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Mets Option Kodai Senga

By Steve Adams | September 5, 2025 at 12:38pm CDT

The Mets announced Friday that right-hander Kodai Senga has been optioned to Triple-A Syracuse. Catcher Francisco Alvarez has been reinstated from the injured list. New York also optioned catcher Hayden Senger and activated righty Wander Suero, whom they claimed off waivers yesterday.

Senga’s five-year, $75MM contract stipulated that he needed to consent to being optioned at any point, meaning he gave his approval for the move. It’s obviously a bit surprising at first glance to see a former Rookie of the Year runner-up with a 3.02 ERA optioned to Triple-A, but the Mets have been mulling this move in recent weeks as Senga’s struggles have mounted. He’s pitched to a bleak 6.56 ERA over his past eight starts and lasted only 35 2/3 innings in that time. He’ll bite the bullet and head to the minors as he looks to get back on track before the Mets’ overwhelmingly likely trip to the postseason.

SNY’s Andy Martino reports that the decision to option Senga doesn’t appear to have strained the relationship between player and team. He was included in multiple discussions on the possibility and ultimately “felt respected by the process and consented without issue,” per Martino.

The demotion for Senga coincides with the expected promotion for pitching prospect Brandon Sproat, who’ll reportedly make his major league debut when he starts Sunday’s game against the Reds. He’ll join a youth movement in a rotation that currently includes fellow top prospects Nolan McLean and Jonah Tong. That trio of rookies will join David Peterson, Clay Holmes and the also-struggling Sean Manaea as the Mets’ starters for the time being.

Senga has to spend at least 15 days in the minors and can only be recalled sooner if it’s to replace an injured player on the roster. The Mets surely want him to get multiple Triple-A starts to try to get back on track anyhow, but his results in Syracuse will determine whether he’s back to rejoin the rotation in the final week or so of the regular season — and in the playoffs.

While the recent struggles are notable, it bears mentioning that Senga started the 2025 campaign in excellent fashion. Through his first 13 starts, he posted an exceptional 1.47 earned run average, albeit with less-impressive rate stats (23.9% strikeout rate, 10.6% walk rate) and some more skeptical grades from metrics like SIERA (4.28) and FIP (3.25). A hamstring strain sent Senga to the injured list in mid-June, and while he tossed four shutout innings in his return to the big leagues just under one month later, his struggles began immediately thereafter.

If Senga were still feeling the effects of that hamstring injury, he’d likely have been placed on the injured list rather than optioned. However, it’s possible that he developed some bad mechanical habits while compensating for that injury. He’s displayed uncharacteristically poor command since the All-Star break, walking 13% of his opponents (plus another two plunked batters) and yielding an average of 2.02 homers per nine innings pitched. Prior to his hamstring injury, he’d walked 10.7% of his career opponents and surrendered just 0.81 homers per nine frames.

There are no real service time or salary implications with Senga’s demotion. He’s guaranteed the full freight of that $75MM sum regardless, and his contract stipulates that he become a free agent at its conclusion, even though he’ll have under six years of major league service time. Sending him to Syracuse doesn’t alter his window of control with the team — it merely provides him a lower-stakes environment to try to get back to his All-Star form.

The other side of today’s notable slate of transactions will see the astonishing return of Alvarez. The Mets’ catcher had been one of baseball’s hottest hitters since mid-July but tore a ligament in his thumb while sliding into second base. That injury occurred less than three weeks ago, and his health troubles were compounded when Alvarez suffered a broken pinky finger upon being hit by a pitch on his minor league rehab assignment.

That damaged thumb ligament will require offseason surgery, but Alvarez will remarkably gut out both of those injuries as he tries to help his club down the stretch. Alvarez, like Senga, was optioned to the minors earlier this summer amid some pronounced struggles but returned with a vengeance, hitting .323/.408/.645 in 71 plate appearances before his injury. He went just 4-for-19 with eight strikeouts in 21 plate appearances during his rehab stint, though he did belt a grand slam in his final minor league game prior to today’s activation.

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View Comments (44)
Post a Comment

44 Comments

  1. YankeesBleacherCreature

    2 hours ago

    Good for Senga and Stearns. I’m sure it wasn’t an easy conversation.

    17
    Reply
    • Acoss1331

      2 hours ago

      Now if only Boone could do that with his struggling rookies…

      1
      Reply
      • BadMojo

        1 hour ago

        Boone just gave you the middle finger.

        2
        Reply
        • ChuckyNJ

          4 mins ago

          Along with a side of LOLmets.

          Reply
    • CheddarBayJesus

      2 hours ago

      I’m sure they had a translator to make it pretty easy.

      2
      Reply
  2. Camikey

    2 hours ago

    This seemed impossible even two weeks ago but the whispers grew pretty loud these last few days. Once Sprout was announced as Sunday’s starter, this was inevitable.

    1
    Reply
    • Paleobros

      12 mins ago

      Hope Sprouts eternal

      Reply
      • Soto should bat first.

