The Mets left Atlanta with the same ugly themes that have followed them for weeks: shaky starting pitching, sloppy defense, and an offense that still has to scrape and claw for every big swing. They did manage to steal one game in the series, but even that win came with plenty of drama attached.
On Saturday, New York nearly watched a six-run lead disappear before hanging on for a one-run victory. The Mets entered the ninth with that cushion and still had to sweat it out to the finish. Earlier in the game, they were staring at their final out against Atlanta closer Raisel Iglesias before Juan Soto launched a three-run homer to put New York ahead 5-3.
That kind of roller coaster has become familiar. The Mets are now sitting as the second-worst team in the National League, and they could slide into the bottom spot before long. Between the trade chatter and the nonstop criticism, this is a team that looks stuck in its worst stretch of the season.
The trip to Atlanta also reinforced how much the Mets still have to sort through as they limp toward the finish line. With the club 17 games under .500, the focus has shifted from chasing results to getting a read on what might matter next year and beyond.
Sean Manaea is one of those questions. After a strong first two starts, the veteran left-hander has gone up and down, and the last outing was especially rough.
He gave up six earned runs against the Braves on Saturday, struggled to hit his spots, and left too many pitches over the plate. With his velocity topping out at 93 mph, that’s a dangerous combination when he’s not sharp.
Over his last five starts, Manaea has a 5.40 ERA and is averaging five innings per outing. That’s not nearly enough to lock him into the Mets’ 2027 rotation. His contract likely keeps him in the picture - he is set to make $22 million next year - but he’ll need a much better finish to stay in the conversation for a rotation spot.
Christian Scott presents a different kind of puzzle. By the numbers, he has been the Mets’ best starter in 2026, with a 3.49 ERA and a strikeout rate around 11 per nine innings.
But the recent trend line has been less clean. In his last three starts, Scott has piled up strikeouts while also allowing a bunch of homers, and he hasn’t gotten through the fifth inning in any of them.
Over those three outings, he has struck out 19 batters, allowed six home runs, and given up nine earned runs across 13 innings. After his 5.2 shutout innings in San Diego, his ERA sat at a season-low 2.50. Since then, it has jumped by a full run.
Scott still has a real chance to claim a spot in the Mets’ 2027 rotation, but the formula is clear: he has to go deeper into games and keep the ball in the park. The stuff is there for him to be more than just a back-end arm, yet the homer issue and the lack of length are enough to keep the question open.
A.J. Ewing, meanwhile, has earned a bigger look in the lineup.
The Mets have been shuffling him around in recent weeks, and the move hasn’t hurt his production much. He still owns a .826 OPS over his last 15 games, and the added responsibility has also put him in more matchups against left-handed pitching.
For the season, his OPS against lefties is now .724, and two of his five home runs since being called up have come against southpaws.
The Mets appear set to keep using Ewing in the top third of the order, which should continue to expose him to lefties. If they want to figure out how much they can count on him next year, these are the matchups that matter. Sitting him against left-handed pitching doesn’t make much sense for a team that’s already out of the playoff race, and with only six games left before the mid-summer break, his next chance against a lefty may not come until after the All-Star Game.
In Other News...
Why Would The Mets Even Consider This NL East Trade Rumor
The National League East has a way of turning even routine roster chatter into something more urgent, and this latest bit of speculation fits that pattern. A CBS Sports writer floated a scenario in which the Mets would consider moving a pitcher who has been sidelined after taking a 110-plus mph line drive off his leg, a reminder that health and timing can reshape how front offices view a player almost overnight.
The wrinkle here is the business side as much as the injury. With a $12 million player option after the season in the mix, the Mets have to weigh whether holding on makes sense if the return could be limited, especially in a division where every edge matters. Nothing has been confirmed, but the rumor underscores how quickly a contender can be pushed to think about value, risk and what happens if it waits too long. [Read more 🡒]
One Forgotten Mets Deadline Move Looks Worse With The Dodgers
The Mets spent the 2024 trade deadline trying to fortify a roster that eventually pushed deep into October, and most of the attention naturally went to the bigger swings that helped shape that run against the Dodgers. But tucked inside the deadline shuffle was a smaller move that has aged a lot more awkwardly, especially now that Los Angeles is getting some useful innings from a pitcher New York once had in its system.
Paul Gervase has given the Dodgers a bullpen option they can keep leaning on, even if the results have come with the usual rookie volatility. He has shown enough swing-and-miss to matter, but also enough control trouble to keep the story from feeling finished, which is exactly the kind of detail that makes a modest deadline deal look different in hindsight. [Read more 🡒]
Mets Fans May Finally Embrace This Tyrone Taylor Trade Idea
If the Mets do decide Tyrone Taylor is movable, the return may not need to be flashy to make sense. Seattle has been sorting through its own outfield picture, and that kind of roster crunch can create openings for a deal built around depth and upside rather than a headline name. For New York, the appeal is obvious: Taylor is the sort of piece a contender can part with if it helps address another part of the roster, especially when the front office is looking for ways to keep the margins working in its favor.
The more interesting part is whether the Mets would use that kind of swap to bring in a pitcher who is close enough to matter soon, but still has some development left in the tank. With A.J. Minter and Brooks Raley no longer in the mix, there is at least a path for a left-handed arm to get a look, and Seattles system has one that has been moving through the upper levels with strong strikeout numbers and steady run prevention. The wrinkle is timing, because a pitcher in that spot can be useful to a club now, while also carrying enough roster pressure that the other side has to decide whether to hold on or make a move before the offseason changes the calculus. [Read more 🡒]
