After missing the playoffs this year, the Mets are poised to aggressively shake up their pitching staff this winter. Their starters posted a 4.13 ERA this year, good for just 18th in baseball, and that’s in part due to the cautious approach they took to building their staff last year.
After spending a massive amount to lure Juan Soto to Queens, president of baseball operations David Stearns seemed reluctant to engage the top free agent starters too aggressively and wound up focusing on mid-level and bounceback arms instead. Clay Holmes converted from the bullpen to the rotation, New York took a flier on Frankie Montas after a weak 2024, and the big addition was a reunion with Sean Manaea. The strategy did not work out. Holmes did fine, turning in a solid mid-rotation performance, but Montas barely pitched and turned in atrocious results when he did, while Manaea was limited to just 15 appearances and was moved to the bullpen late in the year amid his own struggles.
On paper, the Mets head into the offseason with a full rotation for 2026: Holmes, Manaea, and right-hander Kodai Senga are all under contract, and controllable arms like David Peterson, Nolan McLean, Jonah Tong, and Brandon Sproat give the team more than enough arms to fill out a rotation. McLean is widely viewed as a front-of-the-rotation caliber arm, but relying on him to be an ace after just eight MLB starts would be risky. Tong and Sproat are even less established with lower ceilings, and each of Holmes, Manaea, and Peterson fit better in the middle to back of a team’s rotation.
Aside from McLean, Senga has the highest ceiling of all the club’s starting pitching options. In 52 starts with the Mets over the past three years, he’s pitched to a 3.00 ERA and a 3.82 FIP with a 26.8% strikeout rate. Those are generally quite impressive numbers, and on paper it might seem like the Mets can count on McLean and Senga as a potential front-of-the-rotation duo for next year.
That only appears to be the case on paper, however. After a strong rookie season in the majors, Senga missed all but one start in 2024 due to shoulder and calf issues. He returned to the mound in 2025 and looked like his old self early on, with a 1.47 ERA and 3.24 FIP across 73 2/3 innings of work through mid-June. He missed a month due to a hamstring strain that brought that stretch to an end, however, and when he returned he looked like a shell of himself. He pitched to a 5.90 ERA with a 5.76 FIP across his final nine appearances of the year, struck out just 20.6% of his opponents, and walked 12.7%. He pitched into the sixth inning just once in that time, and failed to finish the fifth inning in six of those starts.
Things got bad enough for Senga that he was optioned to Triple-A in early September, a move that he consented to. Even at the club’s Syracuse affiliate, he struggled to a 4.66 ERA across two starts before his season came to a close in mid-September. Last month, MLB.com’s Anthony DiComo indicated that the Mets don’t know what to expect from Senga in 2026. Even if they had made the playoffs, Senga would’ve only been activated to the playoff roster if the club suffered multiple injuries to the rotation. It’s harder to know if a pitcher who will be 33 in January will bounce back than it would be for a younger arm, as well. Stearns’s postseason words on Senga weren’t exactly a vote of confidence, either:
“Kodai has had two very inconsistent, challenging years in a row,” Stearns said, as relayed by DiComo. “We know it’s in there. We know there’s potential. We’re going to do everything we can to help get it out of him. But look, can we put him in ink as making 30 starts next year? I think that would be foolish.”
So, with more starting pitchers than they have spots for and a desire to bring in more surefire options, would the Mets entertain a trade for Senga? It’s possible that a change of scenery could make sense for both sides. Senga could prefer to get a fresh start in 2026 with a club that can offer him a more reliable rotation spot than the Mets might be able to, and New York might see a trade as a way to bolster their pipeline of young talent during an offseason where they might look to get aggressive on the trade market to improve the rotation.
The Mets haven’t been a team concerned with posting sky-high payrolls under Steve Cohen, but if they do have a desire to cut payroll to a less extreme level this winter, then parting with a $15MM hit in luxury tax dollars could be attractive as well. On the other hand, Senga’s potential would be hard to part with. He’s clearly shown himself capable of being a front-of-the-rotation caliber arm as recently as the first half of this season. If the right-hander manages to get back on track elsewhere, it would be a tough pill for the Mets to swallow.
