Some players change how you see a threat, not by flashy moves or loud plays, but by consistently showing up where it counts: on base, in motion, and in the middle of the action. Nick Morabito is starting to feel like that kind of player within the New York Mets organization. There’s a polish to his game that’s quietly emerging, and a set of tools that just so happen to line up with a certain profile teams covet. You won’t find any declarations here. Just a prospect doing many little things right and making it harder to ignore.
Among the NY Mets’ prospects, Nick Morabito’s combination of speed and on-base skills fits the profile of an ideal leadoff hitter.
Drafted 75th overall by the Amazins in 2022, Nick Morabito has spent the season in Double-A Binghamton quietly turning in the kind of year that deserves a second look. At 22, he’s playing like someone who knows exactly what he brings to the table and, more importantly, how to use it. Through his first 190 at-bats, he’s hitting .289 with a .348 OBP, 24 RBI, 31 runs scored, and 21 stolen bases. The speed is obvious. The instincts? Even better; he’s swiped those 21 bags in just 26 tries, tied for fifth-most at the level.
He’s not just running, either. Morabito has 15 doubles on the year, which puts him tied for eighth among Double-A hitters. And after a very quiet April, he’s looked like a completely different batter once the calendar turned.
In May, he hit .326 with a .384 OBP, raising his on-base mark by over 50 points. June has picked up right where he left off, with Morabito batting .348 with a .423 OBP and continuing to pressure pitchers every time he steps in.
Morabito with the Double to send home Jett Williams!
— Binghamton Rumble Ponies (@RumblePoniesBB) June 8, 2025
🎠 x #NeedForSteed x @NickMorabito1 pic.twitter.com/h9z2OZRFvQ
Situationally, he’s doing damage too. With two outs and runners in scoring position, Morabito is batting .333 with a .936 OPS in 33 at-bats. Those numbers reflect a hitter who stays composed and performs in the moments that matter.
If there’s one rough edge, it’s the strikeouts: 61, which works out to a 32% rate. But given the OBP, it hasn’t slowed him down. And if that number starts dropping, the rest of the package gets even harder to ignore.
There’s still development ahead, but Morabito’s doing something valuable: making every part of his game count. He gets on base, takes the extra bag, and creates pressure with speed that shows up in every box score. The strikeouts are worth watching, but they haven’t slowed him down yet. If he keeps building on this version of himself, the conversation won’t be about potential, it’ll be about how close he is to making the next step.