Mets Just Bet Big On A Draft Strategy Fans Know Well

With the New York Mets taking bold risks on their top MLB Draft selections, their strategy could redefine the team's future success.

The Mets spent their first day of the 2026 MLB Draft leaning into upside, and they did it with three very different bets: a pitcher with starter-or-closer intrigue, a bat many thought could go much earlier, and another arm coming off Tommy John recovery. That mix is exactly why the first day felt like a swing-for-the-fences exercise.

New York opened by taking Carson Wiggins 27th overall, a pick that caught some people off guard because most projections had him going later, somewhere in the mid-to-late second round. The Mets clearly had the money side of the draft in mind, and Wiggins fit that plan as an underslot choice. On the pure player value, it lands as a B.

Wiggins arrives with a 3.21 ERA over just 14 innings at Arkansas, plus a 5.8 BB/9 and a 12.9 K/9. The walk rate is messy, but the strikeout stuff is loud enough to make the profile pop.

If he develops into a strong starter, this pick looks better and better. If not, there’s still a path where he becomes an elite closer and still justifies the selection.

Wiggins said he is healthy and wants to start, though he also made clear he’ll take whatever role the organization asks for. He said, "I'm ready to go whenever"

He also said, "I would like to be a starter if that opportunity comes to me, but I'm going to do whatever they need me to do"

The Mets then made one of the more surprising moves of the day by landing Aiden Robbins at 92nd overall in the third round. Robbins had been floated by some as a possible first-round name for New York, so seeing him still on the board this late was a real twist.

That makes the pick feel like a win on value, even if the profile comes with plenty of questions. This one gets an A.

The concerns around Robbins are rooted in his swing and his ability to handle spin. Luke Vlahos of Amazin Avenue laid out the issue clearly: Robbins has a funky, steep swing that can look grooved at times, which could create problems against pro pitching.

There are also real doubts about whether he can recognize and hit spin. That’s the kind of information that can push a player down the board, even if the public-facing buzz says otherwise.

Still, the Mets were comfortable taking the shot in round three, where the downside is easier to stomach. The source material points to Munetaka Murakami as a reminder that evaluations can be wrong, even when the criticism feels loud. In that sense, this was the kind of round where taking a chance makes sense.

With their fourth-round pick at 120th overall, the Mets turned to Shane Sdao, a left-hander they’re hoping can get back to what he looked like before Tommy John surgery. Sdao missed all of 2025 because of the injury and posted a 7.03 ERA at Texas A&M this past year, but the Mets still saw enough to make him their next selection. That one gets a B.

Sdao’s profile is different from Wiggins’ in a few key ways. He wasn’t walking the park, posting a 2.5 BB/9, but he was getting hit hard.

He also struck out 10.4 per nine, which gives the Mets something to work with if the stuff rebounds. The catch is that his college sample was tiny - just 14 innings - so the organization is working with a limited picture.

Taken together, the Mets’ first three picks were all about risk and reward. Wiggins offers power stuff and role flexibility, Robbins brings a bat with real upside but real questions, and Sdao is a recovery bet with enough talent to justify the gamble.

Day one wasn’t about safety. It was about betting that the ceiling is worth the uncertainty.

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