News Mets Team Notes

Tyler Rogers signs three-year, $37 million deal with Blue Jays

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Another reliever is off the table as the Mets continue to struggle to reinforce their bullpen. Just days after Edwin Díaz signed with the Dodgers and Robert Suarez signed with the Braves, former Met and rumored target Tyler Rogers signed a three-year, $37 million deal, with a vesting fourth year option that would kick the contract up to $48 million.

The submariner appeared in 28 games and put up a 2.30 ERA. As mentioned in our rumors piece earlier this week, the Mets didn’t always use him in the most ideal way, bringing him in with men on base and, due to his higher contact rate than a more strikeout-dependent pitcher, that led to more runs scoring against him.

While there are still plenty of relievers on the market, most of the top bullpen arms on the market have found new homes – and expensive ones at that. The Mets added Devin Williams late last week, as well as veteran Carl Edwards Jr. on a minor league contract.

With this signing, all three of the Mets’ bullpen acquisitions at the deadline – Rogers, Gregory Soto, and Ryan Helsley – have all signed elsewhere. Cedric Mullins, their lone offensive upgrade in July, signed with the Rays as well. While few were advocating for any but Rogers to return, the team that everyone wanted to return to after 2024 seems to have all but vanished.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/mlb-news/88429/mlb-news-tyler-rogers-pitcher-bullpen-submariner-relief
 
Mets, Padres have discussed several players in trade talks

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The Mets and Padres have discussed several players in trade talks, per a report from Will Sammon and Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic, who note that no specific trades are imminent or guaranteed to happen. But the Padres have talked about Nick Pivetta, Ramón Laureano, Mason Miller, Adrian Morejon, and Jeremiah Estrada in the talks and have asked the Mets about young major league players and top prospects.

Pivetta signed a four-year, $55 million deal with San Diego ahead of the 2025 season and can opt out after the 2026 or 2027 seasons. Having been on the Mets’ radar last offseason, too, he was fantastic in San Diego this year, as he finished the season with a 2.87 ERA and a 3.49 FIP in 181.2 innings.

Laureano has spent time with five teams over the past three seasons, but he’s coming off his best season ever at the plate, as he hit .281/.342/.512 with a 138 wRC+ in 2025. He signed a two-year, $10.5 million contract with the Padres ahead of the season. For his career, he has a 114 wRC+ with a .253/.323/.445 line, and he spent the vast majority of this season playing the corner outfield spots with some appearances in center field.

Miller is one of the best relievers in baseball, having joined the Padres in a trade with the A’s during the 2025 season. Entering his age-27 season, he’s under team control through the 2029 season and has a 2.81 ERA with a 2.47 FIP in 160.0 major league innings.

Morejon had a 2.08 ERA and a 2.28 FIP in 73.2 innings this year, and he’s spent the entirety of his major league career with the Padres. The 26-year-old lefty is under team control through the 2026 season.

And last but not least, Estrada had a 3.45 ERA with a 3.55 FIP in 73.0 innings this year. He had a career 3.47 ERA, is entering his age-27 season, and is under team control through the 2029 season.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...umors-pivetta-laureano-miller-morejon-estrada
 
Mets, Jorge Polanco agree to two-year deal

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The Mets made their first move after the Winter Meetings exodus of Pete Alonso and Edwin Díaz, signing veteran Jorge Polanco to a two-year, $40 million contract this afternoon.

Polanco is an interesting signing for a myriad of reasons. The switch-hitting veteran, who will turn 33 during the 2026 campaign, has been a steady presence in any lineup since his 2016 debut. He comes to Queens a career .263/.330/.442 (112 wRC+) hitter, with 154 home runs, primarily as a shortstop and second baseman, and 29 games sprinkled in at third base to boot. He played ten seasons in Minnesota and his most recent two in Seattle. His best individual season was his most recent, as he hit .265/.326/.495 with 26 home runs, good for a 132 wRC+, as a member of the Mariners.

The signing gains most of its interest on the defensive side of the diamond. As you can ascertain from the paragraph above, Polanco has extensive experience at positions the Mets have covered—second base with Marcus Semien, shortstop with Francisco Lindor, and third base with Brett Baty, who was one of the few bright spots last season. The initial reporting suggests a position change in the cards for Polanco, as the switch-hitter is likely to see the bulk of his time at first base and designated hitter.

