News Mets Team Notes

MLB Playoffs: Open thread, NLDS Game 3 & ALDS Game 4

gettyimages-2239838362.jpg

Mariners at Tigers, ALDS Game 4​


Mariners lead series 2-1

SP: Bryce Miller (Mariners), Casey Mize (Tigers)

Time: 3:08 PM EDT
Network: FS1

Brewers at Cubs, NLDS Game 3​


Brewers lead series 2-0

SP: Quinn Priester (Brewers), Jameson Taillon (Cubs)

Time: 5:08 PM EDT
Network: TBS, HBO Max

Blue Jays at Yankees, ALDS Game 4​


Blue Jays lead series 2-1

SP: Louis Varland (Blue Jays), Cam Schlitter (Yankees)

Time: 7:08 PM EDT
Network: FS1

Phillies at Dodgers, NLDS Game 3​


Dodgers lead series 2-0

SP: Aaron Nola (Phillies), Yoshinobu Yamamoto (Dodgers)

Time: 9:08 PM EDT
Network: TBS, HBO Max

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/mlb-po...-playoffs-open-thread-nlds-game-3-alds-game-4
 
Mets Morning News: Garrett had Tommy John, Phillies eliminated

gettyimages-2227772158.jpg

Meet the Mets​


The Mets announced that Reed Garrett had Tommy John surgery on Wednesday and will miss the 2026 season.

Former Mets hitting coach Eric Chavez tried to get Juan Soto to change his approach in his first season with the Mets.

The Syracuse Mets announced that Historic NBT Bank Stadium—their ballpark for the unfamiliar—will host some Banana Ball next summer.

Around the National League East​


The Phillies’ season came to an end as an eleven-inning pitchers’ duel ended with a mental mistake and throwing error by Phillies reliever Orion Kerkering that allowed the Dodgers to score the walk-off run that ended their NLDS.

The Braves are parting ways with Paul Davis, their director of pitching development since 2020.

Federal Baseball gives James Wood an A-/B+ grade for his first full season in the big leagues this year.

Marlins prospect Starlyn Caba is getting a chance to show off his elite glove at shortstop in the Arizona Fall League after missing a couple months of the regular season because of a sprained left thumb.

Around Major League Baseball​


Having arrived back home at Wrigley Field down 2-0 in their NLDS against the Brewers, the Cubs made it back-to-back wins in Chicago with a shutout of Milwaukee to force a Game 5.

Speaking of Game 5s, the Mariners and Tigers are set for a decisive one tonight in Seattle as George Kirby and the Mariners look for redemption, while Detroit finally has some offensive mojo going heading into the finale.

Before their Game 4 win last night, the Dodgers removed Tanner Scott from their NLDS roster, making him ineligible to be included on the team’s NLCS roster.

Here’s the updated MLB playoff schedule and bracket.

Bo Bichette is optimistic about returning to the Blue Jays’ roster for the ALCS.

Yoan Moncada won a $7 million arbitration judgment against his former agent.

Here’s everything you need to know about the Arizona Fall League.

Yesterday at Amazin’ Avenue​


Lukas Vlahos took a look back at our bold predictions for the 2025 season.

This Date in Mets History​


The expansion draft in which the Mets and then-Colt .45s drafted players ahead of their inaugural seasons took place on this date in 1961.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...s-news-garrett-tommy-john-phillies-eliminated
 
Mets announce Reed Garrett underwent Tommy John surgery

gettyimages-2230699412.jpg


The Mets announced that 32-year-old right-handed reliever Reed Garrett underwent Tommy John surgery on Wednesday, and he’ll miss the entirety of the 2026 season as he recovers. The news comes as no surprise, as it was reported weeks ago that Tommy John was a possibility when Garrett hit the injured list after making his last appearance of the season on September 14.

Since joining the Metes as a waiver claim about halfway through the 2023 season, Garrett has thrown 129.2 innings at the major league level with a 4.10 ERA and a 3.58 FIP. At times, he’s looked fantastic, having finished the first half of the 2025 season with a 2.87 ERA and a 3.64 ERA in the first half of the 2024 season.

