Mets In The News Today

- Juan Soto is officially in for the Dominican Republic in the 2026 World Baseball Classic, which is fun until you remember spring training health is a fragile little ecosystem.
- Francisco Lindor is out of the WBC due to insurance constraints tied to his elbow procedure, which is the least sexy headline imaginable, but probably the right one.
- Nolan McLean and Clay Holmes are slated for Team USA, while Mark Vientos is committed to Nicaragua. That’s a whole lot of “please come back healthy” in one sentence.
- The Mets are linked to Ty France as a right-handed first base option, mostly because the current plan involves asking a guy to learn first base on the fly and pretending that’s normal.
- Depth churn continues: Craig Kimbrel and Austin Barnes are in camp on minor-league deals. Old-head insurance, the baseball version of keeping jumper cables in your trunk.
A Trip Around Major League Baseball
- Eugenio Suárez is headed back to Cincinnati on a one-year deal, the rare “everybody knows what this is” signing.
- Jordan Hicks is on the move in a Red Sox–White Sox deal that also ships prospect Gage Ziehl.
- Luis Arráez lands with the Giants on a one-year contract. If you like strikeouts, you will not enjoy watching him hit.
- Jose Siri signs a minor-league deal with the Angels, officially becoming “that guy you’ll remember exists exactly twice a year.”
NL East News & Notes

- Braves: The roster is in “paper looks good, reality’s gonna judge you” mode, with Ha-Seong Kim injury complications hanging over the infield plan, plus bullpen upgrades led by Robert Suarez.
- Phillies: The Nick Castellanos situation is still unresolved. Spring training is coming fast, and so is the awkwardness.
- Marlins: The teardown-with-intentions continues. Edward Cabrera is gone, prospect value came back, and they’ve also shopped for immediate leverage help with Pete Fairbanks plus a bat like Christopher Morel.
- Nationals: Paul Toboni and crew are living on the waiver wire like it’s a clearance aisle with no closing time.
Mets History Today
- February 2, 2008: Johan Santana officially becomes a Met after the blockbuster with Minnesota. Still one of the loudest “we’re serious” winter moves this franchise ever made.
- The cost: Carlos Gómez plus arms Philip Humber, Deolis Guerra, and Kevin Mulvey. Prospect packages always look different in hindsight. Always.
- Quick birthday nods for February 2 Mets-adjacent names: Melvin Mora and Jason Vargas.
Stats You Should Know
- Freddy Peralta isn’t “nice rotation depth,” he’s rotation identity. A true bat-misser with ace-level swing-and-miss traits changes how every series starts.
- Bo Bichette plus Marcus Semien is the kind of middle-infield competence Mets fans have begged for since flip phones had antennas.
- Jorge Polanco learning first base is either going to be (a) totally fine or (b) a nightly adventure. There is no third option.
- Late innings look nasty on paper with Devin Williams and Luke Weaver, but bullpen seasons are horror movies, the villain is always “one more arm.”
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