Three weeks after the trade deadline, the consensus among talent evaluators is that Mets GM Billy Eppler did well in bringing back top prospects that have added needed depth, though not necessarily potential star quality, to the farm system.
But the praise comes with a caveat: for the farm system to provide a base for sustained success in the coming years, which is owner Steve Cohen’s stated goal, the Mets’ front office is going to have to get creative in taking a surplus of position players and turning it into some quality pitching.
As it is, the infusion of talent has only steadied a system -- at least in the eyes of those who do the rankings -- that in recent years has lost blue-chip prospects via trades and big-league promotions.
MLB Pipeline and Baseball America recently did their mid-season re-rankings of farm systems, slotting the Mets at No. 11 and No. 14, respectively, the same as pre-season for MLB Pipeline, and nine spots lower for Baseball America, the only ranking that included Kodai Senga as a prospect.
And Keith Law, the former Toronto Blue Jays front office executive who ranks players and systems for The Athletic, had the Mets at No. 15 going into the season, and told me, “The Mets are still below the median” after their recent trades.
The reason is obvious in looking at how heavily the top end of their system tilts toward position players.
“They’d be a Top 10 system if they had better pitching,” said Jim Callis, one of the MLB Pipeline's analysts.
To which a rival team executive added:
“If the Mets are going to contend in the next couple of years they’re going to have to find a way to acquire pitching to supplement what’s in their system.”
That was the one criticism of Eppler’s deadline deals: he didn’t bring back any top pitching prospects. But evaluators don’t knock him for it, saying it’s smarter to get the best value, regardless of need, which seems to be what the Mets GM did in acquiring position player prospects, most notably infielder Luisangel Acuna from the Texas Rangers for Max Scherzer and outfielders Drew Gilbert and Ryan Clifford from the Houston Astros for Justin Verlander.
“I think what the Mets did was smart,” said Callis. “You would have preferred to get some pitching but if you try and force it you end up making lesser trades. Acuna and Gilbert are Top 100 prospects, and some of the Astros’ people think Clifford is a better prospect than Gilbert.
“So if you put Clifford in there too, I know from ranking systems that when you get two or three Top 100 prospects, that can have a huge impact.”
Others temper such optimism to some extent.
Law says Gilbert “can really play center field so he’ll definitely be a big-leaguer, but he’s probably a lower-ceiling guy overall.”
As for Acuna, Law says, “He should be a good big-leaguer for a long time but I don’t think he’s a star. He’s not Ronald.”
Whatever the ceilings of the new acquisitions, the depth could be especially valuable considering the Mets already have other highly-touted position-player prospects such as Ronny Mauricio, Jett Williams, Kevin Parada, and 2023 first-round pick Colin Houck, a high school shortstop that Callis called “a steal” at pick No. 32 for the Mets.
Callis said Houck slipped in the draft because more good college hitters were available than usual, stemming from that five-round draft in the Covid year of 2020, which forced more high school players than usual to play in college, and many teams seized on that opportunity.
In any case, add those prospects to rookies Francisco Alvarez, Brett Baty (“He’ll hit eventually,” said Law, speaking to Baty’s recent demotion to Triple-A), and Mark Vientos, and the Mets have plenty of flexibility to trade for pitching at some point.