        14 seconds ago

        McClean, Thong, and Sprout

        Reply
  3. mlb1225

    2 hours ago

    Senga has allowed at least one home runs in seven of his eight starts since the break. Sad to see, but the Mets are playing better baseball as of late, and their rotation is in an okay spot with McLean, Tong, Peterson, and now Sproat in the mix.

    4
    Reply
    • JackStrawb

      27 mins ago

      Petey’s looking worse and worse, unfortunately. 4.96 ERA his last 12 starts, 7.56 ERA his last 5 starts. 4.55 ERA in June.

      He had a terrific July + his August 1 start, but once he passed his previous career innings high, 121, he’s been looking pretty bad. With his track record, it’s hard to believe he’s going to throw 170 innings in the regular season and another 30 in the postseason, and it doesn’t look like the Mets are pacing *any* of their starters for October. Not the three young guys, not Peterson, not Holmes, no one.

      1
      Reply
      • geofft

        5 mins ago

        Welcome back, sir. FYI, including minor league options (2023) and rehab assignments (2024), Peterson has thrown 148 and 144 innings these last two years. But I agree with the conclusion that IP total is at least part of the problem. As he approached those IP highs, his effectiveness seemed to be waning, generally. But it was hidden by the two gems he threw during that stretch.
        Given the across-the-board ineffectiveness of so many Mets’ starters, I’m beginning to winder if the league hasn’t simply caught on to or figured out what these pitchers were doing. If so, the Mets pitching brain trust might, perhaps, need to be more aggressive about changing things up as the season goes on.

        Reply
  4. Mets Era Thumping Soto

    2 hours ago

    Hopefully he works out his problems like Alvarez did in AAA and comes back better then ever.

    2
    Reply
  5. TellItGoodbye

    2 hours ago

    Well, now that it’s been proclaimed “overwhelmingly likely” that the Mets make it to the postseason, guess there’s no need to play the games.

    I’d say it’s very likely they don’t make it.

    3
    Reply
    • MeowMeow

      2 hours ago

      I don’t know how you can call being up 4 games (essentially 5, since they own the tiebreaker over SF) with just 22 left to play anything other than “overwhelmingly likely.” We play the games because extremely unlikely things can and do happen sometimes. Something with a 5% likelihood is going to happen about, you know, 5% of the time.

      6
      Reply
      • hottakesonly

        1 hour ago

        See ; 2007 Mets, 2011 Red Sox, 2011 Braves, 2009 Tigers…..

        3
        Reply
        • rct

          54 mins ago

          @hottakesonly: sooo, four examples from the last 18 years. You’re proving the opposite of the point you’re trying to make.

          4
          Reply
        • hottakesonly

          29 mins ago

          It’s the Mets so first off, it’s overwhelmingly likely. Second off, there is 4 examples of many. Third, hi again back for more?

          Reply
        • ChuckyNJ

          2 mins ago

          Hidden history: the 2007 Mets had a collapse that wiped out all traces of that suffered by the 1964 Phillies.

          Reply
      • Joel from NY

        41 mins ago

        Good for you to try to bring some sense to the previous poster. Some people just can’t fathom the meaning of probabilities.

        Reply
        • MeowMeow

          24 mins ago

          Joel: Some people in this world really seem to think that math is their enemy.

          Reply
    • Dorothy_Mantooth

      2 hours ago

      Overwhelmingly likely? Let the Mets implosion begin!

      Reply
  6. hottakesonly

    2 hours ago

    Hahaha.

    Reply
  7. This one belongs to the Reds

    2 hours ago

    The league caught on to something and he didn’t make the adjustment. Old story. We’ll see if he can do that now and get back to where he was.

    7
    Reply
    • rct

      45 mins ago

      I don’t think that’s the case here. Before his injury this year, he had 73.2 innings of a 1.47 ERA, 3.25 FIP, and 3.8 BB/9. Averaged 5.67 innings per starts and 15.9 pitches per inning.

      After coming back, in nine starts, he has 39.2 innings of 5.90 ERA and 5.76 FIP with 5.4 BB/9. Averaged 4.40 innings per starts and 18.3 pitches per inning.

      In my uneducated opinion, he’s doing something different since coming back from injury and it’s causing him to lose his location a little bit. Maybe he’s not fully healthy, maybe he’s favoring some part of his body and something mechanically is off. But I don’t think the league “caught on” to him so much as he started doing something different.

      Reply
      • This one belongs to the Reds

        33 mins ago

        That happens too. I saw that a lot after injuries, some favoring of a body part or not so much follow through throwing off command, velocity, or break on pitches.

        Reply
  8. Mr. McNasty

    2 hours ago

    75 million doesn’t get you what it used to.

    1
    Reply
  9. ShouldakeptBuck

    2 hours ago

    Sincere question….why does Senga stuff not translate to bullpen ?

