Edwin Arroyo returned to the playing field for the 2025 season with AA Chattanooga after his 2024 season was lost to a shoulder injury (and subsequent surgery), and the results were more or less what you’d expect to see from a talented player with that kind of rust. On the whole, he hit .284/.345/.371 with only a trio dingers on the season, but it wasn’t until the 44th game he played (on June 11th) when he finally launched one.
From that point until season’s end, he hit .296/.356/.402 with an 8.0% walk rate and minuscule 13.0% strikeout rate, and all that came from a guy whose work defensively has long been lauded as MLB-ready at the most important spot on the diamond. That’s precisely the kind of player who found himself all over Top 100 overall prospect lists prior to his injury, and it’s worth pointing out that he just did all that in his age-21 season at the AA level.
There’s still a ton to love about Arroyo, and clearly you all thought the same. He takes home the #5 spot in this year’s Community Prospect Rankings because of it, as you voted him there with nearly 35% of the vote despite a crowded six-person ballot.
I doubt Arroyo ever morphs into a 20 homer kind of offensive player, but if he keeps that K-rate so tiny you can barely see it, he’s got a hit tool and patience at the plate that could see him hit .280 with a .340 OBP at the big league level. That paired with pretty elite defense at shortstop is a very, very valuable player.
It’s hard not to look at the current state of the big league Reds roster and not think they’ve got Arroyo firmly in mind in the near term, too. He’s got the glove to rotate in at both 2B and SS, and his ability to switch-hit means he can provide another lefty bat in the lineup when needed. Given that they a) cut Santiago Espinal to leave the short a middle-infield defender and b) traded away Gavin Lux to remove a lefty bat from the 2B mix, Arroyo hitting his way from AAA Louisville into the regular Reds rotation at some point in early 2026 sure does sound like a feasible proposition.
Drury wrote on Friday that he plans to “retool” by possibly trading established players.
Coming off an underachieving this season and missing the playoffs last year, the Rangers are the only team with a losing record in the Eastern Conference past the midway mark of the NHL season.
New York has lost a season-high five games, entering its next game Saturday at Philadelphia.
The Rangers were booed off the ice at the first intermission of their latest loss, an 8-4 loss to Ottawa that was the team’s 17th setback in 22 games at Madison Square Garden.
Winger Artemi Panarin, New York’s leading scorer every season since signing as a free agent in 2019, does not have a contract beyond June 30, turns 35 on Oct. 31 and could be dealt before the March 6 trade deadline.
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — Vladyslav Vanat scored penalties in stoppage time of each half as Girona beat Espanyol 2-0 in a fiercely contested Catalan derby in La Liga on Friday.
It was the first time Girona has won three on the trot since November 2024.
The result lifted it into ninth place in the table. Espanyol remained fifth.
Girona had the better of the first half and went ahead on the stroke of halftime when Omar El Hilali was adjudged to have pulled Hugo Rincón in the box.
Espanyol goalkeeper Marko Dmitrović saved Vanat’s initial effort but the referee said he moved from his line before the kick and ordered a retake. Vanat made no mistake a second time, firing a perfect effort to the keeper’s right.
Both sides had chances in a busy second half but Girona took advantage of spaces in the Espanyol defense as the home side pushed for an equalizer.
With seconds remaining, Yáser Asprilla was felled by Rubén Sánchez and Ukrainian striker Vanat scored his second of the night to seal all three points.
“The decision to give the first penalty was very harsh,” veteran Espanyol defender Leandro Cabrera said. “There are a thousand similar situations that never get called back. We lost our patience. In the final minutes there was another penalty decision that killed the game. It’s a pity because the match was pretty tight. A draw would have been a fair result.”
The Sacramento Kings could see the return of their All-Star power forward Jan. 16 in their Friday night game against the Washington Wizards.
Kings forward Domantas Sabonis is officially listed as questionable on the NBA’s Injury Report, but the team expects that he will suit up and play against the Wizards, according to ESPN.