While it is a leap of faith to convert a player to a new position, it has been done successfully in the recent past with first basemen, namely Willson Contreras (+6 OAA in 2025) and Bryce Harper (+1 OAA in 2025). The bar is also very low for a defensive first base upgrade at Citi Field, as Alonso had the second worst OAA among first basemen in 2025 (-9). Polanco’s bat last year would play at first as well, as his 132 wRC+ would rank sixth at the position, below Ben Rice (133 wRC+) and Bryce Harper (131 wRC+).

He also allows you to build out a more flexible lineup, as he can play all over the infield in case of injury, is comfortable as a designated hitter, as he has done so in 134 games in his career, and in 88 games last season.

Polanco is the first of likely many moves President of Baseball Operations David Stearns will make to reshape this roster after the brutal collapse to end the 2025 season.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...co-two-year-deal-first-base-designated-hitter
 
Getting to know Jorge Polanco

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Jorge Polanco’s career in baseball officially started when he signed with the Twins as an international free agent out of the Dominican Republic back in 2009. Five years later, in his age-20 season, Polanco made his major league debut with Minnesota.

Over the course of that first season in 2014 and the 2015 season, Polanco made just 20 total plate appearances at the major league level. But after starting the 2016 season with the Twins’ Triple-A affiliate in Rochester, he got called up to the big leagues twice and wound up sticking the second time. He wound up getting 270 plate appearances with the Twins that year while spending the vast majority of his time in the field at shortstop, and he hit .282/.332/.424 with a 101 wRC+.

In 2017, Polanco was the Twins’ starting shortstop out of the gate, and he played 133 games and made 544 plate appearances with a 90 wRC+. That was good enough for him to be worth 1.9 fWAR 1.4 bWAR.

During spring training in 2018, however, Polanco received an 80-game suspension after testing positive for the performance-enhancing substance Stanozolol. Because of that, he made his season debut in early July, and he finished the season with 333 plate appearances. He improved quite a bit upon his 2017 line in that half-season, hitting .288/.345/.427 with a 111 wRC+.

Polanco remained with the Twins for another five seasons after that, he hit .267/.333/.458 with a 116 wRC+ and a total of 89 home runs, 33 of which he hit in a very good 2021 season that saw him finish with a 124 wRC+ and a career-best 4.0 fWAR. He made the All-Star team once, in 2019, after a particularly great first half that saw him enter the break with an .882 OPS. He went on to finish that

Over the course of those five years, he moved off shortstop, too. The Twins played him at second base in 120 games and at short just 39 times in 2021, and in 2022, he only made six appearances at short as he spent the rest of his time in the field at second. And in 2023, Polanco again played primarily at second base, but he made 15 appearances at third base.

That 2023 season also saw Polanco miss chunks of time because of hamstring injuries, and he played just 80 games that year before the Twins traded him to the Mariners in the 2023-24 offseason. Things didn’t go particularly well for Polanco in Seattle in 2024, as he hit just .213/.296/.355 with 16 home runs, a 93 wRC+, and 0.3 fWAR. Aside from his typical handful of games at DH, he played second base exclusively for Seattle that season, and he had knee issues that saw him undergo surgery following the season. The Mariners declined their $12 million option on him for the 2025 season shortly thereafter.

Late in the offseason, though, Polanco wound up back with the Mariners on a one-year, $7 million deal that included a vesting player option for 2026. And he unsurprisingly declined the option after he had the best season of his career at the plate, hitting .265/.326/.495 with 26 home runs and a 132 wRC+. He played 38 games at second base and five at third—with one very brief appearance at first base that didn’t even log as one-third of an inning—while making 88 appearances as the Mariners’ designated hitter.

Defense has never been Polanco’s strong suit per the OAA metric over at Statcast. He’s consistently ranked in the lowest percentiles across the infield positions he’s played. Whether or not that means he can reasonably turn into a playable first baseman with the Mets over the next two seasons remains to be seen.

