The Mets’ rotation — and roster at large — has underwhelmed thus far in 2026. Mets starting pitchers rank 19th in the majors with a 4.24 ERA and are tied for the game’s sixth-highest walk rate at 10%. In particular, struggles from Kodai Senga and David Peterson have set them back. New York turned to Christian Scott for his first big league start since 2024’s Tommy John surgery yesterday against the Twins, but he walked five of the 10 hitters he faced and plunked a sixth before being lifted from the game in the second inning.
Will Sammon and Tim Britton of The Athletic report that at least for now, the plan is for Scott to make another start next week. The Mets have Peterson, Sean Manaea and Tobias Myers all pitching out of the bullpen right now and will work to keep them all stretched out, given the uncertainty in the rotation. If they end up needing a fresh arm — Peterson and Myers both threw 40-plus pitches in long relief yesterday — it’s possible Scott could instead be optioned to Triple-A Syracuse. Any of those more veteran options in the ‘pen could then step in for a start in Scott’s place.
Scott and young ace Nolan McLean are the only two members of the Mets’ rotation who can be optioned. The latter, of course, isn’t going anywhere. In the bullpen, only Myers and Huascar Brazobán can be optioned. The lack of flexibility, coupled with the Mets’ injured and underperforming lineup, prompts Britton and Sammon to wonder whether president of baseball operations David Stearns might eventually explore the trade of a pitcher to help bolster the offense.
Trades of any real significance are rare this early in the season, but there are a handful of notable April or May deals in recent history. The Brewers picked up Quinn Priester from the Red Sox last April, for instance. A year prior, the Marlins shipped Luis Arraez to the Padres in early May. As The Athletic duo points out, when Stearns was running things in Milwaukee, he acquired Willy Adames from the Rays in a May trade.
The Mets aren’t going to get a hitter of any note for Manaea or Senga with their contracts underwater. They could perhaps try to swap either for a hitter with a similarly undesirable contract, but that sort of player isn’t going to help turn the lineup around. The best version of the Mets would have McLean and Freddy Peralta atop the rotation, and the Mets parted with multiple top prospects to get Peralta this winter, so he’s not an early candidate to move. Clay Holmes‘ opt-out opportunity at season’s end tamps down his value.
Speculatively speaking, Peterson feels like the most logical candidate to move in that type of scenario. He’s a free agent at season’s end, earning $8MM, and currently working in the ‘pen. The 30-year-old lefty had a tough run of three starts before being moved into a long relief role, but he started 30 games last year and finished the season with a 4.22 ERA, 20.7% strikeout rate and 9% walk rate in 168 2/3 innings. He’s allowed one run over his past two appearances — a total of seven innings. He’s not going to net a controllable, established hitter, but the Mets could try to swap him out for a veteran bat with similar service time.
There’s no indication at this point that the Mets are actively seeking to ship out a pitcher and/or bring in another bat via trade, to be clear, but it’s worth keeping in mind as the season progresses. That’s especially true with star shortstop Francisco Lindor hitting the injured list due to a calf strain this week.
In place of Lindor, it’ll be just-recalled Ronny Mauricio getting most of the reps at shortstop, writes Anthony DiComo of MLB.com. The Mets could slide Bo Bichette over to shortstop on occasion, but DiComo notes that the club has been pleased with Bichette’s move to third base so far. Bichette has been charged with a pair of throwing errors through his first 210 frames at the hot corner but has generally corralled anything hit in his direction. Metrics like Defensive Runs Saved (0) and Outs Above Average (1) feel he’s been perfectly adequate during his foray into a new position.
Shortstop is a familiar spot on the diamond for Mauricio. The 25-year-old, who ranked as a top-100 prospect for years before injuries (namely a torn ACL) set him back, has logged nearly 3900 professional innings at the position. He’s healthy now and was playing all over the diamond in Syracuse prior to his recall, though he did spend more time (seven games) at shortstop than at any other position. Even if Lindor hadn’t suffered an injury, pressure to recall Mauricio was mounting. He’s bludgeoned Triple-A pitching so far in 2026, raking at a .293/.349/.638 pace (150 wRC+) with six homers and five stolen bases through 63 turns at the plate.
It’s not clear just how long Mauricio’s runway will be. The Mets haven’t given a timetable for Lindor’s return, with manager Carlos Mendoza telling reporters only that Lindor will “be down quite a bit here.” He’s looking at more than a minimum stint, but the Mets haven’t specified whether Lindor is looking at an absence of three to four weeks or something more appropriately measured in months. Regardless, the injury gives Mauricio a rare everyday opportunity with the Mets — something that’s generally eluded him in recent years as he’s sought to establish himself in the majors.

Bo is back, baby.
And How….