While Senga’s deep struggles and uncertain future might make the Mets willing to listen to offers on Senga, his potential might lead them to keep the asking price for his services quite high. Perhaps there’s a deal to be worked out with a team willing to bet on Senga and surrender a controllable position player at an area of need for the Mets, like first base or center field. The Red Sox stand out as one intriguing fit given Triston Casas’s own uncertain future and high upside, not to mention the rumblings that have connected Boston to Mets slugger Pete Alonso in free agency.
How do MLBTR readers think the Mets will approach Senga this offseason? Will they look to keep him in the fold, even as he approaches his mid-30s with no guarantees he’ll bounce back? Or could they look to move him this winter to bolster the roster in other areas and avoid that risk? Have your say in the poll below:

metzfan it would be completely moronic to trade him when his value is down
Are you talking to yourself?
CravenMoorehead not sure if he is or not
Gwynning! 🤙🏽😎🤙🏽
SoCalBrave replied x hours ago
Not sure you really need to write your username before commenting. Just here to help and stuff
metzfan also includes their name in the text messages they send. Can never be too sure lol
Who knows if his value is at a low point, Stearns could be unloading a falling knife.
So who’s this guy metzfan?
What, you worry?
This comment deserves more thumbs up! Well played my friend, well played!
It’s happening in a month.
Senga is injury prone and a major head case. Any tiny little thing that feels off with his mechanics and he becomes immobilized. He’s fragile and unreliable. The Mets should definitely trade him.
Is there any actual evidence that he’s a head case or is that just something that took flight on comment sections like this? He’s injury prone. Not a head case.
Joel
He’s had some weird quotes and it’s been reported that he’s oddly secretive with the team about how he prepares his body in the winter.
Let’s have the quotes, then. Bring ’em on…I haven’t seen even one.
Maybe has the Manny Ramirez off-season regimen of cartoons and cocoa puffs til January and then start hitting (or throwing in Senga’s case)
He fell apart in spectacular fashion. Call it ‘headcase’ or the ‘yips’ or anything that you feel comfortable with. But he had something wrong with him.
The “Something wrong with him” is that he pitched badly. Why are you so eager and so certain that his problem is psychological/emotional? Athletes never lose it for a time unless they’re a “head case”? Since forever, we speak of a good player having a “down year”. Are they all “head cases”? Was Edwin Diaz a head case in 2024? How about altered mechanics after the hamstring? A minor injury that he’s playing through?
Impossible to tell. But I never leave my suspicion at home, and my suspicions are rarely disappointed.
Reasonable questions but knowing Senga, who treats a hangnail like a spinal cord injury, it’s unlikely he has ever played through even the slightest boo-boo.
There’s actually zero evidence for your statement. If there is, be kind enough to let the rest of us in on your inside information. Ps: a previous post by a disgruntled fan on a website is not evidence.
Yeah, I’d agree with that. I’d say he’s a team player to consent to the option down to AAA. I’d also agree with others that they shouldn’t sell low.
Probably PTSD from receiving bad throws from the first baseman when he’s covering and getting injured as a result.
I follow the Mets to an unhealthy and pathetic degree and I have literally never heard of anyone labeling Senga a ‘head case’ much less a ‘major’ one. I suspect this post is ragebait or trolling.
Sir: on this site and also on the Just Mets site and NY Post site, there have been posters repeating the unsubstantiated slur that Senga is a “head case”. As I said, it’s taken on a life of its own. Your suspicion that my post is trolling is incorrect.
I don’t like it’s a slur, it’s an opinion.
Definition:
an insinuation or allegation about someone that is likely to insult them or damage their reputation.
I think folks might be referring to his statements he made after going back to the minors to figure out his mechanics. They were pretty honest and blunt from what I recall, just admitting he felt completely normal & healthy but was obviously still pitching poorly and was utterly flummoxed by it all. That’s all I have on this.
