4/19/26

RVH — A Message to David Stearns

 

This is no longer a slow start. It’s a signal.

It’s not bad luck. It’s not a small sample size. It’s not something you explain away with expected stats and patience.

This is a credibility moment. And it requires a different posture.

Not the measured, process-driven, long-view approach that defines a well-run organization over time. That approach has value. It builds systems, pipelines, sustainability.

But this is not that moment.

This is a wartime moment.

What April Has Told Us

The Mets were built on an assumption: that a core of established players, supplemented by targeted additions, would produce a stable, competitive baseline.

That assumption is not holding.

The team looks flat. Predictable. At times, disengaged. More concerning, it looks like a group operating under an unspoken premise:

That roles are fixed. That opportunity is guaranteed.

That is the fastest way to lose a season.

Because when performance dips and nothing changes, the message becomes clear, even if unintended:

Nothing has consequences.
And when nothing has consequences, performance becomes optional.

Wartime Requires Different Rules

Wartime leadership is not emotional. It is not reckless.

It is decisive, time-compressed, and unambiguous.

It makes four shifts:

  • Time compresses – decisions happen now, not in June

  • Resources reallocate – at-bats and innings go to production, not projection

  • Accountability sharpens – roles are earned continuously

  • Signals clarify – the organization shows, not tells, what it values

Right now, the Mets are still operating in peacetime.

That has to change.

Start With the Rotation

Move David Peterson to the bullpen. At this stage, he profiles as a shorter-burst arm, especially in a walk year. Limit exposure, salvage value, and stop forcing a starter outcome that isn’t materializing.

Insert Tobias Myers into the rotation and promote Christian Scott.

At some point, upside has to be tested at the major league level. That point is now.

Place Kodai Senga on the IL if there is any question physically or mechanically. Grinding through April helps no one. Preservation now creates value later.

When A.J. Minter returns, there should be no hesitation. If Sean Manaea is not providing competitive innings, the Mets should reallocate those innings immediately, even if it means absorbing the cost.

Contracts are sunk. Outs are not.

Force Infield Clarity

It is time to stop managing around potential and start evaluating reality.

Give Mark Vientos first base. Every day. A real stretch.

No more partial roles. No more sporadic usage. No more waiting.

Find out what he is — definitively.

If he produces, you have something. If he doesn’t, you have an answer. Both outcomes are better than ambiguity.

Send Brett Baty to AAA with a clear directive: reset, play, and come back stronger. We have seen this work before. It may work again. Or it may not. But the current state is not helping anyone.

Promote Ronny Mauricio.

Tell him the truth: this is not a cameo. This is THE opportunity.

Play him frequently against right-handed pitching at second base. Move him around if needed. Inject athleticism and variability into a lineup that currently lacks both.

No player should be immune from occasional rest or adjustment if performance demands it, regardless of contract.

Veteran status cannot function as insulation.

Rebalance the Lineup

If Juan Soto is not fully healthy, move him to DH. Protect the asset while keeping the bat in the lineup.

If Jorge Polanco is not physically right, address it directly.

The goal is not to maintain appearances. The goal is to optimize performance.

Right now, the lineup is too easy to game plan against. It lacks movement, variation, and pressure. Mauricio helps that. So does a healthier Soto.

Inject Athleticism

Promote Nick Morabito and give him real opportunity.

Not a bench role. Not a token start.

Real playing time.

This roster needs speed, range, and energy. It needs players who change the shape of the game, not just the box score.

Build the Next Layer Now

Promote AJ Ewing to AAA.

This is not about April. This is about August.

If he can handle the level, you have another option. If he cannot, you learn early and adjust.

Waiting delays learning. And right now, the Mets need information as much as they need wins.

What This Signals

These moves are not about punishment.

They are about alignment.

They tell the roster:

  • Performance matters

  • Roles are fluid

  • Opportunity is earned

  • Time is not unlimited

Right now, the team feels like it is operating without urgency.

That is the problem.

Not talent. Not even construction, necessarily.

Urgency. Accountability. Consequence.

The Stakes

This is bigger than April.

This is about the credibility of the current build.

If this season fails, it will not be framed as a blip. It will be a referendum.

On the roster.
On the strategy.
On the leadership.

And for David Stearns, it will raise a simple question: Was this the right plan?

Because if the answer becomes no, the next step is another reset.

