Brett Baty Is Forcing The Mets To Revisit Everything

As Brett Baty heats up at the plate, the Mets face a challenging decision with significant trade implications looming.

Brett Baty’s recent surge has put the Mets in an awkward spot at exactly the wrong time - or maybe the right one, depending on how much faith they still have in a player they once hoped would solve third base for good.

Baty was taken 12th overall in the 2019 MLB Draft, and the Mets spent years waiting for that pedigree to turn into the kind of everyday star they envisioned after David Wright’s career ended. The promise was obvious when he debuted in 2022 against the Braves in Atlanta, with his family in the stands and his first big-league swing producing a home run.

That made him the fifth player in Mets history to homer in his first major league at-bat. Since then, though, the production has been uneven enough to keep the conversation alive: is Baty finally turning the corner, or is this the moment to move him?

The Mets have already shown plenty of patience. Baty, now 26, played in 89 of the team’s 93 games and has been asked to fill different roles as injuries reshuffled the lineup. He started at third base when Bo Bichette moved over to shortstop after Francisco Lindor went down earlier this season, and he’s now handling second base with Marcus Semien on the shelf.

That versatility is part of why Baty remains interesting to other teams. It’s also why the Mets may have a real decision to make before the trade deadline.

His 2025 season offered a reason to believe. Baty was a steady presence at third base, hitting .254 with 18 home runs and 50 RBIs while providing above-average defense at the hot corner. But this year has been a different story through 89 games: .218 with three home runs, 30 RBIs, 85 strikeouts and a .601 OPS.

Still, the bat has started to wake up. Baty is riding an eight-game hitting streak, and over his last 10 games he’s hitting .265 with only eight strikeouts and a .707 OPS.

Entering play Wednesday night, he had the fourth-worst OPS (.603) among qualified hitters in the majors this season, but he delivered when the Mets needed it most, lining a two-run single in the bottom of the eighth with the bases loaded and two outs after Jared Young reached on a bases-loaded hit-by-pitch. That hit pushed New York ahead 4-1.

“My pregame work is really good right now,” Baty said to SNY reporters when asked about his eight-game hitting streak. “Trying just to clear my head and hit balls hard because I've always been good at that, and the first part of this year I've been terrible at it. Just trying to hit the ball hard again.”

The timing matters for the Mets in two different ways. First, Semien has been out with a hip injury for several weeks and is expected to stay sidelined for now.

Will Sammon and Tim Britton of The Athletic reported Wednesday that Semien was playing through the injury in May, when it clearly affected him. With Baty swinging better, there’s no reason for the Mets to rush the 35-year-old back.

The other layer is bigger: Baty’s recent run may have only increased his value. He’s under team control through 2029, and a club looking for a player who can handle nearly every position could see him as a long-term piece. If the Mets decide to shop him, this stretch could help bring back a significant return at the deadline.

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What stands out is how direct Green has been compared with Carlos Mendoza, who was often more guarded in public. Green has been more willing to offer honest assessments and push for improvement rather than cushion the message, and that tone is starting to shape the way the roster is being viewed. Batys recent progress has fit neatly into that environment, while Scotts latest outing showed that even encouraging signs still come with the expectation of more. [Read more 🡒]

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Shorts arrival also leaves some obvious questions hanging over the rest of the bench mix. Christian Arroyo had just re-signed a minor league deal and has done more with the bat in the minors, while Ronny Mauricio was another name in the conversation, but the Mets went in a different direction for now. For a team trying to stay afloat in the middle of the season, it is the kind of choice that prioritizes stability in the field even if it does not do much to excite anyone looking for offense. [Read more 🡒]

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The Mets recent surge has given the front office a very different kind of deadline problem than the one it was staring at a couple of weeks ago. A series win over the Royals snapped a drought that had stretched nearly a month, and the offense has suddenly looked like a club that can do damage in a hurry, with six or more runs in five straight games. That kind of run changes the tone around the roster, because it makes it harder to separate what needs fixing from what might just be heating up at the right time.

Mark Vientos hand injury only adds another layer to the uncertainty as the deadline gets closer. The Mets still have to sort out how they want to handle the roster in the short term and where players such as A.J. Ewing and Carson Benge fit into the bigger picture, but the hotter the lineup looks, the less straightforward those calls become. For a team trying to balance present momentum with future planning, the next decision may matter as much as the last series did. [Read more 🡒]