some is a signal you should worry about. Most importantly, some of it is structural—baked into how a roster is built before Opening Day.

If we want to understand the construct of the 2026 Mets, we have to clarify how they are looking to manage their "variance" risk.


1. Structural Variance: The Design of the Floor

What the roster allows to happen over 162 games.

Structural variance is about architecture, not performance. It is the range of outcomes the roster permits before a single pitch is thrown. Think of this as your downside protection.

It comes from role redundancy, defensive range, contact depth, and innings coverage. In other words: How many things can go wrong before the system starts to break?

Low structural variance doesn’t mean a team is great; it means the team has a floor. It can survive the "biological warfare" of a long season—the inevitable injuries and slumps—without a total system collapse. High structural variance means small problems cascade into season-defining crises.

How to diagnose structural variance:

  • The Cascade Effect: Does one injury force three players to move out of position?

  • The Stabilization Test: Does the team still look functional during an ugly 2–4 week stretch?

  • The “Boring Win” Indicator: Can the team win a 4–2 game in June through steady, professional execution, or does every victory require ninth-inning heroics?


2. Executional Variance: The Human Element

How well players perform inside the structure.

Executional variance is what fans usually mean when they say “variance.” It’s the hot streaks, slumps, aging curves, and timing. It is the ignition phase of a season—where results can swing wildly based on individual output.

Every team has this. Even the Dodgers have stars who go 0-for-20. The key question isn’t whether executional variance exists, but whether the roster requires peak execution just to function.

Teams with high executional dependence are brittle; they need everyone to be an All-Star simultaneously. Teams with lower dependence can survive “good enough” seasons from multiple spots because the underlying structure absorbs the dips.

How to observe executional variance:

  • Contagion: Are slumps isolated to one player, or do they paralyze the entire lineup?

  • Redundancy: Do off-days from Juan Soto or Francisco Lindor automatically sink the game?

  • The Margin for Error: Are pitchers allowed to be imperfect without the entire game unraveling?


3. Interactive Variance: The Great Early-Season Deceiver

Where execution masks or exposes structure.

This is where fans—and front offices—most often get misled. Interactive variance occurs when temporary executional swings hide the structural reality.

A lights-out bullpen can mask thin rotation depth for a month. A power surge can hide a complete lack of contact ability. This is why April conclusions are so dangerous. A team can look stable because execution is running hot (the "ignition" is working), but once that heat fades, you find out if there is actual capacity underneath.

The question is always the same: What happens when the "good" breaks?


How to Monitor the 2026 Mets

Instead of asking, “Are the Mets good?” apply these diagnostic filters each month:

  • Failure Modes: Are losses coming from the same repeated flaw, or different isolated causes?

  • Optionality: When something breaks, does the response look planned or desperate?

  • The Boring Factor: Are they winning the games they should win through professional redundancy?

  • Recovery Cycles: Do losing streaks stall at three games, or accelerate into ten?

We will get a view into this as we watch how the Mets respond to Francisco Lindor's injury...


The Real 2026 Question

The Mets will experience variance in 2026. Every team does. That part isn’t up for debate.

The real question is whether this roster absorbs variance or amplifies it. Whether problems stay local or go systemic. Whether we’re watching a team that relies on miracles—or one built for Durable Survival.

That’s not something we’ll know in April. But if we watch the structure instead of just the box score, we’ll see the answer long before the standings reflect it.


Paul Articulates - Who stays? Part 2: Outfield

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 outfielders that are vying for those five “contested” spots:

Outfielders on the 40-man roster: MJ Melendez, Nick Morabito, Jared Young, Brett Baty*, Vidal Brujan*

*: Baty and Brujan were also discussed in our infield competition but since they are listed in the NY Mets outfield depth chart, they are discussed here again.

Nick Morabito - Morabito is fast, has a great glove, and has hit well at every level through AA.  Last season in Binghamton he played 118 games, slashing .273/.348/.385 and stealing 49 bases.  He led the Rumble Ponies in Hits, Stolen Bases, and RBI and was second in runs scored - on a team that also had Jett Williams.  He will show well in spring training, but will undoubtedly begin the year in Syracuse for further development.  Don't pull a hammy in that cold weather, Nick!