Garrett is projected to earn $1.4 million in arbitration this offseason, and it’s plausible that the Mets could tender him a contract, keeping him on the 40-man roster while he counts against it all winter, to retain the team control they have on him through the end of the 2029 season.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...s-reed-garrett-tommy-john-surgery-2026-season
 
Mets Morning News: Sleepless in Seattle

imagn-27295986.jpg

Meet the Mets​


Mike Puma of the New York Post wrote about the impetus for the Mets’ coaching staff changes (“a pissed off owner”) and where Carlos Mendoza stands now.

From October 14-17 there will be a big sale at the Mets Team Store at Citi Field.

On Baseball Night in NY on SNY, John Jastremski and Laura Albanese discussed whether free agent slugger Kyle Schwarber would be a fit for the Mets.

Danny Abriano of SNY explores whether it would make sense for the Mets to trade Kodai Senga.

Japanese star infielder Munetaka Murakami is expected to be posted this winter and both the Mets and Yankees are among his potential suitors, according to reports.

Around the National League East​


The Athletic’s Jayson Stark argued that the Phillies cannot simply go into 2026 with the exact same core group of players that has repeatedly failed to come through in October.

Matt Gelb of The Athletic described the scene as Orion Kerkering’s Phillies teammates comforted him after he became only the second player in MLB history to commit an error that ended a postseason series.

MLB Trade Rumors published their offseason outlook for the Washington Nationals.

Federal Baseball covered the latest rumors on the Nationals’ managerial search.

Around Major League Baseball​


If you went to bed early, you missed a postseason game for the ages. The Seattle Mariners advanced to the ALCS for the first time in 24 years with a 3-2 victory over the Detroit Tigers in Game 5 of the ALDS on a Jorge Polanco walk-off single in the 15th inning. The epic duel was the longest winner-take-all game by innings in MLB history.

Yankees outfielder Cody Bellinger intends to opt out of the final year of his contract and become a free agent.

Yesterday at Amazin’ Avenue​


Steve Sypa reviewed the 2025 season of the Eastern League champion Binghamton Rumble Ponies.

In a new episode of Today Your Love, Tomorrow the World Series, Chris McShane and Brian Salvatore talk about the sweeping changes at the major league coaching level, discuss Edwin Díaz’s upcoming decision, and reveal their rooting interests for the rest of the playoffs.

This Date in Mets History​


On this date in 1969, the Miracle Mets played in Game 1 of the World Series against the Baltimore Orioles. They lost, but of course, we know it was the only game in the series they would lose.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...iners-coaching-staff-schwarber-senga-murakami
 
Flushing is Burning: Not a surprise

FIB-LOGO.jpg


Grace is back and the Mets season is officially over. After a disappointing end that was both surprising and not, the Mets have a lot of questions to answer. WHat to do about the team, who will be a coach next year, and many more.

But now the playoffs are in full swing, and there’s been some good series, so breakout performers, and some wild finishes. Plus, Grace gives her dream World Series matchup (and it’s probably not a common one).

Finally, Grace’s movie minute is the movie of the moment, and also Grace’s favorite movie of the year so far (and maybe of the decade).

Follow us on Twitter/X @FIBPod, on Instagram @FlushingisBurningPod, and email us at [email protected]! Plus, we’ve joined Bluesky at flushingisburning.bsky.social!

As always, you can listen or subscribe to all of our Home Run Applesauce podcasts through Apple Podcasts, where we encourage you to leave a review if you enjoy the show. It really helps! And you can find us on the Stitcher app, Spotify, or listen wherever you get podcasts.

Visit our Patreon for bonus episodes and to help directly support the podcasters whose work you’ve enjoyed for years, as well as unlock access to exclusive episodes, our Discord server, a monthly playlist, and more.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/podcast/86694/mets-podcast-flushing-is-burning-not-a-surprise
 
Mets Arizona Fall League Review: Week One

gettyimages-2239419630.jpg

MONDAY, OCTOBER 6 (0-1)​


PEORIA JAVALINAS 4, SCOTTSDALE SCORPIONS 3 (BOX)

  • CF NICK MORABITO: 1-4, R, K, SB (1)

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7 (0-1)​


NO GAME (SCHEDULE)

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8 (1-1)​


SCOTTSDALE SCORPIONS 12, SALT RIVER RAFTERS 1 (BOX)

