The Mets and veteran right-handed reliever Luis García are in agreement on a contract, reports Joel Sherman of the New York Post. It’s a one-year, $1.75MM major league deal that can be worth up to $3MM after incentives, per Bob Nightengale of USA Today. García, a client of agents Larry Reynolds and Rosie Lopez-Herrera, still needs to complete a physical before the contract becomes official.
García, 39 next week, is a veteran of 13 big league seasons who’s pitched for eight clubs to this point in his career. He sports a lifetime 4.07 earned run average but has pitched better than that in the latter stages of his career; dating back to 2021, he carries a 3.86 ERA with even better marks from metrics like SIERA (3.55) and FIP (3.45). García split the 2025 season between the Dodgers, Nationals and Angels, combining for a 3.42 ERA. His strikeout rate (20.6%) and walk rate (11.2%) were both worse than average, but he induced grounders at a strong 49.7% clip and averaged just under 97 mph on his sinker.
While García almost certainly won’t sustain a minuscule 0.33 HR/9 mark and 4.7% homer-to-flyball ratio moving forward, there’s a good chance he can improve on last year’s command. He entered the 2025 season with a 7.8% walk rate across the four prior seasons, making last year’s 11.2% clip somewhat uncharacteristic. García’s roughly average swinging-strike and opponents’ chase rates would support a modest bump in strikeouts as well, though he’s now turned in a below-average strikeout rate in three consecutive seasons.
The Mets have now added three free agent relievers to the bullpen this winter, although García’s contract is obviously on a much smaller scale than those of presumptive closer Devin Williams (three years, $51MM) and top setup man Luke Weaver (two years, $22MM). García will slot into the middle-relief mix and figures to work lower-leverage situations than Williams, Weaver, A.J. Minter and Brooks Raley, although with 17 career saves and 117 holds, he’s no stranger to high-pressure settings.
With the Mets already in the top tier of luxury penalization, García’s $1.75MM base salary will actually cost the team $3.675MM. The additional $1.25MM worth of incentives, if unlocked in full, would cost the club a total of $2.625MM. Of course, if he maxes out his incentive package, it’ll likely because he’s pitched well enough to make the end-of-day $6.3MM price point well worth the cost.


WS BOUND!
I hope it’s the Houston Luis Garcia. Tough recent years with injuries but when he was on.. he was kinda nasty.
It says reliever in the first sentence, sorry to say 🙁
bet no one saw that coming…
Stearns at work. More coming.
Good pick up for the Mets. I wanted the Braves to take a flyer on him on a minor league deal if possible
If I remember correctly, he was working as a barber before the Phils signed him and brought him along. Seeing him pitching in the majors a dozen or so years later is rather awesome.
Always enjoyed him even as he created a lot of angst and worry…
I this guy not making the team
Take that Dodgers!
Not saying they don’t have a plan because I think they think they do.
But the roster construction is definitely interesting at this point.
If you’re a Mets fan, just gotta believe that there is a method to the madness. I think Stearns has a plan, just hard to see right now.
Didn’t Luis Garcia pitch against Luis Garcia last year?
He’s cheap and the Mets probably unlock more out of him, not bad.
Still waiting for Mets to get Skubal or Skenes to take down LA. They still need an ace.
Good pickup.
I like this move, very solid
Okay good, Luis Garcia (Astros) is still on the market.
Mets are ruining baseball
The funniest part of this is that Steve put “Right-handed reliever” in the first line to differentiate which Luis Garcia it was. It would be great if there were a couple more knocking on the door in AA
Guis Larcia is on line 2.
I still maintain that the MLB players union should adopt the same rules as the Actors Guild and force players to not use the same name as another player. Use your middle name or create a “stage name” to make it easier on the audience. 10 years ago there were 3 different players named Miguel Gonzalez at the same time and all had the same middle initial of A. Now, it is the trio of Luis Garcia (and the Max Muncy duo) that is just difficult. One can be Luis, one can be Lou, and one can be Louie. It just seems so simple to fix.
Cooperstown will be calling this guy in no time, mark my words