Former Mets Depth Piece Is Suddenly Drawing The Wrong Kind Of Attention

Despite an impressive batting average, former Mets standout Donovan Walton finds himself surprisingly cut from MLB's struggling Los Angeles Angels, igniting speculation about his next move.

Donovan Walton’s latest stop has turned into one of those baseball stories that makes you do a double take.

A year ago, Walton was in the mix with the Mets as a minor league free agent trying to crack the club out of camp. He never got there. He didn’t log any major league playing time for New York, and after that he was traded to the Philadelphia Phillies, where he appeared in 2 games and hit .125.

Now he’s putting up a line nobody would have expected from a player with that kind of recent track record. Walton is hitting .319 with a .354 on-base percentage and a .505 slugging percentage for the Los Angeles Angels, yet he was designated for assignment by MLB’s worst team to clear room for Mike Trout’s return from the injured list.

That’s the kind of move that makes the “who for” part easy to understand. The “who instead” is where it gets interesting.

Walton’s production is outrageous considering his history. He’s had multiple seasons and stops with several major league teams while batting under .200, so this kind of breakout was never exactly on the bingo card.

But the Angels, sitting where they are, aren’t in a position to get overly picky. And from their perspective, Walton wasn’t worth forcing someone else off the active roster, even if he ends up being one of the more dramatic late bloomers the league has seen.

He’s also not the only former Mets player to pass through Orange County this season. Nick Madrigal, who was projected for a similar utility role last year, was designated for assignment while hitting .273/.385/.295. A spring training injury ended his season before he could compete for a spot, and he has since signed a minor league deal with the Tampa Bay Rays.

Walton could wind up in that same kind of landing spot. Craig Kimbrel and Austin Slater, two other random Mets from this year, both moved on from New York to Tampa.

If anyone is going to find a way to turn Walton’s unexpected surge into something useful, it might be Tampa Bay or maybe the Los Angeles Dodgers. One of those teams could figure out a fit and let him keep rolling.

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