  • C CHRIS SUERO: 0-3, RBI, 2 BB, SB (1)
  • LF D’ANDRE SMITH: 1-4, R, K, HBP, SB (1)
  • RHP AUSTIN TROESSER: 2.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 2 K, W (1-0)
  • RHP BRETT BANKS: 1.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 2 K, H (1)
  • RHP BRYCE JENKINS: 1.1 IP, 0 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 2 BB, 2 K, WP

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9 (1-2)​


GLENDALE DESERT DOGS 13, SCOTTSDALE SCORPIONS 7 (BOX)

  • CF NICK MORABITO: 2-4, 2 RBI, 2 BB, SB (2), CS (1)
  • LF D’ANDRE SMITH: 0-4, R, 3 K, E (1)

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10 (2-2)​


SCOTTSDALE SCORPIONS 10, MESA SOLAR SOX 2 (BOX)

  • 1B CHRIS SUERO: 1-4, R, RBI, 2 K, SB (2)

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11 (2-2)​


NO GAME (CANCELLED)

ARIZONA FALL LEAGUE SEASON TO DATE​


Nick Morabito: 2 G, 8 AB, .375/.500/.500, 3 H, 1 2B, 0 3B, 0 HR, 2 BB, 1 K, 2/3 SB, 0 HBP, .429 BABIP

D’Andre Smith: 2 G, 8 AB, .143/.333/.143, 1 H, 0 2B, 0 3B, 0 HR, 0 BB, 4 K, 1/1 SB, 2 HBP, .250 BABIP

Chris Suero: 2 G, 7 AB, .143/.333/.143, 1 H, 0 2B, 0 3B, 0 HR, 2 BB, 2 K, 2/2 SB, 0 HBP, .200 BABIP

Brett Banks: 1 G (0 GS), 1.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER (0.00 ERA), 0 BB, 2 K, 0 BLK, 0 WP, 0 HBP, .500 BABIP

Wyatt Hudepohl: DNP

Bryce Jenkins: 1 G (0 GS), 1.1 IP, 0 H, 2 R, 2 ER (13.50 ERA), 2 BB, 2 K, 0 BLK, 1 WP, 0 HBP, .000 BABIP

Austin Troesser: 1 G (0 GS), 2.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER (0.00 ERA), 1 BB, 2 K, 0 BLK, 0 WP, 0 HBP, .000 BABIP

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/mets-minor-league/86746/mets-arizona-fall-league-review-week-one
 
Mets News: Major league hitting program to be led by Jeff Albert

gettyimages-936935502.jpg


Having let go of almost all of their coaching staff following a disappointing season, the Mets have made their first move to fill a vacancy on the hitting coach side of things. Jeff Albert, who has served as the Mets’ director of hitting development since late 2022, will head up the team’s major league hitting program, per Jeff Passan. And while the wording of the news seems to deliberately not refer to him as the team’s hitting coach, he will be in uniform, serving as part of the uniformed replacement for Eric Chavez and Jeremy Barnes.

Mets hitters finished fifth in baseball with a 112 wRC+ in the 2025 season, but their 766 runs scored ranked just tenth in the game. That’s still not terrible, but the lineup had a hard time putting up consistent performances and often struggled to drive in runners on base and especially in scoring position.

Speaking to Baseball America about the Mets’ approach to developing hitters throughout the minor league system in recent years, here’s a snippet of what the 44-year-old Albert had to say regarding an approach that tries to emphasize a hitter’s strengths:

“The truth is that, in year one, you’re learning the player,” Albert said. “In year two, you’re seeing some of those improvements but with less consistency. In year three, hopefully you’re seeing that player taking ownership and making adjustments on his own.

Before joining the Mets following the 2022 season, Albert served as hitting coach for the St. Louis Cardinals from the 2018 season through the end of the ‘22 season.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...program-jeff-albert-coach-new-hiring-new-york
 
So, what happened to the 2025 Mets?

gettyimages-2237944104.jpg


As we get deeper into the postseason, closer to the offseason, and further away from the nightmarish end to the Mets 2025 campaign, a common question pops up for this team and this organization: what in the world happened here?

If you have not been paying attention, or did a Men In Black-style mind wipe, Jeff Passan put it in a tweet that is succinct enough, and blunt enough, to jog your memory:

The New York Mets lost and will miss the playoffs. At one point they were 45-24. They end the season at 83-79. An all-time disintegration. From the best record in the game to out of the postseason.

