Mets Minor League Report | April 23, 2026

Mets Minor League Report

Top prospects first, then the full affiliate rundown. One ugly Binghamton loss, another Brooklyn kick to the teeth, a solid St. Lucie bounce-back, and Syracuse still a little messy from an accessible-data standpoint.

RandomMetsFans.com

Mets Top 20 Prospects Daily Tracker

Minor leaguers only. MLB players, injured prospects, and extended spring names are excluded from the tracker rows below.

Rank Player Level Last Night Box Score RMF Read
#2 Jonah Tong Triple-A Syracuse 5.1 IP, 1 ER, 9 K Still looks like one of the nastiest arms in the system. The strikeout juice is real.
#3 A.J. Ewing Double-A Binghamton No verified line surfaced in the accessible recap Was active in the Erie series, but the available recap centered elsewhere.
#4 Ryan Clifford Triple-A Syracuse No verified Apr. 22 line surfaced in accessible recap Recent power has been loud, but last night’s accessible Syracuse coverage leaned heavily on Tong.
#5 Jacob Reimer Double-A Binghamton 4-for-4 Best night of the bunch in Binghamton. One-man resistance in an 8-1 loss.
#6 Jack Wenninger Triple-A Syracuse Did not pitch No game action verified last night.
#7 Mitch Voit High-A Brooklyn No verified line surfaced in the accessible recap Brooklyn’s offense was mostly stuck in mud, and the available recap did not isolate his line.
#8 Elian Peña Single-A St. Lucie No verified line surfaced in the accessible recap St. Lucie won, but the official writeup focused more on Zayas and the pitching staff.
#9 Jonathan Santucci Double-A Binghamton Did not pitch No game action verified last night.
#10 Will Watson Double-A Binghamton Did not pitch No game action verified last night.
#12 Nick Morabito Triple-A Syracuse No verified Apr. 22 line surfaced in accessible recap Recent Syracuse run production stays relevant, but last night’s accessible note was light on individual hitter lines.
#13 Eli Serrano III Double-A Binghamton No verified line surfaced in the accessible recap Part of a lineup that got overwhelmed early by Erie.
#14 Zach Thornton Double-A Binghamton Did not pitch No game action verified last night.
#15 Chris Suero Double-A Binghamton No verified line surfaced in the accessible recap Another Binghamton bat caught in a rough team night.
#16 Antonio Jimenez High-A Brooklyn No verified line surfaced in the accessible recap Brooklyn’s offense only had five hits total. Not a lot of meat on that bone.
#17 Ryan Lambert Triple-A Syracuse Did not pitch No game action verified last night.
#20 Marco Vargas Double-A Binghamton No verified line surfaced in the accessible recap Binghamton’s lineup didn’t do much beyond Reimer’s four-hit night.
RMF Note: This tracker preserves official prospect rank numbers.

System Snapshot

  • Double-A Binghamton: got rocked 8-1 by Erie, with Jacob Reimer doing almost all the offensive heavy lifting himself.
  • High-A Brooklyn: lost 4-3 on a walk-off homer. Again. Baseball can be a real prick sometimes.
  • Single-A St. Lucie: answered the bell with a 5-2 win over Palm Beach after getting run over the night before.
  • Triple-A Syracuse: prospect-specific accessible reporting was strongest around Jonah Tong, who punched out nine over 5.1 innings.

Triple-A Syracuse Mets

The cleanest verified Syracuse prospect item from the accessible reporting set was Jonah Tong carving up Worcester with nine strikeouts over 5.1 innings. The broader offensive details available in the official accessible recap pool leaned heavier on non-tracker names, so I’m not stuffing fake Syracuse hitter lines in here just to make the section look fuller.

Tong remains the headline. When the fastball plays up and the swing-and-miss stuff is there, he looks like a big-league problem waiting to happen.

Player of the Game: Jonah Tong

Double-A Binghamton Rumble Ponies

Erie 8, Binghamton 1

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Erie 3 0 1 2 0 1 0 1 0 8 12 0
Binghamton 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 4 1

Binghamton got hit early, stayed behind, and never made Erie uncomfortable. That part sucked. The part that didn’t suck was Jacob Reimer going 4-for-4 and refusing to let the whole night turn into a total offensive blackout.

When the lineup only produces four hits and one guy owns all four of them, the story writes itself. Reimer was the only real thunder in the room.

Player of the Game: Jacob Reimer

High-A Brooklyn Cyclones

Hudson Valley 4, Brooklyn 3

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Brooklyn 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 3 5 0
Hudson Valley 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 4 8 0

Brooklyn got walked off for the second straight night, which is the kind of sentence that makes you want to throw a folding chair. The Cyclones only scratched out five hits and went 1-for-9 with runners in scoring position, so the missed chances were just as painful as the final swing.

They stayed in the fight, but they didn’t land enough punches before Hudson Valley ended it on the first pitch of the ninth.

Player of the Game: Bryce Jenkins, right up until that last pitch

Single-A St. Lucie Mets

St. Lucie 5, Palm Beach 2

Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Palm Beach 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 6 1
St. Lucie 0 0 0 2 0 0 2 1 X 5 8 0

St. Lucie got off the mat the right way. After allowing 17 runs the night before, they answered with clean pitching, steadier baseball, and a late push that flipped the game.

Frank Camarillo gave them five strong innings, the bullpen held the line, and Julio Zayas delivered the go-ahead RBI double that changed the whole mood of the night.

Player of the Game: Julio Zayas
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