2026 Non-Roster Invitee Preview: Mike Baumann

Mike Baumann has traveled a lot. He made his major league debut with the Orioles in 2021 things were going along well. Over parts of four seasons Baumann pitched 127 1/3 innings over 94 games with a 4.45 ERA, 4.46 FIP, 1.437 WHIP and a 91 ERA+. He was solid, major league pitcher getting a lot of work with the club that drafted him.

Then 2024 happened. The Orioles traded him to Seattle in May. Then the Giants purchased his contract. He pitched one game with them and ended up with the Angels. He pitched 10 games with them and then ended up on the Marlins. Five different organizations in one season.

After all that chaos he went to Japan for a season and pitched 26 innings over 27 games for Yakult with a 4.15 ERA and a 1.577 WHIP. Now he’s back state side trying to break onto the Mets roster.

When Baumann last pitched in the major leagues he had a mid-to-high 90’s fastball that was in the 87th percentile for velocity. His extension was in the 71st percentile. Usually this is a combination for success, but not in 2024. He had a 4.71 xERA (18th percentile) and was only getting hitters to chase 27% of the time (29th percentile). Hitters were barreling up on him 9.2% of the time (21st percentile) and hitting the ball hard 43.7% of the time (12th percentile).

Baumann used his fastball 40.6% of the time in 2024 and leaned on his knuckle curve 33.5% of the time. He would change things up with his low-90’s slider 23.9% of the time and occasionally mix in a changeup and a sinker.

Baumann has a lot of different pitches in his arsenal. Let’s watch this spring how the Mets pitching lab makes adjustments. He made his debut against the Yankees on 2/22 and pitched a scoreless inning allowing one hit and striking out one batter. He has a lot of competition between getting on the 40-man roster and then on the active roster, but the Mets did use 46 pitchers last season.

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Spring Training Game Preview: Astros vs Mets

The Mets return home this afternoon after two road wins in a row! A home spring training game (generally) means more regular starters in the lineup and SNY coverage of the game!

This is the second time this spring the Mets are rolling out Marcus Semien, Juan Soto and Bo Bichette as the top three hitters in the lineup, possibly hinting what the top of the lineup may look like on days when Francisco Lindor does not play. Today is also the second time this season we are seeing Bichette at third, Soto in left and Ronny Mauricio at short, the most likely fielding alignment for those players.

The Mets go for their third win in a row, let’s go!

Three Things To Watch For:

  1. Jonah Tong’s Best Friend. Jack Wenninger, also known as Jonah Tong’s best friend, gets the start today. Wenninger is the next major pitching prospect coming up for the Mets and was recognized as the #79th prospect in baseball by Fan Graphs a week ago. Wenninger started to put results together in 2025 with an ERA of 2.92, down from 4.30 the year before. He is not going to overpower hitters, he mainly utilizes a low-90’s fastball and low-80’s splitter, mixing in a sweeper, cutter and curveball all out of the three-quarters arm slot.
  2. Fielding. You’ll go insane as a baseball fan taking a small-sample size of attempts and extrapolating from there. That started to happen in some corners of the internet after Bo Bichette’s slightly off throw in his first game at third base. It was one throw, on one attempt. Hopefully he has a game today to turn down the temperature in Panic City.
  3. Mike Tauchman. Tauchman signed a minor league contract with an invitation to major league camp eight days ago. He was signed as an insurance policy for right field in case the Mets current plans (Baty and waiting for Benge) doesn’t work out. Tauchman is coming off of a solid year for the White Sox where he put up a 1.9 bWAR over 385 PA’s, slashing .263/.356/.400 with a 112 OPS+. He’s had an OPS+ over 100 for three seasons in a row now. Maybe Tauchman is the minor league contract that ends up being the x-factor for the Mets in 2026.

Let’s Go Mets!

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2026 Non-Roster Invitee Preview: Ryan Lambert

On Monday, 2/24, Ryan Lambert made his spring training debut with a bang. He tossed 22 pitches, allowed a hit and struck out the side. His fastball was hitting 98 mph and hitters were swinging and missing at his mid-80’s slider. He looked all the part of a player without a roster spot trying to force a conversation about how he could fit on the active roster.