MJ Melendez - David Stearns signed Melendez to a one year contract for $1.5M in an effort to help him realize the potential he showed as a KC Royals top prospect.  Melendez has good power and an elite throwing arm, but failed to realize that potential at the major league level with the Royals.  Sometimes it takes a different look, a different coaching approach, or maybe some key insights from the technology in the hitting lab to unlock that potential.  He has a lot of competition in spring training with this long list of prospects and one-year signees.  If he hits and keeps his K rate down, his strong arm in right field could be a big plus for the team.

Jared Young - Jared saw time with the Mets last year that is typically defined as "a cup of coffee".  He logged a few innings at DH, 1B, and LF for the team and rode the shuttle between New York and Syracuse a few times.  He hit .300 in 75 games with AAA Syracuse last year, so he is not to be dismissed.  His ability to play both 1B and corner outfield could help, as those are two unsettled positions on the club.

Brett Baty – Baty has a strong shot at making the roster as an infielder.  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.  I find it particularly interesting that he is listed on the depth chart in left field even though he has not taken a single rep in an MLB outfield.  My put: this is not how he makes the team.

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.  Brujan’s play to make this team is his versatility to play both infield and outfield.  The question is whether he can outplay Melendez and Baty during spring training.  His career batting history does not favor a positive result here.  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.

Outfielders not on the 40-man roster but with spring training invites: Ji Hwan Bae, Carson Benge, AJ Ewing, Cristian Pache, Jose Ramos, Mike Tauchman

Ji Hwan Bae has legitimate outfield experience.  In 163 games over four seasons he has a career slash line of .223/.294/.293, which does not crack many starting lineups.  However, he is close to flawless in 165 outfield chances since 2022 so he fits the role of late inning defensive replacement.  Clearly his best shot at making this team is to show some bat to ball skills since we know he lacks power.  His career OBP is about 100 points below where it would need to be to find any considerable playing time in a Mets outfield.  Let’s see what new hitting coach Troy Snitker and the hitting lab can do with Ji’s stroke.

Carson Benge is the talk of the town.  With the fastest rising star amongst players that have not yet been called up, this kid looks like the real deal.  He has adjusted to the pitching at every level in the minors until a very short stop at AAA.  In every level prior to that, he posted an OBP above .400 and an OPS over .850.  He has held his own across all three outfield positions.  Oh, and by the way he swiped 22 bags last year.  I think the only thing that holds him back from breaking camp in the majors would be a cautious decision to give him a little more development time.

AJ Ewing is another up and coming player that has the versatility to play both infield and outfield positions, the speed to rack up 70 stolen bases last year, and a very healthy bat.  Ewing spent 28 games at AA Binghamton last year and slashed .339/.371/.430 showing everyone he is ready for the next step.  Although it is an honor to be invited to MLB spring training this year, his next step is likely to play in Syracuse as there are a few (Benge and Morabito) ahead of him in the pipeline.

Cristian Pache has seen time with six MLB teams, including three within the division: Atlanta, Miami, and Philadelphia.  Pache is a light hitting, solid fielding player from the Dominican Republic.  Like Tyrone Taylor and the many defense first center fielders that have been listed on Mets rosters, Cristian will hit or he will sit.  

Jose Ramos is an interesting invite.  Not too long ago (2024), Jose was a top 30 prospect in the coveted Dodgers development organization.  There is good reason for this: Jose is rated with a 55 power tool and a 70 arm!  He was a top player for Panama in the 2023 WBC and has had some eye-opening homers in his minor league career.   That he could not crack the Dodgers’ MLB roster is not a slight.  He has raw talent that could explode upon the scene in spring training, or maybe after some development time in the high minors.  He may be a long shot for the Mets’ April active roster, but keep an eye on him.

Mike Tauchman is a brand new addition to the crowded spring training outfield.  He has seen action in well over 100 MLB games in each of the three outfield positions.  Tauchman, who played right field for the White Sox last year as well as some at-bats as DH, will be giving MJ Melendez, Carson Benge, and Tyrone Taylor some serious competition for that third/fourth outfield position.  With a good eye at the plate and a career OBP of .347 he is more than just a defense-only former center fielder like many past Mets acquisitions.  At age 36 he does not seem to be declining - it is actually the opposite with improvements in his offensive numbers since 2021.  In a competition full of guys that have potential they never reached, Tauchman seems to be on a vector to achieve his.  I'll be watching to see if he can punch his ticket this spring.