    1
    Reply
    • Big whiffa

      2 hours ago

      You want to keep guys starting at all cost until it’s no longer feasible. Move him to the pen and he’s immediately one of the least valuable pieces on the roster as you can’t run him out there in high leverage situations

      2
      Reply
      • mlbnyyfan

        1 hour ago

        Acoss. Haha, Boone is just a puppet. Volpe is not a rookie and should have been sent down longgggg ago

        Reply
    • JackStrawb

      56 mins ago

      @ShouldakeptBuck

      He pitched out of the pen in Japan in 2015, iirc, and was open to doing so in 2024. I don’t know how this site handles links, so I’ll just quote from the MLB site. From Sept 2, 2024:

      “Whether they use me as a starter or in the bullpen, that’s up to them. I just want to be ready to throw as many innings as possible for the team.”

      The drawbacks are that at 32 he’s less able to get up and down the way he could in 2015, and as a feel pitcher his worst innings for his career are the 1st and 3rd innings.

      I think it’s more an issue that if he’s not pitching well (ERA over 6.00 since his first start back from the injury fr covering first base) then he’s not going to be any good out of the pen—and if they can get him back to where he was his first 13 starts this year (1.47 ERA) they’d want to get as many innings as they can from him, even if that means the Mets use him as something like a 3-inning Opener.

      —Great username, btw. They really should have. After Marte was thrown out at the plate in the 8/8 game against the Brewers Mendoza seemed genuinely surprised by the idea that Tyrone Taylor was significantly faster than Marte (29.3 v 26.6 fps), who in addition to being 36 was just off the IL for a knee injury.

      Buck (and every other manager in MLB) would have remembered that with Acuna in the minors, Taylor was the fastest Met and was sitting right there, on the bench, ready and able to pinch run. Amazing.

      1
      Reply
  10. Old York

    1 hour ago

    Yes, as expected… He’s really not that great…

    1
    Reply
    • rct

      44 mins ago

      Keep repeating it, keep being wrong.

      Reply
      • Old York

        34 mins ago

        @rct

        Guy’s being sent down. It seems you’re wrong. I’d recommend learning about baseball and understanding how to properly evaluate players instead of just being a fan. I gave up decades ago on being a fan and now watch for the skills being put on display.

        2
        Reply
        • Sourhaze

          16 mins ago

          Yeah no just beceause a guy who was really good got sent down has nothing to do whether he is really good or not. Doesn’t matter. What hes done proves he is pretty good and even willing to become better

          Reply
        • Old York

          13 mins ago

          @Sourhaze

          Yeah, keep telling yourself that…

          Reply
  11. simonkiller

    1 hour ago

    Some #1

    Reply
  12. mlbdodgerfan2015

    1 hour ago

    More risk to Japanese pitchers than once expected. Senga struggling but at least he’s having a much more productive season overall than Roki Sasaki.

    2
    Reply
    • JackStrawb

      38 mins ago

      Pretty remarkable for Senga to have thrown 8 starts with a 6.56 ERA and still have an ERA of 3.02 on the season. His results through 13 starts were extraordinary.

      It’s hard to know or even conjecture as to what Stearns thinks he’s doing, but it’s little different from what he was doing in June, July, and much of August, watching the Mets implode due to inadequate starting pitching, which in turn wrecked the bullpen, leaving the Mets with little realistic chance of snagging a first round bye as their 45-24 start vanished with a couple of months of .400 ball.

      And now? He’s been doing the bare minimum. Tong came up very late–as late as possible, really, and no one has been paced to pitch in the postseason. Senga and Manaea had nothing, Peterson and Holmes are gassed, but Stearns only made moves long after it was obvious, and somehow Sproat has yet to start in MLB. And his Deadline? Another dismal performance.

      1
      Reply
  13. hcmmike

    57 mins ago

    Rookie of the Year runner up means nothing…look at Miguel Andujar…

    2
    Reply
    • rct

      43 mins ago

      He also finished 7th in the Cy Young voting. Where did Andujar finish in the MVP voting?

      Reply
  14. Soto should bat first.

    55 mins ago

    Sean Manaea…
    Now….
    Please become prime Andrew Miller.
    You will love it. Just chucking for 2-3 innings at a time. Let it rip every time. Post-season headlines are waiting. Let it rip Sean.

    Reply
  15. bobbyvwannabe

    42 mins ago

    LGM!!!

    Reply
  16. YellowCleats

    39 mins ago

    He will have a grand return to the majors and pitch lights out when he returns to the majors. Just needs a few starts in triple A where stakes are lower and he can make adjustments. His prior pitching coach from Japan can also work with him there. The velocity and spin are still there; the location is not. That can be corrected in a conducive environment. He will get a head start on pitching in cooler weather too at Syracuse. Good prep for October

    1
    Reply
  17. Asfan0780

    18 mins ago

    Off-season trade idea severino and Tyler soderstrom for baty and one of their top pitching prospects. Mets get a pitcher familiar with new york and a possible replacement for Alonso. If not soderstrom also plays left field

    Reply

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