Zooming out a bit, Polanco has hit .263/.330/.442 with a 112 wRC+ in his major league career, and he’s hit 22 or more home runs in three single seasons: 2019, 2021, and 2024. It’s encouraging that he has a 117 wRC+ since the start of the 2021 season and only had a truly bad year once in those five seasons, but there’s at least a little risk in his bat. What he can do defensively is a bigger question, but if he can replicate his 2025 numbers at the plate, the 32-year-old would be just fine at DH. Among 23 qualified hitters who primarily served as designated hitters this year, Polanco ranked eighth.

And finally, Polanco stood out at times during the Mariners’ postseason run that saw them lose to the Blue Jays in seven games in the ALCS. It wasn’t a dominant postseason run for him, as he finished with a .208/.269/.417 line with three home runs and a double in 52 plate appearances. But his biggest contribution came in Game 2 of the ALDS when hit two solo home runs off Tigers ace Tarik Skubal, helping the Mariners win the game by a 3-2 score in a series that went five games and saw Seattle advance.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...igning-background-first-second-base-shortstop
 
How Jorge Polanco fits into the Mets’ lineup

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Over the weekend, the Mets signed Jorge Polanco to a two-year, $40 million deal. The move was the club’s first noteworthy move on the offensive side after trading Brandon Nimmo and letting Pete Alonso sign with the Orioles.

While the move doesn’t perfectly replace the production lost from either player or neatly fill the vacated positions, it does offer a glimpse into David Stearns’ strategy and how he will tackle the remainder of the offseason. Stearns, above all else, values positional and lineup flexibility, and that’s something that Polanco offers and neither Nimmo nor Alonso could. Stearns is also somebody who is not afraid to get creative and think outside the box when filling in the roster, and that is on display with this signing.

The move raised some eyebrows given Polanco’s career track record. The 32-year-old has spent the majority of his career at second base and shortstop, logging 430 and 501 games at those positions, respectively. He spent most of 2025 as a DH but also logged 38 games at second base, more than any other position. The Mets, meanwhile, are well covered at those positions with the recently-acquired Marcus Semien and Francisco Lindor. And for the record, Polanco hasn’t appeared at short since 2022. It is also worth noting that Polanco is far from a plus defender, posting a -4 OAA in 2025, including a -1 OAA at second. That comes on the heels of Polanco posting a -10 OAA at second during the 2024 campaign with Seattle.

Will Sammon was the first to suggest the idea that the Mets could be looking to sign Polanco as a first baseman—he did this one night before the signing happened. Polanco has appeared in exactly one inning of his major league career at first base—for one batter, to be exact—and was not tested at the position. This happened in April 2025, due to necessity rather than strategy on the part of the Mariners. However, Stearns clearly feels that Polanco can handle the position and trusts him to make a smooth transition to it. There is a slim possibility that Polanco can play third after logging five games at the position in 2025 and 29 games there in his career. This appears to be the least likely option, but just something to consider as a distant possibility.

For now, it appears that Polanco will get a majority of the reps at first, making him the de facto replacement for Alonso. However, Stearns is hardly one to show his entire hand, and it would be foolish to assume the Mets aren’t looking at other first base options. The club could still look to acquire someone with a little more experience at the position, but they clearly remain interested in someone who can cover multiple positions and not exclusively someone who will take up a roster spot while playing just one role.

Polanco also figures to get a lot of time at DH with Starling Marte’s departure (for now). Polanco posted the second-best season of his career in 2025 by wRC+ (132) and the third-best season of his career by fWAR (2.6). He experienced a power resurgence with 26 home runs, his most in a season since his 33 homers in 2021. It was also his healthiest campaign, as he appeared in 138 games, the most since logging 152 in 2021 and the third-most of his career. He’s a switch hitter who hits left-handed pitchers better than right-handers, and with the club in need of a right-handed bat with Alonso’s departure, he fits that mold well. Polanco hit .308/.348/.548 with a 153 wRC+ against lefties and .254/.321/.481 with a 127 wRC+ against righties in 2025.

Polanco will seemingly spend the majority of his time as a Met at first base and DH. That likely means that Mark Vientos could occupy whichever position Polanco isn’t, playing first when Polanco is the Mets’ DH and serving as the DH himself when Polanco is at first. Semien and Lindor will occupy the middle of the infield, and Baty will take the majority of reps at third. There’s still the question of where Jeff McNeil fits in, but the club is still likely to explore trading him. McNeil’s name has been floated both as a potential left field replacement for Nimmo, a first base replacement for Alonso, and everything in between. McNeil’s greatest strength is his flexibility (something we’ve already established that Stearns values), but his prior clubhouse drama, his association with the old core that Stearns is trying to dismantle, and his advancing age make him a likely candidate to be moved before Opening Day.