Ryan Lambert is the youngest pitcher (23-years-old, a few months younger than Jeff Wenninger) in major league camp this season. He was drafted in the 8th round in 2024 out of the University of Oklahoma where he had a 2.57 ERA over 23 games and 21 innings.

All of Lambert’s strengths and weaknesses were on display during the spring training breakout game in 2025. He struck out two batters but also allowed a run from two walks, a hit and three stolen bases. Lambert can over power hitters, but he has difficulty reliably delivering the ball in the zone. Runners can take advantage of this on the base paths.

Lambert had a quick stint in Brooklyn in 2025 where he allowed one run over eight innings while striking out an absurd 17 batters. He spent the rest of the season in Binghamton where he tossed 42 innings with a 1.71 ERA, 1.286 WHIP and a 13.7 K/9. The only blemish was a 5.6 BB/9. He’s throwing incredibly hard and missing the zone a bit.

At the end of last season MLB Pipeline listed Lambert as the Mets #20 prospect with a predicted major league debut of this season. His hard throwing will get him to the majors but they are concerned about him throwing only two pitches and missing the zone. That’s were performances like his spring training debut come in. If he can continue to get hitters to chase, he’s going to be an electric part of the Mets bullpen.

To honestly break camp with the Mets he would need to be sterling the rest of the month, which probably won’t happen. Lambert will most likely start the season in Syracuse and face more veteran hitters more consistently. If he dominates in Syracuse he’ll find himself to the major league roster in short order.

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Spring Training Game Preview: Mets vs Blue Jays

The Mets are the on the road again today to another AL East team! Today they’ll face off of the Blue Jays and the Mets look to pick up where they left off yesterday hitting four home runs on their way to their first spring training win of the season. Yesterday’s game against the Yankees when exactly how you would expect on paper with homeruns from power-hitter household names like Jared Young, Luis Torrens, Hayden Senger and J.T. Schwartz. Jared Young and Hayden Senger are getting rewarded with starts today!

We’ll get our first spring looks at Clay Holmes and Tobias Myers today. Holmes is coming off his first year as a starting pitcher and is the first member of the Mets rotation to pitch in a spring training game this season. Myers came over the to the Mets with Freddy Peralta and was featured as a swingman last season. They’ll be facing a lineup of regular, starting players from the Blue Jays!

Three Things To Watch For:

  1. Clay Holmes. The Clay Holmes starting pitcher experiment was a success last season with Holmes pitching 33 games including 31 starts totaling 165 2/3 innings. Like many pitchers on the Mets roster, Holmes struggled sometimes to go deep into games, but that made more sense for Holmes as he was adjusting to a new work load. From 2021 through 2024, Holmes topped out at 70 innings per season, so this was a new frontier for him. Holmes had a 3.53 ERA, 4.11 FIP, 1.304 WHIP and a 114 ERA+. He was more effective in the first half of the season (19 starts, 103 1/3 innings, 3.31 ERA, 1.258 WHIP) than int he second half (14 games, 12 starts, 62 1/3 innings, 3.90 ERA, 1.380 WHIP).
  2. Tobias Myers. Myers pitched in 27 games and made 25 starts in his 2024 rookie season totaling 138 innings with a 3.00 ERA, 3.91 FIP, 1.174 WHIP and a 138 ERA+. Last season he started the season off on the injured list due to an oblique strain. When he returned, he pitched in 22 games including six starts with a 3.55 ERA, 3.92 FIP, 1.362 WHIP and a 117 ERA+. Last year the Mets experimented with throwing two starters together to make a full game, Tobias Myers gives the Mets the flexibility to do that again.
  3. Vidal Bruján. Bruján is on the 40-man roster competing for a spot on the active roster to be the Mets back-up, utility infielder. The Mets are looking for a player who can play short as Lindor recovers from his surgery. The Mets are going to want to keep Polanco and Bichette at the positions they are learning, so shortstop will probably fall to Ronny Mauricio or Bruján (or several different players on NRI’ deals trying land a spot on the 40-man). Last season Bruján played for the Cubs, Orioles and Braves totaling 60 games slashing .253/.305/.310 with a 77 OPS+.

Let’s Go Mets!