Another infusion of capital. Another cycle. Another attempt to get it right.

That is expensive. It is disruptive. And it is avoidable.

The Choice

The Mets can continue as they are.

They can wait for regression to the mean. Wait for veterans to normalize. Wait for the season to settle.

Or they can act.

They can compress time. Reallocate opportunity. Test upside. Enforce accountability.

They can move from protecting what this team was supposed to be to discovering what it actually is. Right now. Because the worst outcome is not collapse. It is drift.

And drift is exactly where this team is headed if nothing changes.


Tom Brennan - Time to Move the Franchise? Weather Weirdness; Sid Rosenberg Revolts; Ryan Ward

TEN LOSSES IN A ROW? OH, WELL…

THE FRANCHISE - FRESNO’S FINEST 

Too many franchise failures for the Mets. 

Too many failed deals. 

Too many failed transactions. 

So, what else can one possibly try?

Well, it led me to think of why this team ought to….RELOCATE.

10 reasons/examples:

A) In real life, employees relocate for many reasons.

B) In real life, companies relocate for many reasons. Climate, civility, cost, etc.

C) The Mets fan base have lots of tough, frustrated, angry, despondent fans.

D) Too many stupid fans - booing Bichette in his OPENING SERIES? Really?

E) Cultural - NYC for instance has a million Muslim residents, mostly in Brooklyn and Queens. Think “soccer”.

  - I imagine very few are baseball fans.

 - Does the city demographic really adequately support the team enough?

F) Ballpark is very hard and costly to get to and from, for those in suburbs.

G) Media - so ubiquitous and so tough.

H) Sometimes a change of scenery is a strategic advantage (e.g., Dodgers).

I) Players struggle mightily here, and often do better before & after the Mets.

J) Very, very few notable franchise seasonal successes in 40 years. No WS wins.

 - so much money spent for so little return.

I could go on and on. You readers can add a few.

A guy recently wrote about this, and I add his list here.

Here are the top eight cities that look ready for MLB expansion.

Apparently, in reverse order.

8. Portland, Oregon

7. Sacramento, California

6. Salt Lake City, Utah

5. San Antonio, Texas

4. Oakland, California

(“Oakland recently lost the Athletics, but baseball interest is still strong”.)

3. Charlotte, North Carolina

2. Nashville, Tennessee

1. Montreal, Canada

And…

If Tom Seaver were still alive, he might also suggest….Fresno.

Heck, they relocated “the Franchise” twice, so they have know-how.

But no, I forbid the Mets to relocate to Syracuse or Buffalo.

Here in Jeremiah Jackson is an example of what triggered this article, from this writer and fan who lived in Queens in 1962 and has been a life-long Long Island resident:



This Lad Failed As A Mets Minor Leaguer

But Now Succeeds in MLB Very Shortly Thereafter


I HAD NO IDEA….

I was never expecting Jeremiah Jackson to have success in the major leagues, because he struck out too much as a Mets Minor Leaguer.  I speculated that he was just another flawed, failed Mets minor leaguer.

So, having stopped following him altogether after he left the organization, and not giving him a second thought, I’m flipping through some website looking at articles unrelated to sports, and see that a foul ball from one of the Baltimore hitters nailed their manager right square in the face in the dugout. 

So I decided to watch the video and it turns out that the batter was…

Jeremiah Jackson.

In the MAJORS??  I certainly had him wrong.  VERY wrong.  Why? 

I looked up his MLB stats, and in 2025 and so far in 2026 through Tuesday, he had the following career splits in 233 Major league plate appearances:

 .289/.330/.472.

Wow. 

Compare to Marcus Semien. Or Lindor. Cheaper, for sure.

So the question I have is, what suddenly turned this gentleman Jackson into an apparently excellent major league hitter?  After all…

He hit a mere.205 in 122 games in Binghamton as recently as in 2024…now he already RAKES at the major league level, barely over a year later?

And why does it seem that the Mets are so incapable of doing the same (pulling excellence out of minors hitters) with the prospect guys they do keep?  

They struggle like a guy in deep water who can’t swim, with no life preserver.

I don’t ask that question lightly. 

I really would like to know what the heck is in the water in Queens that makes guys utterly incapable of hitting, only to go elsewhere and rake.

If there are no good answers…RELOCATE!