Sabonis, a three-time All-Star, has missed the previous 27 games for the Kings with a partially torn meniscus.
He only appeared in 11 games so far this season, averaging 17.2 points and 12.3 rebounds.
In recent days, Sabonis was seen participating in shootaround during practices. Signs indicate he’ll rejoin the court with the Kings soon. And at a good time, too.
They’ll also get back Dennis Schroder, who missed that three-game stretch of wins after being suspended by the league for an altercation with Lakers’ star Luka Doncic after a Dec. 28 game at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles.
Sabonis trade market, contract status
Sabonis, in his 10th NBA season and year five in Sacramento, could be on the trade market.
According to ESPN, Kings general manager Scott Perry has been “open to discussing trades for all their veterans with high-priced deals” as the team shifts its focus towards a rebuild.
Sabonis’ remaining contract includes three years and $136.3 million.
He signed a four-year, $186 million contract extension with Sacramento as part of a renegotiation-and-extend on July 6, 2023.
President of Baseball Operations Chaim Bloom has said that he wants to add a veteran arm to the St. Louis Cardinals pitching staff. According to a new report, that might be free agent pitcher Griffin Canning who the Cardinals have been in contact with.
MLB Trade Rumors just dropped the word that the St. Louis Cardinals, the Chicago White Sox and the New York Mets are interested in Griffin Canning. That’s apparently based on a report by John Heyman of the New York Post. He spent several seasons in the Los Angeles Angels organization before signing a one-year deal with the New York Mets last season. He suffered a a torn Achilles tendon which cut his season short. Before that setback, he had greater than 55% groundball rate and decent strikeout and walk rates, too.
Griffin Canning was drafted by the Colorado Rockies in the 38th round of the 2014 MLB June Amateur Draft from Santa Margarita Catholic High School and later by the Los Angeles Angels in the 2nd round of the 2017 MLB June Amateur Draft from University of California, Los Angeles. He has a major league record of 32-37 for his career with an ERA of 4.65.
Assuming that Griffin is fully recovered from his Achilles injury, you’d have to think he would be a prime bounce-back candidate and/or trade deadline arm. He might just be the affordable veteran arm that Chaim Bloom said he would welcome.
Kyle Tucker hits a home run for the Chicago Cubs last year. He’s joining the Dodgers on a $240-million contract. (Nam Y. Huh / Associated Press)
Using a playbook familiar to their front office, the Dodgers waited until the market for slugging outfielder Kyle Tucker dwindled before making him an offer short on duration but generous in dollars.
The result is the defending two-time World Series champion plugged the only hole in its lineup with another superstar — one regarded by many analysts as the prize of this free agency class. The contract Tucker agreed to Thursday night is for $240 million over four years, with a $64-million signing bonus and $30 million deferred. He also will be able to opt out of the deal after the 2027 and 2028 seasons.
It’s a major development that caused immediate consternation throughout baseball. The Dodgers are in a league of their own when it comes to spending on payroll.
Or as ESPN analyst Jeff Passan put it: “Fans feel like this game is unfair.”
To which Times columnist Bill Plaschke wrote, “So what? Who cares? If three consecutive titles blows up the game, so be it. The Dodgers’ only responsibility is to their fans, and they have more than fulfilled their civic duty, and that’s all that matters.”
Kyle Tucker rounds the bases after homering for the Cubs during Game 4 of National League Division Series against the Milwaukee Brewers. (Nam Y. Huh / Associated Press)
Projections early in the offseason put offers for Tucker at around $400 million over 10 years, but the only team that reportedly entertained a deal that long was the Toronto Blue Jays. The New York Mets made an offer close to that of the Dodgers, but Tucker opted for L.A.
The Dodgers employed similar strategy in snaring first baseman Freddie Freeman and starting pitcher Blake Snell in recent years and closer Edwin Díaz last month, patiently allowing media hype to dissipate and waiting out the market before pouncing with short-term offers at astronomical yearly salaries.
