With Pete Alonso and Edwin Diaz headed into free agency on the heels of a season where the Mets shockingly missed the postseason, it goes without saying that some significant changes will be coming to the Mets’ roster this winter. Much of the focus, naturally, has been on potential additions, whether that’s bringing back Alonso and Diaz or making a splash in the starting pitching market. There’s also been plenty of talk regarding players the Mets could look to part ways with on the trade market, however, and today Jeff Passan of ESPN made clear that two more names are available on the Mets’ roster: outfielder Brandon Nimmo and right-hander Kodai Senga.
Nimmo, 33 in March, is a somewhat surprising trade candidate due to the many complications surrounding a potential deal. The veteran has spent all ten seasons of his MLB career in Queens and has a no-trade clause. Nimmo would have to agree to any trade, which would naturally limit his suitors. While hardly an albatross, his contract isn’t exactly appealing, either. Nimmo has five years left on the eight-year, $162MM contract he signed with the Mets during the 2022-23 offseason. Just over $101MM of that money has yet to be paid out, and it’s hard to imagine Nimmo approaching five years and $101MM in free agency this winter if he was a free agent.
That would likely leave the Mets in a position where they would need to pay down a significant portion of Nimmo’s contract in order to facilitate a deal. Nimmo has been generally productive throughout his time in New York but has watched his numbers fall off a bit over the past two seasons. Since the start of the 2024 campaign, he’s slashed a combined .244/.326/.418 with 48 homers and 52 doubles, a 22.7% strikeout rate against a 9.8% walk rate, and a wRC+ of 111. He’s been worth 5.8 WAR according to Fangraphs and 5.1 WAR according to Baseball Reference over the past two years. While he was once a capable center fielder, his defense has dropped off enough that he’s more of a roughly average glove in a corner outfield spot, with -1 Outs Above Average and +3 Defensive Runs Saves in outfield this season with him starting 146 of his 147 games in the field out in left.
A two-to-three win corner outfielder is certainly something plenty of teams could use, and Nimmo does deserve acknowledgement for his reliability. Outside of his 32-game debut season in 2016, Nimmo has never posted a wRC+ below 108. Injury woes early in his career have subsided as well, and he’s played in at least 150 games with at least 650 plate appearances in each of the past four years. That four year stretch has seen him average 22 homers, 28 doubles, and a 10.2% walk rate against a 21.0% strikeout rate. With an above average track record in the outfield, he’ll surely be appealing to teams if the Mets were willing to pay down enough of his salary to make the inevitable decline as Nimmo enters his mid-to-late 30s easier to stomach.
Finding a fit for Nimmo’s services depends entirely on how much money the Mets would be willing to eat and where Nimmo would be willing to be traded. The Royals and Guardians are two of the teams most desperately in need of outfield help in the game, but they operate with small budgets and may not be the sort of consistent contender a veteran like Nimmo would surely prefer to play for. The Phillies have money to spend, a hole in the outfield, and recent success, but it would be a shock to see the Mets trade a franchise stalwart to one of their biggest rivals. Perhaps the Yankees would be a fit as they look for outfield help, though the club may simply prefer to re-sign Cody Bellinger or Trent Grisham rather than bring Nimmo into the fold.
As for Senga, the mercurial right-hander has already been known to be garnering interest on the market, though the Mets’ level of interest in moving hasn’t been clear. Passan reports that the righty is “extremely available,” however, and adds that multiple executives expect him to be traded this winter. The Orioles, Cubs, Red Sox, Blue Jays, and Padres are on a long list of teams known to be looking for starting pitching help this winter, and any could make sense as trade partners for the Mets if they do decide to move Senga. The two years and $28MM guaranteed remaining on Senga’s contract could make him a particularly intriguing fit for teams hoping to fill a rotation spot on a budget like San Diego.
While the Mets are expected to add to their rotation rather than subtract this winter, room will need to be made in the rotation mix for external additions as well as up-and-coming youngsters like Nolan McLean and Brandon Sproat. That’s enough to make a Senga trade worth thinking about for the front office, especially given the highs that could make him enticing to suitors have been matched by equally distressing lows.
The righty sports a career 3.00 ERA and 3.82 FIP across three seasons in the majors to go with a 26.8% strikeout rate, but an 11.1% walk rate, struggles bouncing back from injuries, and the fact that he’ll turn 33 in January all raise questions about his future. Senga struggled badly enough in the second half this past year that he agreed to be optioned to the minor leagues in September and would only have been part of the Mets’ playoff picture if their rotation mix suffered multiple October injuries, suggesting that the organization had little faith in the righty at the end of this past season.

Could the Fish find Nimmo? (By trading a pitcher)
Step right up…..Who wants to help NYM clear some 8 figure older player salaries so it’s easier to pay some FAs they would rather have now (or put toward the Skubal fund)?