WEATHER WEIRDNESS

The Mets had great opening the weather. Then it got cold, really cold.

In the mid week series before they headed out to Los Angeles, it was so cold in Queens that two night games were rescheduled as 4 o’clock starts. Which helped only a little bit. It was still freezing cold. 

Meanwhile, the Yankees were avoiding Arctic weather by being out of town. 

When the Mets went out of town, the Yankees came back in. Suddenly, in the middle of April they had memorial day-like weather. Heck, when I was driving to Brooklyn on Tuesday afternoon, at one point, the outdoor temperature was 87°, and 88° on Wednesday, which is more like mid June or late June, in mid April. About 50 degrees warmer than in that frigid Mets series.

After Sunday, the Mets return to Citi Field. They have Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday night games. The weather temperatures that are projected during those nightgames? Mid 40s, right back to March chills. Great weather for bats to…stay asleep. Balls to fly to track and settle into gloves.

This weather pattern seems to repeat itself, annually and OK, endlessly, between the two teams. I’ve periodically noted it in articles before. Simply, one team is seemingly blessed with good weather, and one is seemingly cursed. Same city. 

I will let you figure out which team is which.


SID ROSENBERG REVOLTS

Radio personality Sid Rosenberg joins what could be an increasing revolt:

“I’ll be 59 on Sunday:) For the first time ever I’m sporting a Yankee jersey as I make my way to the Bronx. The official transition from a life long Met fan to a Yankee fan is now underway. 

“Like my friend @CGasparino once wrote “Go Woke, Go Broke!” The Mamdani Mets are too WOKE for me! See ya at the Stadium soon fans!”

- Unpack THAT one.


I DON’T SEE HAPPINESS THERE

I looked at the expressionless look of Mark Vientos (1 for 25 streak though Friday) and thought:

Can we trade him for someone like Jeremiah Jackson?

Then I see the Dodgers “finally” called up 28 year old lefty slugger Ryan Ward, who in 161 games in 2025 and 2026 has 36 doubles, 6 triples, 40 HRs, a .300 average, and 126 runs scored and 136 RBIs.  

Let’s see lefty slugger Ryan Clifford do THAT. Or anything half way close to that. (Well, he did on Saturday - 4 for 6, including 2 HRs - WOW)

He was an 8th rounder, unlike first round killers like Parada and Jett.

John From Albany: 40 Years Ago - Mets move above .500 with 3-2 win over Phils, 4/19/1986


NY Daily News 4/20/1986


Year: 1986; Game #7; Saturday;  Apr 19, NYM 3  Vs. PHI2; boxscore  WP: Gooden LP: Rawley; Time: 02:27; DAY; Attendance: 38,333; Record: 4-3; Standings: 3; Games up/behind: 2.5; W; 

Kevin Mitchell CF-LF; 0 for 4; 1 K; Tim Teufel 2B; 2 for 4; SB; 1 run; 1 RBI; Keith Hernandez 1B; 2 for 4; HR,2B; 1 run; 2 RBIs; Gary Carter LF-C; 0 for 2; Darryl Strawberry RF; 0 for 1; 1 walk; Ray Knight 3B; 1 for 4; SB; 1 K; Barry Lyons C; 1 for 4; 2 Ks; Lenny Dykstra CF; 0 for 3; 2 Ks; Rafael Santana SS; 1 for 3; 2B; 1 run; 1 K; Dwight Gooden P; 1 for 3; Dwight Gooden, W (2-0); 9 innings; 2 runs; 1 ER; 6 hits; 2 walks; 10 Ks; 

Phillies took a 1-0 lead in the 1st as Glenn Wilson singled in Gary Redus.  Mets tied it at 1 in the bottom of the 5th on a Barry Lyons groundout that scored Gary Carter.  Phils went back up 2-1 in the very next inning when Von Hayes singled in Milt Thompson who had reached base on a Tim Teufel error.  Mets tied it right back up at 2 as Dwight Gooden led off the inning with a single and Kevin Mitchell doubled him in.

In the 8th, Cary Carter singled in Kevin Mitchell to put the Mets up 3-2.  Dwight Gooden (W,2-0) Ks 10 in the complete game win, 6 hits, 2 runs, 1 ER, 2 walks. 

The win put the Mets over .500 - something they would maintain the rest of their historic season.