There’s still an entire offseason to go, and Polanco’s role with the Mets and the outlook of the team’s outfield and lineup will probably change a dozen more times before the team plays its first game. Stearns has shown to not be someone to play by traditional baseball rules of configuring a roster and lineup, and he will look to explore all potential options to replace the production lost with the departure of the team’s core stars. Polanco was a good start, as he fits a few needs, but the team will need more in order to build a lineup that’s ready to compete for a postseason spot and the World Series in a tough National League.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...9/mets-jorge-polanco-lineup-position-new-york
 
Mets sign Cristian Pache to a minor league deal

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The Mets bolstered their outfield depth and defense today by adding outfielder Cristian Pache to a minor league contract. Pache, who last played in the majors in 2024, has played for the Braves, Athletics, Phillies, Orioles, and Marlins. The contract also includes an invitation to major league spring training.

Pache is a defensive specialist with well above-average arm strength and speed. Primarily a center fielder, Pache has logged innings at all three outfield positions. Due to his limited playing time across multiple teams, it is hard to get clear defensive metrics, but he’s been worth 15 Outs Above Average across his major league career.

2025 was entirely spent in the Diamondbacks system, playing 70 games for Triple-A Reno, batting .251/.351/.389. Over the course of parts of five seasons in the majors, he batted .181/.243/.275 with seven home runs and 49 RBIs.

Pache’s role, if he makes the big league club, will likely be as a defensive replacement/fifth outfielder, backing up Tyrone Taylor in center field. If he does not break camp with the club, he will likely be manning center for Triple-A Syracuse.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...ts-sign-cristian-pache-to-a-minor-league-deal
 
Grading the Mets’ Jorge Polanco signing

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It wasn’t necessarily a splash move, but the Mets made their first foray into the offensive side of free agency over the weekend, signing Jorge Polanco to a two-year, $40M deal.

Originally signed as in IFA by the Twins in 2009 (bet you feel old now huh?), Polanco debuted with Minnesota very briefly in 2014 as a 20-year-old. He didn’t get extended run at the major league level until 2016, but he quickly settled in as a roughly average hitter who spent most of time at shortstop (where he was admittedly a disaster). Polanco managed to evolve and squeeze more oomph out of his bat after a couple years of regular playing time, gradually adding more power and posting a wRC+ of at least 110 in every season from 2018 to 2023, excluding the COVID-shortened 2020.

Polanco went from Minnesota to Seattle in an offseason trade prior to the 2024 season and promptly had the worst year of his career. His strikeout rate ballooned to nearly 30% (previous career high was 25.7%) and his power pulled back to meager early-career levels. It was revealed after the season that he’d been playing through consistent knee pain, and he underwent surgery on his patellar tendon in October of 2024. Unsurprisingly, the Mariners declined their $12.5M option, sending Polanco back to free agency.

For many, this made him a popular sleeper target last offseason, but Polanco ultimately didn’t go anywhere; the mariners re-signed him to a one-year deal worth $7.75M. He rewarded Seattle’s faith in him thoroughly with the best offensive season of his career. Despite striking out less than 16% of the time, Polanco posted a .229 ISO and 26 HR in the always-pitcher-friendly SafeCo, including both a 9-homer barrage in April and a strong second half.

Under the hood, there are clear changes supporting the offensive jump. Polanco increased his bat speed by more then a full mile per hour and nearly doubled his fast swing rate without lengthening his swing at all. He also flattened his attack angle, a change that did result in more ground balls but which also improved the quality of his pulled air contact. All of this drove significant improvements to Polanco’s Z-contact and exit velocity metrics without harming his approach significantly or batted ball distribution in a meaningful way..