Bo at SS, Baty at 3b, Williams cannot be the closer, maybe put Holmes there and have a rotation of Peralta, McLean, Manaea, Myers and Scott, putting Senga and Peterson in the BP too.
No LINDOR = 2 Wins so far lol
Perhaps those rumors of a clubhouse rift between Soto and Lindor were more than just rumors
@rsox
If that’s true they better figure it the f out because there kinda stuck with each other for a while.
I think Holmes is needed as a starter. McLean, Peralta and Holmes are not changing roles or teams.
Senga is fine, needs to get his confidence back.
Peterson also fine. They both need to get starts.
Scott a nice stop gap measure but he shouldnt be getting starts in place of Senga or Peterson.
Manaea’s velo is off, he could be toast, and that is a big loss but have to stay confident in Senga and Peterson.
Mets pitching will get on track.
What’s not fine is David Stearns.
Senga’s fastball went 98 mph in his 1st start to 92 in his 3rd. The same happened last season. Somethings off with him.
Senga was throwing 97mph four-seamer in the 3rd inning in his last start against the Cubs on April 17th, was throwing 95mph in the fourth when he was pulled and missed his last start but he had his velocity into the fourth and only lost a tick or two.
He could be injured but if his elbow / shoulder is strong, Id say he gets it back on track as soon as he regains his confidence.
I feel like its the splitter he is losing confidence in and opponents are sitting fastball because of it.
Splitter is his out pitch.
Senga will get his confidence back once he’s DFA’d. Mets holding on to him only cos they may need another long man should they get rained out Saturday and/or Sunday.
Williams WILL be the closer.
Give the job to Kimbrel and relieve Williams.
Kimbrel thrives in the role, Williams doesn’t. If Kimbrel has anything left in the tank, you’ll get the most out of him if he is pitching in the ninth.
Teams that trail in the 9th don’t need a closer…
I don’t get why Manaea, at $25 million per season is coming out of the bullpen. Seems to be a fitting microcosm for why the Mets are so bad
The guy somehow lost 4-5 MPH on his fastball along with his other pitches. Tops out at around 90 MPH on a good day. Don’t know what happened to him.
He has “loose bodies” in his elbow. Reporters have stated that surgery was recommended but the player decided to let nature take its course, for now
1st in payroll
Last in standings
Didn’t realize the Phillies were 1st in payroll.
2nd in payroll, next to last in standings.
@100
Oh what a relief! Here i thought they’ve been a massive embarrassment and disappointment!
The fans keep sayin spend more to win more
Doesn’t always work does it ?
Maybe the Mets can put Christian Scott at first base till he figures it out!
What would Peterson possibly bring back, when he’s pitching so poorly? His trade value must be close to zero right now.
He is one year off from being an all star before he flopped. Some team may take a chance on him on a change of scenery for a decent utility player.
Mets need Skubal next year. They should entertain the idea of signing Peralta provided he does well by the end of the year. Tong needs to be groomed for the 4th spot. A rotation of Skubal, Peralta and McLean at the top three can battle almost any team right there.
Mets also need to say goodbye to Stearns. Thought I wouldn’t be saying this when they first signed him for GM duties, but he’s best working somewhere else like Tampa. The money wasted on players like Manaea, Williams, Polanco, Bichette, and then these bottom of the barrel signings is just ridiculous. He gets zero credit for Soto – that one is clearly the owners doing, and Peralta may be his only good move which is still TBD.
The only staples right now that I don’t see as touchable are Soto, Lindor, and McLean. That’s hard to digest when they have one of the top payrolls in the league and only three to show for it – one of them on a rookie contract.
Lindor is 32 with 5 years left on his contract. He’s more immovable than he is untouchable
His contract isn’t horrible considering his numbers vs other players. He hasn’t shown signs of aging. Not sure I’d want to move him anyway IMHO.
I am shocked at how badly Stearns has run this team given how he always succeeded in Milwaukee with less than half the resources. I thought the Mets might turn into a Dodgers situation with the money plus a great mind/org leading it, but I don’t think I have to worry about that anymore
It’s almost like he’s spending money just to make Cohen happy when they miss out on their targets like Tucker.
Cohen said they weren’t going to spend like a drunken sailor…seems like that’s all they’ve done with only one NLCS appearance to show for it.
Can the Mets bring back Jesse Winker, JD Martinez, and Iglesias?? Get some 2024 vibes going.
Taijuan Walker just got released
Taylor started AGAIN! Why does this imbecilic manager constantly start Taylor? Taylor stinks. Team will never win as long as he’s starting Taylor. Taylor is a sixth outfielder. Taylor can’t hit, and he’s not a major leader. What is the guy doing on the team? What is Mendoza still doing there as manager?
I love it !!!
Soto could’ve stayed a Yankee but his pathetic greed made him jump ship to a train wreck !!!
Mets suck