— Jeff Passan (@JeffPassan) September 28, 2025

It is really hard to fathom that happening in a season. They were the best team in the league, record wise, for months. While it did feel like there was s0me regression coming, mostly because they never really hit or pitched well enough at the same time during that 45-24 stretch, it never felt like a collapse of this magnitude was possible — it just felt like they banked enough wins on the front end of the season that they would sneak by a surprisingly weak National League playoff race. And, even with all of that being said, they somehow still controlled their own destiny going into the final weekend of the season.

All they needed to do was get it done against the Marlins. They did not. Welcome, by the way, to a new generation of Mets fans who have their own “not getting it done against the Marlins”.

If you could boil down the Mets season into one image it would be this:

f3db9f122578bcb2aaae945722f0b42a.jpg

But the burning question is, why?

Well, personally, I boiled it down to two different things: a under the radar massive amount of injuries, and really inconsistent offense.

It did not really feel this way, or get talked about a lot, but the Mets were a very injured ball club, especially on the pitching side of things. Starters Sean Manaea, Griffin Canning, Frankie Montas and Tylor Megill all missed significant time with injury. In Manaea’s case, it was clear that it hampered him when he returned as well, considering he had a 5.64 ERA in 60.2 innings pitched, and generally became batting practice after the fourth inning or so, suggesting that the loose bodies in his elbow were, in fact, a problem for him. In Canning, Montas, and Megill’s case, they had season ending injuries that also will effect their 2026 seasons — and for Montas, he was probably never healthy to begin with. Kodai Senga was one of the best pitchers on the staff before an errant Pete Alonso throw derailed his hamstring, which in turn derailed his season: a season that ended with a trip to Triple-A Syracuse in September.

The injury bug hit the relievers too. A.J. Minter, Max Kranick, Dedniel Núñez, and Danny Young all suffered season ending injuries, and Reed Garrett will miss all of next season due to Tommy John surgery.

The sheer amount of pitching injuries is nearly impossible to overcome, and for the Mets it proved to be just that. While Nolan McLean came up and was excellent — one could argue ace-worthy — the other two top pitching prospects in Jonah Tong and Brandon Sproat looked more like prospects than they did pitchers who are ready to carry a rotation into a playoff run. On top of that, the bullpen was constantly cycling arms, as evidenced by the fact that the Mets literally set the MLB record for the most pitchers used in a season. While that is an effective way to keep guys fresh over a 162 game campaign, it reached levels of unsustainability rather quickly, with the frequency of future Immaculate Grid legends occupying the bullpen reaching levels never before seen. It is just nearly impossible to win that way.

While the pitching side bore the brunt of the injuries, the offense had its fair share too. Francisco Alvarez was hurt quite a bit, and played through multiple hand injuries. Jesse Winker, who was supposed to be a regular part of the DH rotation, played a grand total of 26 games, and Jose Siri, who was supposed to split center field with Tyrone Taylor (and frankly, probably helped cause Taylor’s rough season because he was overexposed in the everyday lineup), played in just 16 games before he was DFA’d. Luis Torrens and the aforementioned Taylor also missed time. Brett Baty missed the final games of the season, as well.

When you write it all out like this, the raw amount of injuries feels large and genuinely impactful, and truly hard to replace during the season. While every baseball team has contingency plans (and, likely, contingency plans to the contingency plans), there are only so many signings you can make to protect yourself against injuries of this volume.

Injuries are a big part of how things went sideways in Queens this year, but it was not the only thing. The second big issue they had was a weird and inconsistent offense.

The Mets finished tied with the Blue Jays for fourth in wRC+, coming in at 112 (just one point behind the dual second place finishers in the Dodgers and Mariners, all of which are playing in the Championship Series). However, they were all the way down in 10th in total runs scored. While that is not the most significant difference in the world, it is something that shows itself when the Mets missed the playoffs by a single game.

The Mets suffered from poor sequencing all year, from the difference between their wRC+ and their raw runs scored, down to never having a comeback after the eighth inning when trailing. And, personally, my theory is that their lineup was extremely top heavy.

Screenshot-2025-10-11-190401.png

The table above is the Mets sorted by wRC+, with at least 50 plate appearances — so basically anyone who played a semi-significant amount of time.