I have heard that he reports no physical problem. I haven’t seen a single quote of anything controversial that he’s said and he deserves credit for willingly going to Syracuse. Mostly Kidding: we can blame Senga for Hefner’s departure. No too long ago, Hefner had the rep of a guru…I guess Atlanta still thinks so.
I prefer the SNY post and this one occasionally, I read for amusement, can’t take much too seriously.
Following the Mets is a disease, I know.
No team is going to pay the mets the value of his ceiling, especially not after how 2025 ended up.
To move him you’d be selling very low, without a great return unless your eating a lot of his future contract.
I dont think even somewhat damaged goods like Casas would be available in a 1:1 trade for Senga without seeing marked improvement. Its be a ridiculous deal like Senga + a pair of low level prospects to get Casas with yoshida and his full contract attached coming back.
The best avenue would be seeing a better showing, even if in the minors, and moving him at the deadline next year having rebuilt some semblance of value. Runs the risk if he continues to stumble along you really get not much more than a lottery ticket for him.
I think they can get a similarly underachieving player with potential.
Senga is cheap at 15M per year and has 2 years of control with an extra year added in case he needs TJ surgery.
His floor as a #3 or #4 starter is worth the salary and the potential for a TOR arm is really valuable.
Is that worth 3 years of Casas? I think that’s pretty close
Based on his second half, I doubt his floor is a #3, and might not even be a #5.
They should listen. His injury history makes him a scary investment.
If that’s the case then he’s playing for the wrong NY team 🙂
If it’s a scary investment you probably won’t get a good return
People say this a lot, but it’s the difference between your team’s perspective and that of the other 29. You only need one to think he’s a good bet for you to get an offer, and 2 is enough for a bidding war.
That can be true but I feel like it’s more applicable for teams that spend less.
Silly flyer of an idea. They’d have to see so low on him, it’s an easy call to keep him and see if he can revert to what he was before the hamstring.
*sell
The 1.47 ERA and 3.24 FIP through June doesn’t even truly capture exactly how lucky this guy was getting, he was in trouble every inning.
13 starts with a 1.47 ERA is luck, no kidding? Every time there were runners in scoring position, the batter hit a bullet right at the third baseman. I remember each one. Thanks for reminding me.
“13 starts with a 1.47 ERA is luck, no kidding?”
No you can’t just pick any person and get a 1.47 ERA across 13 starts. Nobody said that.
The almost 2 full run differential between ERA and FIP say that he was getting lucky. It’s not my opinion so I dk what you’re skeptical about.
My opinion is that it looked like he was getting EVEN luckier than that and that it felt like he was in trouble every inning.
What are you talking about? He had a .199 BAA, .286 OBP, and .604 OPS in the 1st half and only one start in the 1st half after the June 12th injury. Can’t be in trouble every inning with a .286 OBP percentage because that means many innings no one was on base.
What are you talking about?
1.3 WHIP and 4.4 Bb/9
The WHIP you quote is for the entire 2025 season. We’re discussing what he did in the 13 starts before the hamstring injury. We all know he was awful after he came back. So, your argument is careless or maybe you just can’t admit you were off base to start with.
Oh my god you are desperate to be argumentative.
JUNE 1.11
JULY 1.21
AUGUST 1.31
I’m so so so apologetic for being 0.2 off but you dont have to manifest characterizations about me personally.
Keeping the players that have trade value and trading the ones that don’t have any trade value is the stupid behavior that has led them here in the first place. Maybe don’t keep doing that.
Can you give examples?
Guy put up a 3.02 era over 22 starts and you’re complaining
After June he had an ERA close to 6 w 12.6% walk and 20% k rate.
Do people read these articles or what?
I’m sure he’ll be fine
you mean after he was rushed back from injury? how many starting pitchers are in the majors after a lengthy stay on the IL with one outting that was 3 innings and pretty bad with 2 wild pitches in those 3 innings and a run in each of those innings.