The average annual value (AAV) of Tucker’s contract as calculated by Major League Baseball will be a record $57.1 million, blowing past the previous highs set by the Mets’ Juan Soto ($51 million) and the Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani ($46.06 million) the last two offseasons.
Ohtani is now Tucker’s teammate, as are amply paid stars Mookie Betts, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Will Smith, Tyler Glasnow, Roki Sasaki, Freeman and Snell. And on and on. The Dodgers’ estimated competitive tax payroll of $402.5 million is more than the combined spending of the A’s, Tampa Bay Rays, Cleveland Guardians and Miami Marlins.
Who do the Dodgers have to thank for such largess?
Start with Ohtani. When the two-way star signed a record 10-year, $700-million deal two years ago, he agreed to take home a paltry $2 million a year and defer the remaining $68 million. That covers Tucker’s salary and then some.
Don’t forget the $8.35-billion, 25-year TV deal with Time Warner Cable (now Spectrum) in 2013 that created the Dodgers’ SportsNet LA channel. Meanwhile, many teams have seen their TV revenue drastically reduced.
The settlement also approved the sale of the Dodgers from Frank McCourt to Guggenheim Baseball Management, the group fronted by Magic Johnson and run by Mark Walters that has greenlighted the lavish payroll spending.
The Dodgers celebrate after winning Game 7 of the World Series over the Blue Jays in Toronto last fall. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
And be sure to thank the fans who pack Dodger Stadium at each of the 81 home games, spending on parking, concessions and merchandise in addition to increasingly expensive tickets. Attendance last year was 4,012,470, a Dodgers record, the highest in MLB and nearly 600,000 more than the next-highest attendance, that of the San Diego Padres. The Dodgers averaged 49,537 fans per home game.
The response around baseball to Tucker’s contract was as shrill as it was predictable. Cries for a salary cap when negotiations begin for a new collective bargaining agreement at season’s end peppered social media. Some even advocated owners locking out the players if they don’t agree to level the hot-stove playing field.
Anything to stem the spending of a franchise enjoying a revenue model that enables it to spend on salaries unchecked while breaking no rules.
“The Dodgers theoretically aren’t doing anything wrong,” ESPN analyst Chris “Mad Dog” Russo said Friday on “The Dan Patrick Show”. “But the rules have to change. This is getting to be a joke.”
Russo then proceeded to list the reasons players gravitate to Chavez Ravine: “Play in L.A. Winning team. Great organization. Good weather. Have a chance to be in the World Series every year.”
Under baseball’s rules, the Dodgers are punished financially for their gleeful spending. Competitive balance taxes — also known as luxury taxes — are imposed when payrolls reach certain thresholds. The Dodgers have blown past the highest level and must pay 110% of every dollar they spend above $304 million, meaning their commitment to Tucker will cost them $500 million — $240 million to the player and roughly $264 million to MLB in taxes.
By any measure that is a lot to pay a player who batted a ho-hum .266 with 22 home runs, 73 runs batted in and 25 stolen bases in an injury-marred 2025, his lone season with the Chicago Cubs. Tucker was a three-time All-Star during seven seasons with the Houston Astros.
What does MLB do with the luxury tax revenue? Half is distributed to small-market teams, ostensibly to increase their spending on salaries.
Tony Clark, executive director of the players union, concedes that the system might need tinkering but is adamantly opposed to a salary cap.
“We just completed one of the greatest seasons in MLB history, with unprecedented fan interest and revenues,” he told The Times’ Bill Shaikin. “While the free agent market is far from over, it is gratifying to see players at all levels being rewarded for their incredible accomplishments by those clubs that are trying to win without excuses.”
Commissioner Rob Manfred, who will sit across the negotiating table from Clark when a new CBA is hammered out a year from now, is careful not to cast blame on the Dodgers while acknowledging that other teams and their fans are frustrated.
“The Dodgers are a really well-run, successful organization,” Manfred said during the team’s spending frenzy a year ago. “Everything that they do and have done is consistent with our rules. They’re trying to give their fans the best possible product. Those are all positives.