Juan Soto, Pete Alonso, and Francisco Lindor were themselves — they missed two games between the three of them and they all hit well. Francisco Alvarez was their fourth best hitter, but injuries took a lot of time from him, and he was replaced by two well-below average hitters in Luis Torrens and Hayden Senger, which was a huge net-negative while Alvarez was out.

Starling Marte was another solid contributor, but he played less than 100 games due to his inability to play the field and him splitting DH duties. However, they never found a suitable partner for him since Jesse Winker’s back injury forced him into a lost season.

Brett Baty ended the year well, but the context of his season is interesting. He started so poorly he was demoted for a time, came back up, had a 92 wRC+ in the first half, and a whopping 135 wRC+ in the second half.

Brandon Nimmo and Jeff McNeil were solid but unspectacular.

It felt as though, for large swaths of the season, if the trio of Lindor/Soto/Alonso did not get it done, no one would, and that is simply not a way to live; especially when the pitchers are all hurt.

The 2025 Mets felt like a perfect storm of things going extremely wrong. The pitchers were constantly hurt, the batters, outside of the big three, were average to inconsistent to downright disappointing, depending on which batter you are talking about. Those two reasons are certainly not the only ones, too. David Stearns himself also shouted out the defense as a huge issue that he needs to correct, for example.

In order to collapse to the level the Mets did, multiple things need to go wrong. A thing I often say involving a baseball loss is that it is usually everyone’s fault; despite the battles on a baseball diamond being more individual than a football field, a soccer pitch, or a basketball court, you lose a game, or in the Mets case, a season, as a group. As a whole, the injuries, poor offensive sequencing, inconsistent hitting behind the big three, the poor defense, and everything else culminated in one of the worst perfect storms you can imagine.

The fortunate thing, despite it being hard to believe as we sit here in mid-October, is that these things largely balance out over time. It will be hard to believe, but the sequencing will be better, the pitching healthier, and this could be a distant memory soon — David Stearn’s Brewers, for example, blew a (much smaller, mind you) three game lead in 2022, missed the playoffs entirely, and then rattled off three NL Central titles in a row, and are set to play for the National League Pennant after having the best record in baseball. 2022 is now a distant memory for that organization.

2025 was bad, no doubt, but it took a frustrating series of events to get there.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...025-mets-new-york-injuries-soto-alonso-lindor
 
MLB Playoffs: Blue Jays at Mariners, ALCS Game 3 open thread

imagn-27058091.jpg

Blue Jays lineup​

  1. George Springer – DH
  2. Nathan Lukes – LF
  3. Vladimir Guerrero – 1B
  4. Anthony Santander – RF
  5. Alejandro Kirk – C
  6. Daulton Varsho – CF
  7. Addison Barger – 3B
  8. Ernie Clement – 2B
  9. Andres Gimenez – SS

SP: Shane Bieber – RHP

Mariners lineup​

  1. Randy Arozarena – LF
  2. Cal Raleigh – C
  3. Julio Rodriguez – CF
  4. Jorge Polanco – 2B
  5. Josh Naylor – 1B
  6. Eugenio Suarez – 3B
  7. Dominic Canzone – DH
  8. Victor Robles – RF
  9. J.P. Crawford – SS

SP: George Kirby – RHP

Broadcast info​


First pitch: 8:03 PM EDT
TV: FOX/FOX Deportes

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/mlb-po...e-3-open-thread-pitchers-lineups-how-to-watch
 
Pete Alonso cemented his place in Mets history in 2025

gettyimages-2176559574.jpg


Ahead of the 2025 season, the biggest debate among Mets fans was the return of Pete Alonso. While many fans felt that his asking price for a contract was too high given the skill set that he brings to the game and his perceived decline over the past few seasons, there was an equal or larger part of the fan base that wanted to retain one of the key Mets of the past decade. When the dust settled, Alonso signed a two-year, $54 million dollar contract with a opt-out after the 2025 season.

This move was beneficial to both sides. Alonso put up a 141 wRC+ with 38 home runs, 41 doubles, and 136 RBIs and more than did his part to give the Mets a chance to make the playoffs. The Mets also got to celebrate a new all-time home run record for the club, and milked every ounce of baseball and public relations out of Alonso for the season. Alonso, in turn, was able to re-establish himself as one of the best offensive first basemen in all of baseball and set himself up for a big contract when he inevitably opted out.