They keep pushing him back too soon this past season and the season before which amounted to poor performance or another long injury stint.
In the 13 starts up to June 12th when he got injured covering 1B he had a 1.47 ERA. In the 7 starts after the ASG he had a 6.56 ERA.
You are saying that the 1.47 ERA was all luck and that the injury and rushing him back with 1 game of rehab had nothing to do with the 6.56 ERA after the ASG?
It’s a waste of time to discuss luck over a small period of time. The quick stats suggest some luck. His BABIP was .251, below his career .273. His HR/9 was 0.49 against a career mark of almost 1.00.
Like most players having good stretches, there was some luck involved.
They aren’t going to look to actively trade him. Maybe if a team makes an interesting offer but “you can never have too much pitching.” Also, its not an unreasonable $ investment.
Banished to the minors in September when the Mets were fighting for a postseason spot.
Not even called up for the final weekend in Miami when the Mets had to win on Sunday to make the postseason.
Senga is damaged goods and New York would be fortunate to get two minor leaguers for him. Anything else, then Santa Claus will be saying not “ho, ho, ho” but LOLmets on his trip from the North Pole.
Chucky you’re pathetic, get a life
Some people can’t face the truth.
More Montas what a ridiculous signing for 2 years of nothing. Don’t they watch the Yankees and learn from their mistakes? Lol Mets
I wouldn’t mind seeing a rotation of McLean, Sproat, Tong, Peterson, and Senga. Could add Manaea and make it a 6 man rotation, but I’d move Manaea before I move Senga. Holmes to the pen as the new closer. If Tong or Sproat don’t stick around for coffee after spring training you still have five. If both don’t, Holmes is back in the rotation and you go after a closer not named Diaz.
I’d still make a play for a pitcher and Skubal would be interesting. They have enough prospect pieces to make it happen and give back starters that would keep Detroit competitive. McLean and Skubal alone would get the required wins to win a WS.
If that is their rotation they are punting on the season. This only happens if they want to reset the luxury tax.
Isn’t Skubal going into his walk year? Price would be too high imo
The actual poll question and the question in the title of the article are very different. I don’t like it. There. I said it. Good night.
At 33 and those post June numbers are ugly. Mets will be lucky to get pennies on the dollar. Tampa will send some fodder over in a trade, turn Senga around for half a season then dump him for a former 1st rounder who’s scuffling who will then be the lynchpin for the Tampa infield for the next 3 years as he turns it around.
A Japanese player not on the Dodgers? What sort of witchcraft is this?
Ask the Cubs the same question lol.
The Orioles or Cardinals should try to trade for him.
Should they trade him and will they consider trading him are two completely separate questions. Typical article by Deeds. So very bad.
Hear me out: you include Senga along with Tong, Jett Williams and Mauricio to the twins for Joe Ryan and Griffin Jax.
Griffin Jax is not a member of the Twins.
Every MLBTR poll, the choice that is in the center of the two extremes wins by a landslide.
but only trade him if they get a strong return.
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I’m not sure that’s a relevant choice. He’s not expensive, but not quite cheap. With the way he finished, he’s a bit of a risk. And, as always, if a team that needs pitching, offers you one of their own, that’s all you need to know.
Mets should keep as many arms around as possible after last year. Unless they get a decent young arm back I’d hold
I think Senga has some trade value if the Mets send along some cash and package him with a prospect or two. The Twins might take him with a good young arm like Sproat, a mid-tier prospect like Morabito, and maybe $10M for Joe Ryan. If they can then get Senga straightened out over the first half of the year they can flip him for a couple more decent prospects in July.
Based on recent performance I’m hoping Morabito is better than mid-tier at this point.
