Marcus Semien wants to be ‘MVP-caliber’ bat in Mets lineup
Digest more
With every passing baseball season, Mark Vientos feels more at home in New York. It’s why he was happy to help the Amazin’ Mets Foundation hand out turkeys, boxes of stuffing and other Thanksgiving items to members of the community Friday,
With Brandon Nimmo headed out, the Mets can take a big swing to fill the hole in free agency, trade some surplus assets or fill the need internally.
The Mets could keep Vientos and use him as a DH. A right-handed hitter who makes hard contact, there is still plenty of upside. But there are plenty of holes in his game, even beyond defense. He chases too many pitches outside of the zone and doesn’t run the bases well. Still, the club still seems to value the power potential.
Semien was available because of his own offensive downturn and because he is owed $72 million over the next three seasons. Nimmo was partly available because of the $101.25 million he is due for the next five seasons.
In the aftermath of the Brandon Nimmo/Marcus Semien trade, former New York Mets first baseman Keith Hernandez thinks it's more important than ever to re-sign Pe
After an uneven finish to 2025, the New York Mets step into the 2025–26 offseason knowing they must correct last year’s flaws if they want to play meaningful baseball next October.
The New York Yankees could get revenge on the New York Mets for stealing Juan Soto last winter by poaching Pete Alonso from Queens.
You know that feeling when you’re watching your team cruise along nicely, maybe even allowing yourself to believe that this might be the night everything clicks? Yeah, well, the Mets had other plans on Friday night in Miami. What started as a promising 2 ...