To be clear, Polanco is not a physical freak, nor is he someone who is going to post insane exit velocities. He does, however, appear to have found a set of changes that allow him to make a ton of contact and hit balls hard enough to the right places to maximize damage when he does. Put more simply with a couple of old school metrics, Polanco had a 92nd percentile ISO and a 13th percentile strikeout rate. Here’s a scatter plot showing those figures and highlighting the only players with similar 2025 numbers:

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Yes, you’re reading that right. Among players with 100 PA last year, Ketel Marte is the only batter better than Polanco in both of these metrics. Jose Ramirez is the only other player somewhat close. That’s impressive company no matter how you slice it.

So the offensive side makes a lot of sense, but what about the defense? Polanco hasn’t been a shortstop for years and is at this point a poor fielder at both second and third. Fittingly, he seems likely to primarily function as a 1B / DH for the Mets. One problem with that; Polanco has all of one game of experience at the cold corner. Infielders like Polanco typically transition well to the cold corner (tell him Wash) and it’d be tough to be worse than Pete Alonso has been recently, but this does seem to run counter to the Mets’ new emphasis on run prevention.

We also should note that while the term on this deal (only two years) protects the Mets from a lot of downside risk, Polanco’s contract is by no means a bargain. A career-best season at age 32 is always something to be skeptical of, no matter what analysis we do to support it. Both normal regression and plain-old age-related decline are in play here. Couple that with the defensive questions and it’s a good amount of money for an imperfect fit.

The logic becomes more clear when you view this signing through the lens of preserving flexibility. Ideally, the Mets sign another player to be the primary 1B (e.g., Kazuma Okamoto, Munetaka Murakami, Ryan O’Hearn, etc.) and Polanco is the primary DH who functions as an occasional backup around the infield. If the Mets don’t add a clearly better option at 1B, Polanco can play there, and he might even be good; not perfect, but totally viable. If the team decides to trade Baty, Polanco can play there; it’s not ideal, but it’s viable. If a prospect like Ryan Clifford forces the issue and earns 1B/DH at bats, Polanco can split that time while getting additional at bats at 2B or 3B; once again, not ideal, but viable.

So no, this isn’t the perfect deal, but there rarely is such a thing in modern free agency. What Polanco brings is a potentially excellent bat on limited term while preserving the Mets’ flexibility at this relatively early stage of the offseason. It’s a solid B+ move.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...ffseason-analysis-grade-first-base-dh-infield
 
Mets reportedly “very in” on Cody Bellinger

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According to MLB.com’s Mark Feinsand, the Mets are “very in” on free agent outfielder Cody Bellinger. The nine-year veteran, who won the 2017 NL Rookie of the Year Award and 2019 NL MVP Award, spent last season in the Bronx with the Yankees, who remain interested in retaining him as well.

Bellinger finished last season with a 4.9 fWAR, his second-best in a season. He posted a .272/.334/.480 slash line with 25 doubles, 29 homers, 98 runs batted in 89 runs scored, and a 125 wRC+ in 152 games played. Notably, he also enjoyed his best season in terms of K% with a career-best 13.7% K% (he was 91st percentile in K% and 84th percentile in Whiff%). On top of his offensive prowess, he is a strong defensive left fielder, finishing 2025 with 5 Outs Above Average. He was 93rd percentile in OAA, 91st percentile in Arm Value, and 83rd percentile in Arm Strength in 2025. He also has some experience at first base and center field in his career, offering the type of flexibility that David Stearns covets.

While Feinsand did not go into specifics on the Mets’ interests, it’s fair to say that their interest is likely dependent on the type of deal Bellinger commands. He is believed to be looking for a long-term deal, but if he takes a shorter-term, higher-AAV contract, that would play well into the Mets’ plans. Feinsand does mention that should Bellinger return to the Yankees (as he seemed to suggest is likely), Alex Bregman would be an ideal fit for the Mets. This would allow the Mets to station the defensively-strong Bregman at third and move Mark Vientos or Brett Baty to first. While he didn’t discount the possibility, he sees it as unlikely that the Mets land both Bregman and Bellinger.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-york-mets-rumors/88526/mets-reportedly-very-in-on-cody-bellinger
 
Closing the book on the Jarred Kelenic/Edwin Díaz trade

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Just over seven years ago, the Mets and the Mariners pulled off a blockbuster trade during the 2018 Winter Meetings. New York sent first-round picks Jarred Kelenic and Justin Dunn, alongside outfielder Jay Bruce, relief pitchers Anthony Swarzak and Gerson Bautista to Seattle in exchange for second baseman Robinson Canó and closer Edwin Díaz. At the time, the Mets, and their new GM Brodie Van Wagenen, were heavily criticized for trading Kelenic, who was seen to be a cornerstone of their system, and for taking on the contract of Canó, which was already seen to be an albatross.