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2026 Non-Roster Invitee Preview: Chris Suero

Next up in our NRI preview series is Chris Suero, from the Bronx! Suero moved to the Dominican Republic when he turned 15 and attended school there. This allowed Suero to sign as an international free agent. This also meant at 15 Suero left his family to pursue his dream, just an incredible thing for a teenager to do. I highly recommend reading MLB’s profile on Suero, which goes deeper into his story.

Suero has started to sky rocket up the Mets prospect list. Back in 2024, MMO and Mets Minors had him at 37, he’s going to be in the top 20 this season. At the end of last season MLB Pipeline had him as the Mets #13 prospect, he wasn’t even in the top 30 the previous year.

Chris Suero can play in the outfield, first base and at catcher. In his second year in the Mets system, his first year state side, he slashed .281/.422/.469 over 22 games at only 19-years-old. He started 2024 with St. Lucie and hit .265/.390/.434 in only 25 games, forcing a promotion to Brooklyn where he finished the season hitting .228/.353/.350 while being 2.2 years younger than the average player in that week.

He started 2025 in Brooklyn, furthered his development and hit .240/.382/.455 with 13 homers in 74 games, forcing another promotion, this time to Binghamton. He finished the season hitting .221/.374/.324, which was similar to when he was promoted mid-season the previous year. He finished his 2025 with a stint in the Arizona Fall League, turning heads with a .283/.354/.567 thanks to five homers in 15 games. Suero has also impressed on the basepaths, stealing 20 bags in 2024 and 35 and 2025.

Defensively, the Mets have used Suero primarily as a catcher. His versality makes him an interesting prospect, especially if he keeps his OBP up. It is unlikely that we see Suero in the majors this year, unless he starts hitting the cover off the ball in Syracuse. The Mets have created a roster that looks flexible in 2027, 2028 and 2029, which feels on par with his development right now. We’ll be looking this spring to see where the Mets use him in the field and specifically who the Mets want him to catch.

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Spring Training Game Preview: Mets @ Yankees

Quick Broadcasting Note: Today’s spring training game will only on be on MLBN if you live out-of-market. There is no SNY/WPIX coverage but there is radio coverage on 880 AM. Yankees coverage is a bit more confusing. The game is on the Gotham Sports App, which carries the Yankees, Nets, Knicks, Rangers, Islanders, Devils and Sabres. I’m not 100% confident, but you should be able to watch the Yankees game if you have a cable subscription that carries YES and you link that account to the Gotham Sports App.

The Mets head to Tampa this afternoon for a very early trip across the entire state of Florida. There’s a stinky situation right now with Yankees, and it has nothing to do with all the former Yankee faces now in the Mets dugout. There was a massive sewage line breakage outside of the stadium which led to raw sewage in the Yankees clubhouse. Hopefully the situation is remedied before the game today.

Three Things To Watch For:

  1. Justin Hagenman. Hagenman was drafted by the Dodgers in 2018 and traded to the Red Sox in 2023. He finally made his major league debut last season with the Mets. He pitched in nine games including one start totaling 23 2/3 innings with a 4.56 ERA, 3.77 FIP, 1.099 WHIP and an 89 ERA+. He pitched multiple innings every time he pitched for the Mets last season, saving the bullpen multiple, valuable innings of work. We saw the Mets were aggressive already getting pitchers multiple innings of work in their first spring training game and we’ll see if that pattern continues today with Justin Hagenman. As a bonus challenge for Justin Hagenman, the Yankees are throwing out a regular, major league heavy batting order to start the game.
  2. Carson Benge. Leading off for the Mets today is the highest rated position prospect in the Mets system right now. Benge has been ranked #19 by Baseball America, #10 by Baseball Prospectus, #16 by MLB Pipeline, and #21 by Fan Graphs. He will probably be the Mets right fielder at some point this season. He’s coming off of a minor league season where he played across three levels with a .281/.385/.472 with 15 homers and 22 stolen bases.
  3. Ryan Clifford. Ryan Clifford (#86 Baseball Prospectus) is the last of the prospects left from the Justin Verlander and Max Scherzer trades a couple of seasons ago. Last season Clifford played first and the outfield when he wasn’t the DH. If you look at his time in the field only, he played in the outfield about 40% of the time. In 2024 he had a 133 wRC+ in Binghamton and last season he hit .237/.356/.470 between Binghamton and Syracuse with 29 homers. It’s a big day today if you like Mets position prospects!

