The Chicago Cubs season has come to a close which means they can now join the New York Mets in Cancun for a few weeks. The National League version of the New York Yankees who played amazing baseball but were forced into the same division with their league’s best team, what’s next for the Cubs is to reevaluate what went wrong and what they can do better.
It begins with free agency. Just as Mets fans have already begun to circle some names like vultures, so too can Cubs fans. A big story throughout the 2025 season was how Pete Crow-Armstrong was traded by the Mets to the Cubs all of those years ago. This winter, the story might be about which free agents could go from one city to the other.
Thanks to Michael Busch having a huge year in Chicago, there won’t be any realistic Pete Alonso rumors. What about those other Mets or Cubs free agents? Kyle Tucker feeling unlikely as well, there are two from each roster who feel more reasonable.
Brad Keller looks like a good fit for the Mets bullpen
Brad Keller had a big regular season. In a different dimension, he did it with the Mets. A longtime Kansas City Royals pitcher who bounced between the rotation and bullpen in his years there, Keller found a comfortable spot pitching in relief for the Cubs this past season. The numbers were pretty outstanding. His 2.07 ERA in 69.2 innings of work is more than the Cubs could have ever expected. He did it with a good walk and strikeout ratio as well as an incredible 55.5% ground ball rate.
Signed for just $1.5 million last offseason, Keller found his groove in Chicago. He struggled with the Boston Red Sox and Chicago White Sox last year. The Cubs’ faith in him paid off as he has been one of their best late-inning relievers, regularly pitching the 8th or 9th inning.
The fit for the Mets is obvious. The team lacks a right-handed reliever with a high-leverage pedigree. Although A.J. Minter and Brooks Raley are coming back for the role, each throws left-handed. Where’s the balance?
Mark Keller down as one of the first targets for Stearns this winter. The Cubs did the hard work just as the Mets put in the strong effort in improving this next player who could go the other way.