With Díaz signing with the Dodgers this week, neither team still retains any player swapped in this trade. In fact, with Kelenic currently a free agent, Díaz remains the only player in the bunch to be guaranteed to be playing professional baseball in the United States in 2026. This is the perfect time to look back on the trade and see just how it all shook out.

Note: For simplicity sake, while other statistics may be used to illustrate points, bWAR will be the primary statistic used so that we are comparing apples to apples. If this is not your statistic of choice, apologies.

The Trade:​


Mets received Edwin Díaz, Robinson Cano and $20 million

Mariners received Jarred Kelenic, Jay Bruce, Anthony Swarzak, Gerson Bautista, and Justin Dunn.

The Mets’ side:​


Edwin Díaz, already a star in Seattle, having saved 57 games in 2018 with a 1.96 ERA and a 208 ERA+, struggled in his first year in New York. Despite saving 26 games, Díaz put up a career high 5.59 ERA and gave up 15 home runs in 58 innings pitched, resulting in the only negative bWAR season of his career with -0.6.

However, for the remainder of his initial contract, Díaz was more or less lights out. With 2021 simple being a ‘very good, not great season,’ 2020 and 2022 saw Díaz as one of the best relievers in baseball. 2022 in particular was phenomenal, with a 1.31 ERA, 118 strikeouts and a 297 ERA+ in 62 innings. It was on the strength of that season that Díaz signed a five year, $102 million contract with the Mets ahead of the 2023 season, the highest for any reliever in history (both in terms of average annual value and total dollars) up to that point. The first year of that contract was lost to a freak injury suffered during a ‘celebration’ at the end of a World Baseball Classic game, but Díaz came back as mostly the same pitcher for 2024 and 2025, albeit with a little less velocity on both of his pitches.

Robinson Canó was a different story. Already in decline when the Mets traded for him, he struggled mightily initially as a Met, with a first half OPS of .646 in 2019. He rebounded a bit, but it was easily Canó’s worst year since 2009, batting .256/.307/.428 with 13 home runs and an OPS+ of 95. However, in 2020, Canó looked like his old self in the shortened COVID-19 season, putting up 1.3 WAR in just 49 games.

However, that offseason Canó popped a positive test for stanozolol and, because it was his second such performance enhancing drug test failure, was suspended for the entirety of the 2021 season. Canó returned in 2022 but began the year incredibly slowly and the Mets decided they saw enough, releasing him on May 8th, thus ending his Mets career. After cups of coffee with both the Padres and Braves, Canó was out of Major League Baseball, though he played both in Dubai and in the Mexican League. In fact, Canó was still playing in the Mexican League as of 2025.

The Mariners’ side:​


Over parts of four big league seasons, Justin Dunn made 32 starts for the Mariners and Reds and, as recently as last year, was still trying to make a comeback to the majors, having stints in the White Sox and Royals organizations, but a number of injuries, almost all of them shoulder-related, kept him limited in his innings and his effectiveness. However, he was part of a trade which we will discuss a little later that had more impact on the M’s than any other part of this deal.

Gerson Bautista made his MLB debut with the Mets in 2018 before being traded, and would pitch in eight games for the Mariners in 2019 before being released at the end of the season. After a season in Mexico, Bautista attempted a comeback with the Giants, but never got higher than Triple-A. After that, he pitched in the Mexican League until the end of the 2024 season.

Anthony Swarzak, whom the Mets had signed to a two-year, $14 million contract ahead of the 2018 season, missed all of spring training in 2019 and started the year on the Injured List. After just 15 appearances, Swarzak was traded to the Braves for Arodys Vizcaíno and Jesse Biddle. Swarzak did not pitch in the 2020 season, and finished his career splitting the 2021 season between the Diamondbacks and the Royals.

Jay Bruce, a former All-Star who the Mets acquired twice between 2016-2018, played just two months for the Mariners before being traded, along with $18.5 million to the Phillies, for whom Bruce played through the end of the 2020 season. After spending the first few weeks of the next season in the Bronx as a Yankee, Bruce retired on April 18th, 2021.