Not unless/until they add 2-3 top of the rotation pitchers
Trading him this winter would be foolish as his value is just too low. I’d keep him and hope that they can get him fixed in Spring Training. He’s not a head case, he just seems to overthink things. He can be frustrating because he tries to nibble at the plate and throws far too many balls. By no means am I a pitching coach, but If he only trusted his stuff and threw strikes more consistently I think he’d be fine. Hitters have learned to lay off his forkball so he really needs to work on his mix more. He’s got good stuff, and 15 million a year isn’t overly expensive for a starter nowadays. Hopefully the new pitching coach can get him straightened out.
Really depends on the return. I think he’s worth hanging onto assuming whatever his issue was this year is resolved.
He’s cheap and has shown ace upside in stretches. And it’s good to have depth if they plan on going with McLean and Sproat in the rotation next year. A 6 man rotation might be the best thing for everyone next season.
Never understood the never sell low argument. His “value” is whatever combination of players in roles Mets need, salaries, age, contract length, etc. a trade partner will offer and the Mets will accept. If the Mets are offered a trade that they feel is more likely to achieve their goals than keeping Senga, they should make the trade. Teams try to improve their areas of need. Sometimes that means paying more (or giving up more) than you hoped. It’s a relentless march to improve.
There is no such thing as ‘selling low’ for a couple of reasons. The first being that no one knows what floor he’s getting off at. If he continues to pitch like he did post-ASG, then you’re selling high, even if you pick up half the salary. If he pitches like he did in the first half, then you sold low.
But not even the GMs will know for sure.
I think “selling low” is a reasonable common sense idea. Just means that players’ values fluctuate and his value is currently at its nadir. Imo, they should just hold and see if the new pitching coach can weave some magic with him…and Manea also.
The Tigers or Mariners should be interested in Senga if TPIR, as he’d profile as a very solid no.4 arm in their parks. Of course if I’m running the mariners I’m also trading Castillo (for a bat -bohm?) and putting Kirby on the market too (which should draw a great pitching prospect, a big bat and more)…
Senga is a delicate flower that is no longer reliable and I think he should be traded, whether his value is reduced or not.
Stearns saying Senga has 2 very inconsistent and challenging years in a row is a statement he could also make about himself.
Should they or would they consider it? Very different questions. Almost polar opposites.
Every team will consider trading any player. Should they trade him now? No. They would be trading him his nadir. If they want to trade him they SHOULD wait until the deadline. If he pitches well he will being more then than he will now.
They would be trading him his nadir.
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But you don’t know that. If his 1st half 2026 is the same as his 2nd half 2025, then he is worthless.
It’s funny how most of you have selective amnesia. Senga was leading the league in ERA until Alonso couldn’t make a routing toss to first. Alonso almost cost the Mets McLean with a similar toss. Senga, along with the Mets other pitchers, will be fine once Alonso is gone and the Mets get a first base with some skill. Stearns will play Nimmo at DH and move Soto to left. Bellinger is the best bet, because he can play CF and 1B. The Mets can play Vientos the other days at first and use Taylor at center when Berlinger plays first until Benge and Clifford are ready. Pete Alonso is not coming back to the Mets as a first baseman.
I’m with you, pursue Bellinger. But keep Alonso. His 125 rbis would be missed, big-time. Wonder if he’d consent to DH.
I think they are stuck with him, at least for now. The only way out would be to eat salary and find a club looking for a reclamation project to save money. Who that is? Maybe the Rockies, they need something.
I’m not a big Senga fan, it seems the best approach for batters facing him is to be patient and make him throw strikes. If he’s on he’s great but is not a pitcher you can depend on to go 6 IP per start. However he’s relatively cheap given the potential quality he brings.
Last season, he went from barely pitching in 2024 to a full season in 2025. I assume he hit a wall. We should be patient and build depth in case he continues to underperform. I don’t see how trading him will net a worthwhile return with Cohen’s deep pockets.
I’m sure that trash team in L.A will take him, and re-sign him to a 10 year fully deferred contract so they can keep filling their roster without penalties and screw over the rest of MLB!
There shouldn’t be a comma before “either,” nor should there be one before “as well.” Regarding the latter, I don’t get how you can mess this up and then get it right later on in the same article.