“I recognize, however — and my email certainly reflects it — there are fans in other markets concerned about their team’s ability to compete. We always have to be concerned when our fans are concerned about something. But pinning it on the Dodgers? I’m not in that camp.”
And if CBA negotiations reach an impasse and players indeed are locked out and go unpaid until they return, Tucker’s contract provides a hedge for that as well — $54 million of his signing bonus is payable now.
When the Mets agreed to a deal with Bo Bichette barely more than 12 hours after losing out on Kyle Tucker, it was easy enough to deem it a panic move by David Stearns, a quick pivot to lock up the best pure hitter remaining on the free agent market, even if he wasn’t an ideal fit defensively.
But the more I heard about the signing of Bichette on Friday from scouts and executives, the more it seems only fair to give kudos to Stearns for signing a proven clutch hitter who could have a huge impact on the Mets’ often exasperating offense, and for being prepared to do it so quickly.
“That doesn’t happen unless Stearns had already laid the groundwork for a deal,” was the way one executive put it. “I know Mets fans are down on him, but you have to give him credit. As much as they wanted Tucker, Stearns was ready when it didn’t happen. I’m sure Bichette was on their radar. He only turns 28 next year.”
Fair enough. Especially with reports out of Philadelphia that the Phillies were ready to sign Bichette to a long-term deal before the Mets swooped in with their short-term offer of $42 million per year for three years, with opt-outs after each of the first two seasons.
That alone, taking Bichette away from the hated Phillies, should move the needle for some Mets’ fans.
I’m not saying Stearns is suddenly off the hook for this mostly disappointing offseason. As I wrote Thursday night, letting Pete Alonso walk will never completely make sense to me, especially when he’d made it clear he was willing to transition into the DH role.
And the Mets still haven’t addressed their top priority of the winter, the need to upgrade their starting rotation.
But the signing of Bichette at least offers hope and intrigue for what else Stearns may do in the coming weeks, as well as serves as a reminder that he deserves the entire offseason before passing judgment, even if this baseball winter seems even more endless than usual.
That said, the Bichette signing comes with a lot of moving parts. Defensively, he ranked at the very bottom, range-wise, among shortstops, according to MLB Statcast defensive metrics, so it remains to be seen how he’ll do at third base.
Nov 1, 2025; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Blue Jays designated hitter Bo Bichette (11) throws to first for an out against Los Angeles Dodgers second baseman Tommy Edman (25) in the eighth inning during game seven of the 2025 MLB World Series at Rogers Centre. / John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images
At least from afar, he doesn’t fit the Stearns narrative of making run-prevention a priority, and he also displaces Brett Baty, who could now be something of a super-utility man, perhaps splitting time with Jorge Polanco at first base, or be used as a trade chip for pitching.
On the other hand, Bichette may be just what the Mets need to bring more consistency to their offense, especially in clutch situations.
His overall numbers during his years in Toronto with the Blue Jays make it clear that he has been one of the better hitters in baseball, but what jumps out in looking at his numbers is how he has excelled in the clutch.
For example, in 771 career plate appearances with runners in scoring position, he has hit .330 with a .527 slugging percentage and a .904 OPS.
That’s no small sample size.
Even more impressively, in 301 plate appearances with RISP and two outs — the ultimate clutch situation — Bichette has hit .310 with a .531 slugging percentage and a .904 OPS.
He also has a career .318 batting average with an .890 OPS in what Baseball-Reference defines as high leverage situations.
For a Mets’ team whose RISP failures often seemed to overshadow whatever individual numbers players were putting up in recent years, Bichette could be an important difference-maker.
And two scouts I spoke to say those numbers reflect what they’ve observed about him over the years.
“He’s a gamer you want at the plate in big spots,” said one scout. “He can hit elite pitching.”
Added the other: “He’s a very good situational hitter, especially in run-producing at-bats, because he understands how pitchers are trying to get him out and he makes adjustments in the box. He’s a smart hitter.”
In addition, scouts and execs said Bichette will be a better fit in New York than Tucker would have been.