But the real prize of the Mariners’ haul at the time of the trade was Jarred Kelenic, who the Mets drafted sixth overall in the 2018 draft, just six months earlier. Kelenic was the prize of the Mets’ system at the time of the trade, and many had high hopes for him. While Kelenic showed some promise in his first two seasons for the Mariners, he was mostly a disappointment for Seattle. His third year was the first where he looked anything remotely close to what the Mets had drafted him to be, despite kicking a cooler and thus losing two months for breaking his foot against said cooler. On that success of that shorted season, he was traded to the Braves ahead of the 2024 season alongside Marco Gonzales and Evan White for Jackson Kowar and Cole Phillips. 2024 was a disaster for Kelenic and, after another disappointing season in 2025, Kelenic was outrighted to Triple-A and elected free agency.

The aftermath:​


In a continued attempt to compare apples to apples, we are only going to use Díaz’s initial Mariners contract when talking about the trade since, hypothetically, the Mets could’ve signed him to his free agent deal whether or not he was traded to them in 2018. Also, in the interest of simplicity, while we will look at trade returns after the initial deal, it doesn’t make sense to try to itemize how much each former Met was worth in a trade versus the other players in each trade. This is obviously not scientific nor perfect, but simply a way to look at the trade with some reasonable distance and perspective.

On the Mets side, it’s fairly simple: Canó put up 1.4 bWAR as a Met, and between 2019 and 2022, Díaz was worth 5.1 bWAR. Because Cano was released and not traded and Díaz re-signed, the Mets acquired no additional players down the road; the trade ended when both players signed elsewhere.

The only variable in this side of the discussion is the money. The Mets received $20 million in the swap which, hypothetically, they used in the 2019 offseason to bring in players like Jed Lowrie, Wilson Ramos, Justin Wilson, and re-signing Jeurys Familia.

Lowrie, signed for two years and $20 million, is widely regarded as one of the worst signings in franchise history, as Lowrie made just eight plate appearances as a Met and fought various bizarre injuries on his way to -0.2 bWAR. Ramos signed a two year, $19 million contract and put up 2.4 bWAR in his two seasons as a Met. Familia came back to the Mets on a three-year, $30 million deal, and pitched in 156 games, good for 0.1 bWAR. Wilson joined the Mets on a two-year, $10 million deal and he appeared in 68 games with a 2.91 ERA, good for 1.4 bWAR.

The $20 million clearly helped the Mets to sign these players, whose contracts worth approximately $35 million in 2019 payroll obligations. And so, for this exercise, we will attribute 57.1% of the bWAR from these players to this trade, even though the money only contributed to the first year. Again, this is sloppy math, but is merely to illustrate a point.

The Mariners’ piece of this is a little more complicated. While Dunn was worth 1.5 bWAR over his three seasons with Seattle, he was traded alongside Brandon Williamson and Jake Fraley ahead of the 2022 season to the Reds for Eugenio Suárez and future old friend Jesse Winker. Over two seasons in Seattle in his initial stay, Suárez was worth 6.5 bWAR. Winker was less valuable, with -0.1 bWAR.

Bautista put up -0.3 bWAR in his one season with Seattle before being released. Swarzak (-0.3 bWAR) was traded for Jesse Bidde (-0.6 bWAR) and Arodys Vizcaíno (who never played for the big league club and, coincidentally, was in the Mets’ system in 2020). Bruce (0.2 bWAR) was traded with cash for minor leaguer Jake Scheiner, who never played for the Mariners either.

Kelenic’s first two seasons in Seattle were rough, but he had a nice 2023 season, which is what allowed him to be traded to the Braves (alongside Marco Gaonzales and Evan White) for Cole Phillips and Jackson Kowar. Cumulatively, Kelenic put up 0.2 bWAR for the M’s, and Kowar this season put up 0.1 bWAR in 15 appearances for Seattle (Phillips never made the majors). Kowar remains the only player associated with any of these trades in any capacity to still be on an initial contract with the Mariners (Suárez was re-acquired last season, but that’s contractually unrelated).

