November is a month of roster tinkering for major league teams. Internal decisions are the biggest adjustments made in anticipation of the early December Winter Meetings when the Hot Stove fully heats up. Like everyone else, the New York Mets will be busy this month looking high and low on their depth chart to figure out who they do or don’t have room for moving forward.
One aspect of this is the Rule 5 Draft. Taking place as a part of the MLB Winter Meetings, it’s a sometimes overlooked yet important event. Players in the minor leagues who have accrued enough service time without being placed on a 40-man roster become eligible for a special draft which comes with risks to any team who selects someone. Players taken in the Rule 5 Draft must remain on a club’s 26-man roster all year or be offered back to the club they were originally taken from.
Each year comes a new class but also some returning prospects who’ll join the pool of available players. These three Mets prospects will be open for the public to snag unless the Mets add them to the 40-man roster first. What about a trade? It’s another way to make sure they don’t lose them for nothing at all.
1) Luke Ritter
Will the Mets clear a 40-man roster spot for Luke Ritter? Don’t bet on it. Another excellent offensive season in the minors, this time all in Triple-A, had some fans eager to see what he could do at the major league level. The issues with Ritter are obvious. Already 27 and mostly just a first baseman these days, there is no real opportunity for him to get much playing time on the Mets.
Ritter posted some dazzling power numbers over the last two seasons. He hit 27 home runs in 2023. He had another 26 this past season to go along with 25 doubles. He has steadily been increasing his batting average. He hit a career-high .257 this past year and walked 73 times in 567 trips to the plate.
The holes in Ritter’s game are clear, too. He struck out 174 times. Against major league pitching, he’d easily go down 200+.
The Mets didn’t protect Ritter from the Rule 5 Draft last year. No one took him. Would things change this season when he accomplished more? Why wouldn’t a rebuilding organization consider him even in a part-time role off the bench? Any sort of trade involving Ritter would likely be a minor one, perhaps swapping him for a lottery ticket prospect or a player in someone else’s system in a similar predicament.