When the System Became the Only Option
This is the seventh installment in the 2025 Mets Season Review Series. Each post steps back from day-to-day noise to diagnose what actually happened, why it mattered, and what it revealed about the organization beneath the results.
The Mets did not plan to rely on three rookie starters in the heart of a pennant race. But by mid-August, the organization no longer had a choice.
This piece sits between August and September for a reason. It is the hinge. August exposed the limits of the major-league roster — specifically the club’s ability to prevent runs once pitching depth eroded — and the trade-deadline bets. What followed was not desperation, but deployment — the system finally stepping in where the top of the roster could not.
The Context That Forced the Move
By mid-August, the Mets’ rotation was no longer merely thin. It was functionally broken.
Sean Manaea and Kodai Senga were effectively shut down as reliable contributors. Senga never recovered from his hamstring injury, and Manaea could not regain form or durability.
David Peterson was running on fumes, showing clear fatigue-related collapse.
Clay Holmes, despite solid results, was operating at roughly 2× his prior-year innings load and could not consistently reach the 5th–6th inning.
No durable starter had been acquired at the trade deadline, largely due to prohibitive acquisition costs.
The result was predictable. The bullpen was overexposed. Once opponents consistently reached five runs, the Mets’ margin for error disappeared. AAAA spot starters rotated constantly. August collapsed.
At that point, the question shifted from “Should we?” to “Who gives us the best chance to win tonight?”
David Stearns answered it with desperate action.
Nolan McLean — The Stabilizer
Arrival: Mid-August
Role: Immediate rotation relief
McLean was the first lever pulled, and the most important.
2025 Minor League Performance
ERA: ~1.98 across Double-A and Triple-A
Strikeouts: 62 in 59 IP
Profile: Power arm, elite spin, improving command
MLB Impact
McLean did not arrive as a developmental experiment. He arrived as a stabilizer.
Took the ball every turn
Provided regular, competitive starts
Reduced bullpen strain immediately by restoring innings stability
Showed advanced pitchability, not just raw stuff
His ability to miss bats and limit walks translated quickly. For a team bleeding innings, that alone was value.
Brandon Sproat — The Ceiling Play
Arrival: Late August
Role: Upside rotation injection
Sproat’s season was nonlinear — and that mattered.
2025 Minor League Arc
Early Triple-A: 6.69 ERA through May
Adjustment Phase: Velocity and movement gains
Finish: One of the best arms in the system by year’s end
Scouting Reality
Triple-digit fastball
Two distinct breaking balls
True top-of-rotation physical traits
Sproat was promoted not because he was “ready,” but because his ceiling mattered. With the rotation already fractured, the Mets needed arms that could change outcomes, not just absorb innings particularly in games already slipping toward high run totals.
Jonah Tong — The Breakout
Arrival: Early September
Role: Strikeout weapon, late-season jolt
Tong’s rise was the most dramatic.
2025 Minor League Dominance
MiLB Pitching Prospect of the Year
ERA: ~1.43 across 113+ innings
K Rate: At times exceeding 15 K/9
Fastball: ~95 mph with elite vertical break
Secondary: 12–6 curveball, improving changeup
Tong forced the issue. He wasn’t next on the depth chart. He was simply too good to ignore.
Why This Mattered Structurally
This was not a victory lap for the farm system. It was an organizational stress test.
What the Mets Got Right
The pipeline existed
Pitchers were being developed, not just accumulated
Arsenal depth and pitch design translated upward
Promotion decisions were pragmatic, not dogmatic
What This Exposed
The major-league roster lacked durable rotational redundancy
Deadline conservatism carried real in-season cost
The system was forced into action earlier than intended
As one evaluator put it:
“Development wins don’t count in the standings — but without them, this season collapses sooner.”
Strategic Framing
In a perfect world, McLean, Sproat, and Tong debut quietly in 2026. In reality, the Mets needed them now. That is not a failure of development.
It is evidence that the organizational floor was finally strong enough to absorb a shock at the top. What it could not yet do was fully repair a run-prevention system already under water.
September would determine whether this was merely survival — or the beginning of a different kind of roster logic.
🔁 Transition
With the farm now actively contributing at the major-league level, September becomes less about collapse and more about evaluation under real pressure.
Next up: September 2025 — The Hand-Off Month.

One has to discount both Tong and Sproat's first shot in the majors as an aberration.
ReplyDeleteThe norm seems to be what they did in the minors
They both will get another chance this upcoming season
The question is only when
Hopefully ST will clear this up
I tend to recall sprout debuting in Cincinnati and matching Hunter Green. That’s pretty good. Why is he being discounted?
DeleteNot discounted at all just not as consistent as McLean. I’m very bullish on Sproat. He should have been brought up sooner as well.
DeleteI bet Scott make the ream out of ST as long man / spot starter & Sproat is first man up when someone goes down or is ineffective.
August Agony
ReplyDeleteBrutal in every way
DeleteI’m afraid to see the September stats…
ReplyDeleteI wonder if we made the playoffs if DS would be excercising this same plan? I love the Bichette signing now please Bo play a good 3rd base.
ReplyDeleteThis is a fantastic story to read. Each chapter accurately describes what was going on. Of course, if you like happy endings, don't read on...:)
ReplyDeleteThank you Paul. I plan to use this template in real time to track next season. We can watch the story unfold (& hopefully better understand) what is happening as it happens.
DeleteThe best series this site has ever had
ReplyDeleteThank you Mack! It was fun to produce - even though the story is sad.
DeleteI too am high on Sproat. I also like that he fought through adversity last year. A lot of high level prospects so overwhelm the competition with their talent, that it is not until they reach the majors that they finally are confronted with failure. Neither Tong nor McLean went through what Sproat did and that should count in his favor. Who knows for sure who is major league ready? McLean has the stuff and temperament, but it will interesting to see how he responds to his first tough patch. I do not believe Tong is major league because has not shown yet that he has a major league third pitch with horizontal action. He too has only known success, but I would start him in the minors to test develop his repetoire and to test his metal.
ReplyDeleteAnother point: I've got nothing against Syracuse or Binghamton for that matter. What I do worry about is developing feel for pitches in the Spring, something that will impact Tong in particular.