Mets Face Brutal Deadline Choice With Their Most Reliable Unit

As the MLB trade deadline looms, the Mets are eyeing a strategic trade of their bullpen ace Luke Weaver to bolster future seasons.

With the 2026 trade deadline now less than a month away, the Mets are staring at a very different kind of July than anyone would have guessed back in March. Instead of shopping for help, they may end up as one of the market’s biggest sellers.

And if New York is going to move one of its most valuable arms, Luke Weaver should be near the top of the list.

The Mets have built one of the best bullpens in baseball this season, and that relief group has been the one part of the roster that has actually held up. It gives them options, too.

Teams looking for help can ask about middle relievers, lefties, long men, set-up men, openers, and even pitchers with closing experience. In other words, almost every arm in the Mets’ bullpen could wind up in play if the price is right.

But Weaver stands out from the rest.

The Mets signed him to a two-year deal over the winter, and he still has $12.5 million left on the contract for the 2027 season. That extra year of control matters, especially with the kind of run he’s on right now. David Stearns and his staff are trying to shape the 2027 roster, and Weaver looks like one of the cleanest trade chips they have.

Since the start of May, Weaver has been the best reliever in baseball. That stretch has turned him into exactly the kind of deadline piece contenders covet: a veteran arm pitching at a high level with team control beyond the current season.

His turnaround has been dramatic. After giving up a two-run homer to CJ Abrams of the Washington Nationals in the eighth inning on April 30, his ERA sat at 6.00. Since then, he has thrown 25 straight scoreless innings over 23 games, allowing just 16 baserunners while striking out 33 of the 91 hitters he has faced.

He has also been especially tough on right-handed hitters, who are batting .097 against him with a .275 OPS this season.

Entering Sunday, the 32-year-old had a 1.1 fWAR, which tied for 10th among active relievers. He’s done more than just rack up clean innings, too. Weaver has repeatedly walked into messy situations and cleaned them up, and his left-on-base percentage is over 80% on the year.

He has been even sharper with runners in scoring position, holding opponents to a .136 average in those spots.

For a Mets team that has gone through what feels like a constant midseason shuffle, Weaver has been the one steady presence in the bullpen. If he keeps this going through the end of July, New York could end up with the best reliever on the market.

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