For the second straight season, Alonso played in all 162 games this season, and continued to be a very, very good hitter. How good? Per Statcast/Baseball Savant, Pete was 96th percentile on Batting Run Value, scoring over 85% in Expected Weighted On-Base Average, Expected Batting Average, Expected Slugging Percentage, Average Exit Velocity, Barrel Percentage, Hard-Hit Percentage, Launch Angle Sweet Spot, and Bat-Speed.

For a fanbase that has been desperate for offensive superstars over their pitching-rich history, Alonso now sits atop their all-time home run record and is in the top ten in bWAR (tenth, 23.3), slugging percentage (third, .516), OPS (sixth, .857), runs scored (eighth, 580), total bases (fifth, 1942), RBIs (third, 712), extra-base hits (fourth, 455), and hits by pitch (first, 100). If he plays another few years at this approximate level, he will climb even higher on those lists, as well as show up in the all-time hits, doubles, and at-bats/plate appearances lists. Simply put, Alonso’s combination of power and health has made him among the most valuable offensive players in franchise history.

However, his defense is not very valuable. While he was never John Olerud or Keith Hernandez at first base, Alonso has continued to slide down the defensive rankings. Alonso’s Outs Above Average was a staggering -9 for 2025. He’s slightly better with arm strength and foot speed, but still near the worst in the league in all three of those categories. The one thing that Alonso is very well suited for at first base is stretching/picking, which is an important part of the game, but isn’t important enough to make up for all of the deficiencies that happen elsewhere at first base.

Now obviously, the Mets could shift Pete to the designated hitter role, but that’s a crowded space both today and in the future. With neither Juan Soto nor Brandon Nimmo very good in the outfield and Mark Vientos without a real position, Alonso at first base makes the most sense right now, which means that if the Mets do re-sign him (without moving Nimmo or Vientos), they’re signing up for poor defense at first.

But even if somehow the other positions work themselves out, the Mets can’t sign up for too many years of this defense at first, and that’s where the contract issues really come into play. Alonso is reportedly seeking a seven-year contract in free agency. Alonso is 30, so the length isn’t so crazy in terms of where many players wrap up their careers, but for someone who is already at the bottom of the defensive spectrum with the richest player in team history breathing down his neck for the DH spot as well, there’s not a lot of good options here.

The optimistic take would be to say that, hopefully, with more consistent infield defense (the Mets used a lot of players at second and third this season), Pete could stick at first for another two or three seasons at roughly this same level and, hopefully, transition to DH as Soto perhaps transitions to first, with him following to DH once Alonso’s contract is up. And maybe if the money blows him away, you can limit Alonso to five guaranteed years and some options for the last two seasons. That seems much more palatable to the club side, but Alonso and his agent, the always reasonable and measured Scott Boras, are going to rightly try to maximize his value, both in terms of years and dollars.

There are plenty of times when the desires of the fanbase and the desires of the front office clash, but there have been few examples as start as this over the past decade or so for the Mets. Alonso is a fan-favorite for good reason, but the DH logjam and the defensive picture make for a tough fit, even for a beloved player. That’s not to say the Mets won’t or shouldn’t re-sign Alonso, but with David Stearns wanting to put run-prevention at a premium in 2026 and an agent known to go above and beyond for his players, it isn’t a sure-fire decision.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...so-cemented-his-place-in-mets-history-in-2025
 
Vote for the Mets’ minor league pitcher of the year

imagn-26630564.jpg


It was an even more successful year for Mets pitching development in 2025, with continued growth from 2024 breakouts and additional prospects making a name for themselves. This is really a two horse race, but that doesn’t mean we can’t appreciate any of the other big performances from the arms on the farm.

RHP Nolan McLean​


How acquired:
2023 Draft, Round 3, Pick 21 – $747,600 signing bonus
College – Oklahoma State

2025 Stats
MiLB: 8-5 w/ 2.45 ERA, 27.2% K%, 10.7% BB% in 113.2 IP / 21 G
MLB: 5-1 w/ 2.06 ERA, 30.3% K%, 8.5% BB% in 48.0 IP / 8 G

Even among pitchers – where you sort of expect more unheralded breakouts – Nolan McLean’s improvement over the past two seasons is remarkable. He’s gone from a two-way player in college who hit more than he pitched to one of the best pitching prospects in baseball. This past year, after looking like a solid pitching prospect in 2024, McLean came out and destroyed Double-A and Triple-A before functioning as the best arm in the major league rotation down the stretch.