To summarize this widespread competition for a few outfield slots, the important thing to remember is that the Mets are already going to reserve spots for Soto, Robert, and Taylor.  That means that there is only one or maybe two outfielders that will make the team.  Versatility will be very important, defense matters, but someone that can hit and hit with power would be ideal.  Melendez, Tauchman, and Benge fit the model.  The others are likely going to have to prove more at the next level down.

What is your read?

Reese Kaplan -- Is the 2026 Team Better Than the 2025 Team?


As the umpteenth minor addition to the major or minor league roster just took place with multiple catchers and numerous AAAA outfielders people are still wondering about the bigger pieces that still seem to be missing.  No one disputes needing to have extra players available in the system for injuries and slumps that are sure to occur during the season, but there is a bigger question that folks have asked openly or are too reticent to speak aloud.

Are the current 2026 Mets better or worse than the 2025 Mets that fell off the baseball cliff and struggled even to hit the .500 mark when early in the season they were on top of the world.  Let’s take a look.


Starting Pitching

The 2025 starting rotation was a huge mess due to injuries and ineffectiveness.  At various point Sean Manaea, David Peterson, Kodai Senga, Clay Holmes, Frankie Montas, Tylor Megill, Jonah Tong, Nolan McLean and Brandon Sproat among others made their way into the regular 5-man rotation. 

For 2026 the top four remain the same but now they are accompanied by Freddy Peralta and Nolan McLean from day one of the season.  Obviously the latter two are HUGE additions to the pitching mix and with a return to health there is optimism both Manaea and Senga will perform at a much higher level.  Even Holmes could be better with more arm strength as he tended to wear down a bit as the year wore on.  It would seem that the starting rotation should indeed be better.


Bullpen

Gone is closer Edwin Diaz and his All Star repertoire as one of the most dominant firemen in the entire game.  Following him out the door were some other pitchers who departed as free agents, including the three summer additions.  At times the pen was a major disaster

For 2026 the Mets are hopeful that recovering AJ Minter is back soon to take his place in the setup rotation.  Brooks Raley is back.  Luke Weaver has been signed.  Tobias Myers has been added.  Closer duties now go to Devin Williams who needs to show he is more of the 241 games he played as a Brewer when he logged a 1.83 ERA from 2019 through 2024.  Then came the Bronx.  For a moment think back to some of the off years from Diaz and hope that it was an exception based upon the glowing track record that preceded the 2025 season.  Backing up these pitchers are an assortment of contenders who are either towards the end of their careers or who have been pushed into that AAAA category.  Most feel that another solid reliever would help but even without one it’s possible that the 2026 pen is better (particularly if Williams reverts to his Milwaukee form).


Offense

Here’s where things get a little trickier to understand.  Pete Alonso provided on average 42 HRs and 114 RBIs.  Brandon Nimmo provided his best ever year in 2025 with 25 HRs and 92 RBIs.  Jeff McNeil contributed 12 HRs and 54 RBIs.  Starling Marte offered up 9 HRs and 34 RBIs.  Brett Baty gave the club 18 HRs and 54 RBIs.  The remainder of the roster includes various ineffective center fielders, Juan Soto and the two Franciscos as well as the undefined role for Mark Vientos.

For 2026 there have been a lot of changes.  Newcomer Bo Bichette hits for a higher average than anyone from 2025 while contributing 18 HRs and 94 RBIs.  Jorge Polanco is good for an annual total of about 23 HRs and 85 RBIs.  Marcus Semien is the toughest one to absorb.  His bat has been downhill for a few straight years now, last season offering up just 15 HRs and 62 RBIs in an injury riddled year.  However, in 2024 he hit 23 HRs and drove in 74 over the course of a full season.  That’s pretty solid, but a steep drop off from the 100 RBI season in 2023 that was accompanied by 29 HRs.  Which Semien the Mets have gotten is still unknown but it’s probably fair to project the 2024 numbers for 2026 assuming he remains healthy.  Then there is the expensive addition of Luis Robert, Jr. whose glove and legs are unquestioned but whose bat is still a mystery in the mold of David Stearns’ other center field selections since coming over to the Mets.  Add to them the return of the two Franciscos, Juan Soto and the still unknown third outfielder who may or may not be Brett Baty or MJ Melendez or Tyrone Taylor as well as the unknown DH who might be Mark Vientos.  Right now it would appear that the 2025 Mets had a stronger offensive unit than the current team does.

 

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.