“Bichette grew up as a big leaguer’s son,” said one exec, referring to his father, Dante Bichette. “Everything you hear is that he’s a good clubhouse guy who brings day-to-day intensity to the field and really burns to win. What you hear about Tucker is that he may not have been a good fit in New York because he’s a low-key guy.’’
So who knows, maybe losing out on Tucker will turn out to be a blessing in disguise for the Mets.
Of course, they’re only guaranteed one year of Bichette, as they gave him opt-outs after the first and second year of his contract. But if he wants to opt out of $42 million per year next winter, it will mean he had a great season and will still be young enough for Stearns to justify giving him a longer-term deal.
In any case, Bichette certainly seems like a step in the right direction toward helping Mets fans move on from all that has gone wrong this offseason while finally creating some enthusiasm for the 2026 season.
Still, Stearns has more work to do, obviously. The Mets still need an outfielder, and most importantly, they need to upgrade the starting rotation. They’ll lose a draft choice by signing Bichette, because he turned down the Blue Jays’ qualifying offer, which might make it less likely that they’ll sign Framber Valdez, another free agent attached to a QO.
Can Stearns make a trade with his old team, the Milwaukee Brewers, for Freddy Peralta? The right-hander is available, one year away from free agency, and he’d give the Mets a top-of-the-rotation presence to go with Nolan McLean and what otherwise looms as a lot of question marks.
With that in mind, signing Bichette won’t change the complexion of this offseason by itself. But for Stearns, it was a win he desperately needed.
Before contemplating Bichette’s fit in Queens, let’s take a second to acknowledge the futility of forecasting free agency. If we’ve learned anything from the past week of head-spinning transactional activity, it’s that attempting to gauge which teams are “in the lead” or “considered favorites” for a free agent is a fool’s errand. The reality is that when only a handful of clubs are considering spending at the top of the free-agent market, each successive agreement immediately shakes up the state of play. We saw it earlier this week with the Red Sox responding to losing Alex Bregmanby signing starting pitcher Ranger Suarez instead, and now we’ve seen it with the New York Mets whiffing on a much-needed outfielder and pivoting to an infielder who doesn’t fit their depth chart at first glance but most certainly makes them a better team.
But the Mets’ proposal — a scaled-down version of what they offered Tucker, a reported four-year, $220 million deal — was evidently too enticing for Bichette to turn down, and it’s a reminder of owner Steve Cohen’s unique willingness to spend exorbitantly when the right opportunities arise. Most crucially, the deal features opt-outs after the first two seasons. For a player who is still firmly in his prime — Bichette turns 28 in March — the sky-high AAV ($42M!) combined with the chance to reenter what projects to be a shallow free-agent class in either of the next two offseasons was apparently reason enough to take a short-term stint in Queens rather than putting down roots in Philadelphia.
Making sense of the Mets’ seemingly sudden interest in Bichette is its own compelling exercise. Focus on Bichette the hitter, and it comes as no surprise that his special bat would appeal to a team amid a drastic lineup overhaul, having watched three longtime mainstays in Pete Alonso, Brandon Nimmo and Jeff McNeil depart via trade or free agency. The Mets added Marcus Semien in the Nimmo trade and signed Jorge Polanco, but it was hard to argue that those two additions were remotely enough to replace the production lost.
Adding Bichette, who has been at least 20% better than league average at the plate in all but one (his injury-marred 2024) of his seven major-league seasons goes a long way toward quelling those concerns. His rare ability to blend terrific contact skills with plus power should only be enhanced by sharing a lineup with another disciplined hitting savant in Juan Soto, just as it was in Toronto with Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Add the bonus of snagging him at the last minute from the division-rival Phillies, and the Bichette signing is that much more satisfying for New York.
The defensive fit, meanwhile, invites more questions.
