Former Mets Draft Pick Is Suddenly Back In The Spotlight

As Gavyn Jones emerges as a key player in Oklahoma's championship run, the Mets are keen on reevaluating his potential for the 2026 MLB Draft.

When the Mets took Gavyn Jones in the 18th round of the 2023 MLB Draft, they were betting on a left-handed arm with real two-way noise. The White Oak High School product had just put together a monster spring in Texas District 15-3A, winning MVP honors after hitting .490 with 12 doubles, 2 triples, 11 home runs and 16 stolen bases in 18 attempts.

On the mound, he was even more eye-catching: a 0.97 ERA across 79 innings, with 47 walks and 144 strikeouts. At 6-foot-2 and 205 pounds, Jones brought a fastball that sat in the low-to-mid-90s, plus a raw but projectable slider and changeup.

He didn’t sign with New York. Instead, after an initial commitment to Texas Tech fell through, Jones landed at McLennan Community College in Waco, Texas. His lone season there was rocky on the mound - 8 games, 4 starts, and a 14.54 ERA in 13.0 innings - but he also showed up as a hitter, going 48-for-177 and batting .271/.352/.458 with 3 doubles, 2 home runs and 1 stolen base in 2 attempts.

Jones became draft-eligible again in 2024 as a junior college player, but he went unselected. From there, he entered the transfer portal and joined Oklahoma.

His sophomore season with the Sooners was a mixed bag: 22 appearances, 1 start, and a 6.37 ERA over 29.2 innings, with 33 hits allowed, 7 walks and 28 strikeouts. He even made two more appearances as a hitter and went 3-for-3, which left him with a perfect 1.000/1.000/2.000 batting line and, naturally, a spot on the John Olerud Two-Way Player of the Year watch list.

That summer, Jones headed to the Cape Cod Baseball League and pitched for the Chatham Anglers. In 7 outings, 4 of them starts, he logged a 5.33 ERA in 25.1 innings, giving up 32 hits, walking 9 and striking out 14. When he got back to Oklahoma in the fall, coach Skip Johnson made the move official: Jones would be a full-time pitcher.

The results in 2026 were his best yet. Jones worked in 22 games for the Sooners, throwing 26.2 innings for the eventual College World Series champions and finishing with a career-low 4.73 ERA.

He allowed 24 hits, walked 17 and struck out 28. In the NCAA regionals, he tossed 2.0 scoreless innings against Georgia Tech, giving up 1 hit, 1 walk and striking out 3.

Then in the College World Series Championship Series against North Carolina, he delivered 2.1 more scoreless innings, allowing 2 hits, walking 2 and striking out 4.

In Other News...

Mets Just Sent Ronny Mauricio A Message Fans Can't Ignore

Ronny Mauricios path back to the Mets took another hit when the club needed infield help after Mark Vientos landed on the injured list. Instead of giving Mauricio the opening, New York turned elsewhere, a decision that speaks to where the organization sees him right now and how crowded the infield picture has become.

Mauricios major league stint has not matched the promise he has shown in the minors, and his production at the top level has been too light to force the issue. He has been sent back to Triple-A, where he can keep playing every day, but for now the message is clear: the Mets are not handing him a job, and the next step in his season will have to be earned the hard way. [Read more 🡒]

Mets 2027 Rotation Looks Closer Than Fans Think But One Need Looms

The Mets can already sketch a plausible 2027 rotation without squinting too hard, which is not something that has always been true for this franchise. Sean Manaea, Nolan McLean, Christian Scott and Clay Holmes give the club a mix of established arms and younger pieces to imagine around, while Freddy Peralta sits out there as the kind of proven starter who could change the whole conversation if the price ever lines up.

Still, the picture is not complete, and that is what makes the next couple of seasons so interesting in Queens. The organization has internal depth to consider, including Jonah Tong as a possible long-term answer, but the real issue is finding the kind of frontline starter that can anchor a postseason-caliber staff. However the Mets go about it, whether through the trade market or a bigger swing in free agency, the need for a true ace is the part of the rotation puzzle that remains unsolved. [Read more 🡒]