NL East Standings - 4/19/1986
Tm W L W-L% GB RS RA pythW-L%
STL71.875--4220.795
PIT52.714 1.53819.780
NYM43.571 2.53332.514
PHI35.375 4.03440.426
MON36.333 4.53149.302
CHC27.222 5.52749.251
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 4/19/1986.

4/18/26

RVH - This Isn’t a Slump. This Is a Collapse.

 

I don’t know how to defend this anymore.

Not after today. Not after another blowout loss, 12–4 to the Cubs. Not after nine straight losses. Not after being outscored 56–16 during this stretch.

At some point, you run out of language like “small sample size” and “early.” At some point, April stops being a feeling-out period and starts becoming a warning sign.

We’re there.

This was supposed to be different. That’s the part that’s hardest to sit with tonight.

All offseason, we talked about a re-tooled Mets team. Younger. More athletic. More dynamic. Built to win different kinds of games. A system. A philosophy. Something sustainable, something modern, something that could actually close the gap between theory and October reality.

And right now? It looks completely broken. Not flawed. Not underperforming.

Broken.

The Numbers Are Bad. The Way They’re Bad Is Worse.

You can live with losing games in April. You can even live with a losing streak.

You cannot live with how this team is losing.

  • Blowouts

  • Early deficits

  • Pitching implosions

  • Defensive mistakes

  • Empty offense despite traffic

Today was the perfect microcosm.

Kodai Senga gave up seven runs in barely three innings.
The Cubs scored early and often, including another first-inning punch.
The Mets had hits — plenty of them — but almost no impact.

That’s not variance. That’s dysfunction.

Even worse, this isn’t isolated. The Cubs have scored 10+ runs in three straight games — and the Mets are making it look easy.

This isn’t one thing. It’s everything.

The System Isn’t Showing Up

What’s unsettling isn’t just the losing.

It’s the absence of identity.

We spent months talking about:

  • Run prevention

  • Athleticism

  • Defensive reliability

  • Pitching depth

  • A lineup that could pressure, not just slug

Where is any of that right now?

The defense has been sloppy. Errors, misplays, lack of execution.
The pitching has been inconsistent at best, disastrous at worst.
The offense? It’s producing 3.4 runs per game, near the bottom of the league.

Even the adjustments feel desperate.

Francisco Lindor — the centerpiece — is getting shuffled in the lineup because nothing is working.

That’s not process. That’s searching.

This Is Where It Gets Personal as a Fan

I’ll be honest — this one hits differently.

Because this wasn’t blind optimism.

This wasn’t “hope they figure it out.”

There was a real argument behind this team.

We saw the logic:

  • The roster construction made sense

  • The philosophy was coherent

  • The organization appeared aligned

And now? I don’t know how to explain what we’re watching.

It’s not just that they’re losing.

It’s that they look nothing like the team we thought we were getting.

And when that happens, you start questioning everything:

  • Was the roster evaluation wrong?

  • Did we overestimate the talent?

  • Is the system not translating to the field?

  • Or is this just a complete loss of confidence cascading through the roster?

Because right now, it looks like a team playing tight, reacting instead of dictating, waiting for something to go wrong — and then it does.

April Matters When It Looks Like This

You can say it’s early.

But here’s the problem:

This isn’t a 9-game stretch of coin-flip losses.

This is a 9-game stretch where the team has been thoroughly outplayed in every phase.

That travels. That becomes identity if it lingers.

And the standings don’t care when it happens — April losses count the same as September.

At 7–13, you’re not buried. But you’re no longer experimenting either.

You’re chasing.

So What Now?

This is the part where I’d normally pivot to solutions.

Adjustments. Regression candidates. Structural fixes.

I don’t have that tonight.

Because before you fix something, you have to understand what it is.

And right now, I don’t think we do.

This team doesn’t look like it has one problem. It looks like it has five — and they’re feeding each other:

  • Pitching instability creates early deficits

  • Early deficits force pressing at the plate

  • Pressing kills situational hitting

  • Defensive lapses extend innings

  • And suddenly every game spirals

That’s not a tweak.

That’s a reset.

Final Thought

This isn’t a “panic” post. It’s worse than that. It’s confusion.

Because the gap between what this team was supposed to be and what it actually is right now is wider than any of us expected.

And for the first time all offseason, I don’t feel like I can explain it. I can only watch it.

And right now, it’s ugly.