A shortstop for essentially his entire professional career, Bichette’s defensive outlook has been a hot topic throughout his free agency, considering how poorly his glove rated by nearly every advanced metric in 2025. The widespread assumption was that Bichette would soon make the move to second base, a transition many former shortstops have made and a sensible adjustment considering his prior experience at the position in the minor leagues and during the World Series. There were occasional hints that Bichette would perhaps consider a move to third base, but when surveying the landscape for potential fits — and considering Bichette’s below-average arm — a slide to second seemed more likely.
Or not. All reports indicate Bichette is indeed going to man the hot corner for the Mets, a position at which he has zero professional innings in the majors or minors. Shortstop was obviously not happening; that Francisco Lindor fellow is still pretty good. Playing Bichette at third in deference to Semien, still an elite defender at second base and a familiar face for Bichette, who shared the infield with him in Toronto in 2021, seems reasonable.
But it’s an enormous bet on Bichette’s work ethic and the coaching infrastructure, including new bench coach and noted infield guru Kai Correa, to turn him into a reliable defender at a brand new position. And the pressure is only heightened by the fact that another such process is taking place with Polanco, who is expected to handle first base for the first time in his career. That these transitions will both occur after president of baseball operations David Stearns touted an organizational priority to improve on defense this offseason is questionable but certainly intriguing.
Beyond Bichette’s outlook on defense, there’s also the matter of the player he’s displacing. That’s 26-year-old Brett Baty, who, after a slow burn of development since his first-round selection by the Mets out of a Texas high school in 2019, finally broke through as a solid big-league regular in 2025. Baty posted a 111 wRC+ while bouncing between second and third last season, and the Mets were not shy about their intention to give him the third-base job entering 2026.
Bichette’s arrival obviously changes that and raises the possibility that Baty could emerge as a candidate to fill the hole in left field that has not been addressed post-Nimmo. Baty does have some experience there, having made 29 starts in left in the minors across 2021 and 2022, but that’s hardly an ideal plan, considering the previously stated intentions of improving on defense. Still, if New York plans to keep Baty, he could appear in left while providing some insurance for Bichette’s and Polanco’s transitions at third and first. Otherwise, Baty suddenly becomes an intriguing trade candidate, as he would seem overqualified to be a luxury bench option. That doesn’t even begin to address the paths to playing time for young infielders Mark Vientos, Ronny Mauricio and Luisangel Acuña.
The point is the Mets have a lot to sort out. So if there’s one other thing to take away from this stunning Bichette signing, it’s that more Mets moves are on the way. A crowded infield just got more crowded, and the outfield remains remarkably unsettled outside of Soto. The rotation has not been addressed whatsoever. The bullpen still looks thin despite the additions of Devin Williams and Luke Weaver.
The Mets will probably look significantly different by the time they report to Port St. Lucie, Florida, in a month. The Bichette signing is merely the latest installment in a full-fledged transformation of the roster — one that is still very much in progress.
Before contemplating Bichette’s fit in Queens, let’s take a second to acknowledge the futility of forecasting free agency. If we’ve learned anything from the past week of head-spinning transactional activity, it’s that attempting to gauge which teams are “in the lead” or “considered favorites” for a free agent is a fool’s errand. The reality is that when only a handful of clubs are considering spending at the top of the free-agent market, each successive agreement immediately shakes up the state of play. We saw it earlier this week with the Red Sox responding to losing Alex Bregmanby signing starting pitcher Ranger Suarez instead, and now we’ve seen it with the New York Mets whiffing on a much-needed outfielder and pivoting to an infielder who doesn’t fit their depth chart at first glance but most certainly makes them a better team.
But the Mets’ proposal — a scaled-down version of what they offered Tucker, a reported four-year, $220 million deal — was evidently too enticing for Bichette to turn down, and it’s a reminder of owner Steve Cohen’s unique willingness to spend exorbitantly when the right opportunities arise. Most crucially, the deal features opt-outs after the first two seasons. For a player who is still firmly in his prime — Bichette turns 28 in March — the sky-high AAV ($42M!) combined with the chance to reenter what projects to be a shallow free-agent class in either of the next two offseasons was apparently reason enough to take a short-term stint in Queens rather than putting down roots in Philadelphia.