The tally:​


Robinson Canó and Edwin Díaz’s bWAR as Mets between 2019 and 2022: 6.5
Ancillary bWAR (57.1% of Jed Lowrie, Wilson Ramos, Justin Wilson, and Jeurys Familia’s 2019-2021 contracts): 2.1
Total Mets’ bWAR: 8.6

Dunn, Bautista, Swarzack, Bruce, and Keleic’s bWAR as Mariners between 2019 and 2023: 1.3
Ancillary bWAR from acquired players: 5.9
Total Mariners’ bWAR: 7.2

When considered just the players in the initial trade, the Mets really won this one. However, with everything considered, it’s a more fair trade than it looked at the time, or really at any point in the process. After the rough 2019 for both Met additions and Kelenic playing in three levels of the Seattle minors system, it looked like the Mets had overpaid for damaged goods. But Díaz established himself as a top-three all-time Met reliever and revolutionized closer entrances and how they’re broadcast, while having maybe the best closer entrance song since “Enter Sandman,” with all due respect to “Danza Kurudo.”

The only unchecked box here is the rest of Kowar’s career as a Mariner. He’s under contract through 2030, so there’s every chance that he could emerge as a key part of the Mariners’ success down the road.

Another piece to consider is the knowledge that, just two years later, Steve Cohen bought the Mets. This allowed them to cut ties with Canó, something that would’ve been unthinkable under the Wilpon ownership group. Cohen paid almost $50 million for 43 plate appearances in 2022 and zero in 2023, simply because it made the team better on paper. If the Wilpons still owned the team in 2023, they would’ve kept playing a clearly broken Canó or planted more PEDs on him to get out of the contract (joking, ha ha, satire).

The trade signified the real start of the Mets’ post-2015/2016 team. 2018 was a start, with Brandon Nimmo and Jeff McNeil becoming everyday players and Jacob deGrom winning his first of two consecutive Cy Youngs. 2019 saw Pete Alonso break camp with the club and a the team racking up 86 wins in a very fun back end of the season. While the Mets wouldn’t have another winning season until 2021, Díaz’s arrival signaled a major piece arriving and helping establish what would be the core of the team for their next two playoff berths.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...ets-analysis-diaz-kelenic-cano-trade-mariners
 
Mets claim Drew Romo, DFA Brandon Waddell

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The Mets have claimed catcher Drew Romo off of waivers from the Orioles. Romo, a former first round pick and top prospect, was claimed by the Orioles off waivers earlier this offseason but couldn’t survive the churn on their 40-man. Now he gets a chance to stick things out on the back of the Mets 40-man instead.

Romo, 24, was selected 35th overall by the Rockies in 2020 out of Woodlands High School in Texas. he checked in at 9th on Baseball Prospectus’s Rockies list that offseason, with his defensive acumen and potential power from both sides of the dish being cited as clear positives. One year later, he just missed BP’s 101 after a strong season at Low-A, with his defense, power, hit tool, and surprising speed on the base paths standing out as strengths.

Unfortunately, things stagnated from there. Despite playing in extremely hitter friendly stadiums as he worked his way up the Rockies’ system, Romo’s offensive tools never really played all that well in game. His best performance over a meaningful sample was his initial time at low-A (106 wRC+), and he’s generally been an average or slightly worse hitter at every level. Couple that with a defensive decline and you have a player who gets DFA’d twice in one offseason. Call him another victim of young catcher offensive stagnation syndrome…or the COVID draft…or Rockies player development processes.

Still, this isn’t a bad dice roll for the Mets. One of this organization’s few long standing strengths has been improving catcher defense, specifically receiving (see the work done by Francisco Alvarez since the time he was a prospect). It’s also possible a swing tweak could unlock something more in the profile, an adjustment that the Rockies may have missed. In the worst case it’s a gamble on a 4th catcher that doesn’t work at basically no cost.

To make room for Romo, the Mets DFA’d Brandon Waddell. Signed out of Korea last offseason, Waddell posted a 3.45 ERA over 31.1 innings of low-leverage work, running a 5.65 xERA and 4.54 FIP in the process. It’s a nice story for a guy to come back from Korea and get major league time, but Waddell is ultimately an eminently replaceable depth piece (one the Mets might bring back on a minor league deal anyway).

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-york-mets-news/88551/mets-news-claim-drew-romo-dfa-brandon-waddell
 
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