@cwsOverhaul
I thought Skubal was going to the Yankees…
To clear salary to sign Tucker or Bellinger? Yes, let’s see who bites on these aging players. I really doubt anyone is in a rush to help the Mets…
Ward plus prospects for Nimmo and senga
perry do NOT
I wonder what they’ll be used for
The Mets are reportedly the biggest financial losers in MLB, with estimated losses of around $350 million for the 2025 season.
In the offseason, the team fired hitting coaches Eric Chavez and Jeremy Barnes, pitching coach Jeremy Hefner, and bench coach John Gibbons while retaining Mendoza ( head scratcher ).
The future of their free agent star players Pete Alonso and Edwin Diaz are unknown as the Mets are currently in the luxury tax.
It was just announced that Jeff McNeil underwent thoracic outlet surgery. Now waiting for the next shoe to drop regarding Senga who was demoted to the minors and never brought back up even when the Mets needed a Win vs. the Marlins in their final Game when all they needed to do was win one for the Gipper.
The Bad News Mets are now the Bad Contract Mets. Lol
That’s a ludicrous “loss” number… where have you seen those financials being reported, Rob? Not saying it’s wrong, but *extremely* far-fetched at best.
Solid Financial Source Forbes
forbes.com/sites/peterchawaga/2025/11/10/mets-lead…
Thank you. Still unbelievable, then I see Nightengale attached to the story.
‘Nightengale noted that the financial losses are measured in “paper money” only, and that the $1.8 billion figure (League losses) does not really account for the growth that franchise owners are enjoying.
“It doesn’t reveal the financial growth in franchise value, record revenues, or that (Cohen) is worth $21 billion,” he added.
Whilst a ludicrously large and somewhat unbelievable sum, I also don’t doubt that Cohen would run in the red to field a winner. Alas, that did not happen this season… for 28 other teams as well. Thanks Rob.
Cohen can weather the losses. It seems he is more concerned with his Hard Rock Casino planned for the parking lot at CitiField. The bottom line is that the Mets are a poorly managed enterprise even though his franchise value is appreciating.
Gwynning there was a. Article about the teams that lost money this year of a total of 1.8b.
Showed the nets leading the way with losing 350m. No idea how accurate that number is but that’s where it coming from.
We can debate this all day Simmer, but I highly doubt the sums being reported. Besides, nobody outside of Cohen and a couple others *really* know, but they’re not bad businessmen. The summations being reported would be negligent beyond any reputable business practice. Hard to believe.
With hardly any visible numbers from teams it is hard to believe any reporting about losses.
Thigh with the Mets payroll after taxes it wouldn’t shock me if they lost money. 350m seems like too much though.
50-150m seems more like it but who knows.
I would even say Mets’ operating losses at $50MM for 2025 would be an extreme faux pas, but as what’s being suggested, who knows! Cheers Simm, go Pads.
🤙🏽😎
Nimmo’s contract was bad from day 1
8/162
Sweet baby jesus
Pete’s twice the player nimmo is and he couldnt even get more than 1 yr deal!
Royals must be making a call on Nimmo.
I’d be interested in Nimmo….if the Mets ate $60m-$70m of that contract.
Nimmo : What about Mets eat $55M of the remaining money and trade him to the Yankees for Will Warren and Jorbit Vivas?
Senga: Trade him to the Dodgers for Miguel Vargas, Kyle Hurt & Jose Ramos.
Old York
Do the White Sox get a say in what happens to Miguel Vargas?
@MLB Top 100 Commenter
No!
Senga in Colorado would be interesting.
lol Mets.
I really think the Mets would have to eat a lot of that Nimmo contract to move him.. if he is even willing to waive his NTC.
In a perfect world, they trade Nimmo and eat 40 million, then sign Grisham and he reverts to a .190 hitter.
Why do you say that. Grisham may get close to his number in free agency given by some dumb Axx team. Who would you rather in your team?
What’s crazy is how lights out Senga was until late July and the Mets couldn’t even get him back on track at the major league level. I understand giving one or two of the kids a chance while letting Kodai iron things out in the pen, but they called up 3 pitchers and then just dumped Senga without any cares about leaning on so many rookie pitchers to make a playoff run.
I’m not surprised they collapsed when they’re ran like that. Japanese players should be cautious signing with the Mets going forward.
Senga to the Padres makes some sense.
No idea what a trade would look like but perhaps the padres trade a pen arm and a prospect for him.
I feel like this is more narrative than actually likely to happen.
Seems every article or trade rumor will suggest the Mets will have to pay down on salary because of the owner.
Moving Nimmo odds a good idea if they can. Guessing he’s voiced his willingness to move if they’re entertaining offers. Never understood the years handed out in that deal for someone of his level, but $20M per isn’t bad for the numbers he puts up…right now. The last three years left on that deal is probably what will keep teams away and the years the Mets probably should’ve not offered.
Yusei San and senga San would feed families we need this badly take ward San we need Nimmo as well
I wish the Mets would go and refute this. It sends a bad sign to the players hey, if you don’t perform like we like, well off you go. Instead of hey you had a bad year it happens, lets rock it next season!!