Let’s Go Mets!

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2026 Non-Roster Invitee Preview: Carl Edwards Jr.

Carl Edwards Jr. is an Immaculate Grid Superstar!

From 2015 to 2025, Edwards Jr. has played for the Cubs, Padres, Mariners, Braves, Blue Jays, Nationals, Padres again, Angels and Rangers. The Mets will be his ninth club if he makes the roster.

The Mets signed the veteran reliever in early December, and he already made his Grapefruit League debut on Saturday, 2/21, pitching two innings, allowing a hit, walk and one unearned run while striking out two.

Carl Edwards Jr’s first outing showcased his ability to pitch more than one inning in relief. This not something that he has done often at the major league level, but something he did do in the minors in 2025. Last season the Mets had several pitchers that were consistently pulled before the 6th inning, creating a huge tax on the bullpen. Now that Edwards has pitched multiple innings once for the Mets, we’ll be looking to see if he does that again to distinguish himself.

Edwards only had six innings over four games at the major league level in 2025, allowing three runs from four hits. Across Triple A in two different organizations he pitched in 15 games, making eight starts, totaling 50 2/3 innings with a 4.44 ERA an 1.461 WHIP. He also had a lot of work in the Mexican league, making 14 starts totaling 74 2/3 innings with a 3.58 ERA and 1.232 WHIP.

The last time he had sustained success in the majors was in 2022 and 2023 with the Washington Nationals. Over those two seasons he pitched 93 2/3 innings over 89 games with a 3.07 ERA, 4.11 FIP, 1.324 WHIP and a 132 ERA+.

Edwards primarily throws a four seamer (51.1%) that sits in the low-to-mid 90’s and mixes in a high-70’s curve (34.4%) and a high-80’s changeup (14.4%). He brings a lot of veteran experience, and depending on how the Mets use him in Syracuse, he has the ability to spot start or be the bulk guy if needed. Like all pitchers we’ve covered in this NRI preview series, it feels more likely than not we’ll see Carl Edwards Jr. at some point this season on the major league roster.

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Spring Training Game Preview: Marlins vs Mets

The wait is over! The 2026 Mets take the field today for their first spring training game. There are a lot of new faces on the roster this spring, and familiar faces in new places on the diamond. Players in new positions like Bo Bichette at third, Jorge Polanco at first, Juan Soto in left and Brett Baty in right will dominate story lines this spring. On top of that the Mets have 30ish non-roster players in camp this spring.

The Mets will face off against the Marlins today and will end their spring training schedule against them a month later on March 22nd. By then the roster will be set. How we get to that roster starts today!

Three Things To Watch For:

  1. Brandon Waddell. Today’s starter is back in came as a non-roster invitee for a second season in a row. Waddell ended up pitching 31 1/3 innings for the Mets last season with a 3.45 ERA and a 118 ERA+. His actual results were quite different than his expected results which had him at an xERA of 5.59 and an xBA of .281. He’s trying to break through camp as a lefty, and even if he doesn’t break camp with the team, it is safe to assume we’ll see him with the major league club at some point this season.
  2. Stolen bases in spring. There is a thought around baseball that spring training can give insight into stolen bases. Specifically around which players are trying to be more aggressive on the base paths, which teams are making more stealing attempts, etc. Juan Soto is coming off of a career high 38 stolen bases with a previous career high of 12. How many bases did he steal last spring? Zero. Antoan Richardson, the former Mets first base coach, was an absolute wizard and played a huge role in the 2025 Mets stolen bases. We’ll be looking all spring to see how the new first base coach, Gilbert Gomez, handles the role.
  3. New Defense. This was touched in the introduction. Players in new defensive positions will be the major story of the spring. We’ll see a good bit of this today. Juan Soto will be returning to left field. Bo Bichette will get reps a third base. We’ll also see Ronny Mauricio at short. If Lindor misses anytime, Mauricio is the only player on the Mets roster who played any innings at short with the Mets last year.

Let’s Go Mets!

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2026 Non-Roster Invitee Preview: Jackson Cluff

The Mets either have a ton of shortstops on the roster or they have limited depth at the position. It completely depends on how the Mets see the versatility of their roster.