Making it even better, McLean was not actually particularly good at Triple-A until only a few weeks before his debut. He’s continually messed with his pitch mix in search of the best way to leverage his high-level feel for spin while overcoming his poor fastball shape. Needless to say, he figured it out, settling on the latest version of slider and cutter. Calling him a prospect at this point is of course a bit odd given the major league success, but given that he’s technically under the IP threshold, he should be widely regarded as the best pitching prospect in baseball and one of the favorites for 2026 ROTY.

But does that mean he was the best minor league pitcher of the year? Maybe not…

RHP Jonah Tong​


How acquired:
2022 Draft, Round 7, Pick 13 – $226,000 signing bonus
High School – Georgia Premier Academy

2025 Stats
MiLB: 10-5 w/ 1.42 ERA, 40.5% K%, 10.6% BB% in 113.2 IP / 22 G
MLB: 2 -3 w/ 7.71 ERA, 25.3% K%, 10.3% BB% in 18.2 IP / 5 G

…because Jonah Tong exists. There’s a running joke among many folks who discuss baseball that despite the fact that we’ve come up with 10s or even 100s of ERA estimators at this point, K-BB% still drives the majority of the signal. Well, Tong posted an absolutely silly 29.9% K-BB% in the minors this past season while posting an ERA under 1.50 as a 22-year-old in the high minors. Fittingly, he was named 2025 minor league pitcher of the year by Baseball America. Not just for the Mets, to be clear, for all of baseball.

Now, the major league performance was obviously a bit disappointing. Two bad starts ballooned Tong’s ERA, and he wasn’t particularly efficient in his other outings either. He probably needs a third pitch of some kind to complement the fastball / Vulcan change he currently features. I’m confident he’ll get there, particularly given the proficiency the Mets have demonstrated in this department, but McLean is the superior arm at this point.

What does that mean for this award? That’s up for you to decide.

RHP Jack Wenninger​


How acquired:
2023 Draft, Round 6, Pick 19 – $225,000 signing bonus
College – Illinois

2025 Stats
12-6 w/ 2.92 ERA, 26.4% K%, 7.6% in 135.2 IP / 26 G

A 6th round, under-slot pick out of a non-SEC school turning into anything is a huge win. Turning into a potentially viable major league starter in the upper minors is a coupe. Wenninger stepped forward in a huge way and dominated at Double-A, leaning on his fastball and split change. In a weird way, it’s a similar arsenal to Jonah Tong minus the mechanical weirdness (which is a key part of the profile, to be fair). Wenninger is nowhere near that caliber of player, but he’s got a real chance to be an actually useful piece in a major league rotation at some point here.

After spending the past year at Double-A from start to finish, Wenninger will likely begin 2026 at Triple-A as something like the 9th or 10th starter on the depth chart. The inevitable injuries a pitching staff experiences may very well give him a chance to make his debut at some point.

RHP Ryan Lambert​


How acquired:
2024 Draft, Round 8, Pick 8 – $172,500 signing bonus
College – Oklahoma

2025 Stats
2-1 w/ 7 saves and 1.62 ERA, 39.5% K%, 13.2% BB% in 50.0 IP

This could’ve been Dylan Ross who also had a breakout season and reached the majors, but I went with Lambert who had slightly better stats. An 8th round pick in 2024, Lambert made a mockery of Brooklyn to start the year before moving up to Binghamton and doing more of the same. Simply put, his rising fastball was too much for hitters in the low minors to handle, and that’s how he ran a negative FIP for the first eight innings of his season. At Double-A, his low Zone% become slightly more problematic, with the walk rate ballooning to a 5.57 BB/9. That’s only so much of a problem when you’re not giving up any damn hits though, and Lambert’s ERA remained sub-2 despite the extra free passes.