Making sense of the Mets’ seemingly sudden interest in Bichette is its own compelling exercise. Focus on Bichette the hitter, and it comes as no surprise that his special bat would appeal to a team amid a drastic lineup overhaul, having watched three longtime mainstays in Pete Alonso, Brandon Nimmo and Jeff McNeil depart via trade or free agency. The Mets added Marcus Semien in the Nimmo trade and signed Jorge Polanco, but it was hard to argue that those two additions were remotely enough to replace the production lost.
Adding Bichette, who has been at least 20% better than league average at the plate in all but one (his injury-marred 2024) of his seven major-league seasons goes a long way toward quelling those concerns. His rare ability to blend terrific contact skills with plus power should only be enhanced by sharing a lineup with another disciplined hitting savant in Juan Soto, just as it was in Toronto with Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Add the bonus of snagging him at the last minute from the division-rival Phillies, and the Bichette signing is that much more satisfying for New York.
The defensive fit, meanwhile, invites more questions.
A shortstop for essentially his entire professional career, Bichette’s defensive outlook has been a hot topic throughout his free agency, considering how poorly his glove rated by nearly every advanced metric in 2025. The widespread assumption was that Bichette would soon make the move to second base, a transition many former shortstops have made and a sensible adjustment considering his prior experience at the position in the minor leagues and during the World Series. There were occasional hints that Bichette would perhaps consider a move to third base, but when surveying the landscape for potential fits — and considering Bichette’s below-average arm — a slide to second seemed more likely.
Or not. All reports indicate Bichette is indeed going to man the hot corner for the Mets, a position at which he has zero professional innings in the majors or minors. Shortstop was obviously not happening; that Francisco Lindor fellow is still pretty good. Playing Bichette at third in deference to Semien, still an elite defender at second base and a familiar face for Bichette, who shared the infield with him in Toronto in 2021, seems reasonable.
But it’s an enormous bet on Bichette’s work ethic and the coaching infrastructure, including new bench coach and noted infield guru Kai Correa, to turn him into a reliable defender at a brand new position. And the pressure is only heightened by the fact that another such process is taking place with Polanco, who is expected to handle first base for the first time in his career. That these transitions will both occur after president of baseball operations David Stearns touted an organizational priority to improve on defense this offseason is questionable but certainly intriguing.
Beyond Bichette’s outlook on defense, there’s also the matter of the player he’s displacing. That’s 26-year-old Brett Baty, who, after a slow burn of development since his first-round selection by the Mets out of a Texas high school in 2019, finally broke through as a solid big-league regular in 2025. Baty posted a 111 wRC+ while bouncing between second and third last season, and the Mets were not shy about their intention to give him the third-base job entering 2026.
Bichette’s arrival obviously changes that and raises the possibility that Baty could emerge as a candidate to fill the hole in left field that has not been addressed post-Nimmo. Baty does have some experience there, having made 29 starts in left in the minors across 2021 and 2022, but that’s hardly an ideal plan, considering the previously stated intentions of improving on defense. Still, if New York plans to keep Baty, he could appear in left while providing some insurance for Bichette’s and Polanco’s transitions at third and first. Otherwise, Baty suddenly becomes an intriguing trade candidate, as he would seem overqualified to be a luxury bench option. That doesn’t even begin to address the paths to playing time for young infielders Mark Vientos, Ronny Mauricio and Luisangel Acuña.
The point is the Mets have a lot to sort out. So if there’s one other thing to take away from this stunning Bichette signing, it’s that more Mets moves are on the way. A crowded infield just got more crowded, and the outfield remains remarkably unsettled outside of Soto. The rotation has not been addressed whatsoever. The bullpen still looks thin despite the additions of Devin Williams and Luke Weaver.
The Mets will probably look significantly different by the time they report to Port St. Lucie, Florida, in a month. The Bichette signing is merely the latest installment in a full-fledged transformation of the roster — one that is still very much in progress.