When Lindor went down with an injury in 2024, Luisangel Acuña was there to fill the gap for the Mets. Acuña did great in that stint and was able to fill in when needed in 2025 (although that was only parts of seven games totaling 36 innings). With Acuña now gone, the Mets need other options at short. They have two players on the roster, Jorge Polanco and Bo Bichette who are shortstops, but they are also learning new positions. It feels unlikely, even with Lindor recovering from surgery right now, that the Mets will slide either of them over to short unless there is an unforeseen set back. The only other player on the roster who played innings at short in 2025 was Ronny Mauricio who played 22 innings over parts of five games there.

The Mets need a stop gap back up plan incase Lindor isn’t ready and Mauricio needs someone behind him. The short-term back-up shortstop/utility player will be one of the more competitive battles this spring. Jackson Cluff is one of several players batting for that spot.

Cluff was drafted in 2019 out of BYU by the Washington Nationals. Over 498 minor league games he has slashed .219/.324/.363. Cluff hit .279/.395/.382 his first season with BYU and then took two years off for a mission trip. He came back as a senior hitting .325/.458/.515.

His minor league career was interrupted early by a broken hamate bone (that sounds familiar!) and then by the covid lost season. Last season he played in Triple A Rochester slashing .242/.349/.422 over 103 games while being an average of 1.7 years older than the competition. Surprisingly, Cluff has never been younger than the average player age at any level in the minors.

Cluff was last listed as a top 30 prospect on the Nationals by MLB Pipeline back in 2022. He was ranked as their #22 prospect with an estimated major league debut of 2022 (something that still hasn’t happened yet for Cluff). After hitting only .214/.306/.289 across three levels in 2021, Cluff had a strong Arizona Fall league season slashing .342/.432/.456, which played a role in him landing on the Pipeline list. Even back then he was noted for his stellar defense, which is what the Mets are signing him for. He’s not going to hit the cover off the ball, but a great glove and some decent hitting could land him a spot on the roster.

We’ll be watching this spring to see how long he stays in camp, and how his playing time compares to other players who are trying to get that back up shortstop position. Let’s make a big assumption that Ronny Mauricio is the guy if the Mets need a shortstop for a week. The first player up on the 40-man is Vidal Bruján. NRI’s fighting for the spot include veteran Christian Arroyo, Grae Kessinger and Jackson Cluff. There’s a lot of competition!

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2026 Non-Roster Invitee: Matt Turner

Do your Yankee friends try to make fun of you because the Mets have added so many Yankees over the last two years? Wear it with pride and remind them at in addition to all the major league players who are playing in Queens, the Mets stole a player out of the Yankees farm system via the Rule 5 draft back in December.

Matt Turner signed a minor league contract with the Yankees in early December only to get snatched by the Mets less than a week later.

Turner was drafted by Cleveland in 2017 out of high school. Over seven minor league seasons he’s pitched in 130 games totaling 283 2/3 innings with a 4.79 ERA and 1.502 WHIP. He had a strong season before the pandemic, putting up a 2.81 ERA over 73 2/3 innings in 2019. Since then it’s been rough. In his last season with Cleveland he ha da 5.91 ERA over 35 innings across three different teams.

Matt Turner than signed with an independent league team and put up an impressive 2.44 ERA over 48 innings in 2024. He then pitched in the Mexican league with a 1.53 ERA over 17 2/3 innings. This lead the Rockies to take a chance with last season he pitched 56 innings with a 5.79 ERA and 1.661 WHIP.

Now the Mets will see what Matt Turner can do this spring. Turner is one five lefties in camp that are not on the 40-man roster yet. I’ll be watching spring games to get a sense of his pitch mix, it’s been difficult to find online. This scouting report was written when he was drafted. Back then he had a mid-80’s fastball, low-70’s changeup and low-70’s curveball.

Matt Turner is only one season removed from success in the independent leagues and in Mexico. Two organizations, the Yankees and the Mets, were interested in him this year. With the Mets recent track record with pitchers (using a record 46 pitchers in 2025 alone), there is a solid chance that if Matt Turner stays healthy, he’ll up for a cup of coffee at some point this season.

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