Relief prospects are infamously fickle, and it’s no sure thing that Lambert’s control problems won’t prove fatal or that his stuff will work in Triple-A or the majors. At present, however, he projects to be a valuable and potentially exciting depth piece for the 2026 bullpen, with a real chance to develop into a late inning weapon.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/mets-minor-league/86785/mets-minors-mclean-tong-wenninger-lambert
 
Mets Morning News: Skubal rumors circulate, Ohtani dominates

imagn-27351733.jpg

Meet the Mets​


Will the Mets attempt a trade for Tarik Skubal this offseason?

Is Brett Baty a long-term piece for the Mets after his 2025 season?

Can ex-Met Michael Conforto enjoy experiencing the Dodgers’ postseason success despite putting up a down season? (And is every news item going to be written as a question?)

Around the National League East​


The Phillies have a number of questions facing them as they head into the offseason. (Guess not.)

Philadelphia is expected to either trade or release Nick Castellanos this winter.

Battery Power reviewed the brief and unremarkable Braves career of Alexis Díaz.

Ronny Henriquez quietly became a dominant relief option for the Marlins in 2025.

The Nationals’ new president of baseball operations Paul Toboni has been making use of his Red Sox connections thus far in his Washington tenure.

Around Major League Baseball​


The Dodgers—buoyed by what may well have been the single greatest game by any individual player in history—finished off a sweep of the Brewers and are heading back to the World Series.

Shohei Ohtani’s jaw-dropping Game 4 performance was enough to earn him the NLCS MVP.

A five-run eighth inning—including a solo homer from Cal Raleigh and a grand slam from Eugenio Suárez—has put the Mariners one win away from the American League pennant.

George Springer left yesterday’s game for the Blue Jays after getting hit by a pitch in the knee.

After falling in the postseason yet again, the Brewers might consider trading Freddy Peralta—their ace with one year left before free agency—this offseason.

As the Padres search for yet another new manager, it is possible that general manager A.J. Preller may be on the hot seat.

Royals third base coach Vance Wilson is another candidate for the Giants’ managerial opening.

Several Cardinals players have undergone surgery in recent weeks.

The Astros have signed right-handed pitcher Nate Pearson, who they intend to use as a starter despite spending the past several years in the bullpen.

Yesterday at Amazin’ Avenue​


We are taking votes for the top minor league hitter and pitcher for the Mets this year.

This Date in Mets History​


The Mets got critical wins in their respective league championship series on this date in 2006 and 2015.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...ni-dominates-postseason-baseball-new-york-mlb
 
Mets Morning News: Ace in the Hole

gettyimages-2238859755.jpg

Meet the Mets​


It is possible that the Detroit Tigers may make ace Tarik Skubal available in trade this winter and if they do, the Mets would be among the chief suitors.

According to scouts and executives that spoke to John Harper of SNY, trading Skubal would be a tough sell in Detroit, which will only inflate his price further if he is dealt. But there are few teams better positioned than the Mets to meet that asking price.

Anthony DiComo of MLB.com identifies Carson Benge, Jonah Tong, and Ryan Lambert as three prospects who could make an impact for the 2026 Mets.

Mets owner Steve Cohen named the Dodgers as the blueprint the Mets wanted to model their future after. But that hasn’t quite come to fruition, writes Jon Heyman of The Post.

Speaking of Steve Cohen, he and his wife Alex donated $1.3 million to New York City public school teachers after The Post spotlighted instructors’ reliance on donations for basic classroom supplies.

Around the National League East​


The Good Phight reviewed candidates for the Phillies’ bench coach vacancy.

Battery Power wonders how the Braves let Kevin Gausman get away.

Federal Baseball takes a look at who were the most clutch players on the 2025 Nationals and found some surprising answers.

Around Major League Baseball​


Logan Gilbert will match up against Trey Yesavage in Game 6 of the ALCS tonight between the Mariners and Blue Jays—a rematch of Game 2.

Yesavage’s splitter, which baffled the Yankees in the ALDS, will be crucial to his success.

Yankees general manager Brian Cashman pushed back on criticisms made by Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez in the aftermath of the Yankees’ elimination from the postseason regarding roster construction and the level of influence the front office had on in-game decisions.

The Giants are close to hiring University of Tennessee head coach Tony Vitello as their next manager.

This Date in Mets History​


The 2006 and 1999 Mets seasons both ended on October 19—both in heartbreaking fashion.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...ace-in-the-hole-skubal-trade-